StarTalk Radio - Geekdom 101, with Olivia Munn
Episode Date: February 17, 2020Are you ready for your lesson in geek culture? Neil deGrasse Tyson chats with Olivia Munn about superheroes, aliens, math, planetary science, and more. Featuring comic co-host Chuck Nice and astrophys...icist and StarTalk geek-in-chief Charles Liu, PhD. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons and All-Access subscribers can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/show/geekdom-101-with-olivia-munn/ Thanks to our Patrons Genesis Perez, Braden Thomas, Joe Aguirre, Ayush Kapri, and Aden Parker for supporting us this week. Photo Credit: StarTalk. 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. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist and host.
And we are coming to you from my office at the Hayden Planetarium of the American Museum
of Natural History
right here in New York City.
Co-host Chuck Nice.
Chuck.
Hey.
Chuck in the house.
Good to be in the Cosmic Crib.
Tweet.
Oh, we hadn't called it
that in a while.
That's right.
But that's what it is
and has always been.
Always will be.
The Cosmic Crib.
Tweeting at Chuck Nice Comics.
Thank you, sir.
Yes.
All right.
And I got with me
Charles Liu.
The one and only. If Charles Liu is in the house, you know we're going to do, sir. Yes. All right. And I got with me Charles Liu. The one and only.
If Charles Liu is in the house,
you know we're going to do some geeking.
That's right.
Looking forward to it.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Because this topic today is about aliens and superheroes.
Yes.
And we snared an interview with sort of geek icon,
geek goddess,
Olivia Munn.
Yes.
I was out,
last time I was out in L.A.,
got an interview with her.
It was great.
Yeah, last time I was out in L.A.,
got a restraining order
from her.
No.
Yeah.
Last time I was in L.A.,
I was 12.
Really?
Really.
You got to get out more, dude.
I do have to get out more.
You got to get out more.
Especially to the West Coast.
So,
just the whole universe of mutant superheroes to be specific.
Well, she is an X person.
Oh, yeah, because the X-Men are mutants.
She played Psylocke.
Psylocke.
In the Age of Apocalypse.
That's correct.
Okay, there you go.
And it's a, so she's been associated with geek culture simply through her acting roles.
But there's also some of that in her, because you don't have to be a geek to be a geek actor.
That's true.
But it helps.
It does.
You want it to be true.
Right.
When someone has that kind of portfolio.
It's better to be a fan of what you're doing than just to do it in a mercenary type way anyway.
That's a good point.
But mercenary.
Whoa.
Actor mercenary.
Yeah.
Actor mercenary.
Ooh. way anyway. That's a good point. But mercenary. Whoa. Actor mercenary. Actor mercenary.
And so she also wrote a memoir titled Suck It Wonder
Woman. The Misadventures
of a Hollywood Geek. She's also
a talk show host about
geek culture. And I had to
ask her, because she's thought about it. I've thought
about it. We all thought about it. But she's like in it.
Performing it.
Embodying it. And I had to ask
her just what in her mind defines being a geek. Let's check it out. There's a misnomer that being
a geek is just playing video games or being awkward or just, or having a pile of, you know,
comic books. I think being a geek is somebody that
just thinks differently than the rest of the crowd. You know, that it's not just what's laid
out before you. There are different ways to think about it. And that's why comic books have been
so popular with geeks for so long, because there is a group of people that operate a different way,
think a different way, superheroes, like, they are ostracized
because of their abilities to be different.
And I think that all geeks operate that way.
We're just called geeks.
Oh, so superheroes never really fit in.
Well, neither did the geek set.
Yeah, and I think that's what people identify with.
I mean, when you're in school
and your brain works differently
and you're not picking it up on like everybody else is, it's not that you're dumb. It's that
you have to figure out a different way. And like, and that comes with, you know, when,
whether people are autistic or on the spectrum or are shy or uncomfortable or socially awkward
or really smart and clever, and they could be the college quarterback
but also be into astrophysics.
You know, it's just anybody who allows their brain to think differently.
That's a movie title, The Astrophysics Quarterback.
So, Charles, you are StarTalk's resident geek-in-chief.
I'm honored to be there.
I don't remember who first knighted you that.
It wasn't me.
I totally agree with it, but somebody upped that.
Right.
And it landed on you like robes.
A ton of bricks.
No, no.
Like royal robes.
So what was your arc through life to become the geek in chief that you are?
For me, geekdom is essentially freedom
from the norm,
from the constraints of social or familial
or other kinds of pressures.
But we generally associate comic books,
video games,
attendance at Comic-Con.
These are kind of card-carrying behaviors.
Yes, but they're also theater geeks.
They're art geeks. They're opera geeks. They're music they're also theater geeks. They're art geeks.
They're opera geeks.
They're music geeks.
Lab geeks.
They're science geeks.
Sports geeks.
All kinds of geeks.
When you are just different,
then you become a geek in the eyes of many.
And then you have to ask yourself,
what are you going to do with it?
I myself, fortunately, had such a strong sense of self,
some people might say arrogance or egotism
that i didn't care what other people sounds like he's been to therapy and they're trying to get
that through to him doesn't it yeah so i didn't really care that i was off to the side of what
was supposedly mainstream yes i was bummed at times when i felt excluded or otherwise not
part of the in crowd but i was fortunate that I did have a few good friends
who were like me,
who were interested in the same kinds of things that I was
so that I did not have a problem with a social group
that made me feel comfortable.
