Mental - Floss - January - February 2015
Mental - Floss - January - February 2015
Mental - Floss - January - February 2015
NEW
t o S
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e
h
e
e Wo r l d P.2 9
S P E C I A L E D I T I O N P H OTO I S S U E
FEATURES
IN EVERY ISSUE
S C AT T E R B R A I N G O M E N TA L
11 TRAINS: Life lessons from hobos, history’s 59 Geeking out over fan art
PHOTOGRAPHY BY SCOTT DICKERSON
most well-traveled dog, how to plan a trip on 60 3 essential Elvis talking points
the Trans-Siberian railroad, and more
61 The art of everyday design
62 How the T. Rex got its name
RIGHT BRAIN/LEFT BRAIN 63 Observe National Bald Eagle Watch Month
23 How a Swiss photographer changed the 63 A look back at the Internet Stone Age
way people see America 64 The mental_floss quiz On the cover:
photography by
Hassan Hajjaj
CONTENTS
THE INDEX
ILLUSTRATION BY JOEY PARLETT (LOST AND FOUND). ILLUSTRATION BY MATT FERGUSON (ANGRY STAY PUFT). ISTOCK (EAMES CHAIR, CHEESE PUFFS).
hunting with 61
THE AMERICANS BY ROBERT FRANK PUBLISHED BY STEIDL/WWW.STEIDL.DE (“ELEVATOR–MIAMI BEACH”). PHOTOGRAPHY BY JAY GOULD (ROCKET)
Surfing
observing bald 54
cold waves 44
Ethics, according to hobos 18
the web 63
Cool things to
do with your old F
train T
Freud 62
p. 20 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 64
G Trains
Gauguin, misplaced 16 brief manifestos against 15
Ginsberg, Allen 26 floating 13 Photography’s
Guthrie, Woody 18 answer to On
snakes on 16 the Road
H Trans-Siberian 15 p. 23
Hieroglyphics, modern 18 with sails 12
J U
Jem 60
Uncle Phil 64
Great art K
inspired by … V
other great art Kahn, Genghis 57
p. 59 VCR, things to pop in your 63
Kerouac, Jack 23
Verrazano-Narrows 61
Kite enthusiasts, organizations for 38
Vikings 64
Meet the faces
behind the L
furniture. W
Leave It to Beaver 27
p. 61 Limburger 62
“Western Tornado” 13
Wigwam 61
MLandfill Harmonic
Mongolia 54
Y
Monopoly 20 Yacht
Model rocket
Franklin Roosevelt’s 60 aficionados
O Elvis’s 60 reach for
the stars.
Oedipal complex, simplified 62 Yeti crab 61
p. 50
EDITOR’S NOTE
@jessanne
When he saw
photographs taken
inside Egypt’s pyramids,
VO LU M E 14, I S S U E 1 | J A N UA RY/ F E B RUA RY 2 0 15 23-year-old MOHAMMAD
REZA DOMIRI GANJI
FOUNDERS was inspired to
Mangesh Hattikudur Will Pearson give architectural
WHAT’S THKE photography a shot. Never mind the fact
BEST BOO EDITORIAL that he has no formal photography
OR MOVIE EDITOR IN CHIEF Jessanne Collins
training and learned his technique
FEATURING… MANAGING EDITOR Joe Mejía THE JOURNEY OF
A TRAIN EDITOR AT LARGE Maccabee Montandon NATTY GANN from watching Internet videos: The
VOYAGE? CONTRIBUTING EDITOR Jen Doll kaledescopic images he captures in
ASSOCIATE EDITOR Lucas Reilly mosques and other buildings in his
EDITORIAL FELLOW Caitlin Schneider native Iran (“Infinity in a Room,” page 30)
COPY EDITOR Meg Ryan FACT CHECKER Riki Markowitz PROOFREADER Regan Hofmann are absolutely stunning.
CONTRIBUTORS Stacy Conradt, A.J. Jacobs, Foster Kamer, Glynnis MacNicol,
Arika Okrent, Jeff Rubin, Matt Soniak, Jamie Spatola, Julie Winterbottom
GREEN EGGS Chapel Hill, N.C.–based
ART
AND HAM CREATIVE DIRECTOR Winslow Taft
German visual artist
ASSOCIATE ART DIRECTOR Lucy Quintanilla GESCHE WÜRFEL has a
PRODUCTION ASSISTANT Aliya Best PHOTO RESEARCHER Kendra Rennick degree in urban planning
and a particular interest
MENTALFLOSS.COM MYSTERY TRAIN (NANCY in how class, gender,
EDITOR IN CHIEF Jason English DREW & HARDY BOYS
MANAGING EDITOR Erin McCarthy SUPER MYSTERIES #8) and race interact with
DEPUTY EDITOR Nick Greene space, which gave rise to her series on the
STAFF EDITOR Abbey Stone basement sanctuaries of New York City
STAFF WRITERS Hannah Keyser, Rebecca O’Connell building superintendents (“Beauty in a
RESEARCH EDITORS Kara Kovalchik, Sandy Wood Basement,” page 52). Her work has been
PROOFREADER Betsy Johns featured in The New York Times, Slate,
PUBLISHING
and WIRED.
EVP, SALES Tim Koorbusch
VP, SALES Molly Bechert
VP, MARKETING Tara Mitchell Photographer HASSAN
DIRECTOR, DIGITAL SALES John Guehl HAJJAJ, a native of
ACCOUNT DIRECTORS Molly Hollister, Lisa Isoldi Morocco who now lives
ACCOUNT MANAGER Albert Neudeck in London, also designs
NORTHWEST ACCOUNT DIRECTORS William Murray, Steve Thompson furniture, clothes, and
MIDWEST DIRECTOR Erin Sesto record covers. If you look
MURDER ON THE SOUTHWEST DIRECTOR Matt Estrada
closely at his images of
MIJOO KIM (WÜRFEL). JENNY FREMONT (HAJJAJ). COURTESY PHOTOGRAPHERS (GANJI, CORTELLINI, SPRECHER)
ORIENT EXPRESS SOUTHEAST DIRECTOR Ed Kobylus
Moroccan women on motorbikes (“Beyond
DETROIT DIRECTOR Don Schulz
the Cloth,” page 42), you’ll notice that the
INTEGRATING MARKETING DIRECTOR Yasir Salem frames he’s designed around them contain
ART DIRECTOR, MARKETING Joshua Moore niches in which he has stowed graphic
INTEGRATED MARKETING MANAGER Adam Clement everyday objects like cans of soda and
PROMOTIONS MANAGER Jennifer Castellano
tomatoes. Among many others, his work
MARKETING COORDINATOR Jessica Estremera
appears in the Brooklyn Museum, Los
AD OPERATIONS DIRECTOR Garrett Markley
SENIOR ACCOUNT MANAGER Yuliya Spektorsky BEFORE SUNRISE Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, and
EVP, CONSUMER MARKETING Sara O’Connor the Nasher Museum at Duke University.
