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I am the Online Community Manager at PLoS-ONE (Public Library of Science). My job is to try to motivate you to comment on the papers there. My scientific specialty is chronobiology (circadian rhythms and photoperiodism), with additional interests in comparative physiology, animal behavior and evolution. You can contact me at: Coturnix@gmail.com

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« Book publishers do not "get" the concept of the Long Tail | Main | Clock Tutorial #4: On Methodology »

Scientist Rock Star, Part II

Category: Science Education
Posted on: July 30, 2006 5:48 PM, by Coturnix

Talking about the need to have popular scientists out there, I think the term "rock-star" was an unfortunate choice. Some people in joking, some people in all seriousness, started looking for people with PhD's who can play musical instruments.

That is, of course, irrelevant. We are not looking for scientists who are also rockstars, but for scientists who are as well known, as universally respected and as seriously taken as the rock stars were back in the 1960s. The idea is to have a scientist or two or three being so well known that anyone and everyone in the country and the world is at least vaguely familiar with their name and who they are. Thus, when they say something, the media reports it and the people repeat it around the water-coolers, in churches, on front porches and online. People who can demystify science and break down the scientific stereotypes, as well as show that scientific careers are fun and profitable and that doing science is not such hard work as it is often believed.

Chad is absolutely correct in noting that popular culture is more fragmented today than at any point in the past (while at the same time being even more global than before), as well as in noting that nobody takes entertainers seriously any more.

So, in this fragmented (and Long Tailed) society, is there anyone who is known by EVERYBODY in the USA, who is respected and listened to almost universally?

I finally remembered: Oprah! She likes a book - everybody reads it! She legitimizes people and ideas by showcasing them on her show.

Can we put a scientist on TV on a talk-show? It could look somewhat like "Don't Ask Me..." That 1974 - 1978 British show made its resident personalities into real stars! Magnus Pyke even appeared in the TV spot for Thomas Dolby's She Blinded Me With Science which was a big hit at the time. It certainly made science look like fun, it gave serious answers to serious questions, and made science more accessible. Where's Magnus now? How about a more Oprah-like female scientist, more motherly, with a compelling life story (rags-to-riches including surmounting-big-obstacles)?

Comments

Speaking of Ph. D's in science who can also play music...I went to school with Hector Quirko (he was a couple years ahead of me at UT) - anthropology Ph. D. and a damn fine blues guitarist...

Posted by: afarensis | July 30, 2006 5:59 PM

::Ahem::

I formally volunteer to have my own talk show! Can't say I have anything in common with Oprah, and I'm sure as hell not motherly. Maybe if Jessica Simpson wasn't retarded and wore a lab coat, I'd get that job.

Posted by: Shelley Batts | July 31, 2006 12:46 AM

Technically, you could argue that Richard Dawkins is a semi-rock star. Gould used to be. I do entirely agree that science needs more spokesmen, especially when the opponents of science are focused on publicity.

Rostradamus

Posted by: Rostradamus | July 31, 2006 1:24 AM

Maybe we should start by getting scientists onto the existing talk shows.

Imagine if Dawkins and Gould made a tearful reconcilation live on Oprah (ignoring the fact they actually agreed on 97% of topics). Or a scientist apperaing on a late night talk show to to publicise his next paper"

"So Dr Smith, tell me what we're going to see here, this is a figure form your new manuscript which appears on January the 12th in PNAS is that right?"

BTW I used to be in band but the less said about that the better realy

Posted by: David Winter | July 31, 2006 1:46 AM

Here's some (punk) rock-stars who are also real-life scientists:

Milo Aukerman, singer for The Descendents, Ph.D. in Biochemistry.

Greg Graffin, singer for Bad Religion, Ph.D. in Evolutionary Paleontology.

Dexter Holland, singer for The Offspring, Ph.D. in Molecular Biology.

Posted by: Jaybird | July 31, 2006 10:22 AM

To add to my list of Jane Goodall and Marie Curie, how about Sally Ride? Rachel Carson? Dian Fossey?
Please, folks, try to think XX once in awhile when you are thinking science.

Posted by: Zuska | July 31, 2006 4:59 PM

My votes are here.

And, Zuska is absolutely right.

Posted by: Sandra Porter | July 31, 2006 6:08 PM

Has no one mentioned "They Might Be Giants?"

Posted by: John McKay | July 31, 2006 8:39 PM

Young, brilliant jazz musicians and twin brothers: the Moutin brothers.
http://moutin.com/
One got his PhD in physics aged 24, the other (only) a masters degree in mathematics.

Posted by: DenisMB | August 2, 2006 9:25 AM

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