The Ultimate Hopes For the New Cosmos Series
StartsWithABang writes "So unless you've been living under a rock, you're aware that it's only a few short weeks until the premiere of the new Cosmos: A Space-Time Odyssey starring Neil de Grasse Tyson. Many have hopes (and fears) concerning what the series will (and won't) be, but this perspective — on what a 'successful' Cosmos series could mean for the future of humanity — is worth a read for anyone who hasn't given up on dreaming big."
Jarr, Vangelis, in those line...
If it restores America's manned spaceflight program, then it will be worth it.
Almost every cultural intersection between science and the human spirit since the early 1920s originated in man's mission to reach space and other planets. One could argue conclusively that America's peak was July 20th, 1969.
It is true that since then we have lost our way. But that, like many other things, is a fixable problem, provided America rediscovers its soul and remembers what it means to be an American.
Like there was no Big Bang, rather, some powerful beings forgot to turn off their 3D printer before going on vacation in another dimension. Next thing you know, it's 3D printers everywhere and here we are!
Neil de Grasse Tyson isn't bad. Not a Carl Sagan, but running a TV show about science is really about building a bridge between the general public and the current science and I think that Neil de Grasse Tyson can do that.
If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
Sorry Dr. Tyson, I don't watch FOX. Not for a long time. Not planning on starting now either.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
I like the idea of a remade Cosmos series. It's long overdue. However, it will be difficult for the series to be anywhere near as good as the original. The original was a mix of great writing, great music, especially the classical numbers, and the love of the subject that Carl Sagan had. Dr. Sagan wasn't just host and co-writer of the series, he was THE high priest of popular science as that time and when he spoke, he was preaching like a Bible-thumping evangelist, only without the southern drawl. While Neil de Grasse Tyson has done a lot of work to fill that role, he's not Carl Sagan. Still, I look forward to seeing this series. Since I don't usually watch TV, I'll have to get a digital TV antenna.
It's really quite a simple choice: Life, Death, or Los Angeles.
... that it'll be exactly like every other one. We watch them hoping they will show us something new, and they almost never do.
Took a look to see headlines like "How Facebook Can Be Addicting".
Enrol a few grammar Nazis in the editing process and it will be a bit less embarrassing.
Really?
Never heard of it. And a science program for the US public is likely to be all flashy pictures and no depth. Still, if it is a success, maybe it will awaken some belated interest in science and education, as opposed to Justin Bieber and Oprah.
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
Hey, thanks for the feedback. As an editor, I just made the change from addicting to addictive. Yeah, we have some kinks to work out, but hopefully we'll get through it. You are welcome to join and post directly on our articles and summaries. Sounds like you might be perfect for the role you described!
Palin 2017!
Is there only one damn astronomer? Every damn TV astronomy show has this same guy.
Why not Alex Filippenko at UC Berkeley? He's more telegenic.
Their just capturing the charm.
Addicting may be used as participle adjective so "Facebook Can Be Addicting" is in fact grammatically acceptable.
and yet I did not know this
Well, o.k., we find an equal as -or better- than Carl Sagan to present and write the new series (good luck!)... but is it possible to find an equal as -or better than- Vangelis Papathanassiou to compose music for it?
I am a Greek so the music of Vangelis Papathanassiou makes me proud as a nationalist but i don't mention him for that reason - i just think his music is THE music of... Kosmos!
... the original program that got me all excited about science.
For those skeptical about this new one, or who don't want to wait, I'd suggest two things.
The first is Space, as narrated by Sam Neill, an actor we in Australia claim as our own despite the fact he was born in Northern Ireland and has lived in New Zealand since sometime in the 1950s (it's quite a habit we Aussies have - Phar Lap for example).
The second is the excellent series of BBC shows by Brian Cox (yes, of music bands Dare and D:Ream ("Things can only get better") fame) - Wonders of Life, Wonders of the Solar System, and (yes, you guessed it), Wonders of the Universe.
"Contact" was the worst movie ever (and I've seen "Plan 9 from outer space") - the central premise of the book (the digits of PI) was totally removed from the movie. It's like the Americans buying the rights to Fawlty Towers and removing Basil Fawlty because he's too abrasive :-)
So unless you've been living under a rock
I read news to be informed, not insulted by the copy. Journalism, motherfucker, do you do it?
