Brow Beat: Slate's Culture Blog



  • Today's Google Trends: "Shark!"


    If we are what we Google, then Google Hot Trends—an hourly rundown of search terms "that experience sudden surges in popularity"—is the Web's best cultural barometer. Here's a sampling of today's top searches. (Rankings on Hot Trends list current as of 9 a.m.):

    No. 5: "Trina Thompson." A 27-year-old Monroe College graduate is suing her alma mater for $70,000 because she can't find a job. "They have not tried hard enough to help me," Thompson said of the Bronx-based college, where she majored in Information Technology. If Thompson wins her lawsuit, New York colleges could be inundated by unemployed comp lit majors looking to recoup their tuition: The city's jobless rate jumped to 9.5 percent last month.

    No. 42: "Sudan Trouser woman." Meanwhile, in Sudan, women are being arrested for wearing pants. Lubna Hussein is a former U.N. worker who was picked up at a restaurant in a raid by morality police and sentenced to 40 lashes for wearing "indecent" trousers. Hussein is appealing the verdict in order to draw attention to women's rights issues in Sudan.

    No. 94: "1916 shark attacks." It's shark week. The Discovery Channel's annual aquatic bloodbath kicked off yesterday with a two-hour dramatization of a spate of 1916 shark attacks on the Jersey Shore that eventually inspired Peter Benchley's Jaws. Mike Hale in the New York Times explains the misleading-but-enthralling "shell game" Discovery plays each year with Shark Week: "exploiting the queasy fear that sharks inspire while noting in passing how rarely they attack."

    Or join the discussion
    on the Fray
  • Today's Google Trends: Flying Pets


    If we are what we Google, then Google Hot Trends—an hourly rundown of search terms "that experience sudden surges in popularity"—is the Web's best cultural barometer. Here's a sampling of today's top searches. (Rankings on Hot Trends list current as of 9 a.m.)

    Basking shark. Image courtesy of Wikipedia.No. 16: "Basking sharks." A 26-foot, 5,000-pound basking shark washed ashore yesterday on a Long Island beach, and Googlers want to learn more before their next ocean dip. Luckily the basking shark is harmless and eats mostly plankton.  Still, according to a 1894 New York Times article, the first person to describe the shark "tried to prove that this was the species of fish which swallowed Jonah ... Jonah could have lodged quite comfortably in a shark's stomach, and it would have been easier to enter that organ than to squeeze his way down the small throat of a whale."

    No. 53: "how long is the new harry potter movie?" One hundred fifty-three minutes, according to IMDB. This puts the Half-Blood Prince at just over the series average of 150.3 minutes per Harry Potter film. Those with small children and/or child-size bladders will be glad to hear that the proprietor of the invaluable Runpee.com (a database that tells you the best times in a movie to take a leak) is watching the film right now, according to his Twitter status.

    No. 97: "pet airways." In-flight treats are the newest luxury available to America's already pampered pets. Pet Airways is a new pets-only airline, where dogs and cats fly coach instead of whimpering in the cargo hold. Yesterday marked Pet Airways' inaugural flight when a modified turboprop plane took off from Baltimore's BWI Marshall with about 40 cats and dogs bound for Chicago. Tickets cost $150 to $299 one-way, depending on the route, and a trip from New York to L.A. takes about 24 hours. "It's a niche market, no doubt.  But the pet community ... they get it," said co-founder Alysa Binder. 

    Basking shark image courtesy Wikipedia.

    Or join the discussion
    on the Fray
0 Comments
<September 2010>
SMTWTFS
2930311234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293012
3456789
Print This ArticlePRINT Discuss in the FrayDISCUSS

Syndication