Back to news
Argentina falls in love with a starfish: Livestream sparks political wave
@Source: indiatimes.com
Buenos Aires: Couples in Buenos Aires cancelled weekend plans to tune in. Friends crammed together on couches, and family chats buzzed with updates. But the spectacle - the talk all over Argentina, with more than 1 million viewers - was not a Lionel Messi soccer match or a presidential debate.It was a live video of crustaceans, sponges and sea cucumbers crawling, creeping and just lolling around the Mar del Plata canyon, off the Argentine coast.Productivity ToolZero to Hero in Microsoft Excel: Complete Excel guideBy Metla Sudha SekharFinanceIntroduction to Technical Analysis & Candlestick TheoryBy Dinesh NagpalFinanceFinancial Literacy i e Lets Crack the Billionaire CodeBy CA Rahul GuptaDigital MarketingDigital Marketing Masterclass by Neil PatelBy Neil PatelFinanceTechnical Analysis Demystified- A Complete Guide to TradingBy Kunal PatelProductivity ToolExcel Essentials to Expert: Your Complete GuideBy Study at homeArtificial IntelligenceAI For Business Professionals Batch 2By Ansh MehraThe livestream over the past week has transformed a marine exploration project into an internet sensation and shellfish into unexpected standard-bearers for those who oppose President Javier Milei's threats to cut and privatise state-funded science.The marine project, led by scientists from Conicet, Argentina's national scientific council, has reached the front pages of national newspapers, become a talking point on TV shows and been projected on the walls of a nightclub in Buenos Aires. Viewers have adopted a purple sea cucumber as their "little sweet potato," named a pink lobster Barbie and made art out of a starfish that looks like a character from "SpongeBob.""It's very gripping," Natalia Costanzo, 45, a restorer in Buenos Aires, said of the streaming, which she has been watching with her family during dinner. "And it's an act of resistance."Live EventsMilei has sought to curb Argentina's chronic inflation and lessen its fiscal deficit, drawing outrage from progressives and praise from conservatives for his chain-saw approach to public spending. One of his targets has been research programs, and he has slashed the budget for scientific research by more than 20% since gaining office in 2023.Hundreds of researchers have lost their jobs since then, and many others have left their positions and even the country in search of stable work. "What is their productivity? What have the scientists created?" Milei asked about Conicet during his 2023 campaign.Defenders of Conicet, Argentina's largest scientific funding and research body, have been quick to describe its accomplishments, including work on coronavirus vaccines, Parkinson's disease and dinosaur fossils unearthed in Patagonia. The researchers on the current expedition have largely refrained from commenting on politics and focused on the life aquatic. But other scientists and their supporters organized protests this week against the government's policies, where scientists gave out starfish-shaped cookies."Long live the Sea and Conicet," opposition politician Juan Grabois wrote on social media as he posted a video of the newly famous plump orange starfish, adding that Milei "will never understand the beauty of our country nor the greatness of our people."As the mollusks entered the public debate, supporters of Milei directed their scorn at the newfound bottom dwellers."Very nice," Daniel Parisini, an influencer close to Milei, wrote on social media, commenting on a post about the project's work. "But unfortunately, we're going to have to blow everything up to extract oil and get rich."Other supporters of the government accused a sea slug of being Peronist - a political movement currently in the opposition. La Derecha Diario, a right-wing news outlet supportive of Milei, called the expedition "an environmentalist psychological operation designed to block the exploitation of natural resources and keep the country in eternal poverty."The project's popularity is not just about politics, or even science. The newly prominent orange starfish has been featured on T-shirts, stickers, yerba mate mugs, birthday cakes and key holders - its popularity stemming from its resemblance to the "SpongeBob" character Patrick and because it looks like it has a butt. The researchers on the expedition have tried to keep attention on the invertebrates."The focus is the animals," said Daniel Lauretta, the head of the expedition. "The important thing is not us."He added that he was enthusiastic about the interest the streaming was generating. "People are rallying behind the Argentine sea," he said. (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)
Read More News onConicet ArgentinaA Starfish is Born livestreamBuenos Aires scientific research cutbacksorange starfish internet sensationJavier Milei science policy
(Catch all the Business News, Breaking News, Budget 2025 Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.) Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online....moreless
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)Read More News onConicet ArgentinaA Starfish is Born livestreamBuenos Aires scientific research cutbacksorange starfish internet sensationJavier Milei science policy(Catch all the Business News, Breaking News, Budget 2025 Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.) Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online....moreless
Related News
09 Jul, 2025
"I’m like Cristiano" - When ex-RedBull d . . .
17 Aug, 2025
Portable Sewing Machine
21 Jun, 2025
Rematch surpasses 1 million players in i . . .
23 May, 2025
Governor explains economic gains – MyJoy . . .
09 Jul, 2025
Burglary victim, 28, accused of crash th . . .
15 Apr, 2025
Who owns most fielding dismissals in IPL . . .
17 Mar, 2025
Owu picks Kwarasey over Kingson and Samm . . .
04 Jul, 2025
MV Matthew crew were 'valuable component . . .