Cosmos 1 Flash Website (1440 by 1080p Capture)
1 2022-07-06T15:59:09-04:00 Patrick Timothy Dawson a0b08a5aaf9148250b99cba97af95de3340033d4 105 5 This video of the Cosmos 1 Official Mission Tracking Website was captured using the ModernKit.one Flash Emulator 2022 (https://modernkit.one/flash-emulator/). Here is the Internet Archive's Way Back Machine link from the website is viewable: https://web.archive.org/web/20050825214532/https:/solarsail.org/ plain 2022-07-22T15:57:24-04:00 Patrick Timothy Dawson a0b08a5aaf9148250b99cba97af95de3340033d4This page has tags:
- 1 2022-04-20T16:20:22-04:00 Patrick Timothy Dawson a0b08a5aaf9148250b99cba97af95de3340033d4 Cosmos 1 Patrick Timothy Dawson 4 vistag 2022-07-28T22:14:38-04:00 06/21/2005 Patrick Timothy Dawson a0b08a5aaf9148250b99cba97af95de3340033d4
- 1 2022-04-21T10:49:21-04:00 Patrick Timothy Dawson a0b08a5aaf9148250b99cba97af95de3340033d4 Private Patrick Timothy Dawson 3 vistag 2022-07-22T16:29:16-04:00 Patrick Timothy Dawson a0b08a5aaf9148250b99cba97af95de3340033d4
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2022-04-21T16:36:23-04:00
Ann Druyan's Work After Sagan's Death
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2022-08-15T17:39:01-04:00
12/20/1996 - 04/15/2010
You are now situated in the section of this project devoted to Ann Druyan’s work after Carl Sagan’s death. Despite Sagan’s optimism about his two-year battle with myelodysplastic syndrome, the weakening of his immune system brought on by chemotherapy therapy led to his death from pneumonia on December 20th, 1996. Below is an article announcing his death on CNN’s website.
Sagan’s reflections on his battle with the disease are chronicled in the final chapter of his last book, Billions & Billions: Thoughts on Life and Death at the Brink of the Millennium. The book, which was released in 1997, served as a collection of essays that ended with an epilogue from Druyan. The epilogue described their final moments together and her subsequent grief after his loss. Some of what she said was further recounted in a passage from the 2020 Cosmos: Possible Worlds companion book. I've added the quotation from the pages here.
Carl made me want to be the best human being I could be. Every loving thing that one of us did made the other want to go higher. My writing, which had been precious and agonizing, became liberated from my often crippling self-consciousness. I no longer strived to impress. I only wanted to communicate, to connect with the reader. And from Cosmos: A Personal Voyage onward, my work became a daily love offering to Carl. When we wrote together, I would watch him read my day’s output. Sometimes he would burst out laughing, or gesture as if tipping his hat to me, and my heart would soar. I know he felt the same way about my joy in his work. … We had 20 years until his death made me a permanent exile from that world we discovered together. I was suicidal. But our children were still young and as their mother I had no choice but to live. So I carried what I learned with Carl inside me and have done my best to keep his flame burning. I rededicated my life to continuing the work we had done together (Druyan, 2020, p.354-355).
Less than a year after Sagan’s death, the film adaptation of his novel, Contact, starring Jodie Foster and Matthew McConaughey, was released on July 11th, 1997. The book was originally conceived as a film by Druyan and Sagan in the early 1980s. They co-wrote the screenplay together, and Sagan presented a lecture on the science behind the story to the film crew. The movie’s portrayal of a nonviolent alien encounter founded on realistic scientific concepts divided critics and audiences alike. I have included a two-minute trailer for the film below, which you are welcome to check out.
Druyan’s renewed dedication to Sagan’s legacy began with the founding of Cosmos Studios in 2000. One of the first projects by this new production company was, called OneCosmos. OneCosmos is a multimedia project that attempts to bring science communication into the ‘.com’ era. For this project, Druyan partnered with an eccentric Silicon Valley entrepreneur named, Joe Firmage. In 1990, Joe Firmage left the $2 billion company he co-founded because of concerns about his belief in a government conspiracy to hide UFOs. It’s hard to ascertain how the OneCosmos website worked from what little remains on the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine. However, I was able to find a rather eerie final blog post on March 2nd, 2001, by Firmage after the project folded in less than a year. The post begins with Firmage reminiscing about the first time he entered the OneCosmos office and racially profiled an African American pedestrian from his window. His assessment of the man’s inadequate lifestyle, income, and intelligence is then used as a segue to discuss his short-lived hopes of educating the public. The post concludes by discussing how problems acquiring investors, due in part to Firmage’s controversial beliefs about UFOs, led to the project’s demise. The full post is available for you to read below at your discretion.
