StarTalk Radio - Cosmic Crib, with Rainn Wilson
Episode Date: October 12, 2020He’s Dwight from The Office, he’s a climate activist, and he’s definitely a nerd. Neil deGrasse Tyson sits down with Rainn Wilson to explore acting, climate change, his new show Utopia, and the ...mysteries of the universe. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/show/cosmic-crib-with-rainn-wilson/ Thanks to our Patrons Jennifer Sell-Knapp, Chris Reynolds, Nancy Umanzor, Daniel Rolandelli, Raymond Mang, Saad Algwaizani, Tyler Causey, and Christopher Lowther for supporting us this week. Image Credit: Elizabeth Morris/Amazon Prime Video. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
This is StarTalk. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist.
And we're going to go slightly
off format today. This is just going to feature my conversation with Rainn Wilson. His fans know
all about him and his portfolio. And of course, in fact, he's in a recent Amazon Prime. Do I call it
a miniseries? We'll find out uh and it's on a subject
depends on if it has a season two if it has only season one it's a mini series
rain wilson welcome to star talk thank you uh so this i'm calling this my cosmic crib because we're
just you and i are just chilling normally i have like a co-host and experts and all that. It's just you and I having a conversation,
reaching for our geek roots.
I love it.
That's awesome.
Let's do this.
So you're best known,
and do you hate it when people say he's best known for?
Do you hate that when people do that?
No, no, come on.
I mean, it's just true.
I'm best known for playing Dwight Schrute.
It's just true.
In The Office.
And how many seasons did that go?
That was nine seasons, ten seasons.
That's crazy.
Every time I turn on, there's The Office, you know.
Yeah, yeah.
And so I just want to just congratulations for being a fixture in that show.
And in the Geekiverse, you are deeply loved.
And especially most recently, you have a show that dropped,
and it's called Utopia, in which you play a virologist.
Yes.
So we'll have to get to the bottom of that.
And also, you've got a podcast of your own?
Yep.
Soul Pancake?
Yep. Will I ever be. Soul Pancake? Yep.
Will I ever be on Soul Pancake?
Probably not.
Probably not.
You wouldn't make the cut.
I'm so sorry.
Okay.
You're not legit enough.
No, it's a podcast called Metaphysical Milkshake.
I did with Reza Aslan.
Oh, so Soul Pancake is your production?
Soul Pancake.
But Soul Pancake is the company that I co-founded.
It's a digital media company.
So it's SoulPancake Presents Metaphysical Milkshake.
They're very much a part of it.
It's kind of in the whole SoulPancake vibe,
which is about exploring life's big questions
and making uplifting content and bringing people together.
And our podcast is in sync with that. Does that work today? Because no one wants uplifting content and bringing people together. And our podcast is in sync with that.
Does that work today?
Because no one wants uplifting content.
They thrive on conflict and tribalism.
So how's that working out?
Well, yes.
How is that working out?
You're not following the Facebook model.
There is a large percentage of the population that is looking for uplifting content and unifying content and something that contains hope and joy even.
And, you know, I just look at, I mean, you saw the documentary, The Social Dilemma, yes?
Yes, yes, yes.
Very interesting.
I think you went right to the heart of the problems.
Yeah, yes. Very interesting. I think you got right to the heart of the problem. Yeah, yeah.
And I mean, I knew a lot of the stuff that was in it before.
A lot of people watch it and are like, well, I knew all that.
It's like, well, yeah, I knew it, but it wasn't put together in a –
the puzzle pieces weren't put together in such a –
In a coherent way.
In a coherent way.
And you see that so much of the division going on in the world right now
is this Facebook model. way coherent way and and you see that so much of the division going on in the world right now is
is this facebook model um if if they can get you outraged they get you clicking buttons more and
they get more ads and they make more money so uh outrage and division fuels commerce so we're
a digital media company yes we would like people to watch our videos but we're trying to combat
this by bringing people together
and using the best aspects of the web and of YouTube and digital content.
That is so noble.
I mean, I'm proud of you, and I hope it succeeds by greater than all measures
because then others would then emulate it,
and then it would maybe be this force of attraction away from all that continues to divide us.
And what's this in that same production company,
An Idiot's Guide to Climate Change?
Oh, yes.
So you're into that too.
You'll dig this.
I keep wanting to say Dr. Tyson.
No, no, it's Dr. Neil to you.
Just Neil, just Neil, please.
I know, but I keep wanting to say Dr. Tyson.
Why is that? You command such respect. I keep wanting to see Dr. Tyson. Why is that?
You command such respect.
I never want to call anyone a doctor.
Even my own doctor I call a student.
It is fascinating.
Many people call me that, and I never, I don't introduce myself that way.
When I give public talks, I say, here's doctors.
No, I don't.