PLANES, TRAINS & CONSUMER MARKETING DIRECTOR Leslie Guarnieri
AUTOMOBILES
DIGITAL & PRINT PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Sean Fenlon
PRODUCTION MANAGER Kyle Christine Darnell When you see the
HR/OPERATIONS MANAGER Joy Hart sets ANDI CORTELLINI
and URSULA SPRECHER
MENTAL FLOSS, INC. and designed for their
PRESIDENT Will Pearson
series of portraits of
CHIEF CREATIVE OFFICER Mangesh Hattikudur
European hobbyists
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Ethan Trex
CONTROLLER Arielle Starkman
(“Strength in Numbers,”
SENIOR ACCOUNTANT Darcine Denny page 38) you won’t be surprised to learn
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CLERK Domenique Humphreys that their book Hobby Buddies took seven
GROUP CFO Kevin Morgan years to complete! Although the photos
CHIEF INQUISITOR Ian Leggett are staged, their enthusiast subjects
CHAIRMAN John M. Lagana are very real—and very active in their
respective clubs.
COMPANY FOUNDER Felix Dennis
mental_floss (USPS#021-941) (ISSN#1543-4702) is published 9 times per year, January/February, March/April, May, June, July/August, September, October, November, and December,
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pages are tradenames or trademarks of their respective companies. Printed in the USA. Mental Floss is a registered trademark owned by Felix Dennis.
H
never did anything. I couldn’t even get him
Missing From
to write his name on papers, let alone read. NYC Subway?
One day I had a new issue on my desk and
he asked if he could read it. I used this as 8 Obscure Twists
leverage: For the rest of the semester he’d on Monopoly
do his work just to read one. So, thank you
for encouraging younger ones to read ... oh, Time-lapse
and for making my job easier! —Ana Duran of Colorful
Alaskan
Nights
To celebrate our photo issue, we’re featuring YOU (featuring us). Having an The Sad Story of Elvis
extremely Presley’s Senior Prom
difficult time
focusing on
this essay due 11 Ways Kids
to a mental_ Used to
floss magazine Soup Up
calling me Their Bikes
from across
the library.
@nelson_stone27 Where does
space begin?
ISTOCK (ROCKET, HORN, ALASKA). LIZ HANELLIN (“THE GAME SHOW HUSTLER”). COURTESY READERS (YOU FEATURING US)
If mental_floss
were a daily, It’s much closer than you
I’d be reading think. For the full answer,
Clockwise from top #allday go to mentalfloss.com/
left: Rebecca Palter
and her enviable #everyday space.
collection; Deidra @Braden_Keith
Jackson of the
Ole Miss School
of Journalism;
Meghan McGuckin
Every trip to the
has Big Questions airport needs
in Istanbul; Sgt. two things:
Jerilyn McConchie
in Afghanistan patience, and
mental_floss
@RossBo2
$24.99 New
BUY 1 TEE, GET THE
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YOUR ORDER WITH CODE
New TWOTEES
In Italy, beauty is everywhere. The food and wine. Sea and countryside. Sing-songy
language. And a people so warm and passionate about life.
After years of living and traveling throughout Italy, and experiencing firsthand so
much of this beauty, I decided to create Ciao Andiamo. To help you discover and fall in
love with all the authentic beauty and wonder that is Italy. ~Jonathan, Founder
TRAINS
also prevented cars from coupling to each other, so the Schienenzeppelin wasn’t actually much of a train.
2) SAIL TROLLEYS
Sail-powered trolleys were used
in the UK from the 1850s onward,
especially in coastal areas that had
a reliable gust. One in Cliffe, Eng-
land, used abandoned cement mine
tracks to transport people wanting,
as the book The Cement Railways of
Kent describes, to “dig worms and
inspect the sea defences.”
THE BOTTOM LINE: A FEW Y EARS BEFORE JOHN WILK ES BOOTH ASSASSINATED ABR AHA M LINCOLN,
BOOTH’S BROTHER, EDWIN, SAVED THE PRESIDEN T’S ELDEST SON, ROBERT, FROM FALLING OFF A TR AIN.
OWNEY THE DOG WAS NOT YOUR USUAL MUTT: Instead of chas- the wealthiest sightseers.” The mutt also had more jewelry than
ing mailmen, the pup preferred chasing mailbags. In 1888, the the richest train passengers—everywhere he went, postal workers
mixed-breed terrier became a beloved fixture at the post office in and companies attached special tags and medals to his collar. The
Albany, New York. There, he developed a reputation for following dog traveled so much that he amassed about 1,000 tags, and a
mailbags wherever they went. In fact, he’d often hop onto mail special doggie-jacket had to be made to hold all his swag.
wagons and follow the letters as they were stuffed onto trains. On August 19, 1895, Owney set his sights beyond America. A
Workers for the U.S. Railway Mail Service got so used to the pup publicity stunt inspired by Jules Verne’s Around the World in 80
that they eventually let him ride the rails. Days was organized to have Owney ride rails around the globe.
