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16 Jun 12:47

ISS Music Video

Brian Stephens

I for some reason didn't add the xkcd what if cartoons on reader (what do we call the actual soon to go away google reader if this is new reader is the old reader??) but what was I saying, ah yes, but I basically want to share every one I've read so far. Sharing this one for the last drawing. (And yes I admit I covered Wonderwall once back in the day)

ISS Music Video

Is this the most expensive music video ever?

—Various Youtube commenters

For starters, a big welcome home to Chris Hadfield, who returned to Earth last night after a memorable stint as commander of the International Space Station.

Commander Hadfield’s video performance of Space Oddity was an instant hit, and prompted many commenters to ask whether it should count as the most expensive music video ever made.

At a total lifetime cost in the neighborhood of \$150 billion [1], the International Space Station is one of the world’s most expensive megaprojects. (The exact cost is hard to pin down, since the countries contributing don’t all handle their finances the same way.)

By comparison, the most expensive music videos have production budgets in the range of a few million dollars. If Commander Hadfield’s video gets the ISS’s entire \$150 billion price tag, then it must be tens of thousands of times more expensive than the runner-up, right?

Not so fast.

The ISS is expensive, but there have been music videos set against an even more expensive backdrop.

At a cost of roughly \$400 billion, the US Eisenhower Interstate Highway System is probably the most expensive peacetime public works project in the history of mankind. If we’re including the entire ISS in the cost of Commander Hadfield’s video, any video shot on the American highway system should get the cost of the highway system added to its total.

By that measure, the commander’s video would lose to U2’s Last Night on Earth, which was filmed on a section of I-670 in Missouri,[2] and therefore cost more than the ISS and the Moon landing program combined.

In both cases, the comparison doesn’t really make sense; both the ISS and the US highway system are used for things other than making music videos.[citation needed] Instead, let’s look at some other ways we could calculate the cost of Hadfield’s video.

If you spread out the ISS’s price tag across all the astronaut-hours spent on board, you come up with about \$7.5 million per person per day, or roughly \$90 per second.[3] That sounds like a lot, but at that rate, the five-and-a-half-minute video only runs about \$30,000. Given that the video has probably done more for space industry than millions in public outreach, that’s a good deal.

Hadfield’s son confirmed that Hadfield shot the video himself with no help from other astronauts, so even if we assume he spent several hours setting it up and recording it, we don’t come close to the \$7 million cost of the video Michael and Janet Jackson made for Scream.

And the truth is, this isn’t a very good way to calculate costs either. Presumably, Commander Hadfield isn’t busy commanding things 24/7. He has some free time, and it’s no skin off anyone’s back how he spends it (assuming his hobby isn’t drilling holes in walls). It’s hard to argue that shooting the video cost anyone \$90/second when he was going to be up there floating around anyway.

Alternately, we could look at how much Commander Hadfield was paid to make the video. As a Canadian astronaut, his salary is somewhere between \$145,200 and \$171,000 CAD.[4] Astronaut work hours are a little atypical, but if we assume that in the long run he’s on the job 40 hours a week, that works out to \$85/hour. By that measure, the cost of the video was \$7.84. Not 7.84 million; 7 dollars and 84 cents (\$7.76 US).

And then there’s the guitar.

While it’s hard to argue that the entire cost of the ISS counts toward the video, we could at least include the cost to launch the guitar. The Larrivée Parlor acoustic guitar in the video went up years ago on the Space Shuttle, and astronauts have been playing it ever since.[5] Given that launch costs at the time were between \$20,000 and \$30,000 per pound, the cost to send up the guitar was probably in the neighborhood of \$75,000.

While that’s far from the most anyone’s paid for a guitar,[6] it’s certainly a lot of money. And if playing music helps the astronauts relax and keep from going crazy while they’re crammed together in a tin can for months at a time, it’s probably a worthwhile investment.

Of course, this plan could backfire.

14 Jun 23:31

Starboard.

Brian Stephens

My hat would be turned the other way. Otherwise, this comic is factual.

You do this every. Single. Time. We come up here. Damn it Brian.
14 Jun 23:28

Dog Blog

by Piraro

bz panel 06-11-13Bizarro is brought to you today by Prehistoric Dogs.

