What’s in a Name? Everything.

I thought about tweeting this but realised I couldn’t explain it in 140 characters and I hate multiple run-on tweets. So here it is in a blog:

In October of this year I start presenting a new science programme on BBC Radio 4. It will be on every Tuesday at 0900 – a fantastic slot just after the Today Programme. In fact, the hope is that this will become a long-running fixture on R4 with around 30 or so episodes a year, so that the Tuesday 9am slot becomes associated with it. Just think what else is on at that time throughout the week: on Monday it’s Start the Week, Wednesday it’s Midweek, Thursday is In Our Time and Friday it’s Desert Island Discs. Tuesday is the only day without a recognised fixture.

The new controller of Radio 4, Gwyneth Williams, has been absolutely key in getting this programme commissioned – well, she’s the boss, right? Anyway, what is so fantastic is that Gwyn is very keen to get more science on Radio 4 and for science to continue its rapid move into mainstream culture – for instance, The Infinite Monkey Cage, presented by Robin Ince and Brian Cox, recently won a Sony Award.


So, what will the programme be about and why do I need your help?


The first thing to say is that this will not be like In Our Time with Melvyn Bragg, nor will it be like Material World, the excellent science magazine programme presented by Quentin Cooper. We have already recorded two pilots for the new series, differing in format, so that the powers that be in the BBC can decide on the style, format and flavour of the programme. At the moment, a very rough way of explaining what it is about is that it is like Desert Island Discs, without the discs. Each week, I will be talking to a different prominent figure from the world of science (by which I mean ‘science’ in its broadest sense: natural science, maths, engineering, technology, medicine and social science). There wil be Nobel Prize winners, shakers and movers, advisers to governments, writers or just fascinating people who have made a contribution to our understanding of the Universe. So, whereas Kirsty Young might ask her guests on DID something like ‘tell me why you never got on with your father’, I might ask ‘tell me where you were when you first had that Eureka moment that led to your scientific breakthrough’, or some such thing.


So, here’s the thing: we still don’t have a title for the programme!


We have come up with ideas like ‘Latitude‘, ‘The Life Scientific’, ‘This Scientific Life‘, ‘Science Talk‘. I even suggested ‘Curious Minds‘ but it was pointed out to me that that is the strapline for the whole of Radio 4: “Radio for Curious Minds”. Although it would be kinda nice to have the programme title reflect so perfectly the ethos of the network.
So, ideas please: either below in comments or tweet them to me (@jimalkhalili) with the hashtag #radio4sciencetitle


I thank you.

P.S. Apparently I am not allowed to offer a prize if a title is used but I will certainly publicise who came up with it if you are happy for me to do so.


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What I’ll be up to in 2011

Some of the projects in broadcasting I have coming up this year. (Click here to read it).

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What I’ll be up to in 2011

So, 2011 is already shaping up to be another busy and exciting year for yours truly. As I write, I am currently coming to the end of filming on Everything and Nothing, a beautiful 2 x 1 hour documentary about some of the deepest ideas in science. It can be encompassed by the following quote by Blaise Pascal : Man is equally incapable of seeing the nothingness from which he emerges and the infinity in which he is engulfed. Continue reading
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Filming starting on new series

This Thursday, 17th February, I begin filming on my new three-part BBC4 series “The Story of Electricity”.

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Physics and geekiness

Just came across this interview I did at the Science Museum (sandwiched between Robert Winston and Richard Dawkins) during the launch of our Channel 4 series, Genius of Britain, in the summer of 2010.

Click here to view it.

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New blog post: Wot I dun in 2010

Rambling recollections of some of the highlights of my working year. [Click here to read it]

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Wot I dun in 2010

So, I’m sitting on a train back from Waterloo to Portsmouth on a Saturday morning having just been interviewed on Radio 4′s travelogue programme, Excess Baggage. I really should now be reading that PhD thesis in my bag that I am still only a quarter of the way through. I mean it’s not as though it isn’t on a riveting topic in theoretical physics (“Antisymmetrisation of few-body models for light nuclei”) – and if the author sees this blog before the Tuesday viva, rest assured I will have read and digested it before then and promise to ask only ‘nice’ questions during your examination.


Anyway, I will get back to reading the thesis shortly, but this may well be a slightly longer journey than usual due to the snow, so enough time to finish this blog. After all, I have not updated my website since October and feel a little guilty knowing how many millions of people around the planet hang on my every word. You see, that’s the problem; in my blogs I feel I should only be writing about deep and profound subjects from my corner of science, rather than the self-indulgent, self-promoting ‘wot I’ve got up to recently’ stream of consciousness that is the preserve of ‘proper’ celebrities as well as the delusional egos for whom Facbook Status Updates are just not enough. Continue reading

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“Secret Life of Chaos” wins prize

My BBC4 series “The Secret Life of Chaos” has just won ‘Best Film’ award at the International Science Film Festival in Athens. Well done to director/producer Nic Stacey.

You can still catch it on YouTube here.

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