StarTalk Radio - Cosmic Queries – StarTalk-ology with Alie Ward
Episode Date: April 12, 2022What kinds of ologies are out there? On this episode, Neil deGrasse Tyson and comic co-host Chuck Nice explore and answer questions about the vast world of niche sciences with science communicator and... host of “Ologies,” Alie Ward. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free.Thanks to our Patrons Mike S, Luke, Frank (Hopper) Cross, Timur Sultanov, Skyeletta Ramona, Matt W, Bennett Saunders, Vincent Lee, George Gao, and Bob Soltys for supporting us this week.Photo Credit: Chocolateoak, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
This is StarTalk Cosmic Queries Edition.
I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist.
And we can't do cosmic queries without Chuck Nice.
Chuck, welcome back.
Hey, Neil.
And by the way, you could.
You say you can't do it without me.
I'm sorry, I was lying.
You're being kind to me.
You're being kind and I appreciate it.
You know, you're like, we couldn't do this without Chuck Nice,
but I've actually seen shows where you have.
Okay.
Damn, call me.
I thought I could slip that one by, but apparently not.
Okay.
But good to have you, Chuck.
Always a pleasure.
And we've got a special guest, a guest we've never had.
And I don't know how she went under our radar for so many years.
We've got Allie Ward with us.
Allie, welcome to StarTalk.
I'm here.
I'm so happy to incite such excited stammering.
Here I am.
No one can believe I'm here, least of all me.
Hi.
So you've got quite the thing going on. You've,
you've taken ownership of all the ologies of the universe and have delivered them back to us in
digestible bites, not only in your Twitter stream, but in a podcast and videos. So this is just,
I love it. Well, let me say something here if i can if i can just i don't
sound like you know father time on the porch on the rocking chair but uh you have a background
that would not immediately indicate that you do exactly this but your background is all the
background you need to do exactly this right so so there are people there there are students who
study acting
because they want to be an actor, right?
So they go to law school,
you're going to be a lawyer.
Business school, you're going to be a businessman.
And you do these things
and now you invented all of this stuff
because that is that melange of talent
now unique to you
and that can only manifest in products
that are the unique pawprint
of what you bring to it.
That makes me feel a lot better about job security, I'll have to say.
Okay.
And rest easy.
Tell that to your parents.
I know.
Where did we go wrong?
She's not on the list.
But, I mean, you know, I think that really one thing I've learned from ology so much
is that the people that I interview are so passionate about what they study, whether
they're a ufologist studying toads
or they're someone who is a fire ecologist or whatever,
they tend to really love their jobs.
And so I think I've really learned from doing ologies
is figure out what you love the most
and then just gravitate toward that.
Passionology.
Yeah.
It's the study of watching people get excited about their work.
I just invented an ology.
So there.
I can actually use that.
Now that you've said it, I can use it.
So I didn't invent it.
You did.
Maybe there's an ology for my passion.
Buttology.
Is there?
You know who I had on?
I did do gluteology with Natalia Reagan, who has been on StarTalk a bunch.
So she.
Yes, she's a friend of StarTalk.
We talked all about butts.
The primate butt is a whole thing
with the orangutan.
Talked about gluteology.
And the mandrill, the big red butt.
Gluteology, that's what it's called.
So do humans have the biggest butts?
Humans have the biggest butts, right?
We do.
And I'm going to use first person plural on that.
I'm going to include myself on that.
We do have the biggest butts.
That's very kind of you.
That's very inclusive of you.
You're a big fine primate
when you back that thing up.
And for a reason. So yeah, you can
listen to her episode and learn all about it.
But that's kind of, I realized
I was really good at being
curious and just nosy enough
to be uncomfortable in some situations.
So it turns out-
I got you.
You need that because that gets you beyond the edge of your comfort zone, which is always
important.
Otherwise, nothing new shows up.
And what did you study in school?
I studied science.
I loved science.
And I also loved fine art.
And so I was studying illustration and science, and I couldn't decide which way to go. And I thought maybe I would do both.
But I ended up as a double major in biology and film.
Well, there it is. And you're the full manifestation of that. That's great.
And then she, if you notice, Neil, if you notice, there's a very distinct dichotomy in her choices.
One actually pays money where you can get a job,
and the other one doesn't.
So she's like, fine art and science.
Which one can I live on?
Which one?
Biology and television.
Hmm.
I mean, ask a grad student, though.
There are grad students listening saying,
do you know how much grad students make?
Wait, Allie, let me put Chuck in his place here.
I'm going to put Chuck in his place.
Your fine art infuses the depth and elegance
of everything else you do.
So no, you may not be specifically making money
from the fine art.
Everything else you're doing is enhanced by it.
