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The Buzz Week in Review

By Vera H-C Chan
Fri, September 19, 2008, 3:21 pm PDT

Lots of other pressing news piled up this week in the Buzz. Take a moment to cross out some must-reads and catch up on the afterlife, an A-list donation to save gay marriage, and how a 12-year-old took one small step toward saving the world.

Figure Out the Afterlife: Check.
Time magazine ventures to ask how researchers at the aptly named Human Consciousness Project will study "out-of-body" experiences. The study, even more aptly named project AWARE (AWAreness during REscuscitation), will have scientists interviewing approximately 1,500 heart-attack survivors about their experiences during the time they were dead.

Donated $100K to Gay Marriage: Check
Brad PittLEGO figure, blogger, and humanitarian. After he and Angelina Jolie gave $2 million to an Ethiopian health center, the actor kicked over $100,000 to the campaign against Proposition 8, which seeks to overturn same-sex marriages in California. The cash chunk prompted the New York Observer to recall Pitt's conditions for his own wedded bliss.

Solve Energy Crisis Before Puberty: Check.
Buzz readers felt a little bit proud and inadequate at the same time after finding out how 12-year-old William Yuan refined a superduper solar cell. The Oregonian boy genius received a Davidson Fellow Award worth 25 grand for his research, entitled "A Highly-efficient, 3-Dimensional Nanotube Solar Cell for Visible and UV Light." (In case anyone's worried he might be bullied for his brains, Yuan has a youth black belt in tae kwon do.) Feel inspired, or green with envy? Either might motivate you to to try Treehugger's DIY tips on homemade solar panels from eBay damaged goods.

Also buzzing this week ...
 • By sending junior out of the kitchen, could you be encouraging fussy eating habits? The New York Times points out six parental food mistakes.
 • Shades of Hoovervilles: The Associated Press reports the rise of homeless encampments, or "tent cities," across the U.S.
 • "Babar the Elephant" ... imperialist propaganda? A New Yorker report on a Babar books exhibit gives a sweet family history of Babar's creators, and addresses pesky leftists who see the stories of the four-legged mammal as an "allegory of French colonization."

Filed under: Literature, Celebrities, Food, Recaps, Books, Death, Brad Pitt, Environment, Energy, Wrap Up

The Energy Blues

Thu, October 20, 2005, 11:00 am PDT

Feel yourself dragging this late in the week? Maybe you need a little energy. With gas prices rising and eyelids propped open, searchers are turning to information on "energy" for solutions. Terms such as "cheap gas" (+33%), "gas prices" (+40%), and "natural gas" (+5%) remain popular, and our own Buzz attempt at harnessing the hot air of politicians and celebrities has yet to receive a patent, so we got all revved up to see what other power sources you're looking for. Here are our top 20 energy searches...

  1. Solar Energy
  2. Department of Energy
  3. Nuclear Energy
  4. Wind Energy
  5. Alternative Energy
  6. Energy Drinks
  7. Geothermal Energy
  8. Renewable Energy
  9. Kinetic Energy
  10. Energy Star
  1. Energy Hog
  2. Free Energy
  3. Energy Conservation
  4. Red Bull Energy Drink
  5. Monster Energy Drink
  6. Thermal Energy
  7. Alternative Energy Sources
  8. Forms of Energy
  9. Electrical Energy
  10. Energy Saving Tips

Filed under: Energy

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top leaders

Rank Subject Move  Score 
1Black Friday+340 1290 
2NFL+489 670 
3Jennifer Lopez+451 515 
4New Moon-67 250 
5American Music Awards+236 249 
6UFC-36 239 
7Miley Cyrus+66 169 
8Hulu-11 154 

what's the buzz?

A subject's buzz score is the percentage of Yahoo! users searching for that subject on a given day, multiplied by a constant to make the number easier to read. Weekly leaders are the subjects with the greatest average buzz score for a given week.


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