Cards Against Humanity, everyone's
favorite party game for horrible people, has done it again. Today they announced a new science-themed expansion pack that has a
philanthropic twist:
Cards Against Humanity released a new science-themed deck Monday, with proceeds funding a scholarship for women pursuing STEM education.
The 30-card pack sells for $10 and adds lines like “supermassive black hole” to the building blocks for creating funny and offensive sentences in the game, known for its dark humor.
The Cards Against Humanity Science Ambassador Scholarship aims to cover four years of tuition for one high school or college student who identifies as a female.
From their
announcement:
“Everyone at Cards Against Humanity was fortunate enough to receive a great college education that helped us find a job that we’re passionate about, and our goal with this scholarship is to make that opportunity available to others,” said Cards Against Humanity community manager Jenn Bane. “Several of the co-creators of Cards Against Humanity earned degrees in science, whereas I got a degree in journalism. Now look at where I am. Writing this press release for them.”
Cards Against Humanity co-creator Josh Dillon, who will defend his thesis on astrophysics at MIT next month, said, “Women are underrepresented in science, tech, engineering, and math, and we felt like the funding from this pack could have the greatest impact by making it possible for more women to get an education in those fields, and by giving them a platform to share their work and their passion for science.”
Science Ambassador Scholarship board member Veronica Berns, PhD. said, “We desperately need diversity in science because the alternative makes no sense. So often girls are told in both overt and subtle ways that they aren't able to be good at math and science. With this scholarship, I'm excited to get to tell a passionate girl out there, ‘Yes! What you are doing and dreaming is really great, and here's some help to get you where you want to go.’”
Scholarship applications will be reviewed by a board of over forty women who hold higher degrees and work professionally in science, including representatives from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Harvard Medical School, the Smithsonian Institution, the Adler Planetarium, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, as well as NSF, Huxley, and Hubble fellows.
They will open the application process before the fall semester. Three cheers for horrible people and women in science!