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Thursday, 20 February 2025

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What I see is a guy torturing a monkey for no particularly good reason, except to make people laugh.

The BBC filmed a lyrebird in Australia in the early 1980s that perfectly mimicked a motor driven Nikon F3 https://youtu.be/AwxvjrbEkTg?si=rvyzFMCesfBRjA5_

I grew up not far from where this was filmed.

Voltz

In the wealth inequality video, the modern analogy is the researcher is the robber barons. The subjects are the rest of us.

While on the topic of starlings, may I recommend the book "Mozart's Starling" by Lyanda Lynn Haupt?

I think the monkey video captures even better the essence of consumer marketing/behavior. Take a consumer who is otherwise perfectly fine with what they have, convince them that there is something better, and show them that others have the “better” item. Drives demand for the new, shiny thing.

If you think one starling is amazing…
Two short films from the Low Countries: town & countryside.

Bird mimicry is fascinating, and potentially annoying. This morning I watched a video of a parrot asking Alexa to play “Barbara Ann” over and over (successfully). Must have been cute the first dozen times, then…

Off-topic: starlings, like most birds, can be aggressive. About 30 years ago I shot a photo of a pair in what seemed to be a fight, or at least one bullying the other. It was shot on Kodachrome and then scanned and processed about 20 years ago in what seems to have been a fever of vignetting. Maybe I’ll take another crack at it … https://www.blork.org/mondaymorning/index.php?showimage=253

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