By the 1890s, Owney was crisscrossing the nation—and he was Boarding a steamship out of Tacoma, Washington, he traveled
ILLUSTRATION BY BEN KIRCHNER
racking up serious miles. The dog independently traveled every to Japan, China, Singapore, the Suez Canal, New York, and back
major rail line and passed through nearly all 48 lower states. to Tacoma. He met foreign dignitaries and even caused some
A symbol of good luck, Owney became the post office’s official European newspapers to lament that their continent wasn’t on
mascot and, as one postmaster put it, the “pet of 100,000 postal the itinerary. The trip made Owney the most famous dog in the
employees.” Each night, the pup would cuddle up with bags of world. In 1897, after nine years of travel and thousands of miles
mail, protecting them from strangers. Newspapers caught wind to his name, the professional publicity hound officially retired in
and obsessed over the nomadic pup, with the Highland Recorder Toledo. Today you can see him at the Smithsonian.
remarking that “[Owney has] traveled more miles than some of —HANNAH KEYSER
STR A NDED AT A RUR AL TR AIN STATION, WILLIA M H. TAFT WIRED A DESPER ATE TELEGR A M: “L ARGE PART Y
TONS OF CARGO
30% OF RUSSIA’S EXPORTS
&
move along its route each year.
In the 1880s, a baboon worked
$1,062 FIRST
CLASS
TICKET
as a signalman for nine years
on a South African railroad. He
$329*
*(Although you’ll share the car’s two
THIRD
CLASS
TICKET was paid in brandy and never
made a mistake.
toilets with 54 people.)
WAITING.” WHEN THE TR AIN ARRIVED, HE BOARDED A ND SAID “GO AHEAD. I AM THE L ARGE PART Y.”
LOST FOUND
Rare Buddhist scripture A 300-year-old
A Tibetan scholar was so excited to Stradivarius violin
see London mayor Boris Johnson Each worth millions, about 600
riding the Tube that he acciden- Stradivarius violins still exist. In
tally left his laptop on the train. The 2012, a musician lent his rare
computer contained the lama’s instrument to a friend so he could
life’s work: two unfinished books play it at a birthday party. But the
and nearly 1,000 pages of rare 17th- real surprise came when his bud-
century Buddhist scripture. dy accidentally left it on a train in
Bern, Switzerland. Thankfully, a
FOUND good Samaritan turned it in.
A boa constrictor named
Penelope LOST
In 2011, a woman wearing a Early Ernest Hemingway
three-foot-long snake around her In 1922, Hemingway’s wife Hadley
neck realized the pet serpent had was planning to visit her husband
slithered away. Since nobody could in Switzerland. So she packed up
find it, authorities confidently de- all of his papers in a suitcase and
clared that “the trains are absolutely boarded a train in Paris. But while
snake-free.” Turns out, they were the locomotive sat at a station,
wrong. Penelope hid out in an adja- Hadley decided to grab a bottle of
cent car for an entire month. Evian water and left the suitcase
on the train. When she returned,
LOST the suitcase was gone. It had
One of only two copies of contained all of Hemingway’s
The Boy Castaways early fiction. Then unpublished
J.M. Barrie, the creator of the char- as a novelist, Papa griped to Ezra
acter Peter Pan, published just two Pound, “All that remains of my
copies of his story The Boy Cast- complete works are three pencil
aways. One is protected inside Yale’s drafts of a bum poem…”
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript
Library. The other is still missing FOUND
after being lost on a train in 1901. Pete Seeger’s banjo
The folksinger knew a thing about
FOUND trains. Living as a vagabond in
Paintings by Gauguin the 1930s, Seeger rode freighters
In the 1970s, a Gauguin still life across the country. But in 2000,
was found on an Italian train—but the singer reportedly forgot his
nobody knew it was by Gauguin. famed banjo while riding from
An art-loving auto worker bought New York City to Poughkeepsie.
the painting at an auction and it The instrument was faithfully
hung on his wall for more than 40 taken to a lost and found, where
years, its owner oblivious of its it was reunited with Seeger.
origin. Police later determined that
the painting, worth $48 million, had LOST
been stolen from a London home. T.E. Lawrence’s original Seven
Pillars of Wisdom
LOST Following the Arab Revolt of 1916
A violin concerto to 1918, “Lawrence of Arabia”
British composer Havergal Brian decided to put his experiences
spent a whole year writing his first abroad on paper. But after nearly
violin concerto. He finished the one year of work, he accidentally
draft in June 1934, stuffed it in a misplaced the suitcase containing
briefcase, and promptly lost the bag the 250,000-word draft at Read-
containing it at London’s Victoria ing Station. Lawrence started all
Station. Starting from scratch, Brian over again, calling the second
took another whole year to finish version we read today “hope-
his Violin Concerto No. 2. lessly bad.”
IN THE 1970S, THE U.S. DEPARTMEN T OF TR A NSPORTATION WAS CON VINCED THAT PODCARS WERE THE
From Hobos
At the 1889 National Hobo Conven-
WOODY GUTHRIE (1912–1967)
A folk legend, Guthrie wrote over
1,000 songs, singing often in
hobo jungles and migrant camps.
tion in St. Louis, a strict ethical code
was established for all hobos to fol-
low. Here are some tips we all could
all use, no matter what you carry in JACK LONDON
The author started hopping trains
your rucksack. at 16 and spent years riding cross-
country looking for work. He later
immortalized the experiences in
his 1907 memoir, The Road.
1 “Always seek out jobs nobody wants.”
HOW TO READ
HOBOGLYPHS
Most Depression-era vagabonds
were illiterate, but that didn’t stop
them from developing a widely used
secret code. These markings—called
hoboglyphs—were strategically
drawn (with chalk or a pocketknife)
on surfaces like picket fences and
utility poles, alerting fellow hobos Man with a gun Barking
Kind woman here. These people
to what a given area had in store. lives here dog here
Tell pitiful story. are rich!
By design, hoboglyphs looked like
meaningless graffiti, but the system
worked rather well. —MARK MANCINI
FROM 1915 TO 1929, HOBOS HAD A BONA FIDE NEWSPAPER, “HOBO NEWS.” IT HAD A CIRCUL ATION OF ABOUT
2. “DOWNTOWN TRAIN”
Although Tom Waits wrote the song, Rod Stewart
made it a mainstream hit in 1989. It makes sense:
Rod Stewart is a model train nut. While touring,
he often works on train set pieces to relax. His
Beverly Hills home boasts a sprawling 23 x 124-
foot landscape of post-war Manhattan and Chi-
cago, which he built himself. It almost takes up
the whole third floor!
