It's also great that Joe really listen to his guest and tries to process it. He asked a question "so, is the information lost because the time ends there". Means he actively tried to work it out despite the topic being very complicated. Huge respect. A lot of hosts would not strain their brains over it. Curiousity is a great trait.
Brian cox has the most relaxing chilled voice out there I listened to the whole of this podcast and it was a joy, plus his passion of the topics he speaks of is so refreshing
Brian Cox is my favorite scientist of all time. I remember watching an episode of "The wonders of the solar system" on TV with my 63yr old dad, who isn't into science at all. He said to me, "Wow...I've never seen someone be so passionate about something in my entire life. I wish I could be that happy." Fucking broke my heart.
@@FutureDeadGuy007 You said there is no such thing as a scientist, then basically gave the definition. Having a favorite scientist, or liking a persons passion for something, isn't worship. There are bad people, who will take advantage of people or lie to them, for their own benefit, doing all sorts of things. Most wouldn't call themselves scientists. Some call themselves religious. But lets just lump everyone in a group together, and call them all good/bad. This is how things like: believe all women, and all straight white males are racist misogynist homophobes, come about. And if I read to much into what you said, I would say you did the same to him.
Try get yourself to one of his lectures on particle physics and the standard model. He's far more into particle physics (and is an active particle physicist still) than he is astro. Its just astro is the one that pays the bills and gets the interviews
@@sinnersaved9208 lol….try putting on a thinking cap and joining the human species when you’re done with claims that we have it all figured out. many others of us are okay with knowing we don’t know anything CLOSE to everything, but we can damn well try :)
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end. Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam. Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
Brian Cox is one of the most intelligent intellectuals on the planet right now. He's calm and very understandable, while ((edit)conferring) knowledge on the masses with ease. There corrected. Hope you all happy now
@@ethandickson9490 Sometimes. Most times scientific individuals cannot communicate their ideas very well. That is why Brian Coz is as famous as he is BECAUSE HE CAN do that AND he is highly intelligent. My horizons are broadening.....
Cox seems much more humble and more knowledgeable/approachable. I think Tyson used to be more like this, but then I believe he became a bit too self-aware.
@@dannygolightly865Or perhaps he sleeps in an enclosed oxygen-enriched sarcophagus coffin like the one in Stargate & wakes up passionately never needing glasses.
It would be worse than what we have today. He's spent a whole life on speculation, no facts, no value. He also spent considerable amounts of time to tell you that you don't have a soul.
@@afk1sec410 As a atheist, your superstition and belief in magic is not something that has any value! Thinking the world would be a worse place with more people like Brian Cox must mean that you are either mentally ill or part of a some cult or criminal organization who feeds on peoples problems...
@@afk1sec410 meanwhile people worshipping religion basing their ENTiRE *universal worldview* on the speculation of illiterate sand scribes from a couple thousand years ago. at least we have the humility to admit we don’t know everything.
I learned a lot just by watching several times all four episodes of his Wonders of the Universe, also by BBC. I'm a huge fan of Professor Cox. He is a gem and a blessing really.
Louis Theroux is brilliant too. All though a bit off in terms of topics he covers, he still worked for the BBC and did some of the best documentaries I’ve ever seen
BC is one of the only 'science communicators' that gets it right. Easy to understand and doesn't go over the top being too excited, trying to be funny etc.
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end. Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam. Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
What we really need is tiered science communications. PBS Spacetime does this, and understands that the development of the audience's understanding of the topics, slowly building it to the weird stuff after some prerequisite episodes. My point is, it would be great if there was more scientific media that doesn't repeatedly go through the same basics every time (e.g "a black hole is a stellar object where gravity is so strong, not even light can escape" for the 100th time)
Brian Cox was always one of my favorites to watch on the science channel as a kid, him and Michio Kaku… Now my 6 year old daughter was just screened and is well into the range of genius, hopefully one day I’ll be sitting there having her explain her cutting edge studies to me❤
I love Brian Cox. He’s my favorite science communicator, for sure. I saw him on his Horizon’s tour shortly after we started to get pictures back from the JWST, and he shared them with us and displayed them on his incredible hi-def, movie theater sized screen. It was truly a life changing experience.
I'm 45 and still very curious about many things. I have two degrees and decades of accumulated knowledge and experience. I consider myself a well-educated individual, generally speaking. But then I listen to Professor Brian Cox or another intellectual of his caliber, and my confidence instantly vanishes. I truly admire his knowledge and intelligence.
If it makes you feel better Prof Cox was also the keyboard player for the dance band D:Ream, Second thought that is maybe worse, musician and scientist!
i became a doctor thanks to this guy i used to get unmotivated to study back at school and watching Brian and listening to him explain things made me always excited about school
@@bobzombie2710I think his point is that rogan used to do much more varied interviews. If I hear one more time about PC woke culture imma blow my brains out lol
Brian Cox is a national treasure. Man is able to not only convey (sometimes absolutely terrifying) complex information in a way that’s understandable and intriguing, but also brings a smile to my face :) sending much love his way 🫶🏻
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end. Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam. Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
@@harambe7430 you are example of one God's existance every single atom is example of God existance from most complex lens in ur eyes to supercomputer in ur brain to earth slightly tilted to ozone layer to whole creation of universe
@@syedbaqir2687you know what's the difference between religion believers and scientists? You guys never really try to understand how the world works. You don't care. Even when you try you always stop and say "it's magic, I'm now all the wiser. All God's work". Scientists *really* try to figure it out, to understand how things were made to be. And even if sometimes in the future it turns out it was all really created by God you know what scientists will say? "Okay, but how did he create the universe? Let's figure out this one now." Science doesn't compromise on knowledge, it continues until there's nothing to be done anymore. And then a bit further.
@@gilgamesh101 Averaging out. The standard JR listener is a conspiracy theorist who thinks far right wing extremism is a better option. The poorly educated as comrade trump calls them.
These kind of guests always bring out the part of Joe I love the most, which is that sort of child-like wonder and curiosity about existence in all aspects. He both sets up the guest to speak in a manner and style that is understandable and easily consumable to him and in turn to us the audience as well, and he also asks both questions we have and ones we wouldn’t think of(because they’re either smarter or dumber what we would think). As much as it’s a stereotype of who he actually is, Joe is best when he’s covering/talking about conspiracies, psychedelics/drugs, space/science, and fighting(also comedy, but his strength is in conversational comedy and not necessarily stand up or written/rehearsed comedy).
