COMMENTS

  1. 10 hours of walking but this time she talks back (BEST CATCALL parody

    Jukin Media Verified (Original) * For licensing / permission to use: Contact - licensing(at)jukinmediadotcomAnother catcall video but this time, she doesn't ...

  2. Catcall experiment: Hidden camera captures street harassment

    October 29, 2014 / 2:03 PM EDT / CBS News. A new hidden-camera social experiment offers a disturbing look at the harassment some women face when they walk down the street. The video shows Shoshana ...

  3. 10 Hours of Walking in NYC as a Woman

    Creator/Owner/Director: @RobBliss - http://robblisscreative.com/Business/Media Contact: [email protected] Effects Consultant: Kevin Budzynski - h...

  4. Catcall Victims Fight Back Against Street Harassment

    A video of a woman who secretly taped herself being catcalled in NYC went viral and launched a new controversy.

  5. What Have Been Your Experiences With Catcalling or Other Kinds of

    (A catcall in this context is defined as "a whistle, shout, or comment of a sexual nature to a woman passing by.") Here are excerpts from the responses of two of them. ... I think "ten hours of walking in NYC as a woman" is a good experiment because that happens to some women on a daily basis and she's proving a point. This video can ...

  6. A Woman Did The Same Catcall Experiment In New Zealand And ...

    The New Zealand Herald decided to see what would happen if its attempted in Auckland, New Zealand, the same NYC catcall experiment that went viral last week. View this video on YouTube Via youtube.com

  7. A model secretly filmed her walk in New Zealand to see if men ...

    A catcall experiment New Zealand Herald. Alex Abad-Santos is a senior correspondent who explains what society obsesses over, from Marvel and movies to fitness and skin care. He came to Vox in 2014.

  8. Princeton Scientists Once Turned A Live Cat Into A Telephone

    Enter a sedated, but still very much alive cat. First, they opened the cat's skull, to gain access to its auditory nerves. Then, they attached one end of a telephone wire to the nerve, and the other to a telephone receiver, effectively creating a transmitter. Wever then took the receiver and went into a soundproof room 50 feet away.

  9. Scientists Might Have Found the Best Way to Catcall a Cat

    Scientists in France might have just found the most effective way to catcall an unfamiliar cat. The team discovered that cats living at a cat cafe responded most quickly to a human stranger when ...

  10. How To Respond to Catcallers

    In this parody, a woman in New York City takes a stand against catcalling and harassment on the streets. Fed up with the constant catcalling from men, she de...

  11. MLE #5 Cat Calling

    For the experiment, we decided to make it a two part project. Part one was to cat call men and women walking around the HUB. We wanted to give both the experience and see the differing reactions we would get. Afterwards, we asked an equal amount of females and male to take a five question survey asking them about their experiences with cat ...

  12. The Cat Telephone: How To Scientists Turned A Live Cat Into A Working

    Enter a sedated, but still very much alive cat. First, they opened the cat's skull, to gain access to its auditory nerves. Then, they attached one end of a telephone wire to the nerve, and the other to a telephone receiver, effectively creating a transmitter. Wever then took the receiver and went into a soundproof room 50 feet away.

  13. Poll: Is it ok to cat-call people as part of a social experiment?

    EARLIER IN THE week 4FM's The Niall Boylan Show carried out a social experiment that involved sending one of its reporters out onto the street to cat-call at people.

  14. Men React to Their Girlfriends Getting Catcalled

    What happens when these boyfriends see their girlfriends getting catcalled on New York City streets? SUBSCRIBE to Cosmopolitan: http://goo.gl/MJgRO8Cosmopoli...

  15. French scientists might have figured out the best way to catcall a cat

    Scientists from the University of Rennes in France studied video clips of 12 cats living in cat cafes and observed their behaviour in response to different communication patterns. As part of the ...

  16. What Two Princeton Scientists Learned By Turning A Living Cat ...

    Ernest Wever and Charles Bray turned a live cat into a telephone. Ernest Wever and his assistant Charles Bray started the experiment by — brace yourself — surgically opening the skull of a sedated cat and attaching a telephone wire to its cranial auditory nerve. The cable stretched an entire 50 feet and was fastened to a telephone receiver ...

  17. The Cat Telephone

    Undergraduate Alumni Records (AC199). To do so, they first sedated the cat and opened its skull to better access the auditory nerve. A telephone wire was attached to the nerve and the other end of the wire was connected to a telephone receiver. Bray would speak in the cat's ears, while Wever would listen through the receiver 50 feet away in a ...

  18. Men Asked Why They Catcall [VIDEO]

    "After a series of viral videos showing us that catcalling and harassment have morphed into an epidemic, Gothamist only had one question: Why?The Marabigo vi...

  19. Scientists Might Have Found the Best Way to Catcall a Cat

    Scientists in France might have just found the most effective way to catcall an unfamiliar cat. The team discovered that cats living at a cat cafe responded most quickly to a human stranger when ...

  20. Schrödinger's Cat Experiment and the Conundrum That Rules Modern

    The scenario involving Schrödinger's dead — or undead — cat in a box involves a thought experiment to describe how the state of electrons might conceivably affect something much larger, in the macro world. He created it in response to a theory of quantum mechanics by other physicists called the Copenhagen interpretation to show the ...

  21. The Princeton Cat Experiment: Turning a Cat into a Phone

    RING RING . In 1929 Ernest Wever and Charles Bray thought, "Hey, how about a cat telephone? Yeah—let's do it in the name of science!" and proceeded to remove part of a cat's skull, along with most of its brain, and attach an electrode to the animal's right auditory nerve and another to the cat's body.