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  • Documentary History Mini-series Travel

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2017
2017x1
The Confusing Borders of Lake Constance
Episode overview
02, 2017
If you're sitting on a boat in Lake Constance, are you in three countries at once? Or just in one? Does it even matter? Because strangely, it turns out there are parts of the world where .. show full overview
2017x2
The Little-Known Patterns on British Streets
Episode overview
09, 2017
I thought about saying "secret patterns" or "mysterious patterns" in the title, but that'd be a lie: they're just mostly unknown! So let's talk about tactile paving, about design, about .. show full overview
2017x3
Zero-G Experiments on Earth: The Bremen Drop Tower
Episode overview
16, 2017
In Bremen, Germany, there's a tower more than a hundred metres high: it's called the Fallturm, or the Drop Tower. If you want a cost-effective way to test an experiment in microgravity .. show full overview
2017x4
ᚼᛒ: Harald Bluetooth and Your Phone
Episode overview
23, 2017
The Jelling Stones, thousand-year-old Viking runestones, sit in the town of Jelling in Denmark. They tell the tale of Harald Bluetooth: one of the first kings of Denmark. Here's why his name is on your phone.
2017x5
The world's most frustrating work of art
Episode overview
30, 2017
Near the town of Herning in Denmark sits Elia, a giant metal dome sculpture by Ingvar Cronhammar that occasionally spouts flame. I reckon it's the world's most frustrating piece of art, and here's why.
2017x6
America's First Supermodel: Audrey Munson
Episode overview
06, 2017
One woman's face is all over New York, although you've probably never heard of her. This was written with Amor Sciendi: go check it out!
2017x7
The World Is Slowly Running Out Of Sand
Episode overview
13, 2017
I never thought of sand as a non-renewable resource, but there's only a limited supply: and to make things worse, it keeps getting washed into the sea. At Cape May, New Jersey, the US .. show full overview
2017x8
Inside YouTube's Mixed Reality VR Lab
Episode overview
16, 2017
At YouTube Space New York, there's the Mixed Reality lab: a virtual reality setup using an HTC Vive, a third controller, and some fancy compositing equipment. It's brilliant, and I got to visit and look behind the scenes.
2017x9
The Beer Pipeline of Bruges
Episode overview
20, 2017
In Belgium, there's an underground beer pipeline. Yes, it's inherently difficult to film something that's underground, but I headed over to Bruges to investigate anyway.
2017x10
One Town, Four Elements: Ytterby
Episode overview
27, 2017
Yttrium, terbium, erbium and ytterbium were all named after one small town on the Stockholm archipelago. But it could have been different, and there could have been many other names. .. show full overview
2017x11
You Can Hear The Difference Between Hot and Cold Water
Episode overview
06, 2017
Hot and cold water sound different when you pour them. When Steve pitched this to me, I didn't believe it, and then he sent me a couple of sound files, at which point I knew this was going to be the first of the guest videos!
2017x12
The Disaster That Changed Engineering: The Hyatt Regency Collapse
Episode overview
13, 2017
The Hyatt Regency Hotel collapse was a disaster that changed engineering: it's taught in colleges and universities as a way to make it clear: you check and double-check everything. .. show full overview
2017x13
The Foil That Went To The Moon And Back
Episode overview
20, 2017
Amy brings with her one of the greatest props I've ever seen: an actual piece of Kapton foil from Apollo 11. This tiny little sliver of material went around the moon, and helped keep .. show full overview
2017x14
Why Song Translations Usually Suck
Episode overview
27, 2017
It's been a long time since I did a linguistics video, but today Alex has stepped in and done a brilliant job. Song translations usually suck: and it's because you either have to lose .. show full overview
2017x15
Why This “Zero Calorie Sweetener” Isn’t Zero Calories
Episode overview
03, 2017
Splenda is a "zero-calorie sweetener", at least in the US. Or at least, that's what it says on the packet. With the help of some Benedict's Solution, and his chemistry teacher, Alex is going to do some food science.
2017x16
We hit a drone with lightning
Episode overview
10, 2017
At the University of Manchester's High Voltage Laboratory, we see what happens when a DJI Phantom 3 drone gets hit with an electrical impulse of 1.4MV - basically, a lightning strike. Actually, two Phantom 3 drones. We had a backup.
