Good Reads: From the biggest dino yet, to African oral histories, to the father of glam
This week's roundup of Good Reads includes a look at new dinosaur fossils in Argentina, how robots are taking American jobs, a professor's search for oral history, how one beautician's movie magic redefined modern beauty, and the futuristic dreams of some heavy-hitting entrepreneurs.
This week's roundup of Good Reads includes a look at new dinosaur fossils in Argentina, how robots are taking American jobs, a professor's search for oral history, how one beautician's movie magic redefined modern beauty, and the futuristic dreams of some heavy-hitting entrepreneurs.
The new 鈥淕odzilla鈥 movie just got upstaged by a real-life discovery in Argentina: the remains of what may be the biggest dinosaur yet. Based on its bones, the dinosaur (yet to be named) of the so-called Titanosaur species weighed 77 tons, as much as 14 African elephants. Estimates suggest the long-necked plant-eater measured some 65 feet tall and 130 feet long.
The discovery in the Patagonia region is remarkable, according to a story in The Independent, 鈥渂ecause of the large number of bones and the high degree of preservation of their features.鈥 Is this find the biggest dinosaur ever? Right now, 鈥淚t鈥檚 like a fish story [by an angler], it really is,鈥 says Dr. Jack Horner, a Montana State University paleontologist who was the inspiration for the character in the 鈥淛urassic Park鈥 films played by Sam Neill. 鈥淭he science will come after, when they start studying the thing.鈥
Jobs return to the US, for robots
Good news: Fewer jobs will be going overseas chasing lower-wage workers. But the bad news is that robots, not humans, will be doing those jobs. Need examples? Foxconn, the controversial maker of iPhones that employs low-wage workers in China, will be opening a new $40 million plant in Pennsylvania that uses advanced robotics, says Colin Lewis in a blog post at Harvard Business Review. Tesla Motors, a US-based builder of state-of-the-art electric cars, won鈥檛 head overseas because its advanced robotic manufacturing techniques are cheaper.聽
One outsourcing company tells its clients it can cut their costs as much as 70 percent if they stay in the United States and use the latest automation software. 鈥淔or managers, the trend toward botsourcing will require a shift in thinking,鈥 Mr. Lewis writes. 鈥淩ather than moving operations to wherever work costs the least, consider which pieces can be automated, and how best to combine human and robotic expertise.鈥
The man with 10,000 tales
When Harold Scheub went to Africa in 1967 he didn鈥檛 bring a rifle to hunt big game. Instead, he spent years trekking 6,000 miles up and down the continent armed only with a bulky tape recorder to bag something else: nearly 10,000 oral histories. Today the octogenarian professor is still translating (from languages like Xhosa, Swahili, and Yoruba) and transcribing his interviews, writes Tim McDonnell for the online magazine Narrative.ly.聽
The stories he found in Africa are colorful and often complex, but they also share traits with other cultures. 鈥淪tories in all societies deal with change, transformation that takes place in human lives,鈥 Professor Scheub tells Mr. McDonnell. 鈥淏ecause these are scary parts of our lives. We鈥檙e moving from childhood to adulthood, from being unmarried to being married, from the pre-midlife crisis to the post-midlife crisis, all kinds of things. And so stories place a lot of emphasis on transformation....鈥
Hollywood鈥檚 beauty factor聽
He lightened Rudolph Valentino鈥檚 skin tone, transforming him from an early movie villain to one of its first matinee idols. When movie studios switched from harsh carbon arc lights to softer incandescents, he seized the opportunity and created the dazzling blond cinema siren, even flecking gold dust in Marlene Dietrich鈥檚 coif. He invented the eyebrow pencil and lip gloss, as well as camera-ready sweat, tears, and blood 鈥 even a pie topping that stuck to the face better than real cream. He devised a lip liner that allowed actresses such as Joan Crawford to change the shape of their lips.聽
Max Factor was a Jewish immigrant from Poland (his name shrank from Faktorowicz at Ellis Island) who changed not only the movie industry but also America鈥檚 concept of beauty, concludes Sasha Archibald in the online magazine Cabinet. Because of Factor, 鈥渕akeup鈥 (a word coined by Factor) became part of common culture, no longer confined to use by actors or women of questionable character. 鈥淲ith its playful ring,鈥 writes the author, Factor鈥檚 鈥淧an-Cake Make-Up offered a bit of make-believe to everyday life.鈥
Billionaires with sci-fi imaginations
Science fiction appeals to today鈥檚 billionaires who yearn to do big things. Early on Jeff Bezos wanted to use 鈥淢akeitSo.com鈥 as Amazon鈥檚 URL in homage to Captain Picard of 鈥淪tar Trek: The Next Generation.鈥 PayPal cofounder Elon Musk envisions a hyperloop high-speed train that travels faster than a plane. Google chief executive officer Larry Page has set his sights on a truly big goal: eliminating illness 鈥 and even death. 鈥淭hese ambitious, mogul-driven projects all mimic one of science fiction鈥檚 raisons d鈥櫭猼re: the deeply satisfying literary exercise of world-building...,鈥 writes Gene Seymour in a fascinating essay in The Baffler, a printed and digital magazine of art and criticism.
Over the centuries science fiction has had the 鈥渃apacity to clear the mental palette, to squeegee away the mundane distractions of what鈥檚 redundantly termed 鈥榩resent-day reality,鈥 鈥 Mr. Seymour writes. While some see an inherently libertarian viewpoint in science fiction, in which government is the enemy (but what about the noble Federation of 鈥淪tar Trek鈥?), the author is not persuaded. Science fiction鈥檚 鈥渇irst, best promise 鈥 being alive to possibility 鈥 is too vital and too bright to be hammered, bent, or squeezed into anyone鈥檚 ideology. If that makes me a libertarian 鈥 well, I still have a problem with that.鈥