All Videos
All Stories
The military always knew better than to invade Iraq in 2003, but we will not leave the country in a Somalia-like situation—without a government or any national institutions.
▸
5 min
—
with
A conversation with the former U.S. general.
▸
45 min
—
with
Directing doesn’t just mean directing feature films anymore. Almost everyone has access to video recorders these days, and they can begin directing from their iPhones.
▸
3 min
—
with
The only monsters that have scared the filmmaker are the ones from “Alien” and “Phantom of the Opera.” But he is “mortally afraid” of cops, big churches, and politicians.
▸
3 min
—
with
Monster creation is not a mechanical or algebraic process. “What is important is that you riff, you riff by instinct, and you riff with the best you can.”
▸
3 min
—
with
The filmmaker grew up Catholic but is now agnostic. He prefers to abandon himself to the embrace, or perhaps indifference, of the Universe.
▸
3 min
—
with
Things are constantly flying through your hands as you’re trying to shape the product, says the filmmaker.
▸
3 min
—
with
The vampires from “Twilight” and other recent shows have been “defanged” and combined with the bad boy romantic lead myth from gothic fiction. The filmmaker interprets this as a sign […]
▸
4 min
—
with
Western culture teaches us to understand the world in terms of binaries. That’s why the myths we’ve created to explain the world need both angels and demons.
▸
3 min
—
with
A conversation with the filmmaker and author.
▸
20 min
—
with
The current generation is less ready to join the workforce because they’ve been shielded from competitive situations while growing up.
▸
6 min
—
with
When it comes to networking, there is more strength in the weak ties of loose acquaintances than in the close ties you have with friends and family.
▸
5 min
—
with
Projecting confidence is key to gaining and holding onto power—even if you’re not naturally a confident person.
▸
2 min
—
with
A conversation with the Stanford University professor of organizational behavior.
▸
13 min
—
with
Many good bosses have had their own bad bosses on the way up, but have patterned their management style after how not to do things.
▸
2 min
—
with
Failure is a terrible thing, but there’s no other way for people to learn how to do most things except to screw up enough until the point where they get […]
▸
9 min
—
with
An interview with professor of management at Stanford University.
▸
11 min
—
with
The art of narration may have emerged as an evolutionary adaptation, says the author. “If I can tell you that right over there in that river was where the crocodile […]
▸
5 min
—
with
Reading may have evolved from early hunters’ skills of interpreting animal tracks, which allowed them to find food and determine whether they themselves were being hunted.
▸
4 min
—
with
Books are important because electronic storage is fairly fragile. That said, e-books provide many advantages, especially for those with dyslexia and other reading disabilities.
▸
3 min
—
with
Authors are always trying to disguise which parts of the novel were most difficult to write. For Atwood those parts are always the exposition, she says.
▸
3 min
—
with
For the author, it’s not a question of sitting around and wondering what to write; it’s a question of deciding which of the “far-fetched and absurd” ideas she’s going to […]
▸
5 min
—
with
New forms of communication are just modernizations of things that already existed earlier in some other form, says the author.
▸
3 min
—
with
The sprightly 71-year-old has really taken to Twitter and now has over 85,000 followers.
▸
4 min
—
with
The author grew up reading books like “1984” and “Brave New World” and wanted to solve the problem to which these types of books so often fall prey—too much exposition.
▸
4 min
—
with
Books about the end of the world become popular when people suddenly realize that basic assumptions they took to be true may no longer hold.
▸
4 min
—
with
One of the great myths is that doctors are over-medicating the children of America. Koplewicz says nothing could be further from the truth.
▸
2 min
—
with
New research by Xavier Castellanos suggests that the key to diagnosing mental illness might have to do with how the brain communicates with itself during sleep.
▸
6 min
—
with