Home / Series / It's Okay To Be Smart / Aired Order /

All Seasons

Season 2013

Season 2014

Season 2015

Season 2016

Season 2017

  • S2017E01 How An Igloo Keeps You Warm

    • January 9, 2017
    • YouTube

    Building a perfect igloo takes cool science!

  • S2017E02 Is This A NEW SPECIES?!

    • January 17, 2017
    • YouTube

    This is the first-ever video of what we’re calling the "hermit crab caterpillar"! We’re pretty sure this strange caterpillar is a NEW SPECIES. We went to the Peruvian Amazon to see amazing things, but we never expected this :) But that makes me wonder: What *is* a species anyway? And how do you know if you’ve found a new species?

  • S2017E03 How Many Species Are There?

    • January 24, 2017
    • YouTube

    How do we protect what we don’t know exists?

  • S2017E04 The Superb Owl!

    • January 31, 2017
    • YouTube

    As we get ready to watch that big football game that my lawyers tell me I’m not allowed to say the name of, let’s celebrate a champion of the bird world: Stealthy and silent owls! Learn how owls fly so silently, how they see in the dark, and how owls’ incredible hearing makes them such superb aerial hunters.

  • S2017E05 What If Animals Gave Relationship Advice?

    • February 8, 2017
    • YouTube

    Relationship Advice From the Animal Kingdom Ever find yourself wishing for relationship advice and have no one to turn to? Looking for the secrets to a long and happy relationship but can’t find the answers? Maybe you just want to know how to tell that certain someone that you like them, but don’t know how to make the first move? Have no fear, Mother Nature is here! Other animals have millennia worth of mating experience, maybe they can teach us a thing or two?

  • S2017E06 How The Toilet Changed History

    • February 14, 2017
    • YouTube

    We’re proud to collaborate with Bill and Melinda Gates for this week’s video! It may sometimes seem like things are getting worse, but there’s lots of reasons to be optimistic about the future. More people have access to toilets and sanitation than ever before. Thanks to public health improvements like this, since 1990, 122 million children’s lives have been saved. Diseases like polio are nearing eradication. Women have more access to health care and education than ever before.

  • S2017E07 Who Invented the Meter?

    • February 28, 2017
    • YouTube

    How the Meter Became the Meter The meter is the world’s ultimate measure, but how did it become “the” meter? What is this measurement based on? The story of this revolution in measurement traces its roots to the French Revolution. Scientists decided that an equal and united people should have equal and united measures. So they sent a pair of young astronomers out to measure the world, and invent the meter. Little did they know they’d find nothing but war, deception, and strife along the way. As a result of this ill-fated mission, the meter carries an error that still persists today. Still think the metric system is so perfect?

  • S2017E08 How Do We Know Plate Tectonics Is Real?

    • March 7, 2017
    • YouTube

    Solving the Puzzle of Plate Tectonics But did thee feel the Earth move? Why do Africa and South America fit together? Anyone who’s ever looked at a map can see that Earth’s continents are kind of like a jigsaw puzzle. The idea that continents are constantly moving and weren’t always in their current spots is a pretty obvious idea, right? You might be surprised to learn that geologists only accepted that idea recently in the past few decades, and it figuring out how plate tectonics and continental drift work required some pretty strange evidence.

  • S2017E09 What Is Luck?

    • March 17, 2017
    • YouTube

    Is luck real? It might feel like a mystical force tugging us toward good or bad fortune, but it turns out luck is really where probability runs into the human mind. That’s right, there’s a scientific side to luck, and if you study a few principles of math and psychology, you might even be able to create your own good fortune.

  • S2017E10 How Did We Figure Out What Light Is?

    • March 21, 2017
    • YouTube

    Illuminating the Universe: The History of Light Beyond what we can touch, taste, smell, and hear, we experience the universe through light. But how did we come to discover light, and how did we learn light’s true nature, as the fastest thing in the universe, an electromagnetic spectrum, a wave and particle capable of the most amazing things? Here is the history of light, according to physics.

  • S2017E11 How Much Plastic is in the Ocean?

    • March 28, 2017
    • YouTube

    What can you do to make the oceans plastic-free?

  • S2017E12 How Dogs Became Our Best Friends

    • April 12, 2017
    • YouTube

    Dogs and Humans: A 30,000-Year Friendship Of all the species that humans have domesticated, dogs are our oldest animal friends. But how did a group of wolves become the furry pup at the end of the bed? New research is finally unlocking the paw-in-hand evolution of dogs and humans. In this episode we’re answering one big question: Did we domesticate dogs, or did dogs domesticate us?

  • S2017E13 Where Did Humans Come From?

    • April 18, 2017
    • YouTube

    Ready to untangle the branches of the human family tree?

  • S2017E14 Why Are We The Only Humans Left?

    • April 25, 2017
    • YouTube

    In part 2 of our special series on human ancestry, we ask why we are the only surviving branch on the human evolutionary tree. Just 50,000-100,000 years ago, Earth was home to three or four separate human species, including our most famous cousins: the Neanderthals. New research has shown that Neanderthals were not the brutish, unintelligent cavemen that cartoons make them out to be. They were creative, smart, social, and perhaps even had complex language. So why did they go extinct as soon as Homo sapiens moved into their territory? Does any trace of them live on today? Why don’t we have Neanderthal neighbors?

  • S2017E15 Why Does Hair Grow The Way It Does?

    • May 2, 2017
    • YouTube

    Much A-Do About Hair All mammals have hair at some point in their lives, but none of them wear it quite like humans. Why does our hair grow where it does, and not grow where it doesn’t? How does our hair get its color? And why does it go gray and often fall out when we get older and go bald? Learn all about the science of human hair in this week’s video!

  • S2017E16 Are We All Related?

    • May 9, 2017
    • YouTube

    In part 3 of our special series on human ancestry, we investigate how closely related we all really are. Basic math tells us that all humans share ancestors. But you’ll be amazed at how recently those shared ancestors lived. Thanks to genetic data in the 21st century, we’re even discovering that we really are all descended from one mother.

  • S2017E17 CRISPR and the Future of Human Evolution

    • May 17, 2017
    • YouTube

  • S2017E18 Can We Resurrect an Extinct Species? SHOULD WE?

    • May 23, 2017
    • YouTube

    De-Extinction: A Mammoth Undertaking De-extinction, or using the power of modern biotechnology to bring back extinct species like mammoths and dinosaurs, would be cool. But is it really as easy as the movies make it look? Or do the cruel hands of time make it impossible? This weel we look at the technical and ethical hurdles behind the science of de-extinction and reverse engineering species that are no longer around.

  • S2017E19 ЩΉӨ BЦIᄂƬ ƬΉΣ PYЯΛMIDƧ

    • June 2, 2017
    • YouTube

    Who built the pyramids? The colossal geometric monuments found at Giza and elsewhere in Egypt are some of Earth’s most impressive constructions. Pyramids are truly wonders of the ancient and modern world. But when the pyramids were built, the ancient Egyptians hadn’t invented the wheel, developed bronze tools, or discovered pi. How were they able to stack two million stone blocks, each weighing more than two tons, into precise geometric alignments that would survive more than 4,000 years and capture the imaginations of explorers throughout history? They did it the same way we always have: by trial and error. The true history of the pyramids is one of experimentation and science, not magic… or aliens.

  • S2017E20 How Ingenious Animals Have Engineered Air Conditioning

    • June 13, 2017
    • YouTube

    Are humans nature’s greatest architects? When we look elsewhere in nature, we find some pretty amazing animal architects. Species like ants, termites, prairie dogs, birds, and more have engineered some incredible structures. This week we look at how a few of these species have mastered physics to install air conditioning in their homes!

  • S2017E21 Is Space a Thing?

    • June 20, 2017
    • YouTube

    Since the days of Ancient Greece, philosophers and scientists have been wondering: What is space? Is the absence of things… a thing? These questions continued to fascinate physicists in the modern era, leading Isaac Newton, Ernst Mach, and Albert Einstein to wonder about the true nature of the fabric of the cosmos. The search for an answer led them to some of the greatest theories in physics. This week, we ask if space and time are really real, and how they come together to make “spacetime”!

  • S2017E22 How the Pyramids Were Built (Pyramid Science Part 2!)

    • June 30, 2017
    • YouTube

    You asked for it, so here’s the follow-up! Just because something is difficult doesn’t mean it’s impossible. Over the past centuries, archaeologists, historians, and engineers have reconstructed a great deal of the technology and science used to build the Egyptian pyramids. This week we look at ancient Egyptian mathematics, building techniques, tools, and culture to reconstruct the Great Pyramid’s construction.

  • S2017E23 Nature's Fireworks

    • July 3, 2017
    • YouTube

    Nearly all life on Earth is ultimately powered by light. But many creatures have learned how to make their own. This week we investigate the beautiful phenomenon of bioluminescence. From blinking fireflies on summer nights to glowing deep sea monsters, prepare to learn about the chemistry of living light.

  • S2017E24 Orchid Mantis: Looks That Kill

    • July 11, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is perfect for adults orchids. Many creatures wear disguises in order to keep safe from predators, but there are some that dress to kill. Orchid mantises are one of nature’s most awesome examples of aggressive mimicry. These killer insects are almost indistinguishable from orchids! Scientists recently learned that their disguise doesn’t work quite how we thought it did.

  • S2017E25 Beavers: The Smartest Thing in Fur Pants

    • July 19, 2017
    • YouTube

    Beavers have done more to shape North American landscapes than any animal beside humans. We don’t notice them much today because there aren’t many left, but before colonization, North America was home to hundreds of millions of these furry engineers. This week, we show you why Earth’s second largest rodent is more amazing than you ever knew, and why they’re the smartest thing in fur pants.

  • S2017E26 How Do Glaciers Move?

    • July 25, 2017
    • YouTube

    Glacier ice is weird. It’s solid. Solid things aren’t supposed to flow. But glacier ice flows like a liquid, and it does that without melting! How is this possible? I traveled to Mendenhall Glacier in Juneau, Alaska to find out.

