Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - GGACP Classic: Neil deGrasse Tyson
Episode Date: April 20, 2023GGACP celebrates Earth Day (April 22) by revisiting this 2020 interview with astrophysicist, "Cosmos" host and "Twilight Zone" superfan Neil deGrasse Tyson. In this episode, Neil schools Gilbert and F...rank on the subjects of time travel, zombie uprisings, the "logic" of werewolf movies and the plausibility of "Jurassic Park." Also, Sandra Bullock defies gravity, Perry Mason meets Godzilla, Raquel Welch rocks a loincloth and Rod Serling adapts "Planet of the Apes." PLUS: "The Blob"! Raymond J. Johnson Jr! Superman gets his freak on! Saluting Gene Roddenberry! And Neil and Gilbert compete on "The $100,000 Pyramid"! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Your teen requested a ride, but this time, not from you.
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Add your teen to your Uber account today. hi this is gilbert godfrey and this is gilbert godfrey's amazing colossal podcast This is Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre.
Our guest this week is a cosmologist, science communicator, lecturer, planetary scientist, best-selling author, TV, radio, and podcast host.
on podcast host, the only Harvard-educated astrophysicist we've ever had on this show,
unless you want to count Larry Storch.
Since 1996, he's been the director of the Hayden Planetarium at the Rose Center for Earth and Space, and in 1997, he founded the Department of Astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History right here in New York City. He's also the author or
co-author of 16 books and the recipient of 20 honorary doctorates, and in 2007, Time Magazine named him one of the 100
most influential people in the world.
We're also fairly certain that he's our only guess to have an asteroid named after him.
to have an asteroid named after him.
You've seen him on the big screen in features like Ice Age Collision Course and Batman vs.
Superman, Dawn of Justice, as well as dozens of TV programs. The Daily Show, The Simpsons, The Big Bang Theory, Jeopardy, Family Guy, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Real Time with Bill Maher,
and the late show with Stephen Colbert, just to name a few.
He's served as the host of the PBS series Nova and Nova Science Now,
as well as the popular podcast and radio show StarTalk.
And he's the host of an Emmy-winning television series,
Cosmos, Possible Worlds, and Cosmos, A Space-Time Odyssey.
He's also the recipient of NASA's Distinguished Public Service Medal.
of NASA's Distinguished Public Service Medal.
And in 2015, the U.S. National Academy of Science awarded him the Public Welfare Medal for his extraordinary role
in exciting the public about the wonders of science.
Frank and I are excited to welcome to the show
my co-star from the film
The Last Sharknado.
Which I think is...
Wait, Gilbert, I thought, you know,
it was one of my finest performances
and the Academy just overlooked it, I think.
They just...
I got overlooked that year and I'm very disappointed.
They're so political.
Just, I...
But I had a reason for agreeing to the part.
I don't know about your situation, but I was invited to portray Merlin.
This is Sharknado 6, in case you didn't know that there were five others, by the way.
In case you missed the others, this was Sharknado 6, the last Sharknado.
And the Sharknados opened a portal through the space-time continuum.
And they – wait, I'm not even done yet.
And their DNA got merged with dragon DNA.
So there were shark dragons in this medieval time that the movie takes place.
And I play Merlin, and I'm'm doing actual science but people think it's
magic now now that's legit so that's an authentic reason that's my excuse for being in that movie
now scientifically yeah how accurate was sharknado so i i i think so here it is. Here it is.
Mark Twain famously wrote, first get your facts straight, then distort them at your leisure.
Okay.
So, you know, you have tornadoes, you know, you have water spouts.
Occasionally fish get caught up in the tornado.
So you throw in some sharks.
Why not? You know you can have warps in the space-time continuum.
You know you have DNA
recombinant DNA.
There's gene editing and gene
splicing, but this happened sort of naturally
as it went through. So I'm okay
with that. Gilbert, you know what
our listeners are thinking right now? Yes.
You haven't introduced the guest.
Oh.
Well, we had to get Sharknado.
Sorry, I interrupted you.
Please continue.
Okay.
Frank and I are excited.
No, we did that part.
Well, okay.
We couldn't let Sharknado go by uncommented upon.
Neil deGrasse Tyson.
There he is.
All right.
So, Gilbert, I was delighted to meet you on the set of the $100,000 Pyramid.
Actually, we met before.
We did.
We did.
We met once more with J.B.
Smough had a show.
Yes.
And we were both guests on his show.
And along with a person who had the largest hands that I ever shook.
And I said, who is this person?
And it was Jerry Cooney, the boxer.
Oh, yes.
The 1970s.
The great white hype.
Yeah, exactly.
He had this big, big meat hook fists.
And so, and then, but he was a charming,
polite fellow.
And so I was, I was delighted.
It's a sports interview show.
I don't know why they had Gilbert on it,
but.
I don't either.
Stop that.
Gilbert is a world-class highlight player.
Neil,
how did he do on Pyramid?
It was,
I don't think it aired yet, so don't give too much away. Okay, so...
I'll give...
Okay, so...
See, it's already bad.
Yeah, no, no.
He did okay.
There was just one moment it was like, what?
You know how a dog hears a high-pitched whistle?
Yeah.
So Gilbert gave an answer, and we all just tipped our head.
And it wasn't even from his comedic trove.
He was being serious, and it was like, what the fuck did you just say?
And so...
I don't even know the woman who was partnered with you, Gilbert, and I have a great swell of pity for her.
No, no.
Gilbert did better than you think after hearing that first answer.
Okay.
Yeah.
Oh, I think it was like it was the first of things.
Yeah, yeah, the first,
the numbered list of numbers or something, right?
Yeah, like it was the first.
No, no, but the first in numbers, right?
And you said A. And it was like, everybody, the whole show stopped.
The cameraman said,
everybody had to look from behind the camera.
The lighting guy looked.
So, no, but then you redeemed yourself.
You did.
You did.
You did well.
You did better, I should say.
Did you make it into the final round, Gilbert, in the circle?
Oh, yeah.
The big money?
Didn't I?
Yeah.
I don't even know.
See, for example.
See what I'm saying?
I must see this.
I'm just glad that Neil figured out that Sharknado is accurate scientifically.
So, by the way, one of the other films you mentioned I I had a cameo. Yeah. Was ice age.
Yes.
And,
but that was ice age five.
Again,
you probably didn't know there were four other ice ages,
ice age five.
And I read the reviews and it was like,
the time has come where the franchise needs to go extinct.
Not just the animals in the movie, but the whole franchise. the franchise needs to go extinct.
Not just the animals in the movie,
but the whole franchise.
Because all those animals didn't make it past the Ice Age.
There's the sloth and the mastodon.
So that's part of the thing.
And they're all just trying to stay alive.
But there was an asteroid coming
that was going to take them out.
I see.
And my character
helped them figure out how to deflect the asteroid we had leguizamo here a couple of weeks ago
oh yeah yeah i see yeah yeah well there's like all kinds of people yes i just like the way
said we're co-stars.
So these are just little things.
If an artist reaches for a scientist, I can't say no to that.
I have to sort of – and then they usually let me sort of edit the script a little just to boost the science value,
but still retaining the comedic or the playful tone of it.
So they
trust me to do that. And it's worked out really well. How did you wind up in the Batman Superman
picture? Was Zack Snyder a fan? Okay. So that one, don't get me started on that movie.
Yeah. Okay. Maybe you can give a short answer. Okay. I'll give a short answer. So I was one of
the people interviewed in a CNN style debate. I remember.
Of what should we trust Superman?
Okay.
And so just on the premise,
just,
just think this through Batman versus Superman.
That's the title of a movie.
Superman could wipe his ass with Batman.
So what Batman is human.
Okay.
Superman is a super powerful alien.
So why is this even a contest it's a contest because
who who does batman report to remember uh commissioner gordon commissioner gordon and
commissioner gordon is appointed by the mayor so there is a thread of accountability of batman to
the will of the people superman came from space. So if Superman decides to do something,
who's going to tell him not to? And suppose his mission statement is not aligned with that of
the United States, and he still wants to do it. Do we tell him no? Who does Superman report to?
And so that debate was about what would happen if superman starts acting in
the service of the interest of other countries and not ours he would lose public support and if you
lose public support even if you have big muscles you're not helping anybody and you've lost one of
your prime directives for coming here to begin with and so that was a real interesting dynamics
and most of that was taken out of the movie. And it was just a lot of big fights.
I always wondered with shows like the Justice League, where it's Superman and Batman and whoever.
Green Lantern.
Yes.
DC Comics people, the DC Universe.
And I always thought, well, if you got Superman, why do you need a little guy?
What do you need Green Lantern for?
Green Lantern has to get in a car in order to get somewhere.
Superman, right?
That's kind of lame when you think about it.
Yeah.
He could do everything.
So if we're going to take superhero sides, so I lean to the Marvel Universe for a simple reason.
