
A Brain Question
A quirky science-comedy look at big questions and common myths. In this episode: If we could use 100% of our brain's capacity, would we gain superpowers like those shown in Lucy? The answer is more complicated than you might think.
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A quirky science-comedy look at big questions and common myths. In this episode: If we could use 100% of our brain's capacity, would we gain superpowers like those shown in Lucy? The answer is more complicated than you might think.

Professor Mustache takes a science-comedy look at the trend of placentophagy, where some new mothers choose to consume the placenta after birth. He explores the biological claims, cultural ideas, and medical perspectives behind this practice, separating myth, fashion, and evidence-based science.

Professor Mustache takes on the role of a forensic drug investigator to examine how powders are tested and identified. Inspired by crime dramas and movie clichés, he explores the effects and detection of both legal and illegal substances.

In this quirky science-comedy episode, no bodily gas is off limits. Beyond the well-known impact of cow burps and flatulence, Professor Mustache explores the science behind body gases and their surprising effects on the environment.

How can Darth Vader stay fresh after spending years sealed inside his iconic armor and helmet? In this quirky science-comedy episode, Professor Mustache examines the practical challenges of hygiene, breath, and life support for one of science fiction's most famous villains.

Professor Mustache takes a deep dive into the digestive systems of marine mammals. Along the way, he explores what really happens inside these giant creatures and whether being swallowed alive is as dangerous as popular stories suggest.

Professor Mustache plunges into packed stadiums and crowded subway systems to explore the behavior of large groups. Why do people move, think, and react differently in a crowd? The answers may be surprising.

Professor Mustache investigates common fears about germs in public restrooms. Are toilet seats really as dangerous as people think, or do everyday items such as handbags harbor even more microbes? A humorous look at hygiene myths and the science behind them.

Professor Mustache dives into the mysteries of galaxies, black holes, and the vast scale of the universe in a playful science-comedy format. While astrophysics may sound intimidating, there’s no need for alarm - exploring the cosmos won’t end the world.

Professor Mustache explores the scientific limits of drilling into our planet, from ambitious human attempts to reach extreme depths to the intense heat and pressure found underground. What seems like a simple idea quickly turns into a lesson in geology and the harsh realities of Earth’s interior.

Professor Mustache returns with his signature science-comedy style, mixing pop-culture satire with real biological oddities. This time, he uncovers the surprising and not always wholesome behaviors of marine life, showing that even beloved characters like Nemo and his friends have a very different reality beneath the surface.

In a playful blend of psychology and science-comedy, Professor Mustache turns the analyst’s couch into a launchpad for exploring hidden associations and unconscious reactions. After this session, even something as simple as a banana or a carrot may never feel quite the same again.

Professor Mustache heads aboard the International Space Station to explore the everyday life of astronauts in orbit. From microgravity routines to the strange realities of living off Earth, this science-comedy episode turns space station living into a mix of curiosity, humor, and real-world science.

Professor Mustache examines a legendary moment from fantasy through the lens of physics and science-comedy. When the wizard Gandalf plunges into a chasm in pursuit of a monstrous demon, he appears to defy the laws of nature - or does he? A playful look at gravity, motion, and cinematic exaggeration.

Professor Mustache takes a humorous science-comedy look at skin biology, from pimples and blackheads to sebaceous glands. What seems like a purely cosmetic concern turns out to be a fascinating glimpse into how the skin really works. A celebration of “inner beauty” in all its biological detail.

Professor Mustache explores the intimate mysteries of dinosaurs in a playful science-comedy episode. As a tongue-in-cheek paleontology investigation, he asks how giant prehistoric creatures might have reproduced - and whether there is such a thing as a “Kamasutra of Godzilla.” A humorous dive into extinct love lives and scientific speculation.

Professor Mustache explores the brain’s complex visual systems in a science-comedy journey through neural pathways specialized in image processing. He examines how we recognize faces and connect them to names - and why this seemingly simple task so often fails in everyday life.

Professor Mustache examines the extreme feats of Felix Baumgartner, the daredevil who leapt from record-breaking heights and even from near space. In this science-comedy episode, he breaks down what really happens when a human body falls at supersonic speeds.

In this science-comedy episode, clever minds explore how gravity can be temporarily “outsmarted” by flying specific curved trajectories inside an aircraft. Professor Mustache breaks down how these parabolic maneuvers create brief moments of weightlessness, turning flight into a playful experiment in physics.