But so I have to receive it as an unsolicited honorific.
Yes.
Okay, good.
I'm warmed by it, but still, it's not necessary.
Well, okay, Neil.
All right, Neil.
Shut the f*** up.
Here's what we did.
So, you know, you would dig this show, An Idiot's Guide to Climate Change.
Here's what we did.
I got involved with this nonprofit called Arctic Base Camp that basically explores the science of how climate change is affecting the Arctic and tries to really impart that information to movers and shakers.
Because, as you know, in the world of climate change, what's happening in the Arctic is far more extreme than what's happening even in California. I mean, yeah, in fact, when they say we're warming the earth by one or two
degrees, that that's the average, the Arctic gets a much bigger hit from that. Exactly. Almost double
what we're feeling in North America. So I got invited to take a trip with them to Iceland and
Greenland and meet some scientists that were working up there. And so we didn't really have a budget for SoulPancake.
It's a smallish company.
But on like a $60,000 budget, we were able to kind of pull together.
I kind of documented myself on this trip up to Greenland,
and we made it a six-part series.
Greta Thunberg is on the series.
And the whole point of it was like, listen, there's a lot
of people that believe in the science of climate change. Of course, as you always say, you don't
believe in science. Science just is. Right, right, of course. Wait, wait, wait, wait, just put,
wait, back up for a second. You can't just call up American Airlines and say, book me a trip to
Greenland. Like, how did you, what was the path that you took? So, yeah, so getting to Greenland was a bitch.
Did someone invite you to Greenland?
Yeah, the scientists, Dr. Gail Whiteman, who's the founder of Arctic Base Camp,
and there were a bunch of other scientists that were working up there,
and she was like, we were going to do a bunch of events,
and she was like, Rain, I'm going up there to meet with these scientists.
You should come along and just see firsthand what's going on.
Okay, cool.
And we'll document it, and you can make it into this little series.
And then you can also kind of, as you know,
you can speak to science much more when you've kind of lived it and gone through it.
So the point of the show, though, Neil,
was that there's a lot of people that buy the science.
There's a lot of people that don't buy the science and think it's kind of a crazy liberal conspiracy. But there are
some people in the middle. There are some young people in the middle that are kind of getting it
from both sides that, you know, maybe they've got a crazy right wing uncle that doesn't buy the
science. Yeah, at Thanksgiving. It all happens at Thanksgiving. At Thanksgiving dinner table.
Exactly. And but maybe their friends at school are climate activists or something like that.
So do fire drill Fridays with Jane Fonda or something.
So they don't know what to think.
So I tried to make it like I'm the doofus.
I'm the idiot who doesn't know anything about climate change, wants to learn something, and is going on this trek.
So it's fun.
I try and use humor.
It's kind of, you know, off-putting.
And it was a lot of fun.
We had Greta Thunberg was on it, and we had a blast.
Excellent.
Did you glean any tactics, any tools,
or the tools of communication from that trip?
You know, that's a great question.
I didn't.
I don't know.
I don't know what to do.
You know, just keep... Where will. I didn't. I don't know. I don't know what to do.
You know, just... Who will I go? What will I do? Sorry, I'm despairing in front of you. I thought you said you were hopeful, dude. I do think that we just need to keep fighting the good fight and
trying and really work with young people. You know, or 50, they've got their minds made up.
They're never going to change their minds.
Yeah, it does seem to be demographically split that way.
That's a fascinating fact.
And so therefore, the younger demographic,
they're tactically different
if you're trying to get some of them off the fence
versus, you're right, the old ossified folks.
Exactly, to try and reach some of the young people.
And we can make a difference.
If we make extreme changes right now throughout the world, we can meet the goals of the Paris Agreement.
It's going to be really, really hard, but we can do it, and we just have to keep believing.
That's it.
That's all I got.
Okay.
Well, that's helpful.
And do you think – so I'm just wondering if there should be tourist jaunts to Greenland so they can see.
That might help.
be tourist jaunts to Greenland so they can see.
That might help.
Because I always think, I think the flat earthers are a conspiracy just so that they're the first ones to go into space, because that's where we're going to want to send them, so
they can see the round earth firsthand.
So they get a free, just send them off, just do that now.
You don't even need to go to space.
You can just fly, you can fly to Europe, and you're up so high, like the sun's rising, you see the curve of the earth.
It's not.
Here's what you do.
You set them up into space and say, you have to confess earth is round.
Otherwise, we're not bringing you back.
Oh, there you go.
Perfect.
I would not suggest bringing people to Greenland, mostly because the carbon footprint is so big.
And I talk about that in the series.
But just flying to Greenland, it's so carbon footprint is so big. And I talk about that in the series, but just flying to Greenland,
it's so much gas and taxis and whatnot.
