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We realize here's only so much time one can spend in a day watching new trailers, viral video clips, and shaky cell phone footage of people arguing on live television. This is why The Atlantic Wire is unveiling a new late afternoon feature highlighting the day's video clips that truly earn your five minutes (or less) of attention. Today: The Walking Dead are up to their old tricks, Borges explains himself, and the Milky Way looks stunning from South Dakota.

Frank Darabont won't be back as showrunner when The Walking Dead returns for its second season in October. The absence of the three-time Oscar nominee may be felt during quieter moments, but we didn't detect a drop-off in the zombies-trying-to-grab-people scenes. If anything, the undead seem a bit crisper this year. [AOL TV]









Today's Google Doodle marking the birthday of Jorge Luis Borges was appropriately complicated, but this excerpt from a 1980 he gave to Spanish journalist Joaquín Soler Serrano is enlightening, not because of what he says about himself, but for the opportunities he sees in writing for a living. Specifically, the chance to cultivate "a vast circle of invisible friends." Perfect. [YouTube]

If zombies and Borges are a bit much this late in the day, there's always Randy Halverson's time-lapse video of the Milky Way filmed in South Dakota. It's also perfect. [Vimeo via Gizmodo]

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