MythBusters - The Lost Experiments 362
theLorax writes "From Discovery: "If you like the MythBusters here are some videos they just posted of some of the out takes and things that didn't appear on the show. Cola bits (cleaning things with cola), water torture, otter ping pong, live power lines, cement build up and plywood flight."
Here is the interview we did with these guys in December.
a step removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:a step removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:a step removed (Score:3, Funny)
Hello world!
real 0m0.284s
user 0m0.236s
sys 0m0.020s
And that is in Java 1.4, newer JVM versions have faster startup.
Myth busted!
Re:a step removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:a step removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Or allow them to blow something up.
Re:a step removed (Score:2)
Ah, but the MythBusters actually try things out and believe the evidence.
Slashdot myths this are famously immune to evidence, and therefore un-bustable.
Re:a step removed (Score:3, Insightful)
The same day they deal with the myth that C++ is as productive as Java.
Re:a step removed (Score:3, Funny)
Re:a step removed (Score:3, Funny)
Ahh, no better way to start the day than insulting all major programming languages (and one operating system with built-in text edit
Re:a step removed (Score:3, Funny)
Re:a step removed (Score:3, Insightful)
their IQ is at least a double digit number, which puts them many a step from jackass
Re:a step removed (Score:4, Funny)
Well, maybe Adam...but probably not for the show.
-Eric
Coca Cola a pesticide? (Score:2, Interesting)
When will they cover the Coca Cola Pesticide counter-myth? [impactlab.com]
Re:Coca Cola a pesticide? (Score:2)
Re:Coca Cola a pesticide? (Score:2, Interesting)
Coke (Score:3, Funny)
I could've had that bottle...
Re:Coke (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Coke (Score:3, Funny)
You're bitching about a bottle of coke?!?
Straight from the Bottlers mouth... (oooh Yuck!) (Score:2)
Not necessarily because it tastes better, but rather because it has a shelf life that is twice as long as aspartame. 60 days vs. 30 days.
Re:Straight from the Bottlers mouth... (oooh Yuck! (Score:2)
Reason (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong, I love watching them, I just prefer to keep that squishy feeling in my heart that they really love us, and the interview they did here helped that along, with this pushing it further.
Re:Reason (Score:5, Insightful)
What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:5, Insightful)
However, what I've been hearing now is that the Discovery Channel is moving away from their specialty programming, more towards content that will appeal to a wider range of people. This change does being a decrease in quality, according to my cousins.
I think I know what they mean. Shows like American Chopper and American HotRod, which I have watched over here in the UK, are more like soap operas than educational, enlightening shows. The two or three minutes of engineering in each episode is overshadowed by 57 minutes of workplace drama and commercials.
While a show like Mythbusters isn't as bad, it still lacks the quality that previous shows on the Discovery Channel had. None of the hosts have much engineering or scientific experience, and it shows. Even watching just one episode, one will hear numerous factually incorrect statements (especially when it comes to chemistry or physics). Perhaps it is entertaining, but educational it is not.
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:5, Insightful)
discovery channel can only show whats being produced. if shit is being produced then shit is all they have to air. people seem to think they know exactly what is available for discovery channel to purchase for broadcast. keep in mind that junkyard wars, the program discovery channel fanatics always bring up as an example, (aka scrapheap challenge) was a purely accidental find.
if you know specific programs discovery channel should be airing, tell them.
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't think you need to worry. The History Channel will be showing "The Last Days of Hilter" from now until the end of time.
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
I suspect lots of the "good" discovery content has moved to channels like Discovery Science (or whatever similar channels your provide
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
MTV - How often is a diversity of music played on the main channel now?
Discovery Channel - Read the parent
CNN - I find their second channel much more informative in relation to a broader view of the news
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2, Interesting)
Regarding MythBusters, while they can't possibly get all their facts straight, you have to reason they do do a reasonable job, considering the extremely wide breadth of subjects they cover.
This brings up a good point of the problem with shows that focus on such a wide range of topics that they aren't able to focus on one single topic with much amount of detail.
Are these shows educational? No. Can it be a feasible starting point for
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're arguing that Mythbusters isn't educational, you haven't watched enough episodes. Yes, they make mistakes. So do over half of all peer-reviewed scientists' papers, last I read. But it's still a very educational show, and more importantly, one that gets the watcher thinking instead of passively being entertained.