“And it’s just like saying why can’t we escape tomorrow, we are going to tomorrow”. That’s the best explanation I’ve ever heard also it goes hard as a quote too, Brian Cox man he is on a different level.
@@marvinwilliams7938 Time is not an illusion. It's an emergent property of spacetime that is measurable as relative to the observer. While the past and the future don't exist simultaneously, it's really just an argument of semantics to say they don't "exist". Even if you travel at close to the speed of light, time still moves at the same speed for you wherever you are. The analogy is that once you cross the event horizon of a black hole, time and space essentially flip. Outside the black hole, you cannot stop or slow time (relative to yourself). You ARE going forward in time, whether you like it or not. Inside a black hole, you ARE going to the singularity, whether you like it or not. And when you reach the singularity, time ends (for you).
@@pyrophoria2206 I its not that they dont exist simultaneously its that they don't exist full stop. I think what he's saying instead of “time” is that the “time it takes” to go from your point to another Point ceases to exist at the singularity since everything is so dense and together, is that right? That makes more sense.
I picked up Brian Cox at The Dorchester about 12 years ago, going to Clapham High Street. The most nicest man you can imagine and so down to earth. Had a lovely conversation with him. This man is what I would call a real celebrity, a contributor to the advancement of our species.
I'm sooooo glad there is ANOTHER podcast. I've listened to the latest one every sunday when i drive about 2 hours with the car. Every time it's amazing to listen to Thanks, i'm glad you got another podcast!!
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end. Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam. Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
@@austenpowers Why would anyone truly worship something that punishes for the mistakes they made when they made them? *Because God who created you also left you with enough info to know and understand what is right or wrong. IF you think there is no God even seeing universe and complicate world where small angle makes big difference between life and no life and still say there is no God then you are the biggest loser* *Also God is all merciful and do not punish or like punishing. With just 1 forgiveness He is willing to give you paradise which never ends. what a shame to lose that*
I wish I had Brian as teacher. His ability to explain very complex matter in layman’s language is really good. His passion and enthusiasm shines through
Oh buddy, the world outside the podcast bubble is mind blowing, you have no idea. Heads up though, if you start learning science and logic you'll lose the simplistic views sold to you by the frauds like Joe and JP
What I love about Brian Cox is that he always talks to his own expertise, unlike some pseudo intellectuals, who constantly pontificate outside their area of expertise.
I don't watch a lot of JRE, but I watch these types of episodes especially those including space, science and wild animals. I learn quite a lot. I love this corner of the internet.
This man delivers such complex theories and facts in such a grounded and understandable way. He is fascinating to listen to. He has a great new series on the Solar System on BBC iPlayer.
I think it’s because he genuinely gets joy out of these topics and has the childlike curiosity that causes us to go “Wow! That’s neat. What else can we learn about it.”
Haha, the first time I ever scrolled by a clip of his first appearance on the podcast, I had to double take cause I thought "oh shit it's Mullen on JRE"
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end. Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam. Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
His friendly face and demeanor makes me want to learn more about this stuff even tho i barely understand or comprehend these scales he is speaking of 😂
I feel like they often describe spacetime as a solid fabric, when it’s more dynamic and fluid in nature. And if spacetime acts as a fluid, then you can have such things like waves, ripples, currents, or vortices in spacetime itself. You can think of the recent discovery of gravitational waves, for example. And when I think of black holes, I always am reminded of a whirlpool in water. When I shake the water in my bottle just right then let the container sit, you see a vortex or mini-whirlpool being created. This happens when the contents of a container are moving rapidly, but the container itself remains stationary. Specifically, in the right conditions you see what’s called the inverted whirlpool paradox. Basically, an hourglass shaped pair of vortices, one of the top and bottom, each spinning in different directions. And the top one will usually suck in the particles of whatever’s in the water, and the bottom one spits them back out. In the same way, I believe a black hole is connected to a white hole. It’s literally the same mathematics just the inverse. And if the Einsteins theory allows for the positive to exist, then the negative can just as well exist. What does this mean? Well the black hole sucks everything in, and the white hole spits everything out. The theory is that things that go into the black hole are trapped forever in singularity. Doesn’t the idea of the things within the black hole being trapped in singularity break the idea of conservation of energy? Idk, but what if every black hole was connected to a white hole? Instead of being trapped fire ever in singularity, things come out the other side through the white hole. Think about it like a crude wormhole or something. If space acts as a fluid, then the black hole is more like a vortex or whirlpool in space. All that energy and even light that goes into the black hole, comes out somewhere else in space. What does a black hole look like from the outside observer? A spherical event horizon. What would the opposite of that look like? The white hole is emitting all the energy and light, and would probably appear like a spherical star or sun. The black hole appears like a spherical Event horizon, unless your in a higher dimension. Think of it like viewing the whirlpool from the surface of the water itself. Unless You’re in a higher dimension you can’t see that it’s a vortex, it appears circular or spherical from that perspective. I’m just brainstorming here, but that takes me back to the inverse whirlpool paradox. The double whirlpool looks like a hourglass. The two vortex’s are spinning in opposite directions. The interesting thing about this is if you watch long enough, these two vortex’s spinning opposite directions will cancel each other out. Suddenly you see the vortex’s switch positions, so to speak. They basically reverse rotations. For example, the top one is spinning left, and the bottom is spinning right; eventually they flip and you see the top spin right, and the bottom spins left. That reminds me of how the hourglass when the sand is reached the bottom, it has to be flipped to continue. What if the black hole / white hole combo does a similar thing? We know that stars will collapse in on themselves and turn into black holes. That would be the same phenomenon. The rotation is reverse and suddenly, instead of a star that emits energy and light, it becomes a black hole that devours energy and light. What if the black hole does the same? Hypothetically, these things would take far too long to observe. But what if we have observed it before? I think a few years ago, astronomers and physicists reported a star that didn’t previously exist (or not observed) appeared in the sky where it wasn’t supposed to be. What if that was the black hole (invisible to our eyes) flipping rotation and becoming a white hole (or star)… It really makes you think about the