I mean, the only way to do it is if you're going to, like,
I'm going to plant a frickin' forest when I'm done flying to Greenland.
Just to make up for it.
And Greta's quite the ambassador.
Was she on the same trip with you or did go in another time?
No, this guy who's on our board, Callum Greaves,
works with her and her organization.
So he was able to kind of patch her in
and we shot remotely with her.
She didn't go on the trip,
but she's a firebrand, man.
It's remarkable what she's done.
Really good.
Yeah.
Doing that right.
So now you have a show that just dropped
like days ago from the moment of this recording.
And I already know people who have binged the entire series.
And I said, damn.
So I confess, I just read some of the reviews.
I haven't seen any of them yet.
But I just like the fact that you're a virologist. In Utopia, it is curiously, weirdly synchronized.
Yes.
Some overlap with our current pandemic.
So what's up with that?
It's pretty crazy, man.
I mean, this is based on a British show.
Utopia was on the BBC a long time ago, like 10 years ago. As was The Office. As was The Office. Thank you. Based on a British show. Utopia was on the BBC a long time ago, like 10 years ago.
As was The Office.
Thank you.
Based on a British show.
Yes, and in fact, we're fighting that same battle.
There are these hardcore fanboys of the British original series
who are like, the American series sucks.
It's going to fail.
It's terrible.
And how did that work out?
That's it.
It always makes more money in America than in England.
But I don't get that argument
because no one's taking away that TV show.
When we made The American Office,
we didn't take all copies of The British Office
and burn them like no one could watch them.
You can watch them over and over and over again.
Plus, it's an American office show in an American office.
It's not Americans in a British location.
Yes, exactly.
But Utopia is the same thing.
And it's been being developed for years.
Gillian Flynn was a showrunner and creator of our version.
And it's all about conspiracy theories.
But the parallels are creepy.
So give me a three-sentence overview.
A group of comic book geeks discover a graphic novel that contains the keys to the
destruction of humanity which includes uh crazy viruses and a super villain named mr rabbit
okay that's how it begins how's that and then it takes off from there and then it's all it's all
downhill yeah it's so it's conspiracy theory thriller with some science fiction and drama and really dark sense of humor.
I call it Stranger Things meets Quentin Tarantino.
Oh, so it's got some blood and water in it too.
Yeah, it has.
Yeah, human heads being smashed.
Okay, so tell me about the virus.
What's the virus up to in this story? Yeah, so in this story, I play a virologist, Dr. Michael Stearns,
who discovered a really obscure virus in the Andes Mountains in Peru
that killed a couple hundred members of the Peruvian military.
And so I studied it, and I created a super vaccine
that not only inoculates it but cures the disease.
Now, let me guess.
You're a scientist.
You call this to people's attention, and no one listens to you.
No one listens.
No one cares.
I'm just spitballing there.
Let me just.
Exactly.
All right.
So I'm just relegated to kind of researching this virus in the basement of my college in Chicago.
I'm a small potatoes guy. And then there happens to be this huge pandemic sweeping
America. And the parallels between my virus and this one are very stunning. And so it does turn
out that my virus is the virus that is killing hundreds or thousands in America. So all of a
sudden I get thrust into the spotlight and I become this very, very unlikely hero.
So all of a sudden I get thrust into the spotlight and I become this very, very unlikely hero.
Oh.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, it's good to have a scientist as a hero, even if it's in a gory, weird storytelling.
Yeah, no, it is.
It is.
Usually the scientist gets long forgotten after you pass them by in the beginning of a storytelling.
So I'm happy to learn of this. Yeah.
Yeah. of a storytelling. So I'm happy to learn of this. Yeah, yeah. And is there,
does it also address social cultural things
like fear of vaccines and this sort of thing?
Yes, yes, it does.
And it was amazing.
So we shot this thing,
we finished this thing in September,
the virus, the Wuhan virus started in December.
The pandemic was in February or March.
And we were texting each other like January, February, March,
like what is happening here?
Is our show coming true?
This is nuts.
Because not only is it the virus,
but there's a whole segment of the show that's about the vaccines,
the production of vaccines, rushing the vaccine to market.
How are we going to get this vaccine out?
Who should take it?
What it means is you have a really effective PR firm.
Apparently, yeah.
I guess that's it.
They started the Wuhan virus.
Yes, yes.
You're a PR firm.
I think I'm waiting for, because this is an Amazon show,
I'm waiting for the conspiracy theory that Jeff Bezos started the virus
in order to promote utopia on Amazon Prime.
And with everyone, with the virus, no one is going out,
so everyone needs their stuff shipped.
So that's the Amazon Prime.
Exactly, exactly.
Yeah, yeah, he's the only one, you know,
he'll be a trillionaire by the time this is over.
He almost is.
So, Rain, we've got to take a quick break.
