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How to Die Clever

8.0(3)
First Aired:August 23, 2015
Seasons:4 seasons
Episodes:130
Status:Returning Series

Professor Moustache and his assistant Nathanaël go the extra mile to answer your questions scientifically. Do we really eat spiders in our sleep? Can we shrink children just like in a film? And what happens when a murder happens in space? All your queries are resolved by our favourite knowledgeable professor.

Cast

François Morel

François Morel

Professeur Moustache

Jérôme Pauwels

Jérôme Pauwels

Nathanaël

Anna Tessier

Sylvie Caspar

Ferdinand Tahaibaly

Nathalie Fort

Amandine Fredon

Amandine Fredon

Seasons

Fear of Flying

E1Fear of Flying

3m

Aug 23, 2015

Who is scared of flying? Our very Professor Moustache is here to explain to you just how safe it is.

Immunology

E2Immunology

3m

Aug 23, 2015

Guitou the Microbe asks why he is always unfairly expulsed from the human body. Professor Moustache explains that this is due to the army of bouncers that protect it: the immune system.

Honey, I Want to Shrink the Kids

E3Honey, I Want to Shrink the Kids

3m

Aug 23, 2015

Would it theoretically be possible to shrink people, like in the 1989 film, Honey I Shrunk the Kids? Professor Moustache highlights a few problems with this scenario.

When Will Real Lightsabres Be Invented?

E4When Will Real Lightsabres Be Invented?

3m

Aug 23, 2015

Professor Moustache investigates whether we will see exciting lightsabre duels in the future, just like in the hit film Star Wars.

Jumping Off the Golden Gate Bridge

E5Jumping Off the Golden Gate Bridge

3m

Aug 23, 2015

An animated series tackling scientific questions with rigour and a touch of humour. In this episode: Could you survive if you jumped off San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge?

Swallowing Spiders in your Sleep

E6Swallowing Spiders in your Sleep

3m

Jan 11, 2016

Do we really swallow spiders and other insects in our sleep? Professor Moustache tells us the truth about the urban legend.

Could Head Transplants Work?

E7Could Head Transplants Work?

3m

Jan 12, 2016

Grichka Bogdanov thinks his brother is better looking so wants to replace his head with his sibling’s. Could a head transplant actually work? Professor Moustache gives us the answer.

A Lesson in Hobbitology

E8A Lesson in Hobbitology

3m

Jan 13, 2016

It would be really cool to become invisible like Frodo in The Lord of the Rings. Professor Moustache explains if it is theoretically possible.

My Girlfriend Wants to Marry a Pony

E9My Girlfriend Wants to Marry a Pony

3m

Jan 14, 2016

Why do so many girls adore ponies? Professor Moustache offers an unusual perspective: after learning surprising facts about the horse's esophageal sphincter, they might never look at the animal quite the same way again.

Higgs-Boson, What is it?

E10Higgs-Boson, What is it?

3m

Jan 15, 2016

Can you explain the Higgs-Boson particle? Professor Moustache gives it his best shot with refrerence to Lord of the Rings.

When Will Cryogenics Become a Reality?

E11When Will Cryogenics Become a Reality?

3m

Jan 18, 2016

Being cryogenically frozen is a process of preserving a body after death in nitrogen in the hope of bringing it back to life later. Could this ever be a reality? Professor Moustache is on the case.

How Animals See

E12How Animals See

3m

Jan 19, 2016

We know that spiders see differently to us because we’ve all watched the Spider Man films. But what about other animals? Professor Moustache is here to explain animal vision to us.

Why Shooting Guns Isn't Easy

E13Why Shooting Guns Isn't Easy

3m

Jan 20, 2016

Wendy from Texas wants to buy a firearm to protect her chickens. Is this a good idea? Operating guns looks easy in the movies but, as Professor Moustache explains, it’s not the same in real life.

How Does a Nuclear Power Station Work?

E14How Does a Nuclear Power Station Work?

