Your Roomba’s Also a Half-Decent Nanny

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Need to run downstairs to fetch the laundry? Or maybe there’s a phone call you just have to take? Life with a baby can make even the smallest chores feel like a herculean task if you don’t have a nanny. But it turns out, if you keep your floors clean using a robot, maybe you do have a nanny and just didn’t realize it.

The mileage on this new parent lifehack will vary depending on how comfortable your child is with being dragged around the house on an automaton. But this infant seems suitably entertained and comforted by a Roomba going about its cleaning routine. Any robovac large enough to plop a child onto can serve as a temporary nanny in a pinch, just be careful of loose clothing, and children protective services eventually banging on your door.

[YouTube via Geekologie]

via Gizmodo
Your Roomba’s Also a Half-Decent Nanny

The Forest Awakens with These Animal Stormtrooper Helmets

“The New Order project came from a doodle,” says designer William Kang. He started with the rhino, and, since he likes to work in threes, added two other pachyderms: an elephant and a hippo. While Kang has done work in fashion, furniture, housewares, consumer electronics, and more, Blank William was a project he wanted to develop that he could have complete ownership of. Plus, he wanted a way to celebrate the release of The Force Awakens.

Kang uses a fluid process, working from sketches to multiple CAD packages to quick renders and back again, which allows him to progress toward a finished piece while still being able to backpedal and tweak details.

To make the physical sculpture, Kang worked with his fabricator friend Vince Su. They make silicone molds from 3D-printed parts, then mold wax prototypes that they dip into a ceramic slurry, reinforced with refractory sand. They then use the lost wax method and pour liquid metal into the mold. The helmets are stainless steel painted with an automotive finish, and they’re supported with a metal stem fixed into a marble block. Each helmet takes a couple of months to make.

Kang says his interests jump from design and art to tech, fashion, pop culture, politics, science, and whatever else grabs his attention. He draws inspiration from everywhere, so he says the hardest part of his process is settling on an idea, as well as the communication and marketing.

 

via MAKE Magazine
The Forest Awakens with These Animal Stormtrooper Helmets

The First Trailer For Deadpool 2 Is Hidden in a Bizarre Tribute to Bob Ross

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Our first look at Deadpool 2 in action is finally here. But you’re going to have to get through a totally weird, and pretty hilarious, skit to get to it.

Ryan Reynolds has just dropped the first footage from Deadpool 2, but at first you might not realize it. Because the video starts—and goes on for an alarming amount of time—as an extended skit where Reynolds, in character as Deadpool, is… in character as beloved art icon Bob Ross?

Yeah, this is the way to do it. The whole skit is a retro delight, but the trailer itself is all brief snippets of what we can expect from the movie. There’s our first brief look at Zazie Beetz’s Domino, a new look for Negasonic Teenage Warhead, Wade smashing his way through a car,and actually no Cable… but there are guns. Lots of guns, naturally. For added hilarity, here is Fox’s new synopsis for the film:

After surviving a near fatal bovine attack, a disfigured cafeteria chef (Wade Wilson) struggles to fulfill his dream of becoming Mayberry’s hottest bartender while also learning to cope with his lost sense of taste. Searching to regain his spice for life, as well as a flux capacitor, Wade must battle ninjas, the yakuza, and a pack of sexually aggressive canines, as he journeys around the world to discover the importance of family, friendship, and flavor – finding a new taste for adventure and earning the coveted coffee mug title of World’s Best Lover.

I swear to god, it’s real. Deadpool 2 drops June 1, 2018.

via Gizmodo
The First Trailer For Deadpool 2 Is Hidden in a Bizarre Tribute to Bob Ross

Smith & Wesson’s M&P 22 Compact is the New Kit Gun 2.0

Tom is compelled to update his Kit Gun to the Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact Pistol, but why does it need a silencer?

This is my pick for the perfect Kit Gun 2.0 - the Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact.
This is my pick for the perfect Kit Gun 2.0 – the Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact.
Tom McHale
Tom McHale

USA –-(Ammoland.com)- When I got into this whole shooting thing, I frequently read mentions of things called “kit guns” in the established gun magazines. Usually in articles written by guys older than me (and that’s saying something) the term “kit gun” referred to a small, portable, light revolver that was suitable for tucking into a backpack or fishing tackle box. You know, something to have on hand for… whatever.