Yeah, I tried to say that.
I tried to tell my mother that when I went into comedy.
I tried to do the same thing, Neil.
Did not work.
Did not work.
Did not work.
She's like, you need to infuse some money into this rent.
How about that?
That's good.
There is an ology for that.
Gelatology is a study of humor.
And I interviewed someone who told me he was, he was Dr. Burke down in Loma Linda. He studies the effects of laughter on medical patients. And he is a man who is serious about laughter. And it was one of the driest interviews I've ever done, which I thought was absolutely perfect because he's so serious. Wait, wait, wait. So if you say, I was laughing so hard I was in stitches,
that would have extra meaning to him.
It probably would.
Or if I bust out my stitches, I don't want to laugh too hard.
If I'm in the hospital trying to recover,
I don't want Chuck too near me because I might laugh too hard.
You could just say, I don't want Chuck too near me because I might laugh too hard. Yes.
You could just say, I was laughing so hard, I was lengthening my telomeres is a better way to say it.
Oh, good. I like that.
You live longer when you laugh.
Is that the deal?
Yeah.
That's the deal.
Okay.
Yeah, you want to, the telomeres are good.
Good.
Chuck, we have questions for you.
Yes.
Is that right?
That is right.
We're solicited from our fan base.
This was so much fun. I forgot we were doing this. This was so much fun. I forgot
we were doing a Cosmic Queries.
Cosmic Queries, yeah.
What do you have for us? Okay, so
let's just start off with Adam Crowther,
or Crowther. It's C-R-O
W-N-N-T-H-E-R.
So, Crowther? Crowther? I don't know.
Anyway, he says,
thank you for this opportunity to ask the question.
Chuck, you never know.
Okay, go on.
I wish I could refute that, but I can't.
You can't.
Okay, here we go.
He says, thank you for the opportunity to ask this question.
I have friends and family who have been convinced that COVID vaccination is useless against the disease and it will be harmful to our health. They are motivated by the general distrust
of conventional medicine and faith in alternative,
so-called holistic and spiritualistic healing methods
and their strong belief in the paranormal.
Ooh.
So he says, how do I approach this discussion?
Adam, so you're a person who studies everything.
Each of the fields that you dip your toes in
or full body in
require some sensitivity to the vocabulary,
the jargon, what's interesting, what's not.
And so you have to think this through.
And somewhere in there,
you would have come up with methods, tools, and tactics of communicating what needs to get out
there. So what can you share with us on this topic? Well, you know, I was lucky enough to
study biology and I used to read a lot of journals for fun when I was in college. I was a dork. So
luckily I have that kind of background. But things like this, when it comes to
communicating science, that I always try to start from is just empathy and understanding where
someone's coming from, whether it is asking a scientist to share their work or whether it's
trying to get these ideas to the public. And so I think, of course, there's things that are infuriating about this,
but if you are with someone who does not want to understand science or is blocked to it,
always come from an empathetic standpoint of what are they scared of? I think typically fear
is what blocks us off from a lot of learning. So what are they scared of?
This would come from psychology.
of learning. So what are they scared of? This would come from
psychology.
Yes, an ology
indeed.
See what I did there? Am I good?
Am I good? Loved it.
Haven't done that episode yet.
Too broad a topic.
But the idea that the empathy
at least doesn't have them
dig their heels in more strongly.
You might be able to find a place to have that conversation.
Yeah.
I mean, a space, a conversational space.
Yeah, there's no, you don't do any good
if you are being condescending to someone or patronizing
or if you are annoyed at them for their beliefs.
It doesn't do anyone good.
You don't get, it doesn't help anyone.
Well, I'm doing this whole thing wrong
because I have the Fred Sanford approach. Shut up, dummy. Shut up. Yeah, he did say that.
Does not open a lot of minds. So try to address what they're scared of and then try to perhaps
talk to them about how scary the other alternative is, you know, in this, in terms of vaccination.
So, so what you're saying is you're an idiot is not a good opener. I think, no. But it's a good closer if they don't listen to you.
We have to get you back on another show the week before Thanksgiving, before everyone goes home.
Yes. So that the Thanksgiving dinner conversations can, so no one dies.
Yep. All right. We'll have the special yeah i have two apologies
for you though we do have vaccine infodemiology um which premiered in january has a lot of
information has a lot of talk about vaccine hesitancy and where those come from from
historical psychological place and agnotology which is the study of willful ignorance which
is a real study and i talked talked to a Stanford professor about that.
So those episodes are there in case you want to understand why some people.
Wow. Okay. Very good. I like, I like the overview there. Very good.
We're going to take a quick break.
When we come back more Q and a with the queen of ologies,
Ali Ward on StarTalk.
on StarTalk.
