I missed a Daily Double in Jeopardy on Friday about the first nuclear chain reaction, which occurred in 1942 at the University of Chicago and credited to Enrico Fermi (although it was a collaboration of various scientists at the time), and which kicked off the Manhattan Project which was needed to beat the Germans who had a head start in creating a nuclear bomb. "Chicago Pile-1 was the nuclear reactor that helped to change the course of history and not some "Man in the High Castle" dystopia where the Nazis and Japanese split the U.S., so pretty high stakes that everyone should know about. It could be a prequel to "Oppenheimer" if Christopher Nolan ever wants to capitalize off of 2023's co-Movie of the Year (unlikely Nolan does it) but like most science movies, it probably wouldn't go forward without some eye-catching actresses like Florence Pugh bring the sex appeal or star power like Matt Damon as Leslie Groves or Robert Downey Jr. as Levi Strauss. More embarrassing than missing the DD question was the fact I wasn't more familiar that Fermi conducted that experiment at the UofC, in my own backyard as a kid, and I distinctly remember going on a class field trip to Fermi Lab, although I don't remember anything and was probably lost in my own world of whatever kids think about. I guess I'm not the only one whom science was lost on. Unfortunately, America doesn't care about science. Science fiction? Oh please, bring on more Planet of the Apes, Star Wars, Star Trek, Aliens, E.T., etc., etc., but when it comes to real science? It's the opposite of sex, it doesn't sell.
I think part of the problem with science is that it is hard. Truly it is. Computer science is hard; engineering is hard; physics was the hardest class for me in high school and I cut out all science from my curriculum by college, even though my parents both rely on science for a living! It's much easier to explain to other people about Donald Trump or a TV show or what food tastes really good than explain equations, experiments, quasars, etc. But at least, through learning trivia (which is just barely brushing the tip about a subject), I understand the general overview of scientific developments; that's something everyone should priortize much more. Science news should be the front page of every newspaper, newsfeed, news blog, Tiktok video; if we devoted more energy and priority towards healthcare and the environment, we'd be prioritize much more resources and get a better outcome than having everything be about politics, or sports. Ah, sports, the bane of our existence but so tempting to talk about. Bread and circuses. Some movies talk a big game about prioritizing science, like "Black Panther" with using vibranium to create new scientific advances in Wakanda, but no follow through from the general populace, including me. MJ and I have been watching "Millionaire" too and geography and science questions getting a smattering of right responses in the "fastest finger" questions, but when it's about NFL QB's, EVERY SINGLE contestant got the question right. Millionaire also had a bunch of celebrity editions like "Comedians" with Bill Maher, Jimmy Kimmel, Jack Black, and "Classic TV" edition with Florence Henderson from the Brady Bunch and Sherman Hemsley from the Jeffersons, even "Supermodels" got an edition (Heidi Klum and a bunch of other very attractive ladies, perfect for television). Where are the Scientists edition or World Leaders edition? The sports stars, singers, movie stars, and most celebrities all get great reputations for just doing their jobs, but scientists like Fermi never get their due except in academic circles and world leaders are one of the most criticized groups of people, no wonder we can't get any good candidates anymore (see Hobson's choice entry).
But guess what? Celebrities aren't celebrities forever; the 2000 classic TV version is filled with people who the young generation wouldn't even know today; Cindy Williams (Laverne and Shirley), Adam West (Batman), Valerie Bertinelli (One Day at a Time). They probably wouldn't get recognized in the street today. Science? The benefit of science is that if you do something great, they remember you forever: Galileo, Jonas Salk, Einstein, Goddard, Stephanie Kwolek (kevlar vest). Those inventions last til the end of history, and so might Fermi and Oppenheimer, for better or worse: nuclear chain reaction leading to the nuclear bomb. That effects the entire human race. Gotta know about them.