Sunday, March 15, 2015

This Week's Best Videos: Flying, Lobs, And Michael Bolton

Japanese Snowboarder Yuki Kadono Pulls Off Back To Back 1620s, 'Office Space,' With The Real Michael Bolton, Introducing Nautilus Prime, Gak Stands Up To A Red Hot Ball Of Nickel, Little Kid Schools Roger Federer With Flawless Lob, Mike Cohen Recorded His Parents Nagging Him 30 Years Ago, Now A Friend Animated It
The Daily Digg
Sunday, March 15, 2015
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FOUR AND A HALF ROTATIONS EACH
Japanese Snowboarder Yuki Kadono Pulls Off Back To Back 1620s
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Unsurprisingly, after making history with these two 1620s, Kadono took home the gold in U.S. Open slopestyle.
'IT'S JUST A COINCIDENCE'
'Office Space,' With The Real Michael Bolton
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Today we saw an aging pop singer do unspeakable things to a printer, and it was glorious.
MAGAZINES WE DIGG SPONSORED
Introducing Nautilus Prime
nautil.us
Nautilus Prime is a new way to take in our favorite science magazine. Read provocative science stories on your phone while riding the subway, or on your iPad on a flight. Get all the content and design of the print magazine, digitally. The only magazine ever to win two National Magazine Awards in its first year is yours for just over a buck a month.
WE DOUBT FLOAM WOULD FARE SO WELL
Gak Stands Up To A Red Hot Ball Of Nickel
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In all seriousness, what on earth is Gak made out of? It seems functionally unmeltable.
SHOULN'T HAVE GONE EASY ON HIM
Little Kid Schools Roger Federer With Flawless Lob
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Federer accepted a challenge from the stands during an exhibition match. What he didn't realize was that the kid challenging him was the time-traveling child version of Pete Sampras.
SOUNDS FAMILIAR
Mike Cohen Recorded His Parents Nagging Him 30 Years Ago, Now A Friend Animated It
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A young man's love of rock and roll told through secretly recorded conversations with his parents.
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WINDOW TO A BLEAK FUTURE
Image: Internet cafes have existed in Japan for over a decade, but in the mid-2000s, customers began using these spaces as living quarters. Internet cafe refugees are mostly temporary employees; their salary too low to rent their own apartments.
Internet cafes have existed in Japan for over a decade, but in the mid-2000s, customers began using these spaces as living quarters. Internet cafe refugees are mostly temporary employees; their salary too low to rent their own apartments. Credit: MediaStorm
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