Hi, I'm Chris Cohen from Haworth, New Jersey, and I support
StarTalk on Patreon.
Please enjoy this episode of StarTalk
Radio with your
and my favorite personal
astrophysicist, Neil DeGrasse
Tyson.
We're back. StarTalk Cosmic Queries edition.
I got Chuck with me.
And Chuck, we have a guest.
I don't know how we missed her the past eight years
that we've been doing this.
Ali Ward, welcome.
Welcome to StarTalk.
I'm here.
How do we find you on Twitter?
Oh, just at Ali Ward, A-L-i-e-w-r-d or
ologies just at ologies on everything i sat on those handles i got them they're mine ologies
nice so you own ology i do i do i couldn't believe the handles i don't know if that's a good thing or
a bad thing i have to think about that it's a a good thing. Trust me. If you turn evil, then to control the ologies is you become a superhero nemesis.
Yeah.
No, that's my plan.
Yeah.
My plan is to ruin everything.
You're just seeing part of my backstory now.
So someone's going to haunt me, and then I'm going to use everything.
This is your origin story right now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, cool.
So Chuck, we have to be nice to her because no telling what powers she's advancing. We might turn her into
an evilologist. Yep, yeah.
Lightning's going to come out of my eyes. I'm going to own
the world. It's going to be great. There you go.
So Chuck, we solicited
questions specifically for her
in this unheard-ology
universe.
So what do you have there? Okay, here we go.
This is Chapter Lipschitz who says,
Hey, what's up stellar StarTalk crew, Neil and Chuck?
Chester Lipschitz here with the question about ancient science.
Clearly man-made discoveries before language,
even though they did not formally fall into today's definition of science.
Do you think there would have been a limit to the advancement of civilization
without language?
Ooh.
Interesting.
I like that.
Is there an ology for that?
So, Ali, have you interviewed any linguists or anybody who's thought about this language
in the brain?
I haven't.
I haven't. I haven't, but I want to
say, obviously,
I guess it depends
on how you define language, because there are so many
animals that use language
and have different ways of communicating.
Are they talking about just written language?
Are they talking about
syntax? Because there's, I mean,
there are different primates. There are monkeys
that have different dialects in terms of where they grow up in certain rainforests.
So I'm thinking every species of animal on earth has no trouble communicating with other members
of its species. All right. I mean, you look at ants and bees and birds and they're just having
a doing fine. And I bet cavemen, you know, the cave people,
they, without a dictionary and a language and a school,
I'm sure they communicated with each other when they were hungry, when they needed more food,
when they're sleepy.
I mean, so maybe we should tune the question
a little tighter and ask,
maybe basic discoveries could be communicated, but not subtle nuances of discoveries,
which would require a more sophisticated way of communication.
What do you think of that?
That's my answer, and I'm sticking to it.
It's a good answer.
I think we would find those nuances, the same way we found nuances for when you're deaf
or when you're blind. We always seem to find a way to communicate
with each other as human beings. And even if we didn't have that, we would just find a way to
communicate those nuances. It would be interesting to look at, yeah, written language and technology
and if they follow a similar curve, if there's a certain limiting factor. I don't know, but I will
say that I want to just deconstruct the question
in terms of what is language, because I think that
we have a very narrow
definition of that in terms of
what is human written language.
That's what I say. I say, go back to your question,
re-tinker the language of your question,
and then we'll re-answer it.
That's what I say.
Damn, just send them back to the drawing board.
Hey, Allie.
We have to be here next week Chester I think it's a good question
Chester I do
I do
I just want to deconstruct a little bit
how about this
let me leapfrog this and say
science as we now think of it
took great leaps
and advances only after scientific journals
became the common way discoveries were shared not only within a country but across national
boundaries speaking whatever was the agreed upon language of the day right and you go back several
hundred years it was latin the language of the erudite and the scientific communication that's when it really took a took a jump so i have to say whether or not it's spoken
language the simple act of communicating a discovery at a distance mattered greatly yeah
and you're right you know what's that's so interesting because that's where the codification
comes in is the fact that you're able to have these, you know, records so that you can go back and compare and then compare across distances.
You don't have to reinvent something.
You don't have to reinvent something.
You have a record.
Not only the record of what's been discovered, but the record of dead ends.
So you don't have to repeat the mistakes of people who came before you.
Fascinating. Great job. Good question. All right, keep going.
That was awesome. All right, here we go. Tom says, C-E-Z, so I don't know. He says,
I think being nice is better for teaching the scientific method.
What are the verified experiments showing which teaching methods are best?
Yeah.
So, Ali, what's this field?
I mean, other than the field of education, is there an ology associated with that?
