makes me think of the Indiana Pi Bill, which would've legally made the number pi equal 3.2 in Indiana, based on a stupid proof of squaring the circle. It passed the House but luckily not the Senate (a professional mathematician happened to be at the House when it was passed there, and decided to coach the Senate on why it was stupid).
@@OwlRTA 3.2 would have been better than what they were trying to do, make it 4. You can easily show that a circle with radius one has a circumference of 4 by using a square and cutting away corners. There's flaws of course, but yeah, they wanted to make it equal 4 lol
@@RaihotDoW2 I looked it up, and apparently Edward Goodwin thought he could construct a circle of the same area of a square with a straightedge and compass (which is proven impossible) with a "circle" of diameter 10 and circumference 32, making pi=3.2. Theres' also a "square" of side length 7 and diagonal 10, implying 7^2+7^2=10^2, or 98=100. The cutting corners trick is a more recent thing that's more of a joke.
@@HeyLeFay If I remember correctly, the discoverer of this radical new definition of pi was planning on charging royalties to anyone wishing to use his discovery, but graciously offered his home state free use as long as they in turn agreed to enshrine it in law.
BobbyBroccoli on twitter, 16/08/2023: "I don't cover super recent topics in general, but the LK-99 saga doesn't have enough to really warrant a video anyway." HUH.... 4D chess move.
I was really wondering what happened to that story and where things ended up after like a week of chatter. Good to finally know it went exactly where I thought it did, the garbage.
@@RJS2003 In my case i ended up following the "soviet catgirl scientist" account for a while after that, not because they were right, or sane, but specifically because of how ridiculous everything that account posted was. It was hilarious - you had threads like "The proliferation of the personal computer is one of the failures of Soviet communism", "my parents shot me and left for dead in a lake", multiple people living in their, head, etc x
@@RJS2003 Thundef00t put out a video on it shortly after the announcement was made and walked through the actual science behind why it wasn't real. I know a lot of people don't care for him because he was anti-sjw back in the day, but he's still an actual scientist that works for an actual university. Now he mainly just rips Elon Musk apart over and over again. In fact, Thundef00t was the first channel that showed me just how full of crap Elon was several years ago, before his major fall from grace.
@@apollo4950 We didn't get a video because they speedran to the best possible ending of cold fusion, it getting disproven real quick and them deciding to keep their heads down and stop making stuff public
Pons viewing a scientist colleague admitting to making a mistake as an act of betrayal of their friendship tells more about this story than it really should
The cropped image reveal is genuinely the most incredible twist ending imaginable. If it was a plot point in a movie, no one would believe it, it would be just too ridiculous.
“*cold fusion* was created by John Fusion in 2024 to sell more Bobby Broccoli videos” -The internet, probably. (Edit: not to be confused with Cold Fusion, who was invented by TH-cam to make even more TH-cam videos)
After all the eye rolling and frustration i felt watching this as the pair of them dodged and weaved their way though giving out actual evidence, I definitely wasn't expecting to get choked up at that last interview with Fleischmann. Just to see an old professor looking back at his work and wondering what happened just hit me regardless of what it was
Man the worst for me was seeing the part where he did not invite pons to christmas anymore. Dude lost a lifelong friend and a scientific passion for what?
@@skyaero8773 Yeah. As much as I disliked their reluctance to admit that they had made mistakes, I liked the fact that they had stayed friends, even moving to Japan together. I was actually sad to hear of their falling out. It seems to me that as both men got older, the balance of power shifted from the now elderly Fleischmann to the younger Pons, and that Pons in that role was more overbearing to Fleischmann than the latter had been to him earlier in their careers.
I think this is the most tragic series you’ve made. The other stories often had people who are clearly and knowingly committing fraud. Here, it seems like they were just overwhelmed and embittered after everything. I don’t know if I feel sad for them when they seem so arrogant, but I think I pity them to a degree
I found it hard to watch the footage of them still trying to defend their research because I genuinely feel bad for them, especially when I think about how they were basically forced to release their research early
@@misteryA555the only thing that really 'forced' them to release early was paranoia about data theft, the same paranoia that prevented them from showing their work to nuclear physicists. There's an argument for the real problem being capitalism infecting science, but in the end it feels like hubris was the real killer all along.
Seeing the ending fleischmann interview was so depressing, his laugh from reminiscing... Their entire story really is a tragedy, two electrochemists that fell from grace with a blunder so big it killed a scientist and broke their friendship
I felt bad for them early on in the saga. But there comes a point where they ought to have changed course and admitted they'd screwed up. They never, ever did. They kept on scamming, damaging their entire scientific field in the process. By the end, they'd lost every shred of my sympathy. They brought this onto themselves.
@@TaschenschieberI feel like Pons especially conducted himself in unscrupulous ways from the beginning. I wouldn't go so far as to accuse him of fraud, but I don't think he was ever being totally honest.
I feel like Pons just had a wrong attitude from the start, being overly protective of his work and seemingly more concerned over credit and patent rights than the whole science part of all of this. I can believe that admitting being wrong about something gets psychologically almost impossible after a certain point (shame and embarrassment cause considerable pain both on emotional and even physical level) and that anyone could get stuck on an idea in this way, because we are just humans. But for Pons it seems like a situation like this was bound to happen. Even before this, he would sent legal threats when people couldn't reproduce his results on completely different projects, coupled with apparent paranoia over people stealing his inventions or ideas looming over him... He just had a completely wrong temperament to be a researcher. What a sad case. Really reminds you how scientists are human under all of their expertise and can get caught up in the excitement just like any of us. It was a really hopeful promise after all. Wonderful broccumentary, great work!
@@allanshpeley4284 having watched the video again I incline to agree with you. Pons seems to have hostility towards even the scientific method itself, having purposefully ruined the double-blind test by not telling which rod was which. All the other shenanigangs as well... Really make me doubt if he is just delusional and makes me feel like he knows none of it works and he just wants to find a forever project to burn money with, or to apparently finance his own family business. I feel bad for Fleischman. I get the feeling that he was conned by Pons with all of this. What a mess...
@@allanshpeley4284 I wonder if anyone's done a close examination of Pons's entire academic career, because if these videos are accurate he does have a whiff of fraud about him. Why else do you have a lawyer prepared just in case someone wants to examine your work?
They both come off as having a similar mindset to people on the forefronts of conspiracy movements. The claiming anyone who can't replicate their results was just doing it wrong, but refusing to elaborate on how, the attitudes that finding a mistake and admitting to it was somehow a complete betrayal, the belief that people were actually conspiring to stop them, the refusing to actually cooperate with tests or ever share any actual data. But then you've got the stuff that makes them look even worse, where they actively sabotaged people who were trying to test their data. There seems no excuse for turning off the one that was producing heat before it could be tested in detail. Or for ruining the double blind test. Or for legally threatening people for publishing negative results. They can claim everyone was against them all they want, but at the end of the day the simple fact is that they never showed any actual usable data. For all their whining of bias against them, they never seemed to have any data of their own. No matter how much they claim to believe it themselves, they never had anything concrete to show for it. That's not the doubters' fault.
Starting the video with a mention of LK-99 seems appropriate. This series has been the perfect background context for why the media at large (correctly) chose not to treat it as a huge story.
South Korea mention! Schon mention! Bell labs mention! Watkins mention! Darlene Hoffman mention! Truly a culmination of your previous videos. I am, however, a bit saddened you didn't fit in a "Bingo, bango, bongo"
@cabbelos he said it in the first Schon video when talking about Schons early publications and again in the first Nortel video when talking about the companies Nortel was buying
*SPOILER ALERT DO NOT READ PAST THIS LINE IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO BE SPOILED* The fact that the photo of Steve Jones used throughout the documentary is actually cropped out and hides his 9/11 conspiracy presentation is definitely something I did not expect. He sort of came into the story as a hero and voice of reason that stood against fraudulent science. The fact that he is just as susceptible to conspiracy madness is truly tragic and kind of poetic. Loved the reveal.
I had as a kid been very interested in debunking the 9/11 Truth Movement and so I was familiar with Jones's name and had no idea he was this important in the cold fusion drama.
