MythBusters - Who Ya Gonna Call? 92
An anonymous reader writes "The currently-airing Discovery Channel show MythBusters has been profiled in a Newsweek article. Basically, the show takes two former Hollywood effects designers as they set out to prove or disprove various folklore myths that have come about over the years, such as the actual effect of a poppy-seed bagel on a drug test, or what effect a penny dropped from the Empire State Building observation deck will have on a human at ground level."
topics topics topics (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:topics topics topics (Score:3, Informative)
Re:topics topics topics (Score:5, Informative)
Re:topics topics topics (Score:2)
It's a great show. Last week's had the walrus mustachioed guy wearing nothing but a beret and a pair of flimsy gold hot pants refusing to put a thermometer up his ass.
They're in San Francisco.
Don't whizz on the electric fence! (Score:2)
You can buy the DVD here [amazon.com]
Re:Don't whizz on the electric fence! (Score:2)
True story. Boy Scout campout on the back property of a dairy farm when I was a teen. Kid walks over and pees on a bush. Electric fence runs THROUGH the bush. The rest of us were only about 15 feet away. In very halting screams he yells "AAHHHHH...CAN'T....STOP....CAN'T... STOP.....AAHHHHHH!!!" He pretty much stood there getting zapped until he lost pressure. I should be more sympathetic, but I laugh every time I think about it because we all looked at each other and thought the same thing. Karma. (Believe
Re:topics topics topics (Score:2)
Re:Move along people, nothing to see here. (Score:2)
Running In the Rain (Score:4, Insightful)
The amount of rain falling is constant and is equal between point A and B. Wind is not a factor. Assume that the rain drops are at critical velocity. You move through the path at a constant velocity.
Now, imagine freezing time - with all of the raindrops fixed in place. The rain that would hit you in 3s is maybe 100 feet up, while the the rain that hits you in 6 sec is 200 feet up. So, you simply convert the amount of time it takes to traverse A to B, and convert that to the vertical distance of the rain drops that would hit you when you get to point B. Then, you can simply use C^2 = A^2 + B^2, where A is the path length and B corresponds to the amount of time (rain height). So minimizing the C, total path length in the rain reduces how wet you get. Even if you moved at near-infinite speed, you would still get wet in the rain, but not as wet as someone who never moved.
Re:Running In the Rain (Score:2)
Yeah, but the real question is, if you throw punches in the rain, does your opponent's face turn into silly putty?
Re:topics topics topics (Score:2)
Re:topics topics topics (Score:2, Informative)
At the end of the trip they weighed all of the shirts and there was no difference.
As for urinating on the third rail, at your own risk !! I would not like to try as the third rail here in Budapest is at 6,000 volts.
Ed Alm
Already answered (Score:2)
www.straightdope.com
Re:topics topics topics (Score:2, Funny)
Re:what happens? (Score:1, Informative)
oh, you say you want to know what happened during those shots? go find out yourself! you know how to use google, right?
Awesome (Score:1)
Glad to see them get press.
Might not be the best, or most factual show on TV, but it's sure entertaining.
Busted? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Busted? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Busted? (Score:1, Informative)
Vint Cerf told me that Al Gore was in fact... (Score:3, Offtopic)
Vint Cerf [ibiblio.org] told me that Al Gore was in fact the strongest early supporter of making the old ArpaNet into the public utility we call the Internet. Without Gore's technical understanding and power in the U.S. Congress, it would have taken much longer.
For those who can remember back that far, there were many ArpaNet users who did now want the system open to the public. There was intense opposition to making the system open to commercial interests, too. Al Gore was a true visionary, in this case.
Re:Bzzt... .wrong (Score:1)
Some other articles on this issue: 1 [salon.com] 2 [davnet.org]
Re:Bzzt... .wrong (Score:2)
Actually, all us here in the vast-right-wing-conspiricy know we made all that Al Gore stuff up, and probably shoulden't repeat it - it's just that we just love to see y'all squirm and whine like little squirmy whiny things.
What Al Gore said. (Score:1)
Read by a normal person, one with out the word parsing ability of Clinton and/or Karl Rove, that looks like he is taking credit for "creating the Internet".
The internet was a political achievement, also. (Score:2)
And on the next episode... (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe... (Score:4, Interesting)
Maybe when they get done debunkning all of the ULs you can find on Snopes, they can turn their crosshairs on huckster quackery such as cell-phone radiation shield stickers, magnet therapy bracelets and all the other crap that shows up on late-night infomercials.
THAT'S what I'd do to improve humanity.
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe... (Score:2, Informative)
YAW.
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe... (Score:1)
YAW.
Re:Maybe... (Score:3, Interesting)
They mostly focus on psychic tricks and illusions-- showing tricks on how it is to get information on your dead relatives, by using selective questions and special wording, watching for you to react to certain words, etc.
Their philosophy is that it's OK when everyone involved knows that the trick is for entertainment. The line is cr
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
Re:Maybe... (Score:2)
There's quite a bit of difference between being "cocky" and being "an asshole". Randi is the kind of guy who would stand up in front of a church full of people and berate them for their belief in God.
Re:Maybe... (Score:1)
Re:Maybe... (Score:1)
Re:Maybe... (Score:1)
Here's one link [bible.ca] that's pretty good.
Here's a Google search [tinyurl.com] for your convenience.
As for Randi's attitude, more power to him! There are too many frauds out there, from Uri Geller to John Edwards, "The Biggest Douche In The Universe!" and they ALL need to be shown up and humiliated in public.
