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Podcast
Subscribe to our video podcast about all things Railroad. Get your train fix fast as we cover...

The Real Food Whole Health Podcast: Food, Travel, Natural Health, Self-Care
Podcast
The Real Food Whole Health Podcast is all about real food and holistic health in the real world....

Stuff You Should Know About Stuff: How to Properly Behave in Certain Situations
Tripp Crosby and Tyler Stanton
Book
Do you know how to properly conduct yourself in a public restroom? What about while in the midst of...

Ice Candy Kids - Ice Cream Making Game
Games and Entertainment
App
Express your creativity and create a cold, yummy and refreshing ice candy! This ice pop candy maker...

Jay Jeffers: Collected Cool: The Art of Bold, Stylish Interiors
Book
In his first book, acclaimed interior designer Jay Jeffers displays the sophisticated yet playful...

Modern Art in Detail: 75 Masterpieces
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Great works of art cannot be fully understood in a single encounter. This is perhaps even truer for...

Physical
Book
This book was shortlisted for the 2015 Forward Prize for Best First Collection, Longlisted for the...

Sticky: 10th Anniversary Edition
Dale Lazarov and Steve MacIsaac
Book
"TimeOut Chicago" says "carnality and sweetness is exactly the right combination that makes Sticky a...

Why We Do the Things We Do: Psychology in a Nutshell
Book
Can you really tell a criminal by the bumps on his head? What does a memory look like? Can a machine...

LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Contagion (2011) in Movies
Sep 21, 2020 (Updated Nov 26, 2020)
Totally unrealistic, not even a *single* scene where someone buys out all the toilet paper. In all seriousness, it's interesting to kick this around in terms of the current pandemic really only until this starts to take form of a narrative movie (a fucking bingo drawing for who gets the first vaccines? lmfao) rather than a "what if?" scenario - but it's never any less measured or just plain fun. Soderbergh's sickly, medical-esque digital palette coats a befitting film over a story with absolutely no regard for the sanctity of human life. I wish it retained most of the pure penchant for schadenfreude it did in its first hour before turning toward a more traditional route - characters being viciously snuffed out one after another without warning, paranoia cranked up to 11 (bystanders are the enemy, air is the enemy) but even still it does have a giddy love for the cruelty of dragging this world and its inhabitants through the wringer. Sacrifices depth for pure pacing perfection (favorably, might I add) in what is essentially a seamless series of montages that boast the same kind of uninterrupted inertia of (lesser) films such as 𝘊𝘢𝘱𝘵𝘪𝘷𝘦 𝘚𝘵𝘢𝘵𝘦. And what a bitchin' score, no? Could have ended with more vigor, but very much succeeds as the business-casual 𝘊𝘢𝘣𝘪𝘯 𝘍𝘦𝘷𝘦𝘳.