We all know how horrible it is when powerful entities push down smaller upstarts for no other reason than that they can. But too little is made of the inverse, when the smaller entities gain a complex and attempt to discredit those larger than them simply because they’re larger. It is simply a true fact that larger entities on the whole, especially in methodical industries like science, tend to be the most correct ones more often than not. Their smugness is perhaps not warranted, but it is earned. And attempting some half-baked revenge is usually going to fail, because in their ego the smaller entities forget why the larger ones are where they are.
The underdog bias is very much real. We love it in storytelling when 'the little guy sticks it to the man' so to speak, so often that we can often do forget that no, the real world tends to not work this way.
this is really the truth of it all; as was stated in part 2, cold fusion is/was never going to come from a small laboratory at a small school. we are in the age of science wherein significant, technological progress will likely only come about via global, coordinated efforts between national labs and large, established academic institutions. especially when it comes to physics
this!! the larger institutions could disprove/point out errors in the work specifically because they were large and well funded. with that funding they had access to the top scientists in their respective fields, as well as the tech/resources to test both the cold fusion reaction and error points within its process.
1:59 Slight correction: South Korean Kim Dae-jung won the peace prize in 2000 (followed by Han Kang winning the literature prize in 2024). It wouldn’t be the first time a Korean won the Nobel prize, but it would be the first time in one of the science fields.
You don't have to be insane to believe 9/11 was an inside job. You do have to be quite an idiot to think certain govt agencies wouldn't be able or willing to do such a heinous thing, however. It really is an interesting subject.
I don't know Steve Jones view on the matter, perhaps he does indulge in the crazy side of it, but i'd refrain from instantly labelling anyone in association of it as 'insane'. There are enough oddities on the subject to raise scepticism. I reserve the idiot tag for those who claim lizard people, jews, hologram etc
@@EDcaseNO There's definitely a difference between political conspiracy theories, some of which turn out to be true, and the alien and other whacky stuff.
That errors section was intense, crazy how many little things can go wrong. Makes me think about how poorly my high school labs results would've held up under such scrutiny lol
"So your precision with uou $20 HS equipment is much better than ours with our $20 000 000 equipment. Please, iluminate us..." "So i just moved the points a bit, just by a couple of decimals here and there... Maybe some whole units... And that point never existed. I did not want to have to come back another day to complete the experiment..."
My partner and I got Nebula just to see this video two weeks ago. It feels like the magnum opus so far. Everything we’ve learned in the past Broccumentaries coalesced together into a haunting finale to the cold fusion series. A damn beautiful job, Mr. Broccoli. We’re excited to see what the future holds, and you can be we’ll be day one viewers of 17 Pages.
All these redactions due to erroneus readings because of leeching, voltage fluctuations etc. i think also happen to work as a reminder of why the finest test equipment can be so expensive. Going from good data to perfect data requires machinery that can somehow handle all of the minuscule edge cases that it has any control over, perfection at every step.. the complexity in circuitry can easily go from linear to exponential, in a sense.
Not just that. Even with the best equipment, you still have to model for all possible influences or error sources. I think this is why the 'faster than light' neutrino incident at the LHC was dealt with so solidly.
It was pretty clear that the Pons & Fleischmann train was going to wreck itself, but the Steve Jones situation was a total gut punch. What a twist to drop on us all.
stuck the landing, bravo. the spiral at the end as you list the grifters not worth sourcing photos and documents for, felt like such a great finale to sell the consequences of the splinters that've been created by this one instance of cold fusion frenzy. you deserve every bit of success you're seeing, and i'll continue to look on in wonder
What gets me on people's need to cling to 'cold fusion' as a magic bullet for our energy problem, is that while it MIGHT be possible, we have entirely feasible energy sources that we could and should be investing into in the meantime, to give ourselves some space. And yet, we haven't, really.
Unfortunately as Broccoli boi said. Those sources are already incredibly divisive both scientifically and politically, and given the way the political climate seems to be heading in the U.S. its even more unlikely now we will actually see those sources step ahead given that denying there is a climate problem entirely has become popular.
i’ve never considered myself someone who was into science, it’s slayed been super confusing and hard for me to enjoy learning about but this channel has effectively changed that. Im always waiting for a new video because the science and the history mixed together is just awesome- i really love this channel!
I think it’s absolutely incredible the amount of seriousness involved in the scientific community. The fact they hold conferences, hold each other accountable, and challenge each other is amazing. I definitely think this a valuable opportunity that I hope remains in the future of science. As someone who works a basic office job, I am just in awe. Great video series btw.
Yeah, this documentary has both a negative and positive takeaway. It's sad to see so many grifters and leeches, and people willing to go beyong ethical boundaries to publish whatever they need to succeed. But there are also enough people that are willing to stand up, to do the critical work and do deep dives in papers and subjects no ordinary person will ever be interested in; just for the good of the scientific field as a whole.
when i was thinking glenn seaborg and james d watkins was the most ambitious crossover in history, i was not expecting darlene hoffman to enter the mix
This entire series made me nonlinear. Seriously, I feel like this documentary really revealed how science can take out the very worst in people. Incredibly tragic
@deathmagneto-soy steal? Steal or not, it's talented to be able to replicate his content. What's ur point? He's not original? This is TH-cam- not a single idea hasn't been remade in some way, shape or form.
I was 13 when the cold fusion story broke. It was everywhere, and I remember the disappointment when it faded. Undaunted, I learned all the science I could in high school and Georgia Tech. After graduating I read even more and followed the LENR guys, watching in disbelief as they continued to string people along through the early 2000s and even into the 2010s. Now you have multiple projects that have sprung off from a seemingly unrelated direction. But it’s not unrelated. There is a lot of money to be made by carefully balancing the public’s desire for a good show and an investor’s desire for a rapid turnaround. But to get it to work you have to solve Ponzi’s paradox, and currently very few have. Most either turn on the tap too fast (like Pons), or (like Rossi), have no low-tech, functioning mechanism to sell while holding out for the “ten years away” machine. Honestly it’s a fascinating thing to watch.
Balancing public enthusiasm, scientific rigor, and investor expectations is a forever struggle in research, especially in fields promising transformational change. The story of Pons and Fleischmann encapsulates the complexity of hope intersecting with ambition and skepticism, an enduring theme in the pursuit of breakthrough science. The concept of “Ponzi’s paradox” highlights this tension well: the necessity of showcasing progress without tipping into overpromise. It underscores the precariousness of maintaining confidence while steering clear of speculative hype. The parallel with Rossi's case exemplifies how research can fall short when it hinges on spectacle rather than substantiated, incremental advancement. The cultural appetite for immediate, tangible results indeed poses a barrier to fostering patience in research. The shift towards quick payoffs undermines the slow, sometimes ambiguous path true scientific breakthroughs often require. One solution lies in redefining the metrics of success for both the public and investors, moving the focus to verifiable milestones that celebrate steady progress rather than singular, uncertain outcomes. The challenge remains: how can scientists and communicators reshape narratives to highlight the value of incremental progress without succumbing to the “next big thing” allure? Part of the answer may involve better communication strategies that emphasize the process and the significance of intermediary achievements. This, coupled with changes in funding structures that incentivize sustained research efforts over headline-grabbing declarations, could help. Investors, too, would need to be educated on the long-term nature of such pursuits, valuing transparency and trust over spectacle. Shifting the paradigm involves creating a research and funding culture that values honesty and step-by-step progress, where trust is built on consistency and substance rather than dramatic, unsubstantiated claims. It’s a question of fostering patience, measured optimism, and an appreciation for the incremental steps that pave the way to genuine breakthroughs.
1:02:59 God this has got to be one of the saddest things I’ve ever watched… the way he is utterly speechless is absolutely gut wrenching. I think somewhere in that man is a person who genuinely wanted to save the world with science, be that crazy 2nd Einstein. But now at the end of his life he is so full of regrets. It’s just, sad.
@@FieryRedmond Nono, let him feel bad for the architects of their own undoing. Trust me, we don't want those who can feel this kind of empathy to vanish completely. We _really_ don't.
At the end of the day its a niche hour long documentary. To get on trending you need to be in 10-20 min range, with a video which all age groups can watch without much thought. Not that I hate such videos, its just scratches a diff need in your brain.