And as a result, my geekdom gave me freedom.
You found family.
I did.
Okay, so now, but geek to me should also mean
not just an interest
in something, but some expertise that you could put on the table. Something that you know more
about than other people. So Chuck, I like you as my co-host because you hang with the geek folk.
So I think you got some geek underbelly from your past that you have not fessed up about.
I lived most of my life as a closeted geek.
Oh.
And then,
believe it or not,
10 years ago when I started working with you
is when I came out
of the closet.
Oh.
I felt like,
you know,
I was like,
you know what?
Why am I hiding
this part of myself?
Whoa.
I'm cool.
Geek liberation.
I was liberated
as a matter of fact.
Wonderful.
I could say like,
you know what?
Yeah,
I really enjoyed this.
I love science.
I love all this stuff.
Neil is one of us now.
So finally you had a way you can express it professionally.
Correct.
Yeah.
Charles, what's the next geek frontier?
Is it because it tends to track technology?
Yes, it does.
Is it like VR worlds?
Is it augmented reality?
You know what?
With video games?
So far, so good.
This sounds great.
The geeks tend to be at the moving frontier
of how technology applies to ways to not go to work.
I believe the next great geek frontier,
at least right now, is biohacking.
Really?
Wait, wait, wait.
Biohacking.
Biohacking.
The idea of, like, say,
somebody is paralyzed
and can't move their arm
because their nerve systems,
nervous systems
can't get from their...
get signals from their brain
to their arm.
Instead, you put a,
say, a wireless thing
up against your temple,
which then allows you
to do some other way
of communicating,
maybe through 5G,
maybe through some sort
of wireless or Bluetooth signal.
6G.
Right, at that point.
At that point.
Yeah, at some point.
Which then allows that person to move the arm.
So you have completely convinced me that you've watched too many science fiction movies.
Well, this is the point.
Put on this helmet and then you become...
But see, that's happening now, though, in a way.
But that's the frontier.
You asked me what the frontier was, and that's what it is.
And we're not talking about, like, cyborg Terminators or anything.
We're talking about people whose lives can be improved.
But that's not just a geek frontier.
That's a medical frontier.
That's not just geeks.
I don't know.
There are people who are right now just geeks who can do cool things with a screwdriver and a webcam.
They might lead the charge to make
this happen. I think there's some neat stuff.
I don't think there's going to be talking about people
inserting devices into their
gray matter or anything like that.
Like half of every episode
of Black Mirror on Netflix
involves brain interfacing.
I'm not talking about that kind of thing.
I'm talking about the other kinds.
There's also biohacking in agriculture,
growing plants.
It's called GMO.
Gementically modification.
But I really like what you said,
that geeks are people that don't fit in
because they have interests
that they want to preserve within themselves
and not succumb to social pressure.
So Olivia also had thoughts about this, about what it is to think differently growing up,
especially when you have peer pressure in school.
Let's check it out.
I'm half Asian, so there is a very strict grade system.
There's like the Asian F is a B.
So it was like, and I am, so in my family,
it's a hundred percent true. And so I remember I had to work so hard to understand, because it was
just going so fast and I just, I needed more time to absorb it. In fact, I got really good at
cheating because of it. Like I had to learn when I was like really young, I had to learn like
how to come up with a little system of dots or dashes
like on my notebook or on a chalkboard or whatever.
So I would see like the formulas everywhere because you couldn't have them out.
But I would like sketch them into like little dots
and I would come up with a whole like an alphabet based on dots and dashes
just because that's how my brain had to work.
It was so much easier to come up with that than to just learn the actual formula.
It was easier for me to learn a whole new system. This is the beginnings of cryptography.
Right, yeah. I mean, but it worked for the way my brain worked. But there was Mr. Theck,
and that was in eighth grade. I was 13. And I remember there was a time where he called,
and he said, look, your daughter is flunking on her algebra.
And my mom was normally a yeller, but she sits me down.
I was like, oh my gosh.
Normally she's like the screaming, yelling.
But it's that moment she knew it was more serious.
And she sat down.
She says, OK, so you're making an F right now in algebra.
And I was like, oh gosh.
And she said, now I asked him, what would it
take for you
to make an A? Because obviously that's, it's either A or nothing. And she said, he said,
you have to make 100% on every quiz, test, pop quiz, and homework, and all the bonuses on all
of those for the rest of the semester. And I was like, well, there's just no way I'm doing it. I
was like literally calling, you know, the funeral home. I was like, I need a casket ASAP.
This is not going to end well.
And my mom said, you're going to do it.
So every day I would come home and she'd say, did you do your homework?
And I said, yes.
And she says, let's do it again.
Like, oh, I don't.
And she would normally like when we would be studying and stuff, she'd be like, no, it's this, it's this.
She'd yell.
This time, this whole period of time, my mom was just, just took her time with me.
A little more tender.
Yeah, and she understood that I was trying,
but that I needed someone to just explain it slowly and in a different way.
And by the end of it, I made an A.
I made 100% on every single quiz, test, pop quiz, homework, plus the bonuses.
And, I mean, that's what has helped me in my life now
when I think something seems hard
or I don't understand it,
I will say to myself, I know I can do it.
I just need to stop down and think about how my brain works.
