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Ricky Gervais was able to capitalize on a generational shift with an understanding that so much of the comedy is not set up, set up, punch line. It really is […]
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“You have to really key into what the other person you’re acting with is saying and how they’re saying it, and react in the moment to what is going on,” […]
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The actor grew up a member of the Baha’i faith, and “soaked in all kinds of different beliefs.” He lost himself in his career when he was younger, but then […]
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The actor says he would hire his TV alter-ego “in a heartbeat,” because Dwight would do anything. “I could hire him for any job imaginable and he would morph himself […]
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I have a talent for playing oddball characters and I can make people laugh,” says Wilson. “That can help bring families together … it puts a smile on their face, […]
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Technology, like anything else that mankind creates, is a tool that can be used for good or for evil. It’s supposed to bring people together and make life easier—but it […]
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People have trouble living creatively when they don’t know who they are or what they’re about. The best thing to do if you’re blocked is to make radical changes and […]
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A conversation with the CEO of Gay Men’s Health Crisis.
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After three or four odors are blended together, even the best noses in the world have a difficult time distinguishing one original scent from another.
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“There are some things that simply disgust us in a very, very instinctive, deep kind of way. And there are other things that we clearly learn to find either good […]
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The cause of the so-called “Proustian experience” of recalling a vivid memory through taste is well documented, but its cause continues to confound scientists.
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What’s remarkable about the olfactory system is that from the outside world to the highest level of brain tissue there are only two synapses.
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Our olfactory system’s methods of molecular recognition provide a model for understanding all kinds of other receptors in our bodies.
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Olfaction may be both the most primitive and the most sophisticated of our five senses.
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A step-by-step explanation of how flavor makes it from our mouths to our brains, as well as a “shocking” interactive experiment for you to try at home.
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Taste refers to our five sensitivities — sweet, sour, salt, bitter, and umami — while flavor is a “hedonic” sense involving smell, texture, and expectation.
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A conversation with the chair of Columbia University’s Department of Biological Sciences.
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Time’s Man of the Year in 1996 discusses how his background in physics helped him develop the Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Treatment (HAART) that revolutionized AIDS treatment in the mid-1990s.
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Hill’s last boyfriend wasn’t pleased when she came out to him, but he doubted she was really gay because she hadn’t told her mother. So that’s exactly what she did […]
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Even in 2010, people are still worried to share their HIV status with family members and co-workers. But as more people come out, the stigma will begin to abate.
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AIDS is the most pressing public health issue of our time in this country, yet the media’s lack of coverage contributes to a widespread assumption that it is under control.
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The Obama Administration has demonstrated a real commitment to fighting the issues of HIV and AIDS—notably through the creation of the first national AIDS strategy. Hill gives the President’s efforts […]
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A conversation with the AIDS physician.
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Despite being infected with HIV, some people have genetic traits that prevent the virus from progressing to AIDS, even without treatment from antiretrovirals. Known as “elite controllers” and “long-term nonprogressors,” […]
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Despite what Obama advisor Ezekiel Emanuel says, we may be able to treat our way out of the epidemic if enough resources were applied wisely and correctly.
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A 2008 Swiss study suggested that people on antiretroviral medication are non-infectious, which, if true, would help to combat the stigma attached to HIV.
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Hofmann found out in 1996 that she had contracted HIV, something she kept private for ten years. Even to this day “it still takes the spit from my mouth when […]
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For the first time in 15 years, Hofmann is optimistic that we are near a cure for AIDS. In fact, it seems that one man may have already been cured.
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A conversation with the editor-in-chief of POZ magazine.
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