I think it's the fact that the friendship between Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann broke in the end that affects me the most. That and the fact that the latter's last questions for the former are "how are you" and "are you continuing the dreadful research." Like he knows by now that it's a cursed dream that can never happen, but still hopes that his best friend is continuing it all the same. I have long-term friends of my own, and I really do hope we stick the landing. So, definitely a significant dose of projecting on my part, even if neither me nor my friends have any plans of creating a scientific uprising with uncertain scientific discoveries any time soon. Still, thanks a ton for the three-part-doc. It was wonderful to follow, and it will be wonderful to rewatch later.
And to give a proper Utah analogy, Pons and Fleischmann are like Joseph Smith reading “the golden plates” out of a hat (the basis of Mormonism) when it comes to being asked about their experimental veracity.
Slight correction: Superconductivity isn’t when resistance APPROACHES 0. It is when it IS 0. That’s what makes it so remarkable. You can move electricity without losing ANY energy. In a superconductor, you could hypothetically keep a current in a loop of wire indefinitely.
It becomes measurably zero. The practical resistance, however, is still above 0 - as proven by the fact that the more amps you push through a superconductor, the more you need to cool it. That means you're converting some amount of electrical energy to heat. But this is due to nucleic interactions, not electric ones, so the electrical resistance is indeed zero.
Man this is the most tragic one you have covered yet. Not only did these two men ruin their careers they pretty much ruined their lives for almost no reason. That final interview... I would say that they brought this onto themselves but seeing a man so clearly broken and regretful at the end of their life is just profoundly sad to me no matter what. And the fact that there are still people so committed to a dead field walking just adds onto that sadness. (Also if anybody knows the song at 52:46 please let me know I quite like it)
19:02 Darlene Hoffman Cameo. I love it when people from other documentaries show up in these videos, it really puts into perspective how connected the scientific community is.
24:55 this is why I have so much respect for physicists- all these tiny tiny pieces of information that could effect the experiments, and they still manage to make such great advancements in technology
I’m a solid state physics grad student and the LK-99 drama was quite fun, I remember absolutely losing it over the preprint that had a screenshot of a video of a levitating piece as one of the figures A lot of people in my personal life asked me about it, but I was definitely way more obsessed with the Ranga Dias case that no one in the public had heard about
The reference to superconductors is a good choice of reference. An overnight massive shift in a field that was LEGITIMATE, showing that people weren't just being gullible morons when they had hope for this
Watched on Nebula. I really like the way you weave an interesting human narrative into these stories while also getting into the technical details of how these physics concepts work, and how we can experimentally verify them. I feel like I learn a lot from these.
7:25 is one of the best video editing techniques I've seen in a while. Creative, demanding attention, super fun to witness, also the music bops. I take off my proverbial hat in respect and awe to you Mr Broccoli.
I’m going on a long-haul flight in a few hours and despite having already watched the 2 previous episodes of this series, I downloaded them to watch again offline. Now I get a notification that the last video is out! This is going to be the best long haul-flight ever. Can’t wait to take off 🥦🛫🎉
Babe? Babe?! Oh god, what did you take?? At least I have good science communication media to assuage my grief. Goodnight, babe. Goodbye. _Babe, I’m calling the coroner. Cool if I film this for my channel?_
ARTHUR: Go and tell your master that we have been charged by God with a sacred quest. If he will give us food and shelter for the night, he can join us in our quest for -the Holy Grail- cold fusion. FRENCH GUARD: Well, I'll ask him, but I don't think he'll be very keen. Uh, he's already got one, you see. ARTHUR: What? GALAHAD: He says they've already got one! ARTHUR: Are you sure he's got one? FRENCH GUARD: Oh, yes. It's very nice-a. (I told him we already got one.) FRENCH GUARDS: [chuckling] ARTHUR: Well, u-- um, can we come up and have a look? FRENCH GUARD: Of course not!
I see Mr. Pons as a tragic figure. I know he did things that can't be justified, but it's clear he was pressured into this situation and had to do everything he could to save his reputation. Being in perpetual damage control mode must be exhausting.
And also a victim of the human need to not admit that everything you have put all your energy and time and sweat and tears into was for nothing, that you were wrong. All the emotional distress meant that he could seemingly never admit to himself that they made an error, that their original finding was dubious, because that would make that emotional distress to be for nothing. So its easier(in the short term) to keep believing and just make up reasons why everyone else was wrong or unfair.
@@frosthammer917 All of that amplified times 100 because a whole nation is looking at you. Admitting to being wrong would be utterly humiliating, especially considering that the public wouldn't know the details of them being pressured to publish early. If they did admit, all the blame and embarrassment would be directed at them. And that's how you get this impossible situation.
@@frosthammer917 I think he is an honest man, who tried to hold on too tightly to his claims of original discovery, and did not want to share the glory . This protection of his reputation served him poorly But he went from seeing himself, as having made one of the great discovery of our age to the effacement of increasing vituperation. I do not think he was a fraud And one of the motives attribute to him by broccoli is pure speculation. The research continues funded by the federal government and I do not think they would invest this money simply to bring closure to an issue that broccoli already considers to be closed
He's clearly a fraud and a terrible person... sabotaging experiments, withholding data, even destorying the careers of his own post-doc... I can't imaging ever working under him.
For how close to cold fusion I was growing up, I had never really delved that far into the story at all, so thanks for this. My father joined the physics department at BYU around all this time, but I don't recall much substantial conversation with him about it. I do remember Steve Jones' turn into 9/11 stuff well. I think his office was even next door to my dad's I remember being sympathetic to him at the time, because being BYU's methods of soft-firing its employees is not pleasant, but it fell of my radar until jet fuel doesn't melt steel beams became a meme. There is a way in Utah for anything causing embarassement, warranted or not, to be implicitly hushed over, but nonetheless which haunts the place. I'm not surprised that Steve Jones went the way he did, it is an enormous pressure to be on the receiving side of that, I'd imagine especially for him, given that most people in that situation are somewhere on the left side of things, and have their own support networks, however flawed. Anyway, I appreciate that your coverage did not go the sensationalist route there. That said, the story of cold fusion is Utah through and through, and at some point, these stories end up in fraud. That its main protagonists were neither Mormon nor Utahn just goes to show how far the culture of mormonism seeps into everything, for better, or for sadly more often, for worse.
It's wild to think where Bobby started with his channel, and how he changed gears. Cause this is some of the best video essays/documentaries on TH-cam. Period.
As a STEM student, the science communication abilities you flex with every video are really inspiring. I hope I can learn to communicate with this kind of skill in the future.
I'm still genuinely puzzled by Pons and Fleischmann's behaviour, especially Pons. Stripped of context his behaviour comes across as incredibly evasive and dishonest, if not outright fraudulent, but I still can't help but feel like he was, to be slightly uncharitable, a guileless dork who ended up in over his own head and just couldn't admit that he was wrong. There isn't enough solid evidence to accuse them of outright fraud, there isn't sufficient motive, and they were both clearly smart enough to realize that making the whole thing up would never work out, but they could hardly have handled the situation more poorly than they did. The whole thing just confuses me.
Hi Bobby! I don’t know anything about fusion or physics or advanced science but I really like your videos! They are such great quality and the way you tell this story is clear enough for the less informed such as me 😊 keep up the good work!
Your documentaries are all great in basically every aspect, but the one thing that stands above for me is with how much respect you treat the people that clearly messed up in major ways. Pons feels so human in the way you tell this story and while I have to question how so many mistakes could be made by him along the way despite how intelligent he clearly is, I do deeply sympathize with him.
everytime a person from a previous documentary like hendrick schön or darlene hoffman shows up my body does a mini pog like they revealed my favorite glup shitto coming back in star wars
This has been a wonderful look into how quickly things escalate from better to worse, just a total trainwreck and then the smoking wreck being extinguished because the flame doesn't have anything to fuel it anymore. A tragedy, but an incredible look into a history I never would've seen otherwise.
It's midnight here in the Netherlands and I need to get up at 6. But I will never skip a new Broccoli upload. I've been looking forward to part 3 for so long!
That the government decided to "legally scientifically confirm" the experiment reminds me of that time that a state almost legally defined pi as being 3 because they really wanted a local mathematical proof to work, lmao.
As a scientist, seeing Fleischmann's interview at the end is honestly heartbreaking to see, you can tell he wanted it to be real so bad and for your life's work to end up nowhere makes me want to cry, just seeing the sadness in his face.
