Cosmic Queries – ALIENS! with Jake Roper
50 min
•Oct 24, 20256 months agoSummary
Neil deGrasse Tyson and Jake Roper explore fictional alien depictions in movies and TV, discussing the scientific plausibility of alien weapons, parasitic life forms, first contact protocols, and whether self-replicating robots represent the most probable form of extraterrestrial life we'll encounter.
Insights
- Fictional aliens often reflect human behavior and assumptions rather than truly alien intelligence; screenwriters project human aggression onto extraterrestrial species
- The most believable alien depictions avoid humanoid forms and focus on truly alien biology, communication methods, and motivations that challenge human comprehension
- Self-replicating robotic life forms represent the most scientifically plausible method for galactic colonization, solving the Fermi Paradox through exponential expansion
- Cross-species disease transmission is unlikely between Earth life and extraterrestrials due to biochemical specificity, despite common sci-fi tropes suggesting otherwise
- First contact protocol should prioritize likeable, diplomatic representatives rather than military or political figures to maximize peaceful interaction chances
Trends
Growing scientific literacy in sci-fi storytelling, with films like Arrival attempting to ground alien contact in realistic scientific methodologyShift from humanoid alien designs toward more creative, non-biological life forms reflecting actual evolutionary diversity possibilitiesIncreased focus on AI and machine intelligence as more probable first contact scenario than biological extraterrestrial lifeExploration of parasitic and symbiotic alien relationships as narrative devices examining identity and consciousnessQuestioning of traditional alien invasion narratives and examination of why extraterrestrials would choose aggression over communicationScientific community engagement with pop culture to improve public understanding of astrobiology and extraterrestrial life possibilitiesFermi Paradox discussions moving from speculation toward robotic colonization models as explanatory framework
Topics
Alien Life Forms and AstrobiologyFirst Contact Protocols and DiplomacyExtraterrestrial Weapons and Energy BeamsParasitic Alien Life and Host RelationshipsSelf-Replicating Robotic Life FormsCross-Species Disease TransmissionFermi Paradox and Galactic ColonizationHumanoid vs. Non-Humanoid Alien DesignAI and Machine Intelligence in Sci-FiScientific Accuracy in Science FictionAlien Communication MethodsInvasion vs. Peaceful Contact ScenariosExtraterrestrial Biology and ChemistryGovernment Secrecy and Alien ContactPop Culture and Scientific Education
Companies
YouTube
Jake Roper hosts Vsauce 3 and Could You Survive the Movies series on YouTube, analyzing movie scenarios scientifically
Science Channel
Hosts Vsauce 3, Jake Roper's YouTube series exploring scientific concepts through pop culture analysis
People
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Astrophysicist and host leading discussion on alien depictions in film and television with scientific perspective
Jake Roper
Content creator specializing in analyzing movie scenarios scientifically, guest expert on alien fiction discussion
Chuck
Co-host engaging in Cosmic Queries discussion about aliens in film and television
Steven Spielberg
Discussed as creator of E.T., with Tyson sharing insight that Spielberg conceived E.T. as plant-based lifeform
John Carpenter
Director of 1980s film 'The Thing' featuring shape-shifting parasitic alien, discussed as favorite alien depiction
Quotes
"It would be inexcusably egocentric for anyone to suggest that we, on Earth, are alone in the universe."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Early in episode
"My job is to watch movies and then explore them scientifically."
Jake Roper•Introduction segment
"If they're smart enough for intergalactic travel, are you going to tell me that they can't learn English in a few days?"
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Arrival movie discussion
"If aliens come up to me and they put it as a glass window, I ain't writing shit backwards."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•Arrival movie critique
"If you send Paul Rudd and they kill Paul Rudd, the rest of us are doomed. We're cooked."