3m

Jan 25, 2016

An animated series tackling scientific questions with rigour and a touch of anarchic humour. In this episode Professor Moustache gives us a chemistry class explaining how nuclear power stations work and how they can go terribly wrong.

Loony Scientists

E15Loony Scientists

3m

Jan 26, 2016

The history of science is not just comprised of great minds making amazing breakthroughs. There were also idiotic scientists doing crazy experiments. Professor Moustache gives us some examples.

Alcohol's Great But Not for Your Health

E16Alcohol's Great But Not for Your Health

3m

Jan 27, 2016

It’s cocktail time and time for a little drink. But why does consuming alcohol feel great after the first drink and not so great the morning after? Professor Moustache is here to explain why we get hangovers.

Can We Build a Lift to Space?

E17Can We Build a Lift to Space?

3m

Feb 1, 2016

Ryan dreams of a lift to take his wife to outer space for their honeymoon. Professor Moustache investigates whether a space lift would theoretically be possible.

Space Travel Like in Alien

E18Space Travel Like in Alien

3m

Feb 2, 2016

In science fiction films astronauts always seem to hibernate for long journeys to far off galaxies. But how could this space hibernation work? Professor Moustache tries through the physics.

The Near Death Experience

E19The Near Death Experience

3m

Feb 3, 2016

Why do dying patients sometimes see light at the end of a long tunnel, and an overwhelming sense of peace? What are the medical reasons for it?

Do Bullets Hurt?

E20Do Bullets Hurt?

3m

Feb 8, 2016

Stop believing that a gunshot wound is like in the movies! Professor Mustache and Nathanaël prove that a real gunshot wound is very different and far more dangerous, not least because bullets are basically filthy.

The Point of Dreams

E21The Point of Dreams

3m

Feb 9, 2016

Did you have a stupid and incoherent dream again last night? It's normal. Prof Mustache takes stock of the latest scientific hypotheses on the subject. Remember, you are not crazy. But your brain is working non-stop.

Are Teenagers Lame?

E22Are Teenagers Lame?

3m

Feb 10, 2016

Slumped on the sofa, speaking slowly... why are teenagers so pathetic, asks one frazzled mother. Professor Mustache has the answer: being a teenager is a physically as well as mentally taxing time in a person's life.

Mean Machines

E23Mean Machines

3m

Feb 15, 2016

When will robots overtake people? Professor Mustache visits robotics specialists to find out.

The Mighty Mite

E24The Mighty Mite

3m

Feb 16, 2016

Does it bother you to know that there are a myriad of dust mites in your bed? Professor Mustache talks us through all the bugs that live, eat, and die on your skin.

Want to Slim Down? Fat Chance

E25Want to Slim Down? Fat Chance

3m

Feb 17, 2016

Do you think that by doing two push-ups a day you will lose weight? As Professor Mustache explains, it's way more complicated than that.

Animal Love Lives

E26Animal Love Lives

3m

Feb 22, 2016

Can your love life be more animalistic? But which animal exactly? Choose carefully... Welcome to another mad escapade with the irreverent Professor Mustache.

Dog Food

E27Dog Food

3m

Feb 23, 2016

Can humans confuse dog food with real food meant for people, such as rillettes? If you're a dog, then no chance. But if you're a human? Unfortunately, there's a chance...

Overworked Researchers

E28Overworked Researchers

3m

Feb 24, 2016

Researchers dedicate their lives to research. Professor Mustache highlights the scientific contributions of some overzealous researchers, some of whom have quite literally sacrificed their skin in the name of science.

Did Dinosaurs Have Feathers?

E29Did Dinosaurs Have Feathers?

3m

Feb 25, 2016

Dinosaurs weren't big naked lizards. Professor Mustache explains that they had feathers. You know, like a cute, huge, killer Easter chick. Cheep cheep!

The Evolution of Human Sexuality

E30The Evolution of Human Sexuality

3m

Feb 26, 2016

Professor Mustache demystifies science through weird, funny ancedotes. Here, he takes a look at human sexuality. Why don't humans make love like bonobos?