  • S2017E27 Why Nature Loves Hexagons (featuring Infinite Series!)

    • August 3, 2017
    • YouTube

    From spirals to spots to fractals, nature is full of interesting patterns. Many of these patterns even resemble geometric shapes. One of the most common? Hexagons. Why do we see this six-sided shape occur so many times in nature? This week we explore why hexagons are so common in the natural world, from honeycomb to bubbles to rocks, and what their mathematics, physics, and biology may have in common.

  • S2017E28 Your Climate Conscience

    • August 8, 2017
    • YouTube

    News about climate change is often full of doom, guilt, and anxiety. This can make many people reluctant to pay attention to or discuss it. We asked former Vice President Al Gore to help us find a different way to talk about climate change.

  • S2017E29 When Is It Winter On Uranus?

    • August 25, 2017
    • YouTube

    Earth has seasons, but what about the rest of the planets in the solar system? Let’s take a tour from Mercury to Pluto and see what seasons would be like on all our planetary neighbors. Bring a sweater!

  • S2017E30 How Poop Shapes the World

    • August 29, 2017
    • YouTube

    Waste not, want not… right? Poop, in all of its various forms throughout nature, shapes the world in ways you might not imagine. One creature’s waste is another’s fuel, and all over nature these leftovers help new life spring up. Here’s how whales, birds, worms, bats, and more help the world breathe clean, thanks to their poop.

  • S2017E31 DNA Doesn’t Look Like You Think!

    • September 5, 2017
    • YouTube

    Biology textbooks are full of drawings of DNA, but none of those show what DNA actually looks like. Sure, they’re good models for understanding how DNA works, but inside of real cells, it’s a whole lot more interesting. Learn why we can’t look directly at DNA, and find out how DNA is actually packed inside cells.

  • S2017E32 Putting Hurricane Harvey In Perspective

    • September 15, 2017
    • YouTube

    Replace Harvey with Irma… still true.

  • S2017E33 Do You Really Have Two Brains?

    • September 19, 2017
    • YouTube

    Are you a left-brained person or a right-brained person? Spoiler: You’re neither. Each of us uses both sides of our brain for most of what we do. But still, there are a number of brain functions that do show lateralization, where they are localized to one side or another. Why is this? And how does it influence our definition of consciousness? People with “split brains” can help us figure it out.

  • S2017E34 Why Is The Universe So Empty?

    • September 26, 2017
    • YouTube

    Why is the universe organized the way it is? And why is it so empty? From planets and stars to superclusters and galactic filaments, the universe’s largest structures formed because of its smallest. In this special collaboration with PHD Comics, we’ll learn how the earliest, quantumest blips seeded the structure of everything everywhere.

  • S2017E35 Doomsday Machines

    • October 3, 2017
    • YouTube

  • S2017E36 Why It Is What Time It Is (The History of Time)

    • October 17, 2017
    • YouTube

    How did we come up with our system of telling time? Why do we divide the day into 24 hours of 60 minutes each, and put 60 seconds in each minute? Where does the definition of a second come from? And who decides what clock shows the correct time? There’s clearly a lot of questions when it comes to time.

  • S2017E37 The Cheerios Effect

    • October 25, 2017
    • YouTube

    Ever notice how cereal clumps up in your bowl, or how cereal sticks to the edges of the bowl? Bubbles in beverages do the same thing.You've probably seen this surface tension and buoyancy at work, but did you know there's some mind-blowing science behind it? What we learn in our cereal bowl even connects to the lives of tiny insects that walk on water.

  • S2017E38 Should You Eat Every Day?

    • November 1, 2017
    • YouTube

    An intermittent fasting diet is one of the hippest new nutrition and fitness philosophies, based around the idea that going hungry can be good for your health. Some think it’s a weight loss secret that calls upon our ancient evolutionary programming. We look at the science behind intermittent fasting.

  • S2017E39 Asteroid Mining: Our Ticket To Living Off Earth?

    • November 7, 2017
    • YouTube

    Asteroid mining sounds like something out of a bad space movie, but harvesting materials from space rocks might be our ticket to building space colonies or living on Mars. Most of Earth’s precious and rare metals are locked too far in the crust for us to get at them, and launching them to space is too expensive for us to supply large colonies off Earth or explore far off worlds. How do we get our hands on the planetary resources inside asteroids? Let’s find out!

  • S2017E40 The Romantic Lure of Moonlight

    • November 15, 2017
    • YouTube

    Organisms of all shapes and sizes synchronize their behaviors using biological clocks. Some keep pace with the daily rising and setting sun using circadian rhythms. Others use annual cycles or the changing seasons as their cue. But many animals use moonlight and Earth’s lunar cycle to run their biological clock. Do humans do the same thing, with things like menstrual cycles? This week we take a look at living by moonlight.

  • S2017E41 Inside an ICE CAVE! - Nature's Most Beautiful Blue

    • November 28, 2017
    • YouTube

    Where do glaciers and icebergs get their beautiful blue color? This unique blue might be nature’s most brilliant, and the color arises in a very special way thanks to some surprising interactions between light and water molecules. Who knew physics could be so breathtaking?

  • S2017E42 20 MILLION Year Old Spider!! Unweaving the Science of Spider Silk

    • December 12, 2017
    • YouTube

    You’ll never look at spiders the same way again!

  • S2017E43 Why Do You Love Your Family?

    • December 20, 2017
    • YouTube

    Why do we love people we’re related to? Compared to strangers, why do we feel such a deep sense of connection with our family members? Sure, they’re nice to us, we take care of each other, and we often live with them, but there has to be a deeper biological reason. That reason, unsurprisingly is evolution. In this video, I explain why taking care of our family, or even dying for them, makes sense in the eyes of evolution.

Season 2018

  • S2018E01 How Atom Bombs Can Uncover Forged Art

    • January 2, 2018
    • YouTube

    It’s been estimated that 1 in 10 works of fine art are forged or misattributed. The truth is, no one really knows how much fake art is out there, because many art counterfeiters are so skilled that their paintings are almost indistinguishable from the real works. But even counterfeiters can’t beat physics! From atomic bomb remnants to ancient atoms, here’s some of the amazing ways that science can detect fake art.

  • S2018E02 Why Is Blue So Rare In Nature?

    • January 9, 2018
    • YouTube

    Among living things, the color blue is oddly rare. Blue rocks, blue sky, blue water, sure. But blue animals? They are few and far between. And the ones that do make blue? They make it in some very strange and special ways compared to other colors. In this video, we’ll look at some very cool butterflies to help us learn how living things make blue, and why this beautiful hue is so rare in nature.

  • S2018E03 How to Figure Out the Day of the Week For Any Day Ever

    • January 16, 2018
    • YouTube

    You might think that computers are the only things that run algorithms, but you’re wrong. Here’s a neat mental trick for calculating the day of the week for any day ever, developed by famous mathematician John H. Conway

  • S2018E04 The Most Extreme Life Forms On Earth… And Beyond?

    • January 30, 2018
    • YouTube

    What have we learned from exploring Earth’s harshest locations? That pretty everywhere we look for life, we find it. From smoking hot hydrothermal vents to icy deserts, up in clouds and inside rocks, extremophiles have found a way to survive. These survivors and adapters are not only teaching us about life on Earth, but expanding the possibilities of where life can exist elsewhere.

  • S2018E05 Tuatara All The Way Down – Face To Face With A Living Fossil!

    • February 7, 2018
    • YouTube

    Your now is not your forever (unless you’re a tuatara) During the 2017 Project For Awesome livestream, I promised I’d make a tuatara video if we hit our fundraising goal, and I’m a man of my word! Little did I know I’d get to meet a tuatara and learn things about a 200 million year old branch of life that would blow my mind. Get ready to meet the chillest reptile, weird living fossil, and star of Turtles All The Way Down… the tuatara.

  • S2018E06 Defusing the Population Bomb

    • February 13, 2018
    • YouTube

    Is overpopulation real? Is Earth filling up with too many humans? How many people can Earth hold, anyway? As our species approaches 8 billion, human overpopulation is a major concern for many people. How can we reduce poverty and our impact on the environment? Do we need a forced one-child policy or something? Maybe not, because when we look at the science and history, populations seem to control themselves. This week we look at all these questions and more.

  • S2018E07 Why Are There As Many Males As Females?

    • February 22, 2018
    • YouTube

    In almost every animal species on Earth, equal numbers of males and females are conceived. Why is that? Especially in populations like lions or elephant seals, where most males don’t get to mate? That’s survival of the laziest, not survival of the fittest. It turns out that in most cases, an equal balance of the sexes is the evolutionary stable strategy. From Charles Darwin to Ronald Fisher to W.D. Hamilton to Richard Dawkins, the question of why there’s as many males as females has fascinated biologists. Today, we’ll explain why that is the way it is.

  • S2018E08 Could You Be Immune To Everything?

    • March 7, 2018
    • YouTube

    Do you remember having a cold in 5th grade? Or the flu a couple years ago? Your immune system does. Our bodies hold many levels of immune defense.Physical barriers like skin, the innate immune system, and our body’s most powerful defender, the adaptive immune system. Millions of B cells and T cells and antibodies are constantly on patrol for germs and antigen invaders. As scientists learn more about how this system works and how to engineer it, could we ever actually be immune to everything?

  • S2018E09 Can You Bend Light Like This?

    • April 3, 2018
    • YouTube

    The other day I got bored and noticed this weird thing happened when I held my finger up to my eye, so I had to science it and figure it out! Let me know if you try these light-bending experiments too, especially that last one that I can’t quite explain yet…

  • S2018E10 Where Did Life Come From?

    • April 11, 2018
    • YouTube

    The origin of life is one of the most important mysteries in all of science. When did life begin? How did life first evolve from chemistry? Where did life get started? In some primordial soup or somewhere else? Let’s journey back to the origin of life, as best as we know it, from the RNA world do the last universal common ancestor of everything alive today.

