
Brian Roemmele
@BrianRoemmele • 479,577 subscribers
we can only see what we think is possible...
Shorts
Videos

Tattoos Be Gone Eraser Technology. Laser removal in a blink.
Brian Roemmele34,946,497 views • 7 days ago

Bob Fosse in Little Prince movie, 1974 had a massive influence on Michael Jackson.
Brian Roemmele20,511,933 views • 2 months ago

NO IT’S NOT AI. 1986, "Kin-Dza-Dza!" stands as one of the most strange science fiction films ever produced in the Soviet Union. The plot is following two strangers who accidentally activate an alien teleportation device and find themselves stranded on the desert planet Pluke in the distant Kin-dza-dza galaxy. What unfolds is a masterclass in surrealist social satire, as the two bewildered humans navigate an alien civilization governed by baffling social hierarchies, incomprehensible customs, and a language barrier that transforms every interaction into pure comedic and philosophical gold.
Brian Roemmele575,585 views • 5 days ago

Behold: the reality of our relativity in the solar system.
Brian Roemmele35,020,538 views • 7 months ago

This is the rare art of polyphonic overtone singing. Two vocal tones at the same time.
Brian Roemmele26,903 views • 18 hours ago

I likely have watched this 100s of times and it still transfixed me. This is Mr. Les Paul…
Brian Roemmele303,161 views • 7 days ago

A message from the 1980s: “You know the 80s miss you, right?”
Brian Roemmele28,179,117 views • 11 months ago

“You boys picked the wrong dance floor…” Bond, James Bond?
Brian Roemmele13,434,275 views • 7 months ago

My Exclusive Interview On My Decades Of Research Starting With The Zygon. Back in the early ’90s, I took a chance on the Zygon SuperMind and its evolved Learning Machine—devices dismissed by many as glorified scam gadgets with red LEDs flashing through closed eyelids. My Princeton library patent dives and years of personal use proved otherwise: reliable frequency-following responses rooted in Soviet-era neurological research delivered measurable gains in focus, creativity, and memory encoding. That empirical foundation now resonates powerfully with MIT’s 40Hz light therapy breakthroughs for Alzheimer’s. Join me in this 10-minute interview as I weave these threads together, exploring how flashing lights are not just relics of mail-order dreams but practical tools reshaping our understanding of brain plasticity and human potential in the interregnum ahead.
Brian Roemmele33,005 views • 1 day ago