Okay?
So the Marvel superheroes, they're in all the movies, right?
Here's why I lean that way, because almost every superhero in the Marvel series was once a scientist, where they got their superheroes through a scientific experiment.
Interesting.
Yes. Count them experiment. Interesting. Yes.
Count them up.
Count them up.
From the Hulk to Spider-Man.
Bruce Banner's a scientist, right?
To Bruce Banner.
All these people.
Even Thor's a physician.
Yeah, but he's an alien.
Right.
That's right.
He's a god, so he's.
Yeah, so he's actually the odd man out of the rest of them,
including the medical guy, Dr. Strange.
Oh, yeah.
They all have scientific engineering chops.
Sure.
And so for me, when you tell their backstory, I like that,
and I think it's a nice way to normalize interest in science.
Your superhero was a scientist.
I want to be a scientist, too.
Very good.
Well, it's like the problem I had with Spider-Man, I think in the comic books, he has the power to climb walls.
But the shooting the web is something that he invented, I think.
Wait, isn't that, but all spiders do that.
So what do you mean, why would he have to invent that?
No, they, that's what I can't understand.
Didn't, in the comic books, he had to, like, he couldn't shoot the web.
No, he shoots them depending on the version, I think.
He either shoots them from his actual body or they're shot out of a web
shooter that Peter Parker manufactures. See, that's what I know.
But I think there are two versions. That's your big problem with a man who scales the
sides of buildings on spiderwebs? That's your issue? That's the part that made no sense.
That's the problem.
By the way, Neil, that speaks to one of your bugaboos,
which is people who become something
when they're bitten by that thing.
I don't have a problem.
You know, okay.
Like vampires, like werewolves.
Oh, no, so my issue.
Here's my issue with the vampires, okay?
You like that beginning sentence?
Yeah, I do. Okay.
Here's my issue with vampires.
Why can't
I bite a
vampire and turn them back into human?
Because it doesn't
work that way.
You're supposed to play along with the argument.
I got another one.
Werewolves.
You ready?
Yes.
Why is it that they only turn into a werewolf when they see the full moon?
Okay.
So the full moon is like behind a cloud and then the cloud moves away and then they see it and then they become the full moon was full the whole night.
The moon was full when they exited their home.
Well, what gets me about werewolf movies is that the moon is full every night.
Every night you got a full moon.
Because I always thought when like Cheney was complaining and saying, oh, I turn into a wolf when the moon is full.
And they should have said, well, what's that, three or four times a year?
Yeah, it's not all the time.
But if you made a werewolf movie and the moon wasn't full every night, it's not much of a movie.
Yeah, they have nights where it's just home watching.
Watching Netflix, you know.
Like nights where it's just home watching.
Watching Netflix, you know.
Here's something.
Getting back to prehistoric life.
When can I finally visit Jurassic Park?
Jurassic Park.
Do you really?
Okay.
You can't wait to do this.
You can't.
You got to do this. You can't, you gotta do this. Uh, we,
I would say within 50 years,
we would have the ability to totally make Jurassic park, but to quote,
to quote Jeff Goldblum, if we can do it, does that mean we should?
Oh, just cause you can make dinosaurs.
Should you make dinosaurs?
And by the way, you want to talk about where you get some good DNA?
We have really excellent mammoth DNA.
Because mammoths that got stuck in ice crevasses in glaciers during the Ice Age,
and those glaciers are now melting.
We have fresh mammoth flesh coming out.
And you have good dna we can get some elephant dna put the mammoth dna on it and make a whole
woolly mammoth the problem is that would be diabolical because you can't take a mammoth
that's all evolved for the ice age and bring them in just in time for global warming.
That's not right.
That ain't right.
It's a cruel joke.
Yeah, that ain't right.
Are you saying 50 years from now we will have the science to extract DNA
and produce a species, an extinct species from that DNA?
Oh, easily.
Well, certainly an extinct species.
Getting good dinosaur DNA, that's a little harder right and but if we know what that dna was you sequence other reptiles and things
and you extrapolate we might be able to not have to synthesize it from another animal but just
create it raw in the laboratory i mean is much different, really, from lab-grown
meat? If you can lab
grow biology,
then you don't need the original biology to make it happen.
But to quote Jeff
Goldblum,
this lack of humility
in the face of nature,
it staggers
me.
Except I think we are nature as well. There are people that say-
Hey, don't criticize me. No, no. Here's what I'm saying. Here's my point. And I think maybe
you'll agree. I don't know where you grew up. Yeah. Where'd you grow up, Gilbert?
I grew up in Brooklyn. Brooklyn. Okay. So you're a city guy. So watch. So there are people that say,
oh, I go to the country and it's so quiet and peaceful.
And I went to the country, and there are crickets, there are frogs.
It's like it's a noisy cacophony overnight.
And in the city, I hear cars, and I hear people, and I hear people arguing outside the bar.
That's my own species, and I'm perfectly happy with that.
Those are my city relaxing noises.
That's how I know I'm home. And so, so that's my, that's my ecosystem where I feel quite comfortable for it.
Interesting. And please tell me, please tell me that dinosaurs did not have feathers.
They might have. I mean, feathers are transitional. So feathers, by the way, in evolution,
you can have a feature that wasn't necessarily formed for the later purposes for which it was
used. So dinosaurs are reptilian and they're cold-blooded, okay? So if you're cold-blooded,
you need some way to regulate your temperature because it's not happening internal to you.
So what happens if it gets hot outside?
You have to sort of dissipate your heat.
Feathers are ideal ways to insulate you, okay, from the cold.
That's why you plug down out of Goose and make jackets out of it.
I don't know if they still do.
Probably have artificial ingredients that do that now. But feathers, as you know, have extraordinary
insulating properties. So I misspoke a moment ago. The feathers would insulate them for when
it gets cold. And then you get enough of that. You say, hey, if I jump off a cliff and I wiggle
my arms, I actually can glide a little bit. And that's really
good for my survival. And then a next generation and the next generation, the feathers get developed
and then they're great for flying. Gilbert, why do you have, what do you have against dinosaurs
with feathers? I just, I want them to look like they did in the King Kong movies and Jurassic
Park. Right. Okay. And 1 million B.C.
Oh, also.
Was that the Raquel Welch movie? Yes, indeed.
Raquel Welch.
Very good.
In a bikini loincloth.
Very good.
Now, we also hit upon radiation.
There's a lot of radiation in the world. So our, and what I know about radiation is it makes insects gigantic.
Exactly.
We'll get you to teach the next biology class.
And on people, it makes them either giant or tiny.
This podcast was named after one of those characters.
Amazing colossal man.
That's right.
Colossal.
So radiation, when you say radiation, radiation is the general term for all of light.
But I think the way you're using the term, you're referring to the kind that would damage your DNA or create disturbances in the chain. So it turns
out that almost every radiation damage to your DNA is bad and will kill the host. So most mutations
in the DNA, you can get one from like a cosmic ray hit, but most of it is just a copying error, error from one generation of the DNA to
the next. And there you get the randomization of features in a next generation. And some of
those features help it survive to the next change in the environment or the next stress
to their, to their ecosystem. And so, so yeah. No, I, I read somewhere that if insects were to grow gigantic, they would need to develop lungs.
Yeah, so here's the problem.
Insects, so there are two problems with that.
One, insects have tiny, skinny, spindly legs.
And if you have a big insect, the mass and the weight of the insect will grow faster
than the strength of their legs could accommodate it. This is why hippopotami have short stubby
legs. They don't have thin spindly legs. So you can't just scale things up and have big versions of little things. It doesn't work that way. The physics prohibits it.
So heavy animals have thick stubby legs. And so you can't make a big gigantic ant
with skinny little legs. So that's the first point. Now, many insects breathe through their skin.
Okay. And that's why you ever see those, those gigantic, um, from prehistoric times,
those gigantic dragonflies. You ever seen that? Yes. Yeah. Very cool. Back then there was more
oxygen in Earth's atmosphere than today. So they could breathe that in through their, their outer,
I say skin, but their outer layers. So if you want a big insect to have the same kind of metabolism it had before,
it would need some other way to bring in the oxygen because the skin will be insufficient to accommodate this.
Unless you put it in a pure oxygen environment.
Did you ever see a movie called Them, Neil?
Yeah, with the ants.
Oh, yeah.
James Whitmore.
Yeah.
Oh, by the way, something about in that movie, I just want to highlight this.
Yeah.
In that movie, I just want to highlight this.
Yeah.
Though she was the daughter of a scientist,
one of the lead scientists there was female.
She was an entomologist.
Which was progressive for the time.
That's what I'm saying.
Yeah.
It's progressive for the time. We're not going to have them or H.G. Wells' Food of the Gods,
no giant mosquitoes anytime soon.
It's not happening.