Even if the show contains a greater proportion of entertainment to education than some might like, I think it educates more than some of the old dry shows, because more people watch them. Just to use some silly math, if a show is 90% educational and is watched by 100K people, let's say it has provided 90K education-people worth of education to the world. If a show is 60% educational and watched by 1M people, it's provided 600K education-people worth of education! How's that for a Mythbusters-style estimate?
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Would you want someone to sue you because they built a cannon out of a tree, then blew it up and killed/injured themselves? It's there to prevent things like that. Also, IIRC, they have had a few shows with a safe experiment where they said they would like people to t
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
On the show they did some retarded thing with a low-power transmitter in a Faraday cage with a meter connected to some tooth fillings
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:4, Informative)
enough said. Even Experts pass along myths. Show me an IEEE paper on the subject then you may have proof. But my "uncle/brother/mother/father/friend" had a "uncle/mother/father/brother/sister/dog" that... is not proof.
I have seen a microphone wire going into a notebook computer pick up an AM signal which is totally logical but the fillings is still unproven.
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:3, Insightful)
I find out all sorts of interesting factoids from it, and I am not having my intelligence insulted while I watch it either (lik
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:5, Insightful)
These folks never pretended to be Great Scientists. They can and do, however, come up with clever ways to perform experiments that would otherwise be expensive or dangerous.
They sometimes do the dangerous stuff anyway.
I think it's a superb show. I like the way they often go back and revisit things that people say they got wrong. You know, kinda like scientists are supposed to.
I have an extensive science and engineering background, and I think they do a terrific job. Do they get everything right? No. Who cares?
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2, Informative)
Now I only keep my cable for the new Battlestar Galactica but it hardly seems worth $40/mo for one show once a week (I would just download the episodes if I could find someone that posts high quality captures instead of the 200MB/hr crap that always gets posted)
alt.binaries.multimedia.battlestargalactica (Score:2)
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2, Insightful)
As the latter has been confined to channel 273 (on Comcast) whereas the Discovery Channel is still in the 70's, that should say something about how many people watch programming on both channels.
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:5, Funny)
Mythbusters is Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mythbusters is Good (Score:2)
Re:Mythbusters is Good (Score:4, Interesting)
However I'm a huge fan of the show because its bloody entertaining.
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:4, Insightful)
With the proliferation of cable / sat TV networks it is increasingly difficult to draw in the ratings needed to pay the bills. 10 years ago Discovery channel didn't have much competition in its niche market. Now on digial cable or satellite service you might have 4 or 5 networks that devote at least part of their programming to somethign appealing to Discovery's core audiance. So The Discovery Channel has to go off and bring in more viewers, and that means shows with broader appeal: ie Mythbusters. It's still science, and still informative (somewhat), but it's mostly about people blowing things up and hurting themselves.
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
TLC was the absolutely worst. It went from showing things like surgery, engineering, and other mostly-good content, to being the 24-hour "Trading Spaces" ch
Discovery Wings is gone (Score:2)
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
The rise of "Reality" style Discovery shows could have been predicted by anybody. I jus
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:2)
We have a strange blend of Austrialian, asian, and American channels where I live, and I'm never quite sure which version of a particular channel I'm watching (although I'm certain we get Austrailian Discovery and US TLC), but the History Channel seems to have filled the void somewhat. At least on whichever version we get, Modern Marvels, Extreme Machines, and other shows focus on present or near-present developments rather tha
Re:What has happened to the Discovery Channel? (Score:3, Interesting)
Amen. The worst example to my mind is the Americanizing of Scrapheap Challenge. First, change it to Junkyard WARS, because WARS are MUCH COOLER. Less tinkering and technology (that is boring), more arguing and soap style "talking in pri
Re:What has happened to the shows like... (Score:4, Interesting)
Yet I have a Myspace profile. I'm a pretty active user, in fact. And I was raised on shows like Friends and Seinfeld. Nowadays I love catching Project Runway on Bravo--shit, I'll even watch Blind Date if I'm bored. And while I don't watch American Chopper or Mythbusters, I do think it's cool that programs like these are getting people interested in engineering and science at all. Dismissing them because they're "pop" is like lambasting Christopher Pike for not having written Ulysses: surely the point is that kids are reading. The Shakespeare can come later.
