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Episode 413 - "Memory Foam: It's Real Brain Food!"

Welcome ladies and gentlemen to episode 13 of the 4th Fair Use Law case file as the Triceratops Tribunal is joined for a second week by the Mathemagician Skeesix for a mystical magical tour. This week we discuss the quickest and dumbest way to lose all feeling in one of your appendages while at work, the true meaning behind Alice in Wonderland, the Jay-Z/Freemason conspiracy theory we might have made up out of boredom, and the sad sorry state of the current season of South Park. All this and the movie Jennifer's Body is referenced more times in 90 minutes than it has been in the last two years on this week's podcast!

This week we discussed the less than stellar concert attendance of the band Black Light Burns, a vastly under-appreciated industrial side project starring Wes Borland of Limp Bizkit fame. Here is their video for the song "Lie," a song that probably would still be played on modern rock radio if it were released in 1996:



Last week, during our 100th episode, we discussed the great 90s one hit wonder "Detachable Penis" by King Missle. So consider it kismet that I could find a fan made music video for that song mixed with footage of the show Ugly Americans, which we discuss in this week's venture:



What happens when the colossal Giant Khali, former WWE Champion and Indian movie superstar, meets up with Pamela Anderson on the Indian version of Big Brother? Worlds colliding in ways only Spider-1 from Powerman 5000 could predict, my friends:



Just how long has Fox primetime programming been kind of almost sorta been warning us about impeding natural tragedies in ways almost no sane person can decypher them? We may have never knew if not for the help of whackadoos on Youtube:



And finally we end the show notes for episode 101 in a most awesome fashion: creating a spectacular visual light show using video mapping. In Prague, for a clock tower's 600th birthday, the citizens celebrated with what might be the closest we've gotten to Back to the Future 2's 2015 holographic ads mankind has been able to reach so far:

The 600 Years from the macula on Vimeo.