There was that other movie i think was
it the something the mantis or something okay i don't know that one yeah and it was a giant
prehistoric because you know in prehistoric time they had enormous
so here's the thing here's the thing with with godzilla okay yeah godzilla was sort of radiation
infused thing okay yeah and so just i don't know if the original movie explicitly connected it to
the a-bomb but it was just definitely radiation and then you have all these radiated animals
showing up in japan and then it's a reminder that, of course, they experienced the
radiation of atomic weapons. So to have that folded into their legends and in their storytelling
should not be surprising. So just something to keep in mind there about how your experience as
a country can influence your storytelling.
I think a lot of the politics, Gilbert, isn't this true?
Some of the politics about the bombing in Nagasaki and Hiroshima
was sanitized from the Godzilla American version, the American release.
Okay, I don't remember seeing more than one release.
It sounds like you were quite the aficionado here.
You see all versions.
I think the Raymond Burr, they took some of that out when they inserted Raymond Burr into the movie.
Oh, I did see that.
That was embarrassing.
It was clearly spliced in to get an American.
Yes, yes.
Raymond Burr is like looking out of his hotel window going, Godzilla is attacking the Empire State Building.
Oh, no. But they're in wherever. In Tokyo.
So so here's my if I were to put my vote for the best sort of attacking alien in these movies, it's the 1968 movie The Blob with Steve McQueen, one of his first movies.
Sure.
So what I liked about The Blob, first it was an alien,
and it had no correspondence to any life form anyone has ever seen.
It was not an actor in a costume.
It was not some lizard actor, right, in a lizard suit.
It had no vertebrae.
It had no arms, legs, eyes, nose, mouth. And it just, and it could move
through the grills of grace and go and ooze under the doors that you close. It was terrifying.
And it, and by the way, they need a sequel. You know why? Because they found out that after the
blob caused a fire and the winter put out the fire with the fire extinguisher,
which was cold,
the blob started shrinking.
And they said, wait a minute,
cold temperature reduces the size of this thing.
So they figured this out late in the movie.
And then they said, okay,
how are we going to get rid of this?
They got a military helicopter,
dragged the thing into the Arctic
and dropped it in the Arctic.
And the movie says, the end, question mark.
So this is ideal.
So with global warming, we lose the Arctic and then we reactivate the blob.
Oh, God.
Yes.
The blob is coming back.
This sounds like a movie that two of us can co-star.
So if there are any producers out there, make that movie
and then make me your science advisor. Okay. I'm all in. You got me thinking about those Marvel
comics because of the creativity of all those different origins. Now the fantastic for it was
cosmic rays with the Hulk. It was gamma rays with Spider-Man. It was a radioactive spider,
but once again, a lot of big reliance on radiation. Yes. Yes. You know,
radiation is invisible and it's scary and you don't know what effect it'll have. And it's what
you don't predict. And, but like I said, essentially every case it will kill you. So, but we'll, we'll,
we'll slip him a, give him a hall pass on that one. Cause then you wouldn't have the superhero.
Now, but we will be attacked by the undead, won't we, Edwin?
I was once asked officially, you know, how do I think the world will end?
You know, what kind of apocalypse?
And I said, zombies, of course.
Next question.
Now, what would stop a zombie apocalypse scientifically what would uh
uh why okay so they're already yeah i mean you have to cut off their heads you know that's kind
of it i mean that's obvious gilbert don't ask a stupid question. You need swords, not guns, because all the factories are down because you can't make new bullets.
So you need a fully renewable weapon such as a sword.
And that means you have to get close enough to them.
But I'd invent like a sword extender so that I could cut off their head from a distance.
And by the way, other than the zombies in what's the Z movie?
World War Z.
Yeah, I didn't see World War Z, but all other zombie movies, they don't move very fast.
No.
Okay, they're kind of slow.
Although, the early ones didn't move fast.
They were really slow.
And then in later movies, they had like running zombies.
Yeah, no, see, that's wrong.
You can't have running zombies.
No, I agree.
They're dead, for goodness sake.
I agree. And now dead, for goodness sake. They're dead.
Zombie sprinters.
Although, scientifically...
Scientifically, in Michael Jackson's
thriller video, the zombies could also
dance. That was a good feature.
Dancing zombies. That was great.
What do you like to say,
Neil? You can't kill something
that's already dead? What's that? You said You can't kill something that's already dead?
What's that?
You said you can't kill something that's already dead.
We can't kill it in the usual way.
But if you cut off its head, it's done.
Yeah.
It's done.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast after this.
Did you ever see White Zombie, by the way, with Lugosi?
Oh, great movie.
No.
Oh, that's a good one.
From the 30s.
Okay, so they were racist back then, too? What?
Did you see the skit?
Well, who was it?
I forgot who did this skit, where the zombies were afraid of the black people in their backyard.
And so they realized that the zombies were racist.
And so all the black
people could hang out and have picnics and everything and the zombies kept avoiding them
to go chew on the necks of the white funny skit it might have been key and peel but it was that's
a funny concept now you hated the movie armageddon i I heard. No, no, no. I thought it was an entertaining movie,
but it violated more laws of physics per minute
than any other movie ever made.
So just, it was quite the violation.
So that's all.
Well, the only thing that i understood that just made no sense
to me they had a plant an explosive into the meteor yes they said and they explained you
gotta get it was a comet it was a comet yeah you gotta get it inside the comet yeah that's correct
and not on the and and the way he simplifies it, now, if you hold a firecracker in your fist, it'll blow your hand off.
But if you hold it just on the palm of your hand, then it's fine.
I'm thinking, no, that would blow your hand off, wouldn't it?
Okay.
So it depends on how big the firecracker is yeah but the the problem is in the vacuum of space most bombs that rely on shock waves through the air will have very little
effect on the object so you have it has to be in physical contact with the object around all sides
deep in the middle so you can blow it into pieces.
So that's why you can't—it's not like hand grenades are effective even if they're at a distance.
Regular bombs are not.
The destruction that bombs create are because of an expanding shockwave of air.
In space, there is no air.
Bombs don't work.
I think it's fascinating, too, that you can enjoy these films.
You managed to suspend disbelief with some of these films.
Oh, yeah, I could do that.
No, no, I think my commentary about films, I think, is so misunderstood.
I mean, my intent, I think, is unappreciated.
I'm trying to enhance your movie-going experience.
Yeah, you're a fan, first and foremost.
Not to disrupt it, right. I want to're a fan first and foremost, not to disrupt it.
Right.
Right.
And I want to highlight a few things like in the movie gravity,
Sandra,
which shouldn't have been called gravity because most of the movie is in
zero G,
but Sandra Bullock is there in the caps and it's in zero G and her bangs
always knew which direction gravity was.
Okay.
Now,
now,
now,
now my point is, am I being picky? Am I being
unfair? And I think, no, you know why? Because if you see any photo of any astronaut, particularly
an astronaut with long hair, the first thing you notice is that all the hair is sticking up,
all of it. And because it doesn't know which way to land when there's zero G.
So that is such an obvious and prevalent and perennial feature of astronauts in space,
but Sandra Bullock's bangs always pointed down.
Well, how crazy does it make you when you're sitting there, when you paid your $12,000?
It's not crazy. I'm just a little disappointed, because you might have been able to do something
interesting, as they did with one of her tears, she started crying but the tear doesn't know to go down
the tear actually left her eye which it probably wouldn't do but i gave up because that surface
tension would keep it on the cheek i don't but i live gay i gave him that and the tear came off of
her eye and floated towards the camera and you saw a reflection of a refracted image of her in the tear.
And I thought, because she was sad, and I thought that was a poignant moment.
If you put all that much effort in having a weightless tear,
butter bangs know which way Earth is.
I can't.
That's the hair right.
I'm just saying now. Now, I know from all the movies we've been visited by aliens from outer space.
They're constantly attacking us. And and has there do you believe there has ever been a time of of a UFO?
Well, UFO just means there's something in the sky. You don't know what it is.
coming in. Well, UFO just means there's something in the sky you don't know what it is.
Yeah. So UFOs are real in the sense that people see stuff they don't know what they're looking at all the time. That makes it a UFO. Like a paper plane
is a UFO. Okay, so if you don't know what it is, it's a UFO.
And if you identify it, then it's an IFO, right? So here's the problem.
People see, I don't know what that is. Therefore, it must be
intelligent aliens visiting from another planet. You just said you don't know what that is therefore it must be intelligent aliens
visiting from another planet you just said you don't know what it is you just said you don't
know what it is so your next sentence can't be it must be anything okay am i clear are we are we on
the same page here yeah don't confess your ignorance and then assert your certainty. This is not how that goes.
It's interesting that you've said you wonder if we're intelligent enough to actually engage an alien species.
Yeah.
So, for example, we're intelligent.
Let's find other intelligent life.
You know, consider on Earth, chimps are the closest to us genetically.
Has anyone ever had a meaningful conversation with a chimp?
