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Edited on Sun Mar-14-10 05:35 PM by onager
In between non-history crap like Ax Men and Ass Road Truckers, and all the woo-woo shows...
This (Sunday) morning, History Channel ran a 2-hour show simply called Einstein. I checked and did not see any repeats coming up, so I guess HC just used this as filler in the Sunday morning programming graveyard.
I was expecting a general bio-for-dummies-like-me, but it was less (and more) than that. It only dealt with Einstein's early life, then his work on the the Special and General Theories of Relativity.
Jebus. That even sounds boring to me.
Trust me, this is NOT boring. A good bit of time is spent on the astronomical expeditions that tried to prove Einstein's theories...which required a total eclipse of the sun, and a lot of Indiana Jones type exploring.
One expedition scooted off to the Crimea in the spring of 1914, and missed a fairly big news story a few weeks later - the outbreak of World War I. This was a team of German astronomers, now stuck in enemy territory. With BIG telescopes and cameras. They were promptly arrested by the Russian army.
Nope, not boring at all.
You also get a lot of academics expressing that "wonder of science" we talk about so much in this forum. One woman looks absolutely rapturous as she describes seeing her first total eclipse. "My breath stopped..."
It's also noted that Einstein became a huge popular celebrity (who had several beers named after him, for one thing). Even though only a few people on Earth could understand WTF he was talking about. (Those academics do a great, Feynmann-type job of explaining his theories. They are also a very multi-disciplinal bunch - physicists, astronomers, science historians, etc.)
Oh, and he came up with one of the most creative divorce settlements in history. If you don't already know about it, track down the show and you'll see what it was. :-)
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