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  • Documentary Talk show

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2006
2006x8
Joshua Prince-Ramus - Designing the Seattle Central Library
Episode overview
Architect Joshua Prince-Ramus takes the audience on dazzling, dizzying virtual tours of three recent projects: the Central Library in Seattle, the Museum Plaza in Louisville and the Charles Wyly Theater in Dallas.
2006x1
Al Gore: Averting the climate crisis
Episode overview
With the same humor and humanity he exuded in "An Inconvenient Truth," Al Gore spells out 15 ways that individuals can address climate change immediately, from buying a hybrid to inventing a new, hotter brand name for global warming.
2006x2
Hans Rosling shows the best stats you've ever seen
Episode overview
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." In Hans .. show full overview
2006x3
Sir Ken Robinson - How schools kill creativity
Episode overview
Sir Ken Robinson makes an entertaining and profoundly moving case for creating an education system that nurtures (rather than undermines) creativity.
2006x4
Majora Carter - Greening the ghetto
Episode overview
In an emotionally charged talk, MacArthur-winning activist Majora Carter details her fight for environmental justice in the South Bronx -- and shows how minority neighborhood suffer most from flawed urban policy. (TED2006)
2006x5
David Pogue - When it comes to tech, simplicity sells
Episode overview
New York Times columnist David Pogue takes aim at technology's worst interface-design offenders, and provides encouraging examples of products that get it right. To funny things up, he bursts into song.
2006x6
Tony Robbins - Why we do what we do, and how we can do it better
Episode overview
Tony Robbins discusses the "invisible forces" that motivate everyone's actions -- and high-fives Al Gore in the front row.
2006x7
Julia Sweeney - Letting Go of God
Episode overview
Julia Sweeney (God Said, "Ha!") performs the first 15 minutes of her 2006 solo show "Letting Go of God." When two young Mormon missionaries knock on her door one day, it touches off a quest to completely rethink her own beliefs.
2006x9
Dan Dennett - A secular, scientific rebuttal to Rick Warren
Episode overview
Philosopher Dan Dennett calls for religion -- all religion -- to be taught in schools, so we can understand its nature as a natural phenomenon. Then he takes on The Purpose-Driven Life, disputing its claim that, to be moral, one must deny evolution.
2006x10
Rick Warren - Living a life of purpose
Episode overview
Pastor Rick Warren, author of The Purpose-Driven Life, reflects on his own crisis of purpose in the wake of his book's wild success. He explains his belief that God's intention is for each of us to use our talents and influence to do good.
2006x11
Larry Brilliant - Help stop the next pandemic
Episode overview
Accepting the 2006 TED Prize, Dr. Larry Brilliant talks about how smallpox was eradicated from the planet, and calls for a new global system that can identify and contain pandemics before they spread.
2006x12
Cameron Sinclair - Open-source architecture to house the world
Episode overview
Accepting his 2006 TED Prize, Cameron Sinclair demonstrates how passionate designers and architects can respond to world housing crises. He unveils his TED Prize wish for a network to improve global living standards through collaborative design.
2006x13
Jehane Noujaim - Unite the world on Pangea Day
Episode overview
In this hopeful talk, Jehane Noujaim unveils her 2006 TED Prize wish: to bring the world together for one day a year through the power of film.
2006x14
Nicholas Negroponte - The vision behind One Laptop Per Child
Episode overview
Nicholas Negroponte, founder of the MIT Media Laboratory, describes how the One Laptop Per Child project will build and distribute the "$100 laptop."
2006x15
Jeff Han - Unveiling the genius of multi-touch interface design
Episode overview
Jeff Han shows off a cheap, scalable multi-touch and pressure-sensitive computer screen interface that may spell the end of point-and-click.
2006x16
Sirena Huang - Dazzling set by 11-year-old violinist
Episode overview
Violinist Sirena Huang gives a technically brilliant and emotionally nuanced performance. In a charming interlude, the 11-year-old praises the timeless design of her instrument.
2006x17
Jennifer Lin - Magical improv from 14-year-old pianist
Episode overview
Pianist and composer Jennifer Lin gives a magical performance, talks about the process of creativity and improvises a moving solo piece based on a random sequence of notes.