After OneCosmos, Cosmos Studios would go on to work on two other major projects. The first was a documentary titled, The Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt. This documentary follows an expedition to discover a new species of dinosaurs by a team of paleontologists. The documentary was narrated by Matthew McConaughey and premiered on October 8th, 2002, through the A&E network. It was also accompanied by the release of a companion book. You can view the first two minutes of the documentary below.
After the Lost Dinosaurs of Egypt was released, the other major project Cosmos Studios worked on was an attempt at private space exploration. They planned to launch their own spacecraft in collaboration with an organization co-founded by Sagan in 1980 called, the Planetary Society. The ship would utilize solar sailing technology to gain propulsion from the rays emitted by the sun. However, it failed to reach orbit after takeoff. This ship was called, Cosmos 1, and a host of multimedia projects were planned around it. One such project was an interactive web page that was created using the now discontinued Adobe Flash platform. The page serves as a comprehensive overview of the project’s objectives. Users could select a topic by clicking on any of the ship’s eight solar sails. There is also an interactive timeline at the bottom to learn about all the scientific advancements over the decades that made the mission possible. The only way to currently view this page is to use a Flash emulator. I have gone through the process of emulating the page and capturing it for you to view below as an unlisted YouTube video. You can pause the video to read the text of any parts you are interested in. What you see in the video is every part of the page that is still viewable. All links to other pages and the interactive timeline at the bottom do not work properly in this version. If you would like to browse the project yourself, you will need to download your own Flash emulator and go to the Internet Archive Wayback Machine link in the video’s description.
Following the loss of the Cosmos 1 spacecraft, Druyan continued to make media appearances throughout the latter part of the 2000s. The bulk of the appearances was spent promoting renditions of her earlier collaborations with Sagan. For example, here’s a minute-long promotional video she did for a Science Channel marathon of Cosmos: A Personal Voyage. This concludes the section of this project devoted to the work of Druyan after Sagan’s death. If you would like to continue to the section on a new Cosmos series with Neil deGrasse Tyson and Seth MacFarlane, you can click the blue button at the bottom of the screen. You can also explore whichever sections you are most interested in by returning to the Launch Point or using the drop-down menu at the top of the screen. -
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2022-01-28T10:20:42-05:00
Who Owns (the) Cosmos? An Epilogue, Prologue, and Intermission
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2022-08-15T17:41:03-04:00
While working on this Scalar Project, I was able to explore over 60 years of space exploration history through educational media. Every event that is covered in each section of this project is highlighted in the timeline at the top of this page. One of the things that has stuck with me throughout this experience is a sentiment expressed by Ann Druyan. In a Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey Q&A session embedded in this project, she argues that the information contained in these documentaries is a “birthright” that everyone should be entitled to. This idea is also crystallized in a quote from the original Cosmos: A Personal Voyage that this project is named after. “The cosmos is within us. We are made of starstuff. We are a way for the universe to know itself”. However, in the mission to distribute the findings of cosmology to the public, I believe science communicators could go much further. In this short essay, I will briefly outline three ways that science communicators can improve their work using examples from the Cosmos series. These recommendations include taking a clear stance on social and political issues, using more everyday objects in place of CGI effects for symbolic representations, and engaging with knowledge privatization in their content. Those three recommendations are by no means comprehensive, but I think that discussing them here will encourage us to think about who really owns the knowledge communicated by the Cosmos series: the scientists, the media companies, or everybody on this planet?
