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How the Universe Works

  • TV Series
  • 2010–
  • TV-PG
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
8.9/10
7.5K
YOUR RATING
How the Universe Works (2010)
How The Universe Works: Wednesdays At 9Pm
Play trailer0:31
1 Video
99+ Photos
Science & Technology DocumentaryDocumentary

A users guide to the cosmos from the big bang to galaxies, stars, planets and moons. Where did it all come from and how does it all fit together. A primer for anyone who has ever looked up a... Read allA users guide to the cosmos from the big bang to galaxies, stars, planets and moons. Where did it all come from and how does it all fit together. A primer for anyone who has ever looked up at the night sky and wondered.A users guide to the cosmos from the big bang to galaxies, stars, planets and moons. Where did it all come from and how does it all fit together. A primer for anyone who has ever looked up at the night sky and wondered.

  • Stars
    • Phil Plait
    • Michelle Thaller
    • Richard Lintern
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.9/10
    7.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Phil Plait
      • Michelle Thaller
      • Richard Lintern
    • 49User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes102

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated

    Videos1

    How The Universe Works: Wednesdays At 9Pm
    Trailer 0:31
    How The Universe Works: Wednesdays At 9Pm

    Photos109

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    + 103
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Phil Plait
    Phil Plait
    • Self - Astronomer…
    • 2010–2023
    Michelle Thaller
    Michelle Thaller
    • Self - Astronomer…
    • 2010–2023
    Richard Lintern
    Richard Lintern
    • Self - Narrator
    • 2010–2020
    Mike Rowe
    Mike Rowe
    • Self - Narrator…
    • 2010–2023
    Hakeem Oluseyi
    Hakeem Oluseyi
    • Self - Astrophysicist…
    • 2014–2023
    Lawrence Krauss
    Lawrence Krauss
    • Self - Cosmologist…
    • 2010–2018
    James S. Bullock
    • Self - Astrophysicist
    • 2014–2021
    Paul M. Sutter
    • Self - Astrophysicist
    • 2018–2023
    Moogega Cooper
    Moogega Cooper
    • Self - Planetary Protection Engineer
    • 2015–2023
    Dan Durda
    Dan Durda
    • Self - Planetary Scientist…
    • 2010–2023
    Nina Lanza
    • Self - Planetary Scientist
    • 2015–2023
    Jani Radebaugh
    Jani Radebaugh
    • Self - Planetary Scientist…
    • 2014–2023
    Erik Dellums
    Erik Dellums
    • Self - Narrator…
    • 2012–2021
    Kevin Walsh
    Kevin Walsh
    • Self - Astronomer
    • 2014–2023
    Michio Kaku
    Michio Kaku
    • Self - Theoretical Physicist…
    • 2010–2014
    Alex Filippenko
    Alex Filippenko
    • Self - Astrophysicist…
    • 2010–2021
    Max Tegmark
    Max Tegmark
    • Self - Physicist…
    • 2014–2021
    Grant Tremblay
    • Self - Astrophysicist
    • 2018–2021
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    8.97.5K
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    Featured reviews

    freddielburrow

    Absolutely Incredible

    Simply said, this is the best astronomical documentary that I've seen since Carl Sagan's "Cosmos". And believe me, that is saying a lot considering that I own every astronomy/Cosmos documentary I can find on DVD and/or Blu-ray, including all six seasons of "The Universe" which was my favorite (excluding "The Cosmos") until I saw this. If you are in to watching these type of documentaries and haven't seen this, then I can only say, you are missing at least a year worth of education. The only negative thing I have to say is that season two already isn't as good due to Mike Row not being the Narrator, but that is purely my own opinion and does not reflect the quality or quantity of information given in this season.
    8samyoung-82648

    Fairly Solid, Better Than Average

    If you are interested in this series, you've obviously looking for knowledge. This show is both enlightening and surprisingly slapdash given how much content there is to absorb. Firstly, the good. I have had many questions about the universe and this show has answered many of my questions. That in itself is a huge plus for this series. The content is digestible and paced well. The general structure within an episode is easy to follow and logical. The Bad Part 1. This show often resorts to hyperbole and sloppy language. It leaves the audience with the impression these people really don't know what they're talking about. Multiple things are THE most powerful single thing in the universe. Then, the ONLY reason we are here is because of this single phenomena ... but this other phenomena is also the ONLY reason we are here. This thing is infinitesimally small (which is impossible but they still say it). In each episode, I find multiple statements grating. Keep in mind, these people are scientists. You don't need hyperbole to communicate ideas. If you want sloppy language and half baked ideas, use hyperbole. To educate, just stick to the facts! The Bad Part 2. There are way too many presenters. Rather than picking the best presenter for their knowledge and communication skills, they're picked to tick boxes. It's disappointing and distracting. Jani Radebaugh is easy to listen to and she's very knowledgeable. There's a young African American girl who is almost unintelligible (her Bronx accent may be understandable in the Bronx, but across the entire world... she's hard to understand and it's very distracting). Then you get ridiculous analogies about roller-blading, wedding rings, etc. that really don't help. This dumbs the show down, especially when they spent a long time showing a car being processed in a chop shop! The creators should go back and watch "The Ascent of Man" from the 70s ... a show that NEVER talked down to its audience. Cut out about 90% of the presenters. Look for someone who speaks in an international voice and someone who knows their stuff who can communicate well. Michio Kaku is lovely to listen to ... but he's a little aloof at times. However, his passion is contagious and I'd be happy to see him again. And now for the funnies. My young child heard a presenter talking about hairy black holes ... and lost it! When a young child thinks that scientists are pulling a fast one (cracking a rude joke), it made my day. And it keeps the kids entertained! You can be factual, non-Woke and entertaining! Woke is a huge turn-off in education! Michelle Thaller said something i'd like the producer/director to listen to carefully. She said her inspiration came from Luke in Star Wars. She was inspired, regardless of the skin color and sex of the star. Can you please note that and stop pushing woke politics to tick boxes!! And lastly, I'd like to finish on Erik Dellums. If I ignore Erik's race baiting YouTube content, I love his work as Koh the Face Stealer ... his voice is amazing. However, as a narrator, he was totally the wrong voice for this show. By far, the best narration voice is Richard Lintern ... can you please please please start focussing on what the audience wants and will enable them to absorb the content the most? It's not some Bronx accent or roller derby. Please just eliminate woke from education. Is that too much to ask for? Jani is excellent ... not because she's a woman but because her knowledge and presentation style fits the content perfectly. Many other presenters are just wrong and quite distracting. It's as if the creators want to annoy the audience.
    10stewiemat