The sage of the internet, Wikipedia, describes a kit gun this way:

“A kit gun is a small, lightweight handgun, usually but not always .22LR caliber, and generally but not necessarily a revolver, which is intended to be carried in a kit bag by campers, hunters, trappers, and fishermen.”

While walking my dogs, I got to thinking about what a kit gun is nowadays. Everything else has gone to updated versions like Web 2.0 and Gun Culture 2.0, so why not Kit Gun 2.0? When I thought about it this way, my ideal kit gun selection was easy. In fact, I didn’t even have to think about it because I’ve been using one exactly that way for the past couple of years. What is it?

Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact

Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact Pistol
Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact Pistol

Since we’re now in the 2.0 world, some things are different than the kit guns of Gun Culture B.C. First, while it’s perfectly suitable for tossing in a pack or tackle box, it’s certainly not limited to only those handy but rustic camping and Grizzly Adams applications. Second, it’s a bit decked out with some 2.0 modern technology. Third, while never a hard and fast rule for kit guns, this one isn’t a revolver — it’s a semi-automatic.

If you’re not familiar with the gun, it’s a scaled down .22LR pistol about the size of a Smith & Wesson M&P Shield. The M&P 22 Compact is 6.7 inches long compared to 6.1 for the Shield, but that’s because it’s got a longer 3.5-inch barrel. It’s lighter at 15.3 ounces compared to the 18.3-ounce Shield. This little single-action has an ambidextrous safety that’s positive — you can feel and hear the lock and unlock positions

BlackHawk Rimfire Suppressor Adapter 1/2X28 S&W M&P 22 Compact
BlackHawk Rimfire Suppressor Adapter 1/2X28 S&W M&P 22 Compact

unambiguously. The magazine release is reversible so if you’re a lefty just flip it to the other side and you’re good to go. The M&P 22 Compact comes with two 10-round magazines, and you can carry one in the chamber for a total of eleven. The sights are standard white dot – three of them. The rear is adjustable for windage and elevation. That’s handy not only to account for the wide variety of rimfire ammo out there but to deal with the point of impact shift if you add a suppressor.

Did I mention that the M&P 22 Compact comes with a threaded barrel? The threading is internal to the side so if you order the standard model you need to acquire a 3/8”x24 to 1/2”x28 adapter. You can also order another variant direct that includes the adapter. I kind of like the approach. If you’re not using a silencer, then there’s nothing sticking out the end of the slide to get caught on stuff in your kit.

The real joy of the M&P 22 Compact comes from all the things you can do with it. That’s what makes it a Kit Gun 2.0 in my book.

Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact Pistol , Perfect New Shooter Pistol

I keep my personal Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact Pistol geared up with a SilencerCo Sparrow Suppressor. At just five inches long and small enough not to obscure the sights, it makes a perfect “First Shots” gun. Even the most timid and fearful first-time shooter friends are guaranteed a smile and great experience. The pistol has a small enough grip to fit any hand, but it’s not so thin that we big-mitted folks have to do any finger gymnastics to work the trigger comfortably.

The best part of this for new shooter introduction is that the configuration allows them to focus entirely on technique and the satisfaction of making hits. With no recoil and no noise, it’s pure non-intimidating fun.

Almost a Pellet Gun – The Perfect House and Yard Pest Control Device

While I live in suburbia, we’re next to what savvy real-estate marketing people call “wetlands.” We call it a swamp. Whatever the proper description, that means we get random critters trying to cross our border into places like the partially-exposed garage downstairs.

The solution is simple math.

Aguila .22 Super Colibri + M&P 22 Compact + SilencerCo Sparrow suppressor + Crimson Trace Lightguard = 0 rodents.

In case you’re not familiar, the Aguila Super Colibri cartridges are .22 cases with primer only topped by a 20-grain lead bullet. With no powder charge, the primer bang drives that underweight projectile at 350 to 550 feet per second depending on which gun you use. It’s great for pistols because the short barrels won’t trap the bullet before it exits but be careful using it in rifles. There’s probably not enough juice to make the bullet come out of the fiery end. In this case, the combination of powder-less ammo and a silencer means that the resulting shot is so quiet that it actually removes ambient noise from the area 😉 . I think it’s like some kind of ammo anti-matter, but we’ll avoid the quantum physics discussion for now.

For this Kit Gun 2.0, Aguila Colibri ammo is the bomb.
For this Kit Gun 2.0, Aguila Colibri ammo is the bomb.

Oh, one more detail. Since the Colibris ammo is so low-powered by design, you’ll need to rack the slide for each shot. Think of it as built-in malfunction drills.

