• An image of the planet Jupiter in alternating blue and pink colors against a black backdrop.

    Episode 62: The (Trans) Body in Space

    In this the first episode of Trans Medicine March – the one month of the year where this podcast is specifically and explicitly about being trans, and specifically aspects of medical transition – we begin with a consideration of how time in space affects the human body in general, and how being someone who has medically transitioned might interact with that. Also NASA: Send Tessa to space already. 

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  • An illustration of a female and male fly of the species Drosophila melanogaster separated by an emoticon heart, as if to suggest "female D. melanogaster loves male D. melanogaster".

    Episode 61: Genetic Control of Courtship Behaviors in Flies and Roaches (Happy Belated Valentine’s Day)

    In this episode which is definitely right on time for Valentine’s Day, Charles tells Tessa about a paper he read on the fruitless gene (originally identified in Drosophila melanogaster, the “laboratory fruit fly”) and its possible control over the courtship behavior in Blattella germanica, the “German cockroach,” another classic model organism. Tangents of variable length include how crucial genitals are to entomology, the placement of cockroaches in the insect family tree, and how cockroaches never get their due respect. 

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  • Episode 60: Jackson Reyna on Chemistry, Fire, and the Chemistry of Fire

    On this episode we’re joined by PhD student Jackson Reyna to talk about his love of chemistry and specifically fire. Some topics include organometallics, practical applications of chemical research, what is fire, and whether and under what conditions we’d all be willing to participate in experimental medicine.

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  • Episode 59: Dead Dinosaurs, Cockroach Sperm, and Monkey Testicles – A Science Sampler Platter for the New Year

    In this episode, the two of us share several different interesting topics we’ve read about recently, including the timing of the meteor that killed the dinosaurs, the first fossil cockroach found with its sperm, the use of ultrasound as contraception for mammals, extremely dangerous theoretical rockets, and unethical animal experimentation in the American mid-twentieth-century. Warning for animal abuse (or at least dubiously ethical animal experimentation). 

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  • Photograph of a grylloblattid - an orange-y insect that looks kind of like a cricket - on a sheet of ice.

    Episode 58: Where Do Insects Go When It’s Cold?

    In this episode, we address what happens to all the insects when it’s cold out – where do they go? how do they survive? how do you survive freezing temperatures? Including the elusive grylloblattids, freeze tolerant cockroaches, Alaskan stoneflies, and even some butterflies. 

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Astrobiology (Tessa's focus)

Entomology (Charles's focus)

An illustration of a female and male fly of the species Drosophila melanogaster separated by an emoticon heart, as if to suggest "female D. melanogaster loves male D. melanogaster".

Episode 61: Genetic Control of Courtship Behaviors in Flies and Roaches (Happy Belated Valentine’s Day)

In this episode which is definitely right on time for Valentine’s Day, Charles tells Tessa about a paper he read on the fruitless gene (originally identified in Drosophila melanogaster, the “laboratory fruit fly”) and its possible control over the courtship behavior in Blattella germanica, the “German cockroach,” another classic model organism. Tangents of variable length include how crucial genitals are to entomology, the placement of cockroaches in the insect family tree, and how cockroaches never get their due respect. 

This Is Secretly a Podcast About Star Trek

Screencap from TNG episode 'The Neutral Zone' showing two people in frozen capsules.

Episode 55: “The Neutral Zone” (TNG 1×26) and the Past and Future of Cryonics

In this episode we use the TNG episode “The Neutral Zone,” in which three people from the 20th century are revived from cryopreservation to find themselves on the Enterprise 300 years later, to talk about cryonics. We touch on its history, whether it actually works (no), whether it could work (probably not), whether we’d do it (no way), and, just for fun, a little on the history and philosophy of death as a concept.