SGU Episode 889: Difference between revisions
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SGU Episode 889 |
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July 23rd 2022 |
Solar Tower Fuel Plant |
Skeptical Rogues |
S: Steven Novella |
B: Bob Novella |
C: Cara Santa Maria |
J: Jay Novella |
E: Evan Bernstein |
Guest |
BD: Brian Dunning, American writer and producer |
Quote of the Week |
Scientific principles and laws do not lie on the surface of nature. They are hidden, and must be wrested from nature by an active and elaborate technique of inquiry. |
John Dewey, American philosopher, psychologist, and educational reformer |
Links |
Download Podcast |
Show Notes |
Forum Discussion |
Introduction, Cara's Return, Post-Op reflections
Voice-over: You're listening to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, your escape to reality.
[00:12.840 --> 00:18.000] Today is Thursday, July 21st, 2022, and this is your host, Stephen Novella.
[00:18.000 --> 00:19.800] Joining me this week are Bob Novella.
[00:19.800 --> 00:20.800] Hey, everybody.
[00:20.800 --> 00:21.800] Kara Santamaria.
[00:21.800 --> 00:22.800] Howdy.
[00:22.800 --> 00:23.800] Jay Novella.
[00:23.800 --> 00:24.800] Hey, guys.
[00:24.800 --> 00:25.800] And Evan Bernstein.
[00:25.800 --> 00:26.800] Good evening, everyone.
[00:26.800 --> 00:28.800] Kara, making her triumphant return.
[00:28.800 --> 00:30.800] How are we doing?
[00:30.800 --> 00:31.800] Yeah.
[00:31.800 --> 00:32.800] Blow the horns.
[00:32.800 --> 00:33.800] Yay.
[00:33.800 --> 00:34.800] Hey, everyone.
Special Segment: Cara's Cancer Experience (4:33)
[00:34.800 --> 00:38.960] This is the first time I've sat in my office chair since my surgery.
[00:38.960 --> 00:41.640] We are officially on post-op day.
[00:41.640 --> 00:42.640] What would that be?
[00:42.640 --> 00:43.640] Fifteen.
[00:43.640 --> 00:48.600] I have to say, it's pretty nuts how quickly you start to feel better.
[00:48.600 --> 00:54.520] The first few days are brutal torture, and then you turn a corner, and it's like there
[00:54.520 --> 00:59.520] are moments when I forget that I had surgery, and I have to be like, oh, yeah, Kara, don't
[00:59.520 --> 01:04.400] try to pick that thing up, or you need to slow down a little bit, because my body doesn't
[01:04.400 --> 01:10.600] feel anymore like I'm post-surgery until I push myself, and then I get so tired so
[01:10.600 --> 01:11.740] fast.
[01:11.740 --> 01:13.500] That's the main lasting thing.
[01:13.500 --> 01:17.180] It's fatigue, and my sleep is completely effed.
[01:17.180 --> 01:20.440] It's like I have crazy – and it's funny because I've posted about it, and people
[01:20.440 --> 01:22.640] are like, oh, yeah, I remember that.
[01:22.640 --> 01:23.640] When is night?
[01:23.640 --> 01:24.640] Day?
[01:24.640 --> 01:28.560] I just sleep when I'm tired, so it's like crazy, but yeah, it's mostly just I'm tired
[01:28.560 --> 01:33.920] all the time, and everything wears me out, and it's still kind of hard to find a really
[01:33.920 --> 01:41.160] comfortable sleeping position, but otherwise, I feel pretty good.
[01:41.160 --> 01:43.240] I was up and walking super fast.
[01:43.240 --> 01:47.320] You know, I went home the day of, and we got some interesting emails from people asking
[01:47.320 --> 01:48.320] about that.
[01:48.320 --> 01:49.320] Day of?
[01:49.320 --> 01:50.320] Yeah.
[01:50.320 --> 01:51.320] Just a few hours after surgery.
[01:51.320 --> 01:54.080] I got some interesting emails of people from other countries being like, what?
[01:54.080 --> 01:55.560] What are you doing in America?
[01:55.560 --> 01:59.600] They'll kick you out of the hospital like 13 minutes after the surgery's over.
[01:59.600 --> 02:00.600] I know.
[02:00.600 --> 02:01.600] But you know what?
[02:01.600 --> 02:03.240] The outcomes are better when you do that, though.
[02:03.240 --> 02:04.240] That's what I'm saying.
[02:04.240 --> 02:05.240] Bottom line.
[02:05.240 --> 02:06.240] I'm glad.
[02:06.240 --> 02:07.240] I don't want to spend the night in the hospital.
[02:07.240 --> 02:08.240] I don't want to be there.
[02:08.240 --> 02:09.240] Yeah, you don't want to be in a freaking hospital.
[02:09.240 --> 02:10.240] It's a dangerous place.
[02:10.240 --> 02:11.240] Yeah.
[02:11.240 --> 02:12.240] There are sick people there.
[02:12.240 --> 02:13.240] People die there.
[02:13.240 --> 02:16.960] It's full of infection, and also they wake you up at ungodly hours because it works for
[02:16.960 --> 02:19.960] the rounding schedules, not because it works for your health.
[02:19.960 --> 02:20.960] I know.
[02:20.960 --> 02:25.160] But when you're in a hospital, they're obligated to do certain things.
[02:25.160 --> 02:26.400] You're going to get your blood drawn every day.
[02:26.400 --> 02:29.880] You're going to get your vitals done every shift, whatever.
[02:29.880 --> 02:33.960] And there's just lots of beepers and stuff going off, alarms and everything.
[02:33.960 --> 02:35.520] There's other patients.
[02:35.520 --> 02:37.400] It's just a horrible place to sleep.
[02:37.400 --> 02:38.400] You can.
[02:38.400 --> 02:39.400] Yeah.
[02:39.400 --> 02:42.480] We are as protective of sleep as we can be.
[02:42.480 --> 02:45.180] A lot of orders are while awake.
[02:45.180 --> 02:47.400] Do this every so often, but only while.
[02:47.400 --> 02:50.240] Don't wake the patient up to freaking do this.
[02:50.240 --> 02:51.240] Yeah.
[02:51.240 --> 02:52.240] Especially post-op.
[02:52.240 --> 02:55.560] If you're in the hospital, it's going to be a little bit more intrusive.
[02:55.560 --> 03:01.200] But it's also, there's a lot of really resistant bugs in the hospital.
[03:01.200 --> 03:02.200] You don't want that.
[03:02.200 --> 03:03.200] Yeah.
[03:03.200 --> 03:05.200] And you've got open wounds after you get out of surgery.
[03:05.200 --> 03:10.200] Like yes, they're closed and they're bandaged and everything, but you've got a line in your
[03:10.200 --> 03:11.200] arm.
[03:11.200 --> 03:13.640] And for a lot of people, they have drains and tubes and things too.
[03:13.640 --> 03:16.400] Luckily, this surgery doesn't necessitate that.
[03:16.400 --> 03:19.080] So the only open line I had was my IV.
[03:19.080 --> 03:23.280] But for some people, they've got lots of potential sources.
[03:23.280 --> 03:28.280] But if you have drains in or if they had to actually open up a body cavity, whatever,
[03:28.280 --> 03:31.320] then you need to be in the hospital until that heals.
[03:31.320 --> 03:32.320] For sure.
[03:32.320 --> 03:33.320] Yeah.
[03:33.320 --> 03:34.320] They're not going to save you.
[03:34.320 --> 03:37.080] But with the newer surgeries that are so much less invasive, if you don't have anything
[03:37.080 --> 03:40.080] like that, they want to get you out of there fast.
[03:40.080 --> 03:42.440] And you guys should see my wounds.
[03:42.440 --> 03:45.000] I can text you a picture, but the incisions are tiny.
[03:45.000 --> 03:46.000] Yeah.
[03:46.000 --> 03:47.000] That's awesome.
[03:47.000 --> 03:50.000] They're like a centimeter, maybe two.
[03:50.000 --> 03:51.880] They're so small.
[03:51.880 --> 03:55.200] And it's like incredible that, you know, a friend of mine was so confused because her
[03:55.200 --> 03:59.240] friend recently had laparoscopic gallbladder surgery and she was like, how are they so
[03:59.240 --> 04:00.240] small?
[04:00.240 --> 04:01.240] How did they pull your uterus out?
[04:01.240 --> 04:05.360] And I was like, you know, that's not where they pull your uterus out from.
[04:05.360 --> 04:10.200] That's why hysterectomy scars can be so tiny because they do all the work through the holes,
[04:10.200 --> 04:15.040] but then they remove the organs through the vagina, which is, you know, the easiest way
[04:15.040 --> 04:16.040] to do it.
[04:16.040 --> 04:17.360] It's a vaginal hysterectomy.
[04:17.360 --> 04:18.360] Yeah.
[04:18.360 --> 04:19.360] Yeah.
[04:19.360 --> 04:21.960] And so the laparoscopy is just all the tools.
[04:21.960 --> 04:22.960] It's the light.
[04:22.960 --> 04:26.160] It's the little cutter and, you know, and they can see what's going on.
[04:26.160 --> 04:27.160] Yeah.
[04:27.160 --> 04:28.160] Yeah.
[04:28.160 --> 04:29.160] But so they go in with all that.
[04:29.160 --> 04:32.160] They cut everything loose and then they pull it out the bottom and then they sew it back
[04:32.160 --> 04:33.160] up.
[04:33.160 --> 04:38.840] So what I have to remember and what my gynecologist told me at my one week postop was basically
[04:38.840 --> 04:40.240] she said there are two rules.
[04:40.240 --> 04:41.240] That's it.
[04:41.240 --> 04:43.440] She said no sex for like forever.
[04:43.440 --> 04:47.360] She was like just for a really long time and I was like, yeah, I'm not planning for like
[04:47.360 --> 04:48.360] several months.
[04:48.360 --> 04:49.480] She was like, great.
[04:49.480 --> 04:55.000] And then the second one is no baths and no swimming for four more weeks after my postop.
[04:55.000 --> 04:57.320] So that would be five weeks post surgery.
[04:57.320 --> 05:00.040] But I was like, I was asking her, you know, because you hear all these things like don't
[05:00.040 --> 05:03.880] lift more than 10 pounds and don't blah, blah, blah, and don't walk farther than whatever.
[05:03.880 --> 05:07.840] And I was like, can I harm myself without knowing?
[05:07.840 --> 05:08.840] And she was like, no, you'll know.
[05:08.840 --> 05:09.840] She's like, it'll hurt.
[05:09.840 --> 05:10.840] Yeah.
[05:10.840 --> 05:13.160] You know, she was like, don't do anything that hurts.
[05:13.160 --> 05:14.160] I was like, okay.
[05:14.160 --> 05:16.240] If it hurts, don't do it.
[05:16.240 --> 05:18.000] That's an amazingly useful piece of advice.
[05:18.000 --> 05:19.280] You know, it's kind of a cliche.
[05:19.280 --> 05:20.840] It's not just a doctor joke thing.
[05:20.840 --> 05:21.840] No, it's real.
[05:21.840 --> 05:22.840] No, but it's true.
[05:22.840 --> 05:23.840] Doctor, it hurts when I do this?
[05:23.840 --> 05:24.840] Don't do it.
[05:24.840 --> 05:27.920] Acute pain is a warning that you are causing tissue damage, you know?
[05:27.920 --> 05:28.920] Right.
[05:28.920 --> 05:30.920] And what's the condition some people have where they can't feel pain?
[05:30.920 --> 05:31.920] That's super rare.
[05:31.920 --> 05:32.920] That is horrible.
[05:32.920 --> 05:33.920] Oh my gosh.
[05:33.920 --> 05:35.260] I feel terrible for those people.
[05:35.260 --> 05:40.240] But also you think about it and that's sort of what it's like if you're taking too many
[05:40.240 --> 05:41.720] pain meds as well.
[05:41.720 --> 05:42.720] Totally.
[05:42.720 --> 05:43.880] I'm just glad.
[05:43.880 --> 05:46.600] So here's the crazy thing about my situation.
[05:46.600 --> 05:50.000] I didn't take any opiates at all, not even in my IV.
[05:50.000 --> 05:51.000] That's good.
[05:51.000 --> 05:52.680] And each time they asked me, how's your pain?
[05:52.680 --> 05:53.960] I was like, I can't tell.
[05:53.960 --> 05:55.280] I think it's fine.
[05:55.280 --> 05:58.580] And they were like, okay, we're just going to keep you on Toradol then, which is just
[05:58.580 --> 06:00.460] a really strong NSAID.
[06:00.460 --> 06:02.320] And that seems to be all I needed.
[06:02.320 --> 06:03.680] And I wasn't trying to be a hero or anything.
[06:03.680 --> 06:06.280] It was kind of annoying because so many people were like, don't be a hero.
[06:06.280 --> 06:07.280] Take the pain meds.
[06:07.280 --> 06:08.920] And I was like, I'm not trying to be a hero.
[06:08.920 --> 06:11.800] I'm afraid of pooping.
[06:11.800 --> 06:13.520] I can handle this pain.
[06:13.520 --> 06:17.020] But what I won't be able to handle is constipation at all.
[06:17.020 --> 06:19.940] If I was in a comfortable position, my pain was like a two.
[06:19.940 --> 06:24.440] If I shifted the wrong way or I used my abs at all, it shot up to like a seven or eight.
[06:24.440 --> 06:31.340] But I very quickly learned how to move the right way, how to use my arms to facilitate
[06:31.340 --> 06:33.780] getting up and down out of chairs.
[06:33.780 --> 06:38.360] And we put bars on the toilet, which was hugely helpful.
[06:38.360 --> 06:41.600] The hardest part was getting in and out of bed.
[06:41.600 --> 06:44.440] I mean, that's nearly impossible when you have any abdominal surgery.
[06:44.440 --> 06:45.440] That's an easy problem to have.
[06:45.440 --> 06:46.440] I mean, I just stay in bed.
[06:46.440 --> 06:47.440] Exactly.
[06:47.440 --> 06:51.480] Kara, how long until you're tipped up?
[06:51.480 --> 06:56.560] I mean, it's hard to say because I feel much better now except for the fatigue.
[06:56.560 --> 07:00.440] And they say that that can last even beyond like when you're better.
[07:00.440 --> 07:06.300] They say at four to five weeks is when you, well, four to six weeks is when you can start
[07:06.300 --> 07:09.240] like doing light exercise again.
[07:09.240 --> 07:11.080] I was relatively healthy before the surgery.
[07:11.080 --> 07:15.640] I followed doctor's orders and got up and walked a lot and just really listened to my
[07:15.640 --> 07:16.640] body.
[07:16.640 --> 07:17.640] So I think I'm doing well.
[07:17.640 --> 07:20.560] I just have to remember I'm not healed on the inside.
[07:20.560 --> 07:21.560] Right.
[07:21.560 --> 07:26.480] The fatigue is an interesting phenomenon because like you're tired on a cellular level.
[07:26.480 --> 07:27.480] You know what I mean?
[07:27.480 --> 07:31.280] It's not like you just worked out that kind of tired where you just need to relax.
[07:31.280 --> 07:33.640] It's like your cells don't have energy.
[07:33.640 --> 07:36.160] It's like, Jake, when you were like really had the bad COVID.
[07:36.160 --> 07:37.160] ATP.
[07:37.160 --> 07:42.960] Yeah, it's just like you have this crushing fatigue that goes beyond being tired from
[07:42.960 --> 07:46.840] physical activity because, you know, when you're getting surgery, that's a huge stress
[07:46.840 --> 07:47.840] on the system.
[07:47.840 --> 07:48.840] Yeah.
[07:48.840 --> 07:49.840] From multiple ways.
[07:49.840 --> 07:50.840] And when you're asleep, you heal better.
[07:50.840 --> 07:54.180] Like when you're dead asleep, your body is using all of its metabolic resources just
[07:54.180 --> 07:57.340] for healing and for, you know, basic life functions.
[07:57.340 --> 07:58.340] But you're not walking.
[07:58.340 --> 07:59.340] You're not moving.
[07:59.340 --> 08:00.960] Moving is really intensive.
[08:00.960 --> 08:03.320] But yeah, I'm feeling a lot better.
[08:03.320 --> 08:06.560] I'll tell you a couple kind of fun things about the actual experience.
[08:06.560 --> 08:11.920] I know some people have written in asking about anesthesia and asking about, you know,
[08:11.920 --> 08:13.080] just different aspects of things.
[08:13.080 --> 08:17.140] So I will say that last time, if you guys remember my last surgery, which was a leap
[08:17.140 --> 08:21.300] in DNC, I had not a great anesthesia experience.
[08:21.300 --> 08:25.160] And so that was a big part of my anxiety and fear leading up to this surgery.
[08:25.160 --> 08:31.320] I'm proud to announce that my anesthesia experience was 100% better this time.
[08:31.320 --> 08:32.320] That's good.
[08:32.320 --> 08:33.320] It was like night and day.
[08:33.320 --> 08:34.320] Oh, good.
[08:34.320 --> 08:35.320] Twice as good?
[08:35.320 --> 08:36.320] Yeah, I mean, yeah, exactly.
[08:36.320 --> 08:41.920] A, because I think that I had a great anesthesiologist and B, because I think I learned a little
[08:41.920 --> 08:45.240] last time, because last time was my first surgery.
[08:45.240 --> 08:50.760] Number one, for the nausea, vomiting fear, which is a legitimate fear in surgery, they
[08:50.760 --> 08:53.240] will often do things to try and mitigate that.
[08:53.240 --> 08:58.080] They'll give you Zofran or Reglan or different drugs to help reduce vomiting because it's
[08:58.080 --> 09:00.480] dangerous to vomit after intubation.
[09:00.480 --> 09:05.200] So and a lot of people feel quite nauseous from or nauseated from anesthesia.
[09:05.200 --> 09:08.900] So I was really scared of that.
[09:08.900 --> 09:12.560] And my anesthesiologist the first time was very kind about it.
[09:12.560 --> 09:14.200] He was like, it's a legitimate fear.
[09:14.200 --> 09:15.320] It happens to a lot of people.
[09:15.320 --> 09:16.320] We'll do what we can to manage.
[09:16.320 --> 09:17.320] And I was like, great.
[09:17.320 --> 09:20.440] So he was like, I'm going to give you a Zofran-pepsid combo.
[09:20.440 --> 09:22.160] I was like, that sounds awesome.
[09:22.160 --> 09:24.800] And my nausea was there, but I didn't puke.
[09:24.800 --> 09:26.720] But I was like, what should I do after the surgery?
[09:26.720 --> 09:31.080] And he was like, wait until the last possible minute to eat, until you can't stand the
[09:31.080 --> 09:32.600] hunger anymore.
[09:32.600 --> 09:33.740] And I was like, okay.
[09:33.740 --> 09:38.800] That was terrible advice because that made me feel so much more nauseous.
[09:38.800 --> 09:42.620] Now this time I was like, I'm going to try and just test the waters and eat some crackers
[09:42.620 --> 09:43.880] or bread right away.
[09:43.880 --> 09:48.520] And I did that and I had no nausea because you get sometimes nausea is from an empty
[09:48.520 --> 09:49.520] stomach.
[09:49.520 --> 09:50.520] Oh, wow.
[09:50.520 --> 09:52.080] It's individual in fairness.
[09:52.080 --> 09:57.200] It's totally individual, which is why a blanket statement like just don't eat, I think is
[09:57.200 --> 09:58.240] dangerous.
[09:58.240 --> 10:03.260] I think it's really listen to your body and make sure you're in a safe space that if it
[10:03.260 --> 10:08.260] does induce vomiting, you're able to do it safely, whatever.
[10:08.260 --> 10:09.260] But it didn't.
[10:09.260 --> 10:10.800] I was totally fine.
[10:10.800 --> 10:12.600] Also this guy gave me more goodies.
[10:12.600 --> 10:16.180] He gave me Reglan, Zofran, and some steroids.
[10:16.180 --> 10:20.840] And they even gave me a little boost before they took out my IV because they had one last
[10:20.840 --> 10:22.300] dose standing.
[10:22.300 --> 10:27.240] And that helped me with any car sickness on the ride home, which was great.
[10:27.240 --> 10:28.240] So there was that.
[10:28.240 --> 10:32.640] The other thing is, and this is a huge thing that Steve and everyone else, I want to study
[10:32.640 --> 10:33.640] this.
[10:33.640 --> 10:37.040] Like after I finish my PhD, I think I want to do a research study.
[10:37.040 --> 10:41.640] Actually, I should dig deep to see first if there's literature on this already.
[10:41.640 --> 10:45.700] But okay, so the first guy, I was like, I'm super scared.
[10:45.700 --> 10:47.580] And he was like, that's normal.
[10:47.580 --> 10:48.580] It's okay to be scared.
[10:48.580 --> 10:52.920] We'll give you a little dose of a benzodiazepine right before we give you the rest of the cocktail
[10:52.920 --> 10:56.820] in the OR, which means I rode to the OR in the bed.
[10:56.820 --> 10:59.760] I got on the operating table by myself.
[10:59.760 --> 11:02.080] I was awake when they put on all the monitors.
[11:02.080 --> 11:04.680] They put on the compression booties.
[11:04.680 --> 11:05.680] They did everything.
[11:05.680 --> 11:09.840] And then, and actually, I think I told you guys this last time, but at one point the
[11:09.840 --> 11:13.800] nurse was, it was just me and the nurse in the OR before all the doctors came in and
[11:13.800 --> 11:19.420] somebody came in on the intercom and they started to talk and the nurse ran to it faster
[11:19.420 --> 11:22.320] than I've ever seen her run and was like, patient in the room.
[11:22.320 --> 11:26.280] And I was like, what were they going to say?
[11:26.280 --> 11:29.660] So anyway, it was pretty funny, but I was fully alert before then.
[11:29.660 --> 11:33.400] And then the doc, once the anesthesiologist came in, he said, okay, you should start feeling
[11:33.400 --> 11:34.440] better right about now.
[11:34.440 --> 11:37.240] He pushed the Versed and then I don't remember anything.
[11:37.240 --> 11:39.080] This time I told him I'm scared.
[11:39.080 --> 11:40.080] He said, great.
[11:40.080 --> 11:41.080] After you talk to the docs and stuff, I'm going to hook you up.
[11:41.080 --> 11:42.780] And I was like, okay.
[11:42.780 --> 11:47.200] So I'm in the room with the doctors, the nurses, everybody's there.
[11:47.200 --> 11:50.280] And he walks in with a big ass syringe and I was like, is that the Versed?
[11:50.280 --> 11:51.640] And he was like, yup.
[11:51.640 --> 11:54.640] And he pushed it and I don't remember anything after that.
[11:54.640 --> 11:56.200] That's the memory wiper right there.
[11:56.200 --> 11:57.260] That's the memory wiper.
[11:57.260 --> 12:02.000] So he did it in my pre-op room, not in the operating theater.
[12:02.000 --> 12:08.520] And I have a sneaking suspicion, and this is a total observational hypothesis that I
[12:08.520 --> 12:11.240] would love to study systematically.
[12:11.240 --> 12:16.840] When you first wake up in post-op, the last memory you have is the last memory you have.
[12:16.840 --> 12:21.180] And if your last memory was in the operating theater, it can be somewhat traumatic for
[12:21.180 --> 12:22.440] some people.
[12:22.440 --> 12:26.840] If your last memory was cozy in your room with your blanket and your pillow and the
[12:26.840 --> 12:31.120] warm smiles of everybody around you, I think that can be a lot less traumatic.
[12:31.120 --> 12:38.520] And I'm curious if pushing Versed earlier isn't better for post-op recovery and psychological
[12:38.520 --> 12:39.520] benefit.
[12:39.520 --> 12:44.600] They always, you know, like I've had surgeries, you know, Kara, you and I talked about this.
[12:44.600 --> 12:50.160] For some reason, like my experience is they always talk to you when you're in the surgery
[12:50.160 --> 12:51.160] room.
[12:51.160 --> 12:54.760] There's always some type of conversation going on in there.
[12:54.760 --> 12:56.640] When I'm getting surgery, I don't know why.
[12:56.640 --> 12:58.440] I like your idea.
[12:58.440 --> 12:59.440] Knock me out.