Charles, you're on sabbatical right now,
but otherwise you actively teach
at the College of Staten Island
or the City University of New York.
How do you handle people who learn differently?
Or at the college level, do you have the luxury to not care?
Yeah, exactly.
Because they paid, they just could learn or get out.
Here's the information.
Get it how you get it.
Right.
You always have the option to not care,
but I wouldn't be in what I'm doing in my field if I didn't care.
And you do have to work on it.
Chuck, that's beautiful.
That really is.
Well, thank you.
Let me first shout out,
give a shout out to young Olivia
for getting through
that really difficult period of time academically
and a shout out to Olivia's mom
for doing exactly the kind of thing
that I would have done
in the circumstances there
if I were enlightened enough to do so.
So she knew there's a point
where yelling is not going to work. Exactly. We need to go to plan B. Right. It's a different approach. Okay,
so now what about the fact that we always hear that some people just can't handle math? What
do you do about that? What you do is you realize that these people cannot handle math class.
They cannot handle math curriculum or math teaching or math tests.
Isn't that kind of everything?
Yeah, I was going to say, what's left?
Yeah, what's left? What's left, Charles?
And that's what we find out, right? We all are excellent mathematicians. We just have varying
degrees of ability to look at something in an abstract form and then write it down on a piece
of paper because somebody else told us to, right? Our calculation abilities on a regular basis are
remarkable. Our geometry in order to walk or to run, our physics in order to lift things down.
And by the way, obviously professional players do this best, but anyone can do it.
If I throw you a ball and it's not where you're standing, you will run to it and arrive where the
ball will land as you catch it.
Most people will do this successfully.
That's right.
Which means there's a calculation going on.
You're making that calculation on the fly.
There's a parabolic arc and as it speeds up, as it comes down,
you're going to intersect it at the right time and at the right place.
So the human brain is capable of doing math,
and I don't care who you are, you can do it.
Can you write it down?
Says the Asian person.
Yeah.
You know, Olivia's point is well taken.
It's a very good stereotype.
It's well taken.
And Olivia's half Asian.
Which is why she was only half good at math.
She summoned the Asian gods for that, when she needed to get all the perfect scores.
The amazing thing is that the Asian stereotype of academic success is really a combination of both the American dream, people working hard, and a sort of confluence of cultural things.
In East Asia, for literally a thousand or more years, you got ahead in society by doing
well on tests, by taking exams, whether they were public exams, civil exams, school exams,
and things like that. And so in places like Japan, for example, which Olivia was mentioning,
and also South Korea, some of these other places in East Asia, it's very unhealthy for the young
people because all they're thinking about are tests, tests, tests, tests. But then they come to
America like I did when I was fortunate.
I came to America when I was four years old.
And now all of a sudden...
He said like he took the boat.
You see a young chap
right, you know, one ticket please.
I took a plane with my
parents. My mother brought us over.
My father was a graduate.
And my father was a graduate student already here in America.
So what happened was that when we brought those cultural values over to America,
all of a sudden those values became the things that were valuable for colleges and universities
or the ability to get success in the academic realm.
And so it became a natural extension of it.
It wasn't that we were somehow miraculously more intelligent
than people who are not Asian.
It was just that this is how the confluence of our values combined.
So Charles, what works best for you to learn?
Me?
Yeah.
Oh, God.
I'm going to say sleeping while listening to tapes.
Oh.
listening to tapes.
No, I,
you know,
I think for me,
what I would do,
the best thing for me to do,
and I see this in my son,
is to read
and then to listen to it.
Multiple inputs.
Yeah, different sensory.
By the way,
that's what I do
when I give a public talk
really?
because they say
are you going to stand
behind the podium?
no
no
I'm going to walk around
I'm going to use
my body gestures
and tap in some dance moves
it drives the camera people
crazy
they hate it
but I'm not doing it
for the camera people
and so what do you think
about her dot system?
is that cheating?
or is it
yeah that's cheating.
Yeah.
Come on.
And by the way, I had some news for her.
There is a system that's been invented.
It's called Morse code.
She could have just learned that.
Yeah, but she was a kid, right?
Right.
No, cheating is a fascinating concept, bending the rules.
I mean, how many of us have never watched a movie online without paying for it
or downloaded a song to hear it
without going through the proper copyright, right?
All of us have found something,
some rule that they found onerous
or they'd rather circumvent and then gotten around it.
Well, also too, it's whatever.
Sometimes you're more motivated to cheat.
For her, she had pressure to perform.
Yeah, I almost don't even blame her.
Yeah, that pressure to perform.
She's like, I'm going to get killed if I don't, you know.
Believe me, that's a lot of pressure.
I've been there.
Too much pressure.
When we come back, more of my interview with Olivia Munn,
and we get into mutants and superpowers when StarTalk returns. We're back.
StarTalk.
We are talking about superheroes of the mutant kind.
And we got Charles Liu.
Hello.
Who is our geek and chief.
Yes.
Talking about superheroes.
Yes, absolutely.
And so, Olivia Munn, she was in one of the X-Men movies.
Yes, she played Psylocke in Age of Apocalypse.
Save Psylocke.
X-Men Apocalypse, Psylocke, P-S-Y-L-O-C-K-E.
And she even did her own stunts in the fight scenes.
Impressive.
I don't know if you knew that.
