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Advisory Opinions

12 Angry Dinosaurs

Advisory Opinions

The Dispatch

News, Politics, Government

4.74K Ratings

🗓️ 4 August 2020

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Rewind millions of years and a dinosaur-killing asteroid is racing toward Earth at breakneck speed. But what exactly happened in the immediate aftermath of this event? Which species survived and which ones were met with instantaneous extinction? In a much-needed break from today’s partisan political climate, David and Sarah are joined by Steve Brusatte, a professor of paleontology and evolution at the University of Edinburgh, for some in-the-field expertise on the dinosaur age. “When the dinosaurs died,” Steve Brusatte explains on today’s podcast, “they died literally because a six-mile wide rock fell out of the sky, traveling faster than a speeding bullet.” Fast forward to 2020, and paleontology is in high demand. “We’re in this golden age right now,” Brusatte tells David and Sarah. “There’s fifty-something new species of dinosaurs being found every single year.” But realistically speaking, most people have a limited knowledge base about dinosaurs. Was the Tyrannosaurus rex an intelligent dinosaur? Are pterodactyls birds? What are the personality traits that make a good paleontologist? Steve Brusatte has answers. Tune in for some fun facts about pinocchio dinosaurs, banana-sized T-rex teeth, and birds (which are dinosaurs, by the way). For all you Jurassic Park fans out there, you won’t want to miss this one (especially since Brusatte is now a science consultant for the series.) Show Notes: -Steve Brusatte’s book, The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs: A New History of a Lost World, The Genius of Birds by Jennifer Ackerman, and She Has Her Mother's Laugh: The Powers, Perversions, and Potential of Heredity by Carl Zimmer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

You ready?

0:02.0

I was born ready.

0:04.0

Welcome to a very special edition of the advisory opinions podcast. We promised

0:26.0

August would be nerd month and we deliver on our promises. So today we're going to very

0:33.0

briefly not very briefly but briefly discuss the question can the president actually ban

0:40.2

TikTok from the United States of America? A question that many people have asked and the

0:45.8

public really wants to know Sarah because they've grown to love my dance videos.

0:50.6

Oh gosh.

0:54.6

I have an alternative ego as altered alternative ego as a TikTok influencer.

1:01.0

I wouldn't doubt it. I really wouldn't.

1:03.0

Yeah. It's just look it up a host of videos to early dance videos to early Taylor Swift. It's

1:08.6

just great stuff. But can we eliminate me from the internet and can we eliminate can the

1:14.2

president eliminate TikTok. But that's the side that's the opening act.

1:20.2

One of the greatest concerts I ever went to in my life was the U2 Joshua Tree tour in 1987

1:25.9

in Ruperina in Lexington, Kentucky. And so the opening act was a group called the Baudines.

1:32.8

So the Baudines is the TikTok question. But U2 is Steve Brasadi, a professor,

1:40.0

Steve Brasadi from University of Edinburgh in Scotland. And we're going to talk dinosaurs.

1:44.4

And it's a great conversation Sarah. It's just awesome.

1:48.3

Can I also relate dinosaurs to the law because there was a great legal battle in the 90s.

1:55.2

Have you ever been you've gone to Chicago? Have you been to the field museum there?

1:59.2

Yes, I have. Have you seen Sue the T-Rex?

2:02.4

I have indeed seen Sue the T-Rex.

...

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