Brainiac: Science Abuse: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(added Category:TV Series)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{work}}
{{work}}
[[File:brainiacmh3.png|frame]]
[[File:brainiacmh3.png|fram[[Category:TV Series]]]


{{quote|''"Is looking at a woman's breasts for thirty minutes the equivalent of a thirty-minute workout?"''|'''Richard Hammond''', ''Brainiac Science Abuse''}}
{{quote|''"Is looking at a woman's breasts for thirty minutes the equivalent of a thirty-minute workout?"''|'''Richard Hammond''', ''Brainiac Science Abuse''}}


''Brainiac: Science Abuse'' is a British TV series, originally presented by Richard Hammond and now by Vic Reeves, assisted by Jon Tickle (a former ''[[Big Brother]]'' housemate) and an army of nameless "Brainiacs", used as human guinea-pigs. The series ran from 2003 to 2008.
''Brainiac: Science Abuse'' is a British TV series, originally presented by Richard Hammond and now by Vic Reeves, assisted by Jon Tickle (a former ''[[Big Brothe[[Category:TV Series]]]'' housemate) and an army of nameless "Brainiacs", used as human guinea-pigs. The series ran from 2003 to 2008.


Ostensibly a "[[Edutainment Show|we make science fun]]" programme, it generally displays about as much scientific rigor as a dried kumquat, preferring instead to come up with a series of excuses for showing cool stuff, usually with a little bit of scientific explanation of why the stuff is cool in that way.
Ostensibly a "[[Edutainment Show|we make science fu[[Category:TV Series]]]" programme, it generally displays about as much scientific rigor as a dried kumquat, preferring instead to come up with a series of excuses for showing cool stuff, usually with a little bit of scientific explanation of why the stuff is cool in that way.


It took the part of ''[[MythBusters]]'' where stuff went boom and ran with it. There is generally no attempt made at producing scaleable, repeatable experiments to actually determine a result -- it's more along the lines of "Wahey, if you do ''this'' you can make it go bang! This works because there's a sudden release of energy."
It took the part of ''[[MythBuster[[Category:TV Series]]]'' where stuff went boom and ran with it. There is generally no attempt made at producing scaleable, repeatable experiments to actually determine a result -- it's more along the lines of "Wahey, if you do ''this'' you can make it go bang! This works because there's a sudden release of energy."


Just occasionally, something genuinely interesting slips through, though, and one Brainiac skit was shown on QI - they filled a swimming pool with custard (a non-newtonian fluid) and had Jon Tickle run up and down on it, to the childlike glee of Hammond.
Just occasionally, something genuinely interesting slips through, though, and one Brainiac skit was shown on QI - they filled a swimming pool with custard (a non-newtonian fluid) and had Jon Tickle run up and down on it, to the childlike glee of Hammond.


Original presenter Richard Hammond is a well-known car nut and presenter of ''[[Top Gear]]'', and as such has something of a dislike of the caravans that clog Britain's roads every bank holiday. The show therefore made something of a specialty of destroying caravans in the most explosive way possible.
Original presenter Richard Hammond is a well-known car nut and presenter of ''[[Top Gea[[Category:TV Series]]]'', and as such has something of a dislike of the caravans that clog Britain's roads every bank holiday. The show therefore made something of a specialty of destroying caravans in the most explosive way possible.