Neil deGrasse Tyson•First contact protocol discussion
Full Transcript
Hey, StarTalk fans, Neil here. You're about to listen to an episode specially drawn from our archives to serve your cosmic curiosities. Check it out. Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. This is StarTalk. Cosmic Queries Edition. Chuck. Hey, Neil. People love them Cosmic Queries. They do. We have a lot of inquiring minds. That's a good thing. That is a good thing. Plus, actually, in Cosmic Queries, we bring in other people who are the experts and I just get to sit and listen. Ah. That's how I learned too. So there you have it. Who knew you were still capable of learning something? What kind of... What... What... The man who knows everything? No. I never said I don't know everything. Okay. There's very... Well, okay. Today's subject. Aliens in Film and TV. Oh. Big subject. That is a big subject. Big subject. Huge subject. For something for which there's no data. Aliens. Now, I got my own thoughts about aliens, but there are people out there who are more alien fluent than I am. All right. Before we get to our alien fluency, do you believe in aliens? It's not about a belief. No. Okay. Do you believe that we are alone in the universe? Is that one of the questions? No. I just ask. I think you personally... Okay. I... It would be inexcusably egocentric for anyone to suggest that we, on Earth, are alone in the universe. Given how old the universe is, the prevalence of the chemistry that manifests in life, we see that biochemistry, that organic chemistry, all across the universe, and how long it took life to show up on Earth, it's pretty quick. About 100 million years. Sounds like a long time. But... Short compared to the span of the universe. And of the universe. So it would be astonishing if we were alone. Okay. That's all I'm saying. All right. Very diplomatically placed without actually saying yes or no. But I know exactly what you mean, so it's great. That's all I'm giving you. It's a good answer. That's all I'm giving you. All right. Well, what we have... Who we have here is the one and only Jake Robert. Jake? What? Jake! I got your resume here. Host of Vsauce 3 Science Channel on YouTube. Vsauce. Could you guess that? He's got a YouTube pillow over his left shoulder. Good for him. Okay. And you host the YouTube series, Could You Survive the Movies? That is a brilliant concept. Putting people through what goes on in the movies. Right. That's a brilliant concept. And so do you just never leave home and you're watching movies all the time? Would you like study this in school? I mean, it worked out well because, yes, my job is to watch movies and then explore them scientifically. That's his job! That's a great job. What a great job. Tell me, he pays you to do that? He pays you to watch movies. I know. I don't know why. Don't tell me. How do you get my son that job? He's actually doing it for free. So in Cosmic Queries, we solicit questions from our audience and they've been primed on this subject. So they're coming in and they know you, but many of them, if not most, are fans of yours. So we can do this in a Star Talk way. Absolutely. So let's do it, Chuck. What do you have? All right. Well, can I start with my own personal question for you? Is that okay? Of course. Why are you asking him if it's okay? It's my show. Damn! Oh, you caught me off guard, man. All right. Yes, you have my permission to ask him the first question instead of the people who actually write it. All right. So I just want to know in your estimation, what is the easiest movie to survive? The easiest movie to survive? If we're talking physically, I would say of what genre of alien movies? Like any alien film. An alien film. Hmm. The easiest one to survive. It'd be ET. Well, so, so here's the thing. I would say ET. That's a really, immediately popped in my head, but then you do have that whole segment where like, oh, we need to quarantine them because who knows what bacteria or viruses you might have. That's right. And that's kind of the interesting thing. You have this foreign creature here on earth. Right. We don't know what it's like. We have no idea. You don't know what it is susceptible to or what where's susceptible to from it. So, yes. So at the end of the movie, but in reality, when the kids get them back to the ship, what they don't show you is five weeks later when they all have these horrible growths coming out the size of their faces. And yeah, but he's already gone. Yeah. And the movie ended. Yeah. Exactly. Yeah. Then they were like, we can't make a sequel because all the kids have horrible tumors. Awesome. Awesome. So I have a, I have two reflections on this. Okay. One, I've had Steven Spielberg in that chair over there in my office. Tell me. Okay. So Steven Spielberg asks something related that ET, what he imagined ET as a vegetable and not as an animal. So he's a plant-based lifeform. Plant-based life. That's correct. Okay. Which is, which is how he would have that relationship with the plants. Remember? Oh yes. Because he made the flowers. And they would re-bloom. Right. And so that was imagined, but since he's walking and talking and his eyeballs and shoulders, the natural way to think of them is as living. Right. As animal life rather than plant life. So that's my first one. Interesting. Yeah. Second point. Wow. That is a really cool little fact tour. Yeah. Yeah. Second point. That is really cool. Go ahead. And I, and you say, what are your sources? Steven Spielberg. I know. That's like, that is the ultimate cocktail party smackdown. Just like, yeah, well, I don't know if you know this, but ET is actually a plant-based life. It's like, yeah, where do you get that from? Steven Spielberg. I'm just saying. I've had people come up to me and say, what, what, what Wiki page did you get that information from? And I, for other calcul, calculations, I said, I calculated it. Somebody actually creates information that goes on the Wiki page. Right. I'm one of those people. Right. Okay. That's what it is. So it's called math. It's called math. It's called math, dude. What Wiki page did you get that from? A map. What app? The brain app. Yeah. What app? Yeah. Yeah. So we would catch an ET disease if he comes to Earth. Right. What's the chance of that? Contamination. And here's the problem. The kind of diseases we think about and know about tend to be very specific to the life forms. Right. Think about it. So