Science Communication Needs to Take a Stance on Social and Political Issues
While working on this project, a relative of mine told me that my grandmother, better known as Nan Dawson, was a staunch critic of space exploration while the Cold War space race was unfolding before her eyes. “What a colossal waste of human technological prowess and energy that could be better directed at something more useful” she likely would have thought. When I began this project, I shared similar views on space exploration to that of my late grandmother. Space exploration disinterested me because I perceived it as having nothing to say about present social and political realities here on Earth. This changed when I watched the 1989 update to Cosmos: A Personal Voyages’ final episode, "Who Speaks for Earth". In this six-minute update, Carl Sagan discusses how the study of the runaway greenhouse effect on Venus has helped us better understand climate change’s effects on Earth. This discussion is further expanded upon in episode 12 of Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, "The World Set Free". As a result, I've become a lot more sympathetic to what other space exploration missions can reveal about our own planet. These projects include the recently opened James Webb Telescope or the fabled mission to visit the neighboring Alpha Centauri star system depicted at the end of the first episode of Cosmos: Possible Worlds. I have included that clip from Cosmos: Possible Worlds here below.
My change of heart while watching these television series suggests that science communication is most engaging when it is relevant to the everyday lives of its audience. Science communication needs to showcase what endeavors such as space exploration can tell us about ourselves. It must demonstrate that by looking outwardly we might be better able to look inwardly. We cannot pretend that science is somehow impartial or separated from prevailing social inequities and struggles of power within society. The above clip from Possible Worlds opens by comparing the exploration of space to life evolving out of Earth’s Ocean, or "birds beginning to fly". Science communicators should not position what they are talking about as apolitical in this kind of way. It is uncalled for to suggest that space exploration is a natural extension of evolution. Exploration needs to be a conscious and concerted effort that strives to yield meaningful results for those living on Earth. Those with authority over space exploration cannot delude themselves of their agency under the guise of their work being somehow natural, preordained, or inevitable. The questions posed by episode 11 of Cosmos: Possible Worlds, named after the book Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors by Sagan and Druyan, ask viewers to think deeply about who they are in relation to other animals. These revelations, if accepted, would have profound consequences on how they live their lives. I would like to see more of this kind of social and politically conscious content from science communicators moving forward.Science Communication Should Include Everyday Symbolic Representations
Another way communicators can make the findings of science more tangible for their audiences is by using everyday symbolic representations in place of CGI effects. For all the fantastical computer-generated spectacles in Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, one of my favorite moments was when Tyson used the analogy of walking a dog to explain the difference between climate and weather.
Instances where everyday events activities and objects are used to explain complex concepts are extremely rare in A Spacetime Odyssey and Possible Worlds with Neil deGrasse Tyson. However, they were more commonplace in Cosmos: A Personal Voyage with Sagan. Take for example this sequence where Sagan describes the challenges of conceiving a 4th dimension of experience using pieces of paper, and other household items.
Something about this stripped-down, bare-bones approach to communicating makes science feel inviting and accessible. It is as though the scientist and the layperson have the same set of tools before them for resolving problems at the edge of our understanding. The remake of this sequence in Cosmos: Possible Worlds loses the sense of invitation in my opinion. Its use of special effects doesn’t convey the sense that this is a conversation that the average person can be a part of in the same way.
Though the original Cosmos: A Personal Voyage does later provide its own visualization of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th dimensions using the ground-breaking special effects of its time, this comparison of these sequences nevertheless illustrates a divergence between the two series. It may be possible that this change in direction for the Cosmos series is indicative of a broader shift in science communication. A shift brought on by growing budgets and advancements in CGI technology. If that is the case, there is room to hope that independent content creators constrained by smaller budgets on video platforms such as YouTube and TikTok could continue this tradition of simplicity. The challenges of creating a long-term knowledge repository on the internet are something that I would now like to discuss in my third recommendation.Science Communication Needs to Engage with Knowledge Privatization
The question of “why put Cosmos on Fox” is brought up in two interviews from the new Cosmos with Neil deGrasse Tyson and Seth MacFarlane sections of this project. In those interviews, both Tyson and Druyan expressed that they weren’t interested in having a show on networks that already had plenty of science-related content. They wanted to reach a commercial network audience that typically didn't engage with science communication documentaries. That is a perfectly reasonable objective. However, the choice to privatize scientific information rather than release it on a publicly accessible platform has consequences for long-term knowledge dissemination. I think that communicators should take the time to teach the difference between public and private information, where to find publicly available science content, and consider releasing their work on publicly available platforms if possible. I will now demonstrate why having information publicly available online is important by discussing what I have organized for this case study of the Cosmos franchise.