I think I had Bill Nye on. Head of, Head of Ecology. He's this guy,
he's, um, who's that guy? He's a guy. Don't, don't, just, just, just, just. He just started, just started, he's just starting out in his career. And, um, we talked about science
communication and, um, he essentially was talking about how you shouldn't introduce
a concept with a big word first. You should talk about the concept first and then define it
instead of just dropping a big word. Essentially, I think not alienating people is the biggest
hurdle to get over with science communication. So I guess I would err on the side of being nice
in terms of trying to be as inclusive as possible
and have it be a welcoming space.
Because I think one thing about science
that intimidates people, especially lay people,
is they think that scientists are all in lab coats.
They know everything.
They don't break anything.
They don't make any mistakes.
They don't fail at anything.
They are just imbued with knowledge. They don't realize that scientists...
Inaccessible to them.
They don't realize that scientists are just really curious people who do a lot of experiments that
mess up a lot until they find an answer. So I think trying to come at it from a more humanistic,
like hop on board, learn what you can instead of get out of here.
I like that. I like that.
Rather than think of it as something up on the ivory tower hill
that you have no access to.
Very good.
And I also think the more varied backgrounds we have in science,
the different questions people ask.
I think if you have the same people in science,
they're going to ask the same kind of questions of their experiments.
And I think that's one thing I really love about genealogies
is having all these different types of scientists
who approach their research based on their own background. So yeah,
I think hop on in. We need as many scientists as possible. So nice, nice is better. Okay. I think.
Yeah, I agree. All right. All right. Very cool. So thanks for the supercilious answer,
supercilious answer, Allie. I don't know. English humor. Loved it. Here we go. Stephen Summers wants to know this. He says, hey, say you've spoken on TV or a podcast to a huge audience
with total confidence in your idea, only to find out later that you got something wrong.
How do you set the record straight when that happens? That's a great question. That is a
great question. One thing I recommend if people struggle with this is just take what you need
from your house and go live in a cave for the rest of your life.
Don't show your face again. Remove yourself from society. You failed. It's all over,
is what I would say. No, that's not what I would say.
I would say-
Chuck, you're right. We do have to be here next week.
I think one thing that a lot of people don't realize is that science is evolving.
There are so many things we've thought about science, and then we did more experiments and learned something else.
And so understanding that science and just knowledge, human knowledge, is always elastic.
It's always changing.
You may have been wrong.
That's great.
Admit it.
Cop to it.
Issue a correction on Twitter and Instagram and on your website,
and move on with your life.
I think... Wait, wait, wait.
Ali, there are two kinds of wrongs.
One of them is, this is what we think is true today, but more research may undo it later.
And so I say, well, three years ago, I got that wrong, because that's the best we knew
at the time.
That's different from blunder, where you just simply say something that's just flat out
wrong and someone calls you out later on. So that's a more of an embarrassing kind of error
to do. Should that person move to the cave forever? I would say, remember, every human is a human.
Everyone makes mistakes. And they say there's a fixed mindset and a growth mindset.
One is like too afraid to make mistakes. Others, I make a mistake and I move on from it. So I think
the best thing you can do is admit your wrongs, apologize for them sincerely, and put out a
correction. And so we have to work on that mindset. That's a mindset that people fear, I think.
Because, you know, what is it they said? That the scariest thing, even scarier than death,
is speaking in public for some people?
Yes.
Yeah.
I never understood that because I never had an issue with that.
I mean, you think people would rather be at the front of the room
at their own funeral than giving the eulogy at somebody else's.
Then in the front of the room of a full house.
Right.
Yeah.
And so, I mean, unless there is a sniper or you're going to die straight up of a heart
attack at the speaking podium, you'll be fine.
I always say that, you know, we're definitely so afraid of things that can't hurt us.
I remember I made a flowchart once of like,
can this thing kill you?
If yes, run.
If no, chill out.
Those are the basics.
I did an episode.
I love that flowchart.
It's a great flowchart.
I use it all the time.
But I did an episode, two-parter,
called Fearology with someone named Mary Poffenrauch.
And she's an expert in fear and the amygdala
and how we react to fear.
And it was life-changing.
She is so great.
And she essentially said most of our fears and anxiety and stress is just worry that
we're not good enough.
And so if you think about everyone walking around worrying that they're not good enough
to do their job or follow their dreams or start a conversation or a podcast or correct
their mistakes, then that's a whole lot of stress that we have.
So I got one for you, Chuck.
Yeah.
Ready?
What flat earthers fear most is fear itself.
Oh.
Yeah.
By the way, that joke made me believe the earth is flat.
Did you just come up with that or did you?
No, I tweeted that a couple of years ago.
And no, no, it was, I think it's been around.
It's been around.
The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
Is fear itself.
Is fear.