an oak tree is not going to get whooping cough. Correct. Right. And just like there are certain viruses that, you know, that will not, will not be, what's it, transmitted trans species? Well, cross species. They have to mutate in order to have that. So the idea that an alien from another planet is, has something that's contagious to us is kind of, it's kind of low. Right. Because a lot of things that are contagious to other life forms on Earth with whom we have DNA in common are not contagious to us. That's all I'm saying. Okay. But still we got to be cautious just as you said. Excellent. All right. Well, let's get to the queries now. And of course we always start with a Patreon patron because they support us. Yes. And we love them for it. This is a JB from Patreon who says, Hi, Neil and Jake. This is Jessica from Arizona in 2005, the movie War of the Worlds starring Tom Cruise. These machines driven by aliens start eviscerating people with white laser beams, effectively turning them into ash. Would it be possible to harness light this way into a kind of super laser? If so, where would you go to stay safe? Well, it would be in defense against. In defense against. Okay. Yeah. So Jake, yeah. Jake. All right. So just to clarify, they're asking if the weapon that the World of the Worlds aliens use could be possible. Well, she's saying, yes, is it possible to use light in this manner? So that is a different way of saying, is that weapon possible? And in that way, you could fight with a weapon equivalent to what they're using, perhaps. Or you could defend against it. Well, actually, this is funny because if we just spoilers for everyone that hasn't seen the movie yet, I'm going to give you a second. Okay. The movie's 14 years old. Forget them. They haven't seen the movie yet. I don't care. Go. Well, hopefully they just heard the original War of the Worlds from back in the day when you were a kid, Neil. Anyway. Exactly. So the way that they destroy the aliens and defeat them is by like a virus. A human virus gets them ill and they all just die. Right. So this kind of goes back to the ET conversation where we actually are this contaminant that kills them. We're the weapon. Anywho. Yeah, we are the weapon. Just us existing. And that's kind of the part of the course for humans anyway. So I mean, I would say it is possible. You can't. I mean, I'd harness light. Is that what they're harnessing? We don't really know. You could generate enough energy where you could just completely eviscerate a person. I mean, that's possible. True. Well, I mean, if it's just a matter of energy, right, light is a form of energy. Right. Now, laser beams are kind of cooler than other forms of it, but it's just energy. So, you know, a bow and arrow is putting energy here and taking energy over here and putting it over there. Right. A laser's got energy over here, put it over there. Right. A bullet. And then you have energy over here. It's in the gunpowder and now the energy's over there. So, if you can abstract this question to just say, what are the ways you're going to have energy over here and put it over there? And you have more energy than they have. That's kind of what that comes down to. Right. But I wonder, maybe the question was, what does it take to turn them into a pile of ash? Well, do you think maybe that was the question? So that's what I'm thinking right now. And in that regard, I mean, it would have to be whatever this beam is, let's say this energy beam, it would have to encompass the entirety of the person's body for all of them to instantaneously turn to ash. Right. So you just focus here, well then it would just pop a hole right through you in the same way that a bullet, when it impacts, it doesn't blow apart your whole entire external body internal just, boop. So I guess it would be so, if we just go by heat, so hot that it would immediately vaporize all of the moisture in your body. Okay. It would just completely dry you out to such a degree that you are just dust afterwards. Absolutely. Yeah. Right. So Jake has mentioned an important point because it's hard to burn something that has a lot of liquid in it. Right. The liquid, you got to first get rid of the liquid, then you can burn what's left. So you're talking about ash, if you're going to be a pile of ash, your blood had to evaporate in some way before you even get to the ash. So the instantane, instantaneity, is that a word? It is. It is now. Instantaneity. Instantaneity sounds like a great Quaker Oats commercial. Instantaneity. Instantaneity. It's delicious. All right. Go ahead. So it would require enough energy to instantly take your blood to a rolling boil and then evaporate it. Evaporate. Get rid of all the liquid and then consume the rest of the material. And that seems to me, I have to take a little longer than how long that took in the movie. Yeah. Right. Because the other thing too is, if you're talking about that kind of energy, it only did that to the person. The beam didn't, as it continued, it didn't shoot holes into the ground. It didn't take out buildings. Right. Or the plant life behind it. Or the plant life behind it. Only the people. So. All right. So maybe it was a tune to human chemistry then. Well, that's a good thing. I see you think about this stuff. It is very evident that you think about this crap all day long. Okay. Because. Well, no. Okay. I got one for you. So the military and large municipalities have what's called non-lethal weaponry. Okay. Okay. And the taser is an example of one. But another one is this truck that rolls around with this huge beam and it sends microwaves into a crowd. And you feel like you're burning. You feel like your skin is burning. So you want to get out of that beam. And basically they aim it for the focus points wherever people are gathering and getting the most ornery. So they can disperse the crowd. Disperse the crowd. So the cool thing about microwaves is water responds to microwaves, which is why your plate doesn't get hot, but your food does in the microwave oven. So if you have one of these weapons that targets human molecules, then you could have a beam that's sort of wide enough to just enclose you that could vaporize you, but not the stuff behind you. Oh, right. Excellent. Right. What do you think of that? I mean, I think that that sounds fair because they do have those specific things. They have the microwave weapons that you're talking about. I mean, I