Category Archives: Collaborations

USC Science Film Competition

I chose the most antisocial spot in the back corner of USC’s Ray Stark Family Theatre to gauge the audience for the university’s first-ever science film competition.

Logo for science-themed film festival at USC.My estimate of the crowd was, roughly: half cinema, half science students — mainly due to the balance of eyeglasses that were, and weren’t, meant to be stylish. One filmgoer sat with his sticker-covered cello case. The theater was abuzz with a quirky, intelligent glow.

In the lobby before the screening, I met a group of USC students live-blogging and covering the event for CelebritySC. I hadn’t planned to cover it for Square Syndrome, but suddenly, I felt like giving myself a press pass. Scientific American’s Carin Bondar published a sharp preview story in October.

More than 130 students from many disciplines collaborated on the films.

Cinephiles met engineers. Producers mingled with chemists. Dreamers and innovators were one in the same.

Eight films were selected for the final round by ten judges (USC faculty and indie filmmakers). Criteria used to rank the films included categories like: scientific content, authenticity of science, overall concept, etc.

WINNERS:

1st Place ($2,500) – “Time”

Cooking and everyday kitchen items are combined with stop-motion animation and a clever script about the passage of time made for the clear #1 choice! The authors, Kevin Le (mathematics, physics & astronomy) and Edward Saavedra (cinema, production, editing), piqued our interest by asking: Why does time move in only one direction? They flip pancakes, build sandwiches and make a total mess to teach us about the concept of entropy (read: chaos). I was enthralled for every moment and was delighted to see them win. Learning and enjoyment were one. I hope they put it online. (If you guys are reading this, post a link in comments!)

2nd Place ($1,500) – “It’s A(Au)ll in You”

A hillbilly prospector is fruitlessly panning for gold. He is interrupted by a mysterious voice who guides him through the periodic table to show him how long it takes Sun (or any star) to make gold, a heavy element. The narrative and concept were memorable — very catchy and cute. However, the film could have integrated the teaching moments with the storyline better. It seemed to flip back and forth between cute cartoon story and VO step-by-step instruction over a pulsing “slide” of the sun. It must be noted that weaving creative storytelling with hard science into a cohesive product is a very difficult task — kudos and congratulations to the students for their great work.

3rd Place ($500) – “Superluminal Neutrinos in 5 Minutes”

Perhaps my favorite subject in this competition (aside from one about particle accelerators), this film was jam-packed with information. It really did feel like the filmmakers were rushing to tell as much about superluminal neutrinos in 5 minutes as humanly possible. The animation style was delightfully crude and hand-drawn — unfolding on the screen as we watched. I have a basic layperson’s knowledge of neutrinos, however, I felt a bit bombarded with the steady pulse of fast, nonstop narration. Maybe that was the point, because yeah, these concepts can get pretty dense — Or NOT, as they posed the titillating question: If neutrinos travel faster than the speed of light, do they have negative mass? What is negative mass? Does this totally fuck up special relativity? (Profanity added here for emphasis.)

A few other films received special mentions, including one that applied Newton’s Laws to dance and another that used stochastically self-similar non-Euclidian replication as an animation technique. Phew. That last one also received a special award for best animation — hear, hear.

My personal honorable mention goes to “The Expense of Spirit” for the heartbreaking narrative: a scientist torn between her evolutionary research and her Christian faith. They acting came from the heart. My guess is that the judges realized that the actual evolutionary research itself (and its critical applications) were far ignored, compared with the story. I felt for the characters, but I needed to feel for that überimportant research, too.

It’s not easy making these films, and I wish I would have been a participant. When I heard the call for proposals, I had just completed a short mathematics-themed film and was not able to ramp up the momentum to get a new one going for the contest’s open submission period (they didn’t accept previously produced films).

After all was said and done, the event’s host, Clifford V. Johnson (USC professor of physics and astronomy) said it best:

“If we get [science] out there so it’s not this special thing in a corner, we’re not really in democracy, fully. Because we’re not sharing ideas. A real citizen is someone just as comfortable talking about things in popular culture as they are talking about things happening in science.”

Long live the USC Science Film Competition! And anyone trying to make difficult concepts fun and creative.

An Aggregator of Aggregators

I started this website with the intent of giving home to curious, eclectic and brainy content, most of which I produce myself. But then it dawned on me — that’s pretty self-indulgent. Why not make this a portal for others’ content, too? Aggregation, duh. All the cool kids are doing it. There’s so much stuff out there that I wish I would have thought of first. I should share it.

Square Syndrome has been dormant since April 2011, when I gave a bittersweet goodbye to my beloved podcast HTMLA. It was a really fun project, but as we knew would happen, other priorities got in the way (grad school, getting engaged, landing a job after graduation…).

I have one more semester of the comforting shelter of grad school. It’s filled with lots of fun stuff like being the supervising producer of a TV show, taking a terrifying acting class, taking another class at Hulu headquarters, making some short documentaries, planning my wedding, dyeing my hair purple and learning the accordion.

From here on out, I will allow Square Syndrome to become more than it has been. Bundles of fun, squarish content on the way!

This one time, in grad school…

A few months ago, a techie classmate and I decided that L.A. needed a tech podcast, and HTMLA was born.

We tinkered with our school’s radio booth, lined up some interviews and tossed up a website. Twitter account in tow.

Six episodes in, and we’re ready to take a step back to re-evaluated our BETA project. We nursed this geekie baby during grad school madness, and now we have the summer to think about where to take it. Inspired by Leo Laporte’s TWiT and The 404, we want to fill a niche. If only to argue over whether it rhymes with rich or quiche.

L.A. already has socaltech.com, and we enjoy being the scrappy grad students who throw around some of the L.A. tech buzz, whether it be startups, crazy inventions, university developments or human-shaped cell phones. But we recorded our last episode (unreleased) on the USC Annenberg lobby floor, for crying out loud. Summer radio booth hours are short.

Episode 6 is our pride and joy, and we invite you to take a listen.
If only because we name-drop Captain Planet.
Or… download on iTunes!

Creative Collaboration

Traditional journalism is dying, wah! We know! So how can we foster new ideas with journalistic, technological and business vision?

Lock up grad students from these fields in a room for 9 days, and see what happens.

That’s where I’ve been with 17 other USC students from journalism, engineering and MBA programs, collaborating on mobile tech for news outlets.

A charming engineering student and two brilliant MBA grads were on my team to develop a new mobile app concept for KCRW. The station told us they wanted new ways to engage listeners, so we proposed a technology that allows users to select and share just a snippet of a program. Courtesy of Ben Moskowitz, we learned this is already being prototyped with Mozilla’s new open-source language, Popcorn.js. Demo audio-snippet sharing here.

And here’s our concept video (turned around in a 48-hr timeframe):

Now that we’ve been released from the 9-day boot camp and are decompressing from the collaborative buzz, I look forward to what develops. Perhaps we’ll continue to engage with KCRW over this concept, and I’m excited to delve into popcorn.js and learn more about the beautiful things they’re making. WordPress says it best… Code is poetry.