Let's imagine the simplest conversation I might have with Gilbert.
You ready?
So I'd say, no, Gilbert, I didn't mean it.
That came out wrong.
That came out wrong.
Sorry.
That came out wrong.
So here's a conversation.
I say, Gilbert, I'll meet you at this
Starbucks tomorrow morning for some coffee. And I have plane tickets. We're both going to Vegas.
Uh, and we'll come back tomorrow night. Okay. That's not a complicated sentence.
What would it take for a chimp to understand that? What is Starbucks? What is coffee? What
does time mean? What is, what What does time mean? What is Vegas?
What is an airplane? How does any of that work? Why? Where did it come from? So that's the simplest
conversation we would have. So imagine an alien as intelligent compared to humans as humans are
compared to chimps. What are we asking there? We're 99% identical DNA with a chimp. That's as close
as you're going to get in the world. So get one that's 1% smarter than us on that same scale
and ask them, what is your simplest thought? They will utter their simplest thought and we'll have
no idea what they're talking about because we're too stupid. Okay.
idea what they're talking about because we're too stupid okay disturbing right our okay our what can a smart chimp can stack boxes and reach a banana maybe uh all right they might
know to put up an umbrella or something there's simple things they can do our toddlers can do that
toddlers okay so smart chimp equal human toddler right. So now let's compare ourselves to the alien. Smart humans equal alien toddlers. All right. So alien toddler comes up. Oh, look at little Timmy brought home. Oh, you rederive the principles of calculus. Isn't that cute? Oh, you compose a symphony and a sonnet and an opera. Oh, let's put it up on the refrigerator door.
Isn't that cute?
Little Timmy and little Susie.
That would be the alien toddlers.
Now, why do chimps?
It's not obvious to me that we can have any kind of conversation with all,
with any life form that's even the slightest bit smarter than we are.
Yeah, it's rather disappointing, really.
Yes. Now, why do chimps instinctively, when they attack a person, go for his genitals?
I always hear.
Have you ever been asked that question, Neil?
I've never been asked it, and I don't really have expertise in that.
I can tell you a couple of things.
In that, I can tell you a couple of things. For example, the human arm, wrist, shoulder socket is exquisitely configured for throwing with accuracy.
Now, chimps have very similar muscular skeletal structure, but they can't throw with accuracy.
So when they throw their poop, they just kind of fling it, and wherever it ends up going, it goes. But we can throw 100 miles an hour through a hole, you know, 60 feet away. We have the power and the precision
and the skill for this. And that was, of course, important because we don't have big teeth. We
don't run fast. We need some way to kill our prey that we're chasing. And that became an excellent
way to accomplish that. So, but otherwise, Gilbert, I don't know why they're reaching for either their
or your genitals.
Is that a problem, Gilbert?
A common problem? Yeah, yeah. Gilbert, how often
when you go to the zoo, the monkeys all
chase you? They chase your genitals?
I'm not complaining.
Okay.
All right.
Now,
but they're vicious animals, chimps't they well some of yeah if you yeah
maybe yeah i mean that's you know i i don't think they're like the like lap dogs you know
dogs were bred you know dogs are gmos by the way i want to tweet that one day it'll freak people out
um dogs are gmos we invented them genetically from wolf DNA. And we said, oh, this one bites you too
much. Let's, let's breathe that out of them. Oh, this is too large. I want to hold it on my lap.
Let's breathe that out of them. This isn't cute enough. Let's make it cuter. Let's breathe that,
breathe that into them. And so at the end of the day, you get a Pomeranian,
all right, which would, which an owl could probably grab and fly away and dine upon.
And, and, and the wolf, I wonder, I just wonder what wolves are thinking when they see house dogs. right, which an owl could probably grab and fly away and dine upon.
And the wolf, I just wonder what wolves are thinking when they see house dogs.
I just wonder.
There was an episode of Cosmos about dogs. You remember.
Dogs evolving from wolves.
It was very good.
Showing off now.
Yeah, well, I watch it, buddy.
Yeah, yeah.
It was called When the Wolf Became the Shepherd.
Yeah, it was a good one.
Yeah. Very good. And as a primate, you're also a fan of The Planet of the Apes became the shepherd. Yeah, it was a good one. Yeah.
Very good.
And as a primate, you're also a fan of the Planet of the Apes, the original series.
By the way, you know, I was alive and around when that first came out, but I was not an adult.
I was like a kid, right?
I saw that again much later.
It was like, oh, my gosh, this is deep.
much later it's like oh my gosh this is deep yeah realize that different species of apes play different roles in that society did you know there was species separated so the scientists
were the chimpanzees yeah okay and who were the thuggy police officers, those were the guerrillas.
Yeah.
Okay?
And who were the diplomats?
That was the orangutans.
And so it was like, whoa, they fought this through.
This was like they.
And so I had a renewed appreciation for that entire construct of that storyline.
One of your heroes, Rod Serling, wrote that screenplay.
Oh, I didn't remember that.
Yeah, based on the novel.
He is one of my people.
And Claude Akins, I think, was one of the gorillas.
Oh, is that right?
Why did you know that?
And Maury Sevens was Dr. Zaius.
You could tell from their genitals. Now, you'll agree, of course, that the moon landing was fake during the making of 2001 A Space Odyssey.
And they filmed the moon landing then.
And we never actually landed on the moon.
Okay, so here's the actual story.
And you'll hear it first time on your podcast now. Okay? Here's what actual story. And you'll hear it first time on your podcast now.
OK, here's what it was. So Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong, the two moonwalkers, first moonwalkers, agreed to fake the moon landing.
OK, but they said for authenticity, they should do it on location.
they should do it on location.
And so NASA agreed.
That's a pretty great... Okay.
So they staged the moon landing on the moon
because that's the...
I love those fake moon landing people.
I remember someone asked Neil Armstrong,
do you have any proof you landed on the moon?
And he said, well, I took some pictures, but unfortunately, I left my camera on the moon.
Well, you've interviewed Buzz.
You know Buzz Aldrin.
Oh, no, we were friends.
I knew Neil Armstrong as well.
So here's the thing.
You can calculate how much fuel is in a Saturn V rocket, right?
And ask, what will that fuel do? And it's
enough fuel to launch, to orbit the Earth, to then leave Earth, go to the Moon, orbit the Moon,
come back from the Moon, and land back on Earth. It has that much fuel. So where do you think the
Saturn V rocket was going? Where do you think it's going? To the Whole Foods to get groceries?
five rocket was going.
Wait, do you think he's going to the Whole Foods to get groceries? No! This sucker
was going to the freaking moon!
So, and the
effort to have faked that
with, you'd have to fake
10,000 engineers and all of the
blueprints and the drawings and the diagrams
and the factories. You'd have to fake
all of that. And by the time you had
to fake all of that, you'd say, dude, let's just go to the moon.
It's easier.
Did you ever see that movie
Capricorn One? Yes!
That's about a fake moon landing. Yes.
It had O.J. Simpson in it, too. O.J. Simpson.
Absolutely.
They faked the Mars landing, Capricorn One.
On the subject of the original
Planet of the Apes, Neil, that leads me to
the conversation that Gilbert and I wanted
to have with you about time travel.
Okay. Were we off script?
Were we not supposed to spend 40 minutes
talking about movies?
That's
the show.
Okay, I didn't know if there was some
erudite plan that you had for this interview.
We never have a plan.
It seemed like a perfect combination
of you explaining.
Yeah, plus I just didn't remember that we were co-stars.
That's all.
That's what started it all.
You're also a fan of the Back to the Future treatment of time travel.
Yeah.
The first one.
The first one was brilliant in every way you can think of.
The second one is interesting just for how much stuff they got wrong
predicting in 1989 the future of 2015.
Oh, the Cubs.
But they're off by one year for the Cubs.
Yes, right.
Yeah, so the headline was Cubs sweep the World Series.
But they got other things wrong.
So they got an interesting thing wrong.
If I may take a
moment to share this with you. So many people trying to predict the future, you can get the
near-term future right by sort of extrapolating what's going on now. But generally, if you go too
far in the future, you don't see things that come in from left field that completely transform
what we're doing technologically, scientifically,
politically, culturally, and the like. You just don't see it coming. So projections tend to be good in the near term and bad in the far term. So here's one that they just got completely wrong.
1989, we were sending documents around via fax. Not enough people had email accounts and nobody
knew how to attach anything. Fax was the thing. Fax was the future.
Well, Back to the Future 2 was made in 1989 to take place in 2015.
There's Marty.
And in one scene, he loses his job.
And how is he notified?
By his boss sends a fax to his apartment.
And it shows up in four different faxes in each room.
So if in 1989, every household had one fax machine,
in 2015 you would have four. That's the future.
Also, I think with time machines,
if it were possible,
then we would have met time travelers already.
Yeah, so in the science march, one person held up a placard saying, what do we want?