Actually, I'm going to tell you something.
That's pretty damn clever.
I love it.
It's the sphere.
It's sphere is what does
for the wordplay. I like it.
We got time. Maybe one more question.
What else you got, Chuck?
Let's go to Kayla Slaughter.
Kayla says...
By the way, these are all Patreon members, right?
Yes, that is correct.
I'm glad you brought that up, Neil,
because let me just tell people that
you can go to patreon.com slash StarTalk,
support us there.
If you're coming at a certain support level,
we take your questions and we read them on the air.
And that allows us...
I mean, they bribe us to ask the questions.
That's what they do.
Yeah, listen.
Nobody in this organization is a law enforcement official.
There is no law that says we cannot take bribes.
All right, go on. Next question. Here we go. She says, I'll be starting a family soon. I want to make sure my children have a well-rounded experience in science and politics and every, all theologies, basically.
Any thoughts on how I can start early?
I wish that paper encyclopedias were still around because I feel like when I was a kid, all I wanted was an encyclopedia shelf in our house just to take a volume and then just go sit under a tree with it.
So you're 75 years old.
I'm 1 million years old, yeah.
That's good.
Back when we had paper, books were made of paper.
You can smell them with your nose.
We did have an old, we finally got one from a garage sale,
but it was so outdated that it was like,
one day, human man will be on the moon.
And I remember being like.
Yes, I love the out-of-date things.
They're fun.
I know.
They're cheap.
But I would say let them frolic.
Let them frolic.
Get them a microscope.
Because you start swabbing windowsills and start looking at fly mouth parts.
You start to realize the world is a lot bigger and smaller than we think.
So I'd say let them frolic.
Fly mouth parts.
That was very random right there.
Of all the things you could have listed, fly mouth parts.
I don't even – no, I'd retract the question.
I don't want to know how you came up with that in your list.
Have you ever looked at them?
What are you doing later today?
Get yourself a microscope.
Find a dead fly.
Fly mouth parts.
You know, they're just thinking about them barfing on a sandwich and sucking it back up.
The world is big and small.
It's beautiful.
It's great.
Maybe get them a telescope and a microscope.
This should be
free range
children
with access to
the large and the small.
And in those limits, there are no
bounds. Nice.
And I want to make it known
that I don't have kids.
So take this with a grain of salt because I don't know how to raise children.
Wait, I heard offline that you have a dog.
I do.
I have an 8-year-old daughter.
She's a poodle.
And does your 8-year-old poodle daughter have a microscope?
She does.
Yeah, she has a microscope.
She doesn't have opposable thumbs.
They're working on that.
She's doing great. She's got
infrared goggles. I got her
an electron scanning
microscope we just keep in the garage.
Yeah, so she's got everything
she needs. By the way, Kayla
has a follow-up for you,
Allie. She says, what's it like
talking to so many smart people all
of the time? And by the way, I
love your shows.
Plural, she put.
Well, there it is.
What it's like talking to smart people all the time
is incredibly, incredibly humbling.
So there's nothing better than being reminded
that you're the stupidest person in a conversation.
And that's what I do for a living.
It's great.
So Allie, that reminds me of a quote.
If you're the smartest person in the room, find another room. Yeah. That's a good saying. That's
what you're saying here, Allie, right? You're reveling in the fact that every outing, you learn
something. Absolutely. For so many people, the pain of learning something new is unbearable to them.
And so they stay steeped in their ignorance, ossified from the graduation day or when they
left school. That's true. Living in the past. All right. So with that, is there such a thing
as a stupid question? I really don't think so. I think if it's honest, if it's honest and
vulnerable, it's not stupid. And chances are someone else in the room has it.
And we're all going to die anyway.
We're all going to be bones and dust and a fungus is going to eat us.
Is that true?
Yes.
That's true.
That's how I live my life.
Hot bangs.
Wow.
That's very blunt, but true.
We're all going to die.
You're going to be powder.
No one's going to remember you.
I don't even remember my great-grandparents' name.
So why would I be like, I don't want to ask this question about solar power or about the universe. Wow. No one's going to remember me. I don't even remember my great-grandparents' names. So why would I be like, I don't want to ask this question about solar power or about the universe.
Wow.
No one's going to remember me.
Can I quote you on that?
Yes.
Okay.
Someone said, I'm afraid to do this.
You're going to die anyway.
You're going to die.
You're going to die.
Literally a fungus.
Ask the question.
You're going to die anyway.
There you go.
Your fungus lunch at the end of the day.
Ask a question and learn something.
If someone laughs, they're a jerk.
So it's great.
Just do your life.
All right, wait a minute.
I got to tell the story.
I got to tell the story real quick because it's, speaking of stupid questions now, you
just reminded me, you're going to die.