[12:59.440 --> 13:00.720] But on Versed, that's the thing that's interesting.
[13:00.720 --> 13:03.680] On benzodiazepines, you're not like trashed.
[13:03.680 --> 13:04.760] You're pretty coherent.
[13:04.760 --> 13:07.080] You just don't remember it at all.
[13:07.080 --> 13:12.040] And so if they push the benzodiazepines early so that you're A, comfortable because that's
[13:12.040 --> 13:15.440] what they're for, they make you feel really relaxed, you're totally, I mean, you're not
[13:15.440 --> 13:16.440] totally coherent.
[13:16.440 --> 13:19.920] They want to make sure you sign all the paperwork before they give you that, which you have
[13:19.920 --> 13:21.000] to do.
[13:21.000 --> 13:24.480] But when they push them, they can do that then take you into OR.
[13:24.480 --> 13:27.680] You can still have fully fledged conversations with them.
[13:27.680 --> 13:32.880] You just can't consent to anything because you're technically like on hard drugs.
[13:32.880 --> 13:35.160] But like they told me that I was being totally normal.
[13:35.160 --> 13:37.400] Like I reminded them, hey, we can't bring my pillow in.
[13:37.400 --> 13:39.360] Here nurse, do you want to take this?
[13:39.360 --> 13:43.160] And I told them some story about a woman I talked to who at Sloan Kettering walked her
[13:43.160 --> 13:44.640] way into the OR.
[13:44.640 --> 13:46.320] Like they were like, yeah, you were completely there.
[13:46.320 --> 13:47.400] You were just chill.
[13:47.400 --> 13:51.240] You said the minute they push the drugs, I go, oh, I feel better.
[13:51.240 --> 13:52.480] I literally said that.
[13:52.480 --> 13:58.920] I think I'd be curious from a psychological standpoint, who benefits or what's more beneficial?
[13:58.920 --> 14:04.640] Having your memory wiped slightly sooner and just never being cognizant of the operating
[14:04.640 --> 14:06.200] theater.
[14:06.200 --> 14:07.200] I don't know.
[14:07.200 --> 14:08.200] I don't know.
[14:08.200 --> 14:09.200] Yeah.
[14:09.200 --> 14:10.200] Interesting study.
[14:10.200 --> 14:15.520] When I had a procedure relatively recently, I liked the operating theater.
[14:15.520 --> 14:20.120] First off, it was like the bridge of the enterprise in a sense with monitors everywhere, all these
[14:20.120 --> 14:25.280] technical doodads, and then I had like a cool conversation with one of the doctors.
[14:25.280 --> 14:27.520] It was like a pro-science, pro-skeptical thing.
[14:27.520 --> 14:29.360] I was like, this guy's really cool.
[14:29.360 --> 14:30.680] And then that's the last thing I remember.
[14:30.680 --> 14:32.160] That was a good memory.
[14:32.160 --> 14:35.500] But then my procedure was nothing compared to yours though.
[14:35.500 --> 14:37.600] So it's hard to do a real comparison.
[14:37.600 --> 14:38.600] Yeah.
[14:38.600 --> 14:41.840] You did like a, I think we talked about this, that was more like that Twilight anesthesia.
[14:41.840 --> 14:42.840] Like what's it called?
[14:42.840 --> 14:43.840] Conscious sedation.
[14:43.840 --> 14:44.840] Conscious sedation.
[14:44.840 --> 14:45.840] No, I was out.
[14:45.840 --> 14:46.840] Oh, you were out.
[14:46.840 --> 14:47.840] Oh, okay.
[14:47.840 --> 14:52.080] It was called the butt procedure that I was out.
[14:52.080 --> 14:57.840] I still think, Steve, am I wrong, endoscopy, even though you feel out, it's not conscious
[14:57.840 --> 14:59.440] sedation, but it's like Twilight, right?
[14:59.440 --> 15:01.240] It's not like propofol, is it?
[15:01.240 --> 15:02.640] I guess it varies.
[15:02.640 --> 15:04.520] The question is, were you intubated?
[15:04.520 --> 15:07.140] If you were intubated, you were out.
[15:07.140 --> 15:08.360] That was full and a general anesthesia.
[15:08.360 --> 15:09.360] You probably weren't intubated.
[15:09.360 --> 15:12.100] If you're not intubated, it's conscious sedation.
[15:12.100 --> 15:13.100] That's a good rule of thumb.
[15:13.100 --> 15:15.960] It seems like a misnomer though, because you are not conscious.
[15:15.960 --> 15:16.960] Yeah, it is.
[15:16.960 --> 15:17.960] You're not conscious.
[15:17.960 --> 15:23.040] You also don't remember anything, so even if you're pseudo-semi-conscious, you won't
[15:23.040 --> 15:25.040] remember any of it.
[15:25.040 --> 15:26.040] Oh.
[15:26.040 --> 15:27.040] Kara, you were intubated?
[15:27.040 --> 15:28.040] Oh, yes.
[15:28.040 --> 15:29.040] Absolutely, I was intubated.
[15:29.040 --> 15:31.160] How did your throat feel afterwards?
[15:31.160 --> 15:32.160] Did you have pain?
[15:32.160 --> 15:33.160] Horrible.
[15:33.160 --> 15:34.760] Yeah, horrible, for days.
[15:34.760 --> 15:36.320] That's why I couldn't really eat crackers.
[15:36.320 --> 15:39.000] The first day, I had bone broth and some bread.
[15:39.000 --> 15:43.260] Oh, I bought some of those Hawaiian rolls at the grocery store at the last minute when
[15:43.260 --> 15:46.460] I was grocery shopping for my mom to come in town before the procedure, and those were
[15:46.460 --> 15:48.400] a godsend.
[15:48.400 --> 15:50.360] Those things are just amazing.
[15:50.360 --> 15:51.520] You guys know what I'm talking about, right?
[15:51.520 --> 15:52.520] A Hawaiian roll?
[15:52.520 --> 15:53.780] I don't know.
[15:53.780 --> 15:55.120] We don't know it as a Hawaiian roll.
[15:55.120 --> 15:56.120] We might know that.
[15:56.120 --> 15:57.120] Oh, really?
[15:57.120 --> 15:58.120] Is it sushi?
[15:58.120 --> 15:59.120] No, no, no.
[15:59.120 --> 16:00.120] They're bread.
[16:00.120 --> 16:01.120] Oh, okay.
[16:01.120 --> 16:04.320] They're like these little rolls, bread rolls that are slightly sweet and they're super
[16:04.320 --> 16:05.320] soft.
[16:05.320 --> 16:06.320] Sounds good.
[16:06.320 --> 16:07.320] Yeah, because crackers...
[16:07.320 --> 16:08.320] Like a challah bread?
[16:08.320 --> 16:10.160] Do you know what challah bread is?
[16:10.160 --> 16:11.160] It's Hawaiian bread.
[16:11.160 --> 16:12.160] I guess it's a West Coast thing.
[16:12.160 --> 16:13.160] Yeah, I don't know.
[16:13.160 --> 16:18.400] Yeah, because crackers are so bland and easy, but they hurt your throat.
[16:18.400 --> 16:19.400] They're hard to eat.
[16:19.400 --> 16:20.400] Oh, that's scratching.
[16:20.400 --> 16:21.400] Yeah, the soft bread was great.
[16:21.400 --> 16:23.080] Also, they busted my lip.
[16:23.080 --> 16:26.240] I don't think they realized it, but you know when they intubate, they use that big metal
[16:26.240 --> 16:27.240] thing?
[16:27.240 --> 16:28.240] Yeah.
[16:28.240 --> 16:31.040] He may have stuck my lip between my tooth because I had a really fat lip when I woke
[16:31.040 --> 16:35.520] up from surgery, and it took about three days for that wound to heal.
[16:35.520 --> 16:38.540] So I can answer more questions if you have any, but I think the most important thing
[16:38.540 --> 16:42.560] that I want to mention before anything else is the pathology.
[16:42.560 --> 16:47.360] I want to give you guys a report on what was going on with that and what we learned, and
[16:47.360 --> 16:56.140] just to reinforce to all of my listeners who have a cervix why it is so important to do
[16:56.140 --> 17:02.180] your annual, or whatever your calendar is, but to do the screenings that are recommended.
[17:02.180 --> 17:06.680] If you guys remember, my last surgery was a DNC and a leap.
[17:06.680 --> 17:11.700] DNC dilation and curettage is like a scraping of the endometrium, which is the inner lining
[17:11.700 --> 17:13.200] of the uterus.
[17:13.200 --> 17:17.520] It's also often an abortion procedure, but in my case it was just used to test the tissue
[17:17.520 --> 17:21.280] to see if it had any dysplasia or neoplasia.
[17:21.280 --> 17:25.200] A leap is a loop electrosurgical excision procedure.
[17:25.200 --> 17:29.540] So this is a wire loop that has an electrical current that goes through it where they cut
[17:29.540 --> 17:31.520] a chunk of your cervix out.
[17:31.520 --> 17:33.520] I want to go back a little bit.
[17:33.520 --> 17:39.420] I have long had abnormal pap's, and whenever I had an abnormal pap in the past, it was
[17:39.420 --> 17:42.720] recommended that I do a colposcopy.
[17:42.720 --> 17:47.960] Colposcopy, which sounds like endoscopy, is a scope, but it's a colposcope.
[17:47.960 --> 17:52.480] So it looks at your cervix, not your intestines.
[17:52.480 --> 17:58.400] Colposcopy is a little bit of a misnomer because it almost always includes also a biopsy.
[17:58.400 --> 17:59.960] So it's not just a scope.
[17:59.960 --> 18:04.320] Very often they have to take a punch biopsy, and just so you men know, they do not give
[18:04.320 --> 18:06.280] you any drugs for this.
[18:06.280 --> 18:07.680] They cut you with no drugs.
[18:07.680 --> 18:08.680] Yeah.
[18:08.680 --> 18:10.440] I'm talking about Advil.
[18:10.440 --> 18:11.440] There's nothing.
[18:11.440 --> 18:12.440] There's no anesthesia.
[18:12.440 --> 18:13.440] There's no nothing.
[18:13.440 --> 18:17.860] I mean, you could take Advil on your own, I guess, but they open you up with a speculum.
[18:17.860 --> 18:18.860] They shine a light.
[18:18.860 --> 18:23.880] They do a vinegar wash to see if your skin reacts, to see if there's dysplasic spots,
[18:23.880 --> 18:27.340] and then they literally have this tool that looks like really long scissors with a little
[18:27.340 --> 18:30.240] punchy thing on the end, and they go cut, cut.
[18:30.240 --> 18:34.240] Usually they take two, and then they do what's called an ECC, an endocervical curettage,
[18:34.240 --> 18:37.880] which is that scraper again, but they do it inside the endocervix.
[18:37.880 --> 18:42.480] I've had to have, let's say, five of these in my life, maybe more, and they're brutal.
[18:42.480 --> 18:46.580] And for some women, they're well-tolerated, but for me, they're very painful.
[18:46.580 --> 18:49.100] And it was getting to the point where I couldn't handle it anymore.
[18:49.100 --> 18:52.900] And I had begged and pleaded my doctor, I said, can we just do a leap?
[18:52.900 --> 18:53.900] And she's like, you don't need a leap.
[18:53.900 --> 18:56.060] They always come back negative.
[18:56.060 --> 19:00.980] I'm not going to remove perfectly healthy tissue from your cervix just because you don't
[19:00.980 --> 19:06.140] want to have these biopsies, because the reason, my reasoning, of course, was that most women,
[19:06.140 --> 19:11.480] this is the standard kind of progression of cervical cancer or of precancerous cells for
[19:11.480 --> 19:15.040] most women, it's the squamous tissue.
[19:15.040 --> 19:18.740] So it's kind of like the outer layer of the skin cells of your cervix.
[19:18.740 --> 19:21.880] That's what usually has dysplasia or neoplasia first.
[19:21.880 --> 19:23.400] So they do a biopsy.
[19:23.400 --> 19:26.200] They see that it's what's called SIN 1 through SIN 4.
[19:26.200 --> 19:30.280] Those are basically the stages of precancerous cells.
[19:30.280 --> 19:32.180] In early stages, they might wait and see.
[19:32.180 --> 19:36.480] In later stages, then they'll do a leap or a cone biopsy.
[19:36.480 --> 19:41.060] I never had dysplasia, so she was never going to run ahead with a leap.
[19:41.060 --> 19:44.600] But my reasoning was, well, if we just remove the tissue, it might not come back abnormal
[19:44.600 --> 19:45.600] anymore, right?
[19:45.600 --> 19:47.160] But she's like, I'm not doing that.
[19:47.160 --> 19:52.720] So she said, you know, next time we'll talk about maybe doing some sort of conscious sedation
[19:52.720 --> 19:54.200] or something to make it more manageable.
[19:54.200 --> 19:55.360] It's like, OK.
[19:55.360 --> 20:01.360] And then as a fluke, on my next pap, I had a result of abnormal glandular tissue.
[20:01.360 --> 20:06.160] Now, squamous tissue, like I mentioned, is the outer layer of the cervix.
[20:06.160 --> 20:09.360] It's kind of like the skin cells of the cervix.
[20:09.360 --> 20:12.620] Glandular tissue is deep inside the cervix and moving up into the uterus.
[20:12.620 --> 20:14.520] These are the glandular cells.
[20:14.520 --> 20:18.640] An abnormal glandular tissue result is much more concerning.
[20:18.640 --> 20:21.160] So that's when you have to go straight to a DNC.
[20:21.160 --> 20:23.660] The standard of care there is a DNC.
[20:23.660 --> 20:26.240] So she's like, we got to do a DNC.
[20:26.240 --> 20:29.240] I know that the biopsies haven't been well tolerated.
[20:29.240 --> 20:32.040] Why don't we do this under general anesthesia?
[20:32.040 --> 20:33.840] And I was like, can I do a leap?
[20:33.840 --> 20:42.200] And she was like, technically, the order would be DNC, another colposcopy, and then if the
[20:42.200 --> 20:44.260] colposcopy is positive, then a leap.
[20:44.260 --> 20:47.800] But because you've been so adamant and because we've done so many colposcopies and we're
[20:47.800 --> 20:50.160] going to put you out anyway, let's just do a leap.
[20:50.160 --> 20:55.680] But she was really concerned that she was skipping steps and going outside of the Bethesda
[20:55.680 --> 21:00.160] protocol, which is the standard of care for gynecologic surveillance.
[21:00.160 --> 21:02.800] But we both decided together, let's just do the leap.
[21:02.800 --> 21:03.800] OK.
[21:03.800 --> 21:12.900] Cut to the results from the last surgery, DNC negative, ECC negative, leap positive.
[21:12.900 --> 21:19.720] So if you look back at six or seven screens that I've had over the years, the only thing
[21:19.720 --> 21:24.800] that came up with adenocarcinoma in situ, which, by the way, has blown past the four
[21:24.800 --> 21:28.140] stages of cervical dysplasia of squamous tissue.
[21:28.140 --> 21:32.880] Now we're talking basically cancer stage zero of the cervix.
[21:32.880 --> 21:39.860] The only test that showed that was the test I was never supposed to get.
[21:39.860 --> 21:43.820] Every other protocol screen came back negative.
[21:43.820 --> 21:46.440] So then the standard of care has to be hysterectomy.
[21:46.440 --> 21:50.720] If you have adenocarcinoma in situ, you will have to get a hysterectomy because if you
[21:50.720 --> 21:54.000] leave it alone, it will become invasive adenocarcinoma.
[21:54.000 --> 21:56.000] It's not an if, it's a when.
[21:56.000 --> 22:00.480] So are you saying, Kara, that this was caught as early as it possibly could have been?
[22:00.480 --> 22:03.880] It was not only caught as early as it possibly could have been, it was caught as something
[22:03.880 --> 22:04.880] of a fluke.
[22:04.880 --> 22:09.960] And my doctor said to me, point blank, Kara, if you hadn't advocated for yourself, I think
[22:09.960 --> 22:13.040] you would have woken up in a few years with invasive carcinoma.
[22:13.040 --> 22:14.040] Oh my gosh.
[22:14.040 --> 22:16.840] And how many women cannot advocate for themselves?
[22:16.840 --> 22:17.840] Right.
[22:17.840 --> 22:18.840] Either don't have-
[22:18.840 --> 22:19.840] The vast majority.
[22:19.840 --> 22:20.840] Yeah.
[22:20.840 --> 22:21.840] Either don't have the medical knowledge or-
[22:21.840 --> 22:22.840] Right.
[22:22.840 --> 22:23.840] Or somebody who can help them.
[22:23.840 --> 22:26.040] You know, there's a language barrier, you know, whatever.
[22:26.040 --> 22:27.460] They're not getting these screenings.
[22:27.460 --> 22:29.560] So I know I'm a bit of a flukey case.
[22:29.560 --> 22:31.880] I had a weird presentation.
[22:31.880 --> 22:32.880] So it was two things.
[22:32.880 --> 22:34.840] One, I advocated hard for myself.
[22:34.840 --> 22:39.820] And two, I was very up to date with all of my screenings.
[22:39.820 --> 22:44.160] Because I've had so many abnormal things in the past, we've been super, super vigilant.
[22:44.160 --> 22:49.160] Ultimately, you know, I had the hysterectomy and the pathology report came back.
[22:49.160 --> 22:51.880] The fallopian tubes were clean as we expected.
[22:51.880 --> 22:54.480] We never had any worry about those.
[22:54.480 --> 22:57.200] The uterus was clean, as we mostly expected.
[22:57.200 --> 22:59.840] But the cervix had even more AIS in it.
[22:59.840 --> 23:02.260] So we know we didn't remove it all from the leap.
[23:02.260 --> 23:06.320] We know doing the hysterectomy was absolutely 100% the right thing to do.
[23:06.320 --> 23:10.960] Because if we hadn't done it, that AIS would have transformed into invasive carcinoma.
[23:10.960 --> 23:11.960] Oh my gosh.
[23:11.960 --> 23:16.360] And in somewhere from one to five years, I very likely would have cervical cancer.
[23:16.360 --> 23:19.360] And I'm talking the real deal radiation, chemotherapy.
[23:19.360 --> 23:22.360] Yeah, you dodged a bullet.
[23:22.360 --> 23:23.360] Huge bullet.
[23:23.360 --> 23:24.360] Big time.
[23:24.360 --> 23:25.540] I mean, it's incredible.
[23:25.540 --> 23:29.640] And it just goes to show how important it is, you guys.
[23:29.640 --> 23:36.080] And what I mean is you guys, girls, you every everyone's, how important it is to follow
[23:36.080 --> 23:37.400] the standard recommendations.
[23:37.400 --> 23:40.960] And if something seems wrong, or if something doesn't feel right, or if you're confused,
[23:40.960 --> 23:45.520] or you have questions, to take the time to ask them and to really, really understand
[23:45.520 --> 23:47.320] what's going on with your body.
[23:47.320 --> 23:52.880] Because as amazing as our medical establishment can be, and I'm lucky, I feel like I have
[23:52.880 --> 23:58.020] one of the best gynecologic surgeons, I happen to be lucky that my gynecologist is also a
[23:58.020 --> 24:01.480] premier laparoscopic surgeon, and that she's just incredible.
[24:01.480 --> 24:03.000] She's super progressive.
[24:03.000 --> 24:04.800] She's very warm.
[24:04.800 --> 24:05.800] She's intelligent.
[24:05.800 --> 24:07.400] She's ultra skeptical.
[24:07.400 --> 24:09.720] But not everybody has that opportunity.
[24:09.720 --> 24:13.800] And even with the best of the best of the best, they're your only gynecologist.
[24:13.800 --> 24:17.480] You are one of hundreds of their patients.
[24:17.480 --> 24:21.560] And nobody is going to advocate for you better than yourself.
[24:21.560 --> 24:26.000] And so I just really wanted to reinforce because, gosh, I mean, I burst out in tears when she
[24:26.000 --> 24:28.640] said that to me in the doctor's office.
[24:28.640 --> 24:34.000] She was just like, Kara, thank goodness you did this and we did this together because
[24:34.000 --> 24:37.360] we know what the outcome would have been otherwise.
[24:37.360 --> 24:38.360] Yeah.
[24:38.360 --> 24:39.360] So there's that.
[24:39.360 --> 24:40.360] That's where I'm at.
[24:40.360 --> 24:45.600] Is there this history of cancer in your family, I mean, what can people do in order to kind
[24:45.600 --> 24:46.600] of-
[24:46.600 --> 24:47.600] Oh, gosh, no.
[24:47.600 --> 24:50.600] This is 100% human papillomavirus.
[24:50.600 --> 24:52.000] I can tell you point blank.
[24:52.000 --> 24:57.000] And the vast majority of cervical cancers are, the vast, vast, vast, vast majority.
[24:57.000 --> 24:59.980] So this is not a BRCA1 thing.
[24:59.980 --> 25:01.880] My family is not a cancer family.
[25:01.880 --> 25:02.920] I'm very lucky in that respect.
[25:02.920 --> 25:07.640] My father has prostate cancer, but found it in stage one, removed his prostate, and is
[25:07.640 --> 25:08.700] completely clear.
[25:08.700 --> 25:12.800] And that's just one of those things, the longer you live, the higher your risk.
[25:12.800 --> 25:18.000] But we don't have a lot of cancer, like genetic cancer concerns.
[25:18.000 --> 25:19.000] But I'm of an era.
[25:19.000 --> 25:20.000] I'm 38 years old.
[25:20.000 --> 25:21.660] I was born in 1983.
[25:21.660 --> 25:26.200] The Gardasil vaccine did not exist when I was a child.
[25:26.200 --> 25:28.360] So most kids now get it when they're young.
[25:28.360 --> 25:29.760] It didn't exist when I was a child.
[25:29.760 --> 25:34.600] And as it came on the market, from an insurance perspective, I was always just outside of
[25:34.600 --> 25:35.600] the age bracket.
[25:35.600 --> 25:37.740] I was just too old for my insurance to cover it.
[25:37.740 --> 25:43.300] And only within the last several years did they expand coverage up to 45 in the US, which
[25:43.300 --> 25:45.020] meant that I was able to go and get it.
[25:45.020 --> 25:47.540] But by then, I already had HPV18.
[25:47.540 --> 25:50.300] So I'm now protected against eight other strains.
[25:50.300 --> 25:51.840] It's a nine-valent vaccine.
[25:51.840 --> 25:55.780] HPV18 is one of the high-risk strains it protects against, but I already have it.
[25:55.780 --> 25:57.980] But I'm now protected against the other eight strains.
[25:57.980 --> 26:02.740] But HPV18 is a very cancer-causing strain.
[26:02.740 --> 26:05.960] Most people, and don't get me wrong, if you have it, you're very likely fine.
[26:05.960 --> 26:08.120] The vast majority of people clear it on their own.
[26:08.120 --> 26:09.120] But some people don't.
[26:09.120 --> 26:10.120] And it turns into cancer.
[26:10.120 --> 26:12.380] Or I should say it causes cancer.
[26:12.380 --> 26:15.940] The virus doesn't turn into cancer.
[26:15.940 --> 26:17.540] But this is very common, you guys.
[26:17.540 --> 26:21.900] And another thing that I think a lot of men don't think about, it all falls on the woman
[26:21.900 --> 26:23.060] a lot.
[26:23.060 --> 26:26.460] And there's a lot of slut-shaming around, like, oh, the woman has HPV, oh, the woman's
[26:26.460 --> 26:28.340] getting cervical cancer.
[26:28.340 --> 26:29.580] Men carry HPV.
[26:29.580 --> 26:33.080] That's how women get HPV.
[26:33.080 --> 26:37.180] But men do it willy-nilly because there's no real test, they don't ever have symptoms
[26:37.180 --> 26:40.300] unless they have one of the few strains that cause genital warts.
[26:40.300 --> 26:45.100] The vast majority of the strains, the only real negative consequence is cancer.
[26:45.100 --> 26:48.460] And that really happens much more readily in the cervix.
[26:48.460 --> 26:52.500] Although some men can get throat cancer and anal cancer from it.
[26:52.500 --> 26:53.500] And women as well.
[26:53.500 --> 26:59.380] Yeah, it's one of the main causes behind throat and anal cancers as well.