A Brain Question

E1A Brain Question

3m

Sep 4, 2017

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.

Placenta Eating

E2Placenta Eating

3m

Sep 6, 2017

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.

Your Friend and Helper

E3Your Friend and Helper

3m

Sep 7, 2017

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.

Gone with the Wind

E4Gone with the Wind

3m

Sep 11, 2017

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.

The Sad Life of Darth Vader

E5The Sad Life of Darth Vader

3m

Sep 13, 2017

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.

Can You Be Digested Alive?

E6Can You Be Digested Alive?

3m

Sep 14, 2017

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.

Crowds - Hell Is Other People

E7Crowds - Hell Is Other People

3m

Sep 18, 2017

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.

Risky Wetlands

E8Risky Wetlands

3m

Sep 20, 2017

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.

Astrophysics - Not the End of the World

E9Astrophysics - Not the End of the World

3m

Sep 21, 2017

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.

Journey to the Center of the Earth

E10Journey to the Center of the Earth

3m

Sep 25, 2017

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.

Depraved Animals

E11Depraved Animals

3m

Sep 27, 2017

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.

Freudian Phases

E12Freudian Phases

3m

Sep 28, 2017

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.

Space Madness

E13Space Madness

3m

Oct 2, 2017

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.

Gandalf’s Case Study

E14Gandalf’s Case Study

3m

Oct 4, 2017

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.

Dermatology - Acne Vulgaris

E15Dermatology - Acne Vulgaris

3m

Oct 5, 2017

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.

Jurassic Love

E16Jurassic Love

3m

Oct 9, 2017

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.

Face Memory

E17Face Memory

3m

Oct 11, 2017

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.

Baumgartner’s Supersonic Jump

E18Baumgartner’s Supersonic Jump

3m

Oct 12, 2017

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.

Parabolic Flight

E19Parabolic Flight

3m

Oct 16, 2017

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.

Medical Dramas Under the Microscope

E20Medical Dramas Under the Microscope

3m

Oct 18, 2017

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.

Urinals and Men

E21Urinals and Men

3m

Oct 19, 2017

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.

Teleportation

E22Teleportation

3m

Oct 23, 2017

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.

The Chemistry of Looking Good

E23The Chemistry of Looking Good

3m

Oct 25, 2017

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.

Unlucky Scientists

E24Unlucky Scientists

3m

Oct 26, 2017

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.

Face Transplants

E25Face Transplants

3m

Oct 30, 2017

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.

Darwin’s Wormy Turn

E26Darwin’s Wormy Turn

3m

Nov 1, 2017

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.

Vaccine Science

E27Vaccine Science

3m

Nov 2, 2017

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.

Time Travel

E28Time Travel

3m

Nov 6, 2017

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.

Biomechanics

E29Biomechanics

3m

Nov 8, 2017

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.

Space Cadavers

E30Space Cadavers

3m

Nov 9, 2017

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.

Radiation at the Movies

E31Radiation at the Movies

3m

Nov 12, 2017

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.

Celiac Plexus Spotlight

E32Celiac Plexus Spotlight

3m

Nov 14, 2017

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.

Forensic Entomology

E33Forensic Entomology

3m

Nov 15, 2017

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.

Baby Drool

E34Baby Drool

3m

Nov 20, 2017

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.

Turbulence

E35Turbulence

3m

Nov 22, 2017

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.

Fossil Dreams

E36Fossil Dreams

3m

Nov 23, 2017

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.

Breathing Underwater

E37Breathing Underwater

3m

Nov 27, 2017

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.

Animal Expressions

E38Animal Expressions

3m

Nov 29, 2017

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.

Doped Up

E39Doped Up

3m

Nov 30, 2017

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.

Animal Same-Sex Behavior

E40Animal Same-Sex Behavior

3m1.0

Dec 4, 2017

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.

Corn on Mars?

E1Corn on Mars?

3m

Mar 2, 2020

Professor Mustache takes a science-comedy look at the scientific plausibility of space colonization stories, especially the idea of growing crops like corn on Mars. He breaks down the real challenges of extraterrestrial agriculture, from radiation and soil chemistry to the limits of current space missions.