I did not know that.
Yeah, yeah.
So let's get a little bit of insight into this appearance in that film
as we rejoin my interview with actress Olivia Munn.
So you do martial arts?
Yeah.
What kind?
Taekwondo.
We grew up doing Taekwondo.
All five kids, we had to.
Again, we have to play a musical instrument,
and we have to make A's, and we have to do...
And kick some ass.
Yeah.
Well, your character in X-Men kicks serious ass,
not just with this blade thing that comes out.
Is there a word for that?
It's a psionic sword.
Psionic sword.
Yeah, so Psylocke, her ability is to be able to create anything with her mind.
In my opinion, she has always been the most powerful
because if you can create anything with your mind...
There you go.
Done, game over.
Right, right.
And so the reason why Psylocke doesn't just create a boulder
and just shut the whole thing down, because she could,
is because when you have, in my opinion,
when you have a power that great, you get a little bored.
And it's so much more fun and intimate to kill with a sword
because you have to get up close.
Right.
And I, as a fan, when I watched this movie,
if people have super human powers,
I want them to tear each other apart.
Like that's really what I want.
And these kind of movies,
I want to see what it would be like
if you have these powers, what would it really be?
So Trump, tell me about the powers in the X-Men universe.
All right, well, Psylocke specifically was the sister of Captain Britain.
The Captain Britain and the various British Marvel comics in the 80s
were very much favored by American collectors back then
who were older than the children's crowd
because they weren't controlled as much by the Comics Code Authority
that had to keep everything all family friendly
and things like that.
They meaning the UK censors.
The UK had more freedom.
They had more freedom and the UNS did not.
And so this character, Betsy Braddock,
actually was originally Psylocke,
an intelligent person who also had powers of telepathy,
telekinesis, things like that,
eventually came and joined the X-Men and was there for a while.
But then around 1989 or so, Marvel changed the character dramatically.
First, they gouged her eyes out.
And then they added cybernetic eyes.
And then she was brought over to, I think, Hong Kong, somewhere in Asia,
brainwashed by an assassination team called the hand and then she became the seriously scary kick-ass character
so her character why do you know this much about this psycho lock i love so olivia mum wasn't too
far off the mark so so why do you know this much about this? I know that's an inordinate amount of information to know about a C-level character in the Marvel universe.
That's amazing.
Charles.
That's amazing.
Charles.
Yes.
Charles.
Yes.
I'm sorry.
It's just a thing.
I don't know who you are.
That's pretty cool.
But what happened was that transformation did turn Psylocke from sort of a C-level character to a very popular Marvel character.
Gotcha.
Because then she had this sort of hard edge to her.
Right.
Which became very popular amongst the 20-somethings that were starting to read comics much more than the teens and the children that were reading it beforehand.
So, that dark sharpness that Olivia was describing in the clip is very much reflected in the current Psylocke, which has the ability not just to read minds and so forth, but actually creating your mind energy.
So, there's others.
Magneto.
Yes.
Professor X.
Wolverine.
Yes. A lot of people's favorite.
Oh, yeah.
And Cyclops.
Cyclops.
And Storm.
Shoots beams out of the eye.
I kind of like Storm.
Storm is cool.
Storm was kind of cool.
Meet the weather,
go way back.
Nothing like a meteorologist
that has superpowers.
Looks like Storms.
Yes.
No, looks great.
Oh, yeah.
I got this.
It's a storm.
I don't want to go to the picnic.
So, Chuck,
what would you do
if you had her ability, Psylocke's ability? Psylocke? What would you make? I don't know. Listen, Chuck, what would you do if you had her ability,
Psylocke's ability?
Psylocke?
What would you make?
I don't know.
Listen, first of all,
that's not the only,
like, the idea
of creating something
with your mind.
Green Lantern
has the same thing.
It's just the power
is in the ring.
But whatever he thinks of
comes into existence
in an energy form.
Great point.
So, I mean, it's not,
I don't like that power.
Did you just mix
two different universes? Yes, I did. DC and Marvel. DC and Marvel. But I'm just saying. You know, that's mean, it's not, I don't like that power. Did you just mix two different universes? Yes.
DC and Marvel.
That's a
punishable crime.
My power
would be like
Sebastian Shaw.
That's who I would like to be like.
He's a guy that
can absorb any energy.
Any energy. Blow up, set off a hydrogen bomb.
And guess what?
He can absorb that.
Isn't this what the material is that was featured in Black Panther?
Yes, vibranium.
Yes, exactly, vibranium.
Vibranium does that.
He's essentially living vibranium.
He's living vibranium.
Living vibranium.
He's a living vibranium. To me, that's what. He's essentially living Vibranium. He's living Vibranium. Living Vibranium. He's a living Vibranium.
To me, that's what I would want.
So there's her character.
Yes.
Olivia Munn's character can materialize anything with her mind.
I asked her if she could choose her own superpower, what would it be?
Ooh.
Let's check it out.
Interesting.
It has to be to fly.
I mean, you're an astrophysicist, so if you could have any power in the world, what would you have?
It would be to read people's minds.
Interesting. And what would you do with that?
You would know before someone committed a crime
that that's what they were about to do.
So you don't have to beat them up. You can just prevent them from doing it.
Like Minority Report.
For example. Although that's a little creepier, the way...
But...
But my point is...
You would stop them.