4. RHAPSODY IN BLUE
George Gershwin was en route to Boston when
he dreamed up Rhapsody. “It was on the train,
with its steely rhythms, its rattle-ty bang, that is
often so stimulating to a composer—I frequently
hear music in the very heart of noise … and there
I suddenly heard, and even saw on paper—the
complete construction of the Rhapsody, from
beginning to end,” he told biographer Isaac
Goldberg.
5. “CRAZY TRAIN”
Black Sabbath’s two model railroad junkies
cooked up this song in 1980. Guitarist Randy
Rhoads and bassist Bob Daisley—both model
train collectors—were working on riffs when
Randy’s pedals made a “weird kind of chugging
sound” in the amp. “Randy, that sounds like a
A kind lady train,” Bob said, recalling the event for the web-
Doctor here, Owners will give Free telephone
lives here. site Songfacts. “But it sounds nuts—a crazy train.”
won’t charge to get rid of you
1. Of course, back then, “making love”
meant flirting.
20,000, WAS ADVERTISEMEN T FREE, A ND WAS DISTRIBUTED BY A ND FOR HOMELESS MIGR A N T WORK ERS.
SECOND LIFE
Three creative uses for
retired railroad relics
CHURCHES
In Russia, abandoned train cars are salvaged for
salvation. Orthodox Christians in small villages
are known to resurrect old cars from the scrap
heap, adding onion domes and building new fa-
cades to convert them into community churches.
But not all of the cars are grounded. Similar to the
dining cars on luxury trains, some Russian train
lines carry church cars. One, the Saint Luka train,
travels to settlements in far-off Siberia tugging a
mobile Orthodox church with free medical care.
Monopoly Money
The family board game that foiled the greatest train
heist in history
On August 8, 1963, a Royal Mail train puffed toward London carrying £2.6
million in cash. It was the dead of night, and the old tattered bank notes were
destined for a government furnace, where they’d be permanently taken out of ARTIST STUDIOS
While New York City dumps its retired subway
circulation. But 15 crooks hiding in the darkness had different plans. Wielding cars into the Atlantic Ocean for fish-friendly artifi-
crowbars, the thieves held up the train. The criminals worked quickly, tossing cial reefs, some decrepit carriages in the London
120 sacks of dough off the train and onto a getaway truck. When the heist was Tube are being sent in the opposite direction: up.
complete, the men fled with their convoy to a nearby farmhouse and did what In 2007, the organization Village Underground
converted graffiti-smattered Jubilee line trains
any group of bored bandits would do to celebrate the largest cash heist in his- into artist studios, stacking the retired cars on
tory: They played Monopoly. an abandoned warehouse. The offices can hold
Days later, the criminals had to abandon the farmhouse to evade police, up to 50 people, and the company plans to build
more in Lisbon, Berlin, and other cities.
who’d picked up their trail. When Scotland Yard got to the hideout, they found
20 empty mailbags, sleeping bags, and bank note wrappers—and a Monopoly
board covered in fingerprints. (Apparently, they’d been playing with real
money.) Those prints, along with more found on a ketchup bottle, led to some
arrests the very next day. Eventually, all 15 robbers landed in the slammer,
learning that “get out of jail free” cards are decidedly hard to find in the real
world. —CAITLIN SCHNEIDER
THE WORLD’S L ARGEST MODEL TR AIN USES 8 MILES OF TR ACK A ND ENOUGH WOOD TO BUILD 42 HOUSES.
SAVE
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off the cov
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101 MASTERPIECES #
45 THE AMERICANS
THE AMERICANS BY ROBERT FRANK, PUBLISHED BY STEIDL/WWW.STEIDL.DE
energy. “Never before have I experienced so much in one week as was famous for photographing the Great Depression.
here,” he wrote to his parents. “I feel as if I’m in a film.” Frank was taking pictures through it all, absorbing
Life felt even more like a movie when he landed a gig as a staff everything he could from his new community. From
photographer at Harper’s Bazaar. At 22, Frank had already realized the abstract painters, he learned to embrace ambiguity
his dream—he was being paid to take photos. But taking pictures and chance, to “follow your intuition—no matter how
of purses and girdles for the magazine’s fashion section quickly crazy or far-off or how laughed at it would be,” he told
grew tedious. Frank became frustrated by how much control the William S. Johnson. The Beats encouraged him to treat
editors had over his photos, and disillusionment set in. After just photography as a jazz solo: spontaneous, raw, present.
one month, he quit. Most important, the photographers taught him to hate
From there, he wandered. For six years, Frank traveled the mainstream photography.
world, stopping in Peru, Panama, Paris, London, and Wales. He got In the 1950s, photographs were crisp, sharp, and
married. And he continued to hone his style, clean. A photo was perfect only if it followed the
taking pictures of whatever he liked. Most of traditional rules of composition. Pictures were routinely
his photos were light, gentle, and romantic, PHOTOGRAPHY upbeat, especially in popular magazines trumpeting the
and he dreamed of selling them to big American way of life. That aesthetic reached its apogee
magazines like LIFE, Jonathan Day writes
WAS LIKE A in 1955, when the Museum of Modern Art’s photography
in his book Robert Frank’s The Americans: JAZZ SOLO: curator, Edward Steichen, introduced an exhibit called
The Art of Documentary Photography. But “The Family of Man.” A display of 503 photographs from
his work was consistently rejected. He’d SPONTANEOUS, more than 60 countries, it depicted people as being the
almost given up on making a career of his RAW, PRESENT. same everywhere. Dubbed the “greatest photographic
art when, in 1953, he returned to America to exhibition of all time,” it was wildly genteel, treating war
give it one final shot. “This is the last time I and poverty as minor blemishes on the human race’s
go back to New York and try to reach the top report card.
through my personal work,” he said. But Frank, who had been in Europe during World
This time, the scene he found in New York was different. War II and had visited the poorest parts of South
Frank had a Swiss friend, a designer named Herbert Matter, who America, knew better. “I was aware that I was living
hobnobbed with abstract painters like Hans Hofmann, Franz Kline, in a different world—that the world wasn’t as good as
and Jackson Pollock. Frank was enamored with their world. His that—that it was a myth that the sky was blue and that
Greenwich Village apartment, overlooking Willem de Kooning’s all photographs were beautiful,” Frank told Johnson
yard, was in a bohemian wonderland. He met Beat poets like Allen in 1989.