nature of our cosmos and whether our theories and assumptions are correct. I always thought that the cosmos is more like a fractal. No matter how far you zoom in or away, the patterns remain the same. And it’s because there’s deeper underlying principles at play. Just like you can see the spiral of galaxies in the pedals of a flower, it’s a pattern of creation so to speak. In the same way, when we observe our reality at the smallest of scales, we can observe the same patterns evident at the largest of scales. So seeing how a whirlpool in water acts, or understanding fluid dynamics, can probably tell us something about the behavior of spacetime. Because I always thought that Einsteins view of spacetime was very fluid and dynamic, yet we normally teach and learn about it as some static fabric of spacetime. But it’s not so much static fabric that bends, but rather a dynamic fluid that can exhibit the same characteristics as water. It can have waves, ripples, currents, and vortexes, or even bubbles, etc. (I threw the bubbles in there because why not). But when I think about the nature of black holes and white holes, it reminds me of the diagram of Ying and Yang. The yin and yang symbol, with its black and white halves and dots, represents balance and interconnectedness. Each side has a piece of the other inside it: the black side (yin) has a white dot, and the white side (yang) has a black dot. They are always in motion, flowing into each other in an eternal cycle, like two fish chasing their tails. As these two fish chase the other in a circle, they become the other. They change colors so to speak. So now the white fish turns into the black fish, and so on… That just seems very fitting for this idea. Just as the yin-yang symbol illustrates, where opposites flow into one another and become the other, black holes and white holes may be locked in an eternal dance, their roles reversing over time in a cosmic rhythm that spans dimensions. The black hole takes in everything, while the white hole pushes out what was consumed, creating a balance in the universe. They might be connected by an unseen “bridge,” just as the line in the yin and yang symbol ties the two sides together. It’s a reminder that in the darkest places of space, there might be a path that leads to light on the other side. I’ll call this the Yin-Yang Cosmological Theory for short. It seems like a cool name. Blending elements of fluid dynamics, cosmic structures, and ancient philosophy into one cohesive idea. Anyways, spacetime acts more like a dynamic fluid than a static fabric. It can exhibit the same characteristic as fluid. Like gravitational waves, currents, and even vortices. By that reason, you can have black holes that are connected to distant white holes. From our point of view, these things appear as two separate unrelated phenomena, but perhaps if we could see it from a higher dimension, they’d appear connected. Kind of like the idea of quantum entanglement. Two particles seemingly separated by great distance in space, are still somehow connected. The point being that black holes are really just rapidly spinning vortices in spacetime itself, connected to a white hole on the other side. Things don’t just get trapped in singularity forever. They get torn apart, fused, and emitted from a white hole scattering across the universe. Im no physicist, but my intuition tells me we can learn more about the macro-scale cosmos by observing the micro-scale reality all around us. These patterns resemble Gods fingerprints on creation itself, and that’s why we see all these patterns repeating. It’s why you can see the spiral of galaxies in the structure of flowers, or see similarities between how fluid behaves and spacetime itself. Hopefully my insane rambling made sense. It was a lot of me just brainstorming on the spot. If you read this far thank you, and let me know what you think in the comments!
I went to one of his black hole shows a few years ago and my brain was hurting around the time he got to discovering the end of time in the center of black holes 🤯
Most people can’t fathom the size of the earth let alone the size of our sun… we are so far behind on education, we’re still arguing with people on the shape of the earth…
To be fair, these things are very hard for the human mind to conceptualize. Without reference most would struggle to put scale to something as immense as what this man is talking about.
@with all the tech we have, I imagine people can grasp a bit of information that’s put out… If you put a pea next to a beach ball and tell people the pea is the earth and the beach ball (or maybe an exercise ball) is the sun. They can form a bit of scale in their heads
It’s not exactly an educational problem. The information is out there to grab. But as human beings scaling something so absolutely humongous is just hard to perceive. You’re asking for a universal metric scaling of a spacial phenomenon we literally know almost nothing about
When you think of time - as in the ‘arrow’ of time, is really just a measurable observation of entropy - it’s easier to fathom. ‘End of time’ is really ‘from complete order, to complete chaos’. And yes, black holes are simulacrum of that wider second law, on an observable level. All this stuff really mind-bending and fascinating at the same time.
A human can’t comprehend the end of time because it isn’t something we can experience…long before it happens the changes to the universe will be so hostile to us that it will be impossible for us to survive, or anything to survive.
Maybe the singularity pierces a hole in our universe and opens up another universe therefore ending time on our universe for whatever falls into the black hole.
I love learning about black holes. Still waiting to hear what the latest progress is though. I've been familiar about all of the theories Brian talked about for nearly a decade now.
Can we please just admit to ourselves that we not only need, but desperately want to see only one collaboration. One that would change the world❤ Brian Cox, Joe, Bob Lazar, Elon….. how’s your paper view? But….. guys…. You just get a line…. A massive black hole….and a vacuum
I was gonna say Cox manages to pull off looking like a rock star, a scientist and my grandmother but none of that matters when he’s talking about stuff that transcends everything we will experience in all our lives combined
Brian Cox > Neil Degrasse Tyson
It's not even close.
By a mile!
Depends on the subject
Brian Greene is the GOAT
theyre not even comparable
I really enjoyed Brian Cox on JRE in the past, glad to see him back
I too enjoy Cox
@@CompleteProducer84 Everybody knows that.
Ur mom enjoys cox 😅
I like Cox getting stuck into black holes
@@CompleteProducer84 I see what you did there.
Its interviews like this that got me watching JRE. Just someone with incredible passion on something i know absolutely nothing about.
same here brother
It's also great that Joe really listen to his guest and tries to process it. He asked a question "so, is the information lost because the time ends there". Means he actively tried to work it out despite the topic being very complicated. Huge respect. A lot of hosts would not strain their brains over it. Curiousity is a great trait.
And I still don’t understand
I can just about get my head around the distortion of Gravity but the distortion of Time is still mind blowing to comprehend!
There's some irony in that isn't it
Brian cox has the most relaxing chilled voice out there
I listened to the whole of this podcast and it was a joy, plus his passion of the topics he speaks of is so refreshing
Perfect for a jerk
Brian Cox is my favorite scientist of all time. I remember watching an episode of "The wonders of the solar system" on TV with my 63yr old dad, who isn't into science at all. He said to me, "Wow...I've never seen someone be so passionate about something in my entire life. I wish I could be that happy."
