2325: Science Club

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I've never thought of myself as particularly "scientifically minded" — I always felt like I hated maths at school, although thinking about it I did end up doing reasonably well at it at GCSE level, and I did actually genuinely enjoy science lessons — but in the last few years in particular I've found myself very interested in TV shows that deal with scientific principles, preferably in an entertaining sort of way.

There are a few shows I have in mind for this sort of thing which if you, like me, are interested in generic sciencey things but perhaps don't have the opportunity to study them as a career (or as a hobby), you might want to check out.

First up is Brainiac, which I'm pretty sure I've talked about on these pages before. Brainiac is a show that aired on satellite channel Sky One between 2003 and 2008. Featuring Richard Hammond (best known for Top Gear and Total Wipeout) in the presenter's chair, sternly reminding viewers Not To Try This At Home, the show was designed to be "science entertainment" in that it set up all manner of experiments with genuine scientific principles in mind, but executed them with a fair degree of tongue in cheek. This made it both genuinely interesting and informative to watch as well as being something you could just chill out in front of and have a good laugh with. Despite having watched most of the episodes several times, I happily return to it every so often; it's a pity it's not on a service like Netflix for some better quality videos — I have to rely on dodgy downloads or YouTube at present.

Next up is Mythbusters, an American show which takes nuggets of popular wisdom and puts them to the test in various ways. The show's hosts have a background in special effects, so they often make use of this knowledge to perform their experiments in unnecessarily spectacular ways. It takes a little while to get into the show's groove if you're not accustomed to the hosts' rather dry, deadpan sense of humour, but it's very entertaining and, again, informative if you pay attention to the science bits.

Finally is my most recent discovery, Dara O'Briain's Science Club. O'Briain is primarily known as a comedian and host of topical panel show Mock the Week, but over the last few years he's been spreading his wings a bit and taking on subjects such as mathematics and now science. He's clearly a clever man, and he has some even cleverer friends who come out to play for Science Club. Each show focuses on a specific topic and explores it in detail, and the topics under the microscope (sorry) range from the human brain to the possibility of space travel and Mars colonisation. The show incorporates experiments, "live" studies involving the studio audience, documentary-style footage and layman's explanations of complicated scientific concepts. It's an extremely compelling show, and it's probably a mistake for Andie and I to watch it when we're trying to get to sleep, because it's the kind of show you want to pay attention to!

And on that note, I'm off to bed to learn some science and perhaps, maybe, get some sleep.


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0 thoughts on “2325: Science Club

  1. Oh man, that reminds me of my favorite "sciencey " show Junkyard Wars (which I think was Scrapheap Challenge in Britain). Robert Llewelyn hosting 2 teams of people building machines out of junk to accomplish a goal; it was always so much fun. I wish there was an easy way to watch them now. Maybe I'll have to dig out those dodgy downloads from years ago to watch it again.
    Now I'm going to have to see if I can find a way to watch the other two you mentioned (other than Mythbusters, already a huge fan 🙂

    1. Yes! Scrapheap Challenge is great fun, even as it is self-consciously kind of also rubbish, no pun intended. I'm sure I watched a bunch of these online somewhere recently, now where was it… *thinks*

      Ah yeah, the Channel 4 website. You probably need a proxy of some sort (something like unblock-us might work, don't know, haven't tried it for accessing UK content outside the UK but it works great for Netflix and Crunchyroll's US catalogues!) but you can find a whole ton of episodes here: http://www.channel4.com/programmes/scrapheap-challenge

  2. Check out GENIUS BY STEPHEN HAWKING Pete – it's really amazingly well devised. Average people are presented with problems and the physical means of solving them and they work their way through to the solutions – re Astro-Scientific problems – time n space, n gravity n distances etc.

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