PODCAST · science
Popcorn Science Podcast
by John E. Moores & Catherine Neish
Popcorn Science is a podcast that takes a critical look at the science portrayed in our favourite movies and television shows.
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Jurassic Park
God creates dinosaurs, God destroys dinosaurs. God creates Man, Man destroys God. Man creates podcasts. Dinosaurs eat man, woman inherits the Earth. In this episode of "Popcorn Science," discuss the 1993 film Jurassic Park Topics Science Gripes (5:30) DNA from mosquitoes = impossible. Half life is too short. Humans cannot produce lysine either, we're alright. Not "billions of strands" in a drop of blood. T-Rex, from brain casts: Good sense of smell, vision, and hearing... sitting still not a good strategy. Velociraptors: not so big, not so fast. Humans can probably outrun dinosaurs (19:15) $112k/yr. Enough for fieldwork? What do dinosaurs sound like? Mating tortoises. Science Shine (27:34) Dinosaurs related to birds, checks out. Animals fail to show up at the safari ride. Cloning is a thing, sequencing older samples produce good science Mosquitoes did exist contemporaneously with dinosaurs. Chicxulub impact described well Dinosaur gizzards / gastroliths. Sex switching does happen in some species. Chaos Theory Of it's time (40:39) What could have been James Cameron: Dark Jurassic Park Jim Carey as Malcolm? Groundbreaking CGI, but also practical effects. Clothing is firmly rooted in the 90s CRTs and floppy disks, adjusted refresh rates. "That's not what unix looks like". This was an actual unix system called IRIX running a real program called fsn ("File System Navigator for cyberspace"). 90s hacker tropes and fat shaming John Williams: Wrote the score for everything in the 70s, 80s and 90s Ratings (54:44) References Jurassic Park (1993) Amplification and sequencing of DNA from a 120–135-million-year-old weevil Chicxulub Gastrolith Chaos Theory File System Navigator
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The Fifth Element
In this episode of "Popcorn Science," discuss the 1997 film The Fifth Element. Topics Science Gripes (5:10) Technobabble "Memo-groups", the perfect being, genetic memory Generate skin by exposure to UV Gravity will mess you up (10:05) 3D grid lock? Fog layer in NYC? How big is the death sphere anyway? New Moon? What about tides, tho? How do shadows work? (18:41) -5000 degrees? (22:57) Parable of the Broken Window (22:37) Science Shine (24:23) Aziz! Light! The fifth element is... Boron... err... Ether (25:40) Languages (29:40) Planetary Protection (32:12) Diva Dance (33:40) We bring the evil with us where we go (36:32) Single-use beds Garbage strike 65 trillion served, plausible? Hallway disguise Of it's time (41:05) 23rd century look an awful lot like the 90s. Phonebooks? CDs? Bruce Willis is in every 90's action film. Space Die Hard! Misogyny. Luc Besson is a creep as are most of the male characters. Ruby Rod is ahead of his time. Zorg is a techbro, but what's his motivation. Ratings (56:52) References The Fifth Element (1997) Luc Besson - director New York 2140 - Kim Stanley Robinson Kármán line Parable of the Broken Window Divine Language Toki Pona Laura sings the "Diva Dance" from the Fifth Element
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For All Mankind
In this episode of "Popcorn Science," we discuss the 2019 series For All Mankind. Topics Science Gripes (6:05) Dumbest way to move an Asteroid No reaction control thrusters Do not need a tower to push Spike in a rubble-pile asteroid Sending out crew to asteroid while under thrust? Living on Mars (14:50) Radiation on the Surface, aristocracy live above ground? Happy Valley Base near the equator, but ice is near the poles Korolev Crater harboring life? No Methane or lava tubes. Untethered EVA? Risky. Science Shine (27:08) Asteroid depiction A dark rubble pile Initial contact, asteroid more like a wall than a planet. Space is quiet! Phoenix station has 0.2g gravity Sol is a Mars day Johnson / Molly Cobb Spacecenter Details Astrobiology Methane as a biomarker Lavatubes are a reasonable place to look for life Asteroid Mining Worth the effort? Flooding the market with rare earths 122g of asteroid for $1B (OSIRIS-REx) Of it's time (52:47) Ratings (1:04:35) References For All Mankind (Wikipedia) Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission (ARRM) A City on Mars Mars Phoenix Korolev Crater Mars Odyssey Bruce McCandless II Mars Watch Methanogenesis OSIRIS-REx
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2001: A Space Odyssey
In this episode of "Popcorn Science," discuss the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey. Topics Science Gripes (7:00) Tapir do not live in Africa Arid environment, but humans likely evolved in arboreal environment Little evidence for humans living in caves Humans are not the only tool users, monolith didn't grant unique advantage Artistic placement of the moon Random equations / diagrams on screen: Sci-Fi jibberish Space craft: No thrusters Moonwalking: Too much gravity, too little falling down EVA without tether or thruster packs, gardening gloves Discovery: Moving too fast: 3 weeks to Mars? 18 weeks to Jupiter? Habitation ring too slow (or too much gravity) For every action, these wasn't an equal reaction Jupiter: Too many (major) moons Science Shine (31:00) Centripetal gravity, close enough Decent job showing zero-gravity life Clavius station under ground, close enough to Tycho for a shuttle Infectious disease concerns in space Predicted Magnetic anomalies on the Moon!: Lunar Swirls Earth phases 13 seconds in vacuum, plausible! HAL wins at chess Smooth space turns: Reaction wheels Commercial travel looks modern Of it's time (46:33) Ratings (59:03) References 2001: A Space Odyssey (film, 1968) 2001: A Space Odyssey (novel, 1968) Stargate Effect Arthur C. Clarke Stanley Kubrick Also sprake Zarathustra - Richard Strauss Sapians Homo Habilus (tool users) Stanford Torus Andromeda Strain: Book (1969), Film (1971) Lunar Swirls Vacuum Suit Accident Reaction Wheel Computer sings "Daisy Bell" (1961) Douglas Rain Universe (1960) - National Film Board of Canada