remember reading an article years ago about how in the UK to stop teens from loitering in stores, stores could play this frequency that only teenagers could hear because they still had those hairs in there. That's right. So the frequency of going to them. Yeah. All folks just don't even hear it. And so we can show you. Like what? Well, exactly. Keep trying. That's where we are with teens. That's why they don't listen to them. That's why we're here. All right. Wow. That's great. All right. Well, that's a great question, Jay. Jessica, that was really cool. Are you ready for another one? Here we go. Yes, sir. This is Sivang. Sivang. Sivastata. Sivastata. Sivastata. Sivastava. Yes. Sivang. Sivastava. Sivang. Sivastava. Sivastava. Oh, so, oh, so you're going to, you're going to, uh, uh, yes. I put the wrong emphasis on the syllable. All right. Here we go. All right. She says, hi, Dr. Tyson. Do you think an organization such as MIB, or Men in Black, can be established secretly if the government finds aliens? I'm also really eager to know what changes will you and Jake, would you and Jake like to make in the movies so they are more bound to reality? Ooh. Thank you both for your encouraging science education. So, so, Jay, can MIB be real? Would it, would it be real? Well, first, is it real? Second, would, would the government do it if in fact we were sort of shielding aliens? What's your? I would say yes. Really? I mean, I don't really have, I mean, everything right now is just hypothetical, but I would assume that yes, they would create an organization. Would it be as cool and sexy as Men in Black? Probably not. So, here's what I want to know from both of you. Do you think the government, the scientific community especially, would shield the public from the knowledge that we are not alone? I'm going to ask Jake about this. I, I mean, I think this is a tough one because we are hunting for life out there in the universe, right? That's what we're actively doing when we go to Mars, when we just are trying to go to Europa, all these different missions. That is kind of the point. But that is a different kind of life than I think what most people assume life to be. We think of life as sentient human beings that can walk around, move around, have conversations, think for themselves, not microorganisms. So, when it comes to that level of, I assume an alien is this living, breathing thing that can move around and shake my hand, that I would kind of assume that the government, if it did, if it were happening now, they would hide from us. Because it kind of is a disruptive thought or disruptive information to know. So with an MIB kind of secret keepers? To a degree, not as cool as MIB. I don't think they have like fancy alien weapons and like cool cars and, you know, they're going on all these actions, giving birth to aliens on the like long, long press way or whatever. But like, I do think if aliens, well, you're okay. Aliens exist, I think. Well, just a quick thing. In Men in Black, one of the aliens was, he was like bug life, right? Right. He was like roaches. So it's not, not all of them were fully manifested as humanoid forms. I mean, he was humanoid, but he was still made of bugs or, or, yeah, he was made of bugs. It was just sort of, I have a strong theory that if we go to the deep ocean, that all to me is alien. It looks so foreign from what we experience here in our world of on land, that it is so different. Like that could be aliens for all we know. Actually. It's an environment. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. I'm going to say no, but I'm just going to go out on a limb and say no, they're not aliens. Well, it's very testable. You look at the detected DNA, the overlapping DNA, but otherwise it's fun to think about it. Exactly. We got to take a quick break. When we come back, more with Jake on Aliens in the Universe. Yes. On Star Talk. This is Ken, the nerd neck, Zabara from Michigan, and I support Star Talk on Patreon. This is Star Talk Radio with Neil DeGrasse Tyson. We're back. Star Talk, Cosmic Queries. Aliens in the movies and TV. Yeah. The subject as big as the universe itself. You know what? It probably is. Jake Roper on. Thank God we got Jake Roper on. I know, right? Because he thinks about this stuff. All the time. Professionally. Professionally. Get somebody to pay him. Let me take his. Your parents should be so proud of you. I'm telling you right now, I'm proud of you. I am proud of you, Jake. You are what America is about. I want to be able to save somebody at a cocktail party. So what's your son do? My son talks about aliens on YouTube and they pay him. And he bought my house. My son who does not play basketball bought my house on YouTube. Love it, bro. I love it. All right. So what's the question? You got the next question. We got the next question. Let's keep going. This is Jason. Jason Mogrig. Jason says, hey, what's up guys? What's yours? Neals and Jake's favorite fictional alien movie or game? And why? Oh, nice question. That's a good one. All right, go on. Go on, Jake. Jake, this is going to pressure on you. No, Chuck, you go first on this one. So I can think. So you can think, you got me. All right. So I'm going to give you my favorite movie alien. Let me hear it. And it's going to be very pedestrian because you're going to say it's just the oldest trope ever. Don't tell me what I'm going to say about your alien. Okay, you're right. You're right about that. All right. All right. The alien. The alien. In the movie. In the movie, the alien. That thing is amazing. First of all, it's super cunning and intelligent. Okay. Secondly, we don't know what motivates this thing. It kills everything, but why? Why is it doing it? Third, it loves to fight. Why are you so angry, bro? Calm down. Third, it's got a mouth in a mouth in a mouth. That is amazing. What is that tiny little mouth for? Why? Why do you have a tiny little mouth? I didn't know you felt this way. Wait a minute. He ain't done. That's not it. I'm not done. Wait a minute. Here's an N. You cut it and it bleeds acid. Come on. This thing is awesome. Whoever thought of this alien, I'm telling you, they put a little bit of time in. That's all I'm saying. And it scurries when it escapes. Down the hallway. No, forget it. That's what... I know. Right. And by the way, look at its transformation. It goes in you as who knows what. You're just host. A little crab monster actually grabs