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The Infinite Monkey Cage: Series 18-21 plus Apollo Special
The Infinite Monkey Cage: Series 18-21 plus Apollo Special
Nov 13, 2024 10:53 AM

Author:Brian Cox,Brian Cox,Robin Ince,Full Cast

The Infinite Monkey Cage: Series 18-21 plus Apollo Special

Four more series of Brian Cox and Robin Ince’s multi award-winning science/comedy show – including the 100th episode and The Infinite Moonkey Cage, a special hour-long episode celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo moon landings

One of BBC Radio 4’s most popular programmes, The Infinite Monkey Cage sees physicists Robin Ince and Brian Cox taking a witty, irreverent look at the world through scientists’ eyes. Aided by guests from the worlds of science, academia and entertainment, they delve into a variety of topics in a quest to explore the quirks and wonders of the universe.

In these 25 episodes, they celebrate their 100th show with some very special appearances from Monkey Cage alumni including Brian Blessed, Eric Idle and Andy Hamilton; talk cryptography and codebreaking at GCHQ; look at the origin of numbers; and learn how to build a bionic human. There’s also a discussion about dinosaurs; a sleepy look at the science of dreaming; and a Brits in Space special featuring astronauts Tim Peake and Helen Sharman – plus The Infinite Moonkey Cage, a 60-minute episode in which they are joined by some of the key players involved in landing the first men on the moon on July 20th 1969.

Among the many other guests featured in these four series are Neil deGrasse Tyson, Danny Wallace, Shappi Khorsandi, Beardyman, Ed Byrne, Chris Addison, Jo Brand, Rufus Hound, Bridget Christie and Mark Steel.

Producer: Alexandra Feachem

Reviews

This fascinating book reveals the existence and origins of surely one of our species’ greatest creations, and Andrew Blum is the perfect writer to share both the remarkable human stories and the astonishing technical wizardry behind it all

—— MARK VANHOENACKER, author of Skyfaring

It’s easy to … overlook the monumental achievement [weather forecasts] represent … The Weather Machine asks us to pause and marvel at … one of humankind’s greatest accomplishments

—— HANNAH FRY (author of Hello, World) , New Yorker

Revelatory … convey[s] the technical brilliance and political significance of an achievement that hides in plain sight. The machine’s complexity alone is off all familiar charts … Blum does an excellent job

—— Telegraph

I strongly recommend th[is] book, which is a fascinating glimpse of a mysterious world

—— Tim Haford, author of The Undercover Economist

Blum’s wonderful book succeeds in making the science and industry of forecasting the weather … at once vitally human, technologically awesome and urgently, thrillingly relevant

—— Royal Geographical Society

Sharp, stylish and often surprising. In this absorbing book Andrew Blum tracks the development, from wild dream to astonishing reality, of the quietly revolutionary technology that shapes our everyday lives

—— PETER MOORE, author of The Weather Experiment

Exhilarating ... a hurricane-force tour of one of the most astonishing but under-appreciated facets of the modern world

—— LEWIS DARTNELL, author of Origins

Written with an ease and beauty that will captivate anyone who is simply curious about how things work and came to be' (Literary Review)

—— Literary Review

A vivid account of the history and evolution of the modern daily forecast... Blum is a sharp analyst and engaging guide, adept at translating difficult concepts in meteorology and computer science for the uninitiated

—— Economist

Andrew Blum’s excellent book describes a global meteorological machine that uses scientific models of the atmosphere to convert observations into ever more accurate speculations – or forecasts – of future weather … all described in lively detail

—— Financial Times

Totally fascinating to anyone with even a passing interest in weather or technology

—— Gizmodo

[A] compelling survey of meteorological acceleration from nineteenth-century hand-drawn charts to the trillions of calculations per second performed by today’s supercomputers

—— Times Literary Supplement

Andrew Blum is a master of revealing the hidden systems behind technologies we take for granted. In the The Weather Machine he takes on the daily forecast, and the result is deeply researched, tightly written, compulsively readable and totally fascinating

—— SETH FLETCHER, author of Einstein’s Shadow

A stunning account of our fast-changing world. Earth Time is a wake-up call and
blueprint for future change. Ian Goldin and Robert Muggah´s extraordinary maps offer an
entirely new perspective on some of our most urgent environmental and geopolitical
conundrums.

