Campus News

How a UC Berkeley group project sparked two decades of TV hits

December 19, 2025

For Cal alumni Sanjay Shah and Rachelle Mendez, lessons learned as undergraduate rhetoric majors forged a path to success in Hollywood.

In the late 1990s, Sanjay Shah and Rachelle Mendez were assigned to the same group project in a UC Berkeley rhetoric class. That collaboration would become a blueprint for two decades of friendship and creative partnership that led to parallel paths into the television industry, multiple hit shows, and prestigious awards like the Emmys.

Shah is a writer, showrunner, and executive producer on Everybody Still Hates Chris, an...

From Bob Dylan to Ice Cube: Mapping 60 years of storytelling in pop lyrics

December 17, 2025

UC Berkeley researchers used machine learning to analyze more than 5,000 Billboard Hot 100 hits, finding that storytelling has been on the uptick since the 1990s thanks to the rise in popularity of hip-hop.


Think of the lyrics of your favorite pop song. Are they like Taylor Swift’s “All Too Well,” which narrates the story of a breakup, jumping back and forth in time and building a world through vivid descriptions of past memories? Or are they more like...

What's powering these mysterious, bright blue cosmic flashes? Astronomers find a clue.

December 17, 2025

Among the more puzzling cosmic phenomena discovered over the past few decades are brief and very bright flashes of blue and ultraviolet light that gradually fade away, leaving behind faint X-ray and radio emissions. With slightly more than a dozen discovered so far, astronomers have debated whether they are produced by an unusual type of supernova or by interstellar gas falling into a black hole.

Analysis of the brightest such burst to date, discovered last year, shows that they’re neither.

Instead, a team of astronomers led by researchers from the University of California,...

For 20 years, this UC Berkeley program has helped students who've been in foster care succeed

December 17, 2025

Tristan Lombard’s first interaction with what was then known as the Cal Independent Scholars Network was to call the Better Business Bureau and report a scam.

It was 2006, and Lombard’s pre-college years had looked different than most of his peers: He’d attended four different high schools, sold drugs, had brushes with law enforcement and experienced periods of homelessness. So, as what he terms a “very bitter 17-year-old,” he saw an invitation to create a wish list for move-in day dorm products and assumed it was a con.

It wasn’t. Rather, it was part of a fledgling program...

UC Berkeley physicist John Clarke accepts Nobel Prize in Sweden

December 12, 2025

This year's Nobel Prize winners were invited to officially accept their awards from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden in a special ceremony this week. UC Berkeley faculty John Clarke and Omar Yaghi were among this year's Nobel laureates, in addition to UC Berkeley alumni Michel Devoret and John Martinis. Among other festivities, the weeklong celebration featured lectures delivered by the Nobelists. John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis were presented with the Nobel Prize in Physics "for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric...

All life copies DNA unambiguously into proteins. Archaea may be the exception.

December 5, 2025

A study finds that one microbe, a member of the Archaea, tolerates a little flexibility in interpreting the genetic code, contradicting a 60-year-old doctrine.

round purple things against a black background

The beauty of the DNA code is that organisms interpret it unambiguously. Each three-letter nucleotide sequence, or codon, in a gene codes for a unique amino acid that’s added to a chain of amino acids to make a protein...

Psychology Professor explores what human development can teach us about AI

December 4, 2025

UC Berkeley Psychology Professor Alison Gopnik discussed what children’s development can teach us about artificial intelligence and what AI can teach us about being human during this year’s Berkeley Social Sciences Distinguished Faculty Lecture.

Gopnik challenged the commonly-accepted notion of a “general intelligence,” instead proposing that intelligence arises from many distinct capacities. Rather than viewing intelligence as a quantitative, measurable value, she outlined three interdependent kinds of intelligences: exploration, exploitation...

Then / Now / Next: Actor John Cho on finding independence and identity at UC Berkeley

November 6, 2025

Side by side portrait of John Cho with a photo of Cho in 1995 on the left and a photo of Cho in 2025 on the right

I remember being floored by John Cho (BA ‘96, English) in Justin Lin’s 2002 indie thriller Better Luck Tomorrow, which was based on a true story near where I grew up in southern California. The film was groundbreaking, shattering the model minority myth by depicting Asian American teenagers as complex,...

Atomic clocks: counting the seconds that could change physics

November 3, 2025

UC Berkeley physicist Shimon Kolkowitz explains atomic clocks in just 101 seconds.

Screenshot from video of Shimon Kolkowitz

Most of the atomic clocks in the world — fewer than 500 in total — are housed at standards institutes and used to keep time for the planet. But the one inside UC Berkeley’s...

Possibility Lab and CalMatters launch Knowledge Hub

October 16, 2025

The UC Berkeley Possibility Lab and CalMatters recently launched the Knowledge Hub, a groundbreaking digital repository that will make research more accessible for policymakers, government practitioners and communities across California.

“The Knowledge Hub combines the expertise of our researchers with a trusted reporting resource,” said UC Berkeley Political Science and Public Policy Professor Amy Lerman, the executive director of the Possibility Lab. “It’s designed to help people with decision-making power be able to make practical use of our...