Ancient Anatomy

E2Ancient Anatomy

3m

Mar 4, 2020

Professor Mustache explores how early thinkers like Aristotle tried to understand human anatomy with limited knowledge. In the absence of “Doctor Google,” ancient theories often mixed apples with pears and chickens with women, blending observation, speculation, and imagination - revealing both ingenuity and misconceptions in early medical thought.

Narcissistic Personality

E3Narcissistic Personality

3m

Mar 5, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the psychiatric meaning behind the often casually used label “narcissistic pervert.” Moving beyond everyday language, he explains how such terms are understood in clinical psychology and why popular usage often differs from medical definitions of personality disorders and behavior.

The Future According to Tom Cruise

E4The Future According to Tom Cruise

3m

Mar 9, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the gap between science fiction and real technological progress, using films like Minority Report as a starting point. While Hollywood often predicts futuristic innovations, he shows why many of these ideas remain science fiction rather than engineering reality.

Enteric Neurons

E5Enteric Neurons

3m

Mar 11, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the surprising complexity of the digestive system, which contains a vast network of neurons sometimes compared to a small animal brain. He explains how this “second brain” in the gut works and why such comparisons, while striking, have important scientific limits.

Fruit Fly Blues

E6Fruit Fly Blues

3m

Mar 6, 2020

Professor Mustache takes a science-comedy look at the bizarre reproductive biology of the fruit fly Drosophila, which produces a single sperm cell that can be many times longer than its own body. He explores how extreme evolutionary strategies can lead to surprising and counterintuitive biological adaptations.

Santa Physics

E7Santa Physics

3m

Mar 12, 2020

Professor Mustache takes a science-comedy look at the legendary logistics of Santa Claus, who would have to travel unimaginable distances at extreme speeds to deliver gifts worldwide in a single night. He breaks down why this raises serious questions of physics, time, and feasibility.

Female Desire

E8Female Desire

3m

Mar 13, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the science behind female arousal, questioning whether physical and mental stimulation can occur independently. In this science-comedy episode, he examines how researchers study desire, challenging common misconceptions with insights from psychology and physiology.

28 Days Later (Body Edition)

E928 Days Later (Body Edition)

3m

Mar 16, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the biological purpose and mechanisms behind the menstrual cycle, asking why humans regularly shed blood each month. In this science-comedy episode, he breaks down reproductive physiology and challenges common misunderstandings about what nature is doing - and why.

Erection Mechanics

E10Erection Mechanics

3m

Mar 18, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the physiology of erection, revealing how the human body uses surprisingly sophisticated hydraulic-like mechanisms. In this science-comedy episode, he breaks down the biological processes behind it, showing that nature’s “engineering” can be as inventive as any human invention.

Raven Messengers

E11Raven Messengers

3m

Mar 19, 2020

Professor Mustache explores why fictional worlds like Game of Thrones use ravens as message carriers instead of more familiar birds like pigeons. In this science-comedy episode, he looks at real animal behavior, training feasibility, and why certain species are more practical than others for long-distance message delivery.

The Ig Nobel Prizes

E12The Ig Nobel Prizes

3m

Mar 20, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the quirky world of the Ig Nobel awards, which celebrate real scientific research that first makes people laugh and then think. In this science-comedy episode, he highlights how seemingly absurd studies can still reveal surprising insights about human curiosity and scientific creativity.

No Exit: The Parachute Problem

E13No Exit: The Parachute Problem

3m

Mar 23, 2020

Professor Mustache explores why commercial airliners equip passengers with life vests rather than parachutes. In this science-comedy episode, he breaks down the practical, physical, and safety-related reasons that make parachutes unsuitable for mass passenger use during flight emergencies.

Busy Bees and Lazy Myths

E14Busy Bees and Lazy Myths

3m

Mar 25, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the popular belief that bees and ants are tireless workers compared to humans. In this science-comedy episode, he examines insect societies and labor division, questioning how “hard work” really functions in nature and whether these stereotypes hold up under scientific scrutiny.