—— Francis Fukuyama, New York Times Bestselling author of The End of History and the Last Man

Underland is a startling and memorable book, charting invisible and vanishing worlds. Macfarlane has made himself Orpheus, the poet who ventures down to the darkest depths and returns - frighteningly alone-to sing of what he has seen

—— New Statesman

You'd be crazy not to read this book

—— The Sunday Times

Marvellous... Neverending curiosity, generosity of spirit, erudition, bravery and clarity... This is a book well worth reading

—— The Times

Extraordinary... at once learned and readable, thrilling and beautifully written

—— Observer

Extreme Economies makes sense of the forces shaping the future by describing what people do when pushed to their limits. This strategy of going to extremes pays off spectacularly. Taken together, the book's nine deep dives are a much needed reminder that an economy is not what happens when equations interact with data. An economy is what is what happens when people -- real people, people with names -- interact. Anyone who wants to learn economics, is learning economics, or pretends to know some economics should read this book.

—— Paul Romer, winner of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences

In each location, Davies keeps his perspective on broad, and often disturbing, historical trends while celebrating the resourcefulness of the individuals and communities he profiles. . . This ambitious and thought-provoking guide helps to make sense of the economic future.

—— Publishers Weekly

[A] worthwhile lesson, today more than ever. Much of the evidence from Davies’s book, a bottom-up look at what happens when disaster strikes, is encouraging: before long, individuals rebuild themselves and their livelihoods. Fashionable as it is to do it down, capitalism is remarkably resilient.

—— Ed Conway , The Times

This book is genuinely extraordinary

—— Eleanor Wood

Life affirming [...] an enrapturing journey through darkness, destructive behaviour and an urgency for light and happiness now

—— Magic Radio Book Club, May's Book of the Month

A powerful memoir

—— Laura Whitmore , BBC Radio 5

Timely and highly original

—— Evening Standard

Brilliant and moving

—— The Times

The Consequences of Love is undoubtedly one of this year's most hotly-anticipated books, and with good reason

—— The Sunday Salon podcast with Alice-Azania Jarvis

Brilliantly written and heartbreaking but also joyful and uplifting

—— Psychologies

Extraordinary . . . profoundly moving

—— Sunday Mirror

A brave, lyrical, painful tale of bereavement, addiction, and the building of a new life

—— Joanna Briscoe , Evening Standard

Superbly written. Beautifully written and utterly heartbreaking. Courageous, inspired, bleakly comic, extreme candour

—— Guardian

Searing

—— Daily Mail

Hodge's beautiful memoir is both a devastating, grief-fuelled account of her sister's death and a redemptive tale of an emotional reckoning

—— i

It's a vivid and oddly entertaining memoir, a hand plunged into the dark hole of grief . . . uncovers surprising treasures - most importantly, strength, resilience and love

—— Mail on Sunday

Searing. A masterful writer with a gift for storytelling. Her prose is rich with detail, combining a sharp sense of place with escalating drama. A triumph

—— i

The most moving, most exquisitely written book about addiction, grief, loss and coming to terms with trauma even decades on. One that you will be thinking about, and remember long after finishing

—— Sophia Money-Coutts , Quintessentially

One of the most beautiful memoirs I've ever read. This story will say with you long after you put the book down

—— Emma Gannon

I just turned the last page (reluctantly!). A bold, often brutal exploration of memory, grief and love. Full of hope and heart. I can't recommend it enough

—— Terri White, author of Coming Undone

A brave, brilliant book that is both beautiful and important. Read it then buy it for all your friends

—— Hello!

Gavanndra's memoir The Consequences of Love is absolutely beautiful. It's compelling, heartbreaking, sweet, honest, fascination. I recommend it HIGHLY. I absolutely LOVED it.

—— Marian Keyes

This stunning exploration of grief is so well written and profoundly moving

—— Good Housekeeping

An elegant study of grief and memory

—— Guardian

Hodge pours heartbreak and love into the pages of a book that never pretends to know the answers, and is all the better for it

—— Sunday Times

An eye-opening snapshot of the fashion world in '90s London

—— Vogue UK

The most important story, perfectly told

—— Amy Liptrot

Memorable, urgent, eloquent ... Rebanks speaks with blunt, unmatched authority. He is also a fine writer with descriptive power and a gift for characterisation ... English Pastoral may be the most passionate ecological corrective since Rachel Carson's Silent Spring

—— Caroline Fraser , New York Review of Books
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