[26:59.380 --> 27:02.780] But it's by far the reason that most women have cervical cancer.
[27:02.780 --> 27:06.660] And if you have, like, a grandma who died of cervical cancer, she probably had HPV.
[27:06.660 --> 27:10.340] We just didn't know about it back then.
[27:10.340 --> 27:11.340] So that's the other thing.
[27:11.340 --> 27:15.700] Like, if you're having positive HPV tests and abnormal PAPs, you've got to be vigilant.
[27:15.700 --> 27:18.900] And when your doctor says every six months or every year or whatever their recommendation
[27:18.900 --> 27:21.660] is, follow it.
[27:21.660 --> 27:22.660] Follow it.
[27:22.660 --> 27:23.660] Yeah.
[27:23.660 --> 27:24.660] Well, Kara, I'm glad you're doing better.
[27:24.660 --> 27:26.700] I'm glad it all turned out well in the end.
[27:26.700 --> 27:27.700] Yep.
[27:27.700 --> 27:32.460] Got about a month left until I feel like I'm, like, completely 100%, but so much better.
[27:32.460 --> 27:36.980] You're going to join us for Science or Fiction at the end of the show.
[27:36.980 --> 27:37.980] Yeah.
[27:37.980 --> 27:42.620] And we're going to move on with the news items without you, but we'll talk to you at the
[27:42.620 --> 27:43.620] end of the show.
[27:43.620 --> 27:44.620] Yeah.
[27:44.620 --> 27:45.620] And then next week I'll be back, I think, full time.
[27:45.620 --> 27:46.620] No problem.
[27:46.620 --> 27:47.620] Full time.
[27:47.620 --> 27:48.620] Awesome.
[27:48.620 --> 27:49.620] Yeah.
[27:49.620 --> 27:50.620] All right.
[27:50.620 --> 27:51.620] Talk to you soon.
[27:51.620 --> 27:52.620] Thanks.
[27:52.620 --> 27:53.620] See you in a bit.
[27:53.620 --> 27:54.620] Bye, Kara.
News Items
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(laughs) (laughter) (applause) [inaudible]
Global Warming Technologies (27:50)
[27:54.620 --> 27:55.620] All right, guys.
[27:55.620 --> 27:56.620] To start out the news items, I'm going to talk about some global warming mitigation
[27:56.620 --> 27:57.740] technology.
[27:57.740 --> 28:02.020] This is something that we talk about occasionally, but there are a couple of ones I want to add.
[28:02.020 --> 28:03.420] Jay, you talked about green steel.
[28:03.420 --> 28:08.060] You know, it's about 10% of carbon emissions come from the steel industry.
[28:08.060 --> 28:13.060] And you know, we could find ways to make do with using hydrogen and electricity instead
[28:13.060 --> 28:16.620] of fossil fuels and, yeah, and coke.
[28:16.620 --> 28:20.720] So there is two more I want to talk about that I thought are pretty cool.
[28:20.720 --> 28:28.420] One is a method of making carbon neutral jet fuel because, you know, jets, you know, we're
[28:28.420 --> 28:30.780] not going to have electric jets anytime soon.
[28:30.780 --> 28:32.660] I know that they're working on it.
[28:32.660 --> 28:33.660] They are working on it.
[28:33.660 --> 28:35.100] They do have like an electric jet engine.
[28:35.100 --> 28:41.220] But the thing is, it's just not going to be able to have the range, you know, wouldn't
[28:41.220 --> 28:42.860] it be a hybrid anyways?
[28:42.860 --> 28:43.860] Yeah.
[28:43.860 --> 28:50.460] At first, definitely you would have you would use, you know, hydrocarbons to get into altitude
[28:50.460 --> 28:53.540] because that's where most of your energy is used anyway and switch and then maybe you
[28:53.540 --> 28:55.220] could switch over for cruising.
[28:55.220 --> 29:03.620] But still, that also means that it's not as useful because you're only replacing a minority
[29:03.620 --> 29:04.620] of the energy.
[29:04.620 --> 29:05.620] Right.
[29:05.620 --> 29:06.620] But it's something.
[29:06.620 --> 29:07.620] You know, something's better than nothing.
[29:07.620 --> 29:12.380] So maybe we will go to hybrid jets for a while.
[29:12.380 --> 29:16.260] I think we need a lot of advancements in battery and electronic technology before like they're
[29:16.260 --> 29:18.220] going to be entirely electrical.
[29:18.220 --> 29:24.220] But if we could make carbon neutral hydrocarbon jet fuel, then that could be a way of making
[29:24.220 --> 29:26.940] like the commercial aviation industry.
[29:26.940 --> 29:32.840] So there's been a lot of talk with biofuels and we can't technically do this now.
[29:32.840 --> 29:38.980] It's always a question of doing it at scale, at industrial scale and economically feasibly.
[29:38.980 --> 29:42.960] Biofuels I think are always going to have a very, very limited place in our energy future
[29:42.960 --> 29:47.180] because of a lot of the feedstocks are land intensive.
[29:47.180 --> 29:52.700] There'll be some you could do from what was otherwise waste or growing algae and bats
[29:52.700 --> 29:53.700] or whatever.
[29:53.700 --> 29:57.340] So we will have some of that, but we're not going to be able to use millions of acres
[29:57.340 --> 30:02.460] of land to grow feedstock for biofuels, you know, just just don't have it.
[30:02.460 --> 30:03.460] All right.
[30:03.460 --> 30:04.460] But this uses a different method.
[30:04.460 --> 30:06.340] This is a new method.
[30:06.340 --> 30:09.780] It's a an all in one system.
[30:09.780 --> 30:16.540] So you have a tower and the tower has the material and the chambers in order to have
[30:16.540 --> 30:21.620] a what they what they're calling a consecutive redox cycling.
[30:21.620 --> 30:28.820] And essentially it's a way of turning carbon dioxide and water, H2O, using the energy from
[30:28.820 --> 30:34.580] solar heating in order to make hydrogen and carbon monoxide.
[30:34.580 --> 30:44.060] When we're talking about biofuels and generating any kind of fuel from electricity or from
[30:44.060 --> 30:50.580] a clean energy source, hydrogen and carbon monoxide are commonly the intermediary molecules
[30:50.580 --> 30:55.840] or in the case of hydrogen, it's the final molecule because they're both high energy
[30:55.840 --> 30:56.840] molecules.
[30:56.840 --> 31:01.700] And once you get to either hydrogen or carbon monoxide, you've done it.
[31:01.700 --> 31:03.540] You've got your high energy molecule.
[31:03.540 --> 31:09.260] And then the subsequent reactions in order to make whatever it is you want to make are
[31:09.260 --> 31:11.820] the easy part then from that point forward.
[31:11.820 --> 31:17.820] In this case, they go through hydrogen and carbon monoxide to either kerosene or diesel
[31:17.820 --> 31:21.340] fuel so they can make both with this process.
[31:21.340 --> 31:27.820] Kerosene is a high energy hydrocarbon which you can use in jet engines.
[31:27.820 --> 31:32.540] And in fact, it could be fed into the existing infrastructure from storage to distribution
[31:32.540 --> 31:36.220] to burning it in jets.
[31:36.220 --> 31:39.820] So the engines can accept it without damage without.
[31:39.820 --> 31:40.820] Yeah.
[31:40.820 --> 31:43.820] From what I'm reading, it's like, yeah, they can.
[31:43.820 --> 31:44.820] Maybe it's not all of them.
[31:44.820 --> 31:49.260] But whatever, your typical commercial jet engine can burn kerosene.
[31:49.260 --> 31:55.740] The entire process has an efficiency of 4.1% and they're hoping they can get it up to something
[31:55.740 --> 31:57.540] closer to 15%.
[31:57.540 --> 32:04.400] But even at 4.1%, it's still viable in terms of an industrial process.
[32:04.400 --> 32:11.740] So anyway, the news item here is that they've gone for the first time from the lab to a
[32:11.740 --> 32:14.060] demonstration production.
[32:14.060 --> 32:20.980] They built the tower, they built the solar energy array, and they're making kerosene
[32:20.980 --> 32:23.680] and diesel fuel with this method.
[32:23.680 --> 32:28.780] So again, this is like one of those things, whether or not this will eventually be a significant
[32:28.780 --> 32:31.100] player, it's hard to say.
[32:31.100 --> 32:36.700] But it's good to see that these kind of technological advancements are continuously being made.
[32:36.700 --> 32:41.980] The next one is I thought was just really clever, kind of fun to talk about.
[32:41.980 --> 32:47.720] And it's a way of recapturing the energy lost to breaking trains, meaning, you know, slowing
[32:47.720 --> 32:49.700] that decelerating trains.
[32:49.700 --> 32:55.460] So trains are heavy, they go fast, so they have massive momentum.
[32:55.460 --> 32:59.020] And there's a lot of kinetic energy in that momentum.
[32:59.020 --> 33:05.820] When trains slow down or break, that energy is just completely wasted as heat, right?
[33:05.820 --> 33:08.380] It's a total loss.
[33:08.380 --> 33:15.500] Here's a fun fact, what is the amount of energy lost in the world through breaking of trains?
[33:15.500 --> 33:17.740] So I want to ask you two ways.
[33:17.740 --> 33:24.380] One is when a typical passenger train goes from cruising speed to a stop, how much energy
[33:24.380 --> 33:26.300] does that just one time?
[33:26.300 --> 33:28.500] How much energy does that represent?
[33:28.500 --> 33:29.500] Forfeit one.
[33:29.500 --> 33:37.260] So we're going to put this in, you know, representative units will say, how many days of electricity
[33:37.260 --> 33:38.980] for an average American home?
[33:38.980 --> 33:40.240] I'll say three days.
[33:40.240 --> 33:44.020] I will say 10 days for one household.
[33:44.020 --> 33:51.100] But the difference is that, say, a week, 20 days, wow, 20, 11 average American homes for
[33:51.100 --> 33:53.540] an entire day or one for 20.
[33:53.540 --> 33:55.300] Yeah, that's a lot of energy.
[33:55.300 --> 33:56.300] That's a lot of energy.
[33:56.300 --> 33:57.300] If you can capture it all.
[33:57.300 --> 33:59.940] Yeah, well, that's the other way to look at it.
[33:59.940 --> 34:06.060] If you look at all the trains in the world and all the breaking events for all the trains,
[34:06.060 --> 34:07.540] how much energy is that?
[34:07.540 --> 34:08.540] Wow.
[34:08.540 --> 34:14.340] The units we're going to use for this is the energy produced by the Hoover Dam.
[34:14.340 --> 34:18.220] I think I just figured out what's causing global warming.
[34:18.220 --> 34:20.020] How about 100 Hoover Dams?
[34:20.020 --> 34:21.020] How about one?
[34:21.020 --> 34:22.020] Very close.
[34:22.020 --> 34:23.020] I'll just stop.
[34:23.020 --> 34:24.020] One hundred and five.
[34:24.020 --> 34:25.020] You're very close.
[34:25.020 --> 34:26.020] Wow.
[34:26.020 --> 34:27.020] I was going to say 104.
[34:27.020 --> 34:30.020] One hundred and five Hoover Dam's worth of energy.
[34:30.020 --> 34:31.020] Damn.
[34:31.020 --> 34:32.020] Yeah.
[34:32.020 --> 34:33.020] That's amazing.
[34:33.020 --> 34:34.020] Yeah.
[34:34.020 --> 34:35.020] So that's a lot of energy.
[34:35.020 --> 34:38.340] Now, of course, you know, we're never going to capture all of it.
[34:38.340 --> 34:44.540] But you know, we already have the technology to recapture most of that energy through regenerative
[34:44.540 --> 34:45.540] breaking, right?
[34:45.540 --> 34:47.700] We don't even have to invent a new technology.
[34:47.700 --> 34:52.260] We just need to, you know, to just install them on trains.
[34:52.260 --> 34:56.260] The real question is, what are you going to do with the energy?
[34:56.260 --> 34:57.260] Charge a battery.
[34:57.260 --> 34:58.260] Yeah.
[34:58.260 --> 34:59.260] So you could say, well, we'll charge a battery.
[34:59.260 --> 35:00.260] That's what we do with cars.
[35:00.260 --> 35:06.340] So that means you need enough batteries to hold 20 days worth of power for a typical
[35:06.340 --> 35:07.340] American home.
[35:07.340 --> 35:08.340] That's a lot.
[35:08.340 --> 35:09.340] That's a lot.
[35:09.340 --> 35:10.340] Yeah, that's a lot.
[35:10.340 --> 35:11.340] That's massive.
[35:11.340 --> 35:13.820] And that's just for one breaking event.
[35:13.820 --> 35:17.780] So the assumption would be that you then use all of that energy in order to get back up
[35:17.780 --> 35:18.780] to speed.
[35:18.780 --> 35:20.140] So that would be the simplest thing to do.
[35:20.140 --> 35:23.060] You basically have one car on the train that's a battery.
[35:23.060 --> 35:25.500] You store it up when you break and then you release it.
[35:25.500 --> 35:28.780] If you have an electric train, right, of course, you don't have an electric train, then you
[35:28.780 --> 35:29.780] can't do that.
[35:29.780 --> 35:30.780] Yeah.
[35:30.780 --> 35:36.940] So for those trains that are not electric or, you know, let's just say it's not feasible
[35:36.940 --> 35:42.500] or practical or cost effective to have enough battery to capture all of that energy, what
[35:42.500 --> 35:44.740] else could we do with it?
[35:44.740 --> 35:48.020] Can't really send it to the grid because the train's moving, you know.
[35:48.020 --> 35:50.060] So here is the clever bit, right?
[35:50.060 --> 35:52.940] This is what one company figured out how to do.
[35:52.940 --> 35:54.500] We could heat all the seats in the train.
[35:54.500 --> 35:55.700] Well, you could do a lot of things.
[35:55.700 --> 36:02.940] What they want to do is attach a car to the train, right, to every train that has the
[36:02.940 --> 36:07.460] equipment on it necessary to do carbon capture.
[36:07.460 --> 36:13.940] And then you could use the electricity generated, the energy generated from regenerative braking
[36:13.940 --> 36:16.980] to run the carbon capture on the train.
[36:16.980 --> 36:21.460] Part of the reason why this is so clever is because we can do this now.
[36:21.460 --> 36:23.660] We can capture carbon from the air, right?
[36:23.660 --> 36:29.380] You just have a process that chemically binds the carbon.
[36:29.380 --> 36:35.940] But in order to make it function, you need giant fans blowing air through the apparatus.
[36:35.940 --> 36:38.500] And that uses up a lot of energy.
[36:38.500 --> 36:43.580] But if you have a moving train, you don't need the giant fan to use the trains moving
[36:43.580 --> 36:44.660] through the air.
[36:44.660 --> 36:48.580] You don't need to move the air over the chemical reaction.
[36:48.580 --> 36:51.340] So that's the idea.
[36:51.340 --> 36:55.820] You just have, you just, you know, I guess you'd have to have some batteries to buffer
[36:55.820 --> 36:57.140] it and to keep it going.
[36:57.140 --> 37:00.740] But you don't necessarily need to capture all that energy because you could use it as
[37:00.740 --> 37:01.740] the train is braking.
[37:01.740 --> 37:02.740] Yeah.
[37:02.740 --> 37:10.300] So they did some calculations based upon the efficiency of the equipment and how many trains
[37:10.300 --> 37:11.900] there are or whatever.
[37:11.900 --> 37:14.940] They said this is a Professor Peter Styring.
[37:14.940 --> 37:16.860] He's one of the researchers working on this.
[37:16.860 --> 37:23.020] And he said that just in terms of how quickly they could deploy these, that this technology
[37:23.020 --> 37:31.940] has the potential to reach annual productivity of 0.5 gigatons by 2030, 2.9 gigatons by 2050,
[37:31.940 --> 37:39.540] and 7.8 gigatons, this is of CO2 of course, by 2075, with each car having an annual capacity
[37:39.540 --> 37:46.500] of about 3,000 tons of CO2 in the near term with the technology in its current form.
[37:46.500 --> 37:47.500] That's a lot.
[37:47.500 --> 37:50.260] That's not an insignificant amount of CO2.
[37:50.260 --> 37:51.260] Yeah.
[37:51.260 --> 37:56.500] So the amount of CO2 released per year is 36.7 billion metric tons, right?
[37:56.500 --> 37:57.500] That's a gigaton.
[37:57.500 --> 38:00.540] So 37, basically 37 gigatons.
[38:00.540 --> 38:04.580] And this could capture 7.8 gigatons by 2075.
[38:04.580 --> 38:05.580] So it's not insignificant.
[38:05.580 --> 38:13.600] You know, let's put that 20% and by 2050, maybe 10% or 8% or so.
[38:13.600 --> 38:17.580] So what's the return on investment, like what's the cost compared to these facilities that
[38:17.580 --> 38:20.780] are dedicated to carbon capture?
[38:20.780 --> 38:24.660] Think about how much energy it costs to build the Hoover Dam, you know, how much money it
[38:24.660 --> 38:27.420] costs to build it, like 70 million.
[38:27.420 --> 38:33.300] You have the energy equivalent of 105 of them, you know, it probably is in the same order
[38:33.300 --> 38:38.980] of magnitude in terms of the, you know, they say it's cost-effective in terms of the capital
[38:38.980 --> 38:40.980] investment to do this.
[38:40.980 --> 38:45.620] Yeah, so you think about like where we're going to be in 2050 and all the things we
[38:45.620 --> 38:46.620] got going on.
[38:46.620 --> 38:52.380] I mean, ideally, when we talk about being like net zero in 2050, that doesn't mean we've
[38:52.380 --> 38:59.000] decarbonized everything, all of our infrastructure, all of our transportation, energy production,
[38:59.000 --> 39:00.000] steel production.
[39:00.000 --> 39:05.660] It just means that it's low enough that we're offsetting the rest with carbon capture.
[39:05.660 --> 39:07.460] Right, capture as much as we produce.
[39:07.460 --> 39:12.100] Yeah, if we get down to say 10% of where we are right now, and then we could use this
[39:12.100 --> 39:18.220] to capture 10%, that same amount, that could get us to net zero.
[39:18.220 --> 39:21.940] I don't think that's going to happen, but you know, that's sort of the goal, and it's
[39:21.940 --> 39:22.940] certainly feasible.
[39:22.940 --> 39:28.060] But we're definitely going to need to do some carbon capture on this level in order to get
[39:28.060 --> 39:32.860] to net zero, because we're not going to 100% decarbonize all industries.
[39:32.860 --> 39:35.260] We're going to have to be capturing some carbon.
[39:35.260 --> 39:39.120] But the bigger point here, we can combine this with the green steel thing that we talked
[39:39.120 --> 39:43.500] about before, just a lot of news items that we talk about, is that right now we have the
[39:43.500 --> 39:46.620] technology to get to net zero.
[39:46.620 --> 39:48.660] We have it right now.
[39:48.660 --> 39:53.900] Electric vehicles are now cheaper to operate, cheaper to own and operate than internal combustion
[39:53.900 --> 39:54.900] engine cars.
[39:54.900 --> 39:55.900] They're a better driving experience.
[39:55.900 --> 39:59.460] It's just a better technology.
[39:59.460 --> 40:01.340] We still need some infrastructure, et cetera.
[40:01.340 --> 40:08.380] It's not for everywhere, every place, like if you're in a part of the country where it's
[40:08.380 --> 40:13.700] hundreds of miles in between civilization, it may not be that practical.
[40:13.700 --> 40:20.140] But then you can get a hybrid and get 90% of the carbon savings.
[40:20.140 --> 40:26.500] So between hybrid and full electric technology, we could mostly decarbonize our transportation
[40:26.500 --> 40:27.500] sector.
[40:27.500 --> 40:33.620] We could 100% decarbonize our energy infrastructure if we wanted to just build all nuclear hydroelectric
[40:33.620 --> 40:37.660] geothermal solar wind, that's it.
[40:37.660 --> 40:42.300] If we wanted to completely replace fossil fuel in our energy infrastructure, we have
[40:42.300 --> 40:51.260] lots of options in terms of decarbonizing steel making and decarbonizing concrete cement
[40:51.260 --> 40:52.260] making.
[40:52.260 --> 40:57.380] We also have lots of options for making green hydrogen and carbon capture.
[40:57.380 --> 41:00.820] Certainly we need to continue to incrementally advance all these technologies in addition
[41:00.820 --> 41:01.820] to grid storage.
[41:01.820 --> 41:04.660] But what we have right now, we could do it if we wanted to.
[41:04.660 --> 41:08.220] So then really the question becomes economics.
[41:08.220 --> 41:13.140] A lot of these things will require a massive infrastructure investment or industrial investment.
[41:13.140 --> 41:15.220] But compare it to this.
[41:15.220 --> 41:20.420] The economists estimate, there's a bunch of economic analyses out there, but here's a
[41:20.420 --> 41:22.300] few representative ones.
[41:22.300 --> 41:28.640] Global warming could cost the U.S. economy $14.5 trillion by 2070.
[41:28.640 --> 41:36.380] By 2100, it could be costing the U.S. economy $2 trillion per year, and the world economy
[41:36.380 --> 41:43.220] could shrink by $23 trillion by 2050 due to climate change.
[41:43.220 --> 41:44.220] Wow.
[41:44.220 --> 41:45.220] $23 trillion.
[41:45.220 --> 41:50.540] So if we invest $10 trillion, that's a massive infrastructure investment, $10 trillion.
[41:50.540 --> 41:54.940] And that's less than half of what we'll lose if we don't do anything about global
[41:54.940 --> 41:55.940] warming.
[41:55.940 --> 41:56.940] Half we'll lose per year.
[41:56.940 --> 41:57.940] Yeah.
[41:57.940 --> 42:01.860] The order of magnitude that we're talking about, it's more costly not to make these
[42:01.860 --> 42:02.860] investments.
[42:02.860 --> 42:07.540] And frankly, in terms of, I've been reading a lot about this recently, I've always been
[42:07.540 --> 42:11.740] sort of lukewarm on the carbon tax idea, but bottom line is I think the economists are
[42:11.740 --> 42:14.580] coming to the conclusion that we need a carbon tax.
[42:14.580 --> 42:19.380] It's really the only thing that's going to really push us over the edge, politically,
[42:19.380 --> 42:20.380] economically speaking.
[42:20.380 --> 42:21.740] We don't have the technology.
[42:21.740 --> 42:27.880] We just have to make the mitigation options economically competitive.
[42:27.880 --> 42:35.140] And the way to do that is to not allow fossil fuel producers to externalize their environmental
[42:35.140 --> 42:36.140] costs.
[42:36.140 --> 42:37.140] Yes.
[42:37.140 --> 42:38.140] Get real with them.
[42:38.140 --> 42:39.140] And the way to do that is to tax the carbon.
[42:39.140 --> 42:40.140] Yeah.
[42:40.140 --> 42:42.400] So if you tax the carbon so that there's a level playing field so that you're paying
[42:42.400 --> 42:49.580] the actual real world costs of your technology, of your products, then all of these options
[42:49.580 --> 42:52.020] suddenly become economically viable.
[42:52.020 --> 42:53.020] You know?
[42:53.020 --> 42:54.020] But it'll never happen.
[42:54.020 --> 42:55.020] Yeah.
[42:55.020 --> 42:56.020] I don't say never.
[42:56.020 --> 42:57.020] Well, yeah.
[42:57.020 --> 42:58.020] I don't know.
[42:58.020 --> 42:59.020] Maybe.
[42:59.020 --> 43:00.020] I'm not optimistic.
[43:00.020 --> 43:01.020] Not 10, 20 years ago, Bob.
[43:01.020 --> 43:02.020] Maybe.
[43:02.020 --> 43:03.020] But not in the near future.
[43:03.020 --> 43:04.020] Not in time.
[43:04.020 --> 43:05.020] Yeah.
[43:05.020 --> 43:06.020] I mean, we're too politically dysfunctional right now.
[43:06.020 --> 43:07.020] Absolutely.
[43:07.020 --> 43:11.340] But the way out of that political dysfunction, and I'm going to limit this to the U.S. now
[43:11.340 --> 43:15.600] because I know every country is different, in the U.S., the way out of our political
[43:15.600 --> 43:23.860] dysfunction is for the voters to educate themselves and to hold politicians responsible for these
[43:23.860 --> 43:24.860] things.
