Last year, “The Dark Knight Rises” was one of the top-grossing films of 2012, racking up $1 billion in worldwide box-office sales. That same year, Instagram, the photo-sharing site based in Silicon Valley, was also one of the top-grossing commercial tech deals of the year; Facebook bought it for $1 billion. So which was a better return on investment, the Hollywood hit or the Silicon Valley wonder?
The Internet Is Screaming At Your Television: A Recap
“The telly was oblivious to your elation or annoyance, so you fired up Twitter to announce your celebration or grievance. In the morning, you hopped online and gorged on other people recapping their concerns about the same episode. You probably also perused comments from other viewers at the bottom of the page; possibly, even typed in a few words yourself.
You kept talking to the television, but the television wouldn’t listen. But soon, very soon, it will be forced to hear you.”
http://tribecafilm.com/blogs/the-internet-is-screaming-at-your-tv
Indoor Location startups innovating Indoor Positioning
The secret
“Magic” is probably the only industry where you can buy the secret to something. I mean, you can’t just sommer stroll into a kitchen and ask the chef to show you how they made it. You can’t take a car apart and try to learn the secret to how it works. But, you can purchase a magic trick and learn how the illusion is constructed. This is something I have been exploring over this past year.
Hang on though, before you go thinking that it is all about the secret then just stop and think of the car or the restaurant, as examples. Like magic, there is a lot more to it than just the secret. The presentation is the key. And this is all about storytelling. Story telling with props as Marcel Oudejans insightfully shared with me. Humour, misdirection, deception … these are all part of the equation.
One of the most powerful instruments is the “magician’s choice”. I wonder how often we fall for this conceit. Where we think we are in control, but the opposite is true. Where we are asked to make a choice, but it doesn’t really matter what we choose, because the magician is taking us down a path regardless of what we say.
Another thing about the secrets of magic are in the special props that are most often used. Sticky tape, magnets, safety pins, paper clips, and more. Yeah, there are so many magnets used in magic. But magnets themselves are magical things. How does a magnet work? They either attract or repel; but how?
I am loving learning about this special art form, and about the difference between magic and cheating. As Gus Silber pointed out to me recently, the big difference between magic and cheating is that magic allows you to suspend your disbelief, whereas cheating takes advantage of it.
There is so much to learn. So many secrets. So many different scripts and presentation ideas.
Abracadabra!
Strength !
Winter exercise program
Take one Weetbix.
Take an Aero chocolate bar.
Crumble the Aero over the Weetbix.
Voila!
AEROBIX !
TGIF !
George Bizos – Celebrating Nelson Mandela’s 95th birthday
Celebrating Nelson Mandela’s 95th birthday
http://www.bdlive.co.za/opinion/2013/07/18/celebrating-nelson-mandelas-95th-birthday
Former president Nelson Mandela. Picture: SUNDAY TIMES IT HAS been 65 years of a fulfilling friendship, but it was the things that Nelson Mandela and I could not do together that cemented our relationship far more than the things that we could. We met in 1948, ironically the year of the dawn of apartheid. We were reading law at the University of the Witwatersrand, where the unbearable logic of the National Party invaded our lives in the most unthinkable ways. Though we could occupy the same desk in the lecture theatre, we could not swim together in the pool. We could not sit next to one another at rugby matches.
Because of the colour of his skin, Mandela could not join the soccer team, and he was barred from entering the gym to work out in the boxing ring, his favourite sport of all. Of course, the inhumanity of apartheid put a halt to much more than jolling and sports, but as two young friends of different colour, we generally could not be seen together in the regular walkways of life.
When he began practising law in 1951 and I joined the bar three years later, we worked on numerous cases together, yet we could not enjoy a cup of tea or a meal with one another at any of the eateries in the vicinity of the courts. Not even a bench in a public park would tolerate the presence of a black man in the company of a white.
The other side of apartheid’s coin meant that a white person could not travel to the townships without seeking a permit, which was invariably declined. Hence, July 18, Mandela’s birthday, was a day of immense importance to him, his family and friends and it was one they celebrated with joyful abandon at his home in Vilakazi Street, though it was difficult, if not impossible, for me and many of his friends of paler skin to join him in Soweto during those early years.
It is not by choice but by circumstance that we are separated again for this birthday but, rather than dwell on his poor health, I want to recall our good times and the milestones we have shared in both our lifetimes.
When Mandela and nine other members of the then outlawed African National Congress (ANC) were tried in the early 1960s for attempting to overthrow the apartheid regime, I was one of their defending advocates. I recall the April morning of 1964, when Mandela was due to deliver his now infamous speech in the dock and we read over what he had penned. He had wanted to say that he was prepared to die for a free and democratic SA. “Don’t you think you will be accused of martyrdom?” I asked him. “And won’t there be some people who might consider your words a challenge? You ought to remove those words.”