Passive Aggression

E15Passive Aggression

3m

Mar 26, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the origins and meaning of the term “passive-aggressive,” tracing it back to its historical use during World War II to describe certain military behaviors. In this science-comedy episode, he unpacks how the concept evolved into everyday language for describing indirect or covert hostility.

Anatomy’s Best-Kept Secret

E16Anatomy’s Best-Kept Secret

3m

Mar 27, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the anatomy and biology of the clitoris, a highly sensitive and complex organ that has long been underrepresented in scientific discussion. In this science-comedy episode, he sheds light on its structure, function, and the historical gaps in medical understanding.

Mad Geniuses

E17Mad Geniuses

3m

Mar 30, 2020

Professor Mustache takes a science-comedy look at famous scholars like Pythagoras and Newton, often remembered as wise and rational figures. In reality, many historical thinkers had eccentric, strange, or even bizarre ideas alongside their groundbreaking discoveries.

Iron Man Physiology

E18Iron Man Physiology

3m

Apr 1, 2020

Professor Mustache explores whether a human could realistically survive inside a high-tech armored suit like Iron Man’s. In this science-comedy episode, he breaks down the extreme forces, acceleration, and physiological limits that would turn superhero flight into a serious biological challenge.

Dino Cloning

E19Dino Cloning

3m

Apr 2, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the idea of bringing dinosaurs back to life, inspired by Jurassic Park. In this science-comedy episode, he examines the limits of ancient DNA preservation, questioning whether genetic material trapped in amber for millions of years could ever be used for cloning extinct species.

Photogenic Mystery

E20Photogenic Mystery

3m

Apr 3, 2020

Professor Mustache explores why some people appear more flattering in photos than others. In this science-comedy episode, he examines how perception, optics, and brain processing interact to shape our sense of “photogenic” appearance, questioning whether the issue lies in human vision or photographic technology.

Medical TV Reality Check

E21Medical TV Reality Check

3m

Apr 6, 2020

Professor Mustache compares the idealized world of hospital dramas with real medical practice. In this science-comedy episode, he examines how series like Grey’s Anatomy or House dramatize medicine, and what aspects of real clinical work are accurately portrayed - and what is pure fiction.

CRISPR Gene Editing

E22CRISPR Gene Editing

3m

Apr 8, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the revolutionary CRISPR-Cas9 technology, a powerful tool that allows precise editing of DNA. In this science-comedy episode, he explains how genetic “scissors” work across living cells and organisms, and why altering genes raises both exciting possibilities and complex biological and ethical questions.

Autopilot Systems

E23Autopilot Systems

3m

Apr 9, 2020

Professor Mustache explores how automation and autopilot technology work in aviation and beyond. In this science-comedy episode, he examines the limits of replacing human control with machines, from aircraft to cars, and questions how far a fully automated world can realistically go.

The Strange Joy of Schadenfreude

E24The Strange Joy of Schadenfreude

3m

Apr 22, 2020

Professor Mustache explores why people sometimes feel pleasure at the misfortune of others. In this science-comedy episode, he examines the neural and psychological mechanisms behind this emotion, showing that it is not simply “meanness,” but a complex and deeply human brain response.

Punk Scientists

E25Punk Scientists

3m

Apr 10, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the risky side of scientific discovery, where researchers sometimes experimented on themselves in the name of progress. In this science-comedy episode, he highlights how far some scientists went - occasionally to the point of serious harm or even death - in their pursuit of knowledge.

Gene Transfer

E26Gene Transfer

3m

Apr 13, 2020

Professor Mustache explores how genetic material can be passed or manipulated in nature, contrasting Hollywood-style ideas of gene swapping with real biological mechanisms. In this science-comedy episode, he explains how gene transfer actually works across species and why nature’s methods are both more subtle and more complex than fiction suggests.