  • S2018E11 97% of Climate Scientists Really Do Agree

    • April 19, 2018
    • YouTube

    Do 97% of climate scientists really agree that humans are the main cause of climate change? Yep! Here’s what the 97 percent statistic *really* means.

  • S2018E12 What If You Never Forgot Anything?

    • May 1, 2018
    • YouTube

    How does memory work? And how does… un-memory work? Our brain does a lot of remembering and forgetting every day, so you should probably make room for som info on how it works. You’ll also get to meet some people who can’t make memories, and also never forget anything.

  • S2018E13 Why Do We Itch?

    • May 8, 2018
    • YouTube

    It’s one of the most annoying sensations our bodies can feel, but does anything feel better than when you scratch an itch? Ok, maybe *some* things. But itching and scratching are up there. How does this weird sensation work? And what is itching for?

  • S2018E14 The Deadpool Salamander

    • May 15, 2018
    • YouTube

    Axolotls are special salamanders. Not only to they stay in their juvenile form their whole lives, they can regenerate entire limbs! Studying how they do it could change the way we treat human limb injuries.

  • S2018E15 The Cosmic Origins of Earth's Water

    • May 22, 2018
    • YouTube

    Why is Earth is a blue planet? Because it’s covered in water! Where did Earth’s water come from? Of course, water isn’t unique to our planet. The origin of water traces beyond the solar system to the earliest days of the universe. Here’s the story of the galaxy’s H2O.

  • S2018E16 Why Does This Wolf Have A Pouch?

    • June 5, 2018
    • YouTube

    Until the early 20th century, Tasmania was home to a very weird wolf-like creature. Except that it wasn’t a wolf. Even though it looked like a wolf. How did that happen? Here’s the science of convergent evolution!

  • S2018E17 What’s The Hottest Hot and Coldest Cold?

    • June 12, 2018
    • YouTube

    The hottest and coldest temperatures in our universe are rarely witnessed, but in these rare spots, our understanding of physics is challenged. Weird things happen at extreme hot and absolute cold.

  • S2018E18 Which Life Form REALLY Dominates Earth?

    • June 20, 2018
    • YouTube

    Are humans really Earth’s most dominant species? Let’s put all of the planet’s living things on a scale and see what has amassed the most mass. This week we break down the concept of “biomass” to judge Earth’s living things from top to bottom, and see how humans have changed the world.

  • S2018E19 It's Okay to Fart

    • June 26, 2018
    • YouTube

    Farting is hilarious and gross and everyone is doing it so why can’t we talk about the science of it?! Flatulence, passing gas, cutting the cheese, toots… whatever you call it, it's natural and here's how it works.

  • S2018E20 The Surprising Reason We Eat Spicy Food

    • July 10, 2018
    • YouTube

    People who live near the equator use more spices per recipe than people who live far from the equator. But that isn't for the reason you think. Spices and other plant ingredients have special powers that make them a truly magical superfood!

  • S2018E21 The Only Animal That Weeps

    • July 17, 2018
    • YouTube

    Why do we cry? It’s weird. Humans leak water out of their faces when they get sad. Are we the only animals that do this? What does it mean? What is it for? Here’s the science of human tears!

  • S2018E22 3 Incredible Examples of Evolution Hidden In Your Body

    • July 24, 2018
    • YouTube

    Humans are special, and we got that way thanks to evolution and natural selection. The proof is right there in our bodies! From anatomy to genes, here are some stories of how you got to be the way you are.

  • S2018E23 Why Do Disney Princesses All Look Like Babies?

    • August 7, 2018
    • YouTube

    I noticed something weird about Disney Princesses lately. Naturally, I had to examine it through the lens of science. The answer led me to new knowledge about human development, the domestication and taming of animals, and why we find things cute in the first place. You’ll never look at cartoons the same way again.

  • S2018E24 How Some Words Get Forgetted

    • August 14, 2018
    • YouTube

    English is a confusing language for many reasons. But the irregular verbs might be the most confusing part. Why is “told” the past tense of “tell” but “smold” isn’t the past tense of “smell”? It turns out that the study of irregular verbs can teach us a lot about how languages evolve. This week, we look at how the era of Big Data is unlocking secrets behind the weirdness of words.

  • S2018E25 How Habits are Formed

    • August 28, 2018
    • YouTube

    You have the power to change your brain!

  • S2018E26 Will You Still Eat Raw Fish After Watching This Video?

    • September 11, 2018
    • YouTube

    Have you ever noticed that warning about raw or undercooked seafood at the bottom of restaurant menus? Ever wondered why it’s there? Because fish carry a ton of parasites, and if they aren’t prepared correctly then those parasites can make it into your body. But it turns out, this fishy intersection with the wild world of parasites can teach us a lot about how these moochers help keep ecosystems healthy, and why we should protect them.

  • S2018E27 Is Height All In Our Genes?

    • September 18, 2018
    • YouTube

    I’m tall. Most of the people in my family are tall. Does that mean my son will be tall? Turns out the inheritance of height is a lot more complicated than we thought. Scientists know that nature (genes) and nurture (environment) both play a role, but after more than a century of questions, we’re only just now starting to get some answers.

  • S2018E28 What Do Raindrops Really Look Like?

    • September 25, 2018
    • YouTube

    What do raindrops look like? Exactly how we drew them as kids, right? Wrong! Teardrop-shaped rain is physically impossible. This week I went inside a vertical wind tunnel to bring you the true shape of rain.

  • S2018E29 Where Do Teeth Come From?

    • October 9, 2018
    • YouTube

    Teeth. We’ve all got ‘em (most of us, anyway). But how do they grow? Teeth are made from some biological nanotechnology that will blow your mind. They are strong enough to last hundreds of millions of years. Oh, and if you’ve ever wondered how adult teeth replace your baby teeth, get ready to see something terrifying.

  • S2018E30 The Largest River On Earth Is In The Sky

    • October 23, 2018
    • YouTube

    What’s the largest river on Earth? If you said “the Amazon”… you’re only half right. Scientists have discovered an even bigger river in South America, and it’s in the sky above the Amazon rainforest. Turns out, this sky river is the reason there’s a rainforest at all…

  • S2018E31 The Deadliest Flu Season in History?

    • October 31, 2018
    • YouTube

    The flu might feel like some minor illness that you don’t need to worry about much, but tens of thousands of people still die from it every year. And back in 1918, Flu killed up to 5% of the world’s population. Could a flu that bad happen again?

  • S2018E32 What is Farthest Away?

    • November 6, 2018
    • YouTube

    The edge of everything used to be the edge of the map. But now, thanks to what we know about astrophysics and the universe, the edge of everything might not even exist…

  • S2018E33 The Dinosaur On Your Thanksgiving Table

    • November 15, 2018
    • YouTube

    Eating turkey this holiday season? Chowing down on a roast chicken? You’re eating a dinosaur! Entertain your family and friends with a little science lesson this year, and show them why bird bones tell us that birds are actually living dinosaurs.

  • S2018E34 Can We Get Older Without Aging?

    • November 21, 2018
    • YouTube

    Nothing is guaranteed in life except death, taxes, and entropy. What do other life forms have to teach us about staying alive as we get old, and will we ever conquer death?

  • S2018E35 The Raisin Bran Effect

    • November 30, 2018
    • YouTube

    AKA "The Brazil Nut Effect" but brazil nuts are blah The bottom of the cereal box is a disappointing place. But at least now you know why. Where do you see the Brazil Nut Effect around you?

  • S2018E36 Does Someone Else Have Your Face?

    • December 14, 2018
    • YouTube

    They say everyone has a doppelgänger, but is that really true? This week we meet a young woman who found her own look-alike, and figure out how we actually recognize faces.

  • S2018E37 Do Fish Pee?

    • December 27, 2018
    • YouTube

    You know you’ve wondered. Do fish actually pee? And what does that make the ocean… one big toilet?

Season 2019

  • S2019E01 Is There Life on Earth?

    • February 7, 2019
    • YouTube

    If we lived light years from Earth, how would we know there’s life here? Let’s take a look at the search for extraterrestrial life on habitable exoplanets, and discover what biosignatures would show someone else that we’re here.

  • S2019E02 The Impossible Hugeness of Deep Time

    • February 12, 2019
    • YouTube

    Humans have a hard time with really big numbers, especially when it comes to DEEP TIME. The history of the Earth took a lot longer than you think, trust me. But I’m here to help you put it in perspective. With some string.

  • S2019E03 Are You Afraid of Holes?

    • February 27, 2019
    • YouTube

    Honeycomb. Strawberries. Flower pods. Some people find these things incredibly scary. We call this extreme fear trypophobia. But why does it exist?

  • S2019E04 Where Do You Weigh The Most?

    • March 5, 2019
    • YouTube

    You may have heard that a kilogram of feathers weighs the same as a kilogram of steel, but that all depends on where you weigh them. This video is all about the difference between mass and weight, and how weirdly awesome Earth’s gravity really is.

  • S2019E05 Why Are So Many People Allergic To Food?

    • March 20, 2019
    • YouTube

    More people have food allergies than ever before. Peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, eggs, and even milk… the list of possibly dangerous foods seems to get longer every day. But why do some people’s bodies have deadly reactions food? And why are food allergies on the rise? In this video we explain what food allergies really are, and what the difference is between food allergy and food intolerance. Some fellow YouTubers tell us their stories of what it’s like to live with food allergies, and we bring you the best current science on how to prevent food allergies in kids and adults. It’s a tough nut to crack.

  • S2019E06 How to be Crushed by the Atmosphere!

    • April 2, 2019
    • YouTube

    Air. I bet you never even notice that it’s there. Yet you are swimming in an ocean of it every day. If there’s a literal ton of air pressing down on you all the time, so why don’t we feel it? We look back at the history of physics to learn how we figured out air pressure, why vacuums don’t suck, and how people like Galileo, Torricelli, and Otto von Guericke changed science forever with a few simple experiments.

