NNEB 2016-07

Poster designed by Jeanette Yu.


Grab tix to our July 25th show! Last month’s sold out show, sponsorship by the always incredible East Bay Express, and a fantastic lineup featuring everyday probability, the history of juvenile justice, and the amazing band The Ten Thousand Ways all point to why you should snatch up your tix in advance. Or, as The Ten Thousand Ways put it:

We’re glad you’re here and learning stuff while getting drunk
And we hope you’ll do it all again next month
You’ll get a drink or two
We’ll talk nerdy to you
About when one plus one is more than two (synergy! Buzzwords!)

Doors/bar/food are at 7. We’re pleased to feature Chickpea Chick and Shades of Sugar. Ann-Marie Benz’s Detention (our social program before the talks) starts then too. This month: Games of Chance.

As always: Rick, Rebecca, DJ Citizen Zain, and the Oakland Public Library will ensure the good are odd.

Be there and be square.

This event is 21+.

Monday 7/25/2016
Doors (+food,drink,"Detention" preshow) at 7 pm, talks start at 8 pm and end by 10:30 pm
Club 21, 2111 Franklin St, Oakland
(two blocks from the 19th St BART)

Advance tickets are $8. Any left for the door will be $10.
Your CC statement will denote these come from Drinkified Learning, LLC.
We will allow an extremely limited number of people to enter after we can estimate no shows for $10 (cash or card).

tix

Probability, Outside the Textbook by David Aldous

Can probability contribute to “science fiction” style issues like the Fermi paradox?
Were there improbably many candidates for the Republican Presidential Nomination in 2012 and 2016? How can I give an exam which can be graded objectively, even though no-one will ever know the correct answer to any of the questions? How many topics like this, from my UC Berkeley course, can I cover in 20 minutes?
David Aldous likes the description “aging gentleman scholar” rather than “math nerd”. Aside from research, teaching and advising the 400 UCB Statistic majors, he reads The Economist and science fiction, putters around the garden, and plays killer volleyball with people half his age.

Songs About Science: Emergence and Getting By With a Little Help From Your Friends by The Ten Thousand Ways [Trisha Stan and Greg Bentsen]

We’re glad you’re here and learning stuff while getting drunk
And we hope you’ll do it all again next month
You’ll get a drink or two
We’ll talk nerdy to you
About when one plus one is more than two (synergy! Buzzwords!)

Then we’ll sing a song
It’ll be about science
We’ll take a Beiber hit
And we’ll science that shit

It might get weird (real weird)
We hope that you’ll join us
Don’t disappoint us
Bring your friends (or your tinder date)

It’s July 25 yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah

The Ten Thousand Ways writes original folk/americana songs and performs creative covers. Ridiculous music in the style of pop songs based on recent papers? Miley Cyrus + reproducibility? Yes!

Trisha and Greg are also two of the co-hosts of the podcast Gogggles Optional and are both passionate about science and science communication.

The United States Government is a Shitty Parent:A Brief Amateur History of the Juvenile Justice System by Cat Willett

How did a program meant to keep American children from an Oliver-Twist-like existence evolve into the juvenile justice system we know today? Have teenagers ALWAYS existed?Are superpredators real? Can a court raise a kid? Come learn how a program meant to protect youth spawned the foster care system, juvenile jails, and the concept of adolescence from a professional do-gooder with absolutely no background in law.

Cat Willett is definitely not a lawyer. She is, however, a nerd for all things youth justice and works in the Richmond community, offering restorative practice and mental health first aid trainings. In her spare time, she spends more time in public libraries than may actually be reasonable, and is perfecting her breakfast taco recipe. It has been recommended, on more than one occasion, that she talk less about prisons in her OK Cupid profile.

With thanks to:
The East Bay Express