Yeah. There they are in the act of committing a crime,
and then you have to fight them and then drag them to prison,
or you know they're about to.
And then what do you do?
Well, you say,
Hey, come over here. Let's go have a cup of coffee.
It wouldn't make a good movie.
You think Hitler just needed a cup of coffee?
You think Hitler was just waiting for Neil to come through,
like, Hey, hey, Hitty, come here.
Let's go to the beer garden.
But so that is an interesting thing.
So that way you don't have to be strong.
You can be intimately clever about how to distract someone
from whatever might have been their nefarious plan.
That is awesome.
Neil deGrasse Tyson is Java Man.
Please don't wreck New York.
Come and have coffee with me.
Hey, buddy.
Let's talk about that.
That's great.
Actually, well done.
You want a cup of gel?
It's a great idea.
Would you like some Madagascar cinnamon on the top?
So, Chuck, what superpower do you think you would have?
One superpower.
That's a great question.
At one time, I thought that maybe I would want the same superpower as you was thinking,
you know, being able to read minds.
But then I found out that most thoughts are never realized.
Yes.
Thousands of thoughts.
There's a whole episode of The Twilight Zone on that very fact.
Yeah.
Every time we read a book, we have new thoughts.
Every time we imagine something, new thoughts,
the only things that actually matter are what come out in the real world.
We cannot, in like Minority Port or other kinds of environments,
castigate someone for their thoughts as long as they don't act upon them.
Right. So that episode of the Twilight Zone,
some coin was spun and it ended up standing up on its end
and that changed the universe.
And he could hear people's thoughts.
And he went into a bank
and the bank guard was thinking,
after everyone leaves, I can enter the safe
because the safe will be unlocked.
I can open the thing.
And he's like, he's like alerting the police and everything.
And then he finds out the bank guard
has those thoughts every day.
It's a little fantasy, right?
And so you can't distinguish their fantasy
from what they would actually act upon.
So I agree with you.
Thanks.
So my desired power is instead to be able to know exactly the right thing to say or do at any given moment.
Towards what end?
Toward either making someone.
Peace and love and happiness?
Either making someone feel better or stopping something bad from happening or increasing.
Isn't that my cup of joe?
That is?
You guys have the same power.
It's the same idea, but instead of talking about thoughts,
he gets a scone with a pot.
I like scones.
Seth does a scone.
I'm picky about my scones, but good scones are no substitute.
My wife makes the best scones in the world.
Now you tell me this.
I was at your house two weeks ago.
You didn't tell me she made good scones.
Well, next time.
You weren't going to commit a crime.
You weren't going to commit a crime. You weren't going to commit a crime.
You would have got a scone.
So preventing crime with actions rather than thoughts.
Yes.
Okay, very good.
Chuck, how about you?
Oh, man.
You know, see, you guys are too damn thoughtful.
I just want to be able to vaporize people.
With your eyes.
It's been done.
It's called Cyclops.
There you go.
Yeah, I guess so.
I guess so.
All right.
So, Charles, what do you think science can do to create a superpower?
Oh.
Actual, you know, real.
So, you know, we have the Iron Man suit.
That's right.
That comes closest to imagining that.
There are now cybernetic suits.
They're not nearly powered by some arc generator or whatever,
but it's certainly you can move or be protected from things.
What about genetic mutations?
Yep.
Genetically mutate you so that what?
So that you don't catch diseases that are otherwise lethal to you.
Okay, that's not a superpower.
Yeah.
That's just being healthy.
It's a superpower in the jungles of Africa.
But if it's true for any disease,
then you become immortal,
then that's a superpower.
No, but it's not a superpower if everyone has it.
Why not?
We learned that in The Incredibles.
Why not?
It's still a superpower.
What's the mantra?
If everyone is special, then no one is special. No, I disagree with that point. If it's not a superpower. What's the mantra? If everyone is special, then no one is special.
No.
I disagree with that point.
The difference between a superpower,
it's just power.
Well, see,
that's a small-minded interpretation
of what superpower truly is.
Right?
You just called me small-minded.
I'm telling you.
No, I'm talking.
Meet me outside.
You see how small-minded I am
after I kicked,
after you pulled my foot out of your ass.
I was going to say,
that's astrophysics fighting words right there.
That sounds like,
what'd you say about my mama?
I'm saying that your mama is special.
Mama talks like astrophysicists.
I'm saying your mama is special
and so is everybody else.
That's hilarious.
Yes.
No, no.
This is a very Pollyanna-ish idea
of what being special means and so on.
But the idea that we can all benefit from something and therefore be super as a result is not at all an alien or a bad concept.
I have no problem with, for example, everybody being able to live as long as they'd like to live in a healthy manner.
That is a true superpower, is it not?
Yeah, but it's also, you know,
a big time fantasy
because like,
what kind of taxation
on the earth
would that create?
It'd mean more planets.
We'd need more planets.
We would need to expand.
Well, the universe is large.
That's true.
I forgot who I was talking to.
We already know.
4,000 planets and counting outside our solar system.
Don't worry.
And they're all just in a little circle around us.
We got the planet work.
We're in good shape.
We good.
We good.
Yeah.
So remember what Arthur C. Clarke said, right?
Not only was he a great science fiction writer,
but he also patented, for example, the communication satellite.
So a very intelligent engineer and scientist.
Nice.