What I enjoy is your method of foreshadowing and presentation. You've used stories in both this series and others that parallel what the current video will cover, such as the Edmund Fitzgerald's demise to a staggeringly large wave to Nortel's absurd stock price and crash, with this video using superconductors to delude people into lying for as long as they can and implying that it may have been published too early, paralleling cold fusion. Hell, you used a poker table in the Hwang videos to take the phrases "stacked the deck" and "falling like a house of cards" literally. In the end of the video, you use undated squares spiraling downward to portray that cold fusion, or the idea of infinite energy will never cease, ending multiple careers and labs as it gained a permanently negative reputation. Somehow, you even have easter eggs to your other videos too, either by coincidence or from planning with Schön, Watkins, Fermi, Seaborg, and Hoffman all making an appearance. Even if Hwang wasn't mentioned by name, you noted how South Korea was desperate for a Nobel Prize.
This story feels like the ultimate example of what it means to metaphorically die on a hill. Everybody involved has spent so long insisting they have something, telling everybody to believe them, begging for more resources and time, well after the point where it's reasonable to just let it go. Academia rocks
I used the super conductor YBCO in 2020 with my buddies, and liquid nitrogen we just picked up from a hardware store in my water bottle, to just have fun with letting the thing fly among other things. Good old days and can really recommend :)
I wish youd covered the wikipedia page feud on cold fusion it was huge drama that led to death threats, harassment, doxxing, stalking hacking and a bunch of crazy shit and to this day the page is strictly restricted
@@stella-vu8vh its not well documented because it was early in wikipedias history and youtube wont let me link the sources but the jist of it there was an editing war between physics nerds and cold fusion quacks and it got VERY ugly.
@@28_futabaprobably because we're in desperate need of an alternative to fossil fuels, and due to _actual_ conspiracies carried out by the fossil fuel industry to prevent that it serves as an in for those trapped in conspiratory thinking. You see it in the MLK assassination being suspected of being an FBI plot because they had earlier sent him a letter trying to convince him to take his own life. You see it with people becoming 9/11 truthers because of just how many botched CIA operations led to the rise of the Taliban. Cold Fusion quacks also get roped into that same flawed logic.
Reminds me of the LHC superluminic neutrinos. Thankfully, whatever the press said, the original press released stated that more needed to be done to rule out that this wasnt an error. And two cables wrongly connected were to blame for it. However, thanks to the restrain from the beginning, it was not a "flop" more like "yeah, that happens to the best of us".
47:40 Something the Free Energy Conspiracies never seem to grasp is that the big banks would LOVE a source of cheap reliable energy. Do these people not realise how much power it takes to run stock exchanges and the computers that trade on them?
If you'd like to support the production of my upcoming feature-length documentary you can do so here: go.nebula.tv/17pages?ref=bobbybroccoli
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I locked in when I saw the notif 💀
Ngl, my whole meat got stiff when I saw the notification. Pause 🤚
I signed up for Nebula after the last episode. It's nice to watch stuff without sponsor segments
We've tried Cold Fusion and Hot Fusion, it seems the only option left is Just Right Fusion, I think we should put Professor Goldilocks on the case.
Big Bear won't let that happen
award
I've proposed that before, but the response was tepid
Easy. Add Hot Fusion and Cold Fusion together at once.
We should try a different angle- Moist Fusion
I mixed ammonia and bleach, and it got really hot from room temp. Having clearly invented cold fusion, I got so excited I passed out
That’s nothing. I’ve generated heat using thermal paste and Baldur’s Gate 3
@@Jame5man I tweaked the formula by using Starfield. Half the game, twice the meltdown!
gamers must rise up and clock 16 hours a day on heavily modded Bethesda games to generate enough heat to end fossil fuel use
I don't believe you. Off to try to replicate your results.
You know some bomb recipes on the internet are bogus but the ATF doesn’t do anything about it bcuz its considered “a problem that solves itself”
"Legally scientifically confirmed" is one hell of a phrase.
makes me think of the Indiana Pi Bill, which would've legally made the number pi equal 3.2 in Indiana, based on a stupid proof of squaring the circle. It passed the House but luckily not the Senate (a professional mathematician happened to be at the House when it was passed there, and decided to coach the Senate on why it was stupid).
@@OwlRTA 3.2 would have been better than what they were trying to do, make it 4. You can easily show that a circle with radius one has a circumference of 4 by using a square and cutting away corners. There's flaws of course, but yeah, they wanted to make it equal 4 lol
@@RaihotDoW2 I looked it up, and apparently Edward Goodwin thought he could construct a circle of the same area of a square with a straightedge and compass (which is proven impossible) with a "circle" of diameter 10 and circumference 32, making pi=3.2. Theres' also a "square" of side length 7 and diagonal 10, implying 7^2+7^2=10^2, or 98=100. The cutting corners trick is a more recent thing that's more of a joke.
@@OwlRTA What??? What is even the point of passing a law for that lmao
@@HeyLeFay If I remember correctly, the discoverer of this radical new definition of pi was planning on charging royalties to anyone wishing to use his discovery, but graciously offered his home state free use as long as they in turn agreed to enshrine it in law.
My main takeaway is that even today, 35 years later, fusion has turned to confusion.
Science journalism is 95% puns
This comment made me nonlinear
Everyone has gone non-linear and required scraping off the ceiling.
I am confusion
@@richardbeater8915?
This is the ultimate BobbyBroccoli crossover episode. A Hendrik Schön mention, a Korean Nobel hopeful, Admiral Watkins, and Darlene Hoffman.
And if you include Bell Labs then one could say Nortel got in as well
Made me feel like I was listening to the same video again
So many DiCaprio pointing memes to be made here
Glenn Seaborg is here too!
I need a cigarette after this one....
BobbyBroccoli on twitter, 16/08/2023:
"I don't cover super recent topics in general, but the LK-99 saga doesn't have enough to really warrant a video anyway."
HUH.... 4D chess move.
I was really wondering what happened to that story and where things ended up after like a week of chatter.
Good to finally know it went exactly where I thought it did, the garbage.
Not to quote my own tumblr blog but fucking uuuuuuhhhh welcome to the multiverse lol
LK-99's good, but in modded minecraft more like 😂😂😂😂
@@RJS2003 In my case i ended up following the "soviet catgirl scientist" account for a while after that, not because they were right, or sane, but specifically because of how ridiculous everything that account posted was. It was hilarious - you had threads like "The proliferation of the personal computer is one of the failures of Soviet communism", "my parents shot me and left for dead in a lake", multiple people living in their, head, etc x
@@RJS2003 Thundef00t put out a video on it shortly after the announcement was made and walked through the actual science behind why it wasn't real. I know a lot of people don't care for him because he was anti-sjw back in the day, but he's still an actual scientist that works for an actual university. Now he mainly just rips Elon Musk apart over and over again. In fact, Thundef00t was the first channel that showed me just how full of crap Elon was several years ago, before his major fall from grace.
@@nerdjournal Idk what's more of a sham, LK-99 or Hyperloop lol.
I remember when the first news of the superconductor were posted on Twitter amd i thought "worse case scenario we got a new bobbybroccoli video"
but we didn't even got one! that's half of a video
@@shiroyukiwang1252 we only got half a video due to inflation
@@shiroyukiwang1252 He commented on why he didn't make a video on it around when it happened
Bobbybroccoli is our superconductor of science education.
@@apollo4950 We didn't get a video because they speedran to the best possible ending of cold fusion, it getting disproven real quick and them deciding to keep their heads down and stop making stuff public
Pons viewing a scientist colleague admitting to making a mistake as an act of betrayal of their friendship tells more about this story than it really should
Tells you more about Pons' character, too.
Last time I was this early I prematurely released my research on Cold Fusion without a peer reviewed study
Oof
got me in the firs half
not gonna lie
I watched it on Nebula two weeks ago.
Okay Pons and Fleischmann
BB: this photo has been cropped the whole time!
Me: oh no
BB: *shows whole photo*
Me: OH NO.
The cropped image reveal is genuinely the most incredible twist ending imaginable. If it was a plot point in a movie, no one would believe it, it would be just too ridiculous.
Hey, spoilers.
@@doku367 OP didn't say what was cropped out from where :p
@ No he's spoiling a video an only watched half of, okay.