Many readers already know that I’m an ethical vegan, meaning that I’m vegan because I don’t believe in cruelty to animals. Vegans are routinely against hunting (in cultures where it is not necessary for survival) for obvious reasons. I am, too, but I must say that hunting is the least cruel way to put meat on your table. (Unless you’re doing it with a bow and arrow.) The suffering an animal experiences being shot in the wild is many times less than what happens to “food” animals in commercial production facilities and slaughterhouses. This is true even of “free range” and “cage free” chickens. This is an example of how FDA-approved “free range” chickens live in most cases. At least animals killed in the wild lived a natural life and died relatively suddenly. Still, I don’t hunt because I don’t feel comfortable killing things for fun.bz strip 06-11-13

 

 

This cartoon was a collaboration with my good friend and known associate, Wayno of Pittsburgh. I had the distinct pleasure of hanging out with Wayno for a few days in Pittsburgh a couple weeks ago during our annual cartoonists convention, which was a real treat. Here’s what Wayno has to say about this cartoon.

14 Jun 23:26

Slap Stick

by Piraro

bz panel 06-04-13Bizarro is brought to you today by Devil’s Food.

Coffee is a pretty old drink, I think, but I often wonder how humans got started in the morning before it was invented. Did they chew plants with a natural stimulative? Did they jump into a cold river first thing to have a pee and wake the hell up? Or did they wake up with such fear of being eaten or starving to death that they were immediately awake? Your theories are welcome. Perhaps there’s a cartoon idea in there somewhere.

This gag is a collaboration with my known associate, Wayno of Pittsburgh. Check out what he has to say about it on his entertaining blogapalooza.

And here, my e-friends, is the strip version.bz strip 06-04-13

14 Jun 23:12

asimov’s family restaurant (45 Comments)

by kris

asimov’s family restaurant

boy, i can’t wait to eat here! sorry, i don’t have anything for the blog post here. i used all possible jokes in the comic
14 Jun 22:14

Asimov’s Children

by Jon

Asimov’s Children

Howdy folks! I’m going to spend the next few comics saying hello to some of my favorite science fiction authors. Today we’re saying hi to Isaac Asimov. Hello, Isaac!

The new Scenes From A Multiverse book, BUSINESS ANIMALS, is available for pre-order! Order before June 14th and you can choose to get your book signed and sketched and it will come with a free MYSTERY GIFT! You can also order a discount bundle with the first book and get ‘em both scribbled in at the same time. It is up to you!

This is my major release this year and I really, really hope it does well and that you guys enjoy it. If you love SFAM and want to support the strip, please consider pre-ordering a copy or three so I can keep doing this job and drawing comics for you. Thanks!

14 Jun 22:04

The Guardians Of The Gun

by Jon

The Guardians Of The Gun

Here’s number three and the last in the series. They were all about guns. Could you tell? That was the theme.

See you Friday! It is later this week.

 

 

14 Jun 21:44

I Know That Song




Ads by Project Wonderful! Your ad could be here, right now.

Hannelore was talking about something like this:

We have two delightful new prints available in the QC Store!

VanCaf is this weekend! I will be there! You should also be there!

14 Jun 21:38

Universal paid sick leave reduces spread of flu

Brian Stephens

Hmmm. Duh.

Allowing all employees access to paid sick days would reduce influenza infections in the workplace by nearly 6 percent, according to a first-of-its-kind analysis. The researchers simulated an influenza epidemic in Pittsburgh and surrounding Allegheny County and estimated it to be more effective for small, compared to large, workplaces.
14 Jun 20:59

May 24, 2013


Really been enjoying Junior Scientist Power Hour comics.
14 Jun 20:58

May 28, 2013


Geeks! 5 Second Films just launched their kickstarter!





And a special message from Lord Ashby:

INTERNET! As most of you know, we've done a fair amount of work with 5 Second Films over the past year. If you loved Existential Crisis and Dragons, 50 Shades of Domestic Gray, Sanctions, Batman Academy, Office Survival, The Ugly Duckling and many more YOU ALREADY LOVE THEM!

Well, today they've launched a Kickstarter for their FIRST MOVIE. Yup. 5 Second Films is making a movie. Go check it out. You know it's going to be amazing.

14 Jun 20:52

June 12, 2013


This comic needs more damn robots.
14 Jun 20:51

I have some happy news

by Matthew Inman
Brian Stephens

Ooh I want to visit someday.

I have some happy news

I have some happy news about Nikola Tesla's laboratory.

View
14 Jun 20:46

Pastime

Good thing we're too smart to spend all day being uselessly frustrated with ourselves. I mean, that'd be a hell of a waste, right?
14 Jun 20:46

Hipsters

You may point out that this very retreat into ironic detachment while still clearly participating in the thing in question is the very definition of contemporary hipsterdom. But on the other hand, wait, you're in an empty room. Who are you talking to?