Showing posts with label Follow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Follow. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Tough act to follow

LOS ANGELES — James Gandolfini was a virtual unknown when cast in The Sopranos. But he broke ground with his signature portrait of the show’s title character, Tony Soprano, the head of a fictional New Jersey mob family.

Gandolfini, who died on Wednesday from a possible heart attack in Italy at the age of 51, created a gangster different from any previously seen on American television or film. He was capable of killing enemies with his own hands but prone to panic attacks. He loved his wife, Carmela, played by Edie Falco, and was a doting father, but he carried on a string of extramarital affairs.

He regularly saw a therapist to work out his anxiety problems and issues with his mother.

By the start of the show’s final season in 2007, Gandolfini suggested he was ready to move on to more gentle roles once his TV mobster days were over.

“I’m too tired to be a tough guy or any of that stuff any more,” he said. “We pretty much used all that up in this show.”

The programme, which earned Gandolfini three Emmy Awards as best lead actor in a drama series, was considered by many critics at the time as the finest drama to have aired on American television.

The series was a major factor in establishing HBO, a pay-cable network once focused on presentations of feature films, as a powerhouse of original dramatic television and in shifting to TV the kind of sophisticated storytelling once reserved for the big screen.

The show won the Emmy as best drama series in 2004 and again in 2007 after its final season.

His role also paved the way for a parade of popular prime-time shows built around profoundly flawed characters and anti-heroes, from Dexter and Breaking Bad to Mad Men and Nurse Jackie.

David Chase, creator of The Sopranos, paid tribute to his former star in a statement remembering him as “a genius” and “one of the greatest actors of this or any time”.

“A great deal of that genius resided in those sad eyes. I remember telling him many times, ‘You don’t get it. You’re like Mozart.’ There would be silence at the other end of the phone,” Chase recounted. REUTERS

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Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Follow That Bike!

The direction a bicycle has traveled can be determined by examining its tracks and thinking about tangent lines, geometric constraints and the bike's steering mechanism

By George Hart and Simons Science News


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bike diagram

Mathematical Puzzle: Can you determine the direction a bicycle went when you come upon its tracks? Image: Simons Foundation Mathematical Impressions


From Simons Science News (find original story here).


A nice mathematical puzzle, with a solution anyone can understand, is to determine the direction a bicycle went when you come upon its tracks. The answer involves thinking about tangent lines, geometric constraints and the bicycle’s steering mechanism. Once you learn the trick, you’ll find yourself using it every time you happen upon a bike trail.


The question goes back to the early days of the bicycle age and a 1903 Sherlock Holmes story by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle called “The Adventure of the Priory School.” Surprisingly, Holmes did not analyze the tangents as we do in the video and his reasoning in the story was incorrect. A geometric approach to the question was included in a 1990s “Geometry and the Imagination” course that John Conway, Peter Doyle, Jane Gilman and William Thurston taught at Princeton and the Geometry Center at the University of Minnesota. Holmes’ error is discussed in the book “Which Way Did the Bicycle Go?” by Joseph D. E. Konhauser, Dan Velleman and Stan Wagon.


Related:


More videos from the Mathematical Impressions series.


Reprinted with permission from Simons Science News, an editorially-independent division of SimonsFoundation.org whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and the computational, physical and life sciences.


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