Okay, I have evidence to refute that.
We're somewhere outdoors.
It's Neil and I and these people who are huge fans.
They come over.
They're talking to him.
He's being very, very gracious,
spending way too much time talking to him.
And so the guy says,
hey, do you have one of those apps on your phone
where you can hold it up to the sky
and it will show you constellations?
And the Neil goes like this,
are you kidding me right now?
And I was like, yeah, bro, he is the app.
I'm like, are you insane?
You're asking Neil deGrasse Tyson,
does he need an app on his phone to look at the night sky?
I'm like, brother, he is the app.
What is your problem?
Yes, great. Yeah, my answer is, in my the app. What is your problem? Yes. Yeah. My answer is in my day,
we had to remember where the constellations were. I still, I think embarrassing moment for him,
but still there's a lot of stars up there. If anyone's taught us that it's you. So he learned
something about you that your brain has even more capacity than he ever imagined. And also, he learned he needs the app.
You don't.
Yeah, thank you.
There you go.
And this bit about being fungus lunch,
I'm trying to decide whether that's a happy note or a sad note.
It is.
It's amazingly liberating.
I did a whole episode on thanatology, death and dying,
one of the happiest episodes I did.
I came out of there saying, well, I'm just going to do whatever I want to do. So yeah, your fungus lunch, ask a question, do your thing, follow your passion,
you know, read the encyclopedia. It's all fun. And remember, you're delicious.
To some organism, you're delicious. Guys, we've got to take a quick break,
but when we come back, more StarTalk with Ali Ward.
Hey, StarTalk fans.
This next segment of our episode with Algie's host, Ali Ward, is sponsored by the all-electric Chevrolet Bolt EUV,
the everyday electric vehicle for everyday people.
That's you.
The all-electric Chevy Bolt EUV has
so many cool features, including the ability to engage in conversations hands-free with the
industry's first hands-free driving assistance technology. You can find out more at chevrolet.com
slash electric slash bolt dash EUV. All right, let's get back to the show.
EUV. All right, let's get back to the show.
We're back, StarTalk Cosmic Queries. And for this segment, we're going to actually devote this to a discussion about electric cars. Chuck, what do you think of that?
Yes, that's awesome. Because I know you don't like the word awesome, but in this case,
I think it is awe-inspiring.
But just to be clear, I love the word awesome,
but when properly applied,
like when you discover a new universe or something.
Okay.
When people say, it would be awesome if you could pass the salt.
That is not a good use of the word awesome, okay?
Okay, here is a good use of the word awesome
because electric vehicles actually do so much to help the environment.
And I care about the environment. I know you do. People don't think I do.
But this segment we're doing in partnership with the Chevrolet Bolt EUV.
So I'm just over the moon because we get to talk about electric vehicles, man. And that's our future.
All right. So this EUV, is that like SUV except electric?
Is that how we're going to say it?
Yeah, man.
Yeah, exactly.
Doesn't it sound better, though?
Doesn't it sound better to be like EUV, you know?
EUV.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
Let's get back to our guest here, Ali Ward from Ologies,
who basically did a land grab on all ologies in the universe.
Nice.
All of them.
That's a straight power move.
That's total gangster right there.
It's like, if it's an ology.
Once you get that handle, you're sitting on it, and it's yours.
But yeah, this would be electric vehicle technology, I suppose,
the segment could be.
The ology?
Right, there you go.
You just cram that ology in whether or not it belongs.
Yep, that's what I do.
Someone mentions something in casual conversation and I tell you what ology it is.
But this one has really excited me.
I've been excited about electric vehicles since I was a kid.
My dad is really into alternative sources of power and solar power.
And so I have been watching for years
and seeing how EVs come on the market.
So I'm really excited about the Chevrolet EV.
I think EV is a good move.
I like the way it sounds.
Cool. And Chuck, but is it like 100 grand
like other electric vehicles?
Like what's going on there?
That's the great thing about it.
Otherwise it's not for everybody.
You can't take that Chevy to the levee. If it costs that much, what's going on there? That's the great thing about it. Otherwise, it's not for everybody. You can't take that Chevy to the levee.
If it costs that much, nobody's...
No good old boys are doing that.
So what's...
Right, yeah.
Well, that's why they drained the levee.
What's the price point on this?
That's why they drained the levee,
was to pay for your very expensive,
which this is not.
Actually, when I said it's accessible,
that's what I mean.
It's, you know, this is a car that allows people
to enter into this realm, and if you're a conscientious person... As a first, a foray you know, this is a car that allows people to enter into this realm.
And if you're a conscientious person.
As a first foray.
Okay, very good.
Very good.
Yeah.
So, Ali, do you have a question?