Slashdot is shit.
But Neil Tyson is pretty awesome too.
It could if addict was a verb, but it's not, you French twat.
About 3-4 years ago I got into the habit of watching most of the documentaries that come out of the UK.. whether it be bbc/channel4 or whatever else. ... Having grown up with PBS/discovery channel I have to say that american documentaries have started to turn to crap.
Most of the American docs these days seem to be stock footage with a voice over.. very low quality and not very interesting.. The bigger trend in american docs is a lot of 3-D animations and cheesy recreations.
In comparison the UK docs usually have a personality on-screen who is generally an expert going through the topic, sometimes interviewing people.. with less reliance on 3D animations and recreations, and in general, more respect for the viewers intelligence they end up being much more enjoyable.
NOVA in particular has tended towards lower quality in the past few years.. in stark comparison to HORIZON, which continues to be quite good.
as I've seen the hype over this COSMOS series come about I can't help but think it will be a big let down... as the budgets just don't seem to be there, along with a different view of the intelligence of the viewer.
Unfortunately, this is only a proof that current crop of producers cannot and will not come with new ideas. Using the name of a previously successful series only shows that they can't create something new that will truly motivate viewers. Moreover, modern-day producers are painfuly aware of their mediocrity, as they have effectively created a sort of culture where old ideas are milked to exhaustion and nothing new happens.
In short, they are afraid to innovate, they chose the easy way, and the results will be shaped accordingly.
Will he pronounce it properly, and not so it rhymes with "hoes doze"?
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
... Which means it will start with a 10 minute teaser/cliffhanger to prevent people from leaving during commercials. Then the commercial break. Then a 10 minute teaser, repeating most of what was said in the previous segment, adding like 2-3 minutes new stuff and a new cliffhanger. Commercial break. Then 10 minutes of repetition. Etc. etc.
There are a lot of *seemingly* interesting documentaries being made in the US, but upon inspection they are mostly made to ensure viewers STAY for the COMMERCIALS.
If you watch them without commercials, the look like they were made by retards for retards! :-/
I will probably give it a change, but I guess I will be disappointment... Currently I'm only watching documentaries made by the BBC...
They'll spend umpteen episodes preaching global warming, education spending, handwringing about recent wars, etc. They will definitely not be advocating expensive space programs.
Lower your expectations.
Who is Neil de Grasse Tyson?
He's Pluto's bounty hunter.
Of course, this famous Dutch spirit has been under attack recently as "non-profitable" - exactly the same decline in rational thought that we see much more pronounced in the US.
So instead of becoming like Star Fleet, we're becoming like the Ferringhi.
We are all spiralling to the bottom. I weep for our future.
Check out "The Brain Scoop" on Youtube. It's not about the universe, but it IS done right. http://www.youtube.com/channel...
Yes it is, you imbecile. A transitive verb, to be more precise.
I don't mean that I doubt the quality or the content but I just looked for iTunes and Amazon and didn't see it. I see a lot of music with "Cosmos" in it. I see a few TV shows like "The Universe" and a good Nova special on "The Fabric of the Cosmos" but no "Cosmos" to buy and download as the episodes air. I guess I won't watch it or I'll end up watching "by other means" if I really get motivated. Or I'll wait for it to pop up on Netflix...if it shows up there and isn't throttled to hell.
I love watching shows and content like this. Too bad I no longer love watching any sort of TV.
yeah, the big questions like, "what if I have another toke, will people think I'm a big hypocrite?" and "what if this dolphin continues to rub is dong against me"?
Or Ad Astra Per Aspera which ever way you prefer. I will miss Vangelis music in th eshow but Alan Silvestri has done really good things in the past. This should have come from PBS but at least Seth McFarlane got Fox to fork over the cash to fund the show. Maybe Fox talking heads will get their IQ increased by a few points?
movie wasn't as good as the book, it didn't have enough Pi in it!
Geeze you must hate every other movie except for that weird little thing Aronofsky made.
Plus, it was better in the book by that Polish author Sagan ripped off, where the guy gets sued for his random number tables not being sufficiently random.
And I'll never forgive Tyson shooting Pluto in the back like a damn dirty bushwhacker.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
When did "outside the USA" become "under a rock"? Did I miss a meeting?
