Hoping The Universe Ends Soon
I’m watching the second episode of the History Channel series The Universe and am getting aggravated. I seriously hope that the series improved over time. The narrator’s voice is grating on me and the quality of science displayed is poor. The writers seem to have made their decisions based on dramatic impact rather than facts.
The second episode, about Mars, is better than the first episode, about the Sun. I had to roll my eyes when the narrator introduced the Sun as «the largest star in our solar system,» only later amending the line by saying, «not only is it the largest star in the solar system, it is the only star in the solar system.» Yeah, thanks. But I almost stopped it and went to read a book when he described photons as «glowing particles.» So the photons are emitting photons? Someone get me some pictures of those.
The description of fusion at the heart of the Sun and the subsequent dynamics of electron/photon exchange beneath the surface was nevertheless enlightening, and I enjoyed the portrayal of the solar winds, even if the doom and gloom predictions of solar radiation-fueled disaster (probably coming in 2012) were a bit hysterical.
The Mars episode annoyed me most with a trivial detail: in comparing the information collected by the Viking Orbiter with that collected by the Viking Lander, the show tells us that the media was all over the so-called «face on Mars» while the Viking Lander found nothing but boring, dry rocks and «failed to make headlines.» I remember the headlines, and what I think may have been the first color photo I ever saw on the cover of a newspaper, showing the pictures sent back by the lander. Landing a device on Mars that could send back pictures was big news, and I don’t recall the «face on Mars» ever making the news. I suppose I could have simply missed it, but my recollection was great fanfare and press attention despite the disappointment in some circles to have found a dry, rocky landscape in those first pictures back from Mars. The successful touchdown of the Viking Lander certainly did not fail to make headlines.
The series is now in its third season and has received critical acclaim. It’s been recommended to me by people whose opinion I respect, so I’m guessing it has to have moved up in quality. I cannot imagine anyone getting excited about what I’ve seen so far. If nothing else, replacing the narrator with someone who doesn’t try to make every sentence sound like a movie trailer («in a world where…») would go a long way toward dignifying the material.