Fucking broke my heart.
No such things as a scientist. There are people who do specific jobs on specific topics. Don't worship them. That's what Covid taught us.
@@FutureDeadGuy007 if you dont believe in science you may be mentally retarded. that's okay though. i'm sure you're doing your best buddy.
@@FutureDeadGuy007 You said there is no such thing as a scientist, then basically gave the definition.
Having a favorite scientist, or liking a persons passion for something, isn't worship. There are bad people, who will take advantage of people or lie to them, for their own benefit, doing all sorts of things. Most wouldn't call themselves scientists. Some call themselves religious.
But lets just lump everyone in a group together, and call them all good/bad. This is how things like: believe all women, and all straight white males are racist misogynist homophobes, come about. And if I read to much into what you said, I would say you did the same to him.
So you enjoy listening to nerds sitting around in a room talking about shit the literally have no clue about😂😂😂 man I'm glad I'm not a fucking nerd
@@jrod4344he gave the definition of a m0r0n, next time comprehend better
What I've always loved about Brian is you can see that he is so absolutely passionate about this subject and he loves it so much. He radiates it.
Try get yourself to one of his lectures on particle physics and the standard model. He's far more into particle physics (and is an active particle physicist still) than he is astro. Its just astro is the one that pays the bills and gets the interviews
Radiates like a little supermassive black hole
Cox Radiation
Inappropriate
@@DaveOz-mx5oh Nice. Passion of Cox didn't sit right with me
“Jamie, pull up that video of the grizzly bear eating a black hole”
“When you think about it, we don’t even know how much a black hole can bench press”
Dude 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
You funnicun...😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
“You might need to fact check me on this, but I heard on Twitter that a grizzly bear can eat an entire black hole.”
I don't know about bears, but I've eaten a few black holes in my time. Very tasty! 😋
The guy has a smile on his face the entire time, his passion just beams through the screen. I’m so glad Dr. Cox is back in jre.
mr. Cox is the best conveyor of science. I could listen to him all day.
I listen to him when I can't sleep, you'll be knock out quickly
And Michio Kaku.
Best conveyer of Godless BS.
@@sinnersaved9208
lol….try putting on a thinking cap and joining the human species when you’re done with claims that we have it all figured out.
many others of us are okay with knowing we don’t know anything CLOSE to everything, but we can damn well try :)
Sounds like a good pornstar's name. Especially if you call him Dr Cox.
Dr Cox is so great to listen to. I love his energy and his way of explaining things to non-specialists.
Only Brian Cox could be so happy describing us falling into a black hole and coming to the end of time. ✨
Absolutely love hearing this dude talk
Wow what an insightful comment you love his talk
@@marcuspoopismaximus3795 what an insightful reply. Glad you loved it.
@@marcuspoopismaximus3795meanwhile he got 91 likes and you got none 🤔
@@RarelyReplies a rare reply from RarelyReplies 😮
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end.
Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam.
Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
I could listen to Professor Brian all day long. He soothes my brain.
Brian answering Joe's questions is the best. Joe askes questions that make the conversation understandable to a novice, like me, on this subject.
You understood this?
@@kathleenp3135 Ha! Well if I can understand a third of it I count that as having understood it.
What question did Rogan ask that made you understand this conversation?
Cool. Why don't you just propose and ask them to marry you
@@v1sudo I did. Wedding's in Denmark. July 16th.
This guy radiate happiness from his event horizon.
This is Tony Hinchcliffe's favorite physicist.
He won't admit it, but he really loves Cox.
Lol
WOOOOO
Who da f*k is tommy hichcliff
Lmaoooo made me laugh good one
Tony catching gay strays in the comment section of a video about blackholes.....shit writes itself...
Brian Cox is one of the most intelligent intellectuals on the planet right now. He's calm and very understandable, while ((edit)conferring) knowledge on the masses with ease. There corrected. Hope you all happy now
As a rule of thumb, science communicators aren't "the most intelligent intellectuals on the planet". Broaden your horizons
Aside from me, sure.
@@ethandickson9490No need to be a d**k about it
@@ethandickson9490 Sometimes. Most times scientific individuals cannot communicate their ideas very well. That is why Brian Coz is as famous as he is BECAUSE HE CAN do that AND he is highly intelligent. My horizons are broadening.....
@@Wangchung405 You are pretty good yourself...
Wanna know the best thing about Brian Cox? He doesn't shamelessly and incessantly interrupt everyone like Neil Degrasse Tyson does.
Or Joe Rogan
Cox seems much more humble and more knowledgeable/approachable. I think Tyson used to be more like this, but then I believe he became a bit too self-aware.
@@Sheepdog_Alpha I think he's one of the least self-aware people on the planet.
1:29 lmfao. That noise from Rogan.
Haha, I noticed that too 😂
That got him goin 💅 lol
lmao
He just farted
😂😂😂😂😂
Another decade goes by and Brian ages 1 year and is still smiling.
What a guy 👍🏻👏🏻
he sleep in an oxygen-enriched environment, in tupperware, to keep him lovely and fresh
Just more evidence that doing what you love makes you happy and keeps you young.
That’ll be those time ripples 😄
You will die within his lifetime.
@@dannygolightly865Or perhaps he sleeps in an enclosed oxygen-enriched sarcophagus coffin like the one in Stargate & wakes up passionately never needing glasses.
I've said this a many times, but if more people were like Brian Cox, the world would be a significantly better place!
It would be worse than what we have today. He's spent a whole life on speculation, no facts, no value. He also spent considerable amounts of time to tell you that you don't have a soul.
If more people were like @afk1sec410, the world would be a significantly worse place!
@@afk1sec410 As a atheist, your superstition and belief in magic is not something that has any value! Thinking the world would be a worse place with more people like Brian Cox must mean that you are either mentally ill or part of a some cult or criminal organization who feeds on peoples problems...
@@afk1sec410
meanwhile people worshipping religion basing their ENTiRE *universal worldview* on the speculation of illiterate sand scribes from a couple thousand years ago.
at least we have the humility to admit we don’t know everything.
@@afk1sec410 You just explained religion, minus the made up soul part.
The first Brian Cox JRE episode is one of my favorite of all time. So glad he’s back.