you by the face and puts the baby alien in you. And then it comes out as a little snake man. It's crazy. It's crazy. Jake, have you had enough time to think now? Are you so distracted by Chuck's panic attack? I'm really amazed. That was great. That was a good monologue. I mean, okay, so alien is fantastic. I'm wearing an alien hat. Ms. Roma, the ship from the first one. That's right. I do love alien. But actually in a similar vein to alien, because I think of alien as a parasite, right? The whole entire way that it gestates and bursts out. It is this parasitic relationship. So with that in mind, the thing is my favorite alien. The thing? From the movie, the thing. I forgot what the thing was. What's the thing? Is the thing like the blob? What is the thing? No, so the thing is... But don't get... And don't confuse the thing with them. Because them is ants. Yeah, sir. Them with the ants? Yep. Them is ants. Them is ants. They is something entirely different. Okay. The thing... All right, so back on track, Chuck. Come on. Okay, sorry. So the thing is a... Well, the remake was... Which is the one that's most popular is this 1980s movie with Kurt Russell, directed by John Carpenter. And the thing is this organism that takes the shape... I saw it. Whatever the host is. I didn't realize that that was what I was watching. But it's a shape shifter and you don't know who it is because it can be anything. And then at one point it became the dog or something like that, right? Yep. Yeah, okay. I forgot I saw that movie. It can take any form. And it's... The thing that's scary to me about is one is it really is a parasite, but an intergalactic parasite. And it just takes upon... Like you have things like the jewel wasp here on Earth, right? Which is more similar to the xenomorphon alien where it impregnates the cockroach basically and then the larvae bursts out and becomes a full on wasp, flies away. But the thing I love because it brings up this conundrum where does the person who it took the body of the form of, is it aware that it's not human? Or does it think that it's human? But it has something else controlling its mind. Interesting. And I think that's a really nice conundrum. If you look in the mirror, the mirror tells you you're human, right? Right. Yeah. Yeah. So you like the fact that you could be infested with this parasite or occupied by this parasite and still think you are you, but just going about your life, but really you're just a puppet of a galactic parasite. And you have no idea potentially the people around you have no idea that you are no longer you. Right. Right. That's pretty cool. You know, you're not going to be spooky. Whereas with like traditional aliens or an alien, you know, it's an alien like, okay, you're terrifying. You're not you're not friendly. But if it was just Neil, we're like, oh, Neil, how you doing? And for all this time, he's been this parasitic alien. I am fine. So what's the difference between them and invasion of the body snatchers fundamentally? So that's a great question. There isn't much. Okay. Similar. Okay. I think it's just. It's just a great style and they're both these alien creatures that take over humans. I think an invasion of body snatchers, its motivation is much more clear. It's there to take over the planet. Right. And the thing they just find this crash spaceship from like thousands of years ago. And there's no reason as to why it's there or what the purpose of this alien is. The alien never expresses its intent. It's just this vicious force. Okay. That's a good one. All right, Neil. I have a good answer and then a cop out answer. My good answer is I think the blob is the best alien ever. The blob. Because it didn't walk. It didn't talk. It didn't have two eyes, shoulders, mouth, nose, feet, you know, as much as we like alien versus predator. The predator was great, right? But it's still very humanoid. Yes. It's even the approximate height of a human. You could look, you know, Arnold stare him straight in his eyes. Right now. Right here. Right. Kill me. If it bleeds, we can kill it. Right. Okay. So I'm thinking this was the most creative alien Hollywood has ever come up with because it was not an actor in a costume. Okay. And people forget what color is the blob? You remember? Red. Red. Except when it first landed. It was completely transparent. Oh. After it ate its first person, then it was red. Oh, I got to go back and check that out. Yes. Yes. Jake, did you know that? I didn't know that. I can't. I can't. Unstumpable. I just showed my girlfriend the blog because she'd never seen it. So we just watched it the other week. Okay. So it's fresh and interesting. It might have been Steve McQueen's first movie or very early in his repertoire. Anyway, I think that's the most imaginative. Plus it comes through the grill. Right. It comes through everything. Of the air conditioning ducts. Any opening. Any opening. It can lose its way through. Under the door. Under it. Yeah. Ew. That and a favorite alien, I think is from our contact. Contact. With Jodie Foss? Yes. Wait a minute. So you mean when she was inside of that portal? You never see the alien. That's why it's my favorite alien. Right. Because he says, I've taken on this for him to make you comfortable. No, no. Well, yes. Yes. Yes, sir. But the alien, you do not know what the alien looks like. The alien exists in some way that does not lend itself to material presence for your eyes. Okay. So, and that way, and by the way, 2001 and its sequel, 2010, neither of those show the alien either. Right. So I like it when they don't show it to you. Okay. That's all. That's cool. I feel like that. This actually brings up, I love your thoughts on this. I always like to think that if we were to see an alien that we wouldn't really be able to comprehend it, which is why I always think that the old school look of like the gray alien, big head, big black eyes, because we only understand things in the shapes that we can currently comprehend. But if something were not bound by our understanding of the world, could it look entirely different in a form that we just don't understand and have to put it into a form that we do understand? No, I don't think so. If you're open enough to what can be, it's just a thing that now, no, you don't have a reference for it, but it's a new thing that you make new references for it. So for example, in Star Trek, you have the Horda. The Horda is basically