Arthur Holland Michel
This New Film Puts You in the Center of a Nuclear Blast
Between footage of North Korean military parades, frighteningly beautiful explosions, and powerful images of Hiroshima and Nagasaki burn victims, 'the bomb' reminds us of the very real problems buried beneath our feet.
'Steve Jobs' Is the Thrilling, Sacrilegious, and Frightening Biopic We Never Needed
The new biopic by Danny Boyle and Aaron Sorkin comes on the heels of a searing documentary and a mawkish Ashton Kutcher vehicle. Can anybody get Steve Jobs right?
The Long, Dangerous March South Asian Migrants Make Through South America to Get to the US
Thousands of people from Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, and Nepal are traveling up to 10,000 miles from as far south as Argentina—a treacherous trip that can take anywhere from three to six months.
KATSU Shows You How to Make a Graffiti Drone
The notorious graffiti artist's latest innovation could lift vandalism to new heights, but not everyone in the community is itching to get one.
Artist Simon Denny's Absurdist Vision of Silicon Valley
Where fine art, Silicon Valley, and a Genius-sponsored IRL 'annotation battle' at MoMA PS1 collide.
I Went to the First Drone Film Festival and There Was a Lot of Dubstep
The shining star of drone filmmaking is 'Superman with a GoPro.'
The Born-Again Christian Who Flies a Drone for God
Jake Wells fell into a severe depression. His tricopter—and Jesus—saved him.
This Drunk Man Tackling a Drone Is Basically John Connor
What can this video teach us? Quite possibly very little.
A Giant Hole Is Swallowing a Town in Peru
Cerro de Pasco is an environmental and urban catastrophe thanks to the massive polymetal mine that sits in the middle of town.
The Giant Toxic Hole Eating Peru's Highest City
The 'highest city in the world' is being swallowed by an appetite for metal.
The Drone That Will Change Graffiti: An Interview with KATSU
The mysterious artist wants to give a new meaning to drone bombing, starting in Silicon Valley. An interview and video.
How the Future of War (and Flying) Could Be Swarms of 3D-Printed Drones
The U.S. military has a problem: it takes too long to acquire new combat machines.