Atomic Goat

E27Atomic Goat

3m

Apr 15, 2020

Professor Mustache explores historical experiments investigating the effects of nuclear explosions on animals, including attempts to understand both physical and behavioral impacts. In this science-comedy episode, he reflects on Cold War-era research practices and the strange lengths taken to study the consequences of atomic weapons.

Pseudoscience

E28Pseudoscience

3m

Apr 16, 2020

Professor Mustache explores various disciplines that imitate scientific methods without being based on solid evidence. In this science-comedy episode, he shows how such ideas can look convincing on the surface while lacking real scientific foundation, and why critical thinking is essential to tell them apart.

Scientific Congress

E29Scientific Congress

3m

Apr 17, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the world of academic conferences, where researchers gather to present findings and exchange ideas. In this science-comedy episode, he takes a humorous look at the rituals, networking, and professional dynamics that shape scientific meetings behind the scenes.

The Blob

E30The Blob

3m

Apr 20, 2020

Professor Mustache explores the extraordinary organism known as the “blob,” a resilient, brainless life form with surprising abilities such as regeneration and problem-solving-like behavior. In this science-comedy episode, he shows how this unusual creature challenges our definitions of intelligence, survival, and biological complexity.

The Size is the Limit

E1The Size is the Limit

4m

Jun 2, 2025

Could Godzilla and King Kong, who are bigger than any dinosaur, exist in real life and destroy the world? For Professor Moustache, there is no such thing as a dumb question

Don’t Sweat It!

E2Don’t Sweat It!

4m

Jun 3, 2025

Why do humans sweat so much and smell so bad, when I smell so good? For Professor Moustache, there is no such thing as a dumb question.

Baby Boomers

E3Baby Boomers

4m

Jun 4, 2025

What does “OK boomer” mean? And what’s a boomer anyway? At full gallop on his time pony, Professor Moustache prances into the past to look at how generations are formed and why they never seem to understand one another. It seems psychological biases and the lazy mechanisms of our brains are to blame.

Coronaviruses

E4Coronaviruses

4m

Jun 5, 2025

Oh Covid. We were fed up with it at the time and we’ve been confused ever since. Who was to blame again, bats or pangolins? How does a virus travel from animals to humans? Professor Moustache teaches us about the world of coronaviruses. That’s right, Covid-19 is not the only one.

Babyface

E5Babyface

4m

Jun 6, 2025

Sometimes when you see a newborn baby, you don’t really know what to say. It doesn’t really look like its parents; it looks more like a crumpled creature. You may think you’re heartless for finding it a little ugly, but Professor Moustache and science are here to explain why! Don’t panic, it’ll get better with time.

Anger Games

E6Anger Games

4m

Jun 9, 2025

We tend to look at whether young people with violent behaviour play video games. But what does the research say? Professor Moustache delves into some pretty dodgy psychological experiments to find out more about the science behind this association.

Homo Augmentus

E7Homo Augmentus

4m

Jun 10, 2025

Captain Hook had a hook as a hand. Darth Vader had bionic limbs. Films make it look easy to replace severed limbs. But is it that easy in real life? What is scientifically possible when it comes to prosthetics? Professor Moustache takes a look at different innovations.

Furry Insects

E8Furry Insects

4m

Jun 11, 2025

There are researchers who have not only counted the 3 million tiny hairs found on a moth, but who have also studied how often they clean their fur. If it were up to Nathanaël, we’d put an end to pointless studies like these. Luckily Professor Moustache is there to prove him wrong and show him how the scientists behind this researched ended up helping NASA.

Skynet, the Artificial Unintelligence

E9Skynet, the Artificial Unintelligence

4m

Jun 12, 2025

If robots in the future developed a conscience, would they want to kill humankind like in “The Terminator”? Let’s imagine for a minute that it was their ultimate goal. Professor Moustache wonders if Skynet could have come up with smarter ways of killing us off, rather than just shooting everyone like in the film.

Conscious AI

E10Conscious AI

4m

Jun 13, 2025

Everyone is afraid of the singularity – that stage when machines become conscious and inevitably decide to kill us all. Professor Moustache explains that, in order for that to happen, machines would need to develop common sense. And that’s no mean feat when you’re trapped in a robotic body.

