Next Nerd Nite NYC Jan 10, 2025 w/Ideal Male Butts, Large Hadron Collider, Jewish Demons, Trivia & Matt

Dec 17, 2024 5:50 pm

Dear Nerds and Friends of Nerds,

I know we just had a show four days ago, but we have a quickish turnaround until our next one. So her we are. Nerd Nite NYC – and me! – are back in Brooklyn at Littlefield on Friday January 10, 2025 featuring fun-yet-informative presentations about the ideal male buttocks, the Large Hadron Collider, and Jewish demons. And I'm bringing trivia back too beforehand, so bring some pals and win some perfectly adequate prizes. Hello 2025! Tickets here.


Nerd Nite NYC

Friday January 10, 2022

Trivia + Presentations $16 at 7pm (doors at 6:30pm)

Presentations-only $12 at 8:15pm (doors at 8pm)

Littlefield: 635 Sackett Street, Brooklyn (Park Slope/Gowanus)

Tickets here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/nerd-nite-nyc-tickets-1097351540999?aff=oddtdtcreator


Back to the Lectures At-Hand

*Presentation #1

The Ideal Male Buttocks

by Victoria Aveson


Description coming imminently. But yeah, actual scientific studies about ideal male butts.


*Presentation #2

Big Machines for Tiny Science: Adventures at the Large Hadron Collider

by Savannah Thais


Description: What is the smallest thing in the universe and how do we study it? What exactly is dark matter? What about the Higgs Boson? What the heck do computers and AI have to do with all this? And most importantly, what does any of this have to do with you? In this presentation, Savannah Thais —a physicist who has worked with the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) for over a decade —will take you on a journey into the world of particle physics. Learn about the Standard Model, the framework for understanding everything the building blocks of the universe, and how scientists use the world’s largest machine and all kinds of algorithms and AI to smash protons together at nearly the speed of light in search of the universe’s biggest mysteries. Get ready to think big, dream small, and be amazed!


Bio: Dr. Savannah Thais is a Research Scientist and Adjunct Professor in the Data Science Institute at Columbia University. She has been fascinated by particle physics since learning about the Higgs Boson in her high school physics class; she decided she was going to work at the LHC and never looked back. She completed a PhD in physics at Yale working on the ATLAS experiment at the LHC where she was a pioneer in applying AI to particle physics; she then did a post-doc at Princeton with the competing CMS experiment where she helped found the CMS Machine Learning group, and now runs the Science, Society, and AI Lab at Columbia where she uses advanced AI to study different systems from particle physics to public health.


*Presentation #3

Asmodeus, King of the Demons, and Other Shedim in Jewish Texts and Tradition

by Erik Schechter


Description: Do demons exist? If so, how did they come to be? Are they dangerous? Irrevocably evil? Immortal? Where do demons exist in relation to human society? Finally, how do you protect yourself from a demon? In this presentation, Erik Schechter, a member of the NY Chapter of the Horror Writers Association, will examine the evolving, and often conflicting, Jewish understanding of demons (shedim) in the Hebrew Bible, Talmud, Apocrypha, and other sources.




In the meantime, I'll be working on my glutes.


Fun!

Matt

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