Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Questions and Answers: Volume 43
Episode Date: June 1, 2026Leave an audio message for the 6th anniversary show! https://www.speakpipe.com/EverythingEverywhere Sponsors Newspapers.com Honor the past by uncovering its stories at Newspapers.com P...romo Code EVERYTHINGEVERWHERE Samsara Don’t wait for the next accident to take action. Head to Samsara.com/EVERYTHING ButcherBox Get your choice between chicken breast or top sirloin for a year OR ground beef for life, PLUS $20 off when you go to ButcherBox.com/everything Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Save 50% on Unlimited premium wireless plans starting at $15/month at MintMobile.com/EED Audible Listen to Project Hail Mary Audible.com/hailmary Fast Growing Trees Get 20% off your first purchase when using the code DAILY at checkout at fastgrowingtrees.com/daily Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Discord Server: https://discord.gg/Ds7Rx7jvPJ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The month of June is upon us. It's the month of your solstice of choice depending on your hemisphere.
And the month of June comes from the Roman goddess Juno, who was the protector of the Roman state.
She was also the queen of the gods, being both the sister and wife of Jupiter, which is in no way creepy.
However, I don't think she must have been that great of a goddess if she had nothing to do with either questions or answers.
Stay tuned for the 43rd installment of questions and answers on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive.
The Price is Right Fortune Pick.
BetMGM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact Connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2,600 to speak to an advisor.
Free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario.
Hey y'all.
Kelly Clarkson with Wayfair. Ever order furniture online and wonder what if? Like, what if it doesn't hold up?
That sofa was four days old. You should have ordered from Wayfair. With Wayfair, there's no what if.
Just style you love and quality you can trust. Visit Wayfair.ca. Wayfair, every style, every home.
Before I get into the questions, I want to start with a few housekeeping notes. The first is that
Everything Everywhere Weekly is now up and available to listen to for all tiers on Patreon.
Everything Everywhere Weekly is a recap of the previous week's episode with me and writer Joel Hermanson.
We give our thoughts on the topics, cover things that didn't make it into the episode,
and just go off on tangents that are somewhat related to the topic.
There are currently five episodes uploaded, and we release new ones every week.
The second housekeeping note is that next month marks the podcast's sixth anniversary.
Instead of doing a question and answer episode, I'm going to be turning the episode over to you.
Just like I did for episode 2000, I'm going to let you leave a message that can be played on the show.
What I'm asking is for you to leave a brief audio message where you give your name, your favorite episode, and a brief explanation why.
And please keep it brief, or otherwise it might be subject to editing.
As with episode 2000, I have created a page on a site called SpeakPipe where you can record and leave your message.
A link to that page is available in the show notes and on the podcast website's front page,
well. With that, let's start with the first question which comes from The Rat Mafia on Discord,
who asks? I recently re-watched Back to the Future Three, and something occurred to me that I never
considered the last time I watched the movie 20 years ago. Why didn't Doc Brown distill his own gasoline?
Crude oil was relatively accessible, and surely they had access to kerosene for mining lamps.
Is an oil refining just heating the oil to a certain temperature?
Well, the Rat Mafia, you are correct that distilling petrol,
is really just a function of heating petroleum in the absence of oxygen.
Different heat levels produce different types of fuel, such as kerosene, gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel.
The process is called fractional distillation.
And I think it's fair to assume that Doc Brown would have known that if he was smart enough to discover time travel.
However, I would disagree a little bit about the accessibility of oil.
According to the movie, Doc Brown traveled back to Hill Valley, California in 1885.
Hill Valley is fictional, but Back to the Future 3 was filmed in Sonora in the Central Valley,
so let's assume that it's somewhere around there.
The first oil well in California was only drilled in 1876, nine years before the dock arrives in the past.
The best information I can find is that several hundred barrels per day were produced in California around 1885.
So he probably could have easily ordered a single barrel of oil had it been shipped by train.
approximately 20 gallons of gasoline can be produced from a barrel of crude petroleum, and the
DeLorean had a 13.5 gallon gas tank. So in theory, you could distill gasoline from something akin to an
alcohol still, but it might be dangerous and rather inefficient. So it could be done,
but it would take time to do everything and get the oil. Highjacking a train is much easier
and makes for a better story.