Professor Mustache takes on the gap between hospital reality and TV fiction. From overconfident surgeons to exaggerated diagnostics, he contrasts real medical practice with popular characters like Dr. Derek and Dr. House, showing what actually happens in an operating room.

Professor Mustache takes a humorous look at the peculiar social behaviors of men in public restrooms. What seems like awkward everyday etiquette turns into an amusing exploration of human habits, space, and unwritten rules in shared facilities.

Professor Mustache explores the idea of instantly moving from work straight onto the sofa at home. While it sounds convenient, true teleportation remains firmly in the realm of theory and imagination rather than real-world science.

Professor Mustache explores the world of cosmetics, from laboratory research to marketing strategies. He uncovers what really goes into beauty products and how science, perception, and advertising shape what we put on our skin every day.

Professor Mustache looks at famous figures like Max Planck and Albert Einstein from a less heroic angle. Behind their celebrated scientific breakthroughs lie surprisingly difficult and often unlucky personal lives, revealing that even geniuses don’t always have it easy.

Professor Mustache explores the idea of facial transplantation, inspired by cinematic plots where identities can be swapped like costumes. He contrasts Hollywood-style simplicity with the complex medical, biological, and ethical realities behind real face transplant surgery.

Professor Mustache revisits Charles Darwin’s life after his famous voyage, imagining a more melancholic side where he turns his attention from evolution to earthworms. Blending fact and playful exaggeration, it explores how scientific curiosity can take unexpected and oddly humble directions.

Professor Mustache gets a close-up look at how vaccines work by diving into the human immune system. From white blood cells to invading viruses, he explores the body’s microscopic defenses and how they are trained to fight disease.

Professor Mustache experiments with the idea of a time machine to revisit past moments, including his own vacations. Blending physics concepts with playful speculation, he explores time paradoxes and the limits of what modern science considers possible.

Professor Mustache explores how the human body moves, falls, and gets injured, with a special focus on dramatic football dives that frustrate fans but fascinate scientists. From sports fields to crash tests, he shows how biomechanicians study forces, impacts, and fractures to better understand physical limits.

Professor Mustache tackles a grim but fascinating question from deep-space travel: what happens if an astronaut dies on a long mission to Mars or beyond? From freezing in vacuum to strict international regulations, he explores the practical, legal, and scientific challenges of handling human remains in space.

Professor Mustache looks at how Hollywood misrepresents radiation, often turning it into a magical force that mutates anything from peas to people into monsters or superheroes. He contrasts cinematic fantasy with the far more complex and far less dramatic reality of ionizing radiation.

Professor Mustache explores the surprising neural connections behind intense pain responses, such as the nausea triggered by a blow to the lower abdomen. He breaks down how the nervous system processes injury signals and why certain areas of the body can provoke such extreme, whole-body reactions.

Professor Mustache investigates how insects can help solve crimes by revealing the time of death. At a crime scene, different species arrive in a precise biological sequence, and by studying these “tiny witnesses,” he can reconstruct when the victim died - a surprisingly accurate method of forensic science.

Professor Mustache explores why infants produce so much saliva and why it so often ends up running out of their mouths. Beyond their adorable appearance, babies reveal simple but fascinating physiological reasons behind drooling, from anatomy to early development.

Professor Mustache demystifies airplane turbulence and the fear it often provokes in passengers. While bumps in the air may feel alarming, he explains how aircraft remain stable even in rough conditions and why turbulence is usually far less dangerous than it seems.

Professor Mustache explores how fossilization works and why becoming a museum-worthy fossil is extremely rare and slow. From natural processes to pop culture ideas, even ambitious figures wondering how to become fossils after death learn it’s far from simple.

Professor Mustache explores whether humans could ever breathe underwater, from mythical “men of Atlantis” with gills to sci-fi concepts like liquid breathing seen in films. While such ideas are fascinating, he shows why human biology is fundamentally adapted to air, not water.

Professor Mustache dives into the subtle world of animal communication and behavior, revealing that seemingly passive creatures often display complex signals and hidden abilities. From feline facial cues to overlooked survival strategies, he shows how much expression and information animals convey beyond human perception.

Professor Mustache explores the science and culture of performance enhancement, from professional athletes willing to ingest almost anything to gain an edge to everyday reliance on stimulants like coffee. Through a science-comedy lens, he examines why humans seek chemical shortcuts to productivity and performance.

Professor Mustache explores same-sex behavior in the animal kingdom, showing that it is widespread across many species, from primates to birds and insects. Through a science-comedy lens, he highlights how such behaviors are a natural part of biodiversity, contrasting human cultural debates with biological reality.