Cheap Training and Fun Plinking

Suppressed or not, this gun is a hoot. Whatever the configuration we’re talking about virtually non-existent recoil and low-noise. Add (relatively) cheap ammo, and we’re talking about a pistol you can use for practice and technique development to your heart’s content without breaking the bank. If you have kids, then you know how much a range visit can devour your wallet. “Dad, can I shoot 17 more magazines from the 45 before we leave?”

Whatever your “real” gun is, you can get valuable practice time with the Smith & Wesson M&P 22 Compact Pistol. After all, sight picture, target acquisition, transitions, and trigger technique are universal skills that easily translate to any other handgun.

Kit Gun 2.0 Entitlement

It’s the age of crayon therapy, fairness at all costs, and social justice warriors, I figure I’m entitled to a new generation of kit gun. As long as you agree with me, then you’re entitled too. Let’s meet soon so we can plan our strategy to get M&P 22 Compact reimbursement credits written into the next health care bill. If you don’t agree, then you’re obviously some type of kit gun-ogynist fascist pig, and you can bet I’ll be protesting your sorry butt as soon as I can find someone to pay me to do so.

About

Tom McHale is the author of the Practical Guides book series that guides new and experienced shooters alike in a fun, approachable, and practical way. His books are available in print and eBook format on Amazon. You can also find him on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Pinterest.

This post Smith & Wesson’s M&P 22 Compact is the New Kit Gun 2.0 appeared first on AmmoLand.com Shooting Sports News .

via AmmoLand.com Shooting Sports News
Smith & Wesson’s M&P 22 Compact is the New Kit Gun 2.0

Deadpool 2: Wet on Wet

Deadpool 2: Wet on Wet

Link

(PG-13: Language) The merc with a mouth paints us some happy little trees while channeling Bob Ross in this promo clip for the upcoming Deadpool 2, regaling us with witticisms and playing with his 2-inch brush. We think Pool looks rather smashing with a ‘fro, don’t you?

via The Awesomer
Deadpool 2: Wet on Wet

Slow Mo Katana Sword

Slow Mo Katana Sword

Link

“Every video that goes by, the resale value of this place goes down.” The Slow Mo Guys did their best Man at Arms impression and tried to slice through lines of plastic water bottles with a katana. It’s not as easy – or safe – as you might think it is.

via The Awesomer
Slow Mo Katana Sword

Great Interview With Gun Owner Who Stopped Texas Church Mass-Murderer ~ VIDEO

Steven Crowder interview with hero, Stephen Willeford
Steven Crowder interview with hero, Stephen Willeford

USA – -(Ammoland.com)- A heart-wrenching interview with the hero, Stephen Willeford, who brought down the murderer who attacked a Texas church…

This is an exclusive interview, done by Steven Crowder ( Louder With Crowder ) with Stephen Willeford, the hero who ended the killing spree in Sutherland Springs, Texas. Stephen recounts the actions that lead him to confronting Devin Patrick Kelley outside First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs.

From the courage he showed, to the horrible feelings after having to kill a fellow human being, to being hounded by the press so bad that he doesn’t want to leave his house, not even to attend funerals, this interview covers it all.

Thanks to Virginia Citizens Defense League member Todd V. Banks for the link:

Virginia Citizens Defense League
Virginia Citizens Defense League

About Virginia Citizens Defense League, Inc. (VCDL):

Virginia Citizens Defense League, Inc. (VCDL). VCDL is an all-volunteer, non-partisan grassroots organization dedicated to defending the human rights of all Virginians. The Right to Keep and Bear Arms is a fundamental human right.

For more information, visit: www.vcdl.org.

This post Great Interview With Gun Owner Who Stopped Texas Church Mass-Murderer ~ VIDEO appeared first on AmmoLand.com Shooting Sports News .

via AmmoLand.com Shooting Sports News
Great Interview With Gun Owner Who Stopped Texas Church Mass-Murderer ~ VIDEO

How very low-calorie diets reverse diabetes

New research clarifies the mechanisms by which caloric restriction rapidly reverses type 2 diabetes.

If researchers confirm the findings in people, they could provide potential new drug targets for treating this common chronic disease, the researchers say.

One in three Americans will develop type 2 diabetes by 2050, according to recent projections by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Reports indicate that the disease goes into remission in many patients who undergo bariatric weight-loss surgery, which significantly restricts caloric intake prior to clinically significant weight loss.

