
Fruitloopery on demand
WHETHER it be micellar water or chakra-charging crystals, the practitioners of alternative lifestyles strive to offer novelties that will lubricate the wallets of the worried well-off.
Few do it with as much aplomb as Goop, the Hollywood lifestyle brand of Gwyneth Paltrow. The queen of yoni balls, moon-dust smoothies and ashwagandja (us neither) has continually stayed one step ahead of her satirists, dreaming up ever more bizarre concoctions that are set against a backdrop of quasi-spiritual wellness advice.
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But automation comes for us all eventually. Witness the birth of Goob, the computer-assisted lifestyle magazine from Botnik.org. By training a predictive text generator on a library of material from Goop, Botnik was able to produce an even more adventurous brand.
Goob subscribers can browse products such as Chicago Dad Soothing Mortgage Advice Salve (āget back to the realm of your own essenceā) and āCancer Gossip Jeansā, all wrapped up in bold headlines such as āIs the soul more supple when youāve been divorced? We asked two dogs for some advice.ā
āPolice were called to Oberlin High School in Louisiana last month after students expressed concern during a maths lesson that the ā
In the interests of balance, Feedback trained the program on material gleaned from Āé¶¹“«Ć½ itself. Stay tuned for the upcoming feature āOur multiverse is great: the laws of physics donāt wash out.ā
The shape of water
WATER, water everywhere, so how to make your heavily marked-up version stand out from the crowd? Faced with the inconvenient truth that plain water is an ideal thirst quencher, marketeers have plumbed for ever more exotic ways to dress up the bottles ā and occasionally their contents.
Following in the grand tradition of hexagonal water, alkaline water, iceberg water and sacred geometry water (all seen on these pages) comes Frequency H2O, offering a drink said to be infused with frequencies of love, the moon or ārainbowā.
Spotted by Hamish Bowden and Asa Wahlquist, the tipple was named best bottled water at the Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting .
The company claims to employ a ātrade secret two-stage kinetic energy processā and the resulting water is āinfused with a blend of Solfeggio, sound and light frequencies.ā For those who are wondering, solfeggio is not a water-soluble mineral but a way of teaching the major scale, as immortalised by Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music when she sang Do-Re-Mi. How this ends up inside a plastic bottle of water remains unclear.
Feedback is reliably informed that this process āenlivens the molecules producing noticeable texture, softness and ultra-hydrating taste, feel and effectā.
Those who wish to gulp down some love can pick up Frequency H2O for around A$3.30 per litre. Feedback will be drowning our disbelief with something stronger.
Slug saviour
THE Lowy Institute, an esteemed Australian think tank, has published a paper on the serious topic of Chinese president Xi Jinpingās anti-corruption drive.
āThe corrupt trade in beche-de-mer had been of low priority because there were larger fish to fry,ā writes Graeme Lindenmayer, āuntil an unrelated report from a Chinese environmental scientist happened to reach Xiās attention.ā
Lax enforcement of fisheries was seriously depleting the stocks of this highly valuable animal, says Graeme, spurring the president into action. Or, as the Lowy Institute titled the paper: āā.
Frozen wasteland
NORTH Americaās tallest peak has a big problem: a mountain of excrement, left by the 1100 or so climbers who attempt to reach the summit each year.
The Associated Press reports that an estimated 100 tonnes of solid human waste has been deposited on Denali in Alaska since 1951 and is inching down the Kahiltna glacier toward the meltwater river below.
Dumped in biodegradable pouches, it was believed that the faeces would decompose over time. But research by glaciologist Michael Loso found that the waste ā and most likely the bacteria within ā survives its trip down the mountainside intact. Loso predicts the mid-century sewage will start to appear at the bottom of the glacier in about seven years.
New rules have been proposed by Denali National Park authorities which will require climbers to relieve themselves of bagged faeces at two fixed locations to keep the mountain pristine. Feedback hopes that Alaskaās climbers will be happy to carry out their duty, so to speak.
The birds and bees
FEEDBACK is soliciting creative scientific theories cooked up by your enquiring childhood minds (24 February).
Luce Gilmore writes: āAs a boy, I learned about the deadly, disease-spreading tsetse fly. Not much later, I read that human eggs are fertilised by sperm, āfrom the testesā, though how the two came together was left unexplained.ā
Luce misread testes as tsetse, and so for a while ābelieved that women were pollinated at night, by fliesā.
You can send stories to Feedback by email at feedback@newscientist.com. Please include your home address. This weekās and past Feedbacks can be seen on our website.