Time machines.
When do we want it?
It doesn't matter.
What do you think of Nicholas Meyer's time machines?
So you can ask, wait, wait, wait, we got two more corollaries to this.
Sure.
Nicholas Myers. So you can ask, wait, wait, wait.
We got two more corollaries to this.
Sure.
So if you, one of the arguments against that time machines would ever have been invented
is that we would have met a time traveler by now and no one has shown up from the future.
You know, we've had 10,000 years of civilization and no one from the future has shown up.
And someone, somebody would have killed Hitler by now.
All right.
So here's the thing.
Someone did suggest that maybe a time travel device gets invented.
And what's the first thing event you want to witness if you have a time travel device?
Just pick an event.
A dinosaur.
Would you get off the dinosaur?
Would you?
Kilwood's got a dinosaur on the brain.
Well, I will echo many people's sensors.
They want to witness the Titanic.
Oh, yes.
Oh, okay.
And by the way, the very first episode of Time Tunnel,
they go back in time to the deck of the Titanic.
I remember.
Okay, the very first episode.
By the way, that program also had female scientists or technologists.
Bless you for bringing up the time tunnel.
Yeah, yeah.
And they had female technologists on computers, and they were folded into the tunnel.
Yeah, we had Lee Merriweather here on the show.
Oh, you did?
Excellent, excellent.
So here's the thing.
Maybe a time machine has been invented invented and everyone wanted to go back to
observe the titanic and that overweighted the titanic and that's what made it sink
oh i like that i like that a lot see see that's mind-blowing yeah there you go that's why the
titanic sank the paradox where like if you go back in time and kill your grandparents, then you'll never be born.
So you can't go back in time to kill your grandparents.
That is that is a that's one of the most important paradoxes, except the paradox is is softer than that.
OK, so you gave a softer version than what Arnold Schwarzenegger did
in Terminator, where he's just killing every, you know, he's killing, okay. All the Sarah Connors,
you don't have to do that. You just have to, uh, you don't have to kill people. Just prevent your
parents from ever meeting. You don't have to kill them, Gilbert. That's so violent.
What's just have them miss the train that's so violent what's yeah just knock it off just have
them miss the train that they met each other on okay or or i forgot the movie that got this right
just have them have sex 10 minutes later then you would not have been born. Some other sibling would have been born and not you.
But then that would mean I can't, if I wasn't born,
then I can't go back in time to stop him from getting on the train. So I'm just giving you versions of the paradox that don't involve killing people.
Okay.
Okay.
Will you allow this, Gilbert?
He's a pacifist, Gilbert.
Yeah.
Okay.
Will you allow this, Gilbert?
He's a pacifist, Gilbert.
Yeah, okay.
What about if chimpanzees came back in time and attacked my genitals?
Would you know that by now?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Neil, we have a question.
Gilbert's daughter, Lily, has a science teacher named Denise Darling, and she has a question for you.
The daughter or the science teacher? The science teacher named Denise Darling, and she has a question for you. The daughter or the science teacher? The science teacher.
Denise Darling. Is there such a thing as a science to being
funny? Oh, so we
studied this on my podcast.
There's more than just
Gilbert's podcast in the world. There are other
podcasts.
They're not as colossal as this one.
There's not as colossal as
yours, Gilbert. But
we've studied comedy many times
and my co-host is always a professional
stand-up comedian. Oh yeah, Chuck Nice.
Chuck Nice. I have very deep respect
for the comedic arts.
I consume high
quantities of comedy through stand-up
and through comedic movies
and so I know
Gilbert better than he would know that I know him
for these reasons. And don't, it's not a creepy thing, Gilbert. It's just the fact.
It's just, it's just the fact. I don't mind if it's creepy. I'll take anything. Yeah. So,
so, so I've spoken with people, spoken with Jay Leno and Stephen Colbert.
And yes, I don't know if you call it a science, but there are, what do you call it?
The best practices, right?
That tend to be the scaffold on which jokes work.
And so that gets you a whole categories of funniness that you might be bringing to the,
you know, to the stage. There's other highly innovative comedians that don't need to rely
on that kind of form formulation. And, but they did it by exploring, right? There's a lot of
innovative comedians, most of whom you've never heard of because this stuff doesn't work. All
right. So, you know, when I first heard Gilbert, I said, I cannot keep listening to this person.
I cannot continue. But then you listen enough and say, all right, I, you know,
I get, I'm with him. Let me give him a chance.
And then you hear the voice in other places, you know,
cartoons love voices that are just weird and different.
Oh, yeah, a lot of cartoons.
And then I followed Gilbert through Cyberchase on PBS
and as the voice of the bird.
And so you can be something unusual,
but that's riskier because it might not land.
But if it does land, then you get celebrated for that.
So, and you can list the comics,
the comedians in the past that did just pure sort of unusual things that,
that were just weird, but funny.
I'm old enough to remember the days of Johnny Carson.
Was it, who's that guy, Johnson?
Oh, well we had him on this podcast.
No, you didn't. No. Ray J. Johnson. Ray J, Johnson? Oh, well, we had him on this podcast. No, you didn't.
No.
Ray J. Johnson.
Ray J. Johnson.
Oh, my God.
You can call me, Ray.
But you doesn't have to call me.
And you knew what the routine was, but you laughed every single time you saw it.
And no one else has that routine.
But, Ray, I can't believe you had the guy.
His name is Bill Saluga.
Bill Saluga.
He's alive.
Yes.
And he's here.
Yes.
And we also had Al Martino.
No, we had Art Matrano.
Art Matrano.
I'm mixing him up with Murray's brother.
Art Matrano was the guy that used to go da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, he had like a non-magic act. And there'sda-da. Oh, yeah, da-da-da-da-da-da-da. Yeah, like a non-magic act.
And there's this point, you know, yeah, non-magic.
So there's another one farther, Guido Sarducci.
Sure, non-novello.
So they're very odd comedic entrants,
but I would bet there are many more odd that fail
and you just never even know they existed.
That's fascinating.
So I don't want to know if I call it a science.
Although, think about it, in universities, they're typically the colleges of arts and sciences.
Those are two paired words.
So does it matter if we say this comedian has raised it to an art compared with saying this comedian has it down to a science?
Very interesting.
These are two words, two sides of this, I think the same coin.
Because both of those are compliments to someone perfecting and honing their craft.
Here's a question from another fan of yours.
Carla Haler.
She says, why could Neil have always been the voice of Waddles through the entire run of Gravity Falls?
I was harvesting potatoes in my garden and all I could hear was Neil's voice saying,
yummy potatoes from my fat little pig tummy.
And it was... Why you gotta call
me out like that? It was truly delightful.
Why you gotta
call... Why you gotta, like, let
everybody know I was the voice of a pig?
She said she used that episode to make her
students write an essay to decide
if that episode was science fiction or fantasy
and the class was equally split.
Okay, for those who missed it, uh, in the TV, uh, animated series, uh,
gravity falls, which is Disney XD. I think it was, um, there's a pig that
kids live on a farm, I guess, and they have a pet pig and there wasn't. And
again, I don't agree to all cameos. The camera has to have make some sense in for who I am. Right. But I'm very loose about that, but still it's got to be in the same quadrant. All right. So the, the kids are playing around with some gloop that they think will make them smarter. So, cause they want to make, wake up smart. So they go to sleep and they rub it on their forehead and they think it'll get into their brain.
So they go to sleep and they rub it on their forehead and they think it'll get into their brain.
Overnight, the pig comes in, sees this goop on their forehead and licks it off.
And then the next morning, the kids say, I'm not smarter.
Oh, what happened to the goop?
And they're not smarter.
And then the pig, the pig comes in on an electric cart with a keyboard after it had built an atom smasher overnight and says, and so I am the voice of the pig when the pig became brilliant. I love it. She's a big fan of yours. That's two questions
from teachers, by the way. Gilbert and I, we talk on this show a lot about the universal horror
classics and we've touched on vampires and we've touched on werewolves. What about The
Invisible Man? I have issues with The Invisible Man, only because, you know, if he walks through,
I think, does he have to open a door to go through it? No, no, you see, this is something
you, I asked you about this. Oh, no, and then you corrected me on this. Yes, yes. See, I'm much smarter than you.
Okay, so let me give Gilbert credit on this.
Okay.
And I'll talk him up.
So Gilbert distinguished for me the invisible man from ghosts, okay?
So a ghost can pass through walls,
but the invisible man has to actually open a door to exit a room.
I see.
Yes.
Okay, so that's why the invisible man doesn't actually open a door to exit a room. I see. Yes. Okay.
So that's why the invisible man doesn't fall through to the basement.
But you get to ask that question of ghosts, but ghosts are just floaters.
So we don't have a problem.
There's no problem here with these elements falling through the floor. But I read somewhere with invisibility that if you are invisible, your eyes wouldn't have any color.
