TED Talks with English transcript

Daria van den Bercken: Why I take the piano on the road ... and in the air

TEDSalon Berlin 2014

Daria van den Bercken: Why I take the piano on the road ... and in the air
984,049 views

Pianist Daria van den Bercken fell in love with the baroque keyboard music of George Frideric Handel. Now, she aims to ignite this passion in others. In this talk, she plays us through the emotional roller coaster of his music — while sailing with her piano through the air, driving it down the street, and of course playing on the stage.

Susan Colantuono: The career advice you probably didn’t get

TEDxBeaconStreet

Susan Colantuono: The career advice you probably didn’t get
4,007,402 views

You’re doing everything right at work, taking all the right advice, but you’re just not moving up. Why? Susan Colantuono shares a simple, surprising piece of advice you might not have heard before quite so plainly. This talk, while aimed at an audience of women, has universal takeaways -- for men and women, new grads and midcareer workers.

Gail Reed: Where to train the world's doctors? Cuba.

TEDMED 2014

Gail Reed: Where to train the world's doctors? Cuba.
824,908 views

Big problems need big solutions, sparked by big ideas, imagination and audacity. In this talk, journalist Gail Reed profiles one big solution worth noting: Havana’s Latin American Medical School, which trains global physicians to serve the local communities that need them most.

Eman Mohammed: The courage to tell a hidden story

TED2014

Eman Mohammed: The courage to tell a hidden story
1,474,554 views

Eman Mohammed is one of the few female photojournalists in the Gaza Strip. Though openly shunned by many of her male colleagues, she is given unprecedented access to areas denied to men. In this short, visual talk, the TED Fellow critiques gender norms in her community by bringing light to hidden stories.

Kenneth Cukier: Big data is better data

TEDSalon Berlin 2014

Kenneth Cukier: Big data is better data
1,663,038 views

Self-driving cars were just the start. What's the future of big data-driven technology and design? In a thrilling science talk, Kenneth Cukier looks at what's next for machine learning -- and human knowledge.

Lord Nicholas Stern: The state of the climate — and what we might do about it

TED@Unilever

Lord Nicholas Stern: The state of the climate — and what we might do about it
849,516 views

How can we begin to address the global, insidious problem of climate change — a problem that's too big for any one country to solve? Economist Nicholas Stern lays out a plan, presented to the UN's Climate Summit in 2014, showing how the world's countries can work together on climate. It's a big vision for cooperation, with a payoff that goes far beyond averting disaster. He asks: How can we use this crisis to spur better lives for all?

Moshe Safdie: How to reinvent the apartment building

TED2014

Moshe Safdie: How to reinvent the apartment building
1,771,800 views

In 1967, Moshe Safdie reimagined the monolithic apartment building, creating “Habitat ’67,” which gave each unit an unprecedented sense of openness. Nearly 50 years later, he believes the need for this type of building is greater than ever. In this short talk, Safdie surveys a range of projects that do away with the high-rise and let light permeate into densely-packed cities.

Mac Barnett: Why a good book is a secret door

TEDxSonomaCounty

Mac Barnett: Why a good book is a secret door
1,882,886 views

Childhood is surreal. Why shouldn't children's books be? In this whimsical talk, award-winning author Mac Barnett speaks about writing that escapes the page, art as a doorway to wonder -- and what real kids say to a fictional whale.

Hans and Ola Rosling: How not to be ignorant about the world

TEDSalon Berlin 2014

Hans and Ola Rosling: How not to be ignorant about the world
5,377,171 views

How much do you know about the world? Hans Rosling, with his famous charts of global population, health and income data (and an extra-extra-long pointer), demonstrates that you have a high statistical chance of being quite wrong about what you think you know. Play along with his audience quiz — then, from Hans’ son Ola, learn 4 ways to quickly get less ignorant.

Antonio Donato Nobre: The magic of the Amazon: A river that flows invisibly all around us

TEDxAmazonia

Antonio Donato Nobre: The magic of the Amazon: A river that flows invisibly all around us
1,159,750 views

The Amazon River is like a heart, pumping water from the seas through it, and up into the atmosphere through 600 billion trees, which act like lungs. Clouds form, rain falls and the forest thrives. In a lyrical talk, Antonio Donato Nobre talks us through the interconnected systems of this region, and how they provide environmental services to the entire world. A parable for the extraordinary symphony that is nature. 

Dan Barasch: A park underneath the hustle and bustle of New York City

TED@NYC

Dan Barasch: A park underneath the hustle and bustle of New York City
934,267 views

Dan Barasch and James Ramsey have a crazy plan — to create a park, filled with greenery, underneath New York City. The two are developing the Lowline, an underground greenspace the size of a football field. They're building it in a trolley terminal abandoned in 1948, using technology that harvests sunlight above-ground and directs it down below. It's a park that can thrive, even in winter.

Nancy Kanwisher: A neural portrait of the human mind

TED2014

Nancy Kanwisher: A neural portrait of the human mind
1,226,930 views

Brain imaging pioneer Nancy Kanwisher, who uses fMRI scans to see activity in brain regions (often her own), shares what she and her colleagues have learned: The brain is made up of both highly specialized components and general-purpose "machinery." Another surprise: There's so much left to learn.

