The New York Academy of Sciences
Alan Alda gets uncomfortable making small talk at parties, but he is passionate about authentic, effective communication. Especially where science is concerned.
Read MoreThe New York Academy of Sciences
Alan Alda gets uncomfortable making small talk at parties, but he is passionate about authentic, effective communication. Especially where science is concerned.
Read MoreDowntown Magazine
Infiltrating the lush, regimented tradition of the symphony, Copeland is the guy that brings a trashcan to a concerto.
Read MoreThe New York Academy of Sciences
The actor, writer, and science advocate educates scientists in the elusive art of communication.
Read MoreFolks Magazine (Amazon/PillPack)
Medical student-turned-designer Josie Vallely uses collaborative visual art to tell the untold stories of people with health conditions and to affect broader social change.
Read MoreThe Magazine
An Alaskan singer goes it alone — with an entrepreneurial spirit and a little help from her (mostly online) fans.
Read MoreFolks Magazine (Amazon/PillPack)
With a hip-shake and some hustle, cabaret performer Amanda Lynne powers through Type 1 diabetes to keep dance center stage.
Read MoreFolks Magazine (Amazon/PillPack)
Inspired by a prosthetic made of yarn, Barb Demorest is building an international network of knitters and doctors to support women, one knocker at a time.
Read MoreFolks Magazine (Amazon/PillPack)
After his own isolated childhood, professional dancer Antoine Hunter works to share the gifts of deaf and hard of hearing dancers with the world.
Read MoreFolks Magazine (Amazon/PillPack)
Jen Hyde finds creative inspiration in the people and stories hidden behind the technology that keeps her heart condition in check.
Read MoreStewart Copeland Official Site
With a nod, a smile, and the flick of a stick, Copeland transformed a few fans' show of appreciation into—as he once called it—“our little flag game,” an unconventional variation on Where's Waldo? operating on a global scale in front of tens of thousands of unknowing witnesses each night.
Read MoreThe Magazine
“More a literature nerd than a computer nerd,” Alaskan singer-songwriter Marian Call offers the rare opportunity outside academia to get one’s lit geek on.
Read MoreThe Microscopic Septet
Never sufficiently contained by a single category, the Micros formed during a remarkable period of musical experimentation and quickly distinguished themselves as a raucously fun, musically adept, and wickedly clever jazz band.
Read MoreThe Microscopic Septet
If the Micros have a spiritual beacon, it’s Thelonious Monk. Monk's music has been a part of the Microscopic Septet literally from day one.
Read MoreThe Rumpus
As the opening band left the stage, before the house lights had lifted, a stocky gentleman with plastic cup in hand barreled toward the bar. He pointed, snapping his fingers through the air, and yelled to his buddy, “That was the shit!”
Or did he say, “That was shit”?
PopMatters
From the moment that he appeared on screen in the film—with a cigarette balanced between his fingers and the close-cropped haircut of a little boy—media outlets had him pegged as the James Dean of the ‘80s.
Read MorePopMatters
Like most of his career, Peter Gabriel’s current Back to Front tour is more unusual than it appears. Just 16 dates, all in the U.S. and Canada, this limited run centers on the 25th anniversary (one year late) of his landmark 1986 So album.
Read MoreWhile a long-form essay takes you on a journey through what is said, the best short-form prompts you to take a journey yourself through what is unsaid.
Read MoreWordWebbing
Copeland’s life has been anything but ordinary. It comes as no surprise that his life’s story isn’t either.
Read MorePopMatters
Hawkins imagined Red Light Fever as "sounding like me having sex with my record collection, but delivered from start to finish with the same thrusts at the same speed with the same pressure, the music only humps the listener into numbness.
Read MoreStewart Copeland Official Site
Wrap yourself in the love of StewartCopeland.net all year long.
Read More