This guy makes me smile listening to him. His excitement becomes mine when ever he talks.
You get excited about BS?
@@sinnersaved9208Why bs?
@@sinnersaved9208Who are you kids, commenting wise things so visciously and dumb?
Watching this at 0300 am was a mistake . . .
For you
Same, I have work in the morning!
😂😂😂
for me 6 am
I'm from England and this fella does the best shows on BBC. If you Americans can get BBC then watch his show called Solar System. He's the best.
yeah the ladies love BBC here 😂
I learned a lot just by watching several times all four episodes of his Wonders of the Universe, also by BBC. I'm a huge fan of Professor Cox. He is a gem and a blessing really.
Louis Theroux is brilliant too. All though a bit off in terms of topics he covers, he still worked for the BBC and did some of the best documentaries I’ve ever seen
bbc lul
@@gazzy9136 I will check his documentaries out. Thank you for letting me know about him.
I could listen to him.... endlessly. Such a charmingly earnest voice with a touch a glee. Brilliant man. 😊 A gift to mankind
Great description.
You can tell he's enjoying himself explaining this. Brilliant!
You should try Carl Sagan too. Especially the Cosmos-series.
Just yesterday I watched him on Rogan from years ago again and here we are again. Perfect, love the guy.
This guy has so much knowledge in his head. No BS just facts and knowledge - utterly fascinating listening to him
BC is one of the only 'science communicators' that gets it right. Easy to understand and doesn't go over the top being too excited, trying to be funny etc.
Is this a jab at NDT? 😂
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end.
Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam.
Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
Just say you don't like Tyson.
What we really need is tiered science communications. PBS Spacetime does this, and understands that the development of the audience's understanding of the topics, slowly building it to the weird stuff after some prerequisite episodes. My point is, it would be great if there was more scientific media that doesn't repeatedly go through the same basics every time (e.g
"a black hole is a stellar object where gravity is so strong, not even light can escape" for the 100th time)
@@syedbaqir2687 lol
His excitement and passion are one of a kind. What a gem.
The best science communicator absent of bias.
Love listening to this dude
Living*
Not many of those anymore unfortunately
Oh he does have huge bias when talking Climate change/boiling
@@buryitdeep and when he's banging on about politics, trump and the tories
Brian Cox was always one of my favorites to watch on the science channel as a kid, him and Michio Kaku…
Now my 6 year old daughter was just screened and is well into the range of genius, hopefully one day I’ll be sitting there having her explain her cutting edge studies to me❤
I love Brian Cox. He’s my favorite science communicator, for sure. I saw him on his Horizon’s tour shortly after we started to get pictures back from the JWST, and he shared them with us and displayed them on his incredible hi-def, movie theater sized screen. It was truly a life changing experience.
I'm 45 and still very curious about many things. I have two degrees and decades of accumulated knowledge and experience. I consider myself a well-educated individual, generally speaking. But then I listen to Professor Brian Cox or another intellectual of his caliber, and my confidence instantly vanishes. I truly admire his knowledge and intelligence.
I get that humbling feeling all the time when I listen to people like this speak
If it makes you feel better Prof Cox was also the keyboard player for the dance band D:Ream, Second thought that is maybe worse, musician and scientist!
Nothing wrong with that these people are ridiculous
@@martinnicoll2217 in what world is that worse? That adds ‘artist’ to his resume. I don’t see that as a negative. 🤔
It is that feeling that drives you to know more, my friend.
Hello, much love for the show! Thank you for bringing such interesting and diverse guests.
i became a doctor thanks to this guy
i used to get unmotivated to study back at school and watching Brian and listening to him explain things made me always excited about school
I really like Brian Cox. You can see the passion for the subjects he talks about, and he's a great communitator as well.
This is the JRE I love. Wish he would do more of this and less of the political stuff. I would start listening again
Why not just listen to the ones you're interested in lol
@@bobzombie2710 Stupid is as stupid does :)
@@bobzombie2710I think his point is that rogan used to do much more varied interviews. If I hear one more time about PC woke culture imma blow my brains out lol
@@bobzombie2710why not suck it
@@bobzombie2710the science stuff seems thinner on the ground these days
I can listen to Brian Cox all day man
and I love that Joe is asking the questions I'm literally asking while watching
Brian Cox is a national treasure. Man is able to not only convey (sometimes absolutely terrifying) complex information in a way that’s understandable and intriguing, but also brings a smile to my face :) sending much love his way 🫶🏻
I love when Joe has scientists on. It's always so interesting, and Joe really gets into the topic. His enthusiasm is infectious.
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end.
Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam.
Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
@@syedbaqir2687 nah
@@syedbaqir2687no evidence of gods existence pal, it’s all theory and belief.
@@harambe7430 you are example of one God's existance
every single atom is example of God existance from most complex lens in ur eyes to supercomputer in ur brain to earth slightly tilted to ozone layer to whole creation of universe
@@syedbaqir2687you know what's the difference between religion believers and scientists? You guys never really try to understand how the world works. You don't care. Even when you try you always stop and say "it's magic, I'm now all the wiser. All God's work".
Scientists *really* try to figure it out, to understand how things were made to be. And even if sometimes in the future it turns out it was all really created by God you know what scientists will say? "Okay, but how did he create the universe? Let's figure out this one now." Science doesn't compromise on knowledge, it continues until there's nothing to be done anymore. And then a bit further.
Brian Cox is truly inspiring. He’s living proof that intelligence and pursuit of knowledge are so awesome!
Lost on most of o
JRs listeners.
@@wispa1a and how would you know that? Met them all have you? Or just your own inbuilt assumptions and prejudice?
@@gilgamesh101
Averaging out.
The standard JR listener is a conspiracy theorist who thinks far right wing extremism is a better option.
The poorly educated as comrade trump calls them.
One of my fav guests of all time. I was so excited to see him on JRE again!!!
These kind of guests always bring out the part of Joe I love the most, which is that sort of child-like wonder and curiosity about existence in all aspects. He both sets up the guest to speak in a manner and style that is understandable and easily consumable to him and in turn to us the audience as well, and he also asks both questions we have and ones we wouldn’t think of(because they’re either smarter or dumber what we would think). As much as it’s a stereotype of who he actually is, Joe is best when he’s covering/talking about conspiracies, psychedelics/drugs, space/science, and fighting(also comedy, but his strength is in conversational comedy and not necessarily stand up or written/rehearsed comedy).