I do, actually.
I wanted to know.
Wait, wait, wait.
Actually, that's not fair because you're our guest and we usually take questions from the audience, from our fan base.
But, you know, you seem so into it. Maybe
we'll give you the occasion to ask the question with the permission of our fan base. I think
they'll allow it. So the floor is mine. I have the cosmic query conch right now and can launch
a question. Okay. So I wanted to talk about whether or not electric vehicles are good for the environment, how much good do they do over a car that runs on fossil fuels?
What are your thoughts on it?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
So I can, I mean, I don't claim to be the world's expert on that, but I can get you a lot of the way towards an answer to that question.
So here's the problem.
Transportation today, you know, cars and trucks and things that move commerce, I guess even trains, but some trains are electric.
So let's just stick to the ones that have sort of engines that burn fossil fuels.
The problem is if you have a car that takes gasoline, it can only run on gasoline, right?
So if you run out of gas,
you got to go to a gas station and fill it up with gasoline. So, you know, we all know how much gas
costs and we know where it comes from in the world. And we know if a pipeline gets shut down
and we know if a war breaks out and we know if an oil well is on fire and we know if there's
new regulation related to it. So oil has become a strategic commodity simply because we need it to run our transportation grid.
So now in comes an electric car.
So an electric car, of course, it still uses power.
All right.
So what's up with that?
Why is it good rather than sort of neutral or bad or equal?
Right.
So here's what happens.
You got your car and it's at home and you plug it in, okay?
Now, it's getting electricity from your power plant.
There's a chance your power plant is using coal.
There's a good chance of that, all right?
So that's not really much better, all right?
Burning coal and burning gasoline, there's still this carbon footprint.
Okay. However, the power plant is not limited to just coal. If they wanted to, and many have,
they can put in, if they have sunlight where you are, a solar farm or a wind farm. And if you're
near water, you could be hydroelectric. All of these sources of power can be generated by your power
company and show up in your wall socket. So you don't need 12 different engines in your car
to use 12 different kinds of energy. You just need a plug that gives you access to the thing
that's generating the energy 12 different ways.
So if you electrify the transportation grid, you are future-proofing our path into a culture and a civilization that can wean itself off its dependence of fossil fuel.
And so that's why it works.
That's why it's good.
I like that answer. Not to mention, if you go solar on your house,
you essentially have a solar-powered car,
which is a car powered by the sun.
Oh, yeah.
There you go.
There's got to be a bumper sticker for that.
Like solar-powered.
Yeah, but that wouldn't work in places like Seattle
where the sun never comes out
or upstate New York.
But, yeah, it would be believable if it's in a place where the sun is prevalent.
So that's why electric is good.
Now, the problem is I can have a gallon of gas over here
and I can move it over there where you need it.
Okay. You can't do that with electric, you can't carry electricity with you. Oh, sorry. You can
charge a battery and then I can move the battery over there. No, the battery is in the car.
Okay. So, so one of the problems with electricity as it's generated is you can't store it outside of the battery that's in your car.
To run your lights, to run most of the things that civilization uses electricity for, it doesn't come out of a storage battery.
It's generated on the fly as you need it from the power station and delivered by the high tension lines.
I was going to say, like, I'm glad you said that
because there's a lot of people who are, you know,
electric vehicle hesitant, I will say,
because they're worried about how far they can drive,
like because of what you just said.
And the cool thing about the industry,
but more importantly about the Chevy Bolt AUV,
is because I know this because I got to take a tour of the car with GM.
The cool thing is this car has nearly 250 mile range on a full charge.
Okay.
That's good.
Right.
And then.
That'll get you between any adjacent cities.
I mean, New York City is $250 between Boston and Washington.
And you're in L.A., Allie?
What cities?
San Diego is easy?
If you need to make a getaway, that's Palm Springs.
That's Joshua Tree.
That's Santa Barbara.
That's, yeah, up the coast.
Oh, excuse me, Joshua Tree.
Oh, excuse me.
Okay.
These are different hangouts.
Excuse me.
I'm about to take my Chevrolet Bolt EUV
down to the Joshua Tree.
Perhaps you'd like to meet me there.
Sometimes you need an Instagram shoot.
You need to get in your Bolt.
I love the EUVs.
I think if you like a hatchback with a little bit higher profile,
yeah, I love that.
And the range is great.
They call it range anxiety.
People who are afraid to go EV
because they think they're going to be stranded. But once you drive an electric, it's kind of like once you become a
birdwatcher, you start seeing all these charging stations, just like you would see birds you didn't
realize were there before. But once you drive an EV, it's like, oh, there's a charge. They're
everywhere. You can charge in parking lots at the mall. You can charge next to your grocery store.