Ginsberg and Gregory Corso, and he soon met Walker Evans, who So he bought a used car and proved it.
POWERED BY A TANK OF GAS and a grant from the Gibson, Mississippi, a group of teenagers harassed Frank, calling
Guggenheim Foundation, Frank puttered west in June him a communist. In McGehee, Arkansas, state police pulled his
1955. His network of famous friends had helped him car over on U.S. 65. When the officers peered into the car window,
win the grant, and money in his wallet meant he could seeing suitcases and cameras—and hearing Frank’s foreign
do whatever he wanted. With nowhere in particular to accent—they suspected he was a spy. They
go, he drove. He slept in cheap hotels and started each A SHERIFF demanded that Frank hand over his film,
morning, wherever he was, by taking his Leica 35mm briefly jailing him when he refused. Before
and photographing the closest bar or Woolworths. With PULLED OUT his release, Frank had to sign his name
Allen Ginsberg’s mantra about spontaneity in mind— under the heading criminal. It made him
“first thought, best thought”—he snapped two or three
A STOPWATCH furious, and his empathy for others who
Orleans, a segregated trolley rambled by; a plaintive black man in everybody was used to. Idyllic as the critics believed
the back stared sadly, deeply, into Frank’s lens. things were, America was wrestling with dark issues—
Frank was catching a direct contrast to the smiling humanity McCarthyism, segregation, poverty, and the Cold War
of Steichen’s “The Family of Man” exhibit. But it didn’t anger chief among them. America was as lonely as it was big,
him—he was moved. “I had a feeling of compassion for the and Frank had captured glimpses of all of it.
people on the street,” he told Dennis Wheeler in 1977. He saw If that was a tough message to swallow, critics must
beauty in s highlighting the truth, even if it was mundane, sad, have choked on Frank’s style. The Americans contained
or small. There was something distinctly American, celebratory everything good photography was supposed to avoid.
even, about giving the voiceless a voice. To Americans, these Arthur Goldsmith of Popular Photography lambasted it
sights were too ordinary to notice. But Frank’s foreign eyes saw as “flawed by meaningless blur, grain, muddy exposure,
how they affected and controlled everyday life. Automobiles, drunken horizons, and general sloppiness.” But Frank,
especially. To Frank, few things defined American life more. inspired by the abstract painters he admired, had been
They were places to sleep, eat, enjoy a movie, joy ride, travel, ambiguous by design, Day writes. A murky nation
wait, make love, and, for some, die. Most of all, cars were a way deserved murky photos. The composition was as
Americans could isolate themselves. Frank included. unstable as the American Dream. More practically, the
After nine months, he had driven over 10,000 miles across more blur, shadows, and strange angles framed details that
than 30 states. In all, he had taken 27,000 photographs. When he traditional techniques led viewers to ignore. In one
returned to New York in 1956, he whittled those images down to photo, a starlet walks down a red carpet, her face entirely
1,000 large prints. He tacked and stapled the photos around his blurred. Our eye drifts to the haggard fans standing
apartment like wallpaper. After four months, he chose just 83 of behind the velvet ropes, one chewing nervously on her
them for his book, The Americans. fingernails. Frank’s technique spotlighted details we
tend to overlook. And in this case, he saw the people in
ACCORDING TO JACK KEROUAC, Frank had “sucked a sad poem the margins as the stars.
right out of America onto film.” But the critics were not so kind. Despite the critical uproar, the book was largely
When the volume was first published in Paris, it hardly made ignored. Only 1,100 copies were sold, earning Frank
a ripple, but the U.S. edition, published in 1959 with Kerouac’s $817.12. Soon, he deserted photography and took
introduction, riled them up. The bottom line, critics said, was that up filmmaking (most famously documenting the
The Americans was anti-American. Minor White described it as Rolling Stones’ doped-up exploits in 1972). But it
a “Utterly misleading! A degradation of a nation!” Bruce Downes wouldn’t be long before The Americans appeared
scorned Frank as a “joyless man who hates the country of his hauntingly prescient. By the late 1960s, politicians
adoption” and a “liar, perversely basking in … misery.” John Durniak and activists were addressing everything Frank had
called it a “Wart-covered picture of America. If this is America we captured: discrimination, mind-numbing work
should burn it down and start again.” environments, inequality. Street photographers, from
The Americans, after all, was the opposite of what readers saw in Garry Winogrand to Lee Friedlander, were drawing
the Saturday Evening Post or an episode of Leave It to Beaver. There inspiration from its crushing honesty. In an interview
were no white picket fences, no pies with NPR in 2009, legendary street photographer
cooling on windowsills. Not a single Joel Meyerowitz said, “It was the vision that emanated
Left: “Elevator—Miami Beach.” page would inspire a heartwarming from the book that led not only me but my whole
Frank was fascinated with Norman Rockwell painting. It was generation of photographers out into the American
America’s obssession with cars, as
seen in the photo below, “Public totally different from the simple, landscape.” Today, The Americans is regularly hailed
Park—Ann Arbor, Michigan.” wholesome, patriotic photo essays as the most influential photography book of the 20th
century. Exhibitions across the globe
have featured Frank’s photos, and, just
recently, a 1961 print of that segregated
New Orleans trolley sold for $663,750.
More significantly, the book is no
longer perceived as anti-American.
Having grown up on a continent
soaked in wartime propaganda,
Frank loved the freedom the United
States afforded him as an artist—
nowhere else did he have as much
liberty to experiment so wildly and
to photograph so truthfully. “Opinion
often consists of a kind of criticism,” he
said in 1958. “But criticism can come
out of love.” Uncovering the ugly side
of America was Frank’s way of forcing
the land he adored to face its problems
and improve. Photographing ordinary
life was a way to level the playing field,
to celebrate not just the little things,
but the everyman. What could be
more American?
