We have been watching old Eureka episodes about one show per night 
during dinner at Anne's place.  The science on the show is really bad 
mumbo-jumbo, but the writers were good at picking up on the big keywords
 that were happening in science at the time -- wormholes, strangelets, 
quantum computing, AI memes, you name it -- and making them part of the 
story.
CUT TO
Back at my place, I usually watch a few 
YouTube videos before bed.  A huge variety of topics, from short 
biographies, science bits, math puzzles, geography and history, 
Minecraft updates, D&D lore, board gaming, with subscriptions to 
Mathologer, ibxtoycat, Nerdist, Aphmau, Professor of Rock, Today I Found Out, and many others.  Let's just 
say that my main feed is weird.  And if I see something I think Anne 
would like, I make a mental note of it, and we go to my History page and
 find it a few nights later.  Over the weekend, I saw this video about
 Henrietta Lacks, who was not directly involved in science history, but 
she made a huge contribution to medical research starting in the 1960s. 
 The name was vaguely familiar so I tuned in to see where I knew it 
from.  Oh, right, THAT story.  Fascinating stuff.  I won't spoil it for 
you, since Thoughty2 does such a good job revealing and expanding on the
 story.  Let's just say there is a cell line called HeLa named after 
her, and it is still going strong today.   Maybe a little too strong.
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When
 I scroll through my YouTube history of those strange diversions, I 
usually have to give Anne a little pitch about why I think she would 
find a particular video interesting, and this time I said it sounded 
like something out of a Eureka episode.
Last night on Eureka 
(Season 5 episode 10, about 6 minutes into it), while they were trying 
to bring Holly back to life (again), Henry said, "Just like Henrietta 
Lacks and the HeLa cell line."  Just like that, out of the blue.  A 
super obscure medical factoid gets mentioned the day after Anne first 
heard about it.  It didn't really fit what was actually going on in the 
show, because it's not a science show.  As I mentioned, they tend to 
throw out taglines to science stories, and this was a whopper.  But the 
show is fun to watch because of the great cast.  And sometimes, as 
thousands of writers try to boil down the thousands of directions of 
science into digestible bits, there is a convergence of waves in our 
Unlikely Times.
On a personal note, will they please stop killing Felicia Day??  Come on already.  ;-)
Wednesday, March 16, 2022
Again, Henrietta Lacks
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