  • S2019E07 Decoding the Great Monarch Butterfly Migration

    • April 9, 2019
    • YouTube

    The monarch butterfly migration is one of nature’s greatest events. This orange-winged wonder travels up to 4,500 km from all over North America to spend the winter hanging from oyamel fir trees in central Mexico’s mountain forests. I got to go there. Seeing tens of millions of butterflies dangling from the treetops is a truly breathtaking sight. But how does an animal with a brain the size of a poppy seed navigate to this one special place, especially since the last monarchs to make the trip lived 4 or 5 generations earlier? Get ready for an amazing story of science, instinct, and navigation.

  • S2019E08 Mexico’s Monarch Butterfly Migration in VR180

    • April 9, 2019
    • YouTube

  • S2019E09 Why We Get Dizzy (…and Astronauts Don’t)

    • April 26, 2019
    • YouTube

    We’ve all gotten dizzy before… but have you ever gotten WEIRD DIZZY? I teamed up with Vanessa Hill from BrainCrat to answer the question “why do we get dizzy?” and in the process we learned about some very strange and hilarious ways to get extra-special dizzy! Get ready to learn about your vestibular system, the system that lets you know where your body is in space. You don’t even notice your vestibular system is there… until it stops working right!

  • S2019E10 How To Drink Coffee In Space

    • May 3, 2019
    • YouTube

    I love coffee. Like, a lot. You know who else loves coffee? Astronauts! And also the people who help them do awesome things in space (I think NASA might be powered by coffee). But how do astronauts actually drink coffee in space, aboard the International Space Station, in microgravity? I visited astronaut Don Pettit to learn about his invention for having a cup o’ Joe in orbit. This is some awesome science.

  • S2019E11 Where Your Eye Color Comes From… SurprEYESing Science!

    • May 18, 2019
    • YouTube

    The eyes are often the first thing we see when we look at someone. And when you look at them up close, everyone’s eye color is a kaleidoscope of shapes and hues. How does eye color work? The answer involves some very cool physics, and probably isn’t what you were taught in school. And you’ve probably wondered how is eye color inherited, or why some people have blue eyes even if their parents’ eyes are brown? Get ready for a long look deep into the genetics and physics of eye color.

  • S2019E12 How To Make One Million Species Disappear

    • May 24, 2019
    • YouTube

    A massive new study has just been released showing that human activities are threatening Earth’s other life forms in some very bad ways. One million species may be at risk of extinction. Just let that sink in. Isn’t the Anthropocene awesome? Check out the study below to learn more and find out how we can stop it.

  • S2019E13 See INSIDE a Chrysalis! - Painting Wings with CRISPR

    • June 18, 2019
    • YouTube

    Butterfly metamorphosis is still a bit of a mystery. What happens inside a chrysalis to turn a caterpillar into a beautifully painted butterfly? Does it really turn to soup? I visited Dr. Arnaud Martin, who uses the CRISPR genetic modification technology to learn about how genes build bodies. Dr. Martin uses CRISPR to disrupt certain genes, and then looks for changes in butterfly wing patterns, creating designs we never see in nature. This tells us which genes control which part of the "wing painting" process. In the process of visiting Dr. Martin’s lab, I had my mind blown about what REALLY happens during butterfly metamorphosis. You will too.

  • S2019E14 Could You Be a Chimera?

    • June 21, 2019
    • YouTube

    Ever feel like you aren't totally yourself? Well, maybe you aren't. In this video, we explore the idea of human chimeras. In mythology, the "Chimaera" was a beast made from different animals combined into one. But in biology, a chimera is a single organism whose body is made from parts of two or more genetically distinct individuals of the same species. Biological chimeras were once thought to be rare, but modern genetics has shown us that these genetic mashups are so common, that you yourself may actually be a chimera. And even if you don't have part of another body in you, your body is certainly not just one thing. We also discuss the idea of mosaicism and how it relates to cancer, Tasmanian devils, and circus sideshow attractions.

  • S2019E15 Seeing a Black Hole with a Planet-Sized Telescope - STELLAR

    • July 3, 2019
    • YouTube

    It took about a century for black holes to go from impossible, to theoretical, to real. And it was just this year, in 2019, when we finally saw the first picture of a black hole! But how to you take a photo of something so massively dense that not even light can escape its gravitational pull? You use a telescope the size of the Earth!

  • S2019E16 Apollo’s Most Important Discovery (Inside NASA’s Moon Rock Vault!)

    • July 9, 2019
    • YouTube

    Fifty years ago, we sent the first astronauts to walk on the moon’s face. But what they brought back is just as important as what got them there. I’m talking about moon rocks, guys. And I got to go visit NASA’s lunar sample vault to learn more about them! NASA’s moon rock collection has helped us learn so much about the early solar system, the formation of rocky planets like ours, and where our moon came from. And let me tell you, the story of our moon is a VIOLENT one. It involves the word “magmoon”. That’s an awesome word! Enjoy this video, and I hope you learn not just some lunar geology, but also how exploring the moon helped change what the space program was all about.

  • S2019E17 Why We Are Losing the Night Sky

    • July 14, 2019
    • YouTube

    It never gets dark anymore. Not REALLY dark, anyway. Not like it used to. Most humans on Earth live under light polluted skies. That's because, for the past century and a half, since the dawn of electric light, we’ve been losing our connection to the night. We need artificial light for modern society, of course. The problem is, we need darkness for our health, and for the health of wildlife and ecosystems, and we’re not getting enough of it. I traveled to McDonald Observatory in far west Texas, one of the darkest places in North America, to learn what people are doing in order to preserve dark skies, and to see truly dark skies for myself (and so I could show them to you!). This video features time lapse night sky images that I’ve been collecting for the past few years, and I hope they make you feel something special. Turn out the lights, keep looking up, and don’t be afraid of the dark.

  • S2019E18 Is This Why We Haven’t Found Alien Civilizations? - STELLAR

    • July 22, 2019
    • YouTube

    Looking up at the stars makes you wonder: what and who is out there? And why haven’t we seen any other intelligent civilizations given the vast size and age of the universe? They’re complicated questions and although we haven’t met any other space-faring species we do have a way of calculating just how many alien civilizations might be out there as well as some rather frightening ideas as to why we might not have met them.

  • S2019E19 Do Trees Talk?

    • July 27, 2019
    • YouTube

    Why the forest is more than the trees

  • S2019E20 How Blind People See With Sound…

    • August 10, 2019
    • YouTube

    I met Molly Burke a few months ago. She’s awesome. I absolutely love what she’s done on YouTube to bring awareness to living with disability, and turning it into ability. And her guide dog Gallop is awesome too! When Molly and I first met, we started talking about how she navigates the world, because I’m a nerd and I always steer the conversation toward science. I was not prepared for what she told me. She said she uses echolocation! Molly’s brain has adapted to listen to sounds in her environment in ways that most of us sighted people can’t even imagine. I went to meet her in LA and brought a special surprise, to see if my brain could learn what hers has.

  • S2019E21 Why Don’t Birds Lay Square Eggs?

    • August 19, 2019
    • YouTube

    What is “egg-shaped” even? I used to think it was the shape of a chicken egg. Then one day I saw a collection of eggs from lots of different bird species, and I realized just how many different kind of egg shapes there really are! I had to know why. And it turns out a couple teams of scientists had wondered the same thing. Here’s what science says about why eggs are egg-shaped, if that's even a thing, which I’ve learned it might not be. Evolution of bird eggs, go!

  • S2019E22 7 Scientific Urban Legends Debunked!

    • September 6, 2019
    • YouTube

    It sounds like such an incredible fact. “Our own cells are outnumbered by our microbes 10 to 1!” I don’t remember where I first heard it. But I read it in science papers and articles by journalists, so I believed it without question. I even made one of my first videos based on this fact. Problem is, this fact is not true. So how did it remain firmly planted in our common knowledge for almost four decades without any scientific scrutiny? And how can you prepare yourself to not be fooled by other scientific urban legends? I look at a few of the most famous incorrect factoids in science, and give a few suggestions for how to make our common knowledge more correct.

  • S2019E23 Money Is A Technological Fiction (The Invention of $$$)

    • September 29, 2019
    • YouTube

    Money. We all use it. But is it real? I mean, you can touch a coin or bill, but who decided that’s worth anything? And what about all those 1’s and 0’s getting swapped and traded by computers thousands of times per second? How are those worth anything? We trace the history of money, from physical barter to bitcoin, and discover that money isn’t just a lie we all agree to share, it’s been built on the back of technology and invention for millennia.

  • S2019E24 What’s In a 20,000 Year-Old Cube of Ice?

    • October 7, 2019
    • YouTube

    Earth’s climate is changing in a big way, and it’s because there's more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than at any point in our species’ history. But Earth’s climate has changed before. How do we know that this time we’re the cause? We know thanks to tiny bubbles of ancient atmosphere trapped in ice.

  • S2019E25 This Face Changes the Human Story

    • October 21, 2019
    • YouTube

    Greetings, fellow Homo sapiens. Our species is the only remaining member of the genus of upright, walking apes known as Homo. Where did we come from? Our history just got a whole lot more complicated (in a good way) thanks to some incredible new fossils unearthed in South Africa over the past few years. I got to visit them, and the scientists who discovered them, to learn their story and ours. Meet your cousin: Homo naledi

  • S2019E26 What Would Trees Look Like On Other Planets?

    • October 25, 2019
    • YouTube

    Why are trees and other plants green? Seems like a simple question. But the answer is full of surprises. Using a special camera that can pick up light just beyond the visible range, into the near-infrared, you’ll get to see trees like you’ve never seen them before. And these other-worldly images can teach us not only why trees are green on Earth, but what color photosynthetic life on other planets might be.

  • S2019E27 IN YOUR FACE EXPLOSIVE CHEMISTRY!! (VR180)

    • November 2, 2019
    • YouTube

  • S2019E28 What Color Is A Banana?

