Bit of a sensationalist title but actually one of the better Horizons I've seen in a while. Definately worth a watch if you are a scientist of someone interested in science. It does concentrate quite a lot on climate change and "climategate" but it also shows he biggest problems with science today, politics and the media.
The parts where the presenter interviews the creator of "climategate" and the newspaper comparisons are perhaps the best bits in explaining this, showing just why scientists need to start interacting with the public more.
It turns out that (suprise suprise) the original journalist that brought the climategate issue to the fore didn't have a scientific background and announced, quite smugly it seems, that he doesn't have time to read peer reviewed papers and so takes all his information from second hand sources... I particularly loved his reaction to the consensus on cancer treatment, as soon as he said "yup... um..." you knew he was going to avoid the question.
The newspaper comparisons just show how the mainstream media add so much spin, politics and misunderstanding to reporting of science, which as an example, leads me to this:
I was reading an volcano blog, as you do, on a tuesday night and came across a perfect example.
The Blog... http://bigthink.com/blogs/eruptions/ discusses a recent paper on Yellowstone uplift by showing recent articles from papers, which hits exactly the same point as the Horizon episode...
Read the Mails article
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...Yellowstone-National-Park-wipe-thirds-US.html
and then read the blog entry and discussion...
http://bigthink.com/blogs/eruptions/
Sorry for the rambling post but I think, especially on a forum like this, that a lot of people should have a watch and a read. Maybe it will make you think (it has me).
The parts where the presenter interviews the creator of "climategate" and the newspaper comparisons are perhaps the best bits in explaining this, showing just why scientists need to start interacting with the public more.
It turns out that (suprise suprise) the original journalist that brought the climategate issue to the fore didn't have a scientific background and announced, quite smugly it seems, that he doesn't have time to read peer reviewed papers and so takes all his information from second hand sources... I particularly loved his reaction to the consensus on cancer treatment, as soon as he said "yup... um..." you knew he was going to avoid the question.

The newspaper comparisons just show how the mainstream media add so much spin, politics and misunderstanding to reporting of science, which as an example, leads me to this:
I was reading an volcano blog, as you do, on a tuesday night and came across a perfect example.
The Blog... http://bigthink.com/blogs/eruptions/ discusses a recent paper on Yellowstone uplift by showing recent articles from papers, which hits exactly the same point as the Horizon episode...
Read the Mails article
Is the world's largest super-volcano set to erupt for the first time in 600,000 years, wiping out two-thirds of the U.S.?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...Yellowstone-National-Park-wipe-thirds-US.html
and then read the blog entry and discussion...
http://bigthink.com/blogs/eruptions/
Sorry for the rambling post but I think, especially on a forum like this, that a lot of people should have a watch and a read. Maybe it will make you think (it has me).