And if your eyes didn't have color, you'd be blind. All right. So the problem is, are you
invisible because visible light passes through you? Well, if visible light passes through you,
then it's not getting trapped in your eyes. And if it gets trapped in your eyes, you would find
the spot where there isn't light because it entered your eyeball. So you would be able to detect the invisible man if the invisible
man could still see. Oh, this is fascinating. Okay. Yeah. Because your eyes are stealing away
the light in order to make an image that's processed in your invisible brain. Okay. So also
just because you're transparent to visible light doesn't mean you're
transparent to all wavelengths of light. Are you a transparent to infrared, to ultraviolet,
to radios, x-rays, gamma rays? Perhaps not. Invisibility or transparency, and by the way,
that's not a weird thought to have. Windows are transparent to visible light, but they're not transparent to infrared. So that's
why if you put a glass shield sliding in front of a fireplace, the radiant heat just drops to zero.
You say, why did it get so cold? Oh, we blocked the photons coming from the flame. You think the
flame is making you warm because it warmed the air?
That's only part of it.
And it's not even the major part of it.
The major part is,
have you ever been at a campfire
and someone walks between you and the fire?
And in that instant, you feel colder?
So they blocked the light.
If you block the light,
you'll be detectable in that form of light.
I am learning so much.
What about the Frankenstein monster?
Is electricity the best
way to reanimate a corpse? So once we learned, it's the best way. Well, you have to have a
hunchback assistant. Well, Mary Shelley apparently, when she wrote the novel, she studied real
scientific experiments. So it was once electricity was, you know, discovered and
harnessed, and it was discovered that electrical impulses in the human body trigger movement in
your muscles. This was the famous frog leg test. Once you knew that, then this opened the floodgates,
well, the floodgates had opened the door for Mary Shelley to write Frankenstein.
It's funny.
Wait.
Sorry.
Have you seen the series of memes about Frankenstein versus Frankenstein's monster?
Right?
Because, you know, the cognoscenti say, no, Frankenstein was not the person you're thinking of it was the scientist yes
the monster was frankenstein's monster yes right and it's so there's one with with champagne and
sparkling wine so it's it's because you say you got any marijuana and so the person replies um
it's only called marijuana in the marijuana section of France.
Anywhere else, it's called sparkling oregano.
Anyhow, that's a stupid.
Okay.
Now, Frankenstein's monster.
Well, my point is, my point is, what do you do when the person's heart stops?
You can do CPR, but if you're in a hospital and they got the machine there, clear.
And what are they doing?
They're sending electricity in your body to restart the heart.
So in principle, if there's a body there that has been preserved and you want to re-engage all of the electrochemical system.
In principle, electricity could help boost that.
The problem is if the body tissue is so old that it's putrefied,
we don't know a way to un-putrefy something to make it fresh for making a Frankenstein.
And can you transplant a brain?
So, I think about this all the time.
He's going to think about it a lot after he gets off this show.
No, I'm serious.
Okay, here's why I think about it.
You ready?
Yes. Okay.
infamous afflictions, diseases that affect humans, okay, that are just, that are slow and, and one of them is, is ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, okay, where you lose control of your
body. And the other one is Alzheimer's, where you lose control of all your
thoughts. So the ALS person has a perfectly fine brain. The Alzheimer's person has a perfectly fine
body. So why not transplant the ALS brain into the Alzheimer's body and you get one whole human
being out of that? Interesting. Because then the Frankenstein monster would have either Lou Costello's brain
or Igor's brain.
So that's why I think about a brain transplant.
If we can't fix either of those,
it's a shame that a perfectly good brain and a perfectly good body get buried or cremated when you can merge them together.
And we agree, we will probably agree, that that person is the identity of the brain who had the brain rather than the identity of the body, even though everyone will see the body as the person.
Sounds like you're telling me that digging up a corpse and trying to put a brain into it and reanimating it with electricity is a fool's errand. Unless it's a really,
really fresh corpse, like it died 20 minutes ago or something, or 10 minutes ago. Whatever
is that there's a window where you can still, before you get brain damage, the brain is a huge
consumer of oxygen. And if you cut the oxygen supply, you start losing brain cells fast.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing colossal podcast. But first, a word from our
sponsor. Oh, how about cryogenics? Okay, so a biological and chemical process happens faster in warmer temperatures, okay?
And we know exactly the rate at which it happens faster.
For every 10 degrees Celsius, all those rates happen twice as fast.
Another 10 degrees, twice as fast again.
Another 10 degrees, twice as fast again.
So after 30 degrees, it happens
eight times as fast, two times, two times two. So if you go the other direction, those chemical
and biological processes go slower. 10 degrees lower is half as fast, half as fast. They take
it all the way down. So the decay would happen so slowly that you can hold the body for years.
This is why we have freezers in our home, not to hold bodies, but to hold other kinds of dead animals and other dead things so that it stays, quote, fresh for much longer than it would have in the refrigerator, which is much longer than it would have just out on the counter.
That's why you refrigerate things, to slow the, the, the growth of the bacteria on the
surface of your, of your mayonnaise. It seems cryogenics turned up in a lot of time travel
films. They use that in, in sleeper and the Austin powers pictures.
Yeah. So the thing is they used to think that was important so that you wouldn't have to eat as much
food or consume as much energy. But if you look at the sizes of those spaceships you know the little bit of energy the human uses
it's like come on just keep the person going i mean it's not it's it's uh to put someone in
suspended animation for a one-year trip as they did in in or two-year trip as they did in 2001
just seems completely unnecessary when you look at the size of the ship and how much energy it was consuming.
So that's my first thought.
Plus, why not just make faster engines?
Get me there faster.
I don't have to go to sleep.
Do you believe they'll ever be able to bring a cryogenic, fully frozen body to life?
I think the idea is sound, right? The principle is sound.
But what I think is going to happen is we will figure out a way to not die sooner than we will find a way to bring you back from the dead in a cryogenic state, at which point you don't need
to be put in a cryogenic state because you're not going to die. I think we are closer on the
heels of knowing, having the secret of aging than we are having the secret of electrifying a
cryogenically dead body. See, I kind of think like, you know, when you watch like people with
bad face jobs and Botox, that one day it'll be like people will age up to like, say, 20 years old and never go,
never physically age after that. Okay. That would be an interesting time. I mean, this is the great
challenge. This is the great question that a religion must face, the religion that believes
in a heaven or hell. Okay. So in heaven,
if you're going to meet your relatives and you die and you can meet your
parents,
how old are your parents in heaven?
Are they in their thirties or are they 90 years old and infirmed when they
died?
Right.
Is everybody in their prime?
Then you're there talking to your parents who are either younger than you or
your same age.
And when they were that age, they didn't even know you existed, right?
So it's a weird thing that we say all your relatives will come together.
Do you want grandma to be grandma?
No, grandma wants to be 30 years old again, okay?
So this is just philosophical challenges of having to resolve what the afterlife might be for you.
Absolutely. Let's talk quickly because I touched on Rod Serling and you, like us,
you are an enormous fan of the original Twilight Zone.
I think it's the best television ever made in every way. The acting, the fact that it was in
black and white meant that shadows could be dark, which meant that the filming could use shadows
for part of the storytelling. Someone
coming in and out of a shadow. In full-up color movies, there's nobody coming in and out of
shadows. The concept of shadow isn't even there in the cinemagraphic unfolding of events. So I'm
not saying everything should be black and white. I'm just saying, given that it was in black and
white, they exploited that to a great end. Beautifully. Yeah, we should be black and white. I'm just saying, given that it was in black and white,
they exploited that to a great end.
Beautifully.
Yeah, we won't argue with you.
I mean, we're big fans.
We had Anne Serling here last year for the 60th anniversary. We're just bragging now.
You know, I pull out an obscure comic that people have done.
And you say, we had her.
Yeah, Ray J. Johnston.
We're freaks is the point.
In fact, we unfroze Rod Sterling.
But I noticed three of your favorite episodes all have E.T. themes.
The Invaders.
I don't remember listing three favorite episodes.
Now I worry about you.
Gilbert, is he like a stalker?
Yeah, I'm a bit of a stalker.
There's a line I think he's crossed here.
But I won't grab your genitalia.
I think you said your favorite three were The Invaders with Agnes Moorhead.
Yes.
And To Serve Man.
Yes.
And Monsters Who Do on Maple Street.
Yeah.
I think the Monsters on Maple Street was important. Yeah think the monsters on Maple Street was important.
Yeah.
But I think as a...
Still is.
It was an important story
more than it was
brilliantly filmed.
Let's put it that way.
So I think the invaders
was brilliantly filmed
and conceived.
The story and the execution.
The great twist.
The Served Man
was a brilliant story
told in a short story style
where you think something is true
until the very last moment,
and it's not true.
So that one fully captured that.
And what would they have done
without that actor who's seven feet four?