37 NEW
WAYS TO
SEE THE
WORLD
INSIDE …
I N F I N I T E A R C H I T E C T U R E I N I R A N P. 30
M O M E N T U M B U I L D S I N O A K L A N D P. 34
T A I W A N ’ S P O W E R F U L S T R E E T A R T P. 48
F I N D I N G B E A U T Y I N T H E B A S E M E N T P. 52
M O N G O L I A L O O K S T O T H E F U T U R E P. 54
HOW TO SEE …
INFINITY IN
A ROOM
PHOTOGRAPHY BY MOHAMMAD REZA DOMIRI GANJI
37 NEW
WAYS TO I N F I N I T Y I N A R O O M | PHOTOGRAPHY BY MOHAMMAD REZA DOMIRI GANJI
SEE THE
WORLD
Previous spread: Photographing inside many of Iran’s mosques re- designs get as close as artists have ever come to mak-
A panoramic shot of quires a permit, so many spaces remain unseen except ing truly infinite patterns. A 2007 study found that
Nasir al-Mulk Mosque by those who worship. But that’s not the only rule in Islamic artisans knew as far back as the 13th century
(the Pink Mosque)
in Shiraz, Iran, in full these spaces. Since the 11th century, Islamic architects how to make interlocking patterns that don’t repeat.
bloom. Above: Fisheye have avoided depicting animals, people, and other for- Called quasicrystals, these patterns are so mathemati-
lenses capture a merly pagan icons inside holy places. Instead, they’ve cally complex that it took scientists until the 1970s—
dazzling kaleidoscope
at the Vakil Bath. taken pains to decorate the walls with complex pat- more than 700 years!—to learn how to make them.
Right: the Shah terns, called arabesque, which resemble vines, leaves, Not all these medieval examples are perfect, but
Mosque in and flowers. that’s because some artists intentionally made mis-
Isfahan, Iran.
The result of all these rules? Some of the most vi- takes along the way—a humble way of saying that
sually stunning and mathematically impressive archi- only God can make something infinitely perfect. The
tecture on the planet. The interconnecting geometric aesthetic became so popular it even drifted to secular
patterns represent the infinity of Allah and everything circles, like the Vakil Bath above, proving that your ge-
stretching beyond the material world. In fact, the ometry teacher was right: There is beauty in numbers.
HOW TO SEE …
The
Future in
Bikes
PHOTOGRAPHY BY
MATTHEW REAMER
HOW TO SEE …
Serenity in
the Scam
PHOTOGRAPHY BY FLORIAN MÜLLER
Along the Sri Lankan shore, you’ll find men perched atop wooden stilts, angling for
herring. The scene is beautiful and meditative—evocative of simpler times. But the
art isn’t actually ancient at all. Stilt fishing began about 70 years ago, shortly after
World War II, when cliffside fishing holes became overcrowded. To gain an advan-
tage, crafty sportsmen started casting their lines from unusual locations—mostly
footed on wrecked boats and old airplanes—until someone improved upon the
practice by building a dock out of stilts and twine. Men continued to fish like this for
two generations—a skill that takes remarkable balance and agility. But they mostly
stopped when the massive tsunami in 2004 severely depleted the fish population.
Today, most of the stilt figures aren’t actually fishermen, but actors using the set-
ting as bait, making their daily wages off tourists. The ruse, of course, benefits all
parties: the Sri Lankans make a living from tourism, while visitors happily pay to see
tradition played out—even if only for show. Meanwhile, the fish swim worry-free.
37 NEW
WAYS TO
SEE THE
WORLD
HOW TO SEE …
Strength in
Numbers
PHOTOGRAPHY BY URSULA SPRECHER
AND ANDI CORTELLINI
1 2
4 5
6
1) Children’s Chess Club You know who was also a chess club member?
Thomas Jefferson. He often played against James Madison. 2) Orchid Club
Incidentally, the word orchid derives from the Greek orchis, or “testicle.” In the 1300s,
English speakers called it a “ballockwort” for, well, similar reasons. 3) Poodle Club
Not pictured: Babe Ruth, whose 1921 mascot was a French miniature poodle. 4)
Pigeon Fancier’s Club Honorary members: Queen Elizabeth II and Mike Tyson—both
huge fans of pigeon racing. 5) Hat Club Established in 1750, America’s first secret
collegiate society was called the Flat Hat Club. 6) Santa Claus Group These aren’t
new! The first jolly group, the Benevolent Order of Santa Claus, was organized in 1937.
CONDITIONS
ARE PERFECT
PHOTOGRAPHY BY SCOTT DICKERSON
37 NEW
WAYS TO C O N D I T I O N S A R E P E R F E C T | PHOTOGRAPHY BY SCOTT DICKERSON
SEE THE
WORLD
Surfers will tell you that surfing is a state of mind. Take So why brave the wilderness and the harsh condi-
the mantra one step further and there’s nothing inher- tions? The beauty, for one thing. The landscape is salve
ently Californian about the sport: Waves are waves. for the soul. The rare waves created by Alaska’s bore
Even in Alaska. Even in 30-degree water. Even among tide are part of the draw, too. Bore tides occur when an
the snow-capped mountains a helicopter ride away outgoing channel pushes up against an incoming tidal
from civilization and its space heaters. surge. The waves that result can crest up to 20 feet tall
Compared to the air, the water in January along the and can carry a surfer for miles. But, as Dickerson puts
Alaskan coastline is downright balmy at 28°F to 38°F, it, “It’s not all about riding a wave; sometimes the jour-
but the surfers Scott Dickerson photographed think ney there and back is just as exciting.”
conditions don’t get much better. High-tech wetsuits The photos he’s captured are a reminder to indulge
are somewhat cozy, so hypothermia isn’t the main in the now: We can pine for sun-kissed coastlines a
worry. As Dickerson told GrindTV, “Help is not usually world away, or we can grab the opportunity before
nearby, and the weather turns violent quickly.” us—as inhospitable as it may seem—and embrace it.