    • November 9, 2019
    • YouTube

    What color is a banana? Duh, it’s yellow. But what is yellow? Now that you mention it, how do we see color in the first place? That’s the series of questions that led me to making this video. It started simple and took me down a rabbit hole of decoding our visual system. Turns out it’s way more interesting than I ever thought possible. You might even call it complex. In fact, it’s a wonder it even works. Biology… wow, right?

  • S2019E29 Evolution FAILS in the Human Body

    • November 19, 2019
    • YouTube

    If you were taking an engineering class in school and you turned in the human body for your final exam… you would get like, a C+. Or maybe a B- at best. That’s because the human body is full of design flaws. Except they aren’t really design flaws, because the human body wasn’t designed. It was evolved, and it is still evolving. And that means some of our parts don’t work as well as they could, they just work well enough. Here’s a rundown of a few of the human body’s biggest evolutionary fails!

  • S2019E30 I Ate Worms! Trying a Thanksgiving Feast Made from Bugs

    • November 23, 2019
    • YouTube

    People say insects are the food of the future. They’re more environmentally sustainable and more humane than other sources of animal protein. Can they really catch on in western diets? I’m a pretty adventurous eater, but I’ve never actually tried edible insects. So when I got invited to an edible insect Thanksgiving feast, I had to say yes. Along the way I learned that eating bugs isn’t really that new for humans, and that this really could be a delicious food we all eat in the near future.

  • S2019E31 Recycling Is Broken. Here’s How We Can Fix It.

    • December 10, 2019
    • YouTube

    If everyone would just put more in the recycling bin instead of the trash can, the world would be a better place. Right? Well, that’s not exactly true. For many items that end up in the recycling bin, you’ve actually created more trash by trying to recycle them. You’ve also made it harder to recycle the stuff that CAN be saved, and basically demonstrated that recycling is broken… at least the way we do it today. Here’s how we can fix it.

  • S2019E32 The Strange (Unexpected) Reason Ice is Slippery

    • December 17, 2019
    • YouTube

    I’m guessing you’re pretty familiar with ice. We use it in our drinks, slip on it, skate on it, worry about climate change melting it. But have you ever stopped to really think about this stuff? The freezing and melting of water affects so much of our world. It’s ice crystals in thunderclouds that create lightning. Ice is powerful enough crack boulders, float stones, and alter entire landscapes. Ice is such a common substance, you'd think we'd know everything about it by now. But it has some secrets and weird properties we’ve only just begun to figure out. One question about ice that's, still not totally answered, is one of the most obvious: why is ice slippery? It's a more complicated answer than it seems!

  • S2019E33 Why We Should Put Rockets On the Moon

    • December 30, 2019
    • YouTube

    Half a century ago, astronauts got on top of a really big rocket and sent a tiny little capsule on a 384,000 km trip to the moon and back. And they were able to do it because a lot of extremely smart and dedicated people pushed engineering and chemistry to the limits in order to create a 36-story tower of carefully-controlled space fire powerful enough to escape Earth’s gravity. I went to NASA in Houston to talk to astronaut Don Pettit about how they did it, and if we’ll be able to do it again.

Season 2020

  • S2020E01 3 Ways Trees Can Save the Climate (With Our Help)

    • February 11, 2020
    • YouTube

    Can trees really save us from climate change? For eons, nature has relied on photosynthesis as a big way to keep carbon dioxide levels from getting out of control. But as we have put more carbon into the air, we’ve also cut down many of the forests we need to suck that carbon up. So big tree-planting initiatives like #TeamTrees to the rescue, right? Actually, we need to think bigger. Here’s three ways trees really can help us solve climate change, from a guy who wants to plant a TRILLION trees, to how we might save the forests we’ve got, to scientists hacking biology to make trees even better.

  • S2020E02 Can Supercrops Feed 10 BILLION People?

    • February 19, 2020
    • YouTube

    If you tried to sum up the last 150 years or so in one image, a chart of exponential growth would be a good place to start. It shows that some things change faster over time. You could apply it to life expectancy. Or compound interest. Or any number of things. But especially population growth. Back in 1798 a guy named Thomas Malthus noticed that not everything grows this way. And this caused people to worry, because they were sure it would lead to massive death and starvation and famine. But that didn’t happen, thanks to something called the Green Revolution and a guy named Norman Borlaug. As we face a future population of ten billion and a world impacted by climate change, how will we do a Green Revolution 2.0?

  • S2020E03 Humans Are Smart. Why Are Babies So Unsmart?

    • February 25, 2020
    • YouTube

    The first thing a baby giraffe experiences after being born is a 2 meter fall straight down to the ground. But within an hour, it’s standing, walking, and nursing on its own. And a blue whale calf, after nearly a year growing inside mom, can swim to the surface moments after being born. Human babies on the other hand? We’re born unable to move or eat on our own, we can’t communicate or fully sense our world, and we leak EVERYWHERE. If humans are so smart, why are our babies so… un-smart? You may think it’s all about head size, but the real science is more complex.

  • S2020E04 Sunlight Is Way Older Than You Think. Here’s Why…

    • March 3, 2020
    • YouTube

    If the sun instantly switched off like a light bulb–which can’t happen, by the way–then we wouldn’t know for almost 8 and a half minutes. Light travels at the fastest speed there is, but it still takes almost 500 seconds to get to Earth. That’s how long it would take before we knew the sun went dark.But the most amazing thing about the sunlight we see is it’s actually really old. SUPER old. AMAZINGLY OLD! Tens of thousands of years old. How is that possible? Because of the physics and mathematics of random walks.

  • S2020E05 Fixing Daylight Saving Time Is THIS Easy

    • March 10, 2020
    • YouTube

    Every year, hundreds of millions of people voluntarily turn their lives upside down by setting their clocks forward one hour in the spring and back one hour in the autumn on a particular date mandated by the government wherever they happen to live. Daylight saving time is a perfect example of how a few people with the best of intentions can end up annoying millions of the rest of us for the better part of a century. And it’s time we take an honest look at how we got to this place where half the world comes unstuck in time twice a year, and ask if the supposed advantages for springing forward and falling back still hold up!

  • S2020E06 What This Chart Actually Means for COVID-19

    • March 17, 2020
    • YouTube

    Stay informed. Stay cautious, but not scared. Listen to scientists and public health officials and follow their guidance. By protecting yourself, you’re protecting the most vulnerable among us. Together we can flatten the curve on COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2. More resources below!

  • S2020E07 Why Soap Is Still Our Best Weapon Against the Coronavirus

    • March 25, 2020
    • YouTube

    One of the most effective things you can do to protect yourself from catching a germ and becoming a statistic, whether it’s a global pandemic like COVID-19 or just every single other day of your life, is something that people have been trying to get you to do since you were like 2. Wash your hands. With good ol’ soap. And do it the right way. That’s it. Here’s the science of handwashing!

  • S2020E08 Why the Heck Are We Ticklish?

    • April 14, 2020
    • YouTube

    I’ve explained a lot of weird bodily functions on this show but there’s one that we haven’t covered that’s always confused me: Tickling. What are you for, tickling? What’s the point of you? Why do you exist? Why do you make us laugh even though we hate you? Let’s dig into our evolutionary past to try and find an answer.

  • S2020E09 Fly Through a Nebula 163,000 Light Years Away (30 Years of the Hubble Space Telescope)

    • April 25, 2020
    • YouTube

  • S2020E10 How Evolution Made COVID-19 Our Perfect Enemy (and Why We’ll Beat It)

    • May 6, 2020
    • YouTube

    SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 are nasty enemies. Invisible, mysterious, and deadly, they have spread around the world and caused much of humanity to hide away. Germs like these only succeed and spread because of our social evolution, and our social nature is why social and physical distancing is so deeply painful for us. But evolution has also given us the gifts we need to survive this difficult time. Here’s how.

  • S2020E11 Counting the Species in my Backyard… for SCIENCE!

    • May 19, 2020
    • YouTube

  • S2020E12 Why Do Other Animals Keep Giving Us Viruses?

    • June 3, 2020
    • YouTube

    Viruses keep jumping out of nature and into humans, and getting us very sick in the process. So why do zoonotic spillovers like SARS-CoV-2 happen, and why are they becoming more frequent? We asked an expert.

  • S2020E13 How Did Giant Pterosaurs Fly?

    • June 9, 2020
    • YouTube

    The largest pterosaurs like Quetzalcoatlus were closer in size to airplanes than birds. No flying animal alive today comes close to their huge size. So did giant pterosaurs actually fly? I went to see the fossil bones of the largest pterosaur that ever lived so I could learn how these winged giants actually took to the skies.

  • S2020E14 What Is A Dinosaur And What Isn’t?

    • June 23, 2020
    • YouTube

    There’s a lot of confusion out there about what is and isn’t a dinosaur. And you’d be forgiven for being kinda confused. Maybe paleontologists are just messing with us. Or… maybe the question of what is and isn’t a dinosaur goes deeper than we think? Well, like an intrepid fossil hunter, I set out to dig up an answer, and what I found teaches us a lesson about how hard it is to build a picture of the past when you only have a few puzzle pieces, and a lot about why we classify things the way we do.

  • S2020E15 How Well Do Masks Work? (Schlieren Imaging In Slow Motion!)

    • July 4, 2020
    • YouTube

    Wearing a mask is a cheap and easy way to help stop the spread of airborne infections like COVID-19. It’s also a sign that you want to help protect other people and have them protect you… that we’re all in this together. Here’s some awesome slow-motion schlieren imaging experiments to demonstrate why masks work! Share with someone who needs to see this.

  • S2020E16 COVID-19 & Mask Myths DEBUNKED!

    • July 23, 2020
    • YouTube

    Bottom line: Masks work. They are safe for almost everyone to wear, and the more people that wear them along with adhering to physical distancing and other strategies, then that’s more lives we’ll save. But there’s still a lot of confusion and misinformation out there when it comes both to wearing masks and the actual risks of getting infected with COVID-19. In this video I address a few of the most common myths and misunderstandings using scientific evidence.