“And it’s just like saying why can’t we escape tomorrow, we are going to tomorrow”.
That’s the best explanation I’ve ever heard also it goes hard as a quote too, Brian Cox man he is on a different level.
True but Sabine > Brian
I don’t get it because time is an illusion, past is a memory, future doesn’t exist only real moment is the present.
@@marvinwilliams7938 Time is not an illusion. It's an emergent property of spacetime that is measurable as relative to the observer. While the past and the future don't exist simultaneously, it's really just an argument of semantics to say they don't "exist". Even if you travel at close to the speed of light, time still moves at the same speed for you wherever you are. The analogy is that once you cross the event horizon of a black hole, time and space essentially flip. Outside the black hole, you cannot stop or slow time (relative to yourself). You ARE going forward in time, whether you like it or not. Inside a black hole, you ARE going to the singularity, whether you like it or not. And when you reach the singularity, time ends (for you).
@@pyrophoria2206 I its not that they dont exist simultaneously its that they don't exist full stop. I think what he's saying instead of “time” is that the “time it takes” to go from your point to another Point ceases to exist at the singularity since everything is so dense and together, is that right? That makes more sense.
@@marvinwilliams7938 oh honey
Brain Cox is one of my favorite people to listen to
A smart, polite British man describing “time storms” is why we love JRE
He is rowdy when he drinks
Joe Rogan is also British
So you're brainwashed
@@ivaerz4977 That’s true, Rogan did say when he got a DNA ancestry report that he’s a descendant of Big Ben
Not so polite when he was a rock star!
I picked up Brian Cox at The Dorchester about 12 years ago, going to Clapham High Street. The most nicest man you can imagine and so down to earth.
Had a lovely conversation with him. This man is what I would call a real celebrity, a contributor to the advancement of our species.
Man, you can tell this guy really enjoys talking about this! Makes it easier to understand too. Very cool
It’s just nice to see how much Brian smiles while he explains something really complicated
I'm sooooo glad there is ANOTHER podcast. I've listened to the latest one every sunday when i drive about 2 hours with the car. Every time it's amazing to listen to
Thanks, i'm glad you got another podcast!!
This is one of the best jre podcasts I’ve seen. So good.
I'm so happy Brian is back. I saw his Horizons show in Edinburgh earlier this year and it's absolutely amazing. What a national treasure he is
True
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end.
Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam.
Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
reading your comment I am regretting now not buying it when I saw he was coming.
Why would anyone truly worship something that punishes for the mistakes they made when they made them?
@@austenpowers Why would anyone truly worship something that punishes for the mistakes they made when they made them?
*Because God who created you also left you with enough info to know and understand what is right or wrong. IF you think there is no God even seeing universe and complicate world where small angle makes big difference between life and no life and still say there is no God then you are the biggest loser*
*Also God is all merciful and do not punish or like punishing. With just 1 forgiveness He is willing to give you paradise which never ends. what a shame to lose that*
I wish I had Brian as teacher. His ability to explain very complex matter in layman’s language is really good. His passion and enthusiasm shines through
He lectures in my city at Manchester University. I missed an opportunity.
As much Brian Cox as you can get is never enough
Take all of that cox 😂
So thankful to see him back! Need more Brian, the dude is one of a kind
This is some of the most interesting stuff i've ever heard, delivered in such a beautiful way
Oh buddy, the world outside the podcast bubble is mind blowing, you have no idea. Heads up though, if you start learning science and logic you'll lose the simplistic views sold to you by the frauds like Joe and JP
Love this guy. Explains scientific things so well. But also these topics freak me out.
Don’t worry black holes and outer space don’t exist in the real world.
@@ErocNelson88source?
@ErocNelson88 Yeah, we just have an impossibly large dome covering the flat artificial superstructure that we call earth. Makes waaay more sense.
@@dawsonparker7173prove they exist? He even says it’s theoretically, like going to the theatre you are watching a play
@@Banana_Jesus_yeah infinite impossible space makes way more sense 🤦♂️
to this day he was always my favorite JRE episodes. i'm happy they got him on again. he has such an elegant way of explaining complex ideas
you could have the same conversation with the premise being Dragons instead of black holes and we've been really close to finding them for 800 years.
Find someone who looks at you the way Joe looks at Brian @3:28
hahahah
Dead
😂😂😂😂
😭yes! Will never happen for some 💔
Hahah😂😂😂😂😂 that was great
One of the most pleasant people to listen to. It is fascinating how capable humans can be.
What I love about Brian Cox is that he always talks to his own expertise, unlike some pseudo intellectuals, who constantly pontificate outside their area of expertise.
Totally! Neil Degrasse Tyson .
You're so bitter
@@EvanGalt No one beats Michio Kaka when it comes to bull shit!
he doesn't "talk TO his own expertise" that would be very perculiar and i think impossible, he speaks FROM his experience.
I love getting my nutrition advice from Jordan Peterson lol
I don't watch a lot of JRE, but I watch these types of episodes especially those including space, science and wild animals. I learn quite a lot. I love this corner of the internet.
BC has been a hero of mine since first grade. His ability to articulate insanely complex concepts is just incredible.
You're no stranger to Cox
That's an awesome hero to have hell yeah man 👍
Sabine > Brian
Yeah man. Correct and right
This man delivers such complex theories and facts in such a grounded and understandable way.
He is fascinating to listen to.
He has a great new series on the Solar System on BBC iPlayer.
Brian Cox always a smiling face🙂
Yeah because he’s a gormless fraud
I think it’s because he genuinely gets joy out of these topics and has the childlike curiosity that causes us to go “Wow! That’s neat. What else can we learn about it.”
I could listen to this guy for literally days. I love it when he’s on.
With all this thought and work, things can only get better
🙏
I see what you did there
Brian Cox always looks like a younger Rodney Mullen
Haha, the first time I ever scrolled by a clip of his first appearance on the podcast, I had to double take cause I thought "oh shit it's Mullen on JRE"
Now that you say that, I always got the Rodney vibe from him but never actually thought about it
hes 2 years younger..
The way he talks too
Information isnot lost thats why God will recreate us as He did before. God also explains how universe is created by big explosion and how it will end.
