Task Failed Successfully: The Science of Happy Accidents - Part 1
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(0:00) Pre-Show
(1:20) Open
(3:40) When Mr. Goodbar Went Soft
(7:35) Here, Hold This Box of Smallpox…
(11:11) The Great Pigeon Poop Epiphany
(14:42) Attenuate The Cholera Please
(19:47) cj’s recommendation: Particle Fever (2013)
(20:39) Jeff’s Recommendation: Young Frankenstein (1974)
Have you ever messed up so badly that you accidentally solved the mysteries of the universe or wiped out a deadly disease? This week the guys start their dive into the glorious world of "happy accidents" in science, proving that sometimes the best way to make a breakthrough is to trip, fall, and land directly into a Nobel Prize.
Science isn't always a straight line of meticulous calculations; more often than not, it’s a stumbling block that strikes gold. From a melted Mr. Goodbar candy bar that gave birth to a 750-pound appliance monstrosity, to 18th-century medical experiments that involved scraping lesions and rolling the dice on unsuspecting eight-year-old boys, the history of innovation can be terrifyingly random.
Sometimes cleaning pigeon poop off a giant antenna ends up proving the Big Bang theory, while a lazy lab assistant’s vacation saves countless lives - avian and otherwise.
It’s the first episode of a two-part series packed with rogue medical ethics, exploding eggs, and a celebration of the unexpected outputs that define human progress. You don't want to miss this one!
Microwave oven - Wikipedia
Pigeon waste, cosmic melodies and noise in scientific communication - Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings
Particle Fever - Wikipedia
Young Frankenstein - Wikipedia
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