Podcast Review: Vox's Unexplainable: The Unknown Knowns

Scientists don’t really know what 95 percent of the universe is made up of. That fact is particularly shocking, considering we live in an age where humans seem to know it all.

That's why Vox’s science podcast – Unexplainable – is especially timely because it takes listeners on a journey into the unknown and then explores that feeling when “you think you understand something and there’s just so much more.”

Unexplainable host Noam Hassenfeld reminds us that we don’t understand exactly how the nose works, or what’s going on inside the earth? And does anyone know about ball lightning?

Unexplainable podcast


 

Produced by Vox --known for quality, thoughtful podcasts – Unexplainable host Hassenfeld explains that the podcast isn’t about the answers. “It’s about the questions,” he says. Alex Trebek would be proud of him.

Unexplainable launched its first episode in March 2021. Dutifully, that initial episode focused on the mystery of dark matter, which is composed of particles that do not absorb, reflect, or emit light. Therefore, dark matter can not be detected by electromagnetic radiation and can’t be seen directly.

The format of Unexplainable is straightforward and is smartly designed to enhance understanding rather than grovel for listeners. In the show, host Noam Hassenfeld is joined by an array of experts and Vox reporters each week to look at fascinating unanswered questions in science and the mind-bending ways scientists are trying to answer them.

Wearing multiple hats

Hassenfeld, who gained his hosting chops on Vox’s Today Explained, with Sean Rameswaram as a reporter and producer, is supremely comfortable in the driver’s seat of the podcast.

The name of the podcast, Unexplainable, smartly retains the Today, Explained, branding nomenclature and benefits from that identical desire to interpret the dark arts of current events and scientific uncertainty.

Hassenfeld’s recipe for hosting success blends earnestness, an ear for irony, a touch of dry wit, and a sincere desire to illuminate often obtuse and misunderstood scientific principles.

Hassenfeld, in addition to acting as host and senior producer of Unexplainable, also composed the show’s music. Before Unexplainable, Hassenfeld was a reporter/producer for Vox’s daily show Today, Explained, where he was also responsible for the show’s periodic parody songs. In summer 2020, Hassenfeld co-created Today Explained’s first spinoff mini-series, Today, Explained to Kids.

Explaining the show

Hassenfeld isn’t afraid to wade into the softer sciences with a perilous episode about the lack of scientific rigor in many psychology studies. Not afraid to defend science against conspiracy theorists and the foil hat crowd, Hassenfeld has tackled cloud formations and the effect climate change may have and a two-parter on the lingering effects of “long COVID on thousands of patients.

There is a cadre of excellent science podcasts – Science Vs, Science Diction, The Disappearing Spoon to list a few. Unexplainable finds its niche as a science podcast that focuses on what we don’t know about our world. Given a world of “just because” anti-vaxxers, COVID deniers, climate change ostriches, and crazy for coal throwbacks, Unexplainable could not have come along at a more ideal time.

Currently, Unexplainable is running a series called Making Sense about our senses. So far, the podcast has covered sound and touch. Predictably, both episodes are easy on the ears and digestible for the brain.

New episodes drop every Wednesday.

So the next time your “know-it-all” brother-in-law jabbers about his numerous areas of scientific expertise, recommend that he listen to Unexplainable. He won’t ever admit it, but he’ll learn something. And you’ll re-discover how much we do not know about the world around us.

 

 


 

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