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Deep Impact
Cities fall, but they are rebuilt. And heroes die, but they are remembered. We honor them with every podcast we record. Our planet, our home. In this episode of "Popcorn Science," discuss the 1998 film Deep Impact. Topics Science Gripes (4:30) Nobody notices the comet Sublimation / thermal inertia Gravity on a comet Sun visor, facial boils Travel time Communication failure Impact effects (earthquake, airburst) Temperature increase due to many small impactors (>10 degrees) Science Shine (28:05) Comet naming Comet stats: Reasonable size, mass, density and rotation More likely scenario than Armageddon (comet from Ort cloud, off the plane of solar system) Visuals: Cometary Jets, dark colouration 2 years of darkness (maybe) Nuclear propulsion Of it's time (45:45) Ratings (56:29) References Deep Impact (1998) Carolyn Shoemaker Gene Shoemaker Meteor Crater DART Orion Deep Impact (NASA Mission)
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Blade Runner
A new life awaits you in the Popcorn Science Podcast. The chance to begin again in a golden land of opportunity and adventure! In this episode of "Popcorn Science," discuss the 1982 cult classic Blade Runner. Catherine and John have seen things you people wouldn't believe. If you don't listen to this episode, all those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. References Blade Runner (1982)
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Battlestar Galactica
In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine hear nothing but the rain while discussing the 2003 Battlestar Galactica miniseries. So grab your gun and bring the cat in. References Battlestar Galactica (2003)
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Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
Many Bothans died to bring us this episode. In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind the movie Rogue One. References Star Wars: Rogue One
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Thor
References Thor Misc In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind the movie Thor!
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Clara
References Clara (film) Clara on YouTube Misc In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind the 2018 movie "Clara." Clara tells the sotry of a down-on-his-luck astronomer who succeeds in making a momentous discovery with the help of a mysterious artist. Featured in the Toronto International Film Festival, this movie has a familiar science advisor - Dr. John Moores!
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The Core
References The Core Stevenson (2003) Misc In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind the movie everyone loves to hate: "The Core"! First released in 2003, this movie explores what would happen if the Earth's outer core stopped spinning, and sends a courageous group of "terranauts" down to start it up again.
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Tribbles
References The Trouble with the Tribbles Trials and Tribble-ations Misc In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind two Star Trek episodes: "The Trouble with Tribbles" (1967) from The Original Series and "Trials and Tribble-ations" (1996) from Deep Space Nine. In both episodes, the crews try to grapple with an outbreak of a number of fuzzy spheroids known as Tribbles, with the DS9 crew coming from the future to help out Kirk and Spock!
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Contact
In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind the 1997 movie "Contact". Based on the 1985 novel of the same name by Carl Sagan, Contact explores what would happen if humanity were to receive a message from an extraterrestrial civilization. Topics Science Gripes (4:37) Headphones? (6:01) Opening Sequence (9:40) Hitler, Messenger of Earth (11:20) Arecibo Message (12:28) Arecibo Geography (16:00) Ellie the Astronaut (17:28) Funding (20:08) Arecibo v. VLA (21:15) Timeline Issue (48:35) The Good Things (24:59) On Location (25:05) Science Culture (27:40) Signal from Vega (30:32) Is Space Exploration Worth it? (34:48) Crewed Spaceflight (38:50) Transit Network / Wormholes (#42:25) Of Their Time (44:35) Computer Technology (44:53) Bill Clinton (47:00) Space Industrialists (49:56) Science v. Faith (52:52) Fragile Institutions (54:59) Accuracy and Significance (56:39) References Contact (film) Contact (book) Kent Cullers Frank Drake Arecibo Message Arecibo Telescope (RIP) Project Phoenix Jill Tarter Rendezvous with Rama Robert Zemeckis Carl Sagan The Demon Haunted World Cosmos
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Ender's Game
References Ender's Game (film) Ender's Game (book) Misc In this episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind the 2013 movie "Ender's Game". Based on the 1985 novel by Orson Scott Card, Ender's Game follows a young boy as he learns to defend the Earth from an invasion by a mysterious alien species known as the Formics.
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Tunguska-Terma
Topics Antarctic Meteorite Survey Tunguska References Tunguska Event Tunguska Episode Terma Episode Misc In our first episode of "Popcorn Science," John and Catherine discuss the science behind The X-Files two-parter "Tunguska/Terma". These episodes first aired in November 1996, and follow Mulder and Scully around the world as they try to get their hands on a rock filled with a mysterious alien oil.
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