My jaw dropped. Just…wow.
@doku367 and you're reading the comments of a video you haven't even watched yet
Truly the avengers moment of BobbyBroccoli. We have non-linear man, fermi, Korea wanting a nobel prize in sciences and finally Schon himself.
And also Glenn Seaborg
And Darleane Hoffman
All that was missing was Nortel
@@badgergaucho99 SEABORG
@@Jame5man i mean, bell labs was mentioned, so... i'd like to think they were present in spirit.
“*cold fusion* was created by John Fusion in 2024 to sell more Bobby Broccoli videos” -The internet, probably.
(Edit: not to be confused with Cold Fusion, who was invented by TH-cam to make even more TH-cam videos)
Bobby broccoli stocks have never been higher
This sounds like a Fact Core line.
Ernst Peter Kalte Fusion Walters
@@hyenasenpai8227We’re making big money right now!!!
@@hyenasenpai8227 just hope that they won't lose twenty cents per share.
After all the eye rolling and frustration i felt watching this as the pair of them dodged and weaved their way though giving out actual evidence, I definitely wasn't expecting to get choked up at that last interview with Fleischmann.
Just to see an old professor looking back at his work and wondering what happened just hit me regardless of what it was
Agree. An honest man who made errors. Especially errors in sharing his results. But not fraud and did not deserve the treatment he got.
Man the worst for me was seeing the part where he did not invite pons to christmas anymore. Dude lost a lifelong friend and a scientific passion for what?
@@mobcont8335 That really is the worst aspect. It all seems so pointless, they both threw everything away for basically nothing.
@@skyaero8773 Yeah. As much as I disliked their reluctance to admit that they had made mistakes, I liked the fact that they had stayed friends, even moving to Japan together. I was actually sad to hear of their falling out. It seems to me that as both men got older, the balance of power shifted from the now elderly Fleischmann to the younger Pons, and that Pons in that role was more overbearing to Fleischmann than the latter had been to him earlier in their careers.
Scary to think how quickly things can go south
I think this is the most tragic series you’ve made. The other stories often had people who are clearly and knowingly committing fraud. Here, it seems like they were just overwhelmed and embittered after everything. I don’t know if I feel sad for them when they seem so arrogant, but I think I pity them to a degree
I found it hard to watch the footage of them still trying to defend their research because I genuinely feel bad for them, especially when I think about how they were basically forced to release their research early
@@misteryA555the only thing that really 'forced' them to release early was paranoia about data theft, the same paranoia that prevented them from showing their work to nuclear physicists.
There's an argument for the real problem being capitalism infecting science, but in the end it feels like hubris was the real killer all along.
Seeing the ending fleischmann interview was so depressing, his laugh from reminiscing...
Their entire story really is a tragedy, two electrochemists that fell from grace with a blunder so big it killed a scientist and broke their friendship
I felt bad for them early on in the saga. But there comes a point where they ought to have changed course and admitted they'd screwed up. They never, ever did. They kept on scamming, damaging their entire scientific field in the process. By the end, they'd lost every shred of my sympathy. They brought this onto themselves.
@@TaschenschieberI feel like Pons especially conducted himself in unscrupulous ways from the beginning. I wouldn't go so far as to accuse him of fraud, but I don't think he was ever being totally honest.
I feel like Pons just had a wrong attitude from the start, being overly protective of his work and seemingly more concerned over credit and patent rights than the whole science part of all of this.
I can believe that admitting being wrong about something gets psychologically almost impossible after a certain point (shame and embarrassment cause considerable pain both on emotional and even physical level) and that anyone could get stuck on an idea in this way, because we are just humans.
But for Pons it seems like a situation like this was bound to happen. Even before this, he would sent legal threats when people couldn't reproduce his results on completely different projects, coupled with apparent paranoia over people stealing his inventions or ideas looming over him... He just had a completely wrong temperament to be a researcher.
What a sad case. Really reminds you how scientists are human under all of their expertise and can get caught up in the excitement just like any of us. It was a really hopeful promise after all.
Wonderful broccumentary, great work!
@@allanshpeley4284 having watched the video again I incline to agree with you.
Pons seems to have hostility towards even the scientific method itself, having purposefully ruined the double-blind test by not telling which rod was which. All the other shenanigangs as well...
Really make me doubt if he is just delusional and makes me feel like he knows none of it works and he just wants to find a forever project to burn money with, or to apparently finance his own family business.
I feel bad for Fleischman. I get the feeling that he was conned by Pons with all of this. What a mess...
@@allanshpeley4284 I wonder if anyone's done a close examination of Pons's entire academic career, because if these videos are accurate he does have a whiff of fraud about him. Why else do you have a lawyer prepared just in case someone wants to examine your work?
@@SilandaI also wondered about his previous work that could not be reproduced. It seems like this wasn't his first trip to the bad science rodeo.
They both come off as having a similar mindset to people on the forefronts of conspiracy movements. The claiming anyone who can't replicate their results was just doing it wrong, but refusing to elaborate on how, the attitudes that finding a mistake and admitting to it was somehow a complete betrayal, the belief that people were actually conspiring to stop them, the refusing to actually cooperate with tests or ever share any actual data.
But then you've got the stuff that makes them look even worse, where they actively sabotaged people who were trying to test their data. There seems no excuse for turning off the one that was producing heat before it could be tested in detail. Or for ruining the double blind test. Or for legally threatening people for publishing negative results.
They can claim everyone was against them all they want, but at the end of the day the simple fact is that they never showed any actual usable data. For all their whining of bias against them, they never seemed to have any data of their own. No matter how much they claim to believe it themselves, they never had anything concrete to show for it. That's not the doubters' fault.
Starting the video with a mention of LK-99 seems appropriate. This series has been the perfect background context for why the media at large (correctly) chose not to treat it as a huge story.
cold fusion and lk99 in oot when
@@bumpybumpybumpybumpy Surely doable with ACE.
@@shapular cant wait to read the paper on the payload
South Korea mention! Schon mention! Bell labs mention! Watkins mention! Darlene Hoffman mention! Truly a culmination of your previous videos.
I am, however, a bit saddened you didn't fit in a "Bingo, bango, bongo"
All that was missing was Nortel
Lol which video was "bingo bango bongo" from? I can hear it in my head but don't remember the topic
@cabbelos he said it in the first Schon video when talking about Schons early publications and again in the first Nortel video when talking about the companies Nortel was buying
@@Jame5manStill time for nortel to make a surprise entry into both existence and fusion
*SPOILER ALERT DO NOT READ PAST THIS LINE IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO BE SPOILED*
The fact that the photo of Steve Jones used throughout the documentary is actually cropped out and hides his 9/11 conspiracy presentation is definitely something I did not expect. He sort of came into the story as a hero and voice of reason that stood against fraudulent science. The fact that he is just as susceptible to conspiracy madness is truly tragic and kind of poetic. Loved the reveal.
Or...........
A plot twist no one could have expected
I had as a kid been very interested in debunking the 9/11 Truth Movement and so I was familiar with Jones's name and had no idea he was this important in the cold fusion drama.
Spoilers :( I should have known before opening the comments though
Jet fuel cant melt steel beams
We all know how horrible it is when powerful entities push down smaller upstarts for no other reason than that they can. But too little is made of the inverse, when the smaller entities gain a complex and attempt to discredit those larger than them simply because they’re larger. It is simply a true fact that larger entities on the whole, especially in methodical industries like science, tend to be the most correct ones more often than not. Their smugness is perhaps not warranted, but it is earned. And attempting some half-baked revenge is usually going to fail, because in their ego the smaller entities forget why the larger ones are where they are.
I'm going to put this in the quotes section of my personal discord.
The underdog bias is very much real. We love it in storytelling when 'the little guy sticks it to the man' so to speak, so often that we can often do forget that no, the real world tends to not work this way.
this is really the truth of it all; as was stated in part 2, cold fusion is/was never going to come from a small laboratory at a small school. we are in the age of science wherein significant, technological progress will likely only come about via global, coordinated efforts between national labs and large, established academic institutions. especially when it comes to physics
this!! the larger institutions could disprove/point out errors in the work specifically because they were large and well funded. with that funding they had access to the top scientists in their respective fields, as well as the tech/resources to test both the cold fusion reaction and error points within its process.
it's the Galileo fallacy.