“I’ve said it too often from public platforms and I’m not prepared to remove it now,” he insisted.
“What about a compromise,” I suggested after a short discussion. “What about, ‘But if needs be, My Lord, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die’.”
Two months later, he was handed a life sentence and, as harsh as that was, in our hearts it felt like a victory as we had feared he would have been sentenced to death. (But typically, he always found a way to cast light on those dark years and I recall, years later, when he was awarded the Nobel Peace Price and asked me to travel with him to collect it and introduced me to the King of Norway. “This is George Bizos, my lawyer,” he said. “I don’t know why I brought him with me. He sent me to prison for 27 years.”) When he was imprisoned on Robben Island, Mandela nominated me as the lawyer who would visit him and I had to apply for permission to travel to that barren stretch of land off the Cape and had to present pressing reasons to take me there, to convey or relay some critical information. To her credit, his then wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, was very inventive. She would say: “I can’t decide what school the children should go to. Or what subjects they must study. As their father, you must decide.” And I would be dispatched to hear what Mandela would have to say on the subject, but use our time to discuss our core business: freedom.
After his release in 1990, his path to the presidency of SA lay ahead of him and he left no doubt in anyone’s mind that he was the man truly capable of bridging the abyss that defined SA. The one-time life prisoner excelled as head of the state and he worked his Madiba magic in countless ways.
Sadly, his personal life was marred by various tribulations. In 1991, he asked me to defend Madikizela-Mandela in the kidnapping trial, despite the fact that their marriage had crumbled by then. Five years later, he asked me to accompany him to court as he endured their very public divorce. Happier moments were to follow, though, and a year or so later I recall a rather bashful 80-something Mandela telling me about Graca Machel and the chapter in his life that had just opened. They were living together by then and he was more content that I had seen him in a long time.
But Anglican Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu thought their cohabitation was unbecoming of an icon and called on his friend to marry, and so they wed in a quiet ceremony in 1998. High on Machel’s agenda was the unity of the various Mandela families and, in the years that followed, she forged a peace between the children and grandchildren from his first marriage to Evelyn Mase and his second marriage to Madikizela-Mandela. I recall many happy birthday celebrations that followed, when Mandela would take his rightful place at the head of the table, surrounded by the family he had always wanted to nourish, but which life had prevented him from doing.
If he were in better health, I imagine he would be heavily disappointed by the family disputes that are playing out for the world to see. He did not expect any privilege for himself and I know he would appeal to them now to follow his example.
The matter of his final resting place is also beyond dispute and is a decision he made a long, long time ago. I was reminded of that fact in January this year, not long after he was released from hospital, when I went to visit him at his Houghton home. As soon as I entered the living room, he called out to the staff: “Get me my boots.”
“What do you want your boots for, Tata?” one of them asked. “George is here. He will take me to Qunu,” he answered. It was clear that he wanted to go home.
Qunu is a place that is very near and dear to Madiba’s heart. It is where he has enjoyed his retirement, where his contemporaries knocked on his door uninvited and unannounced, something he greatly enjoyed.
It is also there, in the kraal, where he chose his final resting place, in consultation with Machel, something he has talked about many times and always in practical tones.
Mandela doesn’t fear death. He once said that when he eventually departs, he will look for the nearest ANC branch in heaven and join it. And he has often said — in jest — that when he dies, he will be in the good company of Walter Sisulu, Govan Mbeki, Albert Luthuli and Oliver Tambo.
I last saw him at his Houghton home a week or so before he was admitted to hospital last month and we strolled down memory lane, as we often do.
But he asked some questions that saddened me. “When did you last see Oliver (Tambo)?” he wanted to know. “How’s Walter (Sisulu)?” I could not lie to him and so I reminded him that they had passed on many years ago.
I recall a blank expression sweeping over his face for a moment or so, before the conversation got back on track.
As I was saying goodbye, he turned to me and said: “George, make sure that you don’t leave your jacket behind.” As it turned out, I had left it in the car. But Mandela’s words touched me. He was being thoughtful and wanted me to shield myself from the winter chill that had crept into this part of the world.
Today, on his 95th birthday, I also wish for him a shield to protect him as he finds his way back to good health. I have said to him on many birthday occasions in the past, here’s to your 100th birthday. “You are optimistic,” he would laugh in response.
I sincerely hope not, my friend.
• Bizos is a senior advocate at the Legal Resources Centre.