Kevin O'Keefe asks, Gary, as a schoolteacher, I'm constantly struggling over AI. I teach second grade where they're not yet exposed to it. Yet in 20 years, they will clearly be living in a different world when it comes to learning. There's so much we can leverage using this powerful new tool in terms of learning and it being positive yet at the same time, it could be a crutch with students and the public at large using it in a way that could erode our cognitive abilities. With all of your research into learning for your book and without giving too much away, what do you see is the future of learning?
Well, Kevin, when AI systems first went public, no one was ready for it. Kids found them
right away and used them to do their homework and to write papers, before their teachers knew
it was happening. Many teachers have already adjusted for this by returning to in-class essays,
written in longhand, and other means of evaluating students that are basically AI-proof.
Like other tools, AI can be used to make us better or to make us worse.
Having AI write a paper for you is an example of making us worse.
there's nothing that's gained by having AI do this work for you. It's just a cheaper way of
buying a paper. However, like with treadmills or gym equipment, AI can make you stronger if you use it
correctly. In fact, I think if used correctly, AI can be the greatest advancement in human
learning that the world has ever seen. Here's some of the research I have been doing for my book.
The question of what is the best way for people to learn has been well known for a while.
In 1984, an educational researcher named Benjamin Bloom identified a system of learning that was
two full standard deviations better than regular classroom instruction.
That is an astounding improvement.
An average person using this method could perform at the 98th percentile of someone who received
normal classroom instruction.
What is the magic method?
Individual tutoring.
Individual tutoring lets the student.
learn at their own pace, gets all of their questions answered personally, and allows the instructor
to teach for mastery, meaning that you don't move on until the student has mastered the subject.
There are no B's or C's or D's. And this isn't just after school tutoring, this is full-time
personalized instruction. There have been various studies that have produced different estimates
of the benefits of individual instruction, but they all point in the same direction.
There is, of course, a problem with this that might jump out at you immediately.
You can't really scale individual tutoring for thousands of millions of people.
Bloom calls this the Sigma 2 problem.
The first real tool we have that can solve the Sigma 2 problem is artificial intelligence.
Right now, as I speak, some kids, the bright and curious ones, are realizing that with AI, YouTube videos and some podcasts,
They can basically speed-run school.
They can cover an entire semester-long course in just a few weeks.
If you don't believe me, try this yourself.
Go to your favorite AI program and tell it you want it to tutor you in something that you know very little about.
Ask it the dumbest questions you have that you might otherwise be embarrassed to ask someone.
Ask it to explain it to you like you're five or ten years old if necessary.
AI is now capable of passing the bar and medical board exams.
and it's now solving unsolved problems in mathematics.
In a recent panel of theoretical physicists,
100% of them were using AI to assist them in their research.
The current system of schooling isn't set up for this world.
However, there is a catch to this.
You have to want to learn.
If you have no desire to learn and are not curious,
then all the technology in the world will not be able to help you.
There are schools that are experimenting with this currently, and the results so far are extremely promising.
So my advice for a second grade teacher is to stoke their curiosity and to make sure that they have the basic reading and writing skills.
Then, in a few years, give them the tools to allow them to really run with their desire to learn.
Jeremy Mellon asks,
Hey, Gary, since you've traveled the world in the past, is there a particular airport that was your favorite and a particular type of aircraft you'd rather fly on?
The best airport in the world without question is Changi in Singapore. Vancouver also ranks
very high on my list. And the type of plane is secondary to the type of seat. A business class seat
on any plane is better than an economy class seat on any plane. Landon Shea asks,
what is the most memorable or interesting conversation you've had with a stranger while
traveling, never to see them again? Well, Land and I have had many, many, many,
such conversations all over the world.
Maybe the most memorable was the night I stayed up drinking vending machine beer at a hostel
in Tokyo with a rap group from Delaware who were there to perform.
Have we both not been there?
I probably never would have met these guys otherwise.
Joshua Felty ass inspired my Memorial Day, have you or anyone in your family history
ever served in the military?
If so, any interesting stories.
A little known fact, I almost joined.
the Marines after high school to pay for college, but I didn't end up going that route.