  • S2020E17 Why Is Our Skeleton On the Inside?

    • July 28, 2020
    • YouTube

    Having bones is pretty cool. They make our blood, let us hear, and keep us from being just a squishy puddle on the floor. But for every species with bones, there’s at least 20 species on Earth with exoskeletons instead. And those exoskeleton animals are incredibly tough and strong. So why don’t WE have our skeletons on the outside? This is the story of bones!

  • S2020E18 Why a Tuesday Can Feel Like July and Sometimes Never (How We Perceive Time)

    • September 1, 2020
    • YouTube

    Time passes for all of at the saem rate of one second per second. But why does it sometimes feel like time is passing so fast, or so slowly? Especially during COVID? Let’s learn about how our brains keep track of and try to make sense of time, and how they get fooled.

  • S2020E19 The Fastest Animals Are Way Faster Than You Think

    • September 13, 2020
    • YouTube

    The fastest animal in nature isn’t what you think it is. It’s way, way smaller than that. Nature’s tiniest creatures warp the laws of physics, and they do it in ways that even human engineers would gawk at. Using the power of super slow-motion macro video, let’s uncover the biological engineering that lets nature’s fastest creatures do their zoomy thing.

  • S2020E20 4 Ways to End the Universe

    • October 13, 2020
    • YouTube

    I don’t want to alarm you, but the world is going to end. All of this. Gone. And scientists are certain all of this will happen. On the bright side this isn’t going to happen for 4-5 billion years. It makes me wonder: In a universe bigger than we can fathom, across eons of time, could… all of it end? Everything? The whole universe? Yes. And it probably will. Here’s how.

  • S2020E21 The Secret Behind a Gecko’s Gravity-Defying Grip

    • October 31, 2020
    • YouTube

    Geckos can grip and climb almost anything. Walking up walls, hanging upside down… even from glass. It’s almost like they can defy gravity. How do they do it? The secret lies in nanotechnology. I’ll tell you how that works and how scientists are using this incredible gripping ability to inspire next-generation adhesives

  • S2020E22 Why Are There 7 Days In a Week?

    • November 9, 2020
    • YouTube

    Why does everyone use a 7 day week, and where did it come from? Where do the names of the days come from? And who can we blame for Mondays? Here’s the true story of one of the oldest human customs still in use today. It gets a little weird.

  • S2020E23 The SHOCKING Truth About Ben Franklin and the Kite

    • November 18, 2020
    • YouTube

    You’ve probably heard of Ben Franklin and the kite. But do you know the TRUE story of how his famous experiment changed the world? Here’s the tale of how one person’s quest for scientific knowledge altered the direction of history.

  • S2020E24 Inside the Lab That Invented the COVID-19 Vaccine

    • December 8, 2020
    • YouTube

    Here we are, just a year after the first news of the coronavirus we now call SARS-CoV-2 and the global pandemic known as COVID-19… and scientists have already developed more than one safe & effective vaccine. How did they do that so quickly? I visited the lab whose work directly led to these first COVID vaccines, so you can learn how basic research connects to life-saving medicine. This is how to make a COVID-19 vaccine.

  • S2020E25 Why the Heck Is Glass Transparent?

    • December 23, 2020
    • YouTube

Season 2021

  • S2021E01 Why Do We Lie?

    • January 11, 2021

    Everyone lies. Even you and even me. We lie about small things and we lie about big things. We lie to help ourselves and we lie to protect others. Powerful people lie, all the way down to little kids telling fibs. Why do we do this if we’re supposed to be the most socially developed species on Earth? Why can’t we tell the truth? Are we doomed to lie? Well, maybe. Here’s why.

  • S2021E02 Visualizing Herd Immunity (with 500 Mousetraps!)

    • February 4, 2021
    • YouTube

    Since the start of the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic, the term “herd immunity” has been all over the news. But what does it really mean? One thing most people don’t realize about vaccines is that they aren’t just to protect the person who gets the shot. They also protect the population as a whole… even people who didn’t get the shot. In this video, we use lots and lots of mousetraps and ping-pong balls to show you how that works.

  • S2021E03 When Is Now?

    • February 15, 2021
    • YouTube

    When is now? Seems like a pretty simple question… just look at your watch. But do you and I share the same “now”? Let’s journey from Einstein’s thought experiments about relativity to cutting edge neuroscience research to try and answer that question.

  • S2021E04 The Golden Ratio: Is It Myth or Math?

    • March 10, 2021
    • YouTube

    The golden ratio. Some say it’s the most mythical number in the universe. Others say it underlies everything from nature’s patterns to beauty in art and design. But, like, what is it? And does the myth of the golden ratio hold up to its mathematical reality? Let’s find out

  • S2021E05 What is Impossible in Evolution?

    • March 17, 2021
    • YouTube

    Could humans ever evolve to have wings? Why don’t fish have propellers? Why don’t tigers have wheels? Why don’t zebras have laser turrets? These might all seem like stupid questions (and maybe they are!) but they can teach us a lot about how evolution actually works, and how it doesn’t work.

  • S2021E06 The Transcontinental Burrito Hypertunnel

    • April 1, 2021
    • YouTube

    The finest burritos in the world are made in San Francisco’s Mission District. But how can you get a hot & fresh one in New York City in time for lunch? Physics, that’s how. For this very serious and scientific video, we dug a classic documentary out of the vault that tells the story of the transcontinental burrito tunnel, and its successor, the transcontinental burrito hypertunnel. They are both true marvels of physics. Oh, and they aren’t real… but the science is.

  • S2021E07 How Ocean Currents Work (and How We Are Breaking Them)

    • April 19, 2021
    • YouTube

    Ocean currents are our planet’s circulatory system, and they keep everything from ecosystems to the climate healthy. But we’re changing Earth in ways that threaten to disrupt and even break critical ocean currents like the planet-wide Great Ocean Conveyor. This could have devastating effects on our future. In this video, we explain how ocean currents work, how climate change is threatening to disrupt them, and what we can do to stop that from happening.

  • S2021E08 Why Are We Warm-Blooded?

    • May 4, 2021
    • YouTube

    A human with the metabolism of a hummingbird would need to eat about 80,000 calories a day to survive. That’s because staying warm by making your own heat takes a ton of energy. And that brings up a paradox, because creating your own body heat is incredibly expensive. The largest animals on Earth have to spend most of their day just eating enough to keep their heat engines running. So why aren’t we cold-blooded… like crocodiles? Here’s the science

  • S2021E09 The Shocking Way Your Body Makes Electricity

    • June 2, 2021
    • YouTube

    Here’s a thought: What IS a thought? I know it involves my brain, and my brain is made of neurons. And my brain’s neurons are listening to other neurons all over my body. But how do those neurons actually work? Maybe you’ve heard that it involves electricity, but does that mean you’ve got little zaps and lightning bolts running through your veins like Pikachu? Don’t worry, I’m here to set you straight on what a neuron is, what an action potential is, and how fast your nervous system really communicates.

  • S2021E10 A Brief (Scientific) History of Butts

    • June 30, 2021
    • YouTube

    Hold on to your butts. This episode is about… butts. The science and evolutionary history of your rear end, the down-low on your derriere, shining a little light where the sun don’t shine… you get the picture. But(t) seriously, we don’t talk about this all-important hole enough, and how, from an evolutionary perspective, it might be the most important orifice on your body.

  • S2021E11 Why Is Sex a Thing?

    • July 30, 2021
    • YouTube

    Why does sex exist? You might think the obvious answer is “reproduction” but there are plenty of organisms on Earth that don’t require sex to reproduce. And the more that scientists examined sex, they more they realized that it’s an expensive and inefficient way to get your genes to the next generation. The true purpose of sex is actually one of the longest-standing mysteries in evolutionary biology. But scientists are closer than ever to finding the answer. Here’s what we know about the evolutionary enigma of sex.

  • S2021E12 How Much Of You Is Alive?

    • September 7, 2021
    • YouTube

    You’re alive right now… at least I’m pretty sure you are. But you’re not TOTALLY alive. Bits of you are always breaking down, being thrown out, and being replaced. Even right now, parts of you are dying. Some of your cells even died before you were born. And some will never come back. These are all very strange, mildly uncomfortable things to think about. And what’s even stranger than that is a big fraction of your body is, was, and will never be alive. So how much of you is dead?

  • S2021E13 This Simple Code Is Behind Nature’s Most Complex Patterns

    • September 22, 2021
    • YouTube

    How do zebras get their stripes? How do leopards get their spots? And how do giraffes get their giraffe-shaped thingies, whatever they are called? Would you believe the answer is… math? This is the story of a WWII wartime codebreaker and his quest to decode nature’s most beautiful patterns. Alan Turing uncovered a simple code that explains everything from stripes to spots and all the patterns in between… he was just too far ahead of his time. Only recently have biologists found evidence that his pattern-forming system

  • S2021E14 I Can't Believe We're Making Another COVID Video

    • October 8, 2021
    • YouTube

    I guess we’re still doing this.

  • S2021E15 Sand Dunes Shouldn’t Exist (Here’s Why They Do)

    • October 20, 2021
    • YouTube

    Original Title: The Self-Organizing Secret of Sand Dunes How can sand, blown by the wind, form such intricate and beautiful patterns as ripples and dunes? The answer is a surprising secret of self-organization. In this video, we travel to Great Sand Dunes National Park in Colorado to climb the largest sand dunes in North America and bring you the science of how wind and sand combine to create ordered landforms out of chaos. The science must flow.

  • S2021E16 Inside the Largest Living Thing On Earth!

    • November 6, 2021
    • YouTube

    The biggest thing that has ever lived on Earth… is a tree? Hard to believe, but it’s true. Travel with me to the Rocky Mountains of Colorado to go inside the most massive species on our planet, and learn what unique and special evolutionary adaptations let them get so big.