The Yale University researchers investigated the effects of a very low calorie diet (VLCD), consisting of one-quarter the normal intake, on a rodent model of type 2 diabetes. Using a novel stable (naturally occurring) isotope approach, which they developed, the researchers tracked and calculated a number of metabolic processes that contribute to the increased glucose production by the liver.

The method, known as PINTA, allowed the investigators to perform a comprehensive set of analyses of key metabolic fluxes within the liver that might contribute to insulin resistance and increased rates of glucose production by the liver—two key processes that cause increased blood-sugar concentrations in diabetes.

Using this approach the researchers pinpointed three major mechanisms responsible for the VLCD’s dramatic effect of rapidly lowering blood glucose concentrations in the diabetic animals.

In the liver, the VLCD lowers glucose production by:

  • decreasing the conversion of lactate and amino acids into glucose;
  • decreasing the rate of liver glycogen conversion to glucose;
  • and decreasing fat content, which in turn improves the liver’s response to insulin.

These positive effects of the VLCD were observed in just three days.

Skin transplants could treat diabetes and obesity

“Using this approach to comprehensively interrogate liver carbohydrate and fat metabolism, we showed that it is a combination of three mechanisms that is responsible for the rapid reversal of hyperglycemia following a very low calorie diet,” says senior author Gerald I. Shulman, professor of medicine and cellular and molecular physiology at Yale and an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

The next step for the researchers will be to confirm whether they can replicate the findings in type 2 diabetic patients undergoing either bariatric surgery or consuming very low calorie diets. His team has already begun applying the PINTA methodology in humans.

“These results, if confirmed in humans, will provide us with novel drug targets to more effectively treat patients with type 2 diabetes,” Shulman says.

Grants from the United States Public Health Service supported this research.

Lots of red meat and poultry linked to diabetes risk

The researchers report their findings in the journal Cell Metabolism.

Source: Yale University

The post How very low-calorie diets reverse diabetes appeared first on Futurity.

via Futurity.org
How very low-calorie diets reverse diabetes

The Best Kids Headphones

The human ear and brain can’t accurately assess the volume of sound; if they could, there might be no need for volume-limiting headphones. So in order to test how loud the kids headphones could play, we did a set of formal objective sound measurements using audio-testing equipment.

Immediately we found a problem: Almost all these headphones can produce dangerously high volume if you use them with certain gear. And not just specialized gear—a relatively high-powered headphone amplifier, such as the ones built into many AV receivers, or the stand-alone amps popular among enthusiasts (and for most traditional lab measurements), could drive most any headphones well above 85 dB.

This problem happens because most of these headphones don’t really limit volume but merely reduce it. Passive headphones (that is, non-powered headphones, the kind you’re probably most familiar with) reduce volume using resistors, an inexpensive electrical component that reduces electrical flow. The technique is similar to splicing a narrow piece of water pipe onto the end of a fatter pipe, which reduces the amount of water coming through the pipe. However, you can get the overall flow of water back up to the original level by increasing the pressure going through the pipe. In the case of headphones, you apply the extra “pressure” by turning up the volume on the source device. Sure, the headphones are reducing the volume as if you had the dial on 5 instead of 8, but if you turn the volume to 11 it’ll still sound like it’s on 8.

Active headphones (in other words, internally powered ones) such as the Puro BT2200 can employ a digital limiter that stops the sound from playing any higher than a certain volume level. But few of the headphones we tested for this guide have internal amplifiers or digital processors, so they’re not precise. In our tests, a few of the passive models produced little, if any, reduction or limiting of volume.

Of course, a child will almost certainly use a phone, tablet, or portable music player for most or all of their listening, so the fact that most of these headphones will play much louder with a headphone amp is largely irrelevant in day-to-day use. However, we did need to settle on an appropriate source for the audio signals we would be using in our tests. Jason Wehner, an engineering consultant who has been involved in the design of volume-limiting headphones, made the sensible suggestion of using an iPhone as our source device, because iPhones are the loudest source most people will encounter—the iPhone’s internal amplifiers are more powerful than those found in most Android phones. We ended up using an iPod touch (sixth-generation model), which was able to play slightly louder (+0.38 dB) than our iPhone 6s and substantially louder (+4.4 dB) than our Samsung Galaxy S6. The iPod touch is popular as a “starter screen” for young children, so it seemed an appropriate choice here. We haven’t, however, exhaustively tested the output of all possible sources—video game consoles and home theater receivers, for example—so we’re unclear on how these headphones would perform with them. In any case, such devices would likely be used by older kids with gaming headsets, which don’t make any volume-limiting claims and are somewhat outside the scope of this guide (though parents and caregivers should be aware).