He said, and I paraphrase, I think,
that any sufficiently advanced technology
is indistinguishable from magic.
Yes.
Right?
That's not just a paraphrase.
That's a quote.
I got it?
I think you got it.
I think you got it.
So if magic is essentially a superpower, right?
Being a wizard is super powerful or supernatural or something.
Then that means all of us who have the technology,
who know how to wield it and who know how to create it.
Yeah, it just looks like it.
It just looks like it.
Right.
But theoretically, neither is the Iron Man armor, right?
I know what you're saying.
Or Wolverine's claws.
I'm 100% with you.
That's my take. Okay. what you're saying. Right. Or Wolverine's coffee. I'm 100% with you. Right. That's my take.
Okay.
All right.
When we come back, we devote an entire segment to Olivia's cosmic queries.
Awesome.
You know she has some.
I'm sure she does.
Oh, yeah.
You know.
Oh, yeah.
Right.
So when we come back.
Like, what's your favorite coffee?
Kona.
From the side slopes, the eastern slopes of the...
When StarTalk returns, more of my
interview with Olivia Munn.
Hey, it's time to shout out the following Patreon patrons.
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We're back.
StarTalk featuring my interview with patron saint of geeks.
Olivia Munn. All right. Yeah. featuring my interview with patron saint of geeks. Oh!
Olivia Munn.
All right.
Yeah, actress, you know, she's got good street cred for being a geek.
And in this final segment, I just thought,
why don't I see if she has questions for me about the universe?
Because you know she's a deep thinker.
Oh, yeah.
And she's thought about this stuff. So let's get her first question for me right now.
I want to know if you think that aliens exist.
I have no reason to doubt that the galaxy and the universe isn't teeming with aliens.
That makes me so happy that you said that.
But it's not because I want it to be true.
No, because the science shows you that, right?
The science is compelling.
When you look at what we're made of as life on Earth, humans,
we're made of the same ingredients in rank order as what the universe is made of.
So the fact that life started here on Earth,
there's no reason to think that was some special occasion, some
special thing.
And now we have catalogs of exoplanets that is growing into the multiple thousands now,
and that's just in our little sector of our entire galaxy, one of countless billions of
galaxies in the universe.
of galaxies in the universe.
To say that we are alone in the universe,
there is no...
That's inexcusably egocentric
to think such a thing.
I agree.
So Chuck, why do you think people get so
excited? Maybe people like Olivia,
but maybe others, are excited
at the prospect that aliens are
out there rather than scared.
Or maybe there are two camps. There's the scared camp and the happy rather than scared? I think that...
Or maybe there are two camps.
There's the scared camp and the happy camp.
Yes, I think there are two camps.
But I think that being alone
makes this so incredibly random and worthless.
Ooh.
I think that's really from a philosophical...
I think it's more philosophical than anything else.
You know?
We don't want to be that special.
We don't want to be that special. We don't want to be that special.
Because that really does.
It does make this whole thing so random and worthless
that it almost doesn't count.
So, Charles, what do you think of the chances
that we are unique in the universe?
Zero.
Zero.
Statistically speaking, the chances that we are unique are zero.
But...
Wait, wait, wait. Let me back up.
Let me back up.
Let me back up. Let me back up.
So Earth spent billions of years... To create us.
Featuring single-celled life.
Right.
And then billions more with interesting life,
but still, by today's standards, simple.
Okay?
So the life we think of as complex and intelligent and all that is a very recent phenomenon.
Yes.
In the tree of life.
And it's only happened in one branch of the tree of life, the vertebrates.
And the intelligence we think of is even in sub-branches of that, the mammals of the vertebrates of the tree of life.
All right?
Okay.
So, the contingency of that.
Suppose something happened on Earth way back that just snipped at that frequency.
One chain.
Snipped the vertebra chain.
You would never have the apes.
You would never have the hominids.
You would never have the humans.
And you just have everything else.
So I'm not asking you, do you think it's obvious there's life elsewhere?
I'm asking you, do you think we could be alone in our
intelligence wow every species that has ever existed or will exist is unique in its own way
yep so which is what unique means
i have no rebuttal to that right i'm just. I'm just, you know, I don't mean to be Merriam-Webster here, but I'm just saying.
So in that particular vein, there is no other species like us anywhere ever.
Right.
Right?
But if you want to compare ourselves to any possible aliens that have something like intelligence that we can recognize,
that has a backbone or a spine like we recognize,
or some other kind of combination or permutation.
Or even intelligence without an invertebrate intelligence.
Like squid are pretty intelligent.
They are, yeah.
Unless they're spineless characters.
So you're right.
You don't have to have a backbone to have intelligence
because we got squid and octopus.
The octopus is, by most measures, an intelligent creature.
So if you draw your boundaries in a way to say, is there life that we would recognize as intelligent and communicative and so forth, the odds of that happening are essentially 100%.
Cool.
All right.
I got a question for both of you.
Yeah, but are they going to be able to do the Pythagorean theorem?
Yeah, well, math is really good.
Yeah, math.
If they don't have a backbone,
why would they need to do the Pythagorean theorem?
I don't even know how you get that sentence.
If you're a super intelligent octopoid species
and you're zipping around the universe,
why do you need hard angles?
Oh, you're saying if you're squishy,
you don't need...
Why not create...
You're not into straight lines.