I went to the recruiter and got the highest score they had ever seen on their aptitude test,
so I had that going for me. My dad served in the Marines in Vietnam. My grandfather served in the
Navy in World War II, and my great-grandfather was in the Army in World War I. The best story
would probably come from my great Uncle Bob, who served in the Army in the Pacific during
World War II. He cut General MacArthur's hair while he was in Pawp in New Guinea.
Finderre on Discord asks,
What's something that you've heard repeatedly is very difficult to understand,
but for you, it comes rather easily.
Conversely, what is something you've heard is really easy,
but you find it rather hard to understand.
The thing I've never had a problem with was nuclear physics,
that being the mathematics and physics of the nucleus isotope, radioactive decay, etc.
I took a graduate level class when I was studying geology,
and I ace the course.
To me, it was much easier than something like organic chemistry,
which I think is actually far, far more complicated
because there are far more ways for atoms to fit together
than what is going on inside the atom.
MacA on Discord asks,
which book series do you feel is well overdue
for a film or TV series?
Well, now that the Dune movies have been released,
I can't say Dune anymore.
However, Denny Vilnu is going to stop after Dune 3,
which is supposed to cover Dune Messiah and Children of Dune.
However, every Dune fan would really like to see God Emperor of Dune, which takes place 6,000 years after the events of the original Dune book.
Even if Denny Vilni Vlnu doesn't want to direct it anymore, which I understand, I hope he would at least produce it and give the world the same feel as the first films.
And I'll also put in an argument for a faithful adaptation of Isaac Asimov's Foundation trilogy.
The Apple TV series really shares nothing other than the name at this point and can't even really be called an adaptation.
Richard Welcher asks,
Every time I travel, I feel like I have forgotten to pack something.
Forgetting about something like a visa or passport, have you ever gone somewhere and forgot that thing and then couldn't get it where you went?
For example, a razor or toothbrush and in the desert you couldn't get either.
This really wasn't too much of an issue for me because when I was traveling full time, I had everything
with me all the time.
Every time I checked out from a hotel room or something,
I always did a basic check of the important things.
Wallet, passport, camera, computer, phone, etc.
And one thing you quickly learn when traveling
is that you can pretty much get almost anything you need
when you are on the road.
Vlad Sander from Discord asks,
Hey Gary, recently there was a meteor that was reportedly
exploded off the Massachusetts coast.
Could it have been something similar to the,
Tunguska event?
Uh, no, it wasn't really that big.
It was a daytime fireball, which is quite rare, and it was notable for that reason.
But it was nothing on the scale of the Tunguska event, which was basically the power of a
10 to 15 megaton nuclear weapon.
It was probably closer or at least smaller to the Chebblyansk meteor, which landed in Russia
in 2013.
It broke windows and set off car alarms, but didn't kill anyone, although there were a lot of
injuries from debris.
The last question comes from sooner on Discord, who asks,
Gary, can you see yourself in five years?
If so, are you still doing this podcast, or will you have turned the show over to another
host and entered new opportunities?
Let me put this very bluntly.
I got a really good thing going on here.
I'm able to research, write, and talk about whatever I want.
It took a while to get the show off the ground, but now that it's going, I have no plans on
stopping. I have no intentions of having someone else host the show either. Maybe if I was hospitalized
or something and I physically couldn't do it, I might get someone to step in temporarily, but the actual
recording of the show is quite honestly the easiest part of the entire process. Now that I have
some writers helping me, it's taken a big load off my shoulders and made continuing the show much more
sustainable. Editing an episode takes much less time than writing and researching a full episode
from scratch every single day. I might expand what I've been doing. I've considered doing
live shows or expanding into another show, but I see no reason to stop doing this show. You
have to do something. That concludes this month's Q&A episode. If you want to leave a question for
next month's show, you have to join the Facebook group or the Discord server because that is where I solicit
questions.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Otkin and Cameron Kiefer.
My big thanks go to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon.
Your support helps make this podcast possible.
And I also want to remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord.
That's where everything happens that's outside the podcast.
And links to those are available in the show notes.
As always, if you leave a review on any major podcast app or in the above community groups,
you two can have it read in the show.
Thank you.
