Samuel Glass(I)
- Producer
Known as a teacher, writer, and film producer (Magellan (2017), Curse of Crom: The Legend of Halloween (2022)), "Samuel Glass" is the collective name of a biological community of about 100 trillion eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells living on the third planet from a G2V star located at about 7620 parsecs from the center of the Milky Way Galaxy in its Orion Arm.
Formed since Julian Date 2438786.05139 and at coordinates 29.50979 -098.39031 and at 232 meters above mean sea level, this community of cells is composed mainly of O (65% by mass), C (18%), H (10%), N (3%), Ca (1.5%), and P (1.2%) and can be best detected by electromagnetic radiation in the 400 to 790 THz range.
When he's not up late practicing the fine art of parenting, learning how to be a better teacher, debugging script, or drinking black coffee, Samuel Glass blogs about science education and Web technologies for his own amusement. Sam dislikes Piña Coladas, although he does like getting caught in the rain. He really enjoys teaching, learning, and exploring our natural world as well as books, film, music, and photography. Samuel was also named Time magazine's 2006 Person of the Year.
He is really, really lucky to be married to his best friend of over thirty years. Together with their son, they are voluntary participants in a long-term experimental ecosystem consisting of three cats (Felis silvestris catus), eight fish (Carassius auratus, Paracheirodon innesi, Pseudacanthicus spinosus, and Xiphophorus helleri), two shrimp (Caridina japonica), two mud fiddler crabs (Uca pugnax), thirty-two plants (mostly Lamiaceae), and an unidentified species of snail.
Formed since Julian Date 2438786.05139 and at coordinates 29.50979 -098.39031 and at 232 meters above mean sea level, this community of cells is composed mainly of O (65% by mass), C (18%), H (10%), N (3%), Ca (1.5%), and P (1.2%) and can be best detected by electromagnetic radiation in the 400 to 790 THz range.
When he's not up late practicing the fine art of parenting, learning how to be a better teacher, debugging script, or drinking black coffee, Samuel Glass blogs about science education and Web technologies for his own amusement. Sam dislikes Piña Coladas, although he does like getting caught in the rain. He really enjoys teaching, learning, and exploring our natural world as well as books, film, music, and photography. Samuel was also named Time magazine's 2006 Person of the Year.
He is really, really lucky to be married to his best friend of over thirty years. Together with their son, they are voluntary participants in a long-term experimental ecosystem consisting of three cats (Felis silvestris catus), eight fish (Carassius auratus, Paracheirodon innesi, Pseudacanthicus spinosus, and Xiphophorus helleri), two shrimp (Caridina japonica), two mud fiddler crabs (Uca pugnax), thirty-two plants (mostly Lamiaceae), and an unidentified species of snail.