The original Cosmos was the shining star of American public broadcasting for over a decade. Releasing your content on a publicly available network means more than just allowing people to access your show for free without advertisements, it places your work within the public commons where anyone can engage with it. Let's use another poster child of public broadcasting as an example. The painting instructor Bob Ross. His show The Joys of Painting, which ran from 1983 to 1994, has gained an immense resurgence in popularity during the internet age. This is due in part to the fact that any content creator online can watch, react to, and paint along with the program. You can also do this with any episode of Cosmos: A Personal Voyage. All the episodes of the show are available on places like the Internet Archive for you to do whatever you like with online. The same cannot be said for Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey or Possible Worlds. This has consequences that are not truly apparent until you start to engage with the content of the shows. For instance, the four videos I used in this essay when discussing my other two points came from different places online. The first Possible Worlds clip is from an individual YouTube account that likely didn't get copyright approval from the Walt Disney Corporation (who now own Fox and National Geographic). The second clip with the dog from A Spacetime Odyssey and the fourth clip of Tyson describing flatland come from the National Geographics official YouTube channel. The third clip from A Personal Voyage is on the Internet Archive.
That first Possible Worlds clip from the individual YouTube account is at very high risk of being taken down. It would only require someone, not even Disney, to file a report against the video. That would replace the videos window on this Scalar page with an error screen, an issue which is extremely common on other projects I have looked at. Meanwhile, the first and third videos which were officially released through National Geographic are at the second highest risk of leaving. There is nothing stopping National Geographic from taking it down or YouTube changing the metadata my project is using to display the video. This is because YouTube is a private platform that isn't concerned with maintaining a stable source of information for long-term knowledge preservation. Lastly, the A Personal Voyage clip from the Internet Archive is the most likely to stand the test of time. It is a publicly available television show that is hosted on a platform committed to keeping its metadata consistent. The copyright holder is not going to file any sort of claim against the video and the archive is unlikely to change its metadata for no apparent reason.
However, the Internet Archive is not a foolproof place to store information either. There is an ongoing lawsuit that is attempting to take down the internet archive's library of books. Every single book I reference in the sections of this project has a link to their Internet Archive listing. The only exception to that is the recent Cosmos: Possible Worlds book which is not available on the platform. If this lawsuit rules in favor of the publishing companies, all those book links will be rendered useless and people viewing this project will be unable to access them legally for free online.
If the content in this project survives getting taken down for the multitude of reasons I have just mentioned, the long-term sustainability of the internet itself is also a concern. In the work of Druyan after the death of Sagan section of this project, I showcase a website that was commissioned by Cosmos Studios in the mid-2000s. The Adobe Flash platform that this website was built on has since been discontinued and the page is rendered inaccessible without an emulator. Instances like this highlight how unarchived private information is at constant risk of being scrubbed off the face of the internet.
Below is a visualization created using Scalar's tagging system of all the media items that I have included in the project. I have divided them into two categories: Public and Private. If you have a computer mouse, you can use its scroll wheel to zoom out and see more of the visualization. You can also click on the tiny box in the bottom left corner to make it full screen. My goal throughout the project was to include as few private items as possible. Publicly available media outnumbers the private 73 to 19 as a result. It’s only a matter of time until some of these media items begin to disappear from the project. The question is which items will be left standing the longest? In some ways, we can think of this project as a test of who is entitled to the scientific information communicated in these documentaries. The scientific community who conducted the research, the media companies publishing it, or the public whose ‘birthright’ it is to access it? ‘Who’ in fact ‘owns the cosmos’ is the question being posed by this experiment.
This concludes my short essay containing three recommendations for the betterment of future science communication endeavors. I hope that these reflections may have prompted you to think about the connection between information ownership, symbolic representation, and sociopolitical relevance when it comes to science dissemination. You can now return to the Launch Point to explore more of the project or simply select a section you are interested in from the dropdown menu at the top of your screen. If you would like to learn more about the academic underpinnings of this project, along with the process I went through to make it, you can also read my 30-page companion paper. You can find it by clicking the blue button at the bottom of your screen.