Thanks God for giving me enough intellect to connect the dots and have found u instead of endless arguing, Thanks God for finding shia Islam.
Literally from micro and nano world to universe all are signs that there must be a creator, from human to plants
His friendly face and demeanor makes me want to learn more about this stuff even tho i barely understand or comprehend these scales he is speaking of 😂
I want to learn more about u too baby
I feel like they often describe spacetime as a solid fabric, when it’s more dynamic and fluid in nature.
And if spacetime acts as a fluid, then you can have such things like waves, ripples, currents, or vortices in spacetime itself.
You can think of the recent discovery of gravitational waves, for example.
And when I think of black holes, I always am reminded of a whirlpool in water.
When I shake the water in my bottle just right then let the container sit, you see a vortex or mini-whirlpool being created.
This happens when the contents of a container are moving rapidly, but the container itself remains stationary.
Specifically, in the right conditions you see what’s called the inverted whirlpool paradox.
Basically, an hourglass shaped pair of vortices, one of the top and bottom, each spinning in different directions.
And the top one will usually suck in the particles of whatever’s in the water, and the bottom one spits them back out.
In the same way, I believe a black hole is connected to a white hole.
It’s literally the same mathematics just the inverse.
And if the Einsteins theory allows for the positive to exist, then the negative can just as well exist.
What does this mean? Well the black hole sucks everything in, and the white hole spits everything out.
The theory is that things that go into the black hole are trapped forever in singularity.
Doesn’t the idea of the things within the black hole being trapped in singularity break the idea of conservation of energy?
Idk, but what if every black hole was connected to a white hole? Instead of being trapped fire ever in singularity, things come out the other side through the white hole.
Think about it like a crude wormhole or something.
If space acts as a fluid, then the black hole is more like a vortex or whirlpool in space.
All that energy and even light that goes into the black hole, comes out somewhere else in space.
What does a black hole look like from the outside observer? A spherical event horizon.
What would the opposite of that look like? The white hole is emitting all the energy and light, and would probably appear like a spherical star or sun.
The black hole appears like a spherical Event horizon, unless your in a higher dimension.
Think of it like viewing the whirlpool from the surface of the water itself. Unless You’re in a higher dimension you can’t see that it’s a vortex, it appears circular or spherical from that perspective.
I’m just brainstorming here, but that takes me back to the inverse whirlpool paradox.
The double whirlpool looks like a hourglass.
The two vortex’s are spinning in opposite directions.
The interesting thing about this is if you watch long enough, these two vortex’s spinning opposite directions will cancel each other out.
Suddenly you see the vortex’s switch positions, so to speak. They basically reverse rotations.
For example, the top one is spinning left, and the bottom is spinning right; eventually they flip and you see the top spin right, and the bottom spins left.
That reminds me of how the hourglass when the sand is reached the bottom, it has to be flipped to continue.
What if the black hole / white hole combo does a similar thing?
We know that stars will collapse in on themselves and turn into black holes.
That would be the same phenomenon. The rotation is reverse and suddenly, instead of a star that emits energy and light, it becomes a black hole that devours energy and light.
What if the black hole does the same?
Hypothetically, these things would take far too long to observe.
But what if we have observed it before?
I think a few years ago, astronomers and physicists reported a star that didn’t previously exist (or not observed) appeared in the sky where it wasn’t supposed to be.
What if that was the black hole (invisible to our eyes) flipping rotation and becoming a white hole (or star)…
It really makes you think about the nature of our cosmos and whether our theories and assumptions are correct.
I always thought that the cosmos is more like a fractal. No matter how far you zoom in or away, the patterns remain the same.
And it’s because there’s deeper underlying principles at play.
Just like you can see the spiral of galaxies in the pedals of a flower, it’s a pattern of creation so to speak.
In the same way, when we observe our reality at the smallest of scales, we can observe the same patterns evident at the largest of scales.
So seeing how a whirlpool in water acts, or understanding fluid dynamics, can probably tell us something about the behavior of spacetime.
Because I always thought that Einsteins view of spacetime was very fluid and dynamic, yet we normally teach and learn about it as some static fabric of spacetime.
But it’s not so much static fabric that bends, but rather a dynamic fluid that can exhibit the same characteristics as water.
It can have waves, ripples, currents, and vortexes, or even bubbles, etc. (I threw the bubbles in there because why not).
But when I think about the nature of black holes and white holes, it reminds me of the diagram of Ying and Yang.
The yin and yang symbol, with its black and white halves and dots, represents balance and interconnectedness.
Each side has a piece of the other inside it: the black side (yin) has a white dot, and the white side (yang) has a black dot.
They are always in motion, flowing into each other in an eternal cycle, like two fish chasing their tails.
As these two fish chase the other in a circle, they become the other. They change colors so to speak.
So now the white fish turns into the black fish, and so on…
That just seems very fitting for this idea.
Just as the yin-yang symbol illustrates, where opposites flow into one another and become the other, black holes and white holes may be locked in an eternal dance, their roles reversing over time in a cosmic rhythm that spans dimensions.
The black hole takes in everything, while the white hole pushes out what was consumed, creating a balance in the universe.
They might be connected by an unseen “bridge,” just as the line in the yin and yang symbol ties the two sides together.
It’s a reminder that in the darkest places of space, there might be a path that leads to light on the other side.
I’ll call this the Yin-Yang Cosmological Theory for short. It seems like a cool name. Blending elements of fluid dynamics, cosmic structures, and ancient philosophy into one cohesive idea.
Anyways, spacetime acts more like a dynamic fluid than a static fabric.
It can exhibit the same characteristic as fluid. Like gravitational waves, currents, and even vortices.
By that reason, you can have black holes that are connected to distant white holes.
From our point of view, these things appear as two separate unrelated phenomena, but perhaps if we could see it from a higher dimension, they’d appear connected.
Kind of like the idea of quantum entanglement. Two particles seemingly separated by great distance in space, are still somehow connected.
The point being that black holes are really just rapidly spinning vortices in spacetime itself, connected to a white hole on the other side.
Things don’t just get trapped in singularity forever. They get torn apart, fused, and emitted from a white hole scattering across the universe.
Im no physicist, but my intuition tells me we can learn more about the macro-scale cosmos by observing the micro-scale reality all around us.