[43:24.860 --> 43:29.100] If people made climate change a priority, we could do it.
[43:29.100 --> 43:30.660] We could fix this problem tomorrow.
[43:30.660 --> 43:31.660] It's simple, people.
[43:31.660 --> 43:32.660] The problem is...
[43:32.660 --> 43:33.660] But voters don't do that.
[43:33.660 --> 43:34.660] You know, the U.S. voters do not make climate change a priority.
[43:34.660 --> 43:35.660] Right.
[43:35.660 --> 43:40.900] The U.S. voters have to stop being tribal with their political affiliations, and they
[43:40.900 --> 43:42.500] have to eschew misinformation.
[43:42.500 --> 43:43.500] Easy.
[43:43.500 --> 43:44.500] That's so easy.
[43:44.500 --> 43:45.500] You didn't say it was easy.
[43:45.500 --> 43:46.500] You just said it was possible.
[43:46.500 --> 43:49.100] I'm saying it's not easy, and it's not going to happen.
[43:49.100 --> 43:50.100] Yeah, but you know what?
[43:50.100 --> 43:54.580] Things change, and public opinion sometimes can change very fast.
[43:54.580 --> 43:55.580] If you think about...
[43:55.580 --> 44:00.540] I know we're in a little bit of a pushback right now, but the classic example now is
[44:00.540 --> 44:08.020] how suddenly public opinion about gay marriage changed, and then the impossible suddenly
[44:08.020 --> 44:09.020] became possible.
[44:09.020 --> 44:10.020] Right.
[44:10.020 --> 44:13.900] Until the people that were then hiding have now come out of hiding.
[44:13.900 --> 44:14.900] Yeah, but...
[44:14.900 --> 44:16.900] And we know how many there are.
[44:16.900 --> 44:17.900] Obama...
[44:17.900 --> 44:18.900] There's more now.
[44:18.900 --> 44:24.140] There's more now that are obvious than there were the past 15 years.
[44:24.140 --> 44:27.220] I'm just talking about public support for gay marriage.
[44:27.220 --> 44:32.620] Even Obama in, like, 2010 could not unequivocally defend gay marriage.
[44:32.620 --> 44:34.060] He was for the civil unions.
[44:34.060 --> 44:35.060] Remember that?
[44:35.060 --> 44:36.060] Oh, yeah.
[44:36.060 --> 44:37.060] That's right.
[44:37.060 --> 44:39.080] He had to take this wishy-washy middle position.
[44:39.080 --> 44:40.080] It was really...
[44:40.080 --> 44:41.880] And five years later, it was done.
[44:41.880 --> 44:42.880] It was a done deal.
[44:42.880 --> 44:46.300] And political opinion shifted significantly.
[44:46.300 --> 44:52.020] And if we can have the same thing happen with global warming, if we can go from that 40%
[44:52.020 --> 44:58.220] to 60%, not just saying, yeah, yeah, I support mitigation and blah, blah, blah, but, like,
[44:58.220 --> 45:00.140] this is now a voting priority for me.
[45:00.140 --> 45:04.660] I am not going to vote for a politician who's a global warming denier or who doesn't have
[45:04.660 --> 45:05.660] a place.
[45:05.660 --> 45:06.660] That's what is a change.
[45:06.660 --> 45:07.660] Yes.
[45:07.660 --> 45:12.580] That would be a major hurdle that we could potentially get over, and that would be wonderful.
[45:12.580 --> 45:17.980] But then, of course, you know what I'm going to say here, that that's only the first hurdle.
[45:17.980 --> 45:19.940] That's only one country.
[45:19.940 --> 45:23.820] You know, we could make these changes, and that would be great, and it would be beneficial.
[45:23.820 --> 45:24.820] It would save lives.
[45:24.820 --> 45:26.180] It would be the smart move.
[45:26.180 --> 45:29.560] So many benefits for the United States, and that would be great.
[45:29.560 --> 45:34.780] But then all these other countries would have to, you know, do the same thing in order to
[45:34.780 --> 45:36.740] meet what we want to meet.
[45:36.740 --> 45:39.460] And it's just overwhelming to imagine.
[45:39.460 --> 45:44.460] It would have to be replicated in every democracy, but I think, you know, the U.S. has an impact.
[45:44.460 --> 45:46.260] We have an impact on our allies.
[45:46.260 --> 45:50.180] If we did it, we would speak with much greater moral authority when we have these climate
[45:50.180 --> 45:51.180] summits.
[45:51.180 --> 45:52.180] Yeah.
[45:52.180 --> 45:56.740] I know the elephant in the room is China and India, and they don't necessarily have to
[45:56.740 --> 45:57.740] follow.
[45:57.740 --> 46:02.740] Yeah, and the string of reasonable administrations that the United States would have to have
[46:02.740 --> 46:03.740] in a row.
[46:03.740 --> 46:04.740] Yeah.
[46:04.740 --> 46:05.740] I know.
[46:05.740 --> 46:08.980] I didn't say I think it's likely to happen, but I'm just saying it could happen.
[46:08.980 --> 46:09.980] I'm just saying.
[46:09.980 --> 46:12.140] I'm trying to make it a little real here.
[46:12.140 --> 46:15.260] It's interesting to think that that's really the only thing standing in our way.
[46:15.260 --> 46:16.500] It's not technology.
[46:16.500 --> 46:17.740] It's not economics.
[46:17.740 --> 46:20.780] It's just political will.
[46:20.780 --> 46:23.340] And it is like almost there.
[46:23.340 --> 46:25.700] It's just not quite there.
[46:25.700 --> 46:30.500] But of course, that little bit makes all the difference in terms of reality.
[46:30.500 --> 46:31.700] All right.
[46:31.700 --> 46:32.700] Let's move on.
SLS Launch (46:33)
[46:32.700 --> 46:37.580] Jay, I understand that the SLS might actually launch in August.
[46:37.580 --> 46:38.580] Ooh.
[46:38.580 --> 46:43.700] And NASA recently announced that they're making progress with preparations for the Space Launch
[46:43.700 --> 46:48.460] System rocket and the Orion spacecraft.
[46:48.460 --> 46:50.020] Did you hear what I just said?
[46:50.020 --> 46:51.020] Yeah.
[46:51.020 --> 46:52.020] Yeah.
[46:52.020 --> 46:57.860] So they said that it seems likely that a launch could happen later this summer.
[46:57.860 --> 47:01.260] And the truth is that they actually even gave a date.
[47:01.260 --> 47:04.560] The earliest the date could be would be August 29th.
[47:04.560 --> 47:09.740] So the current plans now state that the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft will be crawled
[47:09.740 --> 47:14.400] out to the Kennedy Space Center launch site on August 18th.
[47:14.400 --> 47:19.780] And if for some reason the August 29th launch window doesn't work, they have backup dates.
[47:19.780 --> 47:23.540] They have one on September 2nd and they have one on September 5th.
[47:23.540 --> 47:28.780] Now all these launch dates allow for the complete Artemis I moon mission, right?
[47:28.780 --> 47:33.660] It wouldn't be like a different mission because the launch window changed.
[47:33.660 --> 47:34.660] That's great.
[47:34.660 --> 47:35.980] So here's what I'm talking about.
[47:35.980 --> 47:39.780] They'll be doing an uncrewed command module going into lunar orbit for several weeks and
[47:39.780 --> 47:43.580] eventually returning to Earth with a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.
[47:43.580 --> 47:49.540] So of course, in order for this launch to happen, all of the remaining testing and preparations,
[47:49.540 --> 47:54.820] they need to run without a hitch, even though there's not a lot left.
[47:54.820 --> 47:58.860] There's enough where things could go south, but they feel very good about it.
[47:58.860 --> 48:03.380] And another big factor here, which is out of control of NASA, is the weather, Florida
[48:03.380 --> 48:04.980] weather this time of year.
[48:04.980 --> 48:08.820] It's kind of like the tail end of a bad weather season.
[48:08.820 --> 48:09.920] So you never know.
[48:09.920 --> 48:14.960] So keep in mind, this is the first time that they'll be actually launching this rocket.
[48:14.960 --> 48:19.580] So the amount of preparation and testing is at a maximum, right?
[48:19.580 --> 48:20.580] This is it.
[48:20.580 --> 48:22.100] This is the maiden voyage.
[48:22.100 --> 48:27.980] Between the three launch dates, the mission will either be 42 days or 39 days.
[48:27.980 --> 48:29.260] That's the only difference.
[48:29.260 --> 48:35.640] If the Artemis I mission goes well, then Artemis II missions could come as early as 2025.
[48:35.640 --> 48:40.680] But let's not undercut how complicated and dangerous the Artemis I mission is.
[48:40.680 --> 48:44.740] It has to successfully be launched with a new rocket system.
[48:44.740 --> 48:45.820] That's huge.
[48:45.820 --> 48:50.660] The rocket command module will have to successfully navigate the trip to the moon.
[48:50.660 --> 48:51.660] That's huge.
[48:51.660 --> 48:53.260] They have to get into the moon's orbit.
[48:53.260 --> 48:55.320] I'm sure that's amazingly difficult, right?
[48:55.320 --> 48:58.700] They have to leave the moon's orbit, then they have to return back to Earth.
[48:58.700 --> 49:04.100] They have to reenter into the Earth's atmosphere and then successfully do a splashdown.
[49:04.100 --> 49:09.500] All of those things need to happen perfectly in order for them to do Artemis II.
[49:09.500 --> 49:10.500] Keep that in mind.
[49:10.500 --> 49:13.220] You know, stakes are very high.
[49:13.220 --> 49:17.740] Among all the things that are left to do, one of the main ones is activating the SLS
[49:17.740 --> 49:20.580] rocket's flight termination system.
[49:20.580 --> 49:22.540] This is a system that can destroy the rocket.
[49:22.540 --> 49:27.100] You know, if it goes crazy when it takes off, you know, it could be an amazing hazard somewhere
[49:27.100 --> 49:29.700] because if you think about it, it's basically a bomb.
[49:29.700 --> 49:37.900] So they plan to start activating this system on August 11th, which happens to be my birthday.
[49:37.900 --> 49:41.800] So I'll celebrate the fact that they're turning on the flight termination system.
[49:41.800 --> 49:46.260] So once NASA activates the flight termination system, they have approximately three weeks
[49:46.260 --> 49:47.580] to launch the rocket.
[49:47.580 --> 49:50.900] Guys, can you guess why there's a time limit?
[49:50.900 --> 49:55.020] Something decays, something is evaporating the fuel.
[49:55.020 --> 49:56.020] Kind of, you're getting there.
[49:56.020 --> 50:02.080] It turns out that it's because of batteries that power the system only last about three
[50:02.080 --> 50:06.300] weeks and that system has to be operating on its own power.
[50:06.300 --> 50:08.220] Can't be using the spacecraft's power.
[50:08.220 --> 50:12.300] It can't just run along 10 gauge, 120 cord out to the platform?
[50:12.300 --> 50:14.020] Just swap out the triple A's.
[50:14.020 --> 50:15.300] So it's batteries.
[50:15.300 --> 50:19.700] So if for any reason the flight termination system needs to be serviced, they would actually
[50:19.700 --> 50:23.540] have to bring everything back into the vertical assembly building.
[50:23.540 --> 50:24.780] Oh, brutal.
[50:24.780 --> 50:26.900] So that's what they're testing now, right?
[50:26.900 --> 50:31.480] So if that happens, then you could forget about any launch in August.
[50:31.480 --> 50:34.900] It's going to be, you know, at the earliest sometime in October.
[50:34.900 --> 50:44.020] I'm sure they're also going to a time-lapse record the crawl of, I love that.
[50:44.020 --> 50:48.780] Now according to NASA, the vital pre-launch tests have been completed and approved and
[50:48.780 --> 50:51.580] the vehicle is essentially ready to fly.
[50:51.580 --> 50:55.700] The next thing that's going to happen is the rocket boosters will be brought out to the
[50:55.700 --> 51:02.340] launch pad and then on August 22nd, NASA will make the final go or no go decision.
[51:02.340 --> 51:07.200] So we were going to know soon guys before you know it, before you know it could be watching
[51:07.200 --> 51:08.420] this thing fly.
[51:08.420 --> 51:11.940] I am going to be, I'm going to be riveted and I'm going to be nervous and it's really
[51:11.940 --> 51:12.940] exciting.
[51:12.940 --> 51:13.940] Yeah.
[51:13.940 --> 51:16.820] So we'll, we'll be following it on the show very, very closely.
[51:16.820 --> 51:17.820] All right.
[51:17.820 --> 51:18.820] Thanks Jay.
Periodic FRBs (51:18)
[51:18.820 --> 51:21.780] So tell us about periodic FRBs.
[51:21.780 --> 51:22.780] Yeah.
[51:22.780 --> 51:23.780] Yeah.
[51:23.780 --> 51:30.020] Here's the headline from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, their online newspaper.
[51:30.020 --> 51:35.660] Astronomers detected a radio heartbeat in quotes, billions of light years from earth.
[51:35.660 --> 51:40.220] And I read that and my, in my head went that record scratch sound effect, right?
[51:40.220 --> 51:45.500] You know that sort of like, Whoa, gotta stop and pause and see what this is all about.
[51:45.500 --> 51:50.340] And we've talked about fast radio bursts many times before on SGU.
[51:50.340 --> 51:54.620] These are ultra short, ultra powerful pulses of energy.
[51:54.620 --> 51:58.660] Some of the universe's brightest flashes that you can't see with your own eyes because
[51:58.660 --> 52:03.860] they're detectable in the radio wavelengths and they can travel billions of light years
[52:03.860 --> 52:08.420] as the headline says, but we've also talked about ones that are actually kind of close
[52:08.420 --> 52:10.500] within the Milky Way galaxy as well.
[52:10.500 --> 52:15.180] So they're all over the place, but the energy is super concentrated.
[52:15.180 --> 52:20.920] And as I've written, I've seen it written many times that a single FRB can pack enough
[52:20.920 --> 52:26.660] energy that would be the output of our sun over the course of a hundred years.
[52:26.660 --> 52:27.660] Whoa.
[52:27.660 --> 52:28.660] Damn man.
[52:28.660 --> 52:32.040] That's a ton of energy, but they're quick as snap.
[52:32.040 --> 52:36.860] They blip out of existence in milliseconds after reaching the range that are detecting
[52:36.860 --> 52:39.700] telescopes can capture them.
[52:39.700 --> 52:45.540] They're happening all over the sky as well, a thousand times in any 24 hour period.
[52:45.540 --> 52:49.580] And of course, the astronomers do not yet know what exactly caused them.
[52:49.580 --> 52:54.500] And generally speaking, astronomers cannot predict where they will occur next.
[52:54.500 --> 52:57.700] So they're happening, but you have to have your instruments pointed at the right time
[52:57.700 --> 52:59.180] in order to get them.
[52:59.180 --> 53:05.820] Canadian astrophysicist Victoria Caspi describes FRBs as some of the most fascinating mysteries
[53:05.820 --> 53:07.060] in all of astronomy.
[53:07.060 --> 53:08.300] Yes, they are.
[53:08.300 --> 53:12.820] And there have already been some FRB news reports this year, but this recent announcement
[53:12.820 --> 53:19.020] is exciting because they describe it as a clear and periodic pattern of fast radio bursts.
[53:19.020 --> 53:23.040] As I said, the typical FRB lasts for a few milliseconds at most.
[53:23.040 --> 53:26.340] This new signal persists for up to three seconds.
[53:26.340 --> 53:27.340] Wow.
[53:27.340 --> 53:28.340] Three seconds.
[53:28.340 --> 53:29.340] That's a huge difference.
[53:29.340 --> 53:30.340] Oh, it's enormous.
[53:30.340 --> 53:31.340] What?
[53:31.340 --> 53:32.340] A couple of orders of magnitude.
[53:32.340 --> 53:33.340] Yeah.
[53:33.340 --> 53:34.340] Yep.
[53:34.340 --> 53:35.340] Damn man.
[53:35.340 --> 53:40.340] It's the first detected burst of radio waves that repeated every 0.2 seconds in a clear
[53:40.340 --> 53:47.580] periodic pattern with the peaks described as remarkably precise, emitting every fraction
[53:47.580 --> 53:48.580] of a second.
[53:48.580 --> 53:50.360] Boom, boom, boom, like a heartbeat.
[53:50.360 --> 53:56.460] And it's the first time that, and they say that this is the first time the signal itself
[53:56.460 --> 53:58.040] is periodic.
[53:58.040 --> 54:02.400] And the findings were published in the journal Nature, and it's authored by members of the
[54:02.400 --> 54:08.660] CHIME, C-H-I-M-E, which stands for the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment, and
[54:08.660 --> 54:16.400] the FRB collaboration, MIT authors Calvin Lung, Juan Manapara, Caitlin Shin, Kiyoshi
[54:16.400 --> 54:22.320] Matsui at MIT, and Danielle Micheli at McGill University.
[54:22.320 --> 54:32.380] The researchers have designated this FRB 2019-12-21A, and it's currently the longest lasting FRB
[54:32.380 --> 54:36.380] with, of course, the clearest periodic pattern detected to date.
[54:36.380 --> 54:40.780] So that's what makes this particular one very, very, very special.
[54:40.780 --> 54:44.720] And it's happened apparently through, from what I can gather, I tried reading the paper
[54:44.720 --> 54:46.600] to the best of my ability.
[54:46.600 --> 54:54.640] What I'm able to glean from it is that it was three times that they caught this over
[54:54.640 --> 54:57.480] the course of roughly three years.
[54:57.480 --> 55:03.640] So it takes a long time for this signal to reemerge, at least at the levels that they're
[55:03.640 --> 55:11.320] talking about between, what, 2019 and 2021 are the three measurements that they were
[55:11.320 --> 55:12.480] able to capture for it.
[55:12.480 --> 55:14.760] Now, what do they think that this is?
[55:14.760 --> 55:18.040] Well, they don't exactly know.
[55:18.040 --> 55:19.800] Like I said, it's a mystery.
[55:19.800 --> 55:24.480] But they suspect it could emanate from either a radio pulsar or a magnetar.
[55:24.480 --> 55:25.480] Right, Bob?
[55:25.480 --> 55:26.480] Yes.
[55:26.480 --> 55:55.440] So the magnetosphere, they think, may have something to do with this as well.
[55:55.440 --> 56:01.400] So that's going to help us understand where FRBs come from, what the mechanism of their
[56:01.400 --> 56:02.400] generation is.
[56:02.400 --> 56:03.400] Yes.
[56:03.400 --> 56:04.400] Yeah, that's right.
[56:04.400 --> 56:10.960] And from what I read, about 5% of the FRBs that have been detected so far have some sort
[56:10.960 --> 56:16.420] of repeating nature to them, whether it's days, hundreds of days at a time.
[56:16.420 --> 56:22.960] But those are the ones that you are able to study, predict, and glean a lot more information
[56:22.960 --> 56:29.280] than rather than just figuring out, oh, there was a one-off one back in 2016 that, you know,
[56:29.280 --> 56:30.800] we just uncovered the data now.
[56:30.800 --> 56:31.800] This happened.
[56:31.800 --> 56:32.800] Great.
[56:32.800 --> 56:33.800] But gone.
[56:33.800 --> 56:35.440] And you lost an opportunity to study it.
[56:35.440 --> 56:39.440] So these are the ones that they're really interested in being able to glean some hard
[56:39.440 --> 56:40.560] information from.
Habitable Super Earths (56:40)
S: All right, Bob, finish up by telling us about haaaabitable super-Earths. "Habitable."
B: Habitable!
[56:46.000 --> 56:47.000] Habitable.
[56:47.000 --> 56:48.000] Super-Earths, yes.
[56:48.000 --> 56:52.520] In the news, new simulations show that these gargantuan rocky worlds with hydrogen and
[56:52.520 --> 56:58.240] helium atmospheres could sustain life for far longer than we thought possible.
[56:58.240 --> 57:01.400] In some scenarios, this was published in Nature Astronomy.
[57:01.400 --> 57:04.520] If you're not familiar with super-Earths, they're essentially planets bigger than the
[57:04.520 --> 57:07.080] Earth up to 10 Earth masses.
[57:07.080 --> 57:12.000] Say, man, it varies, but 2 to 10 Earth masses is essentially what they are.
[57:12.000 --> 57:15.600] For the most part, they're considered rocky planets, but I guess they don't necessarily
[57:15.600 --> 57:18.040] have to be.
[57:18.040 --> 57:20.960] The name really applies to just the mass.
[57:20.960 --> 57:25.080] Rocky worlds bigger than 10 Earths are called mega-Earths.
[57:25.080 --> 57:28.520] And if they're mostly gas, then they're obviously called gas giants.
[57:28.520 --> 57:29.520] Okay.
[57:29.520 --> 57:33.840] Now, we obviously don't have a super-Earth in our solar system, but we see them a lot
[57:33.840 --> 57:37.880] in many of the less fashionable parts of the galaxy.
[57:37.880 --> 57:39.680] They're kind of all over the place.
[57:39.680 --> 57:46.380] But just because they have the word Earth in their names doesn't mean they're habitable.
[57:46.380 --> 57:51.280] So can some super-Earths be amenable to life as we know it?
[57:51.280 --> 57:55.400] So while most super-Earths are found very, very close to their host stars, which is not
[57:55.400 --> 58:00.600] good for maintaining an atmosphere, and I'm going to assume that, you know, life as we
[58:00.600 --> 58:03.560] know it is kind of, you know, it's going to probably need an atmosphere.
[58:03.560 --> 58:07.640] But this is really, though, the drunk looking for the keys under a streetlight.
[58:07.640 --> 58:11.900] You know, our exoplanet detection methods, like the transit method, are best at finding
[58:11.900 --> 58:15.640] big planets near their stars, so there's a bias towards that.
[58:15.640 --> 58:22.280] So simulations, however, that show that super-Earths can form and orbit at vast differences from
[58:22.280 --> 58:23.280] their stars.
[58:23.280 --> 58:26.560] They don't need to be really close to their stars, and that would obviously allow for
[58:26.560 --> 58:32.240] them to keep their large hydrogen-helium atmospheres without having the star, the nearby star,
[58:32.240 --> 58:33.240] blowing it away.
[58:33.240 --> 58:36.440] So they can have a nice thick atmosphere, so that's good.
[58:36.440 --> 58:41.280] But what can survive in that atmosphere if it's all hydrogen and helium, right?
[58:41.280 --> 58:44.840] I mean, that's not anything like our atmosphere.
[58:44.840 --> 58:47.840] Is that even amenable to life at all?
[58:47.840 --> 58:49.920] And the answer is yes.
[58:49.920 --> 58:57.080] Bacteria and yeast for one, or I guess two, study after study shows that they, these microorganisms,
[58:57.080 --> 58:59.720] can absolutely survive in such conditions.
[58:59.720 --> 59:01.400] So that's not a problem.
[59:01.400 --> 59:02.920] So that's checkbox two.
[59:02.920 --> 59:04.320] So what's next?
[59:04.320 --> 59:09.600] One of the critical components for life that's pretty much always mentioned is usually what?
[59:09.600 --> 59:10.600] Water.
[59:10.600 --> 59:11.780] Water is key.
[59:11.780 --> 59:17.680] The presence of liquid water is obviously essentially paramount as far as we can tell
[59:17.680 --> 59:19.420] with our one data point here.
[59:19.420 --> 59:23.900] So anywhere you find water on Earth, you're almost guaranteed to find some kind of life,
[59:23.900 --> 59:30.080] you know, whether it's J or some extremophile microorganism, there's going to be life there.
[59:30.080 --> 59:34.680] So can liquid water exist on the surface of a super Earth?
[59:34.680 --> 59:36.020] That's the next question.
[59:36.020 --> 59:37.020] Can we have that?
[59:37.020 --> 59:39.960] And to answer that, let's start with our Earth.
[59:39.960 --> 59:44.440] Water has been on the Earth for four billion years, and there still will be liquid water
[59:44.440 --> 59:49.520] on the Earth for maybe, you know, one and a half billion years, two billion years.
[59:49.520 --> 59:50.520] That's all?
[59:50.520 --> 59:51.520] Hard to be sure.