I guess I just wanted to point out that this attitude of superiority comes off a little sour. Thumbing your nose at popular culture doesn't make you better than everyone else. Not to single you out--I see this all over Slashdot.
Cement Truck go BOOM! (Score:5, Funny)
If you've never seen it - dont miss it! - It's at the very end of the video
Re:Cement Truck go BOOM! (Score:4, Interesting)
For sheer magnitude, that's gotta be one of the coolest ever.
For sheer carnage, my vote still goes to the exploding whale [perp.com] video from the interweb. Nothing like seeing whale blubber rain down
Re:Cement Truck go BOOM! (Score:2)
ODOT: It's your nickel, watch it work!
Oregon Route Pacific Beach at Seaside
Whale removal project. Expect delays.
Oregon Department of Transportation: Keeping Oregon on the Move!
Re:Cement Truck go BOOM! (Score:2)
They WERE shown on TV (Score:5, Interesting)
An "Entertainment" disclaimer? (Score:2, Insightful)
Many people mistakenly think that the MythBusters present the proper way of performing scientific experiment, and that they present verified scientific information. Indeed, watching even a single episode shows that they have very little scientific or engineering background.
Re:An "Entertainment" disclaimer? (Score:2, Funny)
How scientific.
Science (Score:5, Insightful)
The mythbusters discuss the theory of the myth & then generate a hypothesis weather it is plausible or not, then conduct an experiment to find out weather their hypothesis is correct.
What is not science about that???
It may be basic science, but its still science.
From what I have seen it is getting a lot of people interested in science so that has to be good doesn't it.
Re:Science (Score:2)
Re:An "Entertainment" disclaimer? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:An "Entertainment" disclaimer? (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, a lot of the time they call in experts. I think that's a pretty good lesson to be teaching people, about both science and life.
Re:An "Entertainment" disclaimer? (Score:2, Interesting)
Who cares? It's a great show. I especially liked the episode where they challenged the American Grafitti movie's 'chain-cop-car-to-a-pole-and-rip-out-rear-axle' myth.
Man, a real size remote control police car. I suspect these guys don't really care whether their facts pan out or not, they're having TOO MUCH FUN!!
Warning: Mythbusters fanboy here (Score:2, Interesting)
Sure, Jamie and Adam gets it wrong sometimes, but it inspires normal people to get an interest in science because theyre "naturally" funny and they like what they do, whats wrong with that?
You want to see bad stuff on Discovery? Watch Brainiac - probably the "WORST"
Otter Ping-Pong? (Score:5, Funny)
Yes. (Score:3, Informative)
And before you ask, yes, I have seen it done.
Re:Yes (OT) (Score:2)
Thai people don't use chopsticks, and there are precious few in the country (unless you go to a Chinese restaurant or are hanging out somewhere where there are a lot of Chinese tourists).
So this aspect of your story seems, well, apocryphal.
Re:Yes (OT) (Score:2, Offtopic)
didn't prove power line myth (Score:2, Interesting)
What happened to CmdrTaco's guidelines? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Next myth to bust (Score:2, Informative)
Still lost.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Now we know what happened to Christine. (Score:4, Funny)
Coincidence that she's no longer seen on the show? I think not!
"Just posted"? Erm, no (Score:2)
Screw Mr. Wizard (Score:4, Insightful)
Mr. Wizard always bugged me, because it was targeted toward children as actual scientific experiments, but it was really obvious even when I was young that they just took existing facts then had these kids do rigged and generally flawed experiments to demonstrate them.
There was one that I still remember from when I was young where he had a kid test whether vision or hearing was more sensitive. They had the kid match a tone using a generator that had 1000 different tones, and was off by one. Then they had her match a shade of blue out of a range of a hundred cards. Again, she was off by one. Since 1/1000 is more exact than 1/100, obviously hearing was more sensitive.
I got really upset about that one and went huffing off to tell my mother how they didn't use an equivalent sample set or use the same gradation of sound/light frequency between the two experiments (not in so many words, of course). The way Mr Wizard told the kid that the results demonstrated her hearing was more sensitive than her vision really irked me and turned me off the show completely.