Rishi Manchanda: What makes us get sick? Look upstream

TEDSalon NY2014

Rishi Manchanda: What makes us get sick? Look upstream
1,843,333 views

Rishi Manchanda has worked as a doctor in South Central Los Angeles for a decade, where he’s come to realize: His job isn’t just about treating a patient’s symptoms, but about getting to the root cause of what is making them ill—the “upstream" factors like a poor diet, a stressful job, a lack of fresh air. It’s a powerful call for doctors to pay attention to a patient's life outside the exam room.

Shubhendu Sharma: An engineer's vision for tiny forests, everywhere

TED2014

Shubhendu Sharma: An engineer's vision for tiny forests, everywhere
1,294,318 views

A forest planted by humans, then left to nature's own devices, typically takes at least 100 years to mature. But what if we could make the process happen ten times faster? In this short talk, eco-entrepreneur (and TED Fellow) Shubhendu Sharma explains how to create a mini-forest ecosystem anywhere.

Colin Grant: How our stories cross over

TEDxBrighton

Colin Grant: How our stories cross over
933,193 views

Colin Grant has spent a lifetime navigating the emotional landscape between his father’s world and his own. Born in England to Jamaican parents, Grant draws on stories of shared experience within his immigrant community -- and reflects on how he found forgiveness for a father who rejected him.

Sally Kohn: Don't like clickbait? Don't click

TED@NYC

Sally Kohn: Don't like clickbait? Don't click
1,482,015 views

Doesn't it seem like a lot of online news sites have moved beyond reporting the news to openly inciting your outrage (and your page views)? News analyst Sally Kohn suggests — don't engage with news that looks like it just wants to make you mad. Instead, give your precious clicks to the news sites you truly trust.

Jim Holt: Why does the universe exist?

TED2014

Jim Holt: Why does the universe exist?
7,775,216 views

Why is there something instead of nothing? In other words: Why does the universe exist (and why are we in it)? Philosopher and writer Jim Holt follows this question toward three possible answers. Or four. Or none.

Andrew Connolly: What's the next window into our universe?

TED2014

Andrew Connolly: What's the next window into our universe?
1,261,423 views

Big Data is everywhere — even the skies. In an informative talk, astronomer Andrew Connolly shows how large amounts of data are being collected about our universe, recording it in its ever-changing moods. Just how do scientists capture so many images at scale? It starts with a giant telescope ...

Meera Vijayann: Find your voice against gender violence

TEDxHousesOfParliament

Meera Vijayann: Find your voice against gender violence
1,028,379 views

This talk begins with a personal story of sexual violence that may be difficult to listen to. But that's the point, says citizen journalist Meera Vijayann: Speaking out on tough, taboo topics is the spark for change. Vijayann uses digital media to speak honestly about her experience of gender violence in her home country of India -- and calls on others to speak out too.

Martin Rees: Can we prevent the end of the world?

TED2014

Martin Rees: Can we prevent the end of the world?
1,283,785 views

A post-apocalyptic Earth, emptied of humans, seems like the stuff of science fiction TV and movies. But in this short, surprising talk, Lord Martin Rees asks us to think about our real existential risks — natural and human-made threats that could wipe out humanity. As a concerned member of the human race, he asks: What's the worst thing that could possibly happen?

Laurel Braitman: Depressed dogs, cats with OCD — what animal madness means for us humans

TEDSalon NY2014

Laurel Braitman: Depressed dogs, cats with OCD — what animal madness means for us humans
1,649,249 views

Behind those funny animal videos, sometimes, are oddly human-like problems. Laurel Braitman studies non-human animals who exhibit signs of mental health issues -- from compulsive bears to self-destructive rats to monkeys with unlikely friends. Braitman asks what we as humans can learn from watching animals cope with depression, sadness and other all-too-human problems.

Rose Goslinga: Crop insurance, an idea worth seeding

TEDSalon Berlin 2014

Rose Goslinga: Crop insurance, an idea worth seeding
712,277 views

Across sub-Saharan Africa, small farmers are the bedrock of national and regional economies—unless the weather proves unpredictable and their crops fail. The solution is insurance, at a vast, continental scale, and at a very low, affordable cost. Rose Goslinga and the Syngenta Foundation for Sustainable Agriculture pioneered an unconventional way to give farmers whose crops fail early a second chance at a growing season.

Aziza Chaouni: How I brought a river, and my city, back to life

TED2014

Aziza Chaouni: How I brought a river, and my city, back to life
732,804 views

The Fez River winds through the medina of Fez, Morocco—a mazelike medieval city that's a World Heritage site. Once considered the "soul" of this celebrated city, the river succumbed to sewage and pollution, and in the 1950s was covered over bit by bit until nothing remained. TED Fellow Aziza Chaouni recounts her 20 year effort to restore this river to its former glory, and to transform her city in the process.

Ziyah Gafić: Everyday objects, tragic histories

TED2014

Ziyah Gafić: Everyday objects, tragic histories
1,040,925 views

Ziyah Gafić photographs everyday objects—watches, shoes, glasses. But these images are deceptively simple; the items in them have been exhumed from the mass graves of the Bosnian War. Gafić, a TED Fellow and Sarajevo native, is photographing every item from these graves in order to create a living archive of the identities of those lost. 

Jarrett J. Krosoczka: Why lunch ladies are heroes

TED@NYC

Jarrett J. Krosoczka: Why lunch ladies are heroes
1,432,846 views

Children's book author Jarrett Krosoczka shares the origins of the Lunch Lady graphic novel series, in which undercover school heroes serve lunch...and justice! His new project, School Lunch Hero Day, reveals how cafeteria lunch staff provide more than food, and illustrates how powerful a thank you can be.