[59:51.520 --> 59:56.000] Oh yeah, man, the sun's just going to be getting hotter and hotter, not from climate change,
[59:56.000 --> 59:59.040] but just from evolution of our sun.
[59:59.040 --> 01:00:03.280] So yeah, it's going to get nasty, but hey, we've got another couple of billion years.
[01:00:03.280 --> 01:00:08.200] So liquid water is going to have a good run on the Earth's surface, on its surface, which
[01:00:08.200 --> 01:00:11.080] is, you know, important, for six billion years.
[01:00:11.080 --> 01:00:12.320] Good decent span of time.
[01:00:12.320 --> 01:00:13.720] All right, I'll live with that.
[01:00:13.720 --> 01:00:19.160] To answer the same question for super Earths, the researchers ran simulations and they knew
[01:00:19.160 --> 01:00:23.320] from the get go though that if you have a really thick hydrogen atmosphere, you're going
[01:00:23.320 --> 01:00:28.440] to produce a really big greenhouse effect and that's going to trap a lot of heat regardless
[01:00:28.440 --> 01:00:30.140] of how far you are away.
[01:00:30.140 --> 01:00:33.980] So their simulations had two sliding bars, if you will.
[01:00:33.980 --> 01:00:40.040] One was for mass, which slid from one Earth mass to ten Earth masses, and one sliding
[01:00:40.040 --> 01:00:46.520] bar was for orbital distance, which slid from one AU or, you know, Earth sun distance, 93
[01:00:46.520 --> 01:00:49.900] million miles, one AU to a whopping 100 AU.
[01:00:49.900 --> 01:00:52.580] So they fiddled with those sliding bars and they saw what they got.
[01:00:52.580 --> 01:00:57.480] So the conclusions they came to was that these simulations showed that once you got past
[01:00:57.480 --> 01:01:03.300] about two AUs or 180 million miles away, these super Earths had liquid water on the surface
[01:01:03.300 --> 01:01:07.880] that could survive from five to eight billion years, similar to Earth's.
[01:01:07.880 --> 01:01:10.560] But the fun hadn't fully started yet.
[01:01:10.560 --> 01:01:17.240] The fun really started when they basically removed the super Earth from the star entirely.
[01:01:17.240 --> 01:01:23.240] They turned the super Earths into rogues and now not a skeptical rogue, but a rogue planet,
[01:01:23.240 --> 01:01:24.640] which is cool too.
[01:01:24.640 --> 01:01:27.240] Now we've covered rogue planets multiple times.
[01:01:27.240 --> 01:01:32.040] For example, episode 800 had a nice news item on rogue planets.
[01:01:32.040 --> 01:01:36.160] Now these are planets that can escape the gravity well, that have escaped the gravity
[01:01:36.160 --> 01:01:41.760] well of their solar systems, or perhaps they even formed by themselves without being tethered
[01:01:41.760 --> 01:01:45.360] to any solar system, any star of any kind.
[01:01:45.360 --> 01:01:51.200] And they are likely out there in numbers rivaling the number of times Jay has said meatball
[01:01:51.200 --> 01:01:52.720] on this show.
[01:01:52.720 --> 01:01:58.360] Some estimates put the number of rogue planets in the Milky Way at 50 billion and probably
[01:01:58.360 --> 01:02:04.600] a lot bigger than that potentially, but 50 billion is the number they're going with now.
[01:02:04.600 --> 01:02:10.520] And many of them, you got to assume that a bunch of them are likely to be super Earths.
[01:02:10.520 --> 01:02:14.520] So what did the simulation say about rogue super Earths?
[01:02:14.520 --> 01:02:15.600] This is what they said.
[01:02:15.600 --> 01:02:21.680] If you're a super Earth rogue planet and you have five times the Earth's mass and you have
[01:02:21.680 --> 01:02:27.240] an atmosphere 10,000 times more massive than the Earth's, liquid water could survive on
[01:02:27.240 --> 01:02:34.900] the surface of such a planet, 50 billion fracking years, 50 of such a planet could have liquid
[01:02:34.900 --> 01:02:40.320] water for three and a half times the age of the universe.
[01:02:40.320 --> 01:02:41.800] I mean, that just blew me.
[01:02:41.800 --> 01:02:44.320] And I saw some numbers that were even larger.
[01:02:44.320 --> 01:02:49.760] Somebody was throwing around 80 billion, but say, say 50 billion years of liquid water
[01:02:49.760 --> 01:02:52.120] on the surface of a, of a super Earth.
[01:02:52.120 --> 01:02:53.120] That is an incredible.
[01:02:53.120 --> 01:02:58.560] So what's the source of heat in that situation, just internal, just the, just geothermal.
[01:02:58.560 --> 01:03:02.900] There wasn't any mention though of, of geothermal, you know, radioactive decay, cause that that's
[01:03:02.900 --> 01:03:09.960] also kind of a classic source of, of energy for rogue planets in general that are even
[01:03:09.960 --> 01:03:11.440] say Earth size.
[01:03:11.440 --> 01:03:17.280] You can have, you can have subsurface liquid water because of this radioactive decay, but
[01:03:17.280 --> 01:03:22.780] they really didn't, they really don't even mention radioactive decay in this research.
[01:03:22.780 --> 01:03:27.520] But Steve, don't forget, I'm the, the, the, the assumption here is that this atmosphere
[01:03:27.520 --> 01:03:32.140] is 10,000 times more massive than the Earth's that's amazingly massive.
[01:03:32.140 --> 01:03:37.400] And apparently it's massive enough to hold in enough heat for a long time.
[01:03:37.400 --> 01:03:41.360] With what pressure, what would the surface, the, the atmospheric pressure be at the surface?
[01:03:41.360 --> 01:03:45.820] It would be, it would be similar to the pressure at the bottom of the ocean was one, it was
[01:03:45.820 --> 01:03:46.820] one example.
[01:03:46.820 --> 01:03:49.220] That's the, so you're walking on the surface that week.
[01:03:49.220 --> 01:03:50.220] That's what you're feeling.
[01:03:50.220 --> 01:03:54.620] So yeah, if you're living on that surface, you're a hardy mofo.
[01:03:54.620 --> 01:03:57.800] That's who that's a, that's a hell of an environment.
[01:03:57.800 --> 01:04:03.040] There could be organisms living in the water, you know, of the water on the surface of the
[01:04:03.040 --> 01:04:04.040] super.
[01:04:04.040 --> 01:04:05.040] There could be life in the water.
[01:04:05.040 --> 01:04:06.040] Yeah.
[01:04:06.040 --> 01:04:07.040] Yeah, absolutely.
[01:04:07.040 --> 01:04:11.600] So now it made me think now life has had 4 billion years on Earth to evolve and multicellular
[01:04:11.600 --> 01:04:14.120] life has only had 600 million years.
[01:04:14.120 --> 01:04:17.720] Now imagine the life that could evolve on such a planet.
[01:04:17.720 --> 01:04:21.800] Now of course, with some interesting selective pressures, of course, if you've got 50 billion
[01:04:21.800 --> 01:04:26.940] years, what kind of life, what could biology be after, you know, evolving for many, many
[01:04:26.940 --> 01:04:29.900] more times than the, the age of the universe?
[01:04:29.900 --> 01:04:30.900] It's incredible.
[01:04:30.900 --> 01:04:35.160] I would love to see a science fiction show that deal, that deal with this kind of, that's,
[01:04:35.160 --> 01:04:38.040] you know, I want to see some solid speculation, you know, what are the very, you know, what
[01:04:38.040 --> 01:04:41.520] could various different biologies accomplish in 50 billion years?
[01:04:41.520 --> 01:04:42.520] Yeah, no, it's neat.
[01:04:42.520 --> 01:04:49.480] I mean, the idea would be interesting to think about, like it could be life on a habitable
[01:04:49.480 --> 01:04:52.080] super Earth rogue planet.
[01:04:52.080 --> 01:04:53.640] That's 10 billion years old.
[01:04:53.640 --> 01:04:54.640] Yeah.
[01:04:54.640 --> 01:04:55.640] Yeah, absolutely.
[01:04:55.640 --> 01:04:56.640] All right.
Who's That Noisy? (1:04:55)
[01:04:56.640 --> 01:04:58.200] Jay, it's who's that noisy time.
[01:04:58.200 --> 01:05:15.960] All right guys, last week I played this noisy.
[01:05:15.960 --> 01:05:19.880] All right guys, what do you think?
[01:05:19.880 --> 01:05:22.040] Some kind of critter critters.
[01:05:22.040 --> 01:05:23.040] That's right, Evan.
[01:05:23.040 --> 01:05:24.040] It is more than one critter.
[01:05:24.040 --> 01:05:25.040] Yes.
[01:05:25.040 --> 01:05:26.040] Got it.
[01:05:26.040 --> 01:05:29.560] Another listener named Tim Savage wrote in, say, hi Jay, long time listener, first time
[01:05:29.560 --> 01:05:30.560] caller.
[01:05:30.560 --> 01:05:33.960] Gotta say, I love the show and the who's that noisy segment.
[01:05:33.960 --> 01:05:35.060] Of course you do.
[01:05:35.060 --> 01:05:41.560] My guess for this week's noisy is parrots flocking to a lick in the Amazon rainforest.
[01:05:41.560 --> 01:05:43.000] You guys know what a lick is?
[01:05:43.000 --> 01:05:44.000] Like a salt lick?
[01:05:44.000 --> 01:05:45.000] That's what I think.
[01:05:45.000 --> 01:05:46.000] Yeah.
[01:05:46.000 --> 01:05:47.000] That makes sense.
[01:05:47.000 --> 01:05:51.760] Like a, like a Amazonian rainforest version of McDonald's.
[01:05:51.760 --> 01:05:53.440] So that's not correct.
[01:05:53.440 --> 01:05:57.960] Another listener named Angela Frazier wrote in, said, guinea pigs very excited about carrots
[01:05:57.960 --> 01:05:58.960] or other food.
[01:05:58.960 --> 01:06:03.320] I have never heard excited guinea pigs, but I bet you that they do sound similar to this
[01:06:03.320 --> 01:06:05.280] noisy, but that is not correct.
[01:06:05.280 --> 01:06:11.360] Visto Tootie wrote in, he said, it sounds like a swarm of fruit bats, sometimes called
[01:06:11.360 --> 01:06:12.920] flying foxes.
[01:06:12.920 --> 01:06:17.560] They have some sonar sense, but it is low frequency and not very good.
[01:06:17.560 --> 01:06:22.480] When fruit bats and possums get into a fight over tree ownership, it can be raucous.
[01:06:22.480 --> 01:06:24.920] We have a winner from last week.
[01:06:24.920 --> 01:06:30.460] The winner is Robert Morehead and Robert said, hi Jay, this week's Who's That Noisy is two
[01:06:30.460 --> 01:06:34.880] gangs of river otters about to throw down like West Side Story.
[01:06:34.880 --> 01:06:35.880] That is correct.
[01:06:35.880 --> 01:06:43.560] This is two groups of otters who, I guess they call them gangs and they are, they're
[01:06:43.560 --> 01:06:47.340] swimming towards each other and then a battle ensues.
[01:06:47.340 --> 01:06:48.400] That happens.
[01:06:48.400 --> 01:06:51.600] They get pissed, you know, they'll, they'll bring switchblades, you know, they don't mess
[01:06:51.600 --> 01:06:52.600] around, man.
[01:06:52.600 --> 01:06:53.600] Oh, it's otter chaos.
[01:06:53.600 --> 01:06:54.600] You bastard.
[01:06:54.600 --> 01:07:04.160] Evan, I, to celebrate you, I'm going to tell a dad joke that I heard.
[01:07:04.160 --> 01:07:05.160] Please.
[01:07:05.160 --> 01:07:06.960] Why can't you hear a pterodactyl go to the bathroom?
[01:07:06.960 --> 01:07:07.960] I don't know, Jay.
[01:07:07.960 --> 01:07:10.840] Why can't I hear a pterodactyl go to the bathroom?
[01:07:10.840 --> 01:07:12.440] Because the P is silent.
[01:07:12.440 --> 01:07:13.440] Oh.
[01:07:13.440 --> 01:07:21.360] I guarantee you hundreds of people tell that joke in the next day now that, it's funny
[01:07:21.360 --> 01:07:22.360] it's funny.
[01:07:22.360 --> 01:07:23.360] Come on.
[01:07:23.360 --> 01:07:24.360] Hashtag silent P.
[01:07:24.360 --> 01:07:25.360] All right.
[01:07:25.360 --> 01:07:26.680] I have a new noisy for you guys this week.
[01:07:26.680 --> 01:07:31.960] This noisy was sent in by a listener named Marcel Janssens and here it is.
[01:07:31.960 --> 01:07:36.120] And I will say that I believe at some point I have played a noisy that was similar to
[01:07:36.120 --> 01:07:37.120] this one.
[01:07:37.120 --> 01:07:41.200] Same principle, but it's been a very long time and this is one of my favorite kinds
[01:07:41.200 --> 01:07:42.720] of noisies.
[01:07:42.720 --> 01:07:45.080] So tell me what's going on in this sound.
[01:07:45.080 --> 01:07:46.080] Ready?
[01:07:46.080 --> 01:08:02.680] There it is.
[01:08:02.680 --> 01:08:08.000] You must email me your guests at WTN at the skeptics guide.org.
[01:08:08.000 --> 01:08:12.080] And don't forget, if you heard something cool, send it to me because I need to hear it.
[01:08:12.080 --> 01:08:13.080] All right.
New Noisy (1:07:24)
[seeming old/amateur recording of discordant piano notes]
J: There it is.
E: Gee!
Announcements (1:08:12)
[01:08:13.080 --> 01:08:18.400] And finally, Steve, the biggest thing on our plate right now is we have Nexus 2022.
[01:08:18.400 --> 01:08:19.400] Yes.
[01:08:19.400 --> 01:08:20.400] In two weeks.
[01:08:20.400 --> 01:08:21.980] There's plenty of time to register.
[01:08:21.980 --> 01:08:25.000] All you got to do is go to NECSS.org.
[01:08:25.000 --> 01:08:26.840] We have all the information up there.
[01:08:26.840 --> 01:08:28.600] I'll give you a little bit of intel.
[01:08:28.600 --> 01:08:33.480] So because of scheduling situations, we had to prerecord the keynote.
[01:08:33.480 --> 01:08:39.640] The keynote was between Bill Nye and David Copperfield and they had over an hour conversation
[01:08:39.640 --> 01:08:42.080] with each other and it really was fun.
[01:08:42.080 --> 01:08:47.920] George was a part of that conversation and they talked about a lot of different things.
[01:08:47.920 --> 01:08:50.220] They got into some personal information.
[01:08:50.220 --> 01:08:52.480] This was one of the best keynotes we've ever had.
[01:08:52.480 --> 01:08:54.960] It was a really interesting conversation.
[01:08:54.960 --> 01:08:56.980] I hope that you join us this year.
[01:08:56.980 --> 01:09:00.120] You can go to the website, check out all the other speakers that we're having and don't
[01:09:00.120 --> 01:09:06.560] forget that if you can't make it on August 5th and August 6th to the online live streaming
[01:09:06.560 --> 01:09:10.000] conference, you could watch it for several months afterwards.
[01:09:10.000 --> 01:09:14.040] So you could buy your tickets and watch it for up to three or four months after the conference
[01:09:14.040 --> 01:09:17.600] actually airs so you have access to it for a very long time.
[01:09:17.600 --> 01:09:22.160] So please go to nexus.org, NECSS.org and join us this year.
[01:09:22.160 --> 01:09:23.840] Yeah, it's going to be fun.
[01:09:23.840 --> 01:09:24.840] It's always a good conference.
[01:09:24.840 --> 01:09:31.200] Obviously, we're going to be doing a live SGU recording in the middle of Saturday.
[01:09:31.200 --> 01:09:34.280] I'm going to be having a conversation with Richard Wiseman.
[01:09:34.280 --> 01:09:39.160] We're going to be talking about how come it's so easy to hack the brain with misinformation
[01:09:39.160 --> 01:09:40.160] and disinformation.
[01:09:40.160 --> 01:09:44.600] You know, coming from a neurology point of view, he's coming from a social psychology
[01:09:44.600 --> 01:09:49.160] point of view, but it should be an interesting conversation.
[01:09:49.160 --> 01:09:51.040] And we've got a ton of other great speakers lined up.
[01:09:51.040 --> 01:09:54.980] We're going to do a Boomer versus Zoomer on Friday night.
[01:09:54.980 --> 01:09:58.720] It's going to be one of our better conferences, I think.
[01:09:58.720 --> 01:09:59.720] All right.
[01:09:59.720 --> 01:10:00.720] Thank you, guys.
Interview with Brian Dunning (1:10:05)
[01:10:00.720 --> 01:10:04.720] We actually have a really fun interview coming up with Brian Dunning.
[01:10:04.720 --> 01:10:18.360] So let's go to that interview now.
[01:10:18.360 --> 01:10:20.320] Joining us now is Brian Dunning.
[01:10:20.320 --> 01:10:22.360] Brian, welcome back to the Skeptics Guide.
[01:10:22.360 --> 01:10:23.360] Thank you.
[01:10:23.360 --> 01:10:24.360] It's been a long time.
[01:10:24.360 --> 01:10:25.360] Yeah.
[01:10:25.360 --> 01:10:26.360] How are you doing, Brian?
[01:10:26.360 --> 01:10:29.240] So we're talking to you tonight because you have a project that you're working on that
[01:10:29.240 --> 01:10:33.880] we want to chat about, the UFO movie they don't want you to see.
[01:10:33.880 --> 01:10:34.880] So you have-
[01:10:34.880 --> 01:10:35.880] Emphasis on they, yes.
[01:10:35.880 --> 01:10:36.880] Yeah.
[01:10:36.880 --> 01:10:37.880] So who is they?
[01:10:37.880 --> 01:10:38.880] Who is they?
[01:10:38.880 --> 01:10:39.880] That's the big question everyone wants to know.
[01:10:39.880 --> 01:10:42.720] And I say, that's what you got to watch the movie to find out.
[01:10:42.720 --> 01:10:43.720] Ah, smart.
[01:10:43.720 --> 01:10:45.320] All right, then.
[01:10:45.320 --> 01:10:48.820] My question is, this is some little YouTube video, right?
[01:10:48.820 --> 01:10:51.040] That's what you're putting together, a little YouTube thing?
[01:10:51.040 --> 01:10:57.740] No, this is another one of my series of actual movies designed to go on streaming services
[01:10:57.740 --> 01:11:01.640] and be out there in the real world like big boy movies.
[01:11:01.640 --> 01:11:02.640] Excellent.
[01:11:02.640 --> 01:11:03.920] So it's going to be feature length?
[01:11:03.920 --> 01:11:07.560] It's feature length, yeah, and it'll be on all the usual streaming services.
[01:11:07.560 --> 01:11:11.180] And unlike Science Friction, where we had some glitches getting that launched worldwide,
[01:11:11.180 --> 01:11:15.480] this one will be available worldwide from the get-go because I know how to do that now.
[01:11:15.480 --> 01:11:16.480] Yeah.
[01:11:16.480 --> 01:11:17.520] The learning curve is always wonderful.
[01:11:17.520 --> 01:11:20.720] So this is an Indiegogo campaign.
[01:11:20.720 --> 01:11:24.840] You're about 13% of the way through, but you talk as if it's a done deal.
[01:11:24.840 --> 01:11:28.720] So is it possible this won't happen if you don't get the funding?
[01:11:28.720 --> 01:11:29.720] No.
[01:11:29.720 --> 01:11:30.720] No.
[01:11:30.720 --> 01:11:34.280] There's a lot of different ways that you can cut corners, and I mean, I've made enough
[01:11:34.280 --> 01:11:39.120] of these now that I know what you can cut, what you can't cut.
[01:11:39.120 --> 01:11:40.120] It's fine.
[01:11:40.120 --> 01:11:46.080] I mean, this is something that I'm producing myself out of pocket, and I've done really
[01:11:46.080 --> 01:11:52.600] the one of the most expensive shoots has already been done, and most of the rest is going to
[01:11:52.600 --> 01:11:58.920] be for things like insurance and stuff that depend on what distributor I go with.
[01:11:58.920 --> 01:12:04.560] So depending on the insurance policy, that changes the spectrum of available distributors
[01:12:04.560 --> 01:12:06.240] that you can work with.
[01:12:06.240 --> 01:12:11.200] And there's big ticket items like original music, hoping to do that.
[01:12:11.200 --> 01:12:16.000] I've always worked with Lee Sanders, my good friend who's a great composer and does film
[01:12:16.000 --> 01:12:19.800] scoring all the time, and I'm hoping to get him on this.
[01:12:19.800 --> 01:12:24.080] But if I can't pay him a reasonable price, then it's just going to be canned music, which
[01:12:24.080 --> 01:12:25.400] I hate, but it works.
[01:12:25.400 --> 01:12:26.400] Yeah.
[01:12:26.400 --> 01:12:27.640] So you're going to do it no matter what.
[01:12:27.640 --> 01:12:30.800] The budget will just determine how much you can do, how good it will be.
[01:12:30.800 --> 01:12:33.400] Well, I think it's going to be good no matter what.
[01:12:33.400 --> 01:12:39.160] I said how good it will be, not if it will be good.
[01:12:39.160 --> 01:12:40.160] Maybe how slick.
[01:12:40.160 --> 01:12:44.520] Basically, there are production value choices that will change, but the content is going
[01:12:44.520 --> 01:12:45.520] to be the same.
[01:12:45.520 --> 01:12:46.520] Yeah, the meat.
[01:12:46.520 --> 01:12:47.520] The meat will be there.
[01:12:47.520 --> 01:12:50.320] So let's talk about the meat.
[01:12:50.320 --> 01:12:53.360] Now certainly feels like the right time for a movie like this.
[01:12:53.360 --> 01:12:55.960] We're in the middle of a UFO flare.
[01:12:55.960 --> 01:12:56.960] We're surgeons.
[01:12:56.960 --> 01:12:57.960] Yeah.
[01:12:57.960 --> 01:13:00.080] So tell us about what's going on.
[01:13:00.080 --> 01:13:01.080] Yeah.
[01:13:01.080 --> 01:13:04.120] I mean, that was the driver for this project.
[01:13:04.120 --> 01:13:07.800] At Skeptoid Media, we're super spread thin this year.
[01:13:07.800 --> 01:13:12.520] We've got so many projects going on, and we just hired a new director of operations, Kathy
[01:13:12.520 --> 01:13:16.640] Wright Meyer, who you'll all meet if we ever have another conference in person anywhere
[01:13:16.640 --> 01:13:17.640] in the world.
[01:13:17.640 --> 01:13:19.320] Yeah, right?
[01:13:19.320 --> 01:13:20.320] And she's great.
[01:13:20.320 --> 01:13:23.760] But basically, we couldn't do another movie this year like we wanted to start.
[01:13:23.760 --> 01:13:27.720] And so I just talked with the board and said, look, we've got to do this UFO movie now.
[01:13:27.720 --> 01:13:30.120] And we just decided, well, if it's going to happen, it's going to be something that I
[01:13:30.120 --> 01:13:33.560] have to do on my own without sucking up Skeptoid resources.
[01:13:33.560 --> 01:13:35.980] So that's how it is the way it is.
[01:13:35.980 --> 01:13:38.700] But that indicates how timely this issue is.
[01:13:38.700 --> 01:13:45.440] This movie needs to be made now because we've got these ridiculous hearings in Congress,
[01:13:45.440 --> 01:13:51.680] for God's sake, where you've got Congress people talking about UFOs representing national
[01:13:51.680 --> 01:13:57.560] security threats, UFOs shutting down our nuclear arsenal, and all these things that there is
[01:13:57.560 --> 01:13:59.480] actual science that we can discuss here.
[01:13:59.480 --> 01:14:04.680] And I think once we do, that a lot of people see that some of this attention is not necessarily
[01:14:04.680 --> 01:14:06.680] being very appropriately applied.
[01:14:06.680 --> 01:14:10.120] Yeah, it's really something feels a little bit different about this time.
[01:14:10.120 --> 01:14:15.280] I think it's tipped up into like the mainstream media is taking it more seriously than they
[01:14:15.280 --> 01:14:16.280] should.
