"I read every comment people post to your Web site," my mother said to me last week. I had to quickly remind her, Mom, WIRED isn't technically my Web site. I'm just one of many editors. But, like any proud mother, she enjoys telling the checkout people at her grocery store that I am the president and chief of WIRED. Every morning, she logs in from her home in Idaho and "likes" the best comments on WIRED's Facebook page. She calls me when she finds typos anywhere on the site. When you're funny, she lets me know. When you're mean, she calls to check in. When the readers of my brother's magazine leave funnier comments, she calls to make fun of me. "Emily," she says, "your brother's readers beat you this week."
What I'm saying is, my mother is the greatest, most supportive, hilarious human being on this planet (and I'm sure your mother is, too) and so this week, instead of picking my favorite comments, I handed the reins over to the woman who taught me everything. She has picked her favorite WIRED comments from you guys, across the site and Facebook. (Sorry, she isn't on Google+ or Twitter)
Without further ado, here are your best comments this week, as curated by my mother–skip to the bottom for her top funny comment:
First, she loved how Facebook reader Christian Presley was able to synthesize the information in this article on a huge scientific breakthrough, "Biologists Create Cells With 6 DNA Letters Instead of Just 4."
We ran a riveting excerpt from Sam Kean's new book "The Tale of the Dueling Neurosurgeons," recounting the story of the most important contributor to our understanding of how memory works, HM.
My mother loved how Facebook reader Robert Kobus eloquently described the underlying scientific phenomena that explained H.M.'s strange condition:
As a proud resident of Blaine County, Idaho, my Mom loved that WIRED ran a story about an Idaho couple who has created a prototype for paving roades with solar panels. Check out the whole comment thread. She was incredibly impressed that the creators of the technology took to the comments to answer every question you guys were asking.
Oneduality impressed my Mom greatly by explaining why catching your own football is "easy." We posed the question in our science blogs, "Can You Catch Your Own Football?" Oneduality answered, with – video proof:
"Gross and informative," is how my Mom described this comment on our Absurd Creature article of the week, This Oceanic Nightmare Suffocates Foes With Clouds of Slime:
Anthony De Marco took issue with our article on "The Fastest Motorcycle in the World," writing:
My Mom couldn't agree more, saying, "Hey, it's Mother's Day–SAFETY FIRST!"
I'm kind of shocked about this pick of my Mom's. Posting on Facebook about our story, Disney Invents Robots That Swarm Into Colorful Animations, Tony Pepperoni delighted my flower-child Mother by saying:
Anthony Fonzarelli Girabaldi and my Mom would probably get along pretty well. In response to Google co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page saying we need to colonize Mars because "Earth has issues. We need to get started on Plan B," Girabaldi corrected:
"The funniest comment of all–the whole week–was slightly off color so I thought it maybe wasn't appropriate for a mother to pick for mother's day. But the thing is, he's right," my mother said of this next comment.
Facebook reader James Gilmartin made an observation about this post:
Yes, James, you can be immature for a sec. In fact, your cock-and-balls comment is Mother-approved. Aren't moms the best? Happy Mother's Day, everyone!

