A few years ago I was visiting my friend Kristen up in the D.C. area, and we were taking one last blitz through the Smithsonian before I had to run to National Airport and get on a plane. And we got to talking: If we came into an inconceivable sum of money, enough to endow a whole network of museums in a major city, what would those museums be? The Smithsonian covers a lot of territory -- honestly, once you get past American history, natural history, art, and planes and rockets, you kind of have to get down into some very specific categories to come up with something new. But I think I've got five ideas that would provide the nucleus of a museum system that would bring joy and knowledge to people around the world. This week's +5 is Five Museums That Would Make Up The Dougsonian Institution:
The Museum of the Interstate Highway System
I know that not necessarily everyone finds the Interstate system as fascinating as I do, but I think it's amazing how Eisenhower just up and said "Hey, let's build tens of thousands of miles of big wide roads all over the place" and bam, they started growing. This museum would have exhibits on road construction and how the government decides to build roads where they do, with special information on sections of Interstate built over and through mountains, over large bodies of water, and even under the ocean. And one big room would be devoted to an interactive map of the nation's most lucrative speed traps. See, you're going to learn important information here.
Temporary exhibit: From MacArthur Maze to Spaghetti Junction: America's Great Interchanges
The National Air Disaster Museum
Whenever I go to Washington, no matter how packed my schedule is, I always carve out a little time to wander through the National Air & Space Museum. I loved airplanes as a kid; my dad used to take me there all the time. But the one thing it doesn't have a lot about is airplane crashes. This museum would feature artifacts of some of the biggest and most famous plane crashes of the past 50 years or so -- this section of Delta flight 191 would make a nice centerpiece for the exhibit hall, if we could get our hands on it -- as well as an interactive feature where you and a group of friends could pick seats on a number of different doomed flights and then find out whether you would've survived or not. Morbid fun for the whole family!
Temporary exhibit: Aeroblotto: Alcohol-Related Crashes of the Post-Soviet Era
The National Gallery of Football Bloopers
As much as the Smithsonian Institution contains, it doesn't have a whole lot on sports, except for I guess one small section of the Museum of American History. This museum would be devoted to football, but not the great historic plays and players of the game, since we've already got multiple halls of fame for that. Nope, this museum would display the great fumbles, pick-sixes, missed blocks, blown calls, disastrous trick plays, and general brain farts in football history at the pro, college, and high-school levels. (And what the hell, the CFL and arena leagues too.) Plenty of hands-on opportunities here, including interactive features such as Which Detroit Lion Is Going To Blow This Play? and Can You Return A Jarrett Lee Interception For A Touchdown?
Temporary exhibit: "It's Just a Game, Dawg": A Reggie Ball Retrospective, 2003-2007
The National Library of Lingerie
I'm just going to come out and say it: Women's underwear fascinates me. For the obvious reasons, of course, but also on its own merits; there are just so many different kinds, styles, sizes, colors, and materials that someone needs to open a museum to contain it all. This institution would be a wellspring of knowledge on all the different types of lingerie and why they're different (how is a thong different from a G-string? you won't know until you go!), along with a detailed history of lingerie showing just how much smaller everything is than it used to be. There would also be a huge interactive exhibit on bra sizes and how, for example, a 32F cup holds the same volume as a 36D (it would be hands-on, of course). Everything you always wanted to know about undies but were afraid to ask.
Temporary exhibit: Lift and Separate: The Physics of the Push-Up
The American Institute of Fast-Food Innovation
Confession #2: I'm a sucker for new frontiers in fast-food. I was all over the McRib and the P'Zone; I even liked the McDonald's Pizza when that product had its very short trial run back in the early 1990s. You put some new cheese or topping on a plain old burger and I'll eventually succumb to temptation and go out and try one. This museum would have a big exhibit hall centering around that ongoing cheeseburger arms race, in which fast-food joints constantly try to outdo each other with bigger, sloppier, and more artery-clogging burgers, but it'd also have exhibits on obscure regional and seasonal offerings through history, such as the McLobster (yes, some McDonald's still sell lobster rolls at certain times of year in New England and the Canadian maritimes). And the museum would be connected to an international laboratory funded to research and create the fast-food advances of tomorrow.
Temporary exhibit: The World's Longest Curly Fries
And now the Ten:
1. Dave Matthews, "Dodo"
2. Downright, "Say Some Words"
3. The Clash, "Death is a Star"
4. Fatboy Slim, "Praise You"
5. Ryuichi Sakamoto, "Bibo no Aozora/04"
6. U2, "New York"
7. St. Germain, "Latin Note"
8. New Order, "60 Miles an Hour"
9. The Clash, "Know Your Rights"
10. De La Soul, "Ghetto Thang"
Now it's your turn. Your Random Tens and/or brilliant museum concepts in the comments thread, if you please.
Friday, May 1, 2009
The Friday Random Ten+5 is all about making learning fun. Or at least tolerable.
Labels:
boobs,
Friday Random Ten,
my rich fantasy life
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