a rock. And it's alive as a rock. That doesn't look like any alien anyone's dreamt of before, but it can move through silicates, like we move through air because the rock is silicon based, most of them. So I thought that was cool. Would you agree that was a creative attempt? That is really creative. Just to think outside of the box, the Horda. Cool. Very cool. Sorry, just back to the blob there real quick. I know we have more questions, but that's to your point, what makes the blob so great is that it isn't this traditional flesh and blood, looks like it has legs and arms kind of characters. This blob, this shapeless form that just moves around and go through objects or things that we can't physically or that a physical being couldn't. Plus a bullet doesn't stop it, right? No. And not because it's impervious, it's just irrelevant. Right. What is that? It is like shooting water or shooting air. That's my vote. So we got our three votes there. Nice stuff. Good stuff, guys. All right. So shall we move on to Ryan Ramboer. And Ryan wants to know this. In the movie Arrival, the government sends two different scientists from two different fields of study. If you had to choose two people, who would you send into an alien spacecraft? Interesting. Just to remind people in Arrival, the recent Arrival. Recent Arrival. Sorry, I just got here. So they sent a physicist, a particle physicist and a linguist. Okay. Jake, would you have sent different people in? I totally would have sent different people in. What would you have sent in? Other than yourself, who would you have sent? I mean, I think, but that was also a very specific thing where they chose a linguist because they knew there was some kind of communication happening. And I needed someone there to help decipher it. Right after the fact. So we're starting. Okay. It's a tune-in after the fact. Okay. But when you said... So first, I'm going to let you first. I was going to say, but if we're starting from that point, then I think that can make... A particle physicist doesn't seem... Like wouldn't she want some sort of biologist to be there? Yeah, I think so too. That's why I would have sent an astrobiologist and a cryptographer. And a cryptographer. Right. Right. And I agree with that. And or I would have sent like a theoretical mathematician. What's wrong with that? What's wrong with that? Fine. Because, I mean, listen, for them to get here, but had to use math. Sure. Right. Sure. And I think that math would be the same for us. But astrobiologists, no math. So we're good here. Okay. All right. So you just think that physicists are so damn great. No, no, no. I just removed the physicists from that equation. Right. Put in an astrobiologist and a cryptographer. And the cryptographer is going to know math too. Right, Jake? Cryptographer knows some math. Yeah, of course. Here's my question to you, Jake. Yeah. How do they know that the septopod or whatever it's called? Yeah. The thingy thing. They're communicating in the direction they are looking rather than in his own direction and they should then be studying the mirror image of it. Yeah. Flipping it. Wow. Well, I think you thought too hard about that. You just wrote the movie. My answer. What are you saying? Because the thing is writing on transparent glass. Right. So it thinks that everyone is thinking it's its own. Right. Somebody's got to, we need a mirror in there at some point. Jake, what's your take? My opinion is that the aliens are very considerate. So they were like, we're going to make it easy for you guys. We traveled all this distance. We are smart enough to know that we're going to flip it for you. We're going to draw backwards. I'm going to tell you this. Wait, wait, if aliens come up to me and they put it as a glass window, I ain't writing shit backwards. I'm not writing. But here's my point. And this is my only. Making faces. Yeah. My only problem with the movie is this. If you are smart enough for intergalactic travel, are you going to tell me that you can't learn English in a few days? I'm just saying. Yeah, I agree. Yeah. That was my problem. That was my problem with close encounters of the third kind. Right. Okay. And then they go to the next scene where they figure out where they're going to land. Do you remember that scene? The teletype gives the the the the the longitude and latitude. It's like, wait a minute, that's a coordinates on earth. And then they go get the map. And if it's devil's tower, it's like, oh my gosh, and I'm hitting my issue here, Jake. It's our latitude goes from zero to 90. Who thought that up? Okay. And between zero and one and one and two, it's split into 60 parts. Okay. And the longitude is an act of politics that put the prime meridian through Greenwich. So if you are an alien and you know our coordinates, you come up upon earth, there's no grid lines on earth. Right? Hey, look at that. It's a planet made by world math. There's no grid lines. So if you come up to the earth, you have to understand our weird sex adjustable counting system for angles. And you have to know the politics that put the prime meridian going down through Greenwich. And if you knew that much about human culture, you just say, hey, what's happening? What's happening? I'm going to land to the left of devil's tower at 4 30 this afternoon. See you then. Boom. Now, did you tell Steven Spielberg that when he was here? All right. What's your next question? Go. Go. Okay. Next question. Next question. Here we go. All right. This is, oh, I like it. This is 72 underscore 05 underscore 72. And thank you so much for that name, by the way. If our planet was being attacked by aliens, what's the first thing you would do? Now this is an attack, guys. Attack. Not a visit. An attack. Okay. We don't have time in this segment. Oh, okay. When we come back, we're going to find out what's the first thing Jake is going to do when aliens attack when Stark Talk returns. We're back. Stark Talk, segment three of Cosmic Queries, Aliens in the Movies with Jake Roper. That's right. This is good. That's what he does. Yeah, awesome. It's a great job. It's not only what he does, that's all he does. Oh my goodness. I'm so jealous. He's actually sitting on a toilet right now. He never leaves. He just never leaves that space. He said you wouldn't tell. Oh, that's too funny. Okay. So before we went off, here's the question. 