2006x18
Amy Smith - Simple designs that could save millions of lives
Episode overview
Fumes from indoor cooking fires kill more than 2 million children a year in the developing world. MIT engineer Amy Smith details an exciting but simple solution: a tool for turning farm waste into clean-burning charcoal.
2006x19
Ross Lovegrove - The power and beauty of organic design
Episode overview
Designer Ross Lovegrove expounds his philosophy of "fat-free" design and offers insight into several of his extraordinary products, including the Ty Nant water bottle and the Go chair.
2006x20
Richard Baraniuk - Goodbye, textbooks; hello, open-source learning
Episode overview
Rice University professor Richard Baraniuk explains the vision behind Connexions, his open-source, online education system. It cuts out the textbook, allowing teachers to share and modify course materials freely, anywhere in the world.
2006x21
Jimmy Wales - How a ragtag band created Wikipedia
Episode overview
Jimmy Wales recalls how he assembled "a ragtag band of volunteers," gave them tools for collaborating and created Wikipedia, the self-organizing, self-correcting, never-finished online encyclopedia.
2006x22
Mena Trott - How blogs are building a friendlier world
Episode overview
The founding mother of the blog revolution, Movable Type's Mena Trott, talks about the early days of blogging, when she realized that giving regular people the power to share our lives online is the key to building a friendlier, more connected world.
2006x23
Ze Frank - What's so funny about the Web?
Episode overview
Performer and web toymaker Ze Frank delivers a hilarious nerdcore standup routine, then tells us what he's seriously passionate about: helping people create and interact using simple, addictive web tools.
2006x24
Eve Ensler - Finding happiness in body and soul
Episode overview
Eve Ensler, creator of The Vagina Monologues, shares how a discussion about menopause with her friends led to talking about all sorts of sexual acts onstage, waging a global campaign to end violence toward women and finding her own happiness.
2006x25
Helen Fisher - The science of love, and the future of women
Episode overview
Anthropologist Helen Fisher takes on a tricky topic -- love -- and explains its evolution, its biochemical foundations and its social importance. She closes with a warning about the potential disaster inherent in antidepressant abuse.
2006x26
Richard Dawkins - The universe is queerer than we can suppose
Episode overview
Biologist Richard Dawkins makes a case for "thinking the improbable" by looking at how the human frame of reference limits our understanding of the universe.
2006x27
David Deutsch - What is our place in the cosmos?
Episode overview
Legendary scientist David Deutsch puts theoretical physics on the back burner to discuss a more urgent matter: the survival of our species. The first step toward solving global warming, he says, is to admit that we have a problem.
2006x28
Malcolm Gladwell - What we can learn from spaghetti sauce
Episode overview
Legendary scientist David Deutsch puts theoretical physics on the back burner to discuss a more urgent matter: the survival of our species. The first step toward solving global warming, he says, is to admit that we have a problem.
2006x29
Steven Levitt - Why do crack dealers still live with their moms?
Episode overview
Freakonomics author Steven Levitt presents new data on the finances of drug dealing. Contrary to popular myth, he says, being a street-corner crack dealer isn't lucrative: It pays below minimum wage. And your boss can kill you.
2006x30
Barry Schwartz - The paradox of choice
Episode overview
Psychologist Barry Schwartz takes aim at a central tenet of western societies: freedom of choice. In Schwartz's estimation, choice has made us not freer but more paralyzed, not happier but more dissatisfied.
2006x31
Dan Gilbert - Why are we happy? Why aren't we happy?
Episode overview
Dan Gilbert, author of Stumbling on Happiness, challenges the idea that we'll be miserable if we don't get what we want. Our "psychological immune system" lets us feel truly happy even when things don't go as planned.
2006x32
Eva Vertes - My dream about the future of medicine
Episode overview
Eva Vertes -- only 19 when she gave this talk -- discusses her journey toward studying medicine and her drive to understand the roots of cancer and Alzheimer's.
2006x33
Aubrey de Grey - Why we age and how we can avoid it
Episode overview
Cambridge researcher Aubrey de Grey argues that aging is merely a disease -- and a curable one at that. Humans age in seven basic ways, he says, all of which can be averted.
2006x34
Jacqueline Novogratz - Investing in Africa's own solutions
Episode overview
Jacqueline Novogratz applauds the world's heightened interest in Africa and poverty, but argues persuasively for a new approach.