Oh, Richard Keel.
Was he the guy who played Lurch?
Yeah, that was Lurch.
Oh, no, he was the Jaws guy from the James Bond.
No, he was Richard Keel from the Bond movie. Yeah, he was Jaws in the Bond movie,
but you're telling me he wasn't Lurch? No, Lurch was Ted Cassidy, different actor.
Okay, so, okay. Richard Keel lived to a nice ripe old age. I get like seven for four people
mixed up. Excuse me. That's okay. So, that, but with the Maple Street, that one, the story was just so frightening because you know you would
do the same thing. And that was the mirror that Rod Serling would do the same thing. There's a
threat of a nuclear, because this is Cold War storytelling, a threat of a nuclear invasion.
People rush to their fallout shelters. Oh, not everyone has a fallout shelter. They weren't
thinking forward about it. And so the one guy who does have a fallout shelter, his neighbors, they attack him
and attack the fallout shelter to get into the fallout shelter. And these were previously
friendly neighbors. And you just watch people's state of mind transform when their survival is
at stake because of their own short-sightedness they now want to you just
watch people become uncivilized very fast and so for me that that story was frightening because i
said yes that is exactly how we would behave and that makes me embarrassed to be yeah and yet and
watching it the other night it is is sadly as timely as ever.
Oh, well, that's the tribalization that we've got going on out there. Yeah, the monsters on Maple Street.
And Twilight Zone was very heavily influenced by both communism and the blacklist.
The blacklist and a space exploration was a big side of that.
There were many episodes that involved astronauts or people in solitary, you know, capsules. So yeah, it was of the time. And over that,
you know, at least in the 60s, we were on our way to the moon. This infused a lot of the
storytelling that landed in the show. But if you watch the interview of Rod Serling back when the
show was first funded, he said, yeah, we just, you know, we're just making
something that allows you to buy dish soap. Okay. Right. It's really just a vehicle for selling
things. And there's stories I want to tell, but if you, if you don't set it in sort of an alien
construct, people will, it'll hit too close to home and people will reject it. So you put it out there and you throw in some aliens,
you throw in some fictional town.
That's not your town.
Of course it's not.
And then you say, wait a minute.
And so that's why I think it's the best television ever made.
It's also what he had in common with Roddenberry.
He was telling social stories.
Social stories, correct.
And using science fiction to once—
Gene Roddenberry, the producer-creator of Star Trek.
To remove them once.
Did you have him on the show, too?
Yes, we did.
We had your pal George Takei.
That's as close as we got.
By the way, you can't bring him back to life because his ashes were sent into orbit.
That is correct.
So you'd be lying if you said, yeah, we got him too.
We collected his ashes.
Is that that urn behind you on the shelf, Gilbert?
Yeah.
Neil, let's plug the new Cosmos.
Okay, yeah, sure.
Which is a wonderful show.
I just watched Lost City of Life, which is a terrific episode.
And by the way, that guy's life story would make a fascinating movie.
Victor Goldschmidt.
Yeah, but so you've only seen a few, perhaps.
I think almost every episode we profile, in a good way, profile,
a person who wasn't listened to or was shunned or was ignored.
And each one of them, I think, and they were selected for they being stories that are undertold or underseen or appreciated.
And we're doing a little bit of what Serling and Roddenberry did.
We're showing you stories.
Oh, that was 100 years ago.
Oh, yeah. The leaders then, stories. Oh, that was a hundred years ago. Oh yeah. That's
the leaders then they hated the science he was doing. Those are those leaders. Oh, oh,
wait a minute. That's happening now. All right. So the, the, the, the correspondence is not
accidental, but if you are blind to what's happening now, you'll just see it as an
interesting historical vignette. Well, it's one of the things I love about the show is you're watching a science show,
and then it becomes a little bit of a history show.
Yes, yes, and that's part of the DNA of Cosmos.
That's why when you're watching it, you're not feeling,
oh, I'm watching a documentary.
Let me sit down and take my medicine.
When you're watching Cosmos, it's a whole other psychological,
intellectual, and emotional experience.
My friend Gary Citro asked a question,
will there be another season after this season? Yeah, so there's three possible worlds. By the
way, not that I've ever been female, but the closest I can come to that is to say each one,
each one of these is like giving birth. I'll bet. And so can you give us a little time before you
ask when do you want to get pregnant again? I think they're just eager to see more. The woman on the delivery table is not the time to ask,
do you want to have another kid after this? Okay. Let that one run its course a little bit.
So I've spoken with Ann Julian, who's the secret sauce of all three Cosmoses. She's the one who
feels the universe. So nearly every line that is sort of brilliantly emotional
yet nonetheless scientifically literate that comes out of anne she feels the universe and
she's scientifically literate so that's that's part of the secret sauce that all three cosmos
has in common because she was co-author on all three it's a brilliant show so i asked her she's
already collecting stories
for yet another season.
And I think it's time someone else host.
You know, I can't keep, you know,
science is a torch passed to a next generation.
I have no hesitation to pass a torch
to a next person to do this.
She's a treasure.
I think Gilbert should do it.
Gilbert should do it. Gilbert should host?
On another show, Greg. Gilbert, here's a line.
Ready?
And the Big Bang unfolded 14 billion years ago.
Let me hear that, Gilbert.
And the Big Bang unfolded 14,000 years ago. Okay me hear that, Gilbert. And the Big Bang unfolded 14,000
years ago.
Okay. There you go.
You got the job.
Wow, Gilbert.
Now, we both
separately appeared in
a Superman
comic book, I think.
Were you in a Superman comic book?
Yes.
He wrote one.
Which one?
Oh, God.
I was, I wonder if I was Nick Nack.
Yeah.
Oh, okay.
So I played myself, and as a planetarium director
in Action Comics 14, I met Superman.
And I tell people I've met Superman,
and they say, okay, which one? Christopher Reeves? No, I met Superman. And I tell people I've met Superman and they say, okay, which one?
Christopher Reeves or this?
No, I met Superman.
No, which actor?
No, I met Superman.
So in it, I'm there meeting Superman.
It's just a quick story there because I got the call from DC Comics and they wanted Superman
to come visit the planetarium so we can point our telescopes up at the sky so he can see
the destruction of Krypton.
Because that light was only just then reaching Earth.
All right.
And so that was the construct of this story.
And they said, so can Superman visit?
I said, sure.
And they said, can we draw you?
Can we put you in there?
I said, what am I going to say, no?
Of course, if I get to meet Superman.
there. What am I going to say? No, of course, if I get to meet Superman. So then I said,
I said, but if it makes no difference to you, could you take off a few pounds?
It's just going to draw me, you know? And they said, Dr. Tyson, this is the comics.
Everybody looks good. So I said, all right. So I walk out, you know, into the planetarium dome looking fit and buff.
In the StarTalk book, there's a lot of good stuff about you breaking down Superman scientifically from the from the yellow sun to the X-ray vision that could not see the color of Lois Lane's undies.
Yes, yes. You would not. You would not. X-rays can't see regular colors.
Also, I had a whole conversation with Chuck Nice about this.
We had a legitimate question come to us because there's a version of StarTalk that's just cosmic queries, we call it.
And that's actually becoming a book in the spring, Cosmic Queries, at a bookstore near you.
Oh, good. So one of the questions someone asked was, if Superman eats super food,
would he have super farts? Okay. So I tried to treat that seriously and I thought about it and I said, well, if everything about him is super relative to the human counterpart of it, I don't see why he wouldn't have super farts. And farts are very
high in methane, which is a highly flammable gas. So the old joke about being at camp and seeing if
you can light your fart, that actually has authentic chemical, it's an authentically,
it's an authentic chemical test
that you would perform.
So Superman would have
particularly potent methane farts.
So what that meant was
this would be a new weapon
that he could wield,
which would be a flamethrower
out of his butt.
So all you have to do
is roll down his drawers
and just let one loose,
but then you have to ignite it, but he would do that with his x-ray vision right he would turn around ignite his fart and he'd have a flame
throwing fart coming out the other side to balance out his freezing breath that he has sometimes
okay so this would be a total asset to his crime fighting asset i remember but i always thought if superman
were to have sex with lois lane wouldn't he kill her probably but he but i think the idea is
and i think the implication is that he did in the first superman in his ice castle because
they're laying there in the bed you know like like after he bought her flowers from brazil
and and and opened up a bottle of champagne just by squeezing the bottle which i thought was the
coolest thing ever by the way yes so it's champagne and flowers in his ice castle alone with lois lane
in this bed okay so i'm giving it that they got it on all right so uh it seems to me if but he
has the ability to control his strengths.
He's smart and he's talented. So, you know, I don't think he would kill her.
He would just dial down into sort of soft mode, you know, and then.
You do believe that a pair of glasses would make him totally unrecognizable.
Completely unrecognizable. I don't know who the hell that was when he put on glasses.