These patterns resemble Gods fingerprints on creation itself, and that’s why we see all these patterns repeating.
It’s why you can see the spiral of galaxies in the structure of flowers, or see similarities between how fluid behaves and spacetime itself.
Hopefully my insane rambling made sense. It was a lot of me just brainstorming on the spot. If you read this far thank you, and let me know what you think in the comments!
Love seeing Brian on again. His enthusiasm over these topics makes it so much more engaging.
Never knew James Blunt knew so much about space.
Funnily enough, Brian was in a band back in the early 90's. He was the keyboard player in D-Ream
I saaaaw your face, in a crooowded place. And I don't knoooow what to doooo. I will neveeeeer beee, with youuuuu
Call him what you want, just don’t call him late for dinner.
He doesn't
Whatcha talkin about?
This is clearly Johnny Depp from that Willy Wonka remake.
Graham Hancock and now Brian Cox in the last week is the return to good form for JRE 🙏🙏
Great conversation Joe! Thank you for sharing.
When Joe says "whoa" at 5:05 its great!!!!
Stop glazing his nuts
He said it exactly when I read this! Woah!!
Will you help me wipe my butt?
I went to one of his black hole shows a few years ago and my brain was hurting around the time he got to discovering the end of time in the center of black holes 🤯
My brain hurting now ten min into this.
Most people can’t fathom the size of the earth let alone the size of our sun… we are so far behind on education, we’re still arguing with people on the shape of the earth…
To be fair, these things are very hard for the human mind to conceptualize. Without reference most would struggle to put scale to something as immense as what this man is talking about.
@with all the tech we have, I imagine people can grasp a bit of information that’s put out…
If you put a pea next to a beach ball and tell people the pea is the earth and the beach ball (or maybe an exercise ball) is the sun. They can form a bit of scale in their heads
Including Joe and Brian, it would appear!
We need to get rid of ideologies, they are running our perception of reality.
It’s not exactly an educational problem. The information is out there to grab. But as human beings scaling something so absolutely humongous is just hard to perceive. You’re asking for a universal metric scaling of a spacial phenomenon we literally know almost nothing about
One of the best casts of JRE
I’ll watch anything with Cox/Rogan
Joe should have him on everyday of the week ! No conspiracy theorist , no politicians , no Terrence Howard , no nutters !
The universe has no obligation to make sense to us. Jeeeez im always amazed by this
Can listen to Prof. Brian Cox talk about cosmology 24 x 7. Awesome person!!
Black holes are just mind boggling. It's so hard to imagine what "the end of time" is.
I like to think it’s a place where tomorrow never comes, because there are no more tomorrows.
When you think of time - as in the ‘arrow’ of time, is really just a measurable observation of entropy - it’s easier to fathom. ‘End of time’ is really ‘from complete order, to complete chaos’.
And yes, black holes are simulacrum of that wider second law, on an observable level.
All this stuff really mind-bending and fascinating at the same time.
A human can’t comprehend the end of time because it isn’t something we can experience…long before it happens the changes to the universe will be so hostile to us that it will be impossible for us to survive, or anything to survive.
Maybe the singularity pierces a hole in our universe and opens up another universe therefore ending time on our universe for whatever falls into the black hole.
Only that there's no end of time 🫠
I love learning about black holes. Still waiting to hear what the latest progress is though. I've been familiar about all of the theories Brian talked about for nearly a decade now.
Well, black holes severely affect time, so it may take a while.
Many studies were carried out and they concluded that black holes are definitely black.
Can we please just admit to ourselves that we not only need, but desperately want to see only one collaboration. One that would change the world❤ Brian Cox, Joe, Bob Lazar, Elon….. how’s your paper view?
But….. guys…. You just get a line…. A massive black hole….and a vacuum
In principle, I'm an idiot...
I don’t know why I find this man talking so comforting, could listen to him all day. Even though I don’t understand any of it😂
13:48 Joe sitting back in his chair conceding defeat.
You motherfucker, the fact that it was just the sound of it happening absolutely killed me 😂🤣
Wasn’t expecting a sound only haha
True lol@@EddyG0rdo
@@EddyG0rdoEddy Gordo wins! His leg sweep?
Ahhh haha
Cox penetrates deep into scientific theories.
I love being penetrated.
I'm a Coxman
Cox hates science. If he loved it, he’d be telling you “space” is a massive lie and the earth doesn’t curve or move.
he's got a particular interest in Uranus.
You missed the obvious - 'Cox penetrates deep into Black holes...'
0:44 young Jamie making a second appearance in the same week, what's going on over there Joe🧐
Loving life with them rolls 🤣😂
Rare animal appearance
Young Jamie isn't young. Give respect where it's due.
He had to come in and remind Brian Cox that he’s the _real_ expert. After all, Jamie got an A in college physics.
I could listen to this guy lecture all day.
I was gonna say Cox manages to pull off looking like a rock star, a scientist and my grandmother but none of that matters when he’s talking about stuff that transcends everything we will experience in all our lives combined
And the funny thing is...he was a pop star once...
2:39 LORD SAURON HAS RETURNED
😂😂
Quite the fascinating conversation.
Great podcast. Also is amazing to fall asleep to and something about his voice that just makes me fall asleep.
I bet Joe doesn't go near the weed, when Brian comes in 😂 🤯🤯🤯
Brian’s been a smoker since before his D Ream days mate! 👍
But he will go on taking some portabello mushrooms 🤯
He looked super high to me.
I waited to smoke until after i watched this, dont need to be paranoid about falling into an event horizon.
@@W_T.F He really do
Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue
Great movie
"Were gonna need a bigger boat"
@baxter326 good for you! One day at a time. Never tried glue, but I’ve huffed a lot of gasoline in my younger days.
I just said this an hour ago now this is here…as they talk about supermassive black holes i’ll say small world!
This comment stood out as i was scrolling through... made me smile thank you.
It’s like Neil Degrasse Tyson but way less douchey
And way more science.
It's more accurate to say that it's nothing like NGT, to be quite honest.
Waaaaaaaaaaaaay less. I can’t listen to Tyson for too long because he’s just so egotistical.
Stop complaining
Dude, every single time with you guys. Dudes living in your head rent free.
Im glad JRE brings on legitimate astrophysists and not just ancient astronaut theorists