72 underscore 05 underscore 72 says this, if our planet was being attacked, guys, by aliens, what is the first thing you would do? Not a visit and attack. Jake. First thing I would do is probably just relax. What could I do to help stave it off? I'm just going to chill, turn on some Stark Talk radio for a nice Merlot. Very nice. Is that a wine? I think that's a wine. And then just wait for death. Glass of wine and chill. Yes. Instead of Netflix and chill, alien attack and chill. Interesting. I'll tell you what I would not do, which is what they do in the movies. Shoot your gun at it. Go outside and start shooting at the sky. Here's a mothership. Right. And you think you think you think. Right. All right. So what would you do? So Jake, you have surrendered to them. Correct? Well, if they're attacking, like, I'm sorry. So I guess my assumption was that it's the ship that's attacking us. If they sent ground troops and we're going like house by house door by door to door. Then yeah, I'd probably fight back. But if there's just a giant mothership blasting earth, similar to Independence Day, then I just hang out and hope that it all clears. Man. Yeah. I'm kind of. What am I supposed to do? Yeah. I mean, listen, like, you know, I'm not going like when you bought up Independence Day, the scene that really burned my shorts was when all the people got on top of the Capitol Records building to look at the aliens to get a better view of the aliens. And then of course they were all incinerated by a particle beam that wiped them. Like, I don't get that. What I don't, I don't, I don't want to meet aliens that bad. You realize Independence Day is war of the world. Really? How do we attack? How do we triumph over the aliens with a virus? Oh, look at you. Oh, that was good. I'm going to tell you that was good. So biological virus and a cyber logical virus. Okay. So, so I I'd like Jake and I like keeping him around. So I'll put him in with his ball of Merlot. I'll get him a good ball of Merlot. Right. Get your Chateau Petrus, okay from maybe 1989 would be a really good bottle of Miraloh for you. Okay, very nice and look that one up and so Then I like him what keep around and I'll go out and try to figure out how to kick some alien ass Okay, Neil is full of it Because what you don't know Jake is that Neil has many government connections many many Government connections With a couple generals who will be consulting him I don't think Neil was lying when he said that he would you know check on me and then when he did leave though Yes, he would go to his bunker Living his best life cool a Chuck. What's the next one? All right? Here we go. This is a Zevi coming to us She's a YouTube fan. What is the most believable? depiction of aliens you've seen in modern sci-fi good question Yeah, it's the most believable alien. Let's go modern. Let's define it 1980s on. Yeah, let's say they 80s on mm-hmm, okay I mean the first thing that pops my head. I think would be Arrival Okay, I think the way that they handled it the way that the interactive with the aliens with the aliens interacted with us How about the fact that it was a septic pod that didn't disturb you at all? Because I think no Issues that I have with most not an issue because I do enjoy them But with both alien invasion films when they come to earth is why do they always want to destroy us? Why is that there immediate instincts like let's just kill everybody? That's because that's what we could do if we landed on their planet In fact, that's what we've done to each other when we land on each other's continents So that's why I think though we write it that way Because that's what we would do so we put our own self in those scripts when we write aliens But they were smart enough if they could traverse These incredible distances would their first action be aggression Yeah, I mean I think only if we were food with that because otherwise to serve man, right Right you got you got the Twilight Zone episode Yeah to serve man. There was like it's resource gathering. They do a lot of that um But I feel like arrival had a pretty in my mind Good depiction word Obviously these are liberties with some of the science, but it felt still in this world of science realism Or at least they were trying to obtain that Um, and I really appreciated that. What about the day the earth stood still Oh The Well either I mean there was the robot in the first one But that wasn't really the alien right there's something else controlled something else so Uh, because you you're trying to uh, oh, I got it. I got you here. Okay in that same vein I'm going to go back to contact Because it was I thought that was an authentic representation of how we as a society would react To the knowledge that there's an intelligent species out there. So I agree with you. You want some authenticity that isn't always a violence, right, right, but then If you're creative enough as the screenwriter whereas the storyteller you would put some of those authentic reactions in it As I agree they did with arrival I think when you said the day the earth stood still is even even more so because it is a it is A non biological life form like I think our first contact if we send something out It's not going to be a human being we're going to send something out that might make contact That would be the first encounter that from from the opposite way. All right next question. All right. Here we go This is west miller would you rather Aliens be far more intelligent than humans Or far less intelligence and then humans Here's the thing if aliens visited us, they're clearly more intelligent. Yeah That's what I'm trying to because I guess again we're assuming aliens are these life form style creatures And we're not finding them to your point, you know, they're like coming to find us So, yeah, I guess they just intrinsically would be more intelligent But then I guess right now I'm just being pedantic. But like what is intelligence? Do they they'll know more than us about certain things? But I'm sure there'll be Different verticals of information that we are much well versed in than they are jake if they got here in a spaceship Of course in a galactic space They know more about everything that we've ever known about anything That's probably the case unless of but are they going to know about delicious like tacos and nachos neal? Only know that. They will once they take over the earth But what if they're like what was the movie uh, walley walley well and they were Escaping