[01:14:16.280 --> 01:14:22.160] I think because the Pentagon, rather than just like nothing to see here, they're actually
[01:14:22.160 --> 01:14:24.920] being more open about it.
[01:14:24.920 --> 01:14:30.440] But they're not doing a good job of communicating what's really going on and what's not going
[01:14:30.440 --> 01:14:31.440] on.
[01:14:31.440 --> 01:14:34.800] You know, like they're doing that thing like there is no evidence to say that there that
[01:14:34.800 --> 01:14:38.280] there is aliens, but they're saying in such a way that it's like but they're not like
[01:14:38.280 --> 01:14:42.840] closing the door on it or they're not really giving a good like they're not characterizing
[01:14:42.840 --> 01:14:45.000] the evidence in a meaningful way.
[01:14:45.000 --> 01:14:47.160] They're just being coy.
[01:14:47.160 --> 01:14:51.120] They're not science communicators.
[01:14:51.120 --> 01:14:55.240] What they don't realize is they are completely baiting conspiracy theorists.
[01:14:55.240 --> 01:14:56.240] Totally.
[01:14:56.240 --> 01:15:01.960] Guys, could you imagine, you know, go back 15, 20 years when we were all like in our
[01:15:01.960 --> 01:15:03.760] early days of skepticism.
[01:15:03.760 --> 01:15:08.720] Could you imagine us thinking, hey, guys, in 15 to 20 years, we're going to be having
[01:15:08.720 --> 01:15:12.560] a discussion about a resurgence of UFO enthusiasm?
[01:15:12.560 --> 01:15:13.720] I wouldn't believe it.
[01:15:13.720 --> 01:15:14.720] I would.
[01:15:14.720 --> 01:15:16.520] It's almost as bad as Bigfoot.
[01:15:16.520 --> 01:15:17.520] Yeah.
[01:15:17.520 --> 01:15:21.040] That's actually one of the things that I talk about in the film is the cyclical nature of
[01:15:21.040 --> 01:15:22.040] UFO news.
[01:15:22.040 --> 01:15:26.080] You know, about about every 30, 40 years, we've got something huge coming up.
[01:15:26.080 --> 01:15:31.200] We had we had Roswell and everything was was the last time when that all came out with
[01:15:31.200 --> 01:15:35.920] Stanton Friedman and the National Enquirer making, you know, creating creating this mythology
[01:15:35.920 --> 01:15:40.080] that hadn't existed between then and 1947.
[01:15:40.080 --> 01:15:44.240] But the problem we've got right now, I think, is that the narrative is being controlled
[01:15:44.240 --> 01:15:49.440] by a small group of UFO true believers who have been they're well funded and they're
[01:15:49.440 --> 01:15:50.760] very influential.
[01:15:50.760 --> 01:15:54.920] I want to stress that when I point that out, I don't mean to suggest that this is going
[01:15:54.920 --> 01:15:59.560] to be a debunking movie, because there's a lot of very interesting stuff to talk about
[01:15:59.560 --> 01:16:01.360] on the UFO phenomenon.
[01:16:01.360 --> 01:16:04.080] I'm going to talk about it from the science perspective.
[01:16:04.080 --> 01:16:06.520] Here's what we know and here's how we know it.
[01:16:06.520 --> 01:16:09.000] And here's what we think is actually going on.
[01:16:09.000 --> 01:16:13.580] Here's whether we think we actually will meet aliens and how we're likely to do it if and
[01:16:13.580 --> 01:16:15.120] when it ever happens.
[01:16:15.120 --> 01:16:17.040] So this is not a debunking movie.
[01:16:17.040 --> 01:16:19.200] It's not certainly not a credulous movie.
[01:16:19.200 --> 01:16:23.760] I think that no matter what side of the UFO issue you're on, this is going to help you
[01:16:23.760 --> 01:16:26.640] think about your perspective on UFOs better.
[01:16:26.640 --> 01:16:28.520] Yeah, that's a good place to position it.
[01:16:28.520 --> 01:16:33.080] You know, obviously, you want to you want to get to the people who should be watching
[01:16:33.080 --> 01:16:35.720] this movie that you can't just be catering to skeptics.
[01:16:35.720 --> 01:16:37.000] No, absolutely not.
[01:16:37.000 --> 01:16:42.400] Yeah, the target market for this film is anyone who has heard all of this current UFO news
[01:16:42.400 --> 01:16:44.920] and thinks there's probably something going on there.
[01:16:44.920 --> 01:16:45.920] Exactly.
[01:16:45.920 --> 01:16:46.920] And that's a big group.
[01:16:46.920 --> 01:16:51.360] Oh, yeah, it's pretty much everybody except for like hardened skeptics and true believers.
[01:16:51.360 --> 01:16:54.840] It's everything like the 95% of people who are in the middle.
[01:16:54.840 --> 01:16:58.560] And there's people like, you know, we mentioned recently on the show, like Michio Kaku, who's
[01:16:58.560 --> 01:17:03.800] saying like, Oh, now you the burden of proof is on those who saying that these are not
[01:17:03.800 --> 01:17:04.800] aliens.
[01:17:04.800 --> 01:17:05.800] Really, Michio?
[01:17:05.800 --> 01:17:08.240] Do you really think that that's where we are now with the evidence?
[01:17:08.240 --> 01:17:09.240] I don't think so.
[01:17:09.240 --> 01:17:14.760] But it's a great opportunity to teach skeptical thinking and skeptical, skeptical approach
[01:17:14.760 --> 01:17:15.760] to things.
[01:17:15.760 --> 01:17:16.760] It's a huge opportunity.
[01:17:16.760 --> 01:17:17.760] Yeah.
[01:17:17.760 --> 01:17:23.280] What about the angle of do you discuss specifically, for example, the you know, the likelihood
[01:17:23.280 --> 01:17:29.800] of life existing in the universe versus intelligent life actually traveling to our planet?
[01:17:29.800 --> 01:17:30.800] That's a huge part of the film.
[01:17:30.800 --> 01:17:31.800] Yeah.
[01:17:31.800 --> 01:17:32.800] Oh, excellent.
[01:17:32.800 --> 01:17:33.800] Excellent.
[01:17:33.800 --> 01:17:34.800] Okay.
[01:17:34.800 --> 01:17:41.240] And that's I mean, the the overwhelming consensus among astrobiologists, physicists, astronomers,
[01:17:41.240 --> 01:17:47.040] what have you, is that there's absolutely countless amounts of life in the universe.
[01:17:47.040 --> 01:17:51.560] And that's a very different question from will any of them ever get to meet?
[01:17:51.560 --> 01:17:53.320] And that's really where the meat of the conversation.
[01:17:53.320 --> 01:17:54.320] Excellent.
[01:17:54.320 --> 01:17:55.320] Very good.
[01:17:55.320 --> 01:17:56.320] Yep.
[01:17:56.320 --> 01:17:57.320] That's a critical distinction.
[01:17:57.320 --> 01:17:58.320] Yeah.
[01:17:58.320 --> 01:17:59.320] Because the universe is an awfully big place.
[01:17:59.320 --> 01:18:01.000] And that has two implications.
[01:18:01.000 --> 01:18:03.800] One is there's definitely gonna be lots of life out there.
[01:18:03.800 --> 01:18:07.640] The two is it's very far to get anywhere.
[01:18:07.640 --> 01:18:13.840] And interstellar travel, I think, is always going to suck, no matter how far advanced
[01:18:13.840 --> 01:18:14.840] your technology is.
[01:18:14.840 --> 01:18:15.840] Yeah.
[01:18:15.840 --> 01:18:20.680] I mean, unless you're unless you're like robots and you don't give a crap like, oh, yeah,
[01:18:20.680 --> 01:18:22.360] 10,000 years, big deal.
[01:18:22.360 --> 01:18:23.760] Just turn myself off.
[01:18:23.760 --> 01:18:29.760] Otherwise, otherwise, it's like some some sort of like organic life form making that
[01:18:29.760 --> 01:18:30.760] trip.
[01:18:30.760 --> 01:18:31.760] Forget it.
[01:18:31.760 --> 01:18:32.760] I don't care what engines you have.
[01:18:32.760 --> 01:18:35.120] I just not it's not going to happen.
[01:18:35.120 --> 01:18:37.040] It's not just the distance.
[01:18:37.040 --> 01:18:40.600] One other aspect that people often forget is the the timing issue.
[01:18:40.600 --> 01:18:42.760] I call this the Christmas tree problem.
[01:18:42.760 --> 01:18:47.560] If you imagine a Christmas tree with blinking lights all over it, and the duration of each
[01:18:47.560 --> 01:18:54.040] light turning on is the duration of a technical technological society somewhere in the universe.
[01:18:54.040 --> 01:18:58.120] Now, even though there might be lights all throughout this Christmas tree coming on and
[01:18:58.120 --> 01:19:03.400] off, the probability of two lights right next to each other being turned on at the same
[01:19:03.400 --> 01:19:06.020] time is much, much lower.
[01:19:06.020 --> 01:19:08.040] So that's a whole other order of magnitude.
[01:19:08.040 --> 01:19:10.800] You've got increasing the improbability.
[01:19:10.800 --> 01:19:11.800] Good analogy.
[01:19:11.800 --> 01:19:12.800] Yeah.
[01:19:12.800 --> 01:19:15.960] Even still, though, I mean, again, you know, let's say that that there was a whole bunch
[01:19:15.960 --> 01:19:20.800] of lights that turned on right near each other, you know, traveling, first off, locating
[01:19:20.800 --> 01:19:25.280] and realizing that there is an alien, you know, existence somewhere near you and then
[01:19:25.280 --> 01:19:26.360] traveling there.
[01:19:26.360 --> 01:19:28.000] That's that is the breaker.
[01:19:28.000 --> 01:19:31.040] That's the thing that makes it so this is all implausible.
[01:19:31.040 --> 01:19:36.120] Mick West has, I think, done a very good job in recent times of tackling some of these
[01:19:36.120 --> 01:19:39.280] issues that I think you're going to be bringing up in your movie, Brian.
[01:19:39.280 --> 01:19:40.280] Was he part of this project?
[01:19:40.280 --> 01:19:41.280] Yes, he is.
[01:19:41.280 --> 01:19:46.440] At least I have not shot him yet, but we've talked about what we're going to do for that.
[01:19:46.440 --> 01:19:51.080] So when this film comes out, you should be seeing Mick West in it.
[01:19:51.080 --> 01:19:56.460] He's going to be giving us basically a rundown on some of his more popular videos and giving
[01:19:56.460 --> 01:19:58.020] a quick explainer.
[01:19:58.020 --> 01:20:00.560] But again, not in the sense of debunking anything.
[01:20:00.560 --> 01:20:05.360] It's in the sense of looking at where you need to have your standard of evidence set.
[01:20:05.360 --> 01:20:09.240] Because we're not just going to talk about, you know, these three famous Navy videos and
[01:20:09.240 --> 01:20:11.980] the pyramid video and these things that are fairly recent.
[01:20:11.980 --> 01:20:16.120] We're also going to talk about some older, more famous cases.
[01:20:16.120 --> 01:20:18.840] And again, where do we want to set the bar of evidence?
[01:20:18.840 --> 01:20:23.800] Now, no matter what your perspective is on UFOs and alien visitation, you want to make
[01:20:23.800 --> 01:20:27.380] sure that you're as right as you can be.
[01:20:27.380 --> 01:20:32.280] And so we're going to talk a lot about why you need to have a high standard of evidence
[01:20:32.280 --> 01:20:37.120] to make sure that the information you're accepting is going to be useful information that's going
[01:20:37.120 --> 01:20:38.600] to support your perspective.
[01:20:38.600 --> 01:20:43.720] Yeah, I think that's a really good summary, I think, of how the skeptical movement has
[01:20:43.720 --> 01:20:44.720] evolved.
[01:20:44.720 --> 01:20:48.680] You know, like in the last 20 years that we've been doing this, Brian, where we never really
[01:20:48.680 --> 01:20:54.840] liked being debunkers, but I think we've found how to approach these questions tonight.
[01:20:54.840 --> 01:20:59.440] Like all of my science based medicine activism is about where's the threshold of evidence?
[01:20:59.440 --> 01:21:01.300] Like that is the key question.
[01:21:01.300 --> 01:21:05.120] It's not about, as you said, debunking or saying something is wrong.
[01:21:05.120 --> 01:21:09.440] It's about everything has to have a threshold of evidence, you know, that's consistent,
[01:21:09.440 --> 01:21:12.320] that's rational, it's philosophically valid.
[01:21:12.320 --> 01:21:14.600] And people don't even think on that level.
[01:21:14.600 --> 01:21:18.640] They have like no idea what they're not even thinking in that way.
[01:21:18.640 --> 01:21:19.640] Yeah.
[01:21:19.640 --> 01:21:24.280] If you can get them to think about that, then yeah, you've made a huge advance.
[01:21:24.280 --> 01:21:26.880] I agree completely.
[01:21:26.880 --> 01:21:31.040] That's the whole reason I'm making the film and that's why I think it has to be done now.
[01:21:31.040 --> 01:21:35.620] Because this is a time when there's a huge number of people thinking about something
[01:21:35.620 --> 01:21:37.600] that they wouldn't normally have been thinking about.
[01:21:37.600 --> 01:21:41.760] Five years ago, nobody was thinking about this stuff until that horrible article in
[01:21:41.760 --> 01:21:46.360] the 2017 New York Times kicked this all off.
[01:21:46.360 --> 01:21:51.080] And again, it touches on so many different topics because once you establish, you know,
[01:21:51.080 --> 01:21:56.440] getting people to think about, you know, what kind of evidence is compelling, then the dominoes
[01:21:56.440 --> 01:21:57.440] fall.
[01:21:57.440 --> 01:22:02.640] I know that's the sort of the experience I had personally, you know, back in my 20s
[01:22:02.640 --> 01:22:07.800] when you first start to like really ask that question to do, how do we really know if this
[01:22:07.800 --> 01:22:09.360] is happening or not?
[01:22:09.360 --> 01:22:12.440] And then just everything falls once you start to do that.
[01:22:12.440 --> 01:22:15.360] Do any of you guys have a good UFO story personally?
[01:22:15.360 --> 01:22:18.160] Oh, the Danbury Lights, right?
[01:22:18.160 --> 01:22:19.160] The Danbury Lights.
[01:22:19.160 --> 01:22:20.160] Yeah.
[01:22:20.160 --> 01:22:21.160] I think I told this before.
[01:22:21.160 --> 01:22:22.160] I have that one as well.
[01:22:22.160 --> 01:22:23.160] Yeah.
[01:22:23.160 --> 01:22:24.160] So I think I was 15 or something.
[01:22:24.160 --> 01:22:29.480] It was like 1984, 1985 around there as my recollection, but I could be off, but a little
[01:22:29.480 --> 01:22:30.480] bit earlier than that.
[01:22:30.480 --> 01:22:31.480] Maybe I was 17.
[01:22:31.480 --> 01:22:32.480] Okay.
[01:22:32.480 --> 01:22:33.480] Yeah.
[01:22:33.480 --> 01:22:41.480] So just basically a formation of lights moving through the sky slowly and completely silently.
[01:22:41.480 --> 01:22:48.040] And it was like the first time I saw something where I had absolutely no idea what it was.
[01:22:48.040 --> 01:22:49.040] You know, I didn't think it was a UFO.
[01:22:49.040 --> 01:22:52.720] I didn't think it was a flying saucer, like I have no idea what that is.
[01:22:52.720 --> 01:22:56.800] I could not even come up with a hypothesis as to what it might be.
[01:22:56.800 --> 01:23:00.600] And of course, thousands of people had that experience at that time.
[01:23:00.600 --> 01:23:07.080] And then the next day we found out in the newspaper it was a group of ultralights flying
[01:23:07.080 --> 01:23:10.440] in formation deliberately to create that phenomenon.
[01:23:10.440 --> 01:23:12.600] Oh, I remember that case.
[01:23:12.600 --> 01:23:13.600] Yeah.
[01:23:13.600 --> 01:23:14.800] So you guys were witnesses to that.
[01:23:14.800 --> 01:23:15.800] Yeah, we were.
[01:23:15.800 --> 01:23:16.800] Yes.
[01:23:16.800 --> 01:23:17.800] Real-time witnesses.
[01:23:17.800 --> 01:23:18.800] Yeah.
[01:23:18.800 --> 01:23:19.800] Was I there, Steve?
[01:23:19.800 --> 01:23:21.880] No, I was with my girlfriend at the time.
[01:23:21.880 --> 01:23:26.700] I have a friend who's a movie director, and he was one of the witnesses to that.
[01:23:26.700 --> 01:23:28.940] And he got me to do the episode on it.
[01:23:28.940 --> 01:23:33.040] And the bargain we made was that he'd put me in one of his movies as a dead body in
[01:23:33.040 --> 01:23:34.040] the background.
[01:23:34.040 --> 01:23:35.040] Oh.
[01:23:35.040 --> 01:23:36.040] Did that happen?
[01:23:36.040 --> 01:23:37.040] What an honor that would be.
[01:23:37.040 --> 01:23:38.040] Acting.
[01:23:38.040 --> 01:23:39.040] Acting, yes.
[01:23:39.040 --> 01:23:40.040] Acting, yes.
[01:23:40.040 --> 01:23:42.120] Yeah, there's so many cases.
[01:23:42.120 --> 01:23:46.920] Again, it's that idea that just because you can't identify it doesn't mean it's a flying
[01:23:46.920 --> 01:23:47.920] saucer.
[01:23:47.920 --> 01:23:49.960] There's so much weird shit in the sky.
[01:23:49.960 --> 01:23:56.280] And I think part of the reason why we're experiencing a resurgence is because we are putting a lot
[01:23:56.280 --> 01:23:57.280] of crap in the sky.
[01:23:57.280 --> 01:23:58.840] There's a lot of stuff up there.
[01:23:58.840 --> 01:24:03.280] There's a lot more opportunities for these kinds of experiences, even if they're not
[01:24:03.280 --> 01:24:06.600] deliberately trying to fool people.
[01:24:06.600 --> 01:24:12.320] And so you could see satellite re-entries and some satellites flare.
[01:24:12.320 --> 01:24:13.320] Have you had that experience?
[01:24:13.320 --> 01:24:17.240] There are some people who just don't look up a lot, and it's amazing how many adults
[01:24:17.240 --> 01:24:21.920] have just never looked at the sky long enough to see a satellite moving across the sky.
[01:24:21.920 --> 01:24:23.940] Yeah, that surprises me, yeah.
[01:24:23.940 --> 01:24:27.040] Or even care what's happening up there at any level.
[01:24:27.040 --> 01:24:28.040] It's like, what?
[01:24:28.040 --> 01:24:34.280] Check out the Twitter hashtag, UFO Sightings, because all day long, people are posting pictures
[01:24:34.280 --> 01:24:35.280] and videos.
[01:24:35.280 --> 01:24:36.600] Hey, I just saw this last night.
[01:24:36.600 --> 01:24:37.600] What the heck is it?
[01:24:37.600 --> 01:24:43.080] The weird thing is that 99% of them, it's very obvious what they are to anyone who has
[01:24:43.080 --> 01:24:47.760] a general understanding of science and rocketry and satellites and what's up in the sky and
[01:24:47.760 --> 01:24:49.880] astronomy.
[01:24:49.880 --> 01:24:51.440] And then there's some that are weird.
[01:24:51.440 --> 01:24:52.440] Yeah.
[01:24:52.440 --> 01:24:55.560] Yeah, there's always that residue.
[01:24:55.560 --> 01:24:56.760] That's the key.
[01:24:56.760 --> 01:25:00.960] That there's this long tail of things that are harder and harder to identify, and it's
[01:25:00.960 --> 01:25:04.780] always going to be the case, even if we're not being visited by aliens.
[01:25:04.780 --> 01:25:10.560] But the more you research it, the more you eat away at those cases until you're left
[01:25:10.560 --> 01:25:13.960] with basically nothing, stuff where there just isn't enough information, but there's
[01:25:13.960 --> 01:25:14.960] nothing interesting going on.
[01:25:14.960 --> 01:25:18.160] And they're always going to have us, because there's always going to be stuff there that
[01:25:18.160 --> 01:25:21.980] we just don't have enough information to identify definitively.
[01:25:21.980 --> 01:25:25.880] They're going to always latch onto that, so this is never going to go away.
[01:25:25.880 --> 01:25:27.740] And it doesn't even account for the fakes.
[01:25:27.740 --> 01:25:31.840] People fake things as well and try to pass it off as legitimate, so you have to understand
[01:25:31.840 --> 01:25:32.840] that as well.
[01:25:32.840 --> 01:25:34.900] Let me ask you guys a question.
[01:25:34.900 --> 01:25:39.480] One of the points that I plan to make in the film is that, yes, we can look at virtually
[01:25:39.480 --> 01:25:44.720] any reported UFO case and we can come up with something that it could have been, a reasonable
[01:25:44.720 --> 01:25:49.500] explanation that's something that's rather banal, that might explain it, that probably
[01:25:49.500 --> 01:25:50.500] does explain it.
[01:25:50.500 --> 01:25:51.500] It could have been that.
[01:25:51.500 --> 01:25:52.500] More likely than aliens.
[01:25:52.500 --> 01:25:54.020] More likely than aliens, yeah.
[01:25:54.020 --> 01:26:00.360] So I think that that, take that fact as it is, that's a separate question from are we
[01:26:00.360 --> 01:26:06.960] still being visited by aliens, because I don't think we need UFO sightings to be true to
[01:26:06.960 --> 01:26:10.160] prove that we are being visited by aliens.
[01:26:10.160 --> 01:26:11.160] That's true.
[01:26:11.160 --> 01:26:12.160] It's a separate question.
[01:26:12.160 --> 01:26:16.320] And certainly we could be living in a world where we're being visited by aliens who are
[01:26:16.320 --> 01:26:20.800] good enough not to let their ships be seen by the humans, you know?
[01:26:20.800 --> 01:26:24.800] There aren't any legitimate UFO sightings, but they're still here.
[01:26:24.800 --> 01:26:26.280] Yeah, but it still comes back to evidence.
[01:26:26.280 --> 01:26:30.200] But yeah, but we still are living in a world with no evidence, and that's all we can
[01:26:30.200 --> 01:26:32.360] know is that there's no evidence.
[01:26:32.360 --> 01:26:38.200] Yeah, it's still kind of a special pleading to say that, well, the aliens are here, but
[01:26:38.200 --> 01:26:42.680] they're invisible, so that's why we can't see them, or whatever it might be.
[01:26:42.680 --> 01:26:47.800] And again, this all goes back to, you know, my main idea in making the film is I want
[01:26:47.800 --> 01:26:53.880] to find things that the true UFO believers are going to hear and not feel that I'm attacking
[01:26:53.880 --> 01:26:57.040] their beliefs and go, oh, well, that is interesting.
[01:26:57.040 --> 01:27:00.280] I can do what I'm doing a little bit better by understanding that.
[01:27:00.280 --> 01:27:02.760] Yeah, good luck with that.
[01:27:02.760 --> 01:27:03.760] I don't agree.
[01:27:03.760 --> 01:27:04.760] I don't agree.
[01:27:04.760 --> 01:27:07.760] I think that's overly cynical, because I talk to a lot of people.
[01:27:07.760 --> 01:27:10.320] Bob is the cynical one in our bunch.
[01:27:10.320 --> 01:27:11.320] Thank you.
[01:27:11.320 --> 01:27:16.840] I've talked to a lot of people, for example, even just on Twitter, and I'm terrible on
[01:27:16.840 --> 01:27:17.840] Twitter, by the way.
[01:27:17.840 --> 01:27:24.040] I am not at all a good, friendly, charitable listener on Twitter.
[01:27:24.040 --> 01:27:27.280] I tend to be way too snarky, and that's my own fault.
[01:27:27.280 --> 01:27:29.340] But the film is not going to be like that.
[01:27:29.340 --> 01:27:32.860] But many of these people, they're obviously knowledgeable.
[01:27:32.860 --> 01:27:38.000] They understand, you know, the laws of thermodynamics, and they understand Newton's laws of planetary
[01:27:38.000 --> 01:27:39.360] ... all of that stuff.