2006x35
Iqbal Quadir - The power of the mobile phone to end poverty
Episode overview
Iqbal Quadir tells how his experiences as a kid in poor Bangladesh, and later as a banker in New York, led him to start a mobile phone operator connecting 80 million rural Bangladeshi -- and to become a champion of bottom-up development.
2006x36
Ashraf Ghani - How to fix broken states
Episode overview
In this soaring demonstration, deaf percussionist Evelyn Glennie illustrates how listening to music involves much more than simply letting sound waves hit your eardrums.
2006x37
Sasa Vucinic - Why a free press is the best investment
Episode overview
A free press -- papers, magazines, radio, TV, blogs -- is the backbone of any true democracy (and a vital watchdog on business). Sasa Vucinic, a journalist from Belgrade, talks about his new fund, which supports media by selling "free press bonds."
2006x38
Burt Rutan - Entrepreneurs are the future of space flight
Episode overview
In this passionate talk, legendary spacecraft designer Burt Rutan lambasts the US government-funded space program for stagnating and asks entrepreneurs to pick up where NASA has left off.
2006x39
Ben Saunders - Three things to know before you ski to the North Pole
Episode overview
Arctic explorer Ben Saunders recounts his harrowing solo ski trek to the North Pole, complete with engaging anecdotes, gorgeous photos and never-before-seen video.
2006x40
Robert Fischell - Finding new cures for migraine, depression, malpractice
Episode overview
Accepting his 2005 TED Prize, inventor Robert Fischell makes three wishes: redesigning a portable device that treats migraines, finding new cures for clinical depression and reforming the medical malpractice system.
2006x41
Bono - Join my call to action on Africa
Episode overview
Musician and activist Bono accepts the 2005 TED Prize with a riveting talk, arguing that aid to Africa isn't just another celebrity cause; it's a global emergency.
2006x42
Edward Burtynsky - Share the story of Earth's manufactured landscapes
Episode overview
Accepting his 2005 TED Prize, photographer Edward Burtynsky makes a wish: that his images -- stunning landscapes that document humanity's impact on the world -- help persuade millions to join a global conversation on sustainability.
2006x43
Peter Donnelly - How juries are fooled by statistics
Episode overview
Oxford mathematician Peter Donnelly reveals the common mistakes humans make in interpreting statistics -- and the devastating impact these errors can have on the outcome of criminal trials.
2006x44
Michael Shermer - Why people believe strange things
Episode overview
Why do people see the Virgin Mary on a cheese sandwich or hear demonic lyrics in "Stairway to Heaven"? Using video and music, skeptic Michael Shermer shows how we convince ourselves to believe -- and overlook the facts.
2006x45
Kevin Kelly - How does technology evolve? Like we did
Episode overview
Tech enthusiast Kevin Kelly asks "What does technology want?" and discovers that its movement toward ubiquity and complexity is much like the evolution of life.
2006x46
Ray Kurzweil - How technology's accelerating power will transform us
Episode overview
Inventor, entrepreneur and visionary Ray Kurzweil explains in abundant, grounded detail why, by the 2020s, we will have reverse-engineered the human brain and nanobots will be operating your consciousness.
2006x47
Peter Gabriel - Fighting injustice with a videocamera
Episode overview
Musician and activist Peter Gabriel shares his very personal motivation for standing up for human rights with the watchdog group WITNESS -- and tells stories of citizen journalists in action.
2006x48
Rives - If I controlled the Internet (a poem)
Episode overview
How many poets could cram eBay, Friendster and Monster.com into 3-minute poem worthy of a standing ovation? Enjoy Rives' unique talent.
2006x49
Richard St. John - Secrets of success in 8 words, 3 minutes
Episode overview
Why do people succeed? Is it because they're smart? Or are they just lucky? Neither. Analyst Richard St. John condenses years of interviews into an unmissable 3-minute slideshow on the real secrets of success.
2006x50
Dr. Dean Ornish - The world now eats (and dies) like Americans
Episode overview
Stop wringing your hands over AIDS, cancer and the avian flu. Cardiovascular disease kills more people than everything else combined -- and it's mostly preventable. Dr. Dean Ornish explains how changing our eating habits will save lives.