The Latest from Big Think

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1mins
Economic hardship has forced many people to fall in love with their existing wardrobe and make what is old new.
6mins
Forget high-end brands: the subtleties of excellent posture, exquisite tailoring, and 80 year-old Milanese men will do the trick.
36mins
A conversation with The Sartorialist, an influential fashion blogger.
12mins
Growing up in the Midwest, Schuman initially saw fashion as an in with women.
3mins
The digital revolution has made filmmaking technologies available to the masses. But the idea that it makes us all artists, says Ken Burns, is “bullshit.”
2mins
The most effective question he ever asked a subject from behind the camera wasn’t a question at all.
3mins
It’s a classic historian’s question, but Ken Burns rejects it, insisting that “human nature is the only given.”
4mins
According to Ken Burns, imposing a narrative on the past keeps humans from going crazy—and is an act of love. Critics who find that view tidy and sentimental are revealing […]
3mins
Does making a documentary deepen or exhaust Ken Burns’s appreciation of its subject? And does he ever start imagining his life as one of his own films?
5mins
Filmmaker Ken Burns describes how he hopes “The National Parks” will succeed both as a topical statement about conservation and a timeless human story.
6mins
Inspired by Twain’s own example, the “Mark Twain” documentarian seeks to explore quintessentially American issues of “race and space.”
6mins
From cutting huge amounts of footage to zooming and panning on still photos, the documentarian explains the techniques that distinguish his films—and why changing them now would be “ridiculous.”
5mins
As a young director with a risky film, Ken Burns had countless doors slammed in his face. How did he push past them, and how would he advise today’s young […]
3mins
The documentarian last took a formal history class in 11th grade, “when they hold a gun to your head.” But as a passionate student of film, he soon became drawn […]
10mins
From brain size to emotional intelligence, Lise Eliot uncovers the truth behind age-old clichés.
7mins
The neuroscience professor explains that parents are more cautious with daughters than sons, but females are technically easier to rear.
7mins
How parents, siblings, and home setup—including toys in the nursery—influence gender identity.
7mins
Lise Eliot outlines biological differences in girls and boys from womb to playground, explaining the crucial role that culture plays.
31mins
A conversation with the neuroscience professor at Chicago Medical School and the author of “Pink Brain, Blue Brain.”