At least with the Mythbusters there's that general sense of "Huh, well this seemed to work," and they're open to retesting a theory if people call them on it. Personally I think incorrect conclusions and an open, experimental mindset are better science than established facts and weighted demonstrations. For kids these days, it's easy to look up information, but the inquisitiveness and cleverness in experimentation they demonstrate is a lot more compelling to young minds.
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:5, Informative)
Water Torture - Chineese water torture myth. Basically the idea that if you restrain someone to a chair and constantly drip water at a slow rate (1-2 drops per second or so) it'll cause them to crack. It's an elegant torture in that all it requires is time, it's easy to set up, and you don't need an interrogator to administer it, and it's insidious in that nobody would expect that a little harmless dripping would cause to to break. They did show that the torture was effective against the myth crew in about an hour or 2, though you have to wonder how a hardened navy seal might react differently.
Otter Ping Pong - They were testing the myth that you could raise a sunken ship by pumping thousands of ping pong balls into the hull. During the myth, an otter swam down to the hull and stole a ping pong ball and started playing with it, which caused everyone to worry that it might choke on it if it tried to swallow it. The myth was eventually proved successful.
Cement Build Up - They tested the myth that the inside of a cement mixer could be cleaned of all the dried cement build up that accumulates on the inside of the drum during normal use by exploding a stick of dynamite in the drum, a much more efficient method than the usual method of having to chissel the surface by hand. The clip in the video showed a snafu that occured with the first truck when they accidentally filled it up with cement rather than just having enough for a thin coat. It lead up to a spectacular event where they blew up the enture truck with 850 pounds of TNT.
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:2)
I don't understand how that's any different than merely filling the hull with air (which would of course cause it to float, as it would return the
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:5, Insightful)
The cement truck was the most disappointing one in a long time. Everyone who has ever even seen explosives in action knows that you drill a hole in the material (the cemet block in this case) and drop the TNT down the hole before detonating it. They just hung a stick of dynamite above the cemet, and gave up when it didn't do anything.
Before Mythbusters, I've never wanted to reach through my TV and smack people for being so stupid. With Mythbusters, it's a regular occurance. It almost seems like they go out of their way to make their tests complete nonsense.
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:2)
But, when they say plausible, it is almost always actually plausible.
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:2)
The idea was (first of all) to try to prove or disprove what the hypothetical truckdriver was supposed to have done - which would not have entailed drilling a hole in the ceme
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:5, Interesting)
They used turned dry wood for the arrow shafts which has grain that is never perfectly parallel to the shaft. Back in the day of Robin Hood they would split straight green wood along the grain to produce the rough shafts and dress them afterwards, resulting in shafts with perfectly parallel wood grain. It can be done (and has been done -- ask at any archery club), just not with the items they used.
Look at the "make fire without matches" episode. Had they not known that millions of Boy Scouts had achieved it already, they would have concluded that making fire by rubbing sticks together is "busted" because they failed at every attempt even when using a power drill to drive the active stick!
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:3, Informative)
For example, they talk about lighting a fire with a gun. It would've been much easier if they used a shotgun without any buckshot in the cartridge. You are guarranteed to get not only a very large flame out the barrel, but a good chunk of burning wad as well.
The B team also spends about 5 minutes on each myth.
Re:What do these experiments entail? (Score:2)
Re:Video summaries. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Video summaries. (Score:2)
Could he hold onto the plywood while being strapped to the back of a pickup going down the road? No he could not, which means nothing. The wind was e
MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:2)
He gives false summaries. It looks like he just guessed on every one.
Re:Video summaries. (Score:5, Insightful)
They tested it on Kari... since there's no physical torture (other than being restrained), and they were obviously going to let her go when she had enough, it's not much of an issue showing it on TV.
Re:Video summaries. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Video summaries. (Score:2)
(well, okay, there are some sickos out there, but that's another matter).
Re:Lost Experiments? (Score:5, Funny)
Shit, son. This sounds like a job for the MythBusters! They could test the validity of the myth that these videos have been seen on TV before.
Re:Sites like this that require flash.... (Score:2)
Re:They truly are "lost" (Score:2)
Re:They truly are "lost" (Score:2)
They're all Flash videos (Score:2)
Re:from digg (Score:2)