You can charge at hotels. It's just like, it it's really easy so the bird watcher and analog there is if you've never looked for a bird
you would never know it was there until you knew what to look for yeah right and then they're
everywhere i got you okay so that's just like a psychological effect once you know what to look
for but yeah there's av charging stations everywhere um yeah there's about 40,000 birds to look for when you're traveling.
Is that how many EV stations are there? Really? Yeah, yeah, there's about 40,000 public charging
stations. That's great. Okay, so Chuck, which goes faster down the road, a Chevy Bolt or Usain Bolt? You know, I'm going to say that the Usain Bolt is faster
out of the blocks, but the Chevy Bolt is going to ultimately smoke them. Don't tell him that.
You don't need as many carbs for your Chevy Bolt. You don't have to run it on pasta,
protein, anything. I think range, better range.
Oh, I got you.
There you go.
Yeah.
So is that your only question you have?
That was my main question about it.
I think, you know, people who are considering going from a fossil fuel car to something that is electric,
I think tend to be people who are environmentally conscious.
And so they really want to know how much better is this for the environment.
But knowing that you can use...
I agree.
And those are the people who do it first.
But ultimately, if you get the right price point,
people just do it because it's the right price point.
Not to mention...
Oh, wait.
So then, you know, speaking of what you just said,
before we actually got on the show today,
Ali was doing something on your computer
where you were like looking at the savings so when you
talk about price point there are hidden savings in every electric vehicle uh but I don't know
what were you doing well there are fewer moving parts oh can I can I back up real quick we're
running out of time I don't want to take up the whole thing but okay but But Michael Faraday, go back 150, 60 years.
When you said back,
I thought you meant back in the show.
No, no, no.
Can I go back?
Michael Faraday.
So Michael Faraday,
an English scientist, physicist,
he basically is responsible
for figuring out
how to generate electricity.
Right.
And he invented the concept
of an electric field, by the way,
because that's not a thing you can touch, right?
It's just this thing there.
So he can draw it and calculate.
You can calculate with it.
So he realized that if you move a wire through a magnetic field,
it induces current in that wire, and it'll show up on a meter.
And so, whoa, well, that's kind of it was a
little novel at the time but what would you do with this this is kind of a stupid toy and then
people figure oh my gosh this is the birth of electrification of the world point is the way
we do that now is we have a tightly wound in a what's called a turbine, a typely wound wire coil that spins in a magnetic field
and an electric current is induced in that wire.
Ever since the beginning of electricity, we've known how to spin things.
That's what we do best.
We've been doing it for 150 years.
And what is a car if not electricity spinning things?
So the acceleration
on an electric vehicle can be excellent
because of this fact. And that's why
the Chevy Bolt, I didn't check the acceleration
numbers, they might actually accelerate out of the box
faster than Usain Bolt.
Now that I'm thinking about it.
Also, I was
checking on Price Point stuff
just to see how much would I save per year driving an EV.
And my parents live about 400 miles away.
So I go up a couple times, obviously, like every month or two.
And I would save $10,000 over five years on gas just based on that.
Yeah, if you're calculating how much.
Not to mention how much CO2 that is.
Right.
So a little karmically and then pocketbook-wise.
But yeah, they have a number cruncher for you,
so you don't have to pull out your spreadsheets.
They have it for you.
But yeah.
And yeah, the acceleration is better.
I see what you did when you said karmically.
You like that?
Yeah, I see what you did.
Electric.
The cons are electric. So guys, we got to land this plane when you say karma. You like that? Yeah. Electric. Karma.
The puns are electric.
So guys, we got to land this plane or park this car.
So Allie's been a delight to have you on this show.
I can't believe we haven't had you ever on before.
We got to do this again with your permission
and talk about some of the ologies that you've discovered
or I think you're inventing some of those ologies.
Maybe bending some words.
I think you're pulling them out of I don't know where.
I swear I do look for them in the literature first.
I promise.
But yes, so many ologies to cover.
I'm here whenever you need me.
And so little time.
Yes.
Okay.
Excellent.
Thanks for being on StarTalk.
And you can catch her on her Ology podcast.
And it goes everywhere.
I mean, every Ology you can ever imagine, even the ones you haven't imagined because she made them up.
They're there.
Loosely.
All right, Chuck, always good to have you, man.
Hey, Neil, before we wrap up, I just want to let the viewer know that if you're ready to make the electric future part of your present
and do some good for the environment, which is what it is all about.
Check out the Chevrolet Bolt EUV at Chevrolet.com slash electric.
Chevrolet.com slash electric.
Do some good, people.
Come on.
All right.
This has been StarTalk Cosmic Queries.
Neil deGrasse Tyson here.
As always, keep looking up.