The hearing experts we consulted suggested using pink noise, a common test signal with an equal amount of energy per octave that more or less mimics the content of music. To the ear, pink noise sounds a lot like the white noise you’d hear between stations with an old analog-tuner FM radio, but less hissy sounding. We used pink noise with A-weighting, which basically removes frequencies below about 500 Hz (about an octave above middle C on a piano). According to Brian Fligor, chair of the WHO’s Make Listening Safe initiative and one of the experts we interviewed and consulted, low frequencies have a negligible effect on hearing loss.

As we’ve already discussed, the general consensus among experts is that an environmental noise level of 85 dBA (the “A” standing for A-weighting) is considered reasonably safe for an hour of listening. (For the technically inclined, the pink noise we used for these tests has an average level of -10 dBFS, or decibels relative to full scale, which is what audio manufacturers often use to measure the maximum volume of their devices.)

Although pink noise loosely simulates the content of music, it’s still just a simulation, one that serves to make measurements easier and more repeatable. We wanted to add a more real-world evaluation of how loud these headphones could get. To do that, we played a recent Top 40 hit, “Cold Water” by Major Lazer, through all the headphones and measured the A-weighted Leq (equivalent continuous sound level). Leq is a commonly used gauge of sound exposure over time; to oversimplify a bit, it’s sort of like the average volume.

We used the first chorus (from 0:45 to 1:06), which is one of the louder parts of “Cold Water” and roughly analogous to loud dance music. This was something of a worst-case test, because our Leq measurement of the entire tune was typically -1.3 dB lower, although we could have listened at an even louder level for this test because the second chorus typically measured +1.5 dB louder than the first. We also ran test measurements using another tune, ZZ Top’s “Chartreuse.” This track is a very loud recording that’s heavily dynamically compressed, which means the average sound level is pretty close to the maximum sound level possible, resulting in a track that to the ear sounds louder overall. The results were similar to what we measured from the first chorus of “Cold Water.”

For all of these measurements, we attached the headphones to a G.R.A.S. 43AG ear/cheek simulator. At the suggestions of the hearing experts we consulted, we used what’s referred to as a “diffuse-field calibration curve.” We did so because hearing researchers originally determined the theoretically safer environmental sound levels (the 85 dBA amount) using a sound pressure level meter held in free air without much around it. Sound that reaches the eardrum—and sound that reaches the measurement microphone built into the G.R.A.S. 43AG—is altered by the earlobe and ear canal (or in the case of the 43AG, by the simulated rubber earlobe and metal ear canal). So to make sure our measurements were comparable to that 85 dBA free-air measurement, we had to create a method to electronically reverse the way the 43AG’s simulated earlobe and ear canal change the sound. The correction curve (think of this as similar to an EQ adjustment) we created was the “diffuse-field calibration curve.” We created this curve by playing pink noise through a speaker, measuring that noise with an Audiomatica MIC-01 measurement microphone and CLIO 10 FW analyzer, and then comparing that measurement with one taken using the G.R.A.S. 43AG in the same location. Thus, using this correction curve, the levels we measured through the ear/cheek simulator would be directly comparable with environmental-noise measurements.

We calibrated the 43AG’s level using a Reed SC-05 calibrator. For the A-weighted pink noise and Leq measurements, we connected the 43AG to an M-Audio Mobile Pre USB interface and a laptop computer running Room EQ Wizard, a free but powerful audio-measurement application. (By the way, we employed roughly $8,000 worth of test gear in this effort.)

Note that headphone measurements have some inherent inconsistency. Small differences in the fit of the headphone on the ear/cheek simulator can affect the result, just as moving a headphone around slightly on your ear changes the sound. We did everything possible to ensure a good fit of each pair of headphones on the simulator, including using light pressure from the 43AG’s clamping mechanism to help seat the headphones on the simulated rubber earlobe, and listening to the signal coming from the 43AG’s internal microphone to confirm that the sound from each model being tested was coming through properly. Still, we needed to allow for possible measurement inaccuracy, so we decided to make 88 dBA our pass/fail point on the pink noise tests. Any set of headphones that doesn’t exceed that level with pink noise can be considered reasonably safe, along the guidelines explained in this review. Any set of headphones that exceeds this threshold by a few decibels isn’t necessarily dangerous but is less safe than models that pass the test.