Beginning from the fifth season, he quit the show, with Vic Reeves taking over. The new host brought around some minor changes (for one, deliberately acting as a guy who has no clue whatsoever, unlike Hammond), but the premise didn't change.
Beginning from the fifth season, he quit the show, with Vic Reeves taking over. The new host brought around some minor changes (for one, deliberately acting as a guy who has no clue whatsoever, unlike Hammond), but the premise didn't change.
Line 33: Line 33:
* Swimming in syrup. Jon Tickle thought he'd go faster because the viscosity of the syrup would generate more force, while Richard thought the greater resistance caused by same would slow Jon up. Richard turned out to be right-he even gleefully noted that Jon, in his exhaustion, had started cutting across the middle of the pool and ''still'' couldn't beat his time from the water-filled pool.
* Swimming in syrup. Jon Tickle thought he'd go faster because the viscosity of the syrup would generate more force, while Richard thought the greater resistance caused by same would slow Jon up. Richard turned out to be right-he even gleefully noted that Jon, in his exhaustion, had started cutting across the middle of the pool and ''still'' couldn't beat his time from the water-filled pool.
* Brainiac VS Beast: the perhaps most abused Brainiac competes against (other) animals in various fields. Usually ends up losing and going feral.
* Brainiac VS Beast: the perhaps most abused Brainiac competes against (other) animals in various fields. Usually ends up losing and going feral.
* Stuff [[NASA]] never tried. Hilarious "experiments" with rockets.
* Stuff [[NAS[[Category:TV Series]]] never tried. Hilarious "experiments" with rockets.
* Things but vveerryy ssslllooooowww: a segment in which the Brainiacs do random stuff, but in slow-motion.
* Things but vveerryy ssslllooooowww: a segment in which the Brainiacs do random stuff, but in slow-motion.
----
----
{{tropelist}}
{{tropelist}}
* [[Butt Monkey]] - Most Brainiacs. And Caravans. And mannequins.
* [[Butt Monke[[Category:TV Series]]] - Most Brainiacs. And Caravans. And mannequins.
* [[Catch Phrase]] - "Do not try this at home...no really, ''don't.''"
* [[Catch Phras[[Category:TV Series]]] - "Do not try this at home...no really, ''don't.''"
** Later changed to "Do not try this at home... or anywhere else, for that matter!"
** Later changed to "Do not try this at home... or anywhere else, for that matter!"
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]] - There is a segment called "How hard is your thing?".
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]] - There is a segment called "How hard is your thing?".
* [[Double Entendre]] - Much of the voiceover whenever the ridiculously hot Professor Myang-Li is on screen.
* [[Double Entendr[[Category:TV Series]]] - Much of the voiceover whenever the ridiculously hot Professor Myang-Li is on screen.
* [[Edutainment Show]]
* [[Edutainment Show]]
* [[Fan Service]] - People get half-naked a lot.
* [[Fan Servic[[Category:TV Series]]] - People get half-naked a lot.
** Prof. Myang-Li. No subtlety at all in her segments.
** Prof. Myang-Li. No subtlety at all in her segments.
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]] - Some may recognise the announcer of Stars In Their Caravans as the Colosseum Announcer from ''[[Fable II]]''.
* [[Hey, It's That Voice!]] - Some may recognise the announcer of Stars In Their Caravans as the Colosseum Announcer from ''[[Fable II]]''.
* [[Lovely Assistant]]: Professor Myang Li, who determines "Does this fruit float?" You do doubt her academic credentials given her [[Stripperiffic]] outfit.
* [[Lovely Assistan[[Category:TV Series]]]: Professor Myang Li, who determines "Does this fruit float?" You do doubt her academic credentials given her [[Stripperiffic]] outfit.
* [[Rule of Funny]]
* [[Rule of Funn[[Category:TV Series]]]
* [[Running Gag]] - Richard Hammond's hatred of caravans, and the frequent explodification of same.
* [[Running Ga[[Category:TV Series]]] - Richard Hammond's hatred of caravans, and the frequent explodification of same.
** Also, Prof. Myang-Li testing whether various fruits sink in a swimming pool.
** Also, Prof. Myang-Li testing whether various fruits sink in a swimming pool.
* [[Spin-Off]] - ''Brainiac - History Abuse''. The same concept, but with different hosts and historical stuff replacing science.
* [[Spin-Off]] - ''Brainiac - History Abuse''. The same concept, but with different hosts and historical stuff replacing science.
* [[Stuff Blowing Up]]
* [[Stuff Blowing Up]]
* [[We Need a Distraction]] - "Look! The ''sun!''"
* [[We Need a Distractio[[Category:TV Series]]] - "Look! The ''sun!''"
* [[X Meets Y]] - The show is basically ''[[MythBusters]]'' meets ''[[The Man Show]]''.
* [[X Meets Y]] - The show is basically ''[[MythBuster[[Category:TV Series]]]'' meets ''[[The Man Show]]''.


{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:British Series]]
[[Category:British Serie[[Category:TV Series]]]
[[Category:Live-Action TV of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Live-Action TV of the 2000[[Category:TV Series]]]
[[Category:Nonfiction Series]]
[[Category:Nonfiction Serie[[Category:TV Series]]]
[[Category:Edutainment Show]]
[[Category:Edutainment Show]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Western Animation]]
[[Category:Western Animatio[[Category:TV Series]]]

Revision as of 00:54, 2 October 2020

[[File:brainiacmh3.png|fram]

"Is looking at a woman's breasts for thirty minutes the equivalent of a thirty-minute workout?"
Richard Hammond, Brainiac Science Abuse

Brainiac: Science Abuse is a British TV series, originally presented by Richard Hammond and now by Vic Reeves, assisted by Jon Tickle (a former [[Big Brothe] housemate) and an army of nameless "Brainiacs", used as human guinea-pigs. The series ran from 2003 to 2008.