a planet put on a ship that was run by an ai that took care of their every knee And they just became dumb fatties floating around on chairs Right, then they arrived someplace. You just ruined that whole movie Dumb fatties riding on chairs But then instead of trying to wait until their planet was healed it just takes them on an intergalactic mission So here are people living in this enclosed society for all these like there could be millennia if you wanted it Then they get someplace which is earth they find us and what we end up seeing is incredible technology With a bunch of dumb fatties Flat-Ram on chairs True well, I'm sorry. Lastly. I want to say about really smart aliens I will go back to et though as a consideration where et was able to get to earth Yet didn't even know what Reese's pieces were what an idiot what an idiot what a dumb alien Okay All right next all right here we go run it short in time see if we can get a couple in here. Okay go this is uh Prabhaanjan Telang Says this if we ever contact an alien species. Is there a first contact protocol a true to life first contact protocol Jake, I don't know if there is but if there was one, what would you want it to be? Ah, I mean I you know what I never even thought about this question before oh We stumped Jake. Wow Jake well because I always assumed because you have the light cone, right? Which we're gonna have to go to a detail but Information there unless we can figure out tacky on all these everything there's a speed limit to how fast information can travel Tacky on travel so as we were and move backwards in time, right? Far enough away to send us a message by the time you're able to send anything back whoever sent it is probably long gone So I've never really thought about the idea of what would we say there has to be a protocol Interesting Send a radio signal if we were communicated that way, but if they just showed up Do you send your job? Do you send your diplomat? You send your head of state? Oh, let's hope not No, I said like I said Paul Rudd. Everyone likes Paul Rudd That is an excellent answer You need likeable people Very good. We if you send the most likeable human Then that's your best chance. There you go. Let's send the delightful Paul Rudd How could we go wrong? That's a brilliant answer. I like it. Just send the most friendly among us, right? and if they think he's Evil in some way then we're in big trouble Right. Yeah, if we send Paul Rudd and they kill Paul Rudd The rest of us are doomed. There's no hope for humanity. We're done. We're cooked Chuck give me another question. All right, last one. Last one. Okay. Here we go Hi, dr. Tyson and mr. Roper. Oh, look at that This this is you got a mister out of this This is Elias Elias from london and I wanted to ask your thoughts on aliens like replicators from the stargate series series robots who replicated themselves using available resources on every planet Do you believe this is the most probable form of alien life that we will ever encounter? Wow? Whoa, that's an excellent question. Real good. Yeah, Jake. What do you have on that? I mean this brings up what kind of Chuck mentioned earlier that it does seem more reasonable that if we were to get a first contact moment It would be with some sort of machine some sort of non or inorganic built thing And then also when it comes to replicating it This is the whole idea about the singularity that I always love Or just advanced ai where if you were able to create an ai like a machine that is so advanced It no longer needs you to create it It can create itself now So I do think that could be a very real possibility because I mean I'm still stuck on that brilliant idea that chuck had because chuck is a brilliant attractive smart humble person Which is that it would be Some sort of robotic creature would probably be the first contact. Okay Chuck very nice there. Well, thanks. Yeah, he complimented you. He did. Yes 12 ways from sunday and I'm gonna I know I'm gonna use every day I can I So I want to I just put some emphasis on that. Okay, so the the fermi paradox Which is how come the aliens haven't been here? Well, why would we expect that to happen? Because in the lifetime of the universe, they would have colonized every planet in the galaxy. Well, how do you justify that? Well, if you send a robot that can duplicate itself Then it goes to a planet and then it makes two of itself and then they go to two planets And then they make two of themselves and they go to four planets and then eight and then 16 It doesn't take many doubling times To have a robot on every single habitable planet in the galaxy that will take much less time Than the amount of time the galaxy has been around So either you bring humans there and duplicate themselves or you bring robots, but there would have been some evidence if They really were of a of a colonizing species right so Yeah, that this idea that you can duplicate yourself. That's really the only realistic way. That is the most realistic way most realistic way Fantastic, right. Oh, that's great. We speak English in the United States because England sent the colony that spoke English All right, so now we went to the moon not England Right, okay England sent the colony that then went to the moon, right? So that's you want to think about What what you've actually Put into motion, right? And so yeah Yeah, that's good Good stuff, man. It's a great way to think about it. Yeah, Jake. Love you man. That was fun, Jake. Oh, thank you guys so much This is great. We got to do this again. We will we will find a way to get your ass back on here Do matrix do it. I'll do do a whole thing on just a matrix. Well, yeah, well because there's three movies No, no, there's only one I don't know what happened the other I'm not sure But the first one was I can overanalyze matrix. Okay. Okay. I've seen I've seen how many times you've seen the matrix Too many too many. Yeah, me too. Yeah, I'm kind of there too. I say, you know what? I shouldn't say too many. That sounds negative not enough Wow Okay, okay. All right Matrix of this the question is are you a virus? on this earth a virus All right, Jake, we got a call at Chris there. Chuck. Thanks for being on always a pleasure. Jake. We'll find you again I don't know where you're hiding but we'll find you. All right. This has been star talk cosmic queries aliens edition I'm your host Neil deGrasse Tyson as always bidding you to keep looking up