As Brian Fligor pointed out to us, “Most all earphones [headphones] could be used in an unsafe manner. If the max sound level is so low that it can’t get over the background noise of an airplane or minivan on a highway, then it’s not going to sound very good. To make music sound good, the max level does need to have some headroom. This is where a combination of safer level limits along with earphones that block out competing background noise is probably the safest combination.”

To find out which kids headphone models performed well in this regard, we ran the same type of isolation measurements we use to test noise-cancelling headphones: We played pink noise through two speakers and a subwoofer at a level of 75 dB, placed each headphone model on the G.R.A.S. 43AG ear/cheek simulator, and then performed analysis using TrueRTA software to learn how much sound was leaking around or through the headphone into the 43AG’s microphone (and, by extension, into the wearer’s ears).

Unfortunately, only four of the headphones we tested provided notably effective isolation, blocking out a significant amount of sound in the audio spectrum (50 Hz to 2 kHz) that’s typically loudest in the backseat of a car, where we expect kids headphones might get a lot of use. And these pairs weren’t among the best performers in volume limiting, nor were they among our child test panel’s favorites. This group included the Direct Sound YourTones, which reduced sounds in this region by -8.1 dB, and the Fuhu Nabi Headphones, which reduced the same sounds by -4.8 dB. (Note that both of those pairs are large over-ear models.) The two in-ear models we tested did an even better job of blocking outside sounds. The Etymotic ETY-Kids3 reduced environmental noise by -22.0 dB in the test spectrum, and the Puro IEM200 reduced it by -14.4 dB. Note that these results are relevant only for situations where most of the noise is fairly low-frequency, such as in a car or an airplane cabin. Many of these headphones will do a better job of blocking common household noise such as the roar of a vacuum cleaner.

via Wirecutter: Reviews for the Real World
The Best Kids Headphones

The News Media And The AR-15

Journalist, as a species, aren’t gun people. This was clear the moment USA Today decided to illustrate the possible accessories for the AR-15 and included the chainsaw bayonet, for crying out loud, if at no other point before. However, an Ohio television station decided to go even further in showing us just how little they know about guns.

In this clip, they decided to show us just how deadly the AR-15 is by showing a watermelon being shot. There’s just one problem. Can you find it?

If you said, “But that’s a shotgun,” you win!

That’s right, it’s a shotgun shooting that watermelon. You can tell because of the lack of a chainsaw bayonet or a “shoulder thing that goes up.”

Oh…and that’s it’s obviously a freaking shotgun.

I get that most people aren’t as into guns as I am or as most of our readers here are, but the shotgun is fairly common. Even Hollywood tends to get some aspects of the shotgun right, especially the pump-action needing to be…you know…pumped. That’s precisely what happens in this video. The weapon is pumped, then fired.

And the mainstream media wonders why the term “fake news” gets so much play. This. This is why.

There’s no way this is an honest mistake by an otherwise intelligent individual. I can’t even chalk this one up to laziness. I just don’t see how this is a case of simply not checking up on some facts and getting something wrong. This is either a case of weapons-grade stupid, or it’s a case of the media believing that you have a case of weapons-grade stupid and won’t notice the difference.

There’s nothing in this clip that tells us either way, but what we can tell is that it presents a false image of the AR-15, assuming viewers actually don’t pick up the difference.

However, here’s a real AR-15 shooting a watermelon.

Notice the difference?

It’s also important to note that shooting a watermelon isn’t like shooting an kind of animal, be it human or game critter. Flesh of any kind reacts very differently to being shot than fruit does.

Because of that difference, shooting a slab of meat, even with a shotgun, won’t seemingly vaporize the target. It won’t do much of anything as far as the camera can tell at first glance, truth be told, and that’s the problem.

Shooters like pumping rounds into watermelons because of their fragile nature. They react violently when shot, thus looking really cool and making everyone shooting feel really tingly all over.

They’re not representative of how effective one gun is over another, one round over another, or anything else. It just looks kind of awesome on video.

But most people don’t know that. They think this is a true representation of the awesome power of the firearm when it’s not.

Was that what the reporter was trying to convey? Honestly, with that much dumb in a clip only a few seconds long, it’s hard to tell. What I do know is that this clip is ample evidence as to why no one should take the news media at face value on anything, ever.

 


via Bearing Arms
The News Media And The AR-15