And given all the lies and deception Randi has seen over the years by dishonest fuckers like Geller and Edwards, his abrasive attitude is understan
Re:Maybe... (Score:2, Insightful)
Not to defend that sort of behavior, but he's gotten enough of that sort of stuff hurled at him from con artists that over the decades he probably sees it as "sauce for the goose".
Re:Maybe... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Maybe... (Score:1)
In reading his site, though, I don't see that attitude. He pretty clearly has a "prove it" attitude, or else his million dollar prize doesn't make any sense. The worst I've seen is that he has no compunction about pointing out pretty clearly that past failures are, in fact, failures. He'll often suggest theories on what's going on (e.g., he'll point out that so-called psychics use cold-reading techniques), but I don't see a "that's impossible" attitude.
One thing charlatans don't like about him is that h
Re:Maybe... (Score:1)
Re:Maybe... (Score:4, Funny)
I'm quite in favor of debunking the likes of John "the biggest douchebag in the universe" Edward.
My favorite show (Score:5, Informative)
1. coke's ability to remove blood stains/rust/etc
2. do piercing's make you more susceptible to lightening
3. ice bullets (CIA myth)
4. the JADO rocket on the car in the desert
5. the weather balloon lawn chair story
6. running in the rain keeps you drier then walking
7. eel skin wallets erase credit cards
8. smoking on the toliet can kill ya
9. poppy seeds can make you test positive on a drug test
10. peeing on the third rail will kill ya
11. tree canon
12. ways to beat a breathalyzer
13. dropping a hammer in the water before you fall in will break your fall
14. penny off the empire state building
15. exploding cdrom drivers
16. breast implants explode in airplanes
anyway - good show... no answers listed - watch the show to find out.
Re:My favorite show (Score:2)
That was a myth, which they busted. That's what the show is all about. Busting myths. If only they could come up with a good, descriptive name for it.
Re:My favorite show (Score:2)
Quite the opposite.
Re:My favorite show (Score:2)
Exploding cd rom drivers (Score:3, Funny)
That is why I use a special version of WinZip that includes a reinformed titanium shell for my file downloads. You never known when one of these might detonate inside the modem or at the wall phone-plug outlet.
I'm sure glad the RIAA has not discovered exploding files. It could escalate their war against p2p to a new level.
Exploding CD rom drives (Score:3, Interesting)
I had a CD explode in the drive before. It apparently had a miniscule crack (in the CD), and I guess when it was spinning in the drive at full speed, the centrifugal force just made it blow apart. Sounded like a gunshot. Scared the crap out of me. I'll never use those crappy generic CD-Rs again.
When I called up Dell support the guy scratched his head a
Re:Exploding CD rom drives (Score:2)
Re:Exploding CD rom drives (Score:1)
Let's hope so, because the ballistics dummy in the show looked like a bomb victim after their open-air tests.
11. Tree Canon (Score:2)
Re:11. Tree Canon (Score:2)
The myth says that long ago, some town in Hungary at odds with a neighboring town built a cannon out of a tree overnight to shoot at their enemy; however, when they fired it, the cannon exploded killing half of their own town.
The show involves the guys building a tree cannon and some ammo using nothing but tools available at
Re:My favorite show (Score:2)
17. Barrel of Bricks (my 2nd favorite segment, after Penny Drop)
18. Cell phone destroys gas station
19. Microwave madness
20. Pop rocks (another fave)
21. one about a fat woman on an airplane toilet
22. Radio fillings
There are probably others (should be a multiple of 3).
This is my favorite show and I'm glad they brought it back to their regular schedule after a limited run early this spring. One thing people don't often mention is that it's the personality of the hosts that really make i
Official Site (Score:4, Informative)
It's quite and entertaining and informative show, and should definately be Tivo'd (since, you know, we're all out on Friday nights).
They were almost really buried alive (Score:4, Informative)
When they checked out the "Buried Alive!" urban legends by burying one in a metal coffin to see how long the air lasted, they didn't have all the information they needed.
The funeral home was happy to sell them a metal coffin but didn't tell them they bury coffins inside a concrete burial vault.
When the Mythbusters dumped several tons of dirt on the coffin with the tester inside the coffin began to collapse from the load.
They never did explain why they had that problem - A modern coffin can't be - and isn't buried by itself.
Re:They were almost really buried alive (Score:3, Interesting)
Shows that even though they take pains to try to ensure realism, even they can mess up sometimes!
Re:They were almost really buried alive (Score:2)
Myths and Urban Legends (Score:1)
Re: Myths and Urban Legends (Score:1)
> Richard Gere becoming involved with a gerbil
Strictly speaking, the story claims that the gerbil gets involved with Richard Gere!
Re:Myths and Urban Legends (Score:1)
The more notable thing than wether the U.L. is true or not is how easy it is for most people to believe it of Richard Gere. We have a pretty strong opinion about those left coasters here in flyover country...
What about... (Score:1)
...the myth that Slashdotters can't get laid.
And more importantly, how are they going to test it?
Re:What about... (Score:1)
keep trying
An answer provided (Score:2)
No. Groundbreaking for the stadium at the Meadowlands (Giants Stadium) was in 1972, and Hoffa disappeared in the summer of '75. By then the stadium was not far from completion; the foundations had been laid long before.
However, the nearby New Jersey Turnpike is paved with concrete, and elevated portions of it are continually being resurfaced to deal with the effects of East Co
Re:An answer provided (Score:2)