Skip to main content
Advertisment
Home

Main navigation

  • Life Sciences
  • Physical Sciences
  • Environment
  • Social Sciences
  • Education
  • Policy
  • Medicine
  • Brain & Behavior
  • Technology
  • Free Thought
  1. pharyngula
  2. They autotuned Morgan Freeman!

They autotuned Morgan Freeman!

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • reddit
  • linkedin
  • email
  • print
Profile picture for user pharyngula
By pharyngula on September 6, 2011.

(Also on FtB)

Tags
Entertainment
  • Log in to post comments

More like this

Botanical Wednesday: Halloween leftovers
(Also on FtB)
Mary's Monday Metazoan: What else would you expect? It's Halloween!
(Also on FtB)
Friday Cephalopod: Poised to star in the next Hollywood SFX blockbuster
(Also on FtB)
Botanical Wednesday: Get some pants on!
(Also on FtB)
Advertisment

Donate

ScienceBlogs is where scientists communicate directly with the public. We are part of Science 2.0, a science education nonprofit operating under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Please make a tax-deductible donation if you value independent science communication, collaboration, participation, and open access.

You can also shop using Amazon Smile and though you pay nothing more we get a tiny something.

 

Science 2.0

  • Drones Work For Pesticide Applications
  • Pesticides: Environmental Threat Or Anti-Science Populism?
  • Pathogens, Pests And Perils In Global Food Security
  • Side Effects Update: Lecanemab To Slow Alzheimer's
  • The Ideal Amount Of Sleep You Need Is Cultural Not Fixed For All People

Science Codex

More by this author

Friday Cephalopod: I succumb to peer pressure and will mention Octopolis
September 22, 2017
Wow. Every person on the planet saw one version or another of this "Octopolis" story and had to send it to me. It was the subject of a Friday Cephalopod a year ago, you know. Apparently, this is the second octopus city discovered, which is interesting -- they're exhibiting more complex social…
Friday Cephalopod: we all float down here
September 15, 2017
Pale, drifting quietly, long grasping arms, cold and anoxic…we all float down here. Yes, I'm going to go see It this evening. It won't be half as creepy as the reality of the dark deep, though.
Friday Cephalopod: Reflecting my current mood
September 8, 2017
Stephanie Bush
Friday Cephalopod: Sinking blue
September 1, 2017
I think it's a portrait of my mood right now.
Friday Cephalopod: Undead Squid Penis
August 25, 2017
First, a little background: When squid mate, a male transfers its sperm to a female enclosed in complex structures called spermatophores. These are accumulated in the spermatophoric sac, a storage organ inside the mantle cavity, before ejaculation through the penis. Squid that spawn in shelf waters…

More reads

Chemical Cartography
Everything has a unique chemical signature. Every body, every place. When you smell home you're sensing all the chemical traces that make up the place you grew up. When you smell your mate, you're smelling the unique combination of their body and the microbiome of their skin. The unique smell of a city is something that my Synthetic Aesthetics partner, Sissel Tolaas, has been interested in for…
Unique 'Sideways Tornadoes' Shaped The Landscape Of Mars, New Study Shows (Synopsis)
"This would be like an F8 tornado sweeping across the surface. These are winds on Mars that will never be seen again unless [there is] another impact." -Peter Schultz When you examine craters on the surfaces of worlds across the solar system, you find that there are rays emanating outward, containing a mix of ejecta from the impactor and the surface itself. But there’s a limit to how far those…
Of southern African wing-gland bats, woolly bats, and the ones with tubular nostrils (vesper bats part IV)
Time to continue our trek across the vesper bat cladogram. In the previous article we looked at the bent-winged bats (or miniopterids, or miniopterines): a highly distinctive, morphologically novel group that seem to have diverged from vesper bats proper something like 45 million years ago. Their distinctive nature and long history of isolation relative to other lineages conventionally included…

© 2006-2024 Science 2.0. All rights reserved. Privacy statement. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Science 2.0, a science media nonprofit operating under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Contributions are fully tax-deductible.