Last one, Neil.
Why do you hate the Disney movie The Black Hole?
Me?
Yeah, the one from the 70s.
Oh, it was awful.
Yeah.
Wait, wait.
I got to finish with Clark Kent.
Okay.
So Clark Kent putting on glasses and you don't recognize him. So that was the day when they would show photos of people and they would just put some black band across their eyes so that you wouldn't recognize them.
And I'm saying, how about his nose, his lips, his hair, the shape of his head, the size of his butt.
Are you only looking at someone's eyes to know who they are?
Like, come on now.
So I have issues with stuff that I saw growing up that adults were doing.
So I have issues with stuff that I saw growing up that adults were doing.
But anyway, Disney's Black Hole, we knew a lot about black holes.
Even when that movie came out, it was 1978, something like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I, just graduating high school, could have been the science advisor of that film,
and I could have made it awesome.
As it was, it was terrible. I think it's one of the 10 worst films ever made they had so here's the thing you get producers
who say there's a black hole here i want to tell my story but why don't you learn a little more
about black holes no that could interrupt my story excuse me you know jbs haldane said he said the
universe is not only stranger than we have imagined,
it may be stranger than we can imagine.
The universe does not limit your ability to tell a story.
It magnifies it.
Let's take Star Wars The Force Awakens for an example.
In that movie, the bad folks had a new and improved badass planet um uh the planet killer what do they call it
okay this one was badass the other one all this energy would just sort of kill one planet
but this one can kill multiple planets in a star system simultaneously okay what how did it could
do that well it sucks energy out of a star, and all that energy
is contained in it, and then it has enough energy to kill multiple planets at once. This is
especially diabolical, okay? Holding aside the fact that if you take all the energy out of a star
and put it in your ship, your ship becomes that star. But I'll give them that they've got some
containment vessel. I'll give it to them. Calculate how much energy is in that star. But I'll give them that they've got some containment vessel. I'll give it to them.
Calculate how much energy is in that star.
When you do that, you learn you have enough energy to kill a thousand planets, not five.
So they could have been way more diabolical than what they even portrayed had they done the math.
Had there been any kind of science advisor at all?
So it disappoints me when stories could have been greater
than they ended up being
because somebody got lazy in the storytelling.
So needless to say, you're an advocate for studios
and filmmakers hiring science advisors.
As did the Big Bang Theory, for example.
They had an on-set PhD physicist for every episode.
That's a cool thing.
Yes.
I lied.
Last question from Matthew Allen.
Please ask Dr. Tyson, is there a stranger or more unsettling sound anywhere in the universe than Gilbert's voice?
So, here's the thing.
We've researched this across the galaxy.
we've researched this across the galaxy.
And we have yet to find,
we have top researchers on this.
We've yet to find a voice pattern that could match Gilbert's voice.
So that has me wonder maybe if there's a message to aliens,
we should do it in Gilbert's voice so that when they try to find the home planet,
they'll never find it because nobody else
speaks that language.
When they try to come and destroy us,
they say, well, it's not this planet,
not that planet. There is no planet.
So Gilbert could save all life forms
in the galaxy if he's the one
that said this.
No, but let me say,
let me say,
as I said earlier,
Yes.
As odd as it was
when I remembered first hearing it,
first you accept it,
you hate it,
and then you say,
okay, I'll accept it.
And then you grow accustomed to it.
And then you kind of like it.
And then you want more.
Wow.
That is the trajectory of Gilbert Gottfried.
He couldn't even get through it with a straight face.
Let me just say, I've been watching cartoons and I said, you know, right about now,
we need Gilbert Gottfried's voice. There are times where it's missing. So I think that is the natural arc of evolution of people's relationship to Gilbert Gottfried's voice.
What a closer, Gilbert.
Yeah.
Okay, so Cosmos is on Nat Geo and Fox?
Yeah, so it was on Nat Geo in the spring.
Okay.
But that Nat Geo, because Disney bought Nat Geo from Fox, it split the
kingdom. And so Fox said, well, we're going to air it on our own time. And so they put it in the fall.
But Fox also has access to Hulu. So the day after the Tuesday dropping of the show,
it shows up on Hulu. So everyone younger than 30 can watch it because no one younger than 30 sits on a couch at a pre-timed
schedule to watch something that shows up on television. So right now we expect the largest
viewership compared with what happened back in March. It's a terrific show. And I appreciate
that when you were on Family Guy, they animated, they drew the ship of imagination. Yes, it was.
It was. And by the way, Seth McFarlane is a co-executive producer
of Cosmos.
Yes.
That was not an accident.
Who's a big Gilbert fan
and put him in a movie?
Oh, which one?
Oh, A Million Ways
to Die in the West.
Where were you in that movie?
What were you?
I was Abraham Lincoln.
No!
How did you miss it, Neil?
Oh, my gosh.
Okay, I gotta
go back and, okay, I didn't
think I'd have to see that movie a second time,
but now I will. And they also
had me on two family
guys. One where I
was a horse, and
the other one I was a dog whistle.
So, Gibble, you have a lot of range there.
He has a lot of range.
And what's the new book, Neil, that's coming out?
Oh, so in the spring, it's just Cosmic Queries, which is the second StarTalk book.
And, you know, there's a lot of really good material in StarTalk.
I love it. book. And we, you know, there's a lot of really good material in StarTalk and it's our second
book. And it's, it's the most deep, the deepest and most profound questions we've ever asked of
ourselves and of the universe. Where do we come from? Where are we going? How did it all begin?
What's it all made of? How do we know what we know? Is there life in the universe? Is there
multiverse? What is consciousness? So all of that's in there, and it's got a very nice arc from the small to the large.
And so it's very readably written in spite of the deep content that it contains.
Well, I love the first Art Talk book, so.
Oh, yeah, that was just a fun run.
Really a lot of fun.
And please say hi to Lynn Coplitz and Chuck Nice for us.
Oh, we'll do.
Yeah, I haven't seen Lynn in a while.
She was one of the founding co-hosts of the show,
and now it's mostly Chuck Nice, but definitely.
We want to thank Mallory Moorhead and Annie Jeffroy
and Donald Berman for helping put this together.
And Gilbert, who are the two people on the couch
in the back there?
Oh, my God.
They just appeared.
Oh, they're neighbors.
They're your neighbors?
Okay.
Paul and Stu. Okay. Oh, one of you is Stu. Oh, they're neighbors. They're your neighbors? Okay. Paul and Stu.
Okay. Oh, one of you is Stu. Okay. Okay. And they're neighbors. All right.
There's going to be a fight for the fallout shelter right after this.
There was another fallout shelter.
It's called the shelter. That episode with Jack Albertson.
Oh, and also there was one with,
why do I always forget his name
when he's one of my favorite actors? Uh, Dr. No. Oh, Joseph Wiseman. Joseph Wiseman was in one
where I believe Frank, he said that like he knew what he was talking about. So yeah. Yeah. It's
all bullshit. Did one that I didn't like that one because it showed that everyone said, no, no, we won't agree with you on these things.
And we don't care if we die.
And I thought, oh, come on.
Well, I know the motto is every disaster movie begins with people ignoring the advice of scientists.
That's right.
That's just that's just the fact. So, you know, I'd hope that's a lesson for today. But I don't know. People like to ignore
scientists. But on this, it was that he wanted an apology. These were one was his teacher one.
And he wanted and they go, no, no, I won't apologize. I'll go out and die.
And I thought, no, no, you apologize.
I do like the time travel episode, too, where the professor from Gilligan's Island tries to prevent the Lincoln assassination.
Oh, yes, yes.
Do you remember that one, Neil?
No.
Episode of Gilligan's Island?
No, it's a Twilight Zone episode.
Oh, that would have made a great Gilligan's Island. Gilligan's Island was No, it's a Twilight Zone episode. Oh, that would have made a great Gilligan's Island.
Gilligan's Island was a lot more intense.
Oh, the professor was an actor.
You see, you're totally stitching all this together in sentences.
And then Mary Ann was Lincoln.
Have you seen the analysis of Gilligan's Island where they said, you know, if you actually analyze this carefully, the only way to have resolved all those problems is to have killed Gilligan.
Listen, I'm on board for that.
Yeah, you just kill him and then you get then you're rescued two episodes later.
Gilbert, let this man go to dinner.
All right.
Okay, but he has to stay long enough afterwards to give us an ID.
Okay.
I can do that.
I can so do that.
So this has been Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
podcast with my co-host Frank Santopadre
and we've been talking to a man
who says
talking to Gilbert Gottfried
is like talking to
a chimpanzee.
I do think
I retracted that.
He did.
Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Neil, thanks for indulging our
craziness. Yeah, all right. Yeah.
So the world is crazy. The universe
is fine. It's Earth that's messed up. It sure
as hell is. Thanks for doing this. Our fans
will love this. Excellent. © BF-WATCH TV 2021