[01:27:39.360 --> 01:27:41.360] They generally understand this stuff.
[01:27:41.360 --> 01:27:46.880] But they've just accepted a narrative with what I would consider insufficient evidence,
[01:27:46.880 --> 01:27:48.640] but what is sufficient to them.
[01:27:48.640 --> 01:27:53.000] And we need to find out where is the meeting place, where is the middle ground where we
[01:27:53.000 --> 01:27:56.240] can agree this is a good standard of evidence, and this is not.
[01:27:56.240 --> 01:28:02.320] No, I agree, and we've taken that tactic when we interface with the true believers, going
[01:28:02.320 --> 01:28:05.560] all the way back to Ed and Lorraine Warren, and I tried to convince them...
[01:28:05.560 --> 01:28:06.560] Yeah, sure.
[01:28:06.560 --> 01:28:07.560] How did that go?
[01:28:07.560 --> 01:28:08.560] Well, but they were morons.
[01:28:08.560 --> 01:28:13.960] But I tried to convince them, I was like, listen, again, our job here is not to prove
[01:28:13.960 --> 01:28:17.120] you wrong or to debunk you or make fun of you or anything.
[01:28:17.120 --> 01:28:22.560] I told them straight up, he let me give a lecture for his class, and I said, if Ghost
[01:28:22.560 --> 01:28:28.480] are real, I want to be part of discovering it, but you can't just discover it.
[01:28:28.480 --> 01:28:34.440] You have to prove it to the scientific community, and what you're doing is never going to prove
[01:28:34.440 --> 01:28:36.680] it to the scientific community.
[01:28:36.680 --> 01:28:40.320] If you want to do that, you have to do these methods.
[01:28:40.320 --> 01:28:46.040] You have to follow this procedure, and basically describing some nuts and bolts of scientific
[01:28:46.040 --> 01:28:47.040] procedure.
[01:28:47.040 --> 01:28:50.040] It's like then you will be able to prove it.
[01:28:50.040 --> 01:28:54.400] And if it's real, you should be able to do this.
[01:28:54.400 --> 01:29:01.040] And it can sort of work, and some of the people who do that with UFO investigators or whatever
[01:29:01.040 --> 01:29:05.720] who say, okay, I want to be a rigorous scientific approach, they become skeptics because they
[01:29:05.720 --> 01:29:09.080] realize that when you do that, everything evaporates.
[01:29:09.080 --> 01:29:10.080] Yeah.
[01:29:10.080 --> 01:29:15.080] I've gotten into this on this exact topic with the Skinwalker Ranch guys from the current
[01:29:15.080 --> 01:29:16.260] TV show.
[01:29:16.260 --> 01:29:20.760] They won't publish anything, and they're firm in their assertion that they will not publish
[01:29:20.760 --> 01:29:26.840] anything because it takes too much time, it's a distraction, excuses like that that I don't
[01:29:26.840 --> 01:29:28.640] think are acceptable excuses.
[01:29:28.640 --> 01:29:29.640] Yeah.
[01:29:29.640 --> 01:29:31.920] Well, they have an investment.
[01:29:31.920 --> 01:29:37.280] That's in the Skinwalker Ranch, because I looked into it as well recently, Brian.
[01:29:37.280 --> 01:29:42.160] That's a business that the fellow's running there, and he's not going to take any chances
[01:29:42.160 --> 01:29:45.600] at jeopardizing what he has going on there, is my opinion.
[01:29:45.600 --> 01:29:46.600] Yeah.
[01:29:46.600 --> 01:29:55.800] I'm not sure where he comes down, if he's being a genuine interested researcher or how
[01:29:55.800 --> 01:29:59.200] much of this is just trying to protect a business interest.
[01:29:59.200 --> 01:30:06.960] But be that aside, in the film, I don't discuss particular individuals and their beliefs.
[01:30:06.960 --> 01:30:08.780] We're talking about a process.
[01:30:08.780 --> 01:30:10.960] There's two kinds of documentary films.
[01:30:10.960 --> 01:30:13.960] One of them is where you go out there and you want to find, you're going to see what's
[01:30:13.960 --> 01:30:17.400] going on, and you're going to report whatever you find, and you don't know where that story
[01:30:17.400 --> 01:30:18.400] is going to lead you.
[01:30:18.400 --> 01:30:23.580] And the other kind of documentary, which 99% of them are, is a propaganda piece.
[01:30:23.580 --> 01:30:26.420] You know exactly what you're going to say, and you're going to go out there and you're
[01:30:26.420 --> 01:30:31.360] going to poison the well, and you're going to confirmation bias up the yin yang, and
[01:30:31.360 --> 01:30:34.200] you're going to make the film making the point you want to make.
[01:30:34.200 --> 01:30:38.080] So my film, I just want to be clear, I'm going to say this up front, it is very much
[01:30:38.080 --> 01:30:40.140] a propaganda piece.
[01:30:40.140 --> 01:30:43.240] But this is a pro-process propaganda.
[01:30:43.240 --> 01:30:49.160] This is propaganda for a process, not for a conclusion, either pro-aliens or anti-aliens.
[01:30:49.160 --> 01:30:54.480] So that's what I mean when I say that I really think this is a film that everyone is going
[01:30:54.480 --> 01:30:59.480] to take something away from that they appreciate, no matter where they fall on the conclusion
[01:30:59.480 --> 01:31:00.480] spectrum.
[01:31:00.480 --> 01:31:01.480] Yeah.
[01:31:01.480 --> 01:31:03.040] And that's, again, that's what we do as skeptics anyway.
[01:31:03.040 --> 01:31:05.400] We're advocating for a process, not a conclusion.
[01:31:05.400 --> 01:31:06.400] That's key.
[01:31:06.400 --> 01:31:07.400] That's got to be the...
[01:31:07.400 --> 01:31:08.400] Yeah.
[01:31:08.400 --> 01:31:09.400] And so few people understand that.
[01:31:09.400 --> 01:31:10.400] Yeah.
[01:31:10.400 --> 01:31:14.400] They just say, oh, they confuse skeptic and cynic, and that's the end of it.
[01:31:14.400 --> 01:31:15.400] Yeah, yeah.
[01:31:15.400 --> 01:31:20.240] All right, Brian, so if people want to support the UFO movie they don't want you to see,
[01:31:20.240 --> 01:31:21.240] what should they do?
[01:31:21.240 --> 01:31:22.240] You go to...
[01:31:22.240 --> 01:31:23.240] The URL is theufo.movie.
[01:31:23.240 --> 01:31:24.240] Theufo.movie.
[01:31:24.240 --> 01:31:29.680] I didn't even know.movie was a TLD for a domain name.
[01:31:29.680 --> 01:31:30.680] But it is.
[01:31:30.680 --> 01:31:34.200] It's theufo.movie, and that takes you to the crowdfunding page.
[01:31:34.200 --> 01:31:36.600] But it's also where you can see the trailer.
[01:31:36.600 --> 01:31:39.660] And whether you want to support the movie or not, please invite everyone to at least
[01:31:39.660 --> 01:31:43.640] watch the two-minute trailer and get an idea of what this film is going to be about.
[01:31:43.640 --> 01:31:44.640] Theufo.movie.
[01:31:44.640 --> 01:31:45.640] Theufo.movie.
[01:31:45.640 --> 01:31:48.400] And when can we expect it to be released?
[01:31:48.400 --> 01:31:50.200] By the end of the year is what I'm shooting for.
[01:31:50.200 --> 01:31:51.200] Excellent.
[01:31:51.200 --> 01:31:52.200] Awesome.
[01:31:52.200 --> 01:31:53.200] Yeah.
[01:31:53.200 --> 01:31:54.200] Looking forward to that.
[01:31:54.200 --> 01:31:55.200] Looking forward to that.
[01:31:55.200 --> 01:31:56.200] Yeah, totally.
[01:31:56.200 --> 01:31:57.200] Me too.
[01:31:57.200 --> 01:31:58.200] Me too.
[01:31:58.200 --> 01:31:59.200] All right, Brian, good talking with you.
[01:31:59.200 --> 01:32:00.200] Hopefully we'll have a MeetSpace conference sometime soon.
[01:32:00.200 --> 01:32:01.200] Yes.
[01:32:01.200 --> 01:32:02.200] Please.
[01:32:02.200 --> 01:32:03.200] Yeah.
[01:32:03.200 --> 01:32:04.200] I sure look forward to it.
[01:32:04.200 --> 01:32:05.200] It's great talking with you guys again.
[01:32:05.200 --> 01:32:06.200] It's been a while since we've all worked up.
[01:32:06.200 --> 01:32:07.200] Yes.
[01:32:07.200 --> 01:32:08.200] Yep.
[01:32:08.200 --> 01:32:09.200] All right.
[01:32:09.200 --> 01:32:10.200] Thank you.
[01:32:10.200 --> 01:32:11.200] Thank you.
Science or Fiction (1:32:08)
Item #1: Scientists have been able to create a DNA based nanomotor that can convert electricity into kinetic motion, and in which they can control the direction and speed of the rotation.[5]
Item #2: A decade-long investigation finds that about 20% of moth species, representing thousands of species, produce ultrasound to deter bats by either jamming or confusing their echolocation or serving as warnings of toxicity.[6]
Item #3: A new simulation of Jovian planet ring formation indicates that Jupiter likely had a massive ring system throughout most of its existence.[7]
Answer | Item |
---|---|
Fiction | Jupiter's massive ring system |
Science | DNA-based nanomotor |
Science | Moths produce ultrasound |
Host | Result |
---|---|
Steve | swept |
Rogue | Guess |
---|---|
Cara | Jupiter's massive ring system |
Jay | Jupiter's massive ring system |
Bob | Jupiter's massive ring system |
Evan | Jupiter's massive ring system |
Voice-over: It's time for Science or Fiction.
Cara's Response
Jay's Response
Bob's Response
Evan's Response
Steve Explains Item #1
Steve Explains Item #3
Steve Explains Item #2
[01:32:11.200 --> 01:32:20.320] It's time for Science or Fiction.
[01:32:20.320 --> 01:32:25.960] Each week I come up with three science news items or facts, two real and one fake.
[01:32:25.960 --> 01:32:30.800] And then I challenge my panel of skeptics to tell me which one is the fake.
[01:32:30.800 --> 01:32:34.640] Kara is back joining us for the Science or Fiction.
[01:32:34.640 --> 01:32:37.240] Just have three regular news items this week.
[01:32:37.240 --> 01:32:38.240] Is everybody ready?
[01:32:38.240 --> 01:32:39.240] Ready.
[01:32:39.240 --> 01:32:40.240] Ready.
[01:32:40.240 --> 01:32:41.240] Ready.
[01:32:41.240 --> 01:32:42.240] All right.
[01:32:42.240 --> 01:32:43.240] Here we go.
[01:32:43.240 --> 01:32:46.400] Item number one, scientists have been able to create a DNA-based nanomotor that can convert
[01:32:46.400 --> 01:32:51.760] electricity into kinetic motion and in which they can control the direction and speed of
[01:32:51.760 --> 01:32:52.760] the rotation.
[01:32:52.760 --> 01:33:01.200] Item number two, a decade-long investigation finds that about 20% of moth species representing
[01:33:01.200 --> 01:33:06.440] thousands of species produce ultrasound to deter bats by either jamming or confusing
[01:33:06.440 --> 01:33:12.200] their echolocation or serving as warnings of toxicity.
[01:33:12.200 --> 01:33:17.680] And item number three, a new simulation of Jovian planet ring formation indicates that
[01:33:17.680 --> 01:33:21.840] Jupiter likely had a massive ring system throughout most of its existence.
[01:33:21.840 --> 01:33:25.480] Kara, since you missed a couple of weeks, I'll let you go first.
[01:33:25.480 --> 01:33:27.480] Oh, you'll let me, huh?
[01:33:27.480 --> 01:33:28.480] Yeah.
[01:33:28.480 --> 01:33:29.480] Welcome back.
[01:33:29.480 --> 01:33:30.480] Privileged pole position.
[01:33:30.480 --> 01:33:31.480] Yep.
[01:33:31.480 --> 01:33:34.880] These are so all over the place that I have some major, like, cognitive gear shifting
[01:33:34.880 --> 01:33:36.920] I have to do.
[01:33:36.920 --> 01:33:40.600] Sometimes it's funny because a theme as frustrating as it can be, you get to, like, kind of keep
[01:33:40.600 --> 01:33:42.560] your brain in one area.
[01:33:42.560 --> 01:33:43.560] Yeah, that's true.
[01:33:43.560 --> 01:33:44.560] Okay.
[01:33:44.560 --> 01:33:45.560] DNA-based nanometer?
[01:33:45.560 --> 01:33:46.560] Nanomotor.
[01:33:46.560 --> 01:33:47.560] Oh, yeah.
[01:33:47.560 --> 01:33:48.560] Nanomotor.
[01:33:48.560 --> 01:33:49.560] Okay.
[01:33:49.560 --> 01:33:57.760] A nanomotor that I'm assuming that uses base pairs can convert electricity into kinetic
[01:33:57.760 --> 01:33:58.760] motion.
[01:33:58.760 --> 01:33:59.760] What?
[01:33:59.760 --> 01:34:01.480] But DNA doesn't use electricity.
[01:34:01.480 --> 01:34:03.440] It would already be kinetic, no?
[01:34:03.440 --> 01:34:06.320] Motion in which they can control the direction and speed of the rotation.
[01:34:06.320 --> 01:34:10.960] So basically, this is a molecular machine, but it's one that was, like, made in the lab
[01:34:10.960 --> 01:34:13.920] as opposed to one that your body naturally makes.
[01:34:13.920 --> 01:34:16.280] And it's transducing, basically.
[01:34:16.280 --> 01:34:19.960] It's taking electrical current and making, well, yeah, our body does that all the time
[01:34:19.960 --> 01:34:21.160] anyway.
[01:34:21.160 --> 01:34:24.400] Electricity into kinetics is, like, we're freaking awesome at that, so I don't see why
[01:34:24.400 --> 01:34:27.040] they couldn't figure out how to do that in the lab.
[01:34:27.040 --> 01:34:30.660] Twenty percent of moth species, so that's that, yeah, of course, that would be thousands
[01:34:30.660 --> 01:34:33.560] of species produce ultrasound to deter bats.
[01:34:33.560 --> 01:34:40.000] Oh, right, because bats do eat a lot of moths, so they produce ultrasound, and that ultrasound
[01:34:40.000 --> 01:34:44.640] jams or confuses their echolocation or serves as a warning of toxicity.
[01:34:44.640 --> 01:34:45.640] Wow.
[01:34:45.640 --> 01:34:53.560] This is a multi-use, if true, this is a multi-use tool, I guess you could say, behavior.
[01:34:53.560 --> 01:34:59.080] If this is true, I think it's just so cool how many animals within the animal kingdom
[01:34:59.080 --> 01:35:02.800] just, like, do stuff like this, probably with no concept of what they're doing.
[01:35:02.800 --> 01:35:03.800] They just do it.
[01:35:03.800 --> 01:35:10.160] Jovian, okay, so Jupiter, one of the ring, oh, a new simulation of the ring formation.
[01:35:10.160 --> 01:35:14.080] It likely had a massive ring system throughout most of its existence.
[01:35:14.080 --> 01:35:17.440] That's going to be one of those opposite ones where it's like, no, it never had rings until
[01:35:17.440 --> 01:35:18.740] recently.
[01:35:18.740 --> 01:35:21.280] I'll say that's the fiction, and it's, like, the opposite.
[01:35:21.280 --> 01:35:23.320] This is a total shot in the dark.
[01:35:23.320 --> 01:35:24.320] Okay, Jay.
[01:35:24.320 --> 01:35:25.320] Right?
[01:35:25.320 --> 01:35:29.040] Jay, I'm sorry, I did not help you at all.
[01:35:29.040 --> 01:35:37.240] Well, the first one about the nanomotor, you know, I really think that that one is science.
[01:35:37.240 --> 01:35:41.040] I know people have been working on it, and it just seems like we're due for something
[01:35:41.040 --> 01:35:42.280] like this.
[01:35:42.280 --> 01:35:47.920] The second one about the investigation about the moths producing ultrasound, I mean, I
[01:35:47.920 --> 01:35:50.520] think this makes sense, you know?
[01:35:50.520 --> 01:35:54.560] I mean, bats have been eating moths for a very, very long time, and it makes sense that
[01:35:54.560 --> 01:35:58.520] some of them came up with a way to divert that.
[01:35:58.520 --> 01:36:04.080] So I'm going to go with Kara, and I'm going to say that the Jovian planet ring formation
[01:36:04.080 --> 01:36:08.240] indicates Jupiter likely have a massive ring system throughout most of its existence.
[01:36:08.240 --> 01:36:09.400] I don't know, man.
[01:36:09.400 --> 01:36:13.280] I wish I had something smart to say here, like, because of the size of the planet, the
[01:36:13.280 --> 01:36:15.600] blah, blah, blah.
[01:36:15.600 --> 01:36:16.960] I don't, but I'm going to go with Kara.
[01:36:16.960 --> 01:36:17.960] I think that one's a fiction.
[01:36:17.960 --> 01:36:18.960] All right, Bob.
[01:36:18.960 --> 01:36:24.480] Okay, so this DNA nanomotor, I want that to be true, and I like Jay's characterization
[01:36:24.480 --> 01:36:25.480] of it.
[01:36:25.480 --> 01:36:26.480] It's like, we are due.
[01:36:26.480 --> 01:36:33.160] Let's do that, although even though Kara kind of just very quickly accepted the electricity
[01:36:33.160 --> 01:36:37.560] component, I'm thinking, well, wait, wait, how are they going to get electricity to that?
[01:36:37.560 --> 01:36:41.160] I mean, these little tiny, super tiny batteries?
[01:36:41.160 --> 01:36:42.160] I don't know.
[01:36:42.160 --> 01:36:47.280] To me, that's kind of not necessarily the easy part.
[01:36:47.280 --> 01:36:50.920] On that note, let's go to the second one, the moths and the ultrasound.
[01:36:50.920 --> 01:36:53.280] Yeah, moths are cool.
[01:36:53.280 --> 01:36:54.720] I think they could absolutely do that.
[01:36:54.720 --> 01:36:58.400] I mean, they do, you know, they're just, you know, they've done that.
[01:36:58.400 --> 01:37:03.000] They do other interesting things to deal with bats, and that would just be really cool.
[01:37:03.000 --> 01:37:05.200] The third one's rubbing me the wrong way.
[01:37:05.200 --> 01:37:07.520] I mean, Jupiter has a ring system.
[01:37:07.520 --> 01:37:08.520] It's very, right?
[01:37:08.520 --> 01:37:09.520] It's very faint.
[01:37:09.520 --> 01:37:16.080] I mean, most images, the vast majority, in fact, you can't have no hint of any rings.
[01:37:16.080 --> 01:37:21.320] But I have seen some, and this was like, what, 20, 30 years ago, they discovered this.
[01:37:21.320 --> 01:37:27.080] But something about Jupiter having a gargantuan one, something about all of the big moons,
[01:37:27.080 --> 01:37:32.720] the Jovian moons kind of messing with that, potentially.
[01:37:32.720 --> 01:37:37.660] It's got, I don't know, it just feels like something, something about a planet the size
[01:37:37.660 --> 01:37:43.080] of Jupiter would not work with a huge ring system like that.
[01:37:43.080 --> 01:37:45.520] Yeah, I know Saturn has it.
[01:37:45.520 --> 01:37:46.520] I don't know.
[01:37:46.520 --> 01:37:50.860] It's hard to put into words why this one's rubbing me the wrong way.
[01:37:50.860 --> 01:37:53.400] So I'll join the crew and say this is fiction.
[01:37:53.400 --> 01:37:55.120] Okay, Evan, they're all in agreement.
[01:37:55.120 --> 01:38:00.000] Oh, crumbs, because, oh, shoot.
[01:38:00.000 --> 01:38:02.040] I'll start with the Jupiter one.
[01:38:02.040 --> 01:38:09.160] So the one about this is, I forget if Saturn is considered a Jovian or is it smaller than
[01:38:09.160 --> 01:38:10.160] Jovian.
[01:38:10.160 --> 01:38:14.680] I forget the cutoff as far as that definition goes.
[01:38:14.680 --> 01:38:20.340] And I recently watched a video that projected out what's going to happen to Saturn's rings.
[01:38:20.340 --> 01:38:26.360] They are going to eventually get scattered and Saturn will eventually lose its rings.
[01:38:26.360 --> 01:38:31.600] Within the Raleigh limit, I think, they'll just fall onto Saturn, which is kind of sad.
[01:38:31.600 --> 01:38:35.520] So what happened in Jupiter's case, right, Bob, about the rings that it does have?
[01:38:35.520 --> 01:38:41.640] But you're right, I am thinking this one's also the fiction because Jupiter's rings may
[01:38:41.640 --> 01:38:45.620] not be sort of the same situation that Saturn has with its ring.
[01:38:45.620 --> 01:38:49.640] So I think that one is going to be the fiction.
[01:38:49.640 --> 01:38:52.560] The only thing I was thinking about, though, with the moths, Steve, is that it says serving
[01:38:52.560 --> 01:38:54.480] as warnings of toxicity.
[01:38:54.480 --> 01:39:03.260] Now, I've never heard of toxicity in the sense of something that's not either color or secretion
[01:39:03.260 --> 01:39:04.260] or something like that.
[01:39:04.260 --> 01:39:09.600] And it represents something having to do with ultrasound and toxicity.
[01:39:09.600 --> 01:39:10.600] That's unusual.
[01:39:10.600 --> 01:39:13.040] I've not heard that before.
[01:39:13.040 --> 01:39:18.400] However, I think there's enough reason to go with everyone else on thinking the Jupiter
[01:39:18.400 --> 01:39:19.400] one's fiction.
[01:39:19.400 --> 01:39:20.400] All right.
[01:39:20.400 --> 01:39:21.400] So you guys are all in agreement.
[01:39:21.400 --> 01:39:22.680] So let's go back to the first one.
[01:39:22.680 --> 01:39:25.240] You seem to have the easiest time with that.
[01:39:25.240 --> 01:39:29.520] Scientists have been able to create a DNA-based nanomotor that can convert electricity into
[01:39:29.520 --> 01:39:34.760] kinetic motion and in which they can control the direction and speed of the rotation.
[01:39:34.760 --> 01:39:38.880] You all think this one is science and this one is...
[01:39:38.880 --> 01:39:39.880] Come on, this be science.
[01:39:39.880 --> 01:39:40.880] Science.
[01:39:40.880 --> 01:39:41.880] Yes.
[01:39:41.880 --> 01:39:42.880] Nice.
[01:39:42.880 --> 01:39:47.320] The title of the paper is a DNA origami rotary ratchet motor.
[01:39:47.320 --> 01:39:48.320] Cool.
[01:39:48.320 --> 01:39:49.320] So they just use the...
[01:39:49.320 --> 01:39:57.000] The origami is like whenever the really tiny motors, they can change configuration, right?
[01:39:57.000 --> 01:40:00.720] So they can unfold from one shape into another.
[01:40:00.720 --> 01:40:03.960] And if you can get them to do that, that could make them have functionality.
[01:40:03.960 --> 01:40:04.960] Yeah.
[01:40:04.960 --> 01:40:06.520] Well, where's it get the electricity from?
[01:40:06.520 --> 01:40:07.520] Well, there's electricity.
[01:40:07.520 --> 01:40:10.880] I mean, it's just from our tissues, right?
[01:40:10.880 --> 01:40:12.840] We have so much excitable tissue in our bodies.
[01:40:12.840 --> 01:40:13.840] Yeah.
[01:40:13.840 --> 01:40:16.480] But in the experimental setup, they just provide it.
[01:40:16.480 --> 01:40:17.480] Oh, right.
[01:40:17.480 --> 01:40:18.480] They just bathe it in electricity.
[01:40:18.480 --> 01:40:19.480] Just makes it spin.
[01:40:19.480 --> 01:40:20.480] Yeah.
[01:40:20.480 --> 01:40:21.480] All right.
[01:40:21.480 --> 01:40:22.480] Let's go to number three.
