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Design, explained.

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    Today I'm going to unpack for you
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    three examples of iconic design,
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    and it makes perfect sense
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    that I should be the one to do it
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    because I have a Bachelor's degree in Literature.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I'm also a famous
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    minor television personality
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    and an avid collector of
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    Design Within Reach catalogs,
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    so I pretty much know
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    everything there is.
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    Now, I'm sure you
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    recognize this object;
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    many of you probably saw it
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    as you were landing your private zeppelins
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    at Los Angeles International Airport
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    over the past couple of days.
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    This is known as the Theme Building;
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    that is its name for reasons
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    that are still very murky.
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    And it is perhaps
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    the best example we have in Los Angeles
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    of ancient extraterrestrial architecture.
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    It was first excavated in 1961
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    as they were building LAX,
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    although scientists believe that
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    it dates back to the year 2000
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    Before Common Era,
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    when it was used as
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    a busy transdimensional space port
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    by the ancient astronauts
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    who first colonized this planet
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    and raised our species
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    from savagery by giving us
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    the gift of written language
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    and technology and
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    the gift of revolving restaurants.
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    It is thought to have been
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    a replacement for the older space ports
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    located, of course, at Stonehenge
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    and considered to be
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    quite an improvement
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    due to the uncluttered design,
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    the lack of druids hanging around all the time
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    and obviously, the much better
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    access to parking.
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    When it was uncovered,
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    it ushered in a new era
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    of streamlined, archaically futuristic design
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    called Googie,
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    which came to be synonymous with
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    the Jet Age, a misnomer.
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    After all, the ancient astronauts who used it
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    did not travel by jet very often,
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    preferring instead to travel by feathered serpent
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    powered by crystal skulls.
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    (Applause)
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    (Music)
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    Ah yes, a table.
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    We use these every day.
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    And on top of it,
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    the juicy salif.
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    This is a design by Philippe Starck,
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    who I believe is in the audience at this very moment.
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    And you can tell it is a Starck design
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    by its precision, its playfulness,
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    its innovation and
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    its promise of imminent violence.
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    (Laughter)
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    It is a design that challenges your intuition --
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    it is not what you think it is when you first see it.
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    It is not a fork designed
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    to grab three hors d'oeuvres at a time,
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    which would be useful out in the lobby,
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    I would say.
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    And despite its obvious
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    influence by the ancient astronauts
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    and its space agey-ness and tripodism,
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    it is not something
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    designed to attach to your brain
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    and suck out your thoughts.
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    It is in fact a citrus juicer
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    and when I say that,
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    you never see it as anything else again.
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    It is also not a monument to design,
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    it is a monument to design's utility.
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    You can take it home with you,
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    unlike the Theme Building,
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    which will stay where it is forever.
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    This is affordable
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    and can come home with you
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    and, as such, it can sit
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    on your kitchen counter --
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    it can't go in your drawers;
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    trust me, I found that out the hard way --
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    and make your kitchen counter into
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    a monument to design.
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    One other thing about it,
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    if you do have one at home,
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    let me tell you one of the features you may not know:
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    when you fall asleep,
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    it comes alive
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    and it walks around your house
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    and goes through your mail
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    and watches you as you sleep.
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    (Applause)
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    Okay, what is this object?
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    I have no idea. I don't know what that thing is.
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    It looks terrible. Is it a little hot plate?
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    I don't get it.
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    Does anyone know? Chi?
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    It's an ... iPhone. iPhone.
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    Oh yes, that's right, I remember those;
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    I had my whole bathroom tiles
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    redone with those back in the good old days.
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    No, I have an iPhone. Of course I do.
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    Here is my well-loved iPhone.
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    I do so many things on this little device.
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    I like to read books on it.
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    More than that, I like to buy books on it
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    that I never have to feel guilty about not reading
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    because they go in here and I never look at them again
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    and it's perfect.
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    I use it every day to
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    measure the weight of an ox,
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    for example.
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    Every now and then,
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    I admit that I complete
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    a phone call on it occasionally.
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    And yet I forget about it all the time.
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    This is a design
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    that once you saw it,
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    you forgot about it.
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    It is easy to forget the gasp-inducement
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    that occurred in 2007 when you first
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    touched this thing because it became
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    so quickly pervasive
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    and because of how instantly
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    we adopted these gestures
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    and made it an extension of our life.
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    Unlike the Theme Building,
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    this is not alien technology.
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    Or I should say,
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    what it did was it took technology
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    which, unlike people in this room,
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    to many other people in the world,
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    still feels very alien,
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    and made it immediately and instantly feel
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    familiar and intimate.
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    And unlike the juicy salif,
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    it does not threaten
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    to attach itself to your brain,
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    rather, it simply
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    attaches itself to your brain.
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    (Laughter)
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    And you didn't even notice it happened.
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    So there you go. My name is John Hodgman.
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    I just explained design.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Design, explained.
Speaker:
John Hodgman
Description:

John Hodgman, comedian and resident expert, "explains" the design of three iconic modern objects. (From The Design Studio session at TED2012, guest-curated by Chee Pearlman and David Rockwell.)

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:23
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