Ostensibly a "[[Edutainment Show|we make science fu]" programme, it generally displays about as much scientific rigor as a dried kumquat, preferring instead to come up with a series of excuses for showing cool stuff, usually with a little bit of scientific explanation of why the stuff is cool in that way.

It took the part of [[MythBuster] where stuff went boom and ran with it. There is generally no attempt made at producing scaleable, repeatable experiments to actually determine a result -- it's more along the lines of "Wahey, if you do this you can make it go bang! This works because there's a sudden release of energy."

Just occasionally, something genuinely interesting slips through, though, and one Brainiac skit was shown on QI - they filled a swimming pool with custard (a non-newtonian fluid) and had Jon Tickle run up and down on it, to the childlike glee of Hammond.

Original presenter Richard Hammond is a well-known car nut and presenter of [[Top Gea], and as such has something of a dislike of the caravans that clog Britain's roads every bank holiday. The show therefore made something of a specialty of destroying caravans in the most explosive way possible.

Beginning from the fifth season, he quit the show, with Vic Reeves taking over. The new host brought around some minor changes (for one, deliberately acting as a guy who has no clue whatsoever, unlike Hammond), but the premise didn't change.

Items include:

  • Running on custard.
    • And testing various other methods of moving
  • Can you smell fear?
    • A vertiginous Brainiac is given a terrifying ride in a cherry picker, while another runs laps to get hot and sweaty and a third relaxes as a control. A female brainiac correctly identifies the frightened Brainiac by smell.
  • Thermite - can it actually burn through anything?
    • Pretty much, apparently...
      • Actually, they once tested it with a tank (well, just a piece) and it couldn't burn through it.
        • Given that the stuff melts right through iron, that must have been some tank...
  • Do you weigh 1/4 lb more after eating a quarterpounder?
    • Not quite.
      • Their explanation (whatever it's worth) was that the testing Brainiac was "so hungry" that merely ingesting the burger used some energy, resulting in a net weight gain of less than 0.25 pounds.
  • What happens when you attach carbon dioxide fire extinguishers to various wheeled devices and try to race them?
    • Much hilarity. The shopping trolley goes round in circles, the skateboard departs without its rider and the wheelchair is best. Best not to ask about the rollerskates.
  • Swimming in syrup. Jon Tickle thought he'd go faster because the viscosity of the syrup would generate more force, while Richard thought the greater resistance caused by same would slow Jon up. Richard turned out to be right-he even gleefully noted that Jon, in his exhaustion, had started cutting across the middle of the pool and still couldn't beat his time from the water-filled pool.
  • Brainiac VS Beast: the perhaps most abused Brainiac competes against (other) animals in various fields. Usually ends up losing and going feral.
  • Stuff [[NAS] never tried. Hilarious "experiments" with rockets.
  • Things but vveerryy ssslllooooowww: a segment in which the Brainiacs do random stuff, but in slow-motion.

Tropes used in Brainiac: Science Abuse include:
  • [[Butt Monke] - Most Brainiacs. And Caravans. And mannequins.
  • [[Catch Phras] - "Do not try this at home...no really, don't."
    • Later changed to "Do not try this at home... or anywhere else, for that matter!"
  • Does This Remind You of Anything? - There is a segment called "How hard is your thing?".
  • [[Double Entendr] - Much of the voiceover whenever the ridiculously hot Professor Myang-Li is on screen.
  • Edutainment Show
  • [[Fan Servic] - People get half-naked a lot.
    • Prof. Myang-Li. No subtlety at all in her segments.
  • Hey, It's That Voice! - Some may recognise the announcer of Stars In Their Caravans as the Colosseum Announcer from Fable II.
  • [[Lovely Assistan]: Professor Myang Li, who determines "Does this fruit float?" You do doubt her academic credentials given her Stripperiffic outfit.
  • [[Rule of Funn]
  • [[Running Ga] - Richard Hammond's hatred of caravans, and the frequent explodification of same.
    • Also, Prof. Myang-Li testing whether various fruits sink in a swimming pool.
  • Spin-Off - Brainiac - History Abuse. The same concept, but with different hosts and historical stuff replacing science.
  • Stuff Blowing Up
  • [[We Need a Distractio] - "Look! The sun!"
  • X Meets Y - The show is basically [[MythBuster] meets The Man Show.

[[Category:British Serie] [[Category:Live-Action TV of the 2000] [[Category:Nonfiction Serie] [[Category:Western Animatio]