That's right.
Why not just have fluid boundaries?
They have a whole other kind of math.
Exactly.
A fluid boundary math.
And it is well known,
even with our limited intelligence
that relies on geometry and hard boundaries, that there are non-Euclidean geometries that do not rely on, say, all the triangles, adding up 180 degrees, things like that.
I think there's a lot of potential that none of us have even thought about, if anything.
I know we got to move on, but I want to ask you guys this.
kind of based, not really.
How much do you think that we know?
Since you're talking about if there's life in the view, what would you say
is from 1 to 10,
using decimal places if you want,
what is the amount of knowledge that we actually
have with respect to what
is knowledge that
exists? One half. Really?
Between 0 and 10, one half. Between
0 and 10, one half. Oh, between
0 and 10, one half. Yeah. Oh, between zero and ten, one half.
Yeah.
Neil is being generous.
I thought you meant one half all the way to zero.
No, no, no.
That would be a five.
No, no, no.
You mean.5.
No, wait, wait.
No, yeah.
.5.
.5.
You know why?
Why?
Because.
Go ahead.
Because dark matter and dark energy, we have no idea of what those are,
and they comprise 96% of what is driving this universe.
All right, that's a very good...
So on a scale of 1 to 10, we know half, basically.
Neil is being generous.
Even in the part, the 0.5 out of 10,
that we know about in terms of protons, neutrons, electrons, neutrinos,
all the familiar stuff that you know, it's in that half.
We still know less than 1% of what's actually going on in our observable universe alone.
So in the stuff that we actually know, we still don't know.
That's right.
In the stuff that we know.
So I feel like we're at 0.01 of 0.5.
All right, Dan.
Charles, can't you give us a little bit?
Man, what are you doing on our ego?
I'm not saying that's a bad thing.
I'm saying that the fact that we've learned that much,
just being on a little mud ball here in the middle of the solar system...
Dan, he just dissed Earth, too.
Mud ball.
Man, he's in a dissing mode.
You know what?
I just see now an alien race showing up here.
People of the mud ball.
And I would stand up to that alien and say, and what?
Right?
Because it's really neat that we have such humble origins
from a scientific, biological point of view,
and yet we still understand so much already,
and we can't wait to learn more.
All right.
Okay, here's why I think it's not that bad.
Okay.
All right?
Sure.
And I think I can convince you,
because we have similar brain wirings. We train the same, this sort of thing. So I think I got him bad. Okay. All right? Sure. And I think I can convince you. Because we have similar brain wirings.
We train the same, this sort of thing.
So I think I got him here.
Okay.
He doesn't know what's coming.
All right.
All right, you ready?
Bring it on.
In the history of civilization.
Yes.
Before science up to the modern methods and tools of science into modern day.
methods and tools of science into modern day.
Things would happen in the world that we wouldn't understand.
And so you invent gods, you invent... The god of the gaps.
Yeah, the gods of the gaps.
And gaps implies you knew stuff to the left or right of it.
There were not even gaps.
Everything was explained this way.
All right.
As we moved on, things would get explained.
It was no longer a mystery.
Other things would show up.
Oh, that's, you know, what is that?
This lightning coming from, you know, moving through the air.
What is that?
Oh, it's electricity.
It's got electrons.
All right, we got that.
All right, what is this thing?
It moves a needle on a, oh, that's a magnetic field.
So now we got that.
Oh, by the way, they're two sides of the same coin.
Electromagnetism. All right, we got that. Oh, by the way, they're two sides of the same coin. Electromagnetism.
All right, we got that.
What else?
Oh, the atoms are behaving weirdly.
Oh, let's discover quantum physics.
And now we can explain that.
All right?
And so my point is,
how much today is in our world experience
that's a phenomenon that completely defies explanation.
Ah.
This is my point.
Yes.
Because-
No, you make an excellent point.
See, I told you.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I see what you're saying.
When Faraday passed a wire through a magnetic field and a meter moved, that's mysterious.
Oh, my gosh.
We have to figure out a way to explain this.
And we did.
Right.
We understood electricity.
And Faraday tilled the soil for all of the later understanding of electricity to unfold,
including the efforts of, well, it's partly based on what Benjamin Franklin, our boy,
was able to write.
He has a book called Experimental Researchers into Electricity.
Yeah.
All right.
So I'm asking today are there
things moving and we don't understand what's making it happen is there some force operating
that defies our account so you're saying that the reduction in the number of mysteries yes
absolutely something's moving right something's making it, and we don't understand what that is. So the forces of nature, which we've condensed down to just four operations in this world,
the strong force, the weak force, gravity, and electromagnetic forces,
that accounts for all of this.
Right.
Okay?
Yes, we still don't know dark matter, dark energy.
That's a big unknown.
But I'm prepared to limit our unknown to that
right now. And I'm not going to go down
that hole with you. Fair enough.
I can accept your...
He's just looking at me and nodding.
Whoa! I can accept your
current explanation. There are little niggling
skeptical holes that I would poke in that.
But overall, your idea is sound.
You can't use the word niggle in front of a black person
on each side of you.
What's happening? It was a very Yeah, you can't use the word niggle in front of a black person on each side.
It was a very civil conversation.
And all of a sudden, you just like, you know, niggle, please.
Gentlemen, I humbly apologize.
There's another word that got outlawed, niggardly.
