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  1. In this very funny talk, Norwegian television producer Thomas Hellum shares how he and his team began to broadcast long, boring events, often live -- and found a rapt audience. Shows include a 7-hour train journey, an 18-hour fishing expedition and a 5.5-day ferry voyage along the coast of Norway. The results are both beautiful and fascinating.

    • This Wouldn’T Be An Ordinary TEDx event.
    • The Men Gathered Were Affable But shy.
    • I’ll Call Him Donnie.
    • Week After Week, The Men Hammered Away at Draft After Draft.
    • A Miracle happened.
    • He Was The Last to Share His Journey.

    We would be helping inmates — many in for life without parole — tell their stories. No emails, computers, or phones were allowed. We’d have only one face-to-face visit each week, every Tuesday behind the razor wire, for the first two months. We’d add all-day Sunday sessions for the second two months. There would be very little one-on-one coaching t...

    Their average age appeared to be in the late-40s, and most were African-American. All wore blue, with “prisoner” printed in big yellow letters on their pants. We started this and every meeting with a circle led by our team leader and TEDx organizer, who had become very familiar with prison life through her continuing volunteer work. In the circle, ...

    His shoulder-length hair framed a youthful face that looked like a razor had never touched it. He hugged a guitar like a teddy bear, gazing at the floor and avoiding eye contact as he very quietly plucked the strings. He looked like he had wandered into the wrong room by accident. Donnie surprised me by returning for our second meeting with his hai...

    Some began very guarded and opened up gradually through encouragement and applause (but never hugs, which were off-limits). As coaches, we pushed them to go deeper: “And how did you feel?” “Show me, don’t tell me.” Often, revising a sentence involved revisiting pain. The talks began to take shape. Meaningful, passionate, and in some cases shocking,...

    To a man, each speaker — from the Arsenio Hall-smooth emcee and the Voice of God narrator to every individual storyteller — delivered as strongly as Daniel Day-Lewis telling the story of his mother. I couldn’t have been more proud. They were ready. March 11 was the big day. The art team had decorated the activity room with a magnificent banner and ...

    Donnie told the audience about the pain of his home life, which had been consumed by hate, and about overcoming that now through love, which can germinate from the smallest of ideas, no matter how bad of a hand you are dealt in life. This 20-year-old kid delivered an inspiring talk with the wisdom of a seasoned man. My eyes welled up. Despite havin...

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    • A powerful way to unleash your natural creativity by Tim Harford | TED Talk. “To do two things at once is to do neither.” Harford begins with this quote, but quickly contradicts it by asserting that people should actually strive to do “two things at once—or three or even four.”
    • An astronaut’s story of curiosity, perspective and change by Leland Melvin | TED Talk. When he was five years old, Melvin watched Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s historic moon landing on a black-and-white TV set with his family.
    • How kids can help design cities by Mara Mintzer | TED Talk. Mintzer, an urban planner, presents the problem at the beginning of her talk: “Our society routinely makes decisions without consulting a quarter of the population.”
    • Do schools kill creativity? by Sir Ken Robinson | TED Talk. Sir Ken Robinson explains that kids are inherently creative and unafraid to be wrong. However, as we grow into adults, we learn to fear being wrong, because both corporate and education systems stigmatize mistakes.
    • 199 min
    • Do schools kill creativity? 19 minutes 11 seconds. Sir Ken Robinson makes an entertaining and profoundly moving case for creating an education system that nurtures (rather than undermines) creativity.
    • Underwater astonishments. 5 minutes 8 seconds. David Gallo shows jaw-dropping footage of amazing sea creatures, including a color-shifting cuttlefish, a perfectly camouflaged octopus, and a Times Square's worth of neon light displays from fish who live in the blackest depths of the ocean.
    • If I should have a daughter ... 18 minutes 11 seconds. "If I should have a daughter, instead of Mom, she's gonna call me Point B ... " began spoken word poet Sarah Kay, in a talk that inspired two standing ovations at TED2011.
    • The best stats you've ever seen. 19 minutes 36 seconds. You've never seen data presented like this. With the drama and urgency of a sportscaster, statistics guru Hans Rosling debunks myths about the so-called "developing world."
  3. Apr 19, 2020 · The power of vulnerability by Brené Brown. With over 47 million views, Brené Brown’s Ted Talk on the power of vulnerability is one of the most watched Ted Talks of all time, and for good ...

  4. Dec 20, 2023 · Interacts with product demo. #10 Looks aren’t everything. Believe me, I’m a model. Most people believe that models have it all. And at first glance, Cameron Russell appears to– she’s beautiful, tall and an underwear model. In this brave Talk, Russell reveals the darker side of the modeling industry.

  5. In this fierce talk and performance, she explains why poetry is inherently political, pays homage to her honorary ancestors and stresses the value of speaking out despite your fears. "Poetry has never been the language of barriers," Gorman says. "It's always been the language of bridges." 24:40. Uğur Şahin and Özlem Türeci.

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