[01:40:22.480 --> 01:40:27.280] A new simulation of Jovian planet ring formation indicates that Jupiter likely had a massive
[01:40:27.280 --> 01:40:31.040] ring system throughout most of its existence.
[01:40:31.040 --> 01:40:36.720] So you guys all know that all four of the gas giants have ring systems.
[01:40:36.720 --> 01:40:39.360] Only Saturn has a big, beautiful ring system.
[01:40:39.360 --> 01:40:44.680] The other three all have wispy, tenuous rings.
[01:40:44.680 --> 01:40:51.840] What the simulation showed was that the larger the planet, the larger the ring system should
[01:40:51.840 --> 01:40:52.840] be, right?
[01:40:52.840 --> 01:40:58.240] So Jupiter should have a proportionately more massive ring system.
[01:40:58.240 --> 01:40:59.240] And the question was-
[01:40:59.240 --> 01:41:00.240] Can you imagine that?
[01:41:00.240 --> 01:41:01.240] That would be so cool.
[01:41:01.240 --> 01:41:02.240] Oh, man.
[01:41:02.240 --> 01:41:03.240] Yeah.
[01:41:03.240 --> 01:41:04.240] Also because it's a lot closer than Saturn.
[01:41:04.240 --> 01:41:06.240] So, you know, it would just look very different.
[01:41:06.240 --> 01:41:08.360] And so the question is, why doesn't it?
[01:41:08.360 --> 01:41:12.440] Is this an anomaly of just the time in Jupiter's life?
[01:41:12.440 --> 01:41:14.720] Because the ring systems don't last forever.
[01:41:14.720 --> 01:41:18.840] Or is it like what Bob said, like, or was it Evan?
[01:41:18.840 --> 01:41:23.000] Like it's got huge moons and they're super close to it.
[01:41:23.000 --> 01:41:24.000] Yeah.
[01:41:24.000 --> 01:41:26.160] Although Saturn has Titan, but-
[01:41:26.160 --> 01:41:27.160] Right.
[01:41:27.160 --> 01:41:28.160] But Jupiter life-
[01:41:28.160 --> 01:41:29.160] It's true.
[01:41:29.160 --> 01:41:30.160] The configuration.
[01:41:30.160 --> 01:41:31.160] Jupiter's moons are like-
[01:41:31.160 --> 01:41:32.160] Yeah.
[01:41:32.160 --> 01:41:33.160] Jovian moons, man.
[01:41:33.160 --> 01:41:34.160] Yeah.
[01:41:34.160 --> 01:41:35.160] What-
[01:41:35.160 --> 01:41:38.520] Or is it the magnetic field or the radiation belts or something about that?
[01:41:38.520 --> 01:41:44.480] So what the simulation showed is that the moons do not allow for giant ring systems.
[01:41:44.480 --> 01:41:48.960] So Jupiter likely never had a large ring system.
[01:41:48.960 --> 01:41:50.520] So we're right.
[01:41:50.520 --> 01:41:51.520] You're right.
[01:41:51.520 --> 01:41:52.520] Yay.
[01:41:52.520 --> 01:41:53.520] Take care.
[01:41:53.520 --> 01:41:55.120] This is a fiction because of those pesky moons.
[01:41:55.120 --> 01:41:56.120] Yeah.
[01:41:56.120 --> 01:41:57.120] Yes.
[01:41:57.120 --> 01:41:58.800] The question is, is this like a general rule?
[01:41:58.800 --> 01:42:03.880] Like it might be that Saturn is in the sweet spot of gas giants in terms of the ring system.
[01:42:03.880 --> 01:42:04.880] Yeah.
[01:42:04.880 --> 01:42:08.920] And Neptune are smaller, so they have smaller ring systems.
[01:42:08.920 --> 01:42:15.020] Saturn is big enough to have giant rings, but doesn't have a lot of close up big moons.
[01:42:15.020 --> 01:42:19.880] Jupiter is bigger, but then it's got those, the four Galilean satellites, which are close
[01:42:19.880 --> 01:42:24.480] large moons, and they just basically disrupt any massive ring formation.
[01:42:24.480 --> 01:42:27.680] It's sad though that Saturn will lose those rings.
[01:42:27.680 --> 01:42:28.680] Right.
[01:42:28.680 --> 01:42:29.680] It's going to rain down on the surface.
[01:42:29.680 --> 01:42:30.680] Sad, yeah.
[01:42:30.680 --> 01:42:31.680] It sucks.
[01:42:31.680 --> 01:42:33.320] It will be so long gone by then.
[01:42:33.320 --> 01:42:34.320] Right.
[01:42:34.320 --> 01:42:35.320] Yeah.
[01:42:35.320 --> 01:42:36.320] Who would appreciate that?
[01:42:36.320 --> 01:42:37.320] Right.
[01:42:37.320 --> 01:42:38.320] It's fine.
[01:42:38.320 --> 01:42:39.320] It would be nice to know.
[01:42:39.320 --> 01:42:41.600] It is sad though, I agree.
[01:42:41.600 --> 01:42:46.300] This means that a decade long investigation finds that about 20% of moth species representing
[01:42:46.300 --> 01:42:51.480] thousands of species produce ultrasound to deter bats by either jamming or confusing
[01:42:51.480 --> 01:42:54.920] their echolocation or serving as warnings of toxicity.
[01:42:54.920 --> 01:42:56.400] This is of course science.
[01:42:56.400 --> 01:42:59.440] How many moth species are there?
[01:42:59.440 --> 01:43:00.440] What do you guys think?
[01:43:00.440 --> 01:43:01.440] Like a million?
[01:43:01.440 --> 01:43:02.440] I don't know.
[01:43:02.440 --> 01:43:03.440] Two?
[01:43:03.440 --> 01:43:04.440] Three?
[01:43:04.440 --> 01:43:05.440] No, there's got to be-
[01:43:05.440 --> 01:43:06.440] 30,000?
[01:43:06.440 --> 01:43:07.440] There's what?
[01:43:07.440 --> 01:43:08.440] 8,000?
[01:43:08.440 --> 01:43:09.440] The beetles is the most, and what is that?
[01:43:09.440 --> 01:43:10.440] 200.
[01:43:10.440 --> 01:43:11.440] 1,000.
[01:43:11.440 --> 01:43:12.440] 300.
[01:43:12.440 --> 01:43:13.440] 5,000.
[01:43:13.440 --> 01:43:14.440] Oh, it's not as high as that.
[01:43:14.440 --> 01:43:15.440] 160,000.
[01:43:15.440 --> 01:43:16.440] Day long.
[01:43:16.440 --> 01:43:17.440] Holy moly.
[01:43:17.440 --> 01:43:18.440] Way on.
[01:43:18.440 --> 01:43:19.440] Yeah, so 20%, that's a lot.
[01:43:19.440 --> 01:43:20.440] Wow.
[01:43:20.440 --> 01:43:21.440] That is 32,000 species.
[01:43:21.440 --> 01:43:26.400] Now previously, before this comprehensive study, the thinking was that the echolocation
[01:43:26.400 --> 01:43:34.200] ultrasound, rather, ultrasound in moths was rare, it was only a handful of species where
[01:43:34.200 --> 01:43:39.040] it had been identified, but they did this massive survey and they have found that this
[01:43:39.040 --> 01:43:47.280] ability spans the groups of moths, you know, that it's not just those, again, those ones
[01:43:47.280 --> 01:43:49.040] that were known.
[01:43:49.040 --> 01:43:55.200] It occurs across many different, at least six sub-families, they're saying, with thousands
[01:43:55.200 --> 01:44:01.080] of individuals, and it's pretty clear that it evolved multiple times independently.
[01:44:01.080 --> 01:44:02.080] Independently, nice.
[01:44:02.080 --> 01:44:03.080] That's cool.
[01:44:03.080 --> 01:44:05.160] This is clearly a lot of selective pressure here.
[01:44:05.160 --> 01:44:09.880] There's multiple different organs that they use to generate the sound.
[01:44:09.880 --> 01:44:14.400] Some use their abdomen, abdomens.
[01:44:14.400 --> 01:44:15.400] Some use their genitals.
[01:44:15.400 --> 01:44:16.400] Ooh.
[01:44:16.400 --> 01:44:17.400] Oh boy.
[01:44:17.400 --> 01:44:18.400] Sexy.
[01:44:18.400 --> 01:44:19.400] Oh, we've talked about it.
[01:44:19.400 --> 01:44:20.400] I'm jealous.
[01:44:20.400 --> 01:44:21.400] With one species.
[01:44:21.400 --> 01:44:28.760] Yeah, and they think this is the largest example of mimicry rings in nature.
[01:44:28.760 --> 01:44:34.320] A mimicry ring is when different animals will mimic aspects of other animals in order to
[01:44:34.320 --> 01:44:35.480] get the same benefit.
[01:44:35.480 --> 01:44:41.140] So there are moths which are toxic, either they taste horrible or they are literally
[01:44:41.140 --> 01:44:47.160] toxic to bats, and they produce an ultrasound to warn bats, I don't taste good, don't eat
[01:44:47.160 --> 01:44:53.120] me, and of course other moths mimic that sound so that they get the side benefit as well.
[01:44:53.120 --> 01:44:54.520] That's a mimicry ring.
[01:44:54.520 --> 01:45:01.000] And so essentially there's multiple, multiple species of moths converging on this sort of
[01:45:01.000 --> 01:45:03.280] similar warning signals.
[01:45:03.280 --> 01:45:05.760] That's just trial and error?
[01:45:05.760 --> 01:45:06.760] Just luck?
[01:45:06.760 --> 01:45:07.760] I mean, geez.
[01:45:07.760 --> 01:45:08.760] Yeah.
[01:45:08.760 --> 01:45:09.760] It's evolution, man.
[01:45:09.760 --> 01:45:10.760] It's trial and error.
[01:45:10.760 --> 01:45:11.760] That's awesome.
[01:45:11.760 --> 01:45:16.800] Yeah, if you happen to make noise which sounds enough like a toxic species of moth that uses
[01:45:16.800 --> 01:45:22.000] a warning signal, you're less likely to be eaten and then you evolve to mimic it more
[01:45:22.000 --> 01:45:23.000] and more.
[01:45:23.000 --> 01:45:25.440] But the jamming is cool.
[01:45:25.440 --> 01:45:30.800] Basically the bats are coming and it just sends out the sound and it blinds them echolocation-wise
[01:45:30.800 --> 01:45:35.840] and blinds their echolocation or just confuses them so they just can't zero in on the moth.
[01:45:35.840 --> 01:45:40.260] But yeah, moths are bats' favorite food, the echolocating bats.
[01:45:40.260 --> 01:45:45.600] So that's a lot of selective pressure on the moths to develop defenses.
[01:45:45.600 --> 01:45:50.400] So there's basically this ultrasound war going on between bats and moths.
[01:45:50.400 --> 01:45:51.640] It's cool.
[01:45:51.640 --> 01:45:52.640] Really cool.
[01:45:52.640 --> 01:45:53.640] Measures and countermeasures.
[01:45:53.640 --> 01:45:55.400] Yeah, I think totally.
[01:45:55.400 --> 01:45:59.480] Bats would just switch to just more mosquitoes and moths.
[01:45:59.480 --> 01:46:04.640] Well some do, but moths are big, juicy, slow-flying insects, I guess.
[01:46:04.640 --> 01:46:05.640] Yeah.
[01:46:05.640 --> 01:46:11.880] You know what my favorite, one of the weirdest parts of sleeping in the Amazon rainforest
[01:46:11.880 --> 01:46:12.880] was-
[01:46:12.880 --> 01:46:13.880] The cacophony?
[01:46:13.880 --> 01:46:15.880] Yeah, well there is that actually-
[01:46:15.880 --> 01:46:16.880] Or it had to be loud.
[01:46:16.880 --> 01:46:21.680] I went during what's called a freeage, unfortunately, which is like this storm that comes down from
[01:46:21.680 --> 01:46:24.880] the Andes and it makes it relatively colder.
[01:46:24.880 --> 01:46:29.880] And I mean, it's still hot there, but it actually puts a lot of the animals into hiding.
[01:46:29.880 --> 01:46:33.040] It is loud, but not bananas loud.
[01:46:33.040 --> 01:46:35.060] The howler monkeys are very loud in the morning.
[01:46:35.060 --> 01:46:40.500] But the weirdest part is I slept in these lodges that were open air.
[01:46:40.500 --> 01:46:45.000] You would have mosquito nets over your bed anyway, but there was no roof or the roof
[01:46:45.000 --> 01:46:46.840] was up really high and it was thatched.
[01:46:46.840 --> 01:46:52.920] So the bats would feed at night above the beds and you would hear little pieces of like
[01:46:52.920 --> 01:46:57.220] moth bodies and just pieces of the things they were feeding on falling on top of your
[01:46:57.220 --> 01:46:59.920] mosquito net all night.
[01:46:59.920 --> 01:47:01.240] And I didn't know what it was at first.
[01:47:01.240 --> 01:47:04.680] The first night I was like, what is falling on- And they were like, oh yeah, that's the
[01:47:04.680 --> 01:47:05.680] bats feeding.
[01:47:05.680 --> 01:47:06.680] It's like, whoa.
[01:47:06.680 --> 01:47:07.680] Crazy.
[01:47:07.680 --> 01:47:08.680] I know.
[01:47:08.680 --> 01:47:09.680] Oh no.
[01:47:09.680 --> 01:47:10.680] That's the bats.
[01:47:10.680 --> 01:47:11.680] Moth carcasses.
[01:47:11.680 --> 01:47:12.680] Yeah.
[01:47:12.680 --> 01:47:13.680] Bat.
[01:47:13.680 --> 01:47:14.680] They're sloppy eaters.
[01:47:14.680 --> 01:47:21.600] So, you know, the thing is if you could hear into that ultrasound range, like just barely
[01:47:21.600 --> 01:47:28.040] above the human range in terms of pitch at nighttime, there would be this cacophony of
[01:47:28.040 --> 01:47:33.640] ultrasound from bats and moths just- Oh, that would be so annoying.
[01:47:33.640 --> 01:47:36.240] Does it sound like the two goats from Thor, Love and Thunder?
[01:47:36.240 --> 01:47:38.240] I have no idea.
[01:47:38.240 --> 01:47:45.440] The other thing is, what's interesting is if you had greater just sensitivity, if your
[01:47:45.440 --> 01:47:51.000] hearing were much more sensitive, this is not an uncommon thing to portray like on shows.
[01:47:51.000 --> 01:47:52.000] Superheroes.
[01:47:52.000 --> 01:47:56.320] But superheroes or the $6 million woman I think had super hearing.
[01:47:56.320 --> 01:48:00.840] You would hear the back, the white noise of basically air crashing into itself.
[01:48:00.840 --> 01:48:04.480] It would be like, you know when you hold a seashell up to your ear and you hear that
[01:48:04.480 --> 01:48:05.480] noise.
[01:48:05.480 --> 01:48:06.480] That's what you're hearing.
[01:48:06.480 --> 01:48:07.480] You would hear that all the time.
[01:48:07.480 --> 01:48:11.120] You could have hardware remove that.
[01:48:11.120 --> 01:48:12.120] That's what would have to happen.
[01:48:12.120 --> 01:48:13.520] You'd have to evolve to not hear it.
[01:48:13.520 --> 01:48:14.520] Do you know what?
[01:48:14.520 --> 01:48:18.360] I had this, to speak of the Amazon again, I had this really cool experience where if
[01:48:18.360 --> 01:48:25.560] you guys remember when I went, I brought a really nice Sennheiser mic that you guys helped
[01:48:25.560 --> 01:48:26.560] me get.
[01:48:26.560 --> 01:48:27.560] I think you gifted it to me.
[01:48:27.560 --> 01:48:28.560] Yeah.
[01:48:28.560 --> 01:48:29.560] Yeah.
[01:48:29.560 --> 01:48:34.920] And it was for podcasting purposes and I put it on like a big blimp and a handle so it's
[01:48:34.920 --> 01:48:35.920] very directional.
[01:48:35.920 --> 01:48:41.080] So you're out in the rainforest and when you point it in a particular direction, it really
[01:48:41.080 --> 01:48:43.000] amplifies whatever's in that direction.
[01:48:43.000 --> 01:48:48.440] So of course, this isn't broadening the tones, the range of tones that I could hear, but
[01:48:48.440 --> 01:48:51.360] it was making things that are very quiet much louder.
[01:48:51.360 --> 01:48:55.340] And one of the entomologists that I was there with, or no, he wasn't an entomologist.
[01:48:55.340 --> 01:48:58.320] He was a ornithologist.
[01:48:58.320 --> 01:49:05.040] He asked if he could listen and I put my headphones on and handed him the mic and he, tears formed
[01:49:05.040 --> 01:49:06.040] in his eyes.
[01:49:06.040 --> 01:49:10.920] And he said that he could hear an owl that he's never been able to hear before, like
[01:49:10.920 --> 01:49:11.920] deep in the, in the rain.
[01:49:11.920 --> 01:49:12.920] It was, it was so beautiful.
[01:49:12.920 --> 01:49:19.400] It was like the coolest experience to be able to kind of really modify that sense of ours.
[01:49:19.400 --> 01:49:20.800] Does that count as a sighting?
[01:49:20.800 --> 01:49:21.800] If you can hear?
[01:49:21.800 --> 01:49:22.800] Oh yeah.
[01:49:22.800 --> 01:49:23.800] Yeah.
[01:49:23.800 --> 01:49:24.800] Yeah.
[01:49:24.800 --> 01:49:25.800] Oh.
[01:49:25.800 --> 01:49:26.800] In terms of your life list, right?
[01:49:26.800 --> 01:49:30.280] You get the officially, you officially have identified that bird in the wild.
[01:49:30.280 --> 01:49:32.240] There's a few rules.
[01:49:32.240 --> 01:49:35.000] You can identify it a hundred percent by noise.
[01:49:35.000 --> 01:49:36.000] That's okay.
[01:49:36.000 --> 01:49:37.740] You don't have to visually see it.
[01:49:37.740 --> 01:49:43.320] You can identify it by field markings, meaning like, you know, that you like, you see the,
[01:49:43.320 --> 01:49:46.960] like the silhouette of the bird against the sky, but you know, you can positively ID it
[01:49:46.960 --> 01:49:49.480] because it's just some aspects of it.
[01:49:49.480 --> 01:49:56.800] And it must have been released from captivity, greater than 24 hours earlier, just to keep
[01:49:56.800 --> 01:50:00.880] people from just like releasing a bird saying there, I saw it in the wild, it has to have
[01:50:00.880 --> 01:50:04.160] been in the wild for more than 24 hours.
[01:50:04.160 --> 01:50:06.680] Oh, you have to give it a head start.
[01:50:06.680 --> 01:50:07.680] Okay.
[01:50:07.680 --> 01:50:08.680] Those, that's it.
[01:50:08.680 --> 01:50:09.680] Those are the rules.
[01:50:09.680 --> 01:50:11.000] So yeah, you can identify it by sound.
[01:50:11.000 --> 01:50:12.000] Absolutely.
[01:50:12.000 --> 01:50:13.000] Very cool.
[01:50:13.000 --> 01:50:14.720] Did you see that movie, the big year?
[01:50:14.720 --> 01:50:15.720] No.
[01:50:15.720 --> 01:50:20.120] It was all about identifying as many birds as possible in one year, one calendar year.
[01:50:20.120 --> 01:50:21.120] Oh yeah.
[01:50:21.120 --> 01:50:22.120] I think I did see that.
[01:50:22.120 --> 01:50:23.200] It was a funny movie.
[01:50:23.200 --> 01:50:28.320] And the guy who like won that year, you know, and who has like the record, they made a point
[01:50:28.320 --> 01:50:34.480] of saying like he would not accept a, an audio identification is like, how do I know what
[01:50:34.480 --> 01:50:35.480] that is?
[01:50:35.480 --> 01:50:39.000] That could be somebody else making that noise in order to attract the bird, you know, he
[01:50:39.000 --> 01:50:40.000] would only do the visual.
[01:50:40.000 --> 01:50:41.960] He's always just like, he was a purist.
[01:50:41.960 --> 01:50:42.960] He would only do that.
[01:50:42.960 --> 01:50:43.960] And he still won.
[01:50:43.960 --> 01:50:47.960] That definitely also happened to me when we were on a night hike in the, in the rain forest.
[01:50:47.960 --> 01:50:49.520] And I was like, Whoa, what is that?
[01:50:49.520 --> 01:50:52.000] And one of the guides was like, you know, that's Joe.
[01:50:52.000 --> 01:50:53.000] He's making that noise.
[01:50:53.000 --> 01:50:54.000] There you go.
Skeptical Quote of the Week (1:50:58)
Scientific principles and laws do not lie on the surface of nature. They are hidden, and must be wrested from nature by an active and elaborate technique of inquiry.
– John Dewey (1859-1952), American philosopher, psychologist, and educational reformer, from Reconstruction in philosophy, 1920
[01:50:54.000 --> 01:50:55.000] All right.
[01:50:55.000 --> 01:51:03.360] Evan, give us a quote, scientific principles and laws do not lie on the surface of nature.
[01:51:03.360 --> 01:51:09.920] They are hidden and must be rested from nature by an active and elaborate technique of inquiry
[01:51:09.920 --> 01:51:13.360] written by John Dewey, his book reconstruction in philosophy.
[01:51:13.360 --> 01:51:14.360] Nice.
[01:51:14.360 --> 01:51:16.080] It's an interesting point.
[01:51:16.080 --> 01:51:17.080] Yeah.
[01:51:17.080 --> 01:51:18.080] Rested from nature.
[01:51:18.080 --> 01:51:19.080] No, absolutely.
[01:51:19.080 --> 01:51:24.560] Uh, that's why we need science and elaborate technique of inquiry.
[01:51:24.560 --> 01:51:25.560] Yeah.
[01:51:25.560 --> 01:51:26.560] Right.
[01:51:26.560 --> 01:51:27.560] I love it.
[01:51:27.560 --> 01:51:28.560] All right.
Signoff/Announcements
[01:51:28.560 --> 01:51:29.560] Well, good job.
[01:51:29.560 --> 01:51:30.560] You guys swept me this week.
[01:51:30.560 --> 01:51:31.560] Yeah.
[01:51:31.560 --> 01:51:32.560] Oh yeah.
[01:51:32.560 --> 01:51:35.560] Well, that's the only, only appropriate for Kara's trip.
[01:51:35.560 --> 01:51:41.960] I'm so glad that I would have been embarrassing otherwise.
[01:51:41.960 --> 01:51:42.960] Welcome back here.
[01:51:42.960 --> 01:51:43.960] Good to have you back.
[01:51:43.960 --> 01:51:44.960] Thanks guys.
[01:51:44.960 --> 01:51:47.120] Good to have you on the full show next week.
[01:51:47.120 --> 01:51:48.120] Yes.
[01:51:48.120 --> 01:51:49.600] Thank the rest of you for joining me this week as well.
[01:51:49.600 --> 01:51:51.400] Thank you doctor.
S: —and until next week, this is your Skeptics' Guide to the Universe.
S: Skeptics' Guide to the Universe is produced by SGU Productions, dedicated to promoting science and critical thinking. For more information, visit us at theskepticsguide.org. Send your questions to info@theskepticsguide.org. And, if you would like to support the show and all the work that we do, go to patreon.com/SkepticsGuide and consider becoming a patron and becoming part of the SGU community. Our listeners and supporters are what make SGU possible.
Today I Learned
- Fact/Description, possibly with an article reference[8]
- Fact/Description
- Fact/Description
Notes
References
- ↑ Neurologica: Global Warming – We Have the Technology
- ↑ Ars Technica: The SLS rocket finally has a believable launch date, and it's soon
- ↑ MIT News: Astronomers detect a radio “heartbeat” billions of light-years from Earth
- ↑ Space.com: Alien super-Earths may get a habitability boost from hydrogen-rich atmospheres
- ↑ Nature: A DNA origami rotary ratchet motor
- ↑ PNAS: Anti-bat ultrasound production in moths is globally and phylogenetically widespread
- ↑ UC Riverside News: Why Jupiter doesn’t have rings like Saturn
- ↑ [url_for_TIL publication: title]
Vocabulary