"Powerful institutions oppose some scientific breakthroughs
"I am being opposed"
"therefore I have made a breakthrough"
1:59 Slight correction: South Korean Kim Dae-jung won the peace prize in 2000 (followed by Han Kang winning the literature prize in 2024). It wouldn’t be the first time a Korean won the Nobel prize, but it would be the first time in one of the science fields.
The most unfortunate Nobel Prize.
i think it's all about science. not honorable prizes
yeah, but we are talking about the real ones
@@alverto6625
The only honorable Nobel prize is economics.
@@Michael-sb8jf What is the Peace prize then?
Gotta say I was shocked that Pons wasn't the one to become the insane conspiracy theorist, I never would have expected Steve Jones to be the one
You don't have to be insane to believe 9/11 was an inside job. You do have to be quite an idiot to think certain govt agencies wouldn't be able or willing to do such a heinous thing, however. It really is an interesting subject.
I don't know Steve Jones view on the matter, perhaps he does indulge in the crazy side of it, but i'd refrain from instantly labelling anyone in association of it as 'insane'. There are enough oddities on the subject to raise scepticism. I reserve the idiot tag for those who claim lizard people, jews, hologram etc
@@EDcaseNO There's definitely a difference between political conspiracy theories, some of which turn out to be true, and the alien and other whacky stuff.
That errors section was intense, crazy how many little things can go wrong. Makes me think about how poorly my high school labs results would've held up under such scrutiny lol
"So your precision with uou $20 HS equipment is much better than ours with our $20 000 000 equipment. Please, iluminate us..."
"So i just moved the points a bit, just by a couple of decimals here and there... Maybe some whole units... And that point never existed. I did not want to have to come back another day to complete the experiment..."
“He that doeth nothing is damned, and I don’t want to be damned.” Is a hell of a quote.
And a terrible justification for doing something that others claim to be a bad idea.
My partner and I got Nebula just to see this video two weeks ago.
It feels like the magnum opus so far. Everything we’ve learned in the past Broccumentaries coalesced together into a haunting finale to the cold fusion series.
A damn beautiful job, Mr. Broccoli. We’re excited to see what the future holds, and you can be we’ll be day one viewers of 17 Pages.
I have nebula and just realized I could’ve watched this early because of your comment. Fuck.
Mmm subtle shill?
@@30watermelon. yeah when I like stuff I tend to hyperfixate until I sound like a walking advertisement lol
@@kil0602 too real
@@kil0602 This is me with the SkyHanni mod (and its codebase) for Minecraft, the Go programming language, and the game Titanfall 2.
All these redactions due to erroneus readings because of leeching, voltage fluctuations etc. i think also happen to work as a reminder of why the finest test equipment can be so expensive.
Going from good data to perfect data requires machinery that can somehow handle all of the minuscule edge cases that it has any control over, perfection at every step.. the complexity in circuitry can easily go from linear to exponential, in a sense.
Not just that. Even with the best equipment, you still have to model for all possible influences or error sources. I think this is why the 'faster than light' neutrino incident at the LHC was dealt with so solidly.
Opened this faster than a grad-student-killing gamma ray burst
"I wish we didn't have the media attention so we could just do our work."
My brother in christ, YOU went to the press.
They were pressured into giving the press conference and at the time probably didn't realize how detrimental media attention would become
It was pretty clear that the Pons & Fleischmann train was going to wreck itself, but the Steve Jones situation was a total gut punch. What a twist to drop on us all.
stuck the landing, bravo. the spiral at the end as you list the grifters not worth sourcing photos and documents for, felt like such a great finale to sell the consequences of the splinters that've been created by this one instance of cold fusion frenzy. you deserve every bit of success you're seeing, and i'll continue to look on in wonder
13:25 Aurora Borealis? At this time of year? At this time of day? In this part of the country? Localized entirely within your kitchen?
May I see it?
No.
it's more of a utica thing.
Sorry, the power just went out.
Steamed hams. Mmmm
What gets me on people's need to cling to 'cold fusion' as a magic bullet for our energy problem, is that while it MIGHT be possible, we have entirely feasible energy sources that we could and should be investing into in the meantime, to give ourselves some space.
And yet, we haven't, really.
Unfortunately as Broccoli boi said. Those sources are already incredibly divisive both scientifically and politically, and given the way the political climate seems to be heading in the U.S. its even more unlikely now we will actually see those sources step ahead given that denying there is a climate problem entirely has become popular.
i’ve never considered myself someone who was into science, it’s slayed been super confusing and hard for me to enjoy learning about but this channel has effectively changed that. Im always waiting for a new video because the science and the history mixed together is just awesome- i really love this channel!
I think it’s absolutely incredible the amount of seriousness involved in the scientific community. The fact they hold conferences, hold each other accountable, and challenge each other is amazing. I definitely think this a valuable opportunity that I hope remains in the future of science.
As someone who works a basic office job, I am just in awe. Great video series btw.
Yeah, this documentary has both a negative and positive takeaway. It's sad to see so many grifters and leeches, and people willing to go beyong ethical boundaries to publish whatever they need to succeed. But there are also enough people that are willing to stand up, to do the critical work and do deep dives in papers and subjects no ordinary person will ever be interested in; just for the good of the scientific field as a whole.
LK-99 feels like an insane convergence of your previous videos
when i was thinking glenn seaborg and james d watkins was the most ambitious crossover in history, i was not expecting darlene hoffman to enter the mix
Bell labs mentioned as well!
@ bell labs and if i remember correctly berkley as well, the whole team is on this one
19:01 Darleane from Berkeley!!, Glad to hear she was in another investigation, Truly a Bobny Brocoli cinematic universe moment
This entire series made me nonlinear.
Seriously, I feel like this documentary really revealed how science can take out the very worst in people.
Incredibly tragic
ten seconds into the video rn, im always so shocked at how amazing your videos look, the animations are so good.
Man he's soooo Jon Bois inspired. As he has stated before.
When you steal this much off Jon Bois you're definitely gonna look good.
My la Loki
@@kingjulian420
@deathmagneto-soy steal? Steal or not, it's talented to be able to replicate his content. What's ur point? He's not original? This is TH-cam- not a single idea hasn't been remade in some way, shape or form.
I was 13 when the cold fusion story broke. It was everywhere, and I remember the disappointment when it faded. Undaunted, I learned all the science I could in high school and Georgia Tech. After graduating I read even more and followed the LENR guys, watching in disbelief as they continued to string people along through the early 2000s and even into the 2010s.
Now you have multiple projects that have sprung off from a seemingly unrelated direction. But it’s not unrelated. There is a lot of money to be made by carefully balancing the public’s desire for a good show and an investor’s desire for a rapid turnaround.
But to get it to work you have to solve Ponzi’s paradox, and currently very few have. Most either turn on the tap too fast (like Pons), or (like Rossi), have no low-tech, functioning mechanism to sell while holding out for the “ten years away” machine.
Honestly it’s a fascinating thing to watch.
Balancing public enthusiasm, scientific rigor, and investor expectations is a forever struggle in research, especially in fields promising transformational change. The story of Pons and Fleischmann encapsulates the complexity of hope intersecting with ambition and skepticism, an enduring theme in the pursuit of breakthrough science.
The concept of “Ponzi’s paradox” highlights this tension well: the necessity of showcasing progress without tipping into overpromise. It underscores the precariousness of maintaining confidence while steering clear of speculative hype. The parallel with Rossi's case exemplifies how research can fall short when it hinges on spectacle rather than substantiated, incremental advancement.
The cultural appetite for immediate, tangible results indeed poses a barrier to fostering patience in research. The shift towards quick payoffs undermines the slow, sometimes ambiguous path true scientific breakthroughs often require. One solution lies in redefining the metrics of success for both the public and investors, moving the focus to verifiable milestones that celebrate steady progress rather than singular, uncertain outcomes.
The challenge remains: how can scientists and communicators reshape narratives to highlight the value of incremental progress without succumbing to the “next big thing” allure? Part of the answer may involve better communication strategies that emphasize the process and the significance of intermediary achievements. This, coupled with changes in funding structures that incentivize sustained research efforts over headline-grabbing declarations, could help. Investors, too, would need to be educated on the long-term nature of such pursuits, valuing transparency and trust over spectacle.