  • S2021E17 What Is Nothing?

    • November 23, 2021
    • YouTube

    This is a video about nothing. Hope you learn something!

  • S2021E18 Why Do We Dream?

    • December 22, 2021
    • YouTube

    It would be a lot easier to study the science of dreaming if we weren’t asleep every time we did it. Why do we dream? What does dreaming do for our brains? How did dreaming evolve? Here’s a look at the current theories from psychology and neuroscience.

  • SPECIAL 0x15 Can you figure out the Castle Illusion?

    • July 19, 2022

  • SPECIAL 0x16 The Motion Aftereffect Illusion

    • July 26, 2022

  • SPECIAL 0x17 Why jumping spiders are the best things with 8 legs

    • November 2, 2022

  • SPECIAL 0x18 This is why Daylight Saving Time needs to GO

    • November 4, 2022

  • SPECIAL 0x20 The most AMAZING thing about a flame

    • December 15, 2022

Season 2022

  • S2022E01 Can We Actually Clean Up the Plastic Pollution Problem?

    • January 6, 2022
    • YouTube

    Original Title: We’re Drowning in Plastic Pollution. Can We Actually Fix It? There’s been a lot of talk on YouTube lately about ocean plastic pollution and #TeamSeas. But there hasn’t been enough talk about the **ridiculously unthinkable scale of the ocean plastic pollution problem** or how it intersects with other environmental issues like climate change. And here’s a big spoiler alert: Nearly all environmental scientists agree that ocean plastic pollution isn’t a problem we can clean our way out of. So what CAN we do? That’s what this video is about.

  • S2022E02 Here's What I Learned From Getting COVID

    • January 25, 2022
    • YouTube

    Original Title: Here's What I Learned... I’m vaccinated. I’m boosted. And I still got infected with the omicron variant of COVID-19. Here’s what I learned, and what it means for the possible end of this pandemic.

  • S2022E03 The Weird Brain Illusion That Makes Movies Work

    • February 1, 2022
    • YouTube

    Original Title: Why Every Video Is An Illusion Movies. Video games. YouTube videos. All of them work because we accidentally figured out a way to fool your brain’s visual processing system, and you don’t even know it’s happening. In this video, I talk to neuroscientist David Eagleman about the secret illusions that make the moving picture possible.

  • S2022E04 How Do We Read? It’s Magic (Almost)

    • February 15, 2022
    • YouTube

    Reading. You’re doing it right now. I bet you don’t even have to think about it. But have you ever wondered what’s happening in your brain to turn all these weird symbols into meaning? This video will teach you how to read all over again. What you’re doing right now is way more amazing than you ever realized.

  • S2022E05 What’s Actually on the Other Side of a Mirror?

    • March 3, 2022
    • YouTube

    How many times do you look in a mirror every day? Have you ever stopped to wonder how they actually work? Mirrors do strange things to our world, seemingly flipping everything so that what was right is left and what was left is right. But what if I told you that mirrors don’t actually flip the world left to right? The real magic of mirrors is far stranger and more interesting, as you’re about to learn.

  • S2022E06 How Evolution Beat Cancer (…for Whales at Least)

    • March 22, 2022
    • YouTube

    Why do whales, elephants, and other large animals not get cancer? Logically, the larger an animal is, and the longer it lives, the more likely it should be to get cancer. But these giants don’t. Why is that? And can the answer help humanity?

  • S2022E07 Can Life Really Be Explained By Physics?

    • April 8, 2022
    • YouTube

    Original Title: What Is Life? I recently got to sit down with physicist and science communicator extraordinaire Prof. Brian Cox. Did we talk about black holes, the Big Bang, or alien worlds? Nope! We talked about biology. Specifically, what is “life” and how did it begin? You might not expect it, but looking at life through the lens of physics can teach us a lot about why interesting groups of atoms like you and me exist.

  • S2022E08 Can Illusions Teach Us How the Mind Works?

    • April 26, 2022
    • YouTube

    Optical illusions are fun, but they can also teach us a lot about how our brains work. In particular, how our brains accomplish the incredible feat of constructing a three-dimensional reality using nothing but 2-D images from our eyes. A young artist and psychology researcher named Adelbert Ames, Jr. developed a series of illusions that help us understand how this process of constructing reality actually works. Sometimes we need to be fooled in order to gain understanding.

  • S2022E09 Are Humans Still Evolving?

    • May 19, 2022
    • YouTube

    We’re living longer. Dying less. Human life expectancy has doubled in just a couple centuries. Machines and meals and medicines keeping us alive long past the age where we can make babies. Does this mean our species is no longer under the influence of natural selection? Have humans stopped evolving?

  • S2022E10 This Machine Makes 300+ km/h Winds (INDOOR HURRICANE!)

    • June 2, 2022
    • YouTube

    Hurricanes, typhoons, and tropical cyclones are Earth’s most powerful storms, capable of unleashing destruction and death on coastal areas worldwide. As climate change warms Earth’s oceans, we face more risk of storms rapidly intensifying into category 5, sometimes in less than a single day. Being able to predict these rapidly intensifying storms will save lives, but studying hurricanes in detail is difficult and dangerous. So in order to improve our understanding of hurricanes, scientists have built a machine that can create hurricane conditions indoors.

  • S2022E11 Why You Can’t Smell Yourself (and Other Ways Your Senses Lie to You)

    • June 21, 2022
    • YouTube

    There is an absolutely weird, but surprisingly common phenomenon called sensory adaptation that you experience every day in countless ways without even realizing it. Without this very strange phenomenon, you would be lost, overwhelmed, and completely unable to navigate the external world. In this episode, we’ll explore the many ways your brain “tunes out” most of what’s going on around you so that you can be the high-functioning smart people that we know you are.

  • S2022E12 Trying to Land a Plane (to Prove a Point)

    • July 6, 2022
    • YouTube

    You may not be an expert, but perhaps you feel pretty confident that you could ride a motorcycle, or give someone a decent haircut - if you absolutely had to - right? Not so much, according to the psychological phenomenon known as the Dunning-Kruger Effect. Turns out we’re all at risk of being overconfident about something. Watch Joe put this theory to the test as he tries to land a 737 (in a simulator, of course). Oh, did we mention Joe's not a pilot?

  • S2022E13 Why No One Can Agree What’s REALLY the Tallest Mountain

    • July 22, 2022
    • YouTube

    What's the tallest mountain on Earth? It might seem like an easy question to answer, but in reality it's one that brings up more NEW questions than answers. It turns out that the way we measure mountains rests on a lot of approximations, assumptions, and averages. And when you dig into those, there's several contenders for the tallest mountain, each with their own good case for the title. So, which mountain do YOU think should take the throne?

  • S2022E14 Why is Puberty so Weird?

    • August 4, 2022
    • YouTube

    There is no phase of a human’s lifetime that is as strange and disgus....er....magical as the transition from childhood into adulthood - that handful of years that we call . . . PUBERTY. Why does it happen? How does it work? Why is it so weird? Join Joe in this whirlwind tour of the endocrine system to find the answers.

  • S2022E15 The Crime Wave We Can Blame on… Neutron Stars?

    • August 23, 2022
    • YouTube

    There’s a crime wave sweeping the world right now. A new kind of theft that takes just minutes to carry out. These criminals are on the hunt for something that fetches big bucks on the black market. Numbers are skyrocketing, and public officials are scrambling for answers. Turns out, we can blame it all on neutron stars and some oddities of the periodic table. When it comes to neutron crime, it's hard to get a charge to stick… heh heh

  • S2022E16 The Biggest Myth About Climate Change

    • September 15, 2022
    • YouTube

    You’ve seen it in the comment section before: “Climate change is natural. It’s happened before and it will keep happening”. In reality, comments like these are the newest kind of climate change denial. In this video we’re going to learn about all the reasons that Earth’s climate changes, natural and otherwise, and then how we know that modern climate change can’t be blamed on natural forces. Maybe we can finally put this biggest myth about climate change in the trash.

  • S2022E17 The Unbelievable Story of Earth’s Most Epic Flood

    • October 11, 2022
    • YouTube

    One day around 15,000 years ago, a wall of ice 2,000 feet tall and 30 miles wide suddenly broke wide open, and it unleashed the largest flood that we know of in the history of Earth. Come and hit the road with me as we search for the geologic fingerprints of the Missoula Ice Age Floods, and learn the story of one of the worst natural disasters that’s ever happened!

  • S2022E18 Why 8 Eyes Are Better Than 2 (...If You're a Spider)

    • October 25, 2022
    • YouTube

  • S2022E19 How We Solved the Greatest Riddle In Navigation

    • November 8, 2022
    • YouTube

  • S2022E20 The Unexpected Measure that Makes the Modern World Tick

    • November 22, 2022
    • YouTube

    All of modern society relies upon a seemingly simple but surprisingly complex unit of measurement: the second. But knowing exactly what a “second” is is more complicated than you might think!

  • S2022E21 In Search of the Blackest Thing on Earth

    • December 6, 2022
    • YouTube

    There are some startlingly black animals out there, whether they’re in the deep ocean or in the darkest corners of the rainforest. But humans have created some stunningly black substances too, using science and engineering. So who wins, nature or humans? In this video, I go in search of the blackest black things on Earth to see what’s really the blackest… and why.

  • S2022E22 Why Embarrassment Is Actually GOOD For You

    • December 20, 2022
    • YouTube

    Embarrassment. Awkwardness. Cringe. No matter what you call it. it’s one of the most unique human emotions, and one that’s particularly hard to figure out. But if a feeling exists and has lasted through evolution, then it probably has a purpose!

  • SPECIAL 0x21 How much POOP is on your toothbrush?!

    • January 10, 2023

  • SPECIAL 0x22 Climate Change explained in less than 1 minute!