Oh, jeez.
Stingy. Stingy and cheap.
Stingy, yes.
That word got outlawed a long time ago.
You know what? Somebody actually said that to me. They were like, no, nly and it's cheap. Stingy, yes. That word got outlawed a long ago. You know what?
Somebody actually said that to me.
They were like, no, niggardly means cheap.
And I was like, no, it's going to be me you punch.
That's what it's going to mean.
That's going to mean me.
Please, gentlemen, let me rephrase.
There are small details of what you just said that I might poke at.
Quibble.
Yes, but your idea is sound,
and I can see how you can defend the position that you've taken.
Very good.
Yeah, excellent.
Very good.
So Olivia had one last question for me in this interview,
and it had to do with invoking science to make sense of the world.
Let's check it out.
Do you know when people talk about planets, like, oh, when the moon comes in and it affects people this way,
or when Mercury's in retrograde, people will say,
oh, Mercury's in retrograde, that's why they're late.
I've noticed.
They say that a lot.
Do you believe that the planets affect us individually?
So you can measure how much light is coming from a planet
or how much gravity you would feel from it.
So you can measure
this so let's take for example let's say you're about to give birth and there's mars in view
oh you're born under mars well you can calculate how much more light is coming to the delivery
table from the lamp relative to Mars?
Well, it's hundreds of thousands of times the intensity of light.
How about the gravity from Mars?
I can calculate that.
We've known this since Isaac Newton, how to calculate that. gravitational field of the midwife or the medical doctor who is helping you deliver the baby is
Greater than the gravitational force
From Mars on you and your soon-to-be-born child
So if you to appeal to Mars you're gonna have to say, there's something scientists have yet to discover about it.
But you can't talk about the light, you can't talk about the gravity, because we got that.
Okay, so now you have to say, there's some mysterious thing that's affecting us that scientists
have yet to measure. Okay. Well, we have five senses, five traditional senses.
Some people say they have a sixth sense. They can know what
someone's thinking or know something that they don't otherwise have direct access to.
I don't have a problem with people saying they have a sixth sense. What I can tell you, however,
as a scientist, I have access to dozens of senses. What is science if not
there is something to be measured in this world
that my human physiology has no clue
what it is or how it works.
And I've built this machine
that can tell you it's there.
You'd have to say there was something going on
between you and Mars
that all of my access
to my dozens of senses
cannot measure.
And it does make sense understanding that when people want to blame other things,
and that's a big part of it.
That's why you see a lot of people who believe in all this stuff,
where their lives are still just like, they're all anxiety-induced.
And you're like, well, clearly it's not making things more peaceful for you
because they've just got something else to blame it on.
They've got something else to shift it on.
They have not taken control of their life.
Yeah, that's the truth.
They've got something else to shift it on.
They have not taken control of their life. Yeah, that's the truth.
It's the gap that they're trying to explain using scientific language like mercury and retrograde,
but it's not actually science.
That's just pseudoscience.
Right.
So I guess the point is the power of science to explain what you think is a phenomenon is extraordinary.
Yes, amazingly so.
And people who don't even understand it
or don't know about it will use it
even incorrectly
because it helps explain the unknown.
Hmm.
So we need some parting thoughts. Chuck, do you have anything
deep to share with us? Deep? No.
Let's do that again.
Chuck, you're putting too much pressure on me.
So Chuck, we need some parting thoughts. Do you have anything
shallow to share with us?
Absolutely.
No, I just really appreciate the fact that
Olivia is a person who is scientifically curious.
And, you know, I think the more that people in entertainment
show that side of themselves,
the more we might see a reflection of that in society.
Charles, how about you?
Hooray for Olivia Munn
for not only embracing who she is as a geek,
but also recognizing that she learns differently
and that she is different from others.
And yet she embraces all those things,
owns them and says, here I am,
just like the title of her book, Suck It, Wonder Woman, right? She is great in her own way. And it
doesn't really matter what people are going to compare her to because she's cool just as she is.
And only Wonder Woman hates her.
Only Wonder Woman hates her.
Yeah, I don't know that I can add to what the two of you just shared.
What I will say is it's a reminder that when you're growing up and you don't quite know who you are yet or what you want to be emotionally,
personally, professionally, and what is going on around you there are social forces oh
yeah to homogenize you into what others would have you become and what that does
is it robs you of your individuality hmm when you do such a thing so true and so
much of what has shaped this world has been via the expression of individuality.
Yes.
So imagine what this world would be today if everyone were afforded the opportunity to not have to comply with social forces.
with social forces.
Imagine how diverse in the expression of intellect
this world would be.
Imagine how much more fun
the world would be.
And I think Olivia Munn
is a best example of that
who's entered a field
that previously never really embraced
who we are as geeks,
and she's taken it right to the camera lens.
And I agree with you, Charles, it's someone to applaud.
Yes.
And let there be many more Olivia Munns.
Yes, well said, Neil.
To grace the screen.
Absolutely.
All right.
You've been watching, listening.
You've been consuming StarTalk.
Our edition on superheroes.
With some cinnamon on top.
With some Madagascar cinnamon on top.
I just want to thank Olivia Munn for giving us that interview.
And Charles Liu, always good to have you.
Thank you so much.
Yes, sir.
You're my man.
You got it.
All right.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist, as always, bidding you to keep looking up.