2017x17
Voyager 1's Getting Closer to Earth Right Now
Episode overview
17, 2017
The Voyager 1 space probe is the furthest man-made object from Earth, and the fastest. But right now, it's moving towards us. Relatively speaking. At Mission Control for the Deep Space .. show full overview
2017x18
How To Not Break A Mars Rover
Episode overview
24, 2017
The Mars Yard, at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, is one of the closest simulations of Mars that we've got. Admittedly, there's a bit more atmosphere and gravity, but it's the only way .. show full overview
2017x19
Why sci-fi alien planets all look the same
Episode overview
01, 2017
There's a reason that a lot of planets in American science fiction look the same: they're all filmed in the same places. But why those particular locations? It's about money, about union .. show full overview
2017x20
How The Arecibo Telescope Could Help Save The World
Episode overview
08, 2017
The radio telescope at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico can do something that most radio telescopes can't: it can transmit. And that's useful for something other than sending messages to the stars: it might just help save the world one day.
2017x21
Why The YouTube Algorithm Will Always Be A Mystery
Episode overview
15, 2017
The mysterious YouTube algorithm. It's confused people for years, and will continue to do so. So why isn't YouTube more transparent? It used to be that they wouldn't tell anyone how it .. show full overview
2017x22
The world's most powerful tidal current
Episode overview
22, 2017
Near Bodø in Norway, there's the strongest tidal current in the world: Saltstraumen Maelstrom, a constantly-changing rush of whirlpools, boils and vortices. It might not be quite the .. show full overview
2017x23
The poison garden of Alnwick
Episode overview
29, 2017
Inside the beautiful Alnwick Garden, behind a locked gate, there's the Poison Garden: it contains only poisonous plants. Trevor Jones, head gardener, was kind enough to give a guided tour!
2017x24
Blocking People in Real Life: Tom Scott at An Evening of Unnecessary Detail
Episode overview
05, 2017
I'm not saying this would be a good idea, and it's definitely not a prediction of the future. It's just a story. I think. An Evening of Unnecessary Detail runs once a month from .. show full overview
2017x25
The Museum of Failure
Episode overview
12, 2017
In Helsingborg, Sweden, the Museum of Failure has just opened. It's just one room, but inside, curator Samuel West has assembled some of the world's greatest commercial disasters - and .. show full overview
2017x26
The Runways of Fire That Let WW2 Planes Land In Fog: FIDO
Episode overview
19, 2017
Landing on a runway surrounded by fire might not sound like a good idea, but it's better than trying to land without modern instruments in thick fog. This was FIDO: "Fog, Intensive, .. show full overview
2017x27
An elevator that actually goes sideways
Episode overview
26, 2017
I've filmed a paternoster lift; I've filmed the strange Genoa elevator that sort-of goes sideways. So when I got an email from Thyssenkrupp, an elevator company, saying "come and see our .. show full overview
2017x28
Why The Government Shouldn't Break WhatsApp
Episode overview
03, 2017
Encryption backdoors - breaking WhatsApp and iMessage's security to let the government stop Bad Things - sounds like a reasonable idea. Here's why it isn't.
2017x29
Why old screens make a ʰᶦᵍʰ ᵖᶦᵗᶜʰᵉᵈ noise
Episode overview
10, 2017
Last week I made a video surrounded by old-school CRT monitors and televisions - cathode ray tubes. And I completely forgot to remove the high pitched whine they produce. Here's why: why they make that noise, and why I didn't notice it.
2017x30
I can't show you how pink this pink is.
Episode overview
18, 2017
I can show a brighter pink. I can show a more saturated pink. But I can't show you this pink. Not quite. More about Stuart Semple and his pigments: https://www.culturehustle.com/ [that's .. show full overview
2017x31
Connectome Scanning: Looking at the Brain's Wiring
Episode overview
24, 2017
There's an MRI scanner in Cardiff that can look at how the brain's wired up: your connectome. It's nowhere close to science fiction singularity brain-uploading, but it might well be part .. show full overview
2017x32
FizzBuzz: One Simple Interview Question
Episode overview
31, 2017
There are a lot of opinions on how to hire coders, and most of them are terrible. The opinions, that is, not the coders. But a basic filter test to make sure someone can do what they say .. show full overview
2017x33
What counts as a mountain?
Episode overview
14, 2017
I'm at the top of Mount Evans, more than 14,000 feet - 4.3km - above sea level. This is definitely a mountain: but why doesn't the smaller summit next to it also count? Let's talk about prominence. (Just not for too long, I'm getting low on oxygen.)