    • January 25, 2023

  • SPECIAL 0x23 The Invisible Glass

    • February 7, 2023

  • SPECIAL 0x24 The ridiculous reason February only has 28 days…

    • February 23, 2023

Season 2023

  • S2023E01 The Evolutionary Purpose of Fun

    • January 31, 2023
    • YouTube

    Animals as simple as bees and as complex as you and me… like to have fun. But what’s the point of fun? Do all animals have fun? And for that matter, what is fun?

  • S2023E02 The Dark Room Where Science Was Invented

    • February 14, 2023
    • YouTube

    500 years before the Scientific Revolution, the mathematician Al-Hassan Ibn al-Haytham spent hours in a dark room studying the light that filtered in. Not only did he revolutionize how we literally see the world, he pioneered the scientific method that is now the backbone of modern science.

  • S2023E03 The Beautiful Science of Iridescence

    • February 28, 2023
    • YouTube

    Why do we see rainbows in soap bubbles? What makes an oil slick so oddly beautiful? Iridescent colors, which transform depending on the angle you look at them, are all over nature. How does physics make these shifting rainbows? We’re going to find out with the help of the National Museum of Natural History's most spectacular specimens – from bird feathers and beetle wings to fossils and gemstones.

  • S2023E04 Can We Solve the Air Conditioning Paradox?

    • March 14, 2023
    • YouTube

    As the Earth warms due to human-caused climate change, billions of people in the developing world will face life-threatening heat waves, raising the demand for air conditioning. But powering all of that cooling is going to take more energy, which will require burning more fossil fuels! Are there new air conditioning technologies on the horizon that could solve this paradox?

  • S2023E05 Why Does Every Animal Look Like This?

    • March 28, 2023
    • YouTube

    In the race to survive, both predators and prey use visual tricks to get ahead. One nearly universal trick is countershading, a color pattern that helps animals erase their own shadows or blend into different backgrounds. It’s worked well enough that nature has produced this pattern over and over again, all over Earth, for at least tens of millions of years.

  • S2023E06 The Mystery Behind Earth’s Most Epic Migration

    • April 19, 2023
    • YouTube

    The biggest (and most mysterious!) migration in the world happens every night in the ocean as 10 billion tons of zooplankton swim to the surface to feed. This undersea journey is known as Diel vertical migration, and it occurs in every ocean in the world. By learning more about why this happens, science can unlock the secrets behind other phenomena, like our biological clocks…and even climate change.

  • S2023E07 How To Go Faster Than Light Speed

    • May 4, 2023
    • YouTube

    Nothing can travel faster than light — in a vacuum. But when light slows down, sometimes matter can blaze past that speed limit, creating a stunning glow called Cherenkov radiation. We can see this glow in a nuclear reactor as high-energy particles speed by. It offers us a window into a realm of the universe that is usually invisible to us.

  • S2023E08 Why Y Is a Vowel (and so is W) According to Physics

    • May 16, 2023
    • YouTube

    Human language is an incredible thing: a combination of mouth sounds that we combine into words, sentences, poems, and constitutions. They carry meaning, emotion, and power. But underneath it all, language is really just physics. In this episode, we explore how physics is at the core of every syllable, starting with the first word most of us ever speak.

  • S2023E09 How the CIA Secretly Spied On Climate Change

    • June 1, 2023
    • YouTube

    A few years after the collapse of the Soviet Union, a top-secret, first-of-its-kind US spy satellite program was declassified, leading to the unexpected story of how former enemies became scientific allies, and technology invented for Cold War espionage was repurposed to study and combat the newest and greatest threat to human civilization: Climate Change.

  • S2023E10 The Deadly Chemistry That Made Life Interesting

    • June 15, 2023
    • YouTube

    Life’s been around on Earth for at least 3.7 billion years. But for most of that time, it was incredibly boring — just simple little cells squirming around in water. It only got interesting in the last few hundred million years. And that might never have happened without the help of a deadly, but also life-giving, element.

  • S2023E11 From Lab to Table: I Tasted the World’s First Cultivated Meat!

    • June 27, 2023
    • YouTube

    Our appetite for meat is one of the greatest environmental challenges we face. Join me on a mind-blowing visit to UPSIDE Foods, the world's most advanced cultivated meat production facility, as we ask whether cultivated meat can deliver on its promises to help the environment while keeping meat on our plates.

  • S2023E12 How Scorpions Became Earth’s Ultimate Survivors

    • July 11, 2023
    • YouTube

    Scorpions have been terrorizing other creatures on Earth for hundreds of millions of years. They’ve evolved a perfect cocktail of venom that can mess up both predators and prey. But they are also an evolutionary marvel that could show us the way to some powerful new life-saving medicines.

  • S2023E13 The Truth About Butterfly Metamorphosis (It's VERY WEIRD)

    • July 25, 2023
    • YouTube

    Does any other creature on Earth undergo a life transformation as dramatic as the butterfly? I think not. Unfortunately, children's books about very hungry caterpillars skip all the COOL and WEIRD and GROSS stuff that happens along the way. It's time to dig into all the mind-blowing biology behind metamorphosis!

  • S2023E14 Why ROYGBIV is Wrong

    • August 10, 2023
    • YouTube

    Over 200 years ago, scientists were looking at sunlight through a prism when they noticed that part of the rainbow was missing. There were dark lines where there should have been colors. Since then, scientists have unlocked the secrets encoded in these lines, using it to uncover mind-boggling facts about the fundamental nature of our universe and about worlds light-years away.

  • S2023E15 The Biggest Myth About Innovation

    • August 22, 2023
    • YouTube

    The idea of the lone genius creating everything isn’t just misleading. It’s harmful and wrong. Innovation thrives when people work together, and rather than nice linear paths, new ideas come from chance events and unexpected connections. This video tells the story of one such invention, and offers a new idea about how new ideas are really born.

  • S2023E16 What Is the Most Average Thing?

    • September 7, 2023
    • YouTube

    We may not know it, but averages affect our lives every day. Designers and manufacturers use averages to make our houses, cars, shoes and airline seats safer and more comfortable(ish). But calculating averages is way more complicated than one might think! And as long as we are at it - let’s talk about what the most average thing in the known universe might be!

  • S2023E17 Why Are We So Obsessed With X?

    • September 21, 2023
    • YouTube

  • S2023E18 The Strange Psychology of Superfans

    • October 5, 2023
    • YouTube

    Humans can develop intense relationships, even obsessions, with the things we’re fans of. A huge part of our identities, our emotions, and our lives get tied up in these things. Why are we like this?

  • S2023E19 CRASH TEST Science! (Hacking Physics To Save Lives)

    • October 19, 2023
    • YouTube

    No one ever wants to get in a car crash. But if you ever do, be very thankful for the engineers who crash test cars. You may have seen crash test simulations on TikTok using physics engines like BeamNG but I promise you they are nothing compared to the real thing! Join us for this DEEP dive into the physics of car crashes and the ways that engineers hack Newton's laws to keep you safe.

  • S2023E20 Can a Billion Oysters Save New York City?

    • November 30, 2023
    • YouTube

    When people picture New York City they see skyscrapers, subways, and a concrete jungle. But the Big Apple is really a seaside city built on an archipelago. In the wake of a century of industrial pollution and climate change-fueled superstorms like Hurricane Sandy, New York’s waterways need help. Learn how Billion Oyster Project is working to restore one of the world’s greatest lost ecosystems in order to clean up New York’s water and protect it from an uncertain climate future.

  • S2023E21 How Scientists Made the Hottest Thing Ever

    • December 14, 2023
    • YouTube
  • S2023E22 I Don’t Know How to Feel About 2023

    • December 21, 2023
    • YouTube

Season 2024

  • S2024E01 Maybe We've Already Made First Contact…

    • January 15, 2024
    • YouTube

    There are hundreds of billions of planets in our galaxy. Scientists now think hundreds of millions of them have conditions where life could arise. What do scientists think are the best ways of reaching out to them? And why do some scientists think that we shouldn't?

  • S2024E02 Why NASA Punched an Asteroid

    • January 25, 2024
    • YouTube

    Where did life come from? It’s one of the biggest questions humans have ever asked — and the answer might be locked in ancient space rocks that were around before life began. To find out, NASA pulled off one of its most ambitious missions ever, landing on an asteroid and sending a rock sample back to Earth. Today, we’re going to take a look at what it brought back.

  • S2024E03 This Is How We'll Clean Up Space Junk

    • February 15, 2024
    • YouTube

    We know pollution is a problem on earth, but we’re filling space with our junk too. And if we don’t figure out a way to clean up space junk, we could end our interstellar dreams before they even get started. Today, we’re visiting some cool engineers in Switzerland to learn about the space junk problem and the giant space claw that might be the perfect solution.

  • S2024E04 Why the 2024 Solar Eclipse is Such a Big Deal

    • March 7, 2024
    • YouTube

    On April 8, 2024, the Moon’s shadow will fall on Earth, creating a total solar eclipse across North America. If you have the chance to see it, you don’t want to miss it. It’s an amazing coincidence that total eclipses happen at all — and that we’re alive at a time when we can see and predict them. We made this video so you can learn how to watch an eclipse safely, what to look for during an eclipse, why eclipses happen, and how eclipses have helped advance scientific research.

  • S2024E05 How the Heck Do you Measure an Entire UNIVERSE?

    • April 10, 2024
    • YouTube

    Since the time of the ancient Greeks, scientists have been constructing a cosmic measuring tape to measure the universe from our own backyard all the way to its ever-expanding edge: the cosmic distance ladder. In this video, we climb that ladder and explore how each rung has revealed something new and previously unthinkable about the universe we live in.

  • S2024E06 Can AI Help Us Talk to Whales?

    • April 21, 2024
    • YouTube

    New technology is revolutionizing how we study and protect nature. In this video, we’ll learn how artificial intelligence is being used to decode the sonic landscapes of the ocean - specifically, whale song. That’s right, there may come a day soon where AI allows us to understand and talk to whales. But some scientists are saying: the question may not be CAN we talk to whales, but SHOULD we talk to whales?

Additional Specials