Cry Baby Cry

E11Cry Baby Cry

4m

Jun 16, 2025

Screaming babies anywhere can be unbearable. Especially on trains. Professor Moustache explains that it’s normal to sometimes want to chuck them out the window when they won’t stop crying. Researchers have found that our brains are wired to go nuts when we hear a baby cry. In fact, it’s essential for their survival.

It’s Not Me, It’s Evolution

E12It’s Not Me, It’s Evolution

4m

Jun 17, 2025

Why did Mother Nature make babies who won’t let their parents get any sleep? Or who refuse to eat mum’s delicious mashed potatoes? In this episode, a baby goes on trial with evolutionary ethologists at its defense, Professor Moustache as the judge and its parents at their wit’s end.

Of Machine and Men

E13Of Machine and Men

4m

Jun 18, 2025

Why did we feel sorry when that man kicked the cute dog robot? But then we feel nothing when we see a broken blender? Researchers have studied this bizarre human weakness; our tendency to see a soul where there is none. Be careful, you’ll never look at your hoover the same way after watching this episode.

Plants with Feelings

E14Plants with Feelings

4m

Jun 19, 2025

While mowing the lawn, do you ever think about whether grass or flowers can get hurt when they’re cut? What about whether plants talk to insects? Can Professor Moustache mow the lawn without feeling guilty? Don’t let this be an excuse to miss out on your five a day, but science has shown that the plant kingdom communicates – a lot.

DIY Poop Survival

E15DIY Poop Survival

4m

Jun 20, 2025

Various Inuit legends say that in sub-zero temperatures, it’s possible to carve a tool out of a frozen turd. Without any scatological judgment, brave archeologists decided to test it for themselves and fact-check the legend. Professor Moustache explains.

The Superpower of Spit

E16The Superpower of Spit

4m

Jun 23, 2025

Is it a good idea to use your saliva to clean things? Like a dummy that fell on the floor, or a stain on a table? How about washing Timothée Chalamet’s sandy face in Dune? Scientifically speaking, given the composition of saliva, it’s actually not such a bad idea.

In Your Face, Santa!

E17In Your Face, Santa!

4m

Jun 24, 2025

Thankfully there are researchers who ask fundamental questions. Like John Trinkaus, a US professor who wanted to find out whether children really enjoyed having their photo taken with Father Christmas in a local supermarket. Turns out, his methodology was 99 percent statistics and 1 percent psychology.

Twenty Thousand Eyes Under the Sea

E18Twenty Thousand Eyes Under the Sea

4m

Jun 25, 2025

People are afraid of taking airplanes because they fly high and can fall around 11 kilometres. But why aren’t they just as scared on a cruise ship? The boat could also sink 11 kilometres deep. Professor Moustache looks at the science of the deep sea to get a better understanding of his underwater phobia. There is no guarantee he’ll cure it, though.

Space and Furious

E19Space and Furious

4m

Jun 26, 2025

If we’re going to live on the Moon, can we bring our good old Fiat 500 with us? Unfortunately, my friends, terrestrial cars are not cut out for lunar weather conditions. We would need to build entirely new automobiles fit for purpose. Luckily, NASA already did.

Selfish Humans

E20Selfish Humans

4m

Jun 27, 2025

Professor Moustache loves John Trinkaus because he tackled so many everyday mysteries with scientific research. For example, what is the percentage of people who actually respect the ten item limit in the supermarket express lane? Or stop their cars at stop signs? Trinkaus, the ultimate pessimist when it comes to human behaviour, had the answers.

Crimes Without Gravity

E21Crimes Without Gravity

4m

Jun 30, 2025

Every country has its laws. But what happens when a crime isn’t committed on Earth? What if an astronaut kills a colleague on the International Space Station? And what about on the Moon or Mars? Professor Moustache takes us on an interstellar cruise to explain a few useful treaties and helps us answer these questions.

An Atomic Blast in