2017x34
Colorado has a giant freezer filled with polar ice
Episode overview
23, 2017
Welcome to the US National Ice Core Laboratory in Denver, Colorado, where there's a giant freezer filled with 20km of ice cores from Greenland and the Antarctic. Here's why. Thanks to .. show full overview
2017x35
The US government will sell you freeze-dried urine
Episode overview
28, 2017
The National Institute of Standards and Technology, NIST, sells Standard Reference Materials, or SRMs for short. They're analysed, quantified, and certified substances: everything from .. show full overview
2017x36
A nuclear waste dump you can walk on
Episode overview
04, 2017
In Weldon Spring, Missouri, there is a strange, grey, windblasted seven-storey pile of rocks. It's the Weldon Spring Site: a nuclear and toxic waste dump on the site of an old uranium .. show full overview
2017x37
How Computers Compress Text: Huffman Coding and Huffman Trees
Episode overview
11, 2017
Computers store text (or, at least, English text) as eight bits per character. There are plenty of more efficient ways that could work: so why don't we use them? And how can we fit more .. show full overview
2017x38
The "rotary jail" had a slight problem
Episode overview
18, 2017
In Crawfordsville, Indiana, there's a rotary jail: an invention that, with hindsight, should probably never have been built. But it was, here and in other towns across the United States. .. show full overview
2017x39
The centuries-old debt that's still paying interest
Episode overview
25, 2017
In the archives of Yale University, there's a 367-year-old bond from the water authority of Lekdijk Bovendams, in the Netherlands. And it's still paying interest.
2017x40
Reaction ferries are really clever
Episode overview
02, 2017
On the river Rhine in Switzerland, there are reaction ferries: boats with no engine, no paddles, no onboard motive power at all. Here's how they work -- and a question about what other simple ideas are out there.
2017x41
Why California's musical road sounds terrible
Episode overview
16, 2017
In Lancaster, California, there's a musical road. When you drive over it, it plays the William Tell Overture. Unfortunately, it's out of tune. Here's why.
2017x42
What Is Sea Level, Anyway?
Episode overview
23, 2017
In Calipatria, California, the town is below sea level -- but their flag pole isn't. But what does "sea level" mean? Is it just theory, or is there more behind it?
2017x43
The Story of Salvation Mountain
Episode overview
30, 2017
Near Slab City, California, a man painted a hill. It was outsider art: Leonard Knight had no training and no great masters to imitate. But somehow, he created something that resonates .. show full overview
2017x44
The Lava Lamps That Help Keep The Internet Secure
Episode overview
06, 2017
At the headquarters of Cloudflare, in San Francisco, there's a wall of lava lamps: the Entropy Wall. They're used to generate random numbers and keep a good bit of the internet secure: .. show full overview
2017x45
Is it dangerous to talk to a camera while driving?
Episode overview
13, 2017
I'm visiting the University of Iowa's National Advanced Driving Simulator, to answer a question: how unsafe is it for me to vlog while driving? Is vlogging while driving dangerous? The team at the simulator are the experts to ask.
2017x46
The German town that's literally cracking apart
Episode overview
20, 2017
The town of Staufen, in the south-west of Germany, has a problem: a drilling operation in 2007 that went very wrong. Half a metre of movement might not sound like much, but in this town, that's enough for the buildings to crack and fall apart.
2017x47
Hold music used to sound better. Here's why.
Episode overview
27, 2017
It's not your imagination; hold music on phones really did sound better in the old days. Here's why, as we talk about old telephone exchanges and audio compression.
2017x48
Batman's village of fools
Episode overview
04, 2017
There's a link from a 13th century legend, to a 16th century insult book, to a 19th century writer, to a 20th century comic book hero. And it starts in a small village near Nottingham, .. show full overview
2017x49
This is how zero-g flights actually work
Episode overview
11, 2017
The European Space Agency offered me a seat on their zero-g plane: it's an Airbus A310 that flies parabolic maneuvers, pulling up into the sky and then arcing back down, giving its .. show full overview
2017x50
The null hypothesis
Episode overview
18, 2017
While I was trying to read a script to a camera in zero-g, the student researchers behind me were trying to prove their own ideas -- or rather, to disprove their "null hypothesis". Let's .. show full overview
2017x51
This Video Is 2D And 3D Simultaneously: the Pulfrich Effect
Episode overview
26, 2017
Hold on tight, because with a stabilised camera shot and a pair of sunglasses, you're about to see a video that works in both 2D and 3D at the same time. The technique's called the Pulfrich Effect, and this is how it works.