HOW TO SEE …
Art in Utility
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ISIDRO RAMIREZ
You could look at the ubiquitous utility box gone so far as to designate “graffiti zones,”
as a necessary evil. If you’re an urbanite, where street artists can work with no threat
there’s a good chance you might overlook it of fines. They get to create freely and the
all together. But on a trip to Taiwan, Span- whole city benefits. The city also has plans
ish photographer Isidro Ramirez discov- to decorate traffic signal control boxes with
ered there’s another way to see these bulky, policy announcements and designs, adding
dull monoliths: as a blank canvas. In Tai- a whole new level of utility. For now, the
pei, many are hand-painted with unique delicate flowers, palm tree beaches, and
scenes from nature. Although the beauti- green hilltops amid the concrete remind
fying of the utility boxes was spearheaded us that just because something exists out
by the private companies who own them, of necessity doesn’t mean it can’t also add
Taipei’s department of cultural affairs has some color to the world.
HOW TO SEE …
Space
Is Always
in Style
PHOTOGRAPHY BY
JAY GOULD
On clear summer
nights, dreamers of
all ages still gather
to launch model
rockets. You’ll find
them in backyards
and parks and open
fields far from the city
lights. And though the
hobby feels like a relic
of a long-gone era, the
zeal for model rock-
etry endures. There’s
the pride in craft,
the wonder of the
physics, the belief that
tinkering can propel a
rocket higher, and, of
course, the unadulter-
ated joy in watching
a ship launch into the
night. Model rockets
first became popular
in the 1950s, after
Sputnik I. Since then
more than 500 million
hobby rockets have
blasted upward—a
reminder to engineers
and amateur enthusi-
asts alike that the
sky isn’t the limit.
37 NEW
WAYS TO
SEE THE
WORLD
Beauty in a a building clean and its utilities humming. For many live-in supers, though,
the basement is a place of their own: a room of responsibility, sure, but also
for respite. Gesche Würfel has documented some of the city’s most color-
Basement
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GESCHE WÜRFEL
ful. Here, supers have decorated with personal flair, collecting mementos
and assembling materials abandoned or gifted to them by tenants who have
moved on. The sweet and surprising details hint at a pride in workplace that
makes even a space as unlikely as a boiler room feel like home.
A CHANGING
WORLD
PHOTOGRAPHY BY ASHER SVIDENSKY
37 NEW
WAYS TO A C H A N G I N G WO R L D | PHOTOGRAPHY BY ASHER SVIDENSKY
SEE THE
WORLD
matter?
The debate that
will decide
America’s future
—DREW BARRYMORE
p.4
MAIN STORIES
HOW RYAN
WOULD CUT
SPENDING
TALKING POINTS
A computer
as smart as
humans?
PEOPLE
Why Jack
has given up
on sex
“ I’m a huge fan of THE WEEK. ”
p.5 p.21 p.10
—JANEANE GAROFALO
TTERS WWW.THEWEEK.COM
THE BEST OF THE U.S. AND INTERNATIONAL MEDIA
An ‘app’ for
democracy
Are social media TALKING POINTS
HEALTH & SCIENCE
The invader
PEOPLE
How Paltrow “ Encyclopedic yet pithy. THE WEEK
IS FACEBOOK became
undermining REALLY WORTH who’s eating a health nut
dictatorial regimes? the Everglades
p.6 p.20
RN
HER
)DF
Morning in
5H
YR
OXWL
RQ America?
A surge in hiring
finally sparks
economic optimism
p.4
GO
MENTAL
Cult
Favorites
Thomas Olivri is
the ultimate fan of
fandom. As a kid,
he adored comic
books and cult
films. As a grown-
up copywriter at a
French advertising
firm, he still does—
but he loves the
culture that grows
around these niche
interests even
more. In 2012
Olivri started Geek
-Art.net, a place
where obsessives
ILLUSTRATION BY FABIAN CIRAOLO
ILLUSTRATION BY MATT FERGUSON (ANGRY STAY PUFT). PHOTOGRAPHY BY DANIEL POLEVOY (DOUGLAS MCARTHUR). ALAMY (PRESLEY)
“They had problems from
the start … while other “And the winner of the
robots zipped out, their Marine Advanced Technology
machine sat motionless on Education ROV Explorer-class
the floor.” championship is … ”
H OT
DATE
January 8
ELVIS'S 80TH
BIRTHDAY
3 Essential Elvis
Talking Points
Elvis was a natural
blond who started
dying his hair in high
school.
He bought Franklin
Roosevelt’s
presidential yacht.
He never performed
Geek-Art (Chronicle outside North
Books) by Thomas
Olivri is available now.
America.
Design Is One: Lella & Massimo Eames: The Architect and the Objectified. (2009)
Vignelli (2012) Painter (2011) Director: Gary Hustwit
Directors: Roberto Guerra and Kathy Brew Directors: Jason Cohn and Bill Jersey Available on iTunes and Google Play
Available on iTunes Available on iTunes and Google Play
Why do we love certain objects and
Take an iconic logo—Ford, American Charles Eames and his wife, Ray, remain completely oblivious to others?
Airlines, New York City’s subway defined the mid-century American Hustwit poses this question and
map—and there’s a decent chance the living room with their plywood and more to top industrial designers—the
Vignellis created it. “If you can’t find it, fiberglass furniture. Despite a fraught people behind everyday objects like
design it,” was the couple’s motto, and relationship, they also made games, toothbrushes and laptops—as he
that’s what they spent 50 years doing films, and even splints for wounded explores the art of things. As Henry
after they moved to New York from servicemen. Their affordable products Ford once said, “Every object tells a
Italy in 1965. This film chronicles their helped put good design in the hands of story”; this film is your chance to hear
incredible partnership. the middle class. many of them.
