Small Screen Science

Science Podcast of the Year 2022 Finalist (Association of British Science Writers)

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  • Season 1
    • Season One
    • Ep 1: The Great British Bake Off (Soggy Bottom Science)
    • Ep 2: Silent Witness (Crime Scene Science)
    • Ep 3: Strictly Come Dancing (Strictly Science)
    • Ep 4: Love Island (Six Pack Science)
    • Ep 5: Dracula (Blood-Sucking Science)
    • Ep 6: Line of Duty (Blues and Two's Science)
  • Season 2
    • Season Two
    • Ep 1: Blue Planet II (Blue-Chip Science)
    • Ep 2: The Walking Dead (Zombie Apocalypse Science)
    • Ep 3: Most Haunted (Spooktacular Science)
    • Ep 4: Breaking Bad (Walter White Science)
    • Ep 5: Stranger Things (Upside Down Science)
    • Ep 6: The Great Pottery Throw Down (Kiln-fired Science)
  • Season 3
    • Season Three
    • Ep 1: Bridgerton (Corset-ripping science)
    • Ep 2: Brooklyn Nine-Nine (Cool cool cool science)
    • Ep 3: The Great British Sewing Bee (Super stitch science)
    • Ep 4: Killing Eve (Live Science)
    • Ep 5: Red Dwarf (Smeghead science)
    • Ep 6: Chernobyl (Bees, bras and banana science)
  • Season 4
    • Season Four
    • Ep 1: Derry Girls (Throwback Science)
    • Ep 2: Friends (Central Perk Science)
    • Ep 3: The Office (Scranton Science)
    • Ep 4: Line of Duty (Bullets and Burner Phone Science)
  • Season 5
    • Season Five
  • Blog
  • LIVE shows
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Why is chocolate bad for dogs and cats?

April 30, 2020 by Karen Collins

You bought some chocolate nibbles to gobble during lockdown but your dog steals and eats some. Will they be OK? It depends how big your dog is, the type of chocolate it was and how much they ate – but you should definitely contact your vet. Let’s take a look at the science behind why chocolate is so toxic for our pets.

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April 30, 2020 /Karen Collins
soggy, featured

How to make a chocolate ganache (using science).

April 29, 2020 by Emma Brisdion

A thick, smooth, silky-looking chocolate ganache can really make a cake, but they are notoriously hard to get right. By understanding the science behind what’s going on in the making process, you’ll stand a better chance of getting it right.

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April 29, 2020 /Emma Brisdion
soggy, featured

Why don't my sponge cakes rise? The science behind baking a cake.

April 08, 2020 by Karen Collins

I’m embarrassed to say my Victoria sponge cakes fall decidedly flat, even with my A-level in Home Economics. What’s going wrong? It turns out there are many possible reasons why I fail to get a rise, so how can I use science to improve my baking?

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April 08, 2020 /Karen Collins
soggy, featured

Follow the pod on Instagram

👋 Say hello to Boob Ballistics... Yes, REALLY!
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While producing our latest episode, we found some amazing ballistics research (2018) looking at the impact of breast enhancements protecting against firearms, from case studies of people being shot!
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🎧 👮‍♂️ New episode: We’re ending series one with a BANG! 💥Ever wondered how police can trace bullets or casings back to an individual gun? Or even whether fake boobs can stop a bullet? Well if you love a crime drama or are as desperate f
🔫 Our final interview of the series was scheduled to take place at a shooting range the day after lockdown was announced. Did that stop us? No! Instead of being shown how to fire a weapon safely and learning about ballistic forensics in the centre's
☕️🧡 If the significance of this thermochromic Denzel Washington mug passes you by, go and catch up on our Love Island episode! Pretty soon you’ll see why it was the perfect season one wrap gift for Karen.
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Links to listen on your favourite pl
📺 Why do we like horror films? 🧛‍♂️
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We speak to Psychologist Dr Brendan Rooney @brendandavidrooney on this week’s episode to find out why we feel disgust and fear watching horror films, and how by experiencing these feelings while watch
🧛‍♂️ Interviewing a vampire... (bat expert). 🦇
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Dr Daniel Streicker is a Wellcome Trust Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine at the University of Glasgow. He joined us to talk all thin
🧛‍♂️ Drinking blood in nature. WARNING: this is a photo of an actual vampire bat bite on a human toe. Lovely...🦇
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Vampire bats release an anticoagulant, like mosquitos, to prevent blood clotting when they bite an organism to drink their blood.
🎧 New Episode 🧛‍♂️ VELCOME to Blood-Sucking Science, where we explore the science surrounding Dracula!

How do vampire bats 🦇(pictured) find prey and survive by drinking blood? Why do we love watching horror films and vampire shows? And CAN sc

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