Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Interview.
Open To Debate Talks To Wikipedia Founder
In this week’s episode of the podcast Open to Debate, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales discusses, among other things, how Wikipedia can integrate Artificial Intelligence and responds to backlash from its volunteer moderators.
By Frank Racioppi4 months ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 31: Life-Permitting Universes
Scott Douglas Jacobsen contends that subjectivity emerges only in life-permitting universes and is inherently limited: finite minds cannot fully model the larger systems that birth them. Mental maps can improve but need not, as delusion, injury, disease, and aging illustrate. Rick Rosner pushes back on multiverse looseness, arguing that in sufficiently large, natural-order universes, life is likely; only tiny universes preclude it. He asks how knowable any universe is, echoing Feynman on science’s limits. Rosner expects near-term unifying principles but enduring ignorance of particulars given cosmic scale, distances, and timescales. Both land on rigorous curiosity coupled with epistemic humility, ultimately.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen4 months ago in Interview
The Business of Vision How Enzo Zelocchi Turns Ideas into Movements
Every era produces a few individuals who blur the lines between dreamers and doers—people who not only imagine a better world but build it piece by piece. Enzo Zelocchi belongs to that rare breed. To many, he’s known as an actor and filmmaker. But beneath the surface lies something much deeper—a creative entrepreneur who transforms his ideas into living, breathing movements that transcend industries.
By Brian Smith4 months ago in Interview
Desi Dreamers Podcast
Identity is an elusive attribute that strikes at the core of our being. Who am I? What group do I belong to? What if I’m a member of two groups and neither accepts me? We all search for identity and find it in different ways. It could be as a rabid fan of Manchester United, the English Premier League football team. Or as a Swiftie?
By Frank Racioppi4 months ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 30: Particles as Baked Bread
Scott Douglas Jacobsen likens particles to baked bread, emergent from interacting fields. Rick Rosner stresses Heisenberg uncertainty. Context, decoherence, and speculative topological knots frame a 13.8-billion-year interaction braid.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen4 months ago in Interview
Sydney Sweeney Red Carpet Moment: Power in a Sheer Gown
The room went silent when Sydney Sweeney stepped onto the red carpet at the Variety Power of Women gala in Beverly Hills. Cameras flashed, stylists froze mid-stride, and the word that filled social media minutes later was simple: speechless. In a sheer silver gown that shimmered like liquid metal, Sweeney wasn’t just attending an event — she was rewriting the script of how women in Hollywood claim their image.
By Oppositioner News4 months ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 29: How the Human Mind Measures Time, Space, and Thought
In this dialogue, Scott Douglas Jacobsen and Rick Rosner explore the perceptual boundaries of human experience—the limits of what we can truly sense in time and space. Rosner explains that our temporal resolution hovers around a tenth of a second, the scale of reflexes and thought formation, while spatial awareness reaches down to roughly 50 microns, the threshold of the naked eye. They discuss how linguistic processing, births, and deaths occur within similar temporal slices, linking consciousness to the continuous flow of global life. The conversation ultimately frames thought as holographic—relational, dynamic, and resistant to discrete measurement.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen5 months ago in Interview
ORIGINS — “Where It All Began”. AI-Generated.
At just 30 years old, Cullen Spencer has already carved out a name for himself as a storyteller — one who writes not just to be heard, but to be felt. His songs pulse with emotion, honesty, and a touch of grit, echoing through the same walls where he first learned what music really meant.
By Jane Carty 5 months ago in Interview
Fumfer Physics 28: Why Pi and Fibonacci Appear in Nature
Pi recurs because circular and spherical geometry minimize surface area and energy: surface tension rounds droplets; for fixed area a circle has the shortest boundary; in 3D a sphere resists stress and encloses volume efficiently. Fibonacci patterns arise from local growth rules near the golden angle (~137.5°), packing leaves and seeds without overlap. Those rules produce spiral counts that match consecutive Fibonacci numbers. Iterative branching and logarithmic spirals extend the effect across pinecones, sunflowers, shells, and more. Beneath both patterns is information shaped by constraints: simple optimization rules yield stable forms nature reuses, from eyeballs to orbits to seed heads.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen5 months ago in Interview
Enzo Zelocchi: Navigating Film, Tech & Entrepreneurship in the Hollywood Spotlight
In Hollywood, where the spotlight often shines brightest on fame, few manage to balance artistry, business, and innovation with genuine purpose. Enzo Zelocchi stands among that rare group — a multifaceted talent who has built a career that transcends acting and filmmaking to include entrepreneurship, digital innovation, and social impact. His story is one of creative reinvention, business intelligence, and relentless self-belief.
By Brian Smith5 months ago in Interview
The Bold Vision of Enzo Zelocchi — Actor, Producer, and Healthcare Tech Pioneer
In an era when celebrities are often celebrated for their presence rather than their purpose, Enzo Zelocchi stands out as a rare exception: an actor, producer, and healthcare-tech pioneer who refuses to be defined by convention. He’s not simply playing parts — he’s building platforms, telling stories, and launching ventures that merge creativity with impact.
By Brian Smith5 months ago in Interview