BRAIN CANDY
The Bridge: The Quirky Sleeps Creatures of the The Woman Who The Public Domain
Building of the by Bruce and Susan Armstrong Deep, 2nd edition Borrowed Memories Review
Verrazano-Narrows (Armstrong Travel Ventures, $19) by Erich Hoyt (Firefly Books, $40) by Tove Jansson edited by Adam Green
Bridge (NYRB Classics, $17) (PDR Press, $40)
by Gay Talese If you’re a cross-country The acorn worm, which
(Bloomsbury USA, $35) traveler who’s tired of feeds on seafloor Set against the waves Like the eponymous
roadside motels, this sediment and may have and winds of the Baltic site, this compendium
Taleses’s poetically guide is for you. Learn given rise to vertebrates, Sea, Jansson’s weird of esoteric documents
reported ode to the where to spend the night and the yeti crab (as and funny stories whose copyrights have
men who built what in a wigwam (Holbrook, hairy and scary as it about solitary people lapsed is a brainy and
was the country’s Arizona) or a treehouse sounds) are two of the grappling with lost hilarious way to waste
largest suspension (Eureka Springs, Arkansas). thousands of species or stolen memories— time. Start by checking
bridge is the rare If you’ve got sea legs, there discovered since the or, in one comical out the catalog of
coffee table book are also plenty of places 2001 edition of this case, an interloping criminal prosecution of
where the text is as where you can be rocked visual journey to the squirrel—are smart and animals (snails! pigs!)
potent as the images. to sleep on a boat. bottom of the sea. life-affirming. the 1480s.
PSYCHOLOGISTS
Described by
CHEESE
PSYCHOLOGIST CHEESE
Freud Limburger
ALAMY (FREUD, JUNG, SKINNER, BALD EAGLE). ISTOCK (LIMBURGER, CHEEZ WHIZ, CHEESE PUFF, AMERICAN CHEESE, TYRANNOSAURUS REX)
formation, which stretches across North and South Dakota and Montana,
reveal how dinosaurs like the Triceratops and the T. Rex, as well as the
Stangerochampsa (like an American alligator), Didelphodon (an extinct
mammal), and Habrosaurus (an ancient salamander) once roamed the
Jung Cheez Whiz swampy American West—and what happened when they died.
VISIT “The Last American Dinosaurs: Discovering a Lost World,” Smithsonian
The only thing more ubiquitous
than the archetypes of humanity's National Museum of Natural History, Washington, D.C. (November 25, 2014–2018)
shared consciousness is liquid
cheese food. FOSSIL FINDS
Recent paleontological discoveries include a plant-eating sauropod estimated
to weigh 85 tons, stretching 130 feet long and 65 feet tall; a vegetarian
dinosaur from Patagonia named Dreadnoughtus, which weighed 65 tons and
spanned 85 feet, and new skeletal remains of a 100-million-year-old carnivore
called Spinosaurus that could swim and walk. What we can learn from what
the dinosaurs left behind doesn’t stop there.
READ
Ik^ablmhkrl;kbeebZgm?nmnk^%[rFb\aZ^eC'GhoZ\^d%The New York Times
BY LUCAS ADAMS 6) The White House’s 11) Which movie was Michael
Press Briefing Room was Caine talking about when he
NAME: __________________________________________________ AGE: _______ originally what? said, “I have never seen it, but
A A swimming pool by all accounts it is terrible.
SUPERPOWER: ___________________________________________________ B A stable However, I have seen the
C A buffet house that it built, and it is
D A waiting room terrific.”
A Jaws: The Revenge
7) Which company was the B Bewitched
Start first to build a car with air C Cars 2
Here conditioning? D Gnomeo and Juliet
A Ford
B Tucker 12) Which Beatle has a flower
C Packard named after him?
D Volkswagen A John
B Paul
8) Who did Time call “the C Ringo
Black Leonardo” in 1941? D George
A George Washington
Carver 13) Which state was the
B Booker T. Washington first in the modern era with
C Madam C.J. Walker a government-sanctioned
D W.E.B. Du Bois lottery?
A New Hampshire
9) Which musician released B Colorado
A MC Hammer
Mutant Ninja Turtles? 14) What did Civil War officer
B Johnny Cash Egbert Ludovicius Viele have
A B C D C Willie Nelson built into his coffin?
Shredder Krang Leonardo Rocksteady D Michael Jackson A A buzzer
B Airholes
10) Australian Bruce C A fan
2) UCLA students wrote an 4) Bluetooth technology is Holland died during an D A can phone
algorithm to identify what? named after what? eating contest with what
A Jaywalkers A A medieval dentist kind of food? 15) Brazil has 77 what?
B Street gangs B A secret WWII radar A Chili pie A Piranha species
C Christmas shoplifters operation B Puffer fish sushi B Uncontacted tribes
D Potential skateboarders C A Viking king C Chicken drumsticks C Forbidden islands
D A breed of wolf D Vegemite D Shrines to Pele
3) Which one of the
following was not a name
5
of one of anthropologist St. Roch is
Jane Goodall’s chimps?
A Passion
the patron
B Franz saint of all but
C Fifi what?
D Freud
A B C D
Dogs Istanbul Bachelors Locksmiths
FE
LIM
70%
R
2. Mindfulness—The Power of Awareness
3. Expectations—Relinquishing Preconceptions
29
4. Preparation—Taking Moral Inventory
off
OR
5. Position—Where to Be for Meditation
RY
ER
D UA 6. Breathing—Finding a Focus for Attention
BY JA N
7. Problems—Stepping-Stones to Mindfulness
8. Body—Attending to Our Physical Natures
9. Mind—Working with Thoughts
10. Walking—Mindfulness While Moving
11. Consuming—Watching What You Eat
12. Driving—Staying Awake at the Wheel
13. Insight—Clearing the Mind
14. Wisdom—Seeing the World as It Is
15. Compassion—Expressing Fundamental Kindness
16. Imperfection—Embracing Our Flaws
17. Wishing—May All Beings Be Well and Happy
18. Generosity—The Joy of Giving
19. Speech—Training the Tongue
20. Anger—Cooling the Fires of Irritation
21. Pain—Embracing Physical Discomfort
22. Grief—Learning to Accept Loss
23. Finitude—Living in the Face of Death
24. Life—Putting It All in Perspective
EARMUFFS WERE
INVENTED BY A
15-YEAR-OLD.
ISTOCK