Shifting the paradigm involves creating a research and funding culture that values honesty and step-by-step progress, where trust is built on consistency and substance rather than dramatic, unsubstantiated claims. It’s a question of fostering patience, measured optimism, and an appreciation for the incremental steps that pave the way to genuine breakthroughs.
1:02:59 God this has got to be one of the saddest things I’ve ever watched… the way he is utterly speechless is absolutely gut wrenching. I think somewhere in that man is a person who genuinely wanted to save the world with science, be that crazy 2nd Einstein. But now at the end of his life he is so full of regrets. It’s just, sad.
that ending tore my heart out, man. the longing in his voice is painful
Don't feel too bad, it's his fault
@@FieryRedmond So? Are we supposed to hate the guy for making mistakes? People have been forgiven for worse
@@FieryRedmond Nono, let him feel bad for the architects of their own undoing. Trust me, we don't want those who can feel this kind of empathy to vanish completely. We _really_ don't.
@@roseyoung44 I never said to hate him.
@twaggytheatricks4960 _you_ do not. Do not speak for "us".
It completely baffles me how your videos don't end up on the top 5 on Trending. Absolute masterpieces.
Has anything an hour long *ever* ended up on Trending?
That's a serious question if anyone actually knows...
At the end of the day its a niche hour long documentary. To get on trending you need to be in 10-20 min range, with a video which all age groups can watch without much thought. Not that I hate such videos, its just scratches a diff need in your brain.
I think it's the fact that the friendship between Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann broke in the end that affects me the most. That and the fact that the latter's last questions for the former are "how are you" and "are you continuing the dreadful research." Like he knows by now that it's a cursed dream that can never happen, but still hopes that his best friend is continuing it all the same.
I have long-term friends of my own, and I really do hope we stick the landing. So, definitely a significant dose of projecting on my part, even if neither me nor my friends have any plans of creating a scientific uprising with uncertain scientific discoveries any time soon.
Still, thanks a ton for the three-part-doc. It was wonderful to follow, and it will be wonderful to rewatch later.
Admiral Watkins had to deal with Cold Fusion confusion and the SSC nonsense
No wonder he went nonlinear
And to give a proper Utah analogy, Pons and Fleischmann are like Joseph Smith reading “the golden plates” out of a hat (the basis of Mormonism) when it comes to being asked about their experimental veracity.
Its 00:10 and I have school tomorrow why do you have to upload now?
Same xD
Same bro. Same 🫠
You don't need school. Bobby Broccoli videos are educational enough. A Broccoli a day keeps the teachers away, as they say.
Same hahah
@@harleywoods9619 same (just with my job)
Slight correction: Superconductivity isn’t when resistance APPROACHES 0. It is when it IS 0. That’s what makes it so remarkable. You can move electricity without losing ANY energy. In a superconductor, you could hypothetically keep a current in a loop of wire indefinitely.
I think he was referring to the way the resistivity graph drops off a cliff, rather than the mathematical idea of 'approaches 0'.
It becomes measurably zero. The practical resistance, however, is still above 0 - as proven by the fact that the more amps you push through a superconductor, the more you need to cool it. That means you're converting some amount of electrical energy to heat. But this is due to nucleic interactions, not electric ones, so the electrical resistance is indeed zero.
46:29 Well we got our dead grad student does that mean it works???
Seems like it sadly still doesn’t :(
Man this is the most tragic one you have covered yet. Not only did these two men ruin their careers they pretty much ruined their lives for almost no reason. That final interview... I would say that they brought this onto themselves but seeing a man so clearly broken and regretful at the end of their life is just profoundly sad to me no matter what. And the fact that there are still people so committed to a dead field walking just adds onto that sadness. (Also if anybody knows the song at 52:46 please let me know I quite like it)
19:02 Darlene Hoffman Cameo. I love it when people from other documentaries show up in these videos, it really puts into perspective how connected the scientific community is.
24:55 this is why I have so much respect for physicists- all these tiny tiny pieces of information that could effect the experiments, and they still manage to make such great advancements in technology
I’m a solid state physics grad student and the LK-99 drama was quite fun, I remember absolutely losing it over the preprint that had a screenshot of a video of a levitating piece as one of the figures
A lot of people in my personal life asked me about it, but I was definitely way more obsessed with the Ranga Dias case that no one in the public had heard about
I'm a research metallurgist and I had plenty of people asking me about it as well.
The reference to superconductors is a good choice of reference. An overnight massive shift in a field that was LEGITIMATE, showing that people weren't just being gullible morons when they had hope for this
I clicked on this immediately, I have absolutely loved the series so far and can't wait to see how it ends
same!! it was in my notifications and i was like: O
i’ve been waiting all day lmao
hell yeah
0:40 Forbidden Almond Joy
That caught me so off guard lol
I'm starting to think with all these power outages, they might want to get a more reliable energy source!
44:22 Good to know CSpan videocamera operators have always had that sense of humor
Yeah bro without sense of humor they would be not qualified... Good ol boys that laugh at all my jokes however... They Always Know
Watched on Nebula. I really like the way you weave an interesting human narrative into these stories while also getting into the technical details of how these physics concepts work, and how we can experimentally verify them. I feel like I learn a lot from these.
7:25 is one of the best video editing techniques I've seen in a while. Creative, demanding attention, super fun to witness, also the music bops. I take off my proverbial hat in respect and awe to you Mr Broccoli.
Every episode that ends on a cliffhanger kills me, I saw this and instantly clicked, been anticipating this like crazy
Agreed.
I almost subscribed to Nebula, thats how good this guy is. To just watch one video, I was ready to throw my money.
"This photo is cropped" has the same energy as "Shapeland is Animal Kingdom"
I’m going on a long-haul flight in a few hours and despite having already watched the 2 previous episodes of this series, I downloaded them to watch again offline. Now I get a notification that the last video is out! This is going to be the best long haul-flight ever. Can’t wait to take off 🥦🛫🎉
How absolutely beautifully lovely!!!
the unveiling of the un-cropped steven jones pic was such a slam dunk i CRIED laughing
BABE WAKE UP NEW BOBBY BROCCOLI VIDEOOO DROPPED
Insane to refresh and see art on my front door
Ok shooga, Iza wake,
Let’s gooo
Babe? Babe?! Oh god, what did you take?? At least I have good science communication media to assuage my grief. Goodnight, babe. Goodbye.
_Babe, I’m calling the coroner. Cool if I film this for my channel?_
Exactly my thought
ARTHUR: Go and tell your master that we have been charged by God with a sacred quest. If he will give us food and shelter for the night, he can join us in our quest for -the Holy Grail- cold fusion.
FRENCH GUARD: Well, I'll ask him, but I don't think he'll be very keen. Uh, he's already got one, you see.
ARTHUR: What?
GALAHAD: He says they've already got one!
ARTHUR: Are you sure he's got one?
FRENCH GUARD: Oh, yes. It's very nice-a. (I told him we already got one.)
FRENCH GUARDS: [chuckling]
ARTHUR: Well, u-- um, can we come up and have a look?
FRENCH GUARD: Of course not!
I see Mr. Pons as a tragic figure. I know he did things that can't be justified, but it's clear he was pressured into this situation and had to do everything he could to save his reputation. Being in perpetual damage control mode must be exhausting.
And also a victim of the human need to not admit that everything you have put all your energy and time and sweat and tears into was for nothing, that you were wrong. All the emotional distress meant that he could seemingly never admit to himself that they made an error, that their original finding was dubious, because that would make that emotional distress to be for nothing. So its easier(in the short term) to keep believing and just make up reasons why everyone else was wrong or unfair.
@@frosthammer917 All of that amplified times 100 because a whole nation is looking at you. Admitting to being wrong would be utterly humiliating, especially considering that the public wouldn't know the details of them being pressured to publish early. If they did admit, all the blame and embarrassment would be directed at them. And that's how you get this impossible situation.
@@frosthammer917 they're the living embodiment of sunk cost and gambler's fallacy combined
@@frosthammer917
I think he is an honest man, who tried to hold on too tightly to his claims of original discovery, and did not want to share the glory . This protection of his reputation served him poorly But he went from seeing himself, as having made one of the great discovery of our age to the effacement of increasing vituperation.