I know that there are more pressing issues in this world of poverty and famine, but I would still like to be able to use spacebar while reading medium.com. Hit the one key that I know scrolls down a page, the one that works in every other site I've visited as long as I can remember. I want to keep reading and punching the longest key in my keyboard with a cup of coffee on my other hand.
Medium.com seems to have a lot of interesting articles, but the competition of interesting things to read is fierce. Every little bit that nags works for the competition, and every time I need to scroll down my mind pops out of the article to curse the sites behavior.
I could rant how irresponsible and idiotic it is to break common conventions how pages behave in browsers, but I'm not going to ;) I just hope the message somehow gets through to the people responsible at medium.com. The email didn't seem to have an impact.
Personally I feel the show would be more amusing is Neil's distant cousin Mike were to host it.
I bet 10 dollars we don't even get past 3 episodes before they introduce all the left wing sky is falling stories... ozone layer, global warming, global cooling, global change, just global...
... minus the "TV." Just look up. It's been in continuous production since well before you were born and barring divine intervention it's not expected to be cancelled any time soon.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
I often watch the original series for background entertainment. Sure, there is some really informative information in there such as how acolytes of people like Pythagoras, Aristotle, and Plato basically impede real science from moving forward. But then the guy spouts off on the theory of nuclear winter which turned out to be totally bogus and a fabrication of the KGB to deter NATO from placing nukes in western Europe. He just can't resist the opportunity to inject opinion knowing full well that he's A) got a captive audience by that point and B) there is no way opposing facts can be presented.
I'm sure it will be a great series -- I intend to watch every episode -- but let's not be stupid about it. It's not going to have a dramatic effect on the future of humanity.
Proverbs 21:19
Never heard of it. And a science program for the US public is likely to be all flashy pictures and no depth.
The series was first broadcast by the Public Broadcasting Service in 1980, and was the most widely watched series in the history of American public television until The Civil War (1990). As of 2009, it was still the most widely watched PBS series in the world. It won an Emmy and a Peabody Award, and has since been broadcast in more than 60 countries and seen by over 500 million people.
Cosmos: A Personal Voyage
Closed Caption; Collector's edition DVD boxed set of the complete landmark TV series by Carl Sagan; 7 NTSC DVDs - 13 one hour episodes; Fully international edition - DVD region zero, playable everywhere (requires NTSC compatible player and TV); Remastered, restored and enhanced; Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan updates; 7 subtitles languages: French, Italian, German, Spanish, Mandarin, Japanese, English for the hearing impaired); Subtitle science updates; New footage; English soundtrack in AC3 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround Sound; Bonus 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround Sound music and effects track
Cosmos $88
If its on Fox or A&E, I don't care.
whoa, whoa, Whoa, WHOA!
I want my full 100 year century, thankyouverymuch!
Or is this one of those $2 American, $5 Canadian sort of things?
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Faux is free to broadcast whatever trite they want, and we're free to take our viewing hours elsewhere for whatever reason we want.
"Coincidentally" Contact was aired on national TV in Oz last night and today there's a story about the new cosmos on Slashdot. I'm not a big reader when it comes to fiction, maybe a half dozen books a year. I enjoyed Contact in print and film. At the end of the day there can be no accounting for taste - I'm sure someone, somewhere, actually enjoyed the movie adaptation of Stephen Kings "The Stand" after having read the book.
And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
I don't live under a rock, but I also don't have cable, satellite or OTA signals where I live. I only have Netflix, YouTube and Vimeo. I'm also not SouthNorthernAmerican/USAsian/whatever-the-fuck-you-want-to-call-yourselves-apart-from-Americans.
I thought Slashdotters were ahead of their time, I guess not.
I'll just have to wait until samzenpus catches up with the rest of us.
Sorry Dr. Tyson, I don't watch FOX. Not for a long time. Not planning on starting now either.
Watch it on National Geographic.
are you suggesting... Lions In Space!
kickstarter link, please!
I'm sure PETA would complain. But that's a feature, right?
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
I *DO* live under a rock, you insensitive clod!
Obamacare hasn't saved me, yet :(
Nobody lives under a rock, but we all live on one. The 3rd one from the Sun, to be exact.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
We can expect Family Guy inside the Carl Sagan's spaceship.