But when we come back, more with Rain Wilson, one of our patron geek saints out there.
Yes.
And we're going to take questions from our own fan base,
specifically our Patreon patrons when StarTalk returns.
We're back. StarTalk.
A Cosmic Crib edition where I'm in
conversation with Rainn Wilson
who's an actor and
I just learned a climate
activist. Yeah. And can I call you that, Rainn Wilson, who's an actor and, I just learned, a climate activist.
Yeah.
And can I call you that, Rainn?
Sure.
The climate activist?
Why not?
I'll take it.
You'll take it.
Okay.
And so right now in this portion, we've solicited questions from our fan base.
And we're going to lead off with Patreon members.
These are the folks who actively support our podcast.
So we've got a question right here for you, Rainn. All right. So when reading and memorizing scripts for a science-heavy show
like Utopia, how much of what you need and learn sticks with you and furthers your understanding
of science in general? Also, just wondering, what was your
favorite comic book character? Ah, nice. Okay, good. Getting there. Why don't you answer that first,
because that's presumably a fast, fast question. Favorite comic book character? So here's the deal
with me and comic books. So I was a huge comic book nerd as a child, and then around 11 or 12, I discovered these things, Neil,
called books.
They don't have pictures in them.
There's no pictures.
There's just stories.
No, I'm just giving them shit.
I switched over to science fiction.
But I have in the other room of our house,
I have my 1970s and 1980s
science fiction book collection.
It's like 400 books that I read when I was a teenager.
So Dungeons and Dragons and science fiction books were how I lived my teenage years.
But ultimately favorite comic book character, I loved Superman at first and then Green Lantern because I figured out that Green Lantern
could kick Superman's butt
by just making a kryptonite
shell around him but then I always
was I really loved Thor
because I loved mythology and I loved
the way that it blended
kind of Norse myths and mythological
characters with superheroes
so I was really big into
Thor. Excellent so if you're first into Superman
and later into Thor those are the two authentic alien superheroes they come from other planets that's
true just to put that in context in case you never thought i hadn't really even thought about that i
guess because i've always felt like an alien myself kind of in my own so there you have it
okay so now tell me i'm i'm i i actually claim cameo appearances in five feature-length films, but that doesn't make me an actor.
And if I'm playing myself, I don't really have to prepare for it.
So as an actor, what is the relationship between preparing for a role where that role has expertise and what might be real expertise that you'd glean along the way?
That's this question that was just asked.
Yeah, this is a great question, and I get asked this one a lot.
Fortunately, you know, I spent years playing a paper salesman,
and I didn't have to do a whole lot of research about it.
Did you train for that?
Yeah, and a beet farmer.
I didn't, like, research, and a beet farmer. I didn't research beet growing harvest yields
and irrigation techniques for the sugar beet.
That's what I'm trying to say.
But for this...
But imagine how much better you would have been had you done something.
I know. I'm kicking myself right now.
But I'll be brutally honest.
So I play a virologist, and I didn't do any research on what a virologist does or learns or anything like that.
I'm sorry.
I apologize, science nerds.
But because in this case, and I would if I was in, if it really was about the science like if this was a show where i was in the lab a lot
and doing work and talking about concepts of viruses and stuff but i start in the lab and
i'm immediately like episode two just like launched out into the world and uh i don't really deal with
the science of it so much so i knew it wouldn't really help my performance or my kind of authenticity to kind of dive into the research.
Is that because it's scripted in a way where you are more than just a scientist, you're
a whole person who's interacting with a social ecology that's out there?
Yeah.
Because, for example, so I forgot which show it was.
It was one of these doctor shows.
And there's Lawrence Fishburne as the uh the medical examiner
performing autopsies right so they don't put him out in the field too much you know when you go
down into the bowels of the of the where they store the bodies he's there and so his lines have
to come out convincingly to what might be an audience who has fluency in the analysis of dead bodies.
So presumably some of your lines have to be sort of medically authentic
when you deliver them.
Well, in this case, there were really only a handful.
I'm talking three or four lines over the entire series
that needed to kind of sound medically and scientifically authentic.
When you're doing a TV show and you're in the milieu
and you're playing a doctor or a surgeon or a specialist or something like that,
you're coming back time and time again, you know, like Dr. House or something like that.
You really might need to learn some more about medicine
to be able to every single episode be diving into some kind of...
Right, and authentically deliver the lines.
Right, I mean, it's got gotta at least sound convincing to some experts and especially in the geekiverse you'll be held to that that's true we got people who are experts
or no experts or or and you know i'm a big well i i'm known yeah you do this in the movies all the time I watched your live
I literally followed
your live
Twitter feed
of
was it gravity
I think it was
gravity
of like
everything that was right
and most things
that were wrong
but
it was great
it was really entertaining
it was mysteries
of gravity
that was the hashtag
I created for it
but I try to give
some latitude to the creative art.
So people think I'm just a total, you know, nasty person to ever see a movie with.
But I think I'm just misunderstood in my intent.
Yeah, thank you.
You need a hug.
If this weren't COVID, I would give you a hug.
I just need an air hug.
We can give an air hug.
Yeah.
So let's get another question from one of our Patreon members. I would give you a hug. I just need an air hug. We can give an air hug. Yeah.
So let's get another question from one of our Patreon members.
Oh, sorry.
I didn't give the name of that.
That first person was Robert Stanley.
Yes. Okay.
Thank you, Robert.
So, and the next one is Chris Hampton.
And these are clearly your fans.
Hey, Ray.
That's where I have another house, Chris Hampton.
Chris Hampton. That's east I have another house, Chris Hampton. Oh, Chris Hampton.
That's east of West Hampton.
It's like, hey, Rain.
So these are like total fan folks out there.
Huge fan.
Do you ever get into deep conversations
about the universe with the other actors on set?
If so, who have you had the best conversations with?
Oh, that's fantastic.
So let's broaden that to just your, you know,
not only Utopia, but also The Office.
How about that?
Yeah, that's great.
In the downtime, in downtime.
Yeah, yeah, sure we do.
You know, there's a lot of downtime when you're on the set.
So there's a lot of downtime when you're on the set so there's a lot of like really deep uh conversations i the one that just popped into my
mind uh immediately was i did a long time ago now it's about 15 years ago i did a role in this
action uh adventure comedy with matthew mcconaughey called Sahara. Oh, I missed that.
Yeah, it's a big, silly romp through Morocco
and explosions and camels and hidden treasure and stuff like that.
Explosions and camels.
That's the whole move.
Explosions, camels, hidden treasure.
There's a little bit more to it than that.
And I played a science geeky nerd in that one.
But I remember talking to Penelope Cruz,
and I was just blown away by how smart she was and how,
I mean, first of all, she's like the most beautiful woman on planet Earth.
So it was a little bit, my jaw was kind of dropped.
But she speaks five languages.
She runs all
these orphanages she has got university degrees she's very well read she's had you can only know
that in the downtime yeah that i think about it that's how you know that yeah just sipping on a
coffee eating on a sandwich and um we just had some uh we didn't have a bunch but i just remember
this one conversation where we were talking about you you know, world peace and how to achieve it and working together and different cultures coming together and some big concepts.
And I was just super impressed with her.
I like that.
So I did not know that about Penelope Cruz.
Yeah.
Very, very good.
Genius.
Supermodel genius, basically.
I have a very opposite experience that i once had
okay um uh i was filming again in a cameo role and we're between takes so i'm sitting in my
you know in the in the in the chair you know with the director's chair but of course i'm not the
director i'm just but that's what they're called the director's chair and there's someone else
one of the other actors is there.
And so there's some new photo from the Hubble telescope that had just arrived.
And I'm excited.
I'm an astrophysicist.
I say, oh, have you seen this photo?
There's stars being born in the middle of this gas gun.
And she said, oh, okay.
And then went back to reading People magazine.
Oh, goodness.
And this is a person who was playing a medical doctor.
And I was just so, you know, and again,
I'm naive to assume that an actor is the thing that they're acting.
The fact that they're so good at what they're portraying,
making me think that they know this stuff,
that's why they're a good actor.
Yeah.
Okay?
So I'm so torn by this reality
that an actor can be completely ignorant about everything in the world,
and all that matters is they deliver those lines.
At the end of the day, actors are idiots.
So you said it.
You said it best.
No.
Actors are idiots.
Just that one.
Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson.
Well, I'll say something else here, okay, just to dig myself out of the hole that you just threw me in,
even though I dug the hole, okay?
So I remembered a scene she was in where she delivered a line
and the director said, no, you need the line to be,
this is a person you remember from the past and you had good memories then,
but then you had later bad memories, so you have conflicted emotions.
Go.
And out came three lines where it was like, yes, it's all there.
Yeah.
In the body, in the eyes, in the gestures.
Yeah.
And I said, damn, damn, that's good.
And so I asked her in the break, I said, well, so how long have you been acting?
She said, well, yeah, it depends on when you want to start counting.
But since I was six, I was like, okay.
So if you ask me, how long have you been thinking about the universe?
It's like, since I was nine, right?
I got that.
And I'm totally, I'm all in in the universe.
Yeah.
And so she was all in with the actor. No, I appreciate that. And I'm totally, I'm all in in the universe. Yeah. And so, and she was all in with the actor.
No, I appreciate that.
There's a, people don't, a great actor makes it look so easy and effortless.
I always use Brad Pitt as the example.
Like, it's just like, everyone watches a Brad Pitt performance.
You're like, I could do that.
If I was that good looking, I could do that.
I mean, he just is standing there saying.
Oh, that's the only
thing. If I had
won the genetic lottery like he had, I
could do it. But Brad Pitt is a
phenomenal actor. I mean,
transformative, subtle, precise,
emotional, like
I'm astounded at his
the intelligence of his performances.
All of them. So it's really
complicated and you spend your whole life making it all of them. So it's really complicated, and you spend your whole life
making it look really easy.
And you hope someone notices, and then you get the next gig.
Let's do one more question before we take the next break.
So this is Violetta, a 12-year-old astro nerd
in Birmingham, Alabama.
And my mom, Izzy, is also
a nerd.
Nerd, nerd,
nerd soup here. Okay, we want
to know, do you
consider yourself a nerd?
And if so, what level
of nerd are you?
And what's the nerdiest thing you've ever done?
Thanks.
Love you guys.
I love this question.
Okay, we only have a couple minutes, so we need a fast answer here.
Okay.
I love this question.
I have a chess clock over my right shoulder.
That should prove it to you.
I used to play competitive chess, and I was on the chess team,
and we would drive around competing in chess.
And once I went to a chess tournament,
and I saw a guy who had mold growing in his ear.
I'm not exaggerating.
That's how nerdy I am, okay?
Okay, you didn't have the mold, but someone next to you did.
They did.
It means you're hanging out with that crowd.
I was hanging out with the crowd with a guy who had mold in his ear.
That's how nerdy I am.
Boom. Okay. There we go. And's how nerdy I am. Boom.
Okay.
There we go.
And I'm going to answer this too.
So I'm a nerd from way back.
I went to the Bronx High School of Science, but I was kind of a nerd jock.
So, you know, the whole spectrum of tribalizing that goes on in high school, we have the jocks and the nerds.
In the Bronx High School of Science, everybody's a nerd.
So the nerd spectrum has shifted.
The whole high school spectrum has shifted in the nerd direction.
So everybody is a nerd.
I was just a nerd jock.
Then you had the nerd nerds.
They were like extra.
So for me, what's the nerdiest thing I did? I once wrote down every single
number
that had any significance
that I knew at that moment.
So it was a whole sheet.
So it was like all the digits
of pi that I knew.
I also happen to know the fifth root of 100
to 12 decimal places, but that's another
story. Every phone
number that I knew,
including their area code, so these are 10-digit numbers.
Other numbers.
And I said, how many numbers
could possibly be in
my head that are just there for random access?
And I filled an entire sheet.
And each number had meaning
in my life. And I thought that was kind of a geeky thing
to do. That takes the cake.
That's remarkable. I just thought maybe that was kind of a geeky thing to do. That takes the cake. That's remarkable.
I just thought maybe that was kind of geeky.
Although I do have notebooks filled with my,
God, I wish I could just grab one right now.
I've got notebooks filled with the drawings I did
of my Dungeons & Dragons characters.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah, that's good.
There you go.
Okay, Izzy, Mom Izzy and Violetta, where we are on that scale.
And just briefly, however nerdy you think you are, there are people who are way more nerdy than you are.
True.
And when I finally calculated the mass of Thor's hammer, someone corrected my calculation to say the actual mass of Thor's hammer.
Oh, my God.
My calculation was as geeky a thing as I've ever done with a superhero universe,
and that is the Marvel universe, of course.
And then someone out-geeked me who was a material science engineer
who worked for the Navy who had all kinds of superhero paraphernalia in his office.
And he showed me the errors of my calculation. Oh, man. And was he right?
Yeah, I had to concede. Wow, good. Well, good for you that you had the humility to say,
you know what, you got me on that. You got me. Yeah. So it turns out I calculated that his
hammer weighed the equivalent of a
herd of 300 billion elephants.
And I had authentic ways
to calculate that. He said, no,
it's actually made of a fictional substance called
Oulu.
And it weighs exactly 42.3
pounds.
And my answer was so much better
than that.
So, but I had to concede.
I conceded.
And then one of my fans said, no, Neil, Neil,
they didn't say on what planet it weighs 42.3 pounds.
Because you weigh different amounts on different planets.
Sure, sure.
But anyhow, we got to take a break.
And when we come back, Rain, if you have questions for me,
that'll be the chance to ask them.
Great.
When StarTalk returns. a break and we when we come back rain if you have questions for me that'll be the chance to ask great when star talk returns hey it's time to give a patreon shout out to the following patreon patrons
jennifer sell nap and chris reynolds guys thank you so much without you we couldn't do this show
and for anyone else listening
who would like their very own Patreon shout-out,
please go to patreon.com
slash startalkradio and support us.
We're back.
StarTalk Cosmic Career.
Welcome to it.
And in my cosmic career, I've got Rainn Wilson.
Rainn, it's been a delight in conversation with you the first time we've met.
And I'm also, I feel good that we've exposed your geek underbelly.
Yes.
It's actually not your underbelly.
It's all around you.
It's my literal belly.
Yes.
It's your literal belly, not your underbelly. It's on top's all around you it's my literal belly yes it's your literal belly not your
underbelly it's on top uh all around you and so uh in this third segment uh we want to i just want
to probe what are the depths of your cosmic curiosity because it's not every day someone
hangs out with an astrophysicist and i want people to fully exploit that occasion if they want to. So, yeah. So, listen, I hear a lot from people
about this thing that Einstein referenced,
spooky action at a distance.
And then I know that this is kind of a controversial concept
and I just can't wrap my head around it.
I'm really a science neophyte around this stuff
and I really have a hard time taking science and math
into my brain.
But, you know, I know it has to do with theoretical physics and kind of some experiment or some happening in one place affecting something in some other place. And I'm just wondering what
that means. I always hear that and I just don't. i tried to watch a youtube video on it i couldn't i love the way you said that uh all right it predates einstein let's go back to isaac newton
so when isaac newton first wrote down his equations of gravity and in these equations
there's a mass term of one object and a mass term in another you multiply them together
and you divide by the distance between them squared.
And when you do that, that's the force of gravity between these two objects.
So these two objects, at a distance from each other, feel each other's presence.
But he knew there's nothing in space.
There's no cable connecting them.
There's no pulleys.
It's empty.
And this deeply disturbed Isaac Newton.
It's like there's got to be some way that they're physically connecting to each other.
But until we discover that way, I know my equations work.
So I'm sticking with my equations. So the equations
work. The orbit of the moon around the earth, earth around the sun, Jupiter's moons around
Jupiter that you could see with a telescope. It was knocking him out of the park. But he was
uncomfortable that you could have action at a distance. And thus became this quest for,
is there something else going on in space
that enables these two objects to know about each other?
And then we ended up exploring electromagnetism.
There's another thing, action at a distance.
Okay, magnet, there's a magnetic,
the concept of field had to be introduced.
Right?
And that was Faraday in the 19th century.
Faraday introduced the concept of a magnetic field.
And if we're going to talk about fields, we have a gravitational field, if you want to talk that way. And it's this zone out there where things can happen.
But there's still the mystery of what's going on across, what is gapping that distance?
And it took modern field theory to come to an understanding of it.
So before I get to that, let's get the gravity solved.
So Einstein figured out that gravity is not action at a distance.
Gravity is a distortion of the fabric of space and time.
And I, as a mass, am distorting space around me.
And if you want to move in my space,
you're going to follow that path.
So Einstein is quoted as saying
that mass tells space how to curve.
Space tells matter how to move.
So it kind of sidestepped the action at a distance question
because you're just sliding up and down like a skateboarder
on a varied terrain going up and down in the hole and out of the hole.
That's what things are doing.
When things are in orbit, they're just sort of falling
on this curd fabric of space-time.
So that kind of buys us some time on this, all right? Maybe that's all we have to do to think about gravity.
With electromagnetism, we're not talking about spooky action at a distance. It's a photon is
exchanged between two particles, and that creates the force. So photons carry the force of electricity and magnetism.
That's modern field theory describing that.
And so we're done there.
So now, you folded that together with this other thing,
which is, wait a minute, there's something way over here,
and something's happening, and it's not gravity,
and it's not electromagnetism, it's something else.
That, I think, was part of your question.
But there's another sort of modern version of that
that reveals itself in quantum physics.
And it's called quantum entanglement.
And so quantum entanglement is where you can have two particles.
You know, you heard that particles can be wave,
matter can be wave and particles at the same time.
You might have heard about that, the wave-particle duality.
Well, okay, if you create a particle,
you can create a pair of particles that are entangled with each other
where they have complementary properties.
All right, now, separate the particles.
You don't know what properties one of them has until you measure it.
You just don't know. But the moment you measure it, you instantly know the properties of the
other particle because they're complementary. Okay, what one is, the other is sort of the
complementary variant on that. So if you separate these particles and don't measure them, just
separate them, put them at great distance, then the instant you measure this particle, the other
particle shows up with the complementary properties. And so the wave is occupying that entire space
and they instantly know about each other. That is the crowning achievement of action at a distance.
In fact, this information communicates,
this happens faster than the speed of light.
It happens instantaneously.
So sci-fi people are asking,
can you make a warp drive that'll do this instantaneously
and send something, information, instantly?
So there's a whole frontier of sci-fi people thinking about this phenomenon.
Well, that's what I was going to say.
Nick, that's the first thing that popped into my head.
It's like, wait, so these two, I don't want to say elements,
but these two things.
Particles.
Particles that have been split apart can connect with each other,
cannot communicate like language, but there's a tension between them.
You know, is faster-than-light space travel a possibility?
You know, other than this quantum entanglement phenomenon,
and there are a few other, there's quantum tunneling,
which is also an instantaneous thing,
but other than that, moving physical objects through space
faster than the speed of light, there is
no known exception to it
and highly tested laws of physics
that say it's impossible.
So we're kind of stuck with that.
What you need, you need warp drives. You have to
bend space, and then you cheat by
cutting across shortcuts
through it, or tunneling through wormholes.
You can do it.
You're not going to accomplish it by physically moving faster than light
through space.
Got it.
So there you have it.
That's good.
Now I'm thinking of you in Galaxy Quest.
I can't get the image of you.
That was my first role in a movie that was played.
You're supporting alien actor roles.
Lunk the Thermian.
Thermian, yeah.
And so another question I had for you is like,
what was your most transcendent experience in astrophysics or astronomy
that was filled with the most wonder?
Like what discovery or galaxy or experiment
did you kind of witness that kind of made you
gasp and really
stretched the limits of your wonder
yeah I like that and I think
wonder is an undervalued
feature of what it is to be a
scientist or to be anyone on a frontier,
we have one foot in what is known
and the other foot in what is yet to be discovered.
Many people fear that.
They have to have an answer.
They can't bask in the ignorance of the yet to be known.
And that's unfortunate because the wonder is to gaze upon something and say, I have no idea
what I'm looking at. And let me find out. Rather than I have no idea what I'm looking at, I'm
afraid, let me run back into the cave, right? These are two wholly different reactions. So for me,
for parts of my PhD thesis, it involved obtaining data on mountaintops. And I went to mountaintops in the country of Chile,
where those telescopes have access to the southern hemisphere skies,
where the center of the galaxy passes overhead in the middle of their winter,
which is the middle of our summer.
So I would be there on the mountaintop.
And this was a pilgrimage because i have to travel all these thousands
of miles into the southern hemisphere then you have to flip your biorhythms to go nocturnal
because your night becomes your day all right and so so then there's this sort of physiological
transformation then you have to regain your intellectual chops because you're
about to get data that's going to plug into research that you already have in progress.
Okay, so then the sun sets. There's a cloud layer that happens to roll in.
Well, that cloud layer is below you because you're on a mountaintop. Okay, so now the cloud
layer completely surrounds you.
And the moon is out just a little bit.
So as it gets dark, there's still a little bit of light.
I can see the tops of the clouds in moonlight.
And I'm this island of rock with telescope domes
that has ascended above this cloud layer.
And there's nothing else in the world
nothing in your sight line to the horizon except you on this mountaintop above the clouds
so it's me on earth but really above earth looking out to the universe ready to point my telescope
to the center of the galaxy,
waiting for photons that have been traveling for 30,000 years,
emanating from the middle of the galaxy to land on my detector.
And so, and I'm there alone.
This is a very solid, well, there's a technician in another room,
but it is a moment when you are communing with the cosmos and for me that is
the closest thing i've had to a religious spiritual moment not religious in the sense
of oh they're gods up there no no just a spiritual moment where I'm not,
in this moment, I'm not thinking of the universe.
I'm feeling it.
That's beautiful.
And that's happened to me many times on the mountaintop.
Wow, that's a great story.
That's fantastic.
Yeah, I feel like those moments of transcendence is what we're really going for, you know,
as human beings on this planet.
Like that's kind of what makes.
And some people who've never had it might not know that that is something to go for.
Yeah, that's true.
So that's another.
That's true.
That's another.
It's a direction to head.
But I've had that same experience at a Radiohead concert, you know.
Oh, okay.
I did not expect that's you to say that.
I've had that same experience.
Okay, that's great.
You know, camping and being in the wilderness and seeing the stars.
I've had that same experience, the birth of my son.
But those moments.
Okay, wait, does your son know that you've analogized his birth to a Radiohead concert?
He would be thrilled.
Have you disclosed this?
He's a huge Radiohead fan.
He's 16.
He's already seen them in concert twice. He would be thrilled. Have you disclosed this? He's a huge Radiohead fan. He's 16.
He's already seen them in concert twice.
He would be thrilled.
All right.
Well, dude, I love that question,
and thanks for empowering me to relive that moment,
which was very special for me.
Dude, we've got to get you back on at another time.
I don't think we've plumbed all of the nerd space that we're capable of reaching.
Happy to come back anytime.
But Rainn Wilson, thank you for being on StarTalk.
Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson, you're very welcome.
All right.
This has been StarTalk.
Let's call it the Rainn Wilson edition.
I've been your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist,
as always, bidding you to keep looking up.