I do not think he was a fraud And one of the motives attribute to him by broccoli is pure speculation.
The research continues funded by the federal government and I do not think they would invest this money simply to bring closure to an issue that broccoli already considers to be closed
He's clearly a fraud and a terrible person... sabotaging experiments, withholding data, even destorying the careers of his own post-doc... I can't imaging ever working under him.
BobbyBroccoli videos are like watching a train crash in slow motion. You know it's going to end badly but you can't look away.
PLZ don't kill Cold Fusion its a pretty good TH-cam channel.
For how close to cold fusion I was growing up, I had never really delved that far into the story at all, so thanks for this. My father joined the physics department at BYU around all this time, but I don't recall much substantial conversation with him about it. I do remember Steve Jones' turn into 9/11 stuff well. I think his office was even next door to my dad's I remember being sympathetic to him at the time, because being BYU's methods of soft-firing its employees is not pleasant, but it fell of my radar until jet fuel doesn't melt steel beams became a meme.
There is a way in Utah for anything causing embarassement, warranted or not, to be implicitly hushed over, but nonetheless which haunts the place. I'm not surprised that Steve Jones went the way he did, it is an enormous pressure to be on the receiving side of that, I'd imagine especially for him, given that most people in that situation are somewhere on the left side of things, and have their own support networks, however flawed. Anyway, I appreciate that your coverage did not go the sensationalist route there. That said, the story of cold fusion is Utah through and through, and at some point, these stories end up in fraud. That its main protagonists were neither Mormon nor Utahn just goes to show how far the culture of mormonism seeps into everything, for better, or for sadly more often, for worse.
50:20 "not operating within the bounds of sanity" is such beautiful wording for a clear example of projection.
It's wild to think where Bobby started with his channel, and how he changed gears. Cause this is some of the best video essays/documentaries on TH-cam. Period.
As a STEM student, the science communication abilities you flex with every video are really inspiring. I hope I can learn to communicate with this kind of skill in the future.
Hendrik, Watkins, Glenn and Darlene all in the same video. What a Bobby-verse special episode this has become!
I'm still genuinely puzzled by Pons and Fleischmann's behaviour, especially Pons. Stripped of context his behaviour comes across as incredibly evasive and dishonest, if not outright fraudulent, but I still can't help but feel like he was, to be slightly uncharitable, a guileless dork who ended up in over his own head and just couldn't admit that he was wrong. There isn't enough solid evidence to accuse them of outright fraud, there isn't sufficient motive, and they were both clearly smart enough to realize that making the whole thing up would never work out, but they could hardly have handled the situation more poorly than they did. The whole thing just confuses me.
Hi Bobby! I don’t know anything about fusion or physics or advanced science but I really like your videos! They are such great quality and the way you tell this story is clear enough for the less informed such as me 😊 keep up the good work!
Your documentaries are all great in basically every aspect, but the one thing that stands above for me is with how much respect you treat the people that clearly messed up in major ways.
Pons feels so human in the way you tell this story and while I have to question how so many mistakes could be made by him along the way despite how intelligent he clearly is, I do deeply sympathize with him.
30:30 "legally scientifically confirmed" lol😂😂😂
That's some "trust the science" level shit there.😂
everytime a person from a previous documentary like hendrick schön or darlene hoffman shows up my body does a mini pog like they revealed my favorite glup shitto coming back in star wars
This has been a wonderful look into how quickly things escalate from better to worse, just a total trainwreck and then the smoking wreck being extinguished because the flame doesn't have anything to fuel it anymore.
A tragedy, but an incredible look into a history I never would've seen otherwise.
It's midnight here in the Netherlands and I need to get up at 6. But I will never skip a new Broccoli upload. I've been looking forward to part 3 for so long!
Het wordt een onverwacht latertje 🤣👍🏼
@@rickyrico80 Maar het gaat het zo waard zijn ;)
Ik join nog wat later, maar mag om 7 op voor werk. Broccoli skippen we niet
BobbyBroccoliverslaving!
That intro is so good! I remember you saying on twitter that you wouldnt do a video on LK99 last year so im very happy that you found a place for it
Oh dang it, I've already watched this!
Learning you're a bobby broccoli fan is cool. I like when YT channels I follow are just nerds after hours!
That the government decided to "legally scientifically confirm" the experiment reminds me of that time that a state almost legally defined pi as being 3 because they really wanted a local mathematical proof to work, lmao.
I believe that was Nevada for the sake of making that stupid dome in Vegas lmao
@@eggsbox
It was Indiana.
literally decided to open yt once before calling it a night. Okay Broccoli boy
same 😅
As a scientist, seeing Fleischmann's interview at the end is honestly heartbreaking to see, you can tell he wanted it to be real so bad and for your life's work to end up nowhere makes me want to cry, just seeing the sadness in his face.
spoiler
Steven Jones being a 9/11 truther (and that his photo was cropped the whole time) is a twist I did not expect lmao
What I enjoy is your method of foreshadowing and presentation. You've used stories in both this series and others that parallel what the current video will cover, such as the Edmund Fitzgerald's demise to a staggeringly large wave to Nortel's absurd stock price and crash, with this video using superconductors to delude people into lying for as long as they can and implying that it may have been published too early, paralleling cold fusion. Hell, you used a poker table in the Hwang videos to take the phrases "stacked the deck" and "falling like a house of cards" literally. In the end of the video, you use undated squares spiraling downward to portray that cold fusion, or the idea of infinite energy will never cease, ending multiple careers and labs as it gained a permanently negative reputation.
Somehow, you even have easter eggs to your other videos too, either by coincidence or from planning with Schön, Watkins, Fermi, Seaborg, and Hoffman all making an appearance. Even if Hwang wasn't mentioned by name, you noted how South Korea was desperate for a Nobel Prize.
I still can't believe I cited you as Bobby Broccoli in my speech.
"An excellent example is provided by Broccoli later in his documentary... "
Oh my god... the similarities between "room temperature superconductor" and "cold fusion" - how did I not see the connection before!
This story feels like the ultimate example of what it means to metaphorically die on a hill. Everybody involved has spent so long insisting they have something, telling everybody to believe them, begging for more resources and time, well after the point where it's reasonable to just let it go. Academia rocks
welcome back to the BBSCU
Bobby
Broccoli
Scientific
Cinematic
Universe
Love that during this video that the actual BYU / Utah football game took place. And reddit made a lot of references to your videos.
You're still criminally underrated as a creator and documentarian. Bravo yet again.
I used the super conductor YBCO in 2020 with my buddies, and liquid nitrogen we just picked up from a hardware store in my water bottle, to just have fun with letting the thing fly among other things. Good old days and can really recommend :)
This episode feels like the most ultimate BobbyBroccoli video for some reason.
I wish youd covered the wikipedia page feud on cold fusion it was huge drama that led to death threats, harassment, doxxing, stalking hacking and a bunch of crazy shit and to this day the page is strictly restricted
WHAT FILL ME IN
@@stella-vu8vh its not well documented because it was early in wikipedias history and youtube wont let me link the sources but the jist of it there was an editing war between physics nerds and cold fusion quacks and it got VERY ugly.
why does cold fusion always attract the wackiest people
@@28_futabaprobably because we're in desperate need of an alternative to fossil fuels, and due to _actual_ conspiracies carried out by the fossil fuel industry to prevent that it serves as an in for those trapped in conspiratory thinking. You see it in the MLK assassination being suspected of being an FBI plot because they had earlier sent him a letter trying to convince him to take his own life. You see it with people becoming 9/11 truthers because of just how many botched CIA operations led to the rise of the Taliban. Cold Fusion quacks also get roped into that same flawed logic.
Reminds me of the LHC superluminic neutrinos.
Thankfully, whatever the press said, the original press released stated that more needed to be done to rule out that this wasnt an error.
And two cables wrongly connected were to blame for it.
However, thanks to the restrain from the beginning, it was not a "flop" more like "yeah, that happens to the best of us".
47:40 Something the Free Energy Conspiracies never seem to grasp is that the big banks would LOVE a source of cheap reliable energy. Do these people not realise how much power it takes to run stock exchanges and the computers that trade on them?
big oil is also doing fine and suppressing green energy through normal government meddling! They wouldn’t need to get involved in this!