Pages
Friday, May 29, 2026
What's 'activator' or 'magical liquid'?
Monday, May 25, 2026
Metal in Movies is WRONG
I know that you'll be shocked to hear this, but sometimes things in movies aren't real.
Go ahead, take a moment to let that sink in, to let the shock wear off.
In today's video Nate From the Internet addresses times when metals aren't dealt with appropriately in movies - primarily because of the density of heavy metals like gold and because of the black body radiation that should be given off when metals are hot.
I had noticed a couple of these myself - the 'molten' gold in The Hobbit and the weight of gold in The Italian Job 'remake' - but neither took me took much out of the movie. In the case of The Hobbit, it's because I wasn't enjoying the movie anyway. In the case of The Italian Job, it's because the cast is just so darn charismatic that I enjoyed the movie anyway.
Monday, May 18, 2026
Every Jewellery Metal Ranked (Some Are Terrible)
I don't know Mason Mignanelli from Adam, but he clearly knows more about working with metals for jewelry than I do.
As an aside, sources seem to say that jewelry (as my browser wants me to spell the word) and jewellery (as Mason spells it in his video title) are both correct, but that the shorter spelling is more prevalent in the US (where I am) and the longer is more prevalent in the UK (where I assume Mason is).
As a warning, the video does have a couple of spicy words at 1:30 (s*** - spoken), 1:40 (s*** - spoken), 5:55 (s*** - spoken), 6:30 (s*** - spoken), and 7:20 (kicka** - shown on screen).
tl;dr - no one metal is perfect. They all involve tradeoffs or workability/hardness, cost, and appearance.
Monday, May 11, 2026
Perfect Aircrete, Kitchen Ingredients.
I've said it before that I'm not much of a DIY-er, so I'm not likely to make my own cement blocks to build anything, but I like the idea of trying this as a project with my students to balance strength/weight/cost in a building material.
The short version of the above video is that a version of aircrete can be made with xanthan gum, rubbing alcohol, water, dish soap, and cement with some vigorous mixing (a kitchen blender, a drill with a drywall mud attachment, or a smallish cement mixer).
Monday, May 4, 2026
The pastry and marble counter myth
I demonstrate something like this in my classroom using Flinn's ice melting blocks and a knock-off MiracleThaw from a second-hand store.
As one of the comments for the above video notes, "Thermodynamics is often very counter-intuitive."
See, it's funny because Adam's talking about counter materials in the kitchen.
I'll wait while you laugh.
Remember, vinegar leg on the right.