    One of THE BEST shows on TV

    Love the show! From the cgi to the commentators, everything flows and is well explained in layman's terms. It's nice to see astrophysicists and theoretical physicists on the same show and actually being human. No lectures on particle acceleration or space/time continuum theories, just plain language for the every day Joe from people who are obviously passionate about what they do. And that passion is contagious, at least to me, I can't get enough of it. Wonderful. Stunning. Thought provoking. Awe inspiring. And also unexpectedly funny. Highly recommended for anyone who has looked up at the night sky and wondered what is really going on out there.
    10GLanoue

    Excellent series for science nerds and non-nerds, plus Mike Rowe

    A great series. I think I've seen all the science documentaries, and this is the best. Why? Not only do they take some of the better known scientific faces to present the material, they add a host of lesser known but engaging scientists who are great at explaining without undue simplification. Like other dimensions of The Culture that seem to emphasize glamour and show, the producers have found scientists that look good or look simpatico, like you could imagine yourself having a conversation with them. This, however, is not at the expense of the content. The theories are not only current, some are really quite subtle and difficult to present with mathematics, yet they manage, and without too many analogies and metaphors. You don't need a science background here, but it certainly helps. Although they have a musical sound track, it's rather muted and avoids the military/Wagnerian Birth of the Gods melodrama that just dummies down with the scientists say (In one telling interview I think at UCal, Alex Filippenko acknowledged that in other documentaries he doesn't have all the control he wanted on what came across; here, he seems more true to his scientific roots). Plus, the producers and directors try to avoid the standard self-congratulatory narrative trope that always diminishes (for me) similar documentaries: "In 1993 Nasa decided to solve this mystery and launched…. Nasa scientists eagerly waited for the results." Cut to shot of excited scientists huddling around consoles. Same scientists, twenty years later: "We couldn't believe it. It was the greatest moment of my life". Yes, science does involve egos, but it's not about egos, which (I presume) non-scientific producers seem too eager to use as a framing device. They get that the universe is much more dramatic than anything we could conjure up in a studio. True, they also use the Life on Other Planets narrative device, but usually to debunk it. Unlike other recent space documentaries that seem to play to the Trekkie desire to find thousands of alien races on each planet (put a goatee on Spock: instant alternate universe), here, the possibility of alien life is usually quickly debunked as highly improbable. In fact, what seems to be behind this series is the notion that Earth is a one-of. Things are cut hopping by brief framing shots and quick cut- aways. The graphics are great and plausible And, for at least one series, Mike Rowe narrates. Not to take away from the other narrators, who keep things interesting, a filmic structure that depends on narration needs Mike Rowe, whose offhand delivery underlines the stupendous wonders that are presented.
    10IMDB-LeFFFT-Served-As-Center

    Simply the Best Astrophysics Documentary in over 30 Years

    Yes, 10/10 "How the Universe Works" is, in my opinion, simply the best astrophysics documentary in over 30 years (astro-documentary viewers will probably know what landmark series aired at that time). If you like science, gaze at the stars or have any curiosity about anything beyond your own sphere of day-to-day activity THIS SERIES WILL NOT DISSAPPOINT. For me, this is the real deal, and what many of us have been missing since Sagan's death.

    The series started out as a small unknown for many, without the intense fanfare given to many similar series like Tyson's "Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey". But this series is quite the quiet achiever. I LEARN something every episode. Interviews with leading experts like Michio Kaku and Andrea Ghez are HIGHEST QUALITY.

    The season one original musical score from Richard Blair-Oliphant is INSANELY GOOD for material not otherwise sold on a CD label (but right now you can still get it on Last.FM). The visual effects are well done. Commentary is well researched. But a balance is still maintained of keeping this show informative yet hugely entertaining. I often watch a re-run before sleeping. I just love it.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mike Rowe is the narrator of Season 1. Erik Dellums voiced Season 2 when it moved to the Science Channel. Rowe was asked to record Season 3 and then re-record Season 2.
    • Connections
      Featured in DWDD University (2012)

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    FAQ14

    • How many seasons does How the Universe Works have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 25, 2010 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Як влаштований Всесвіт
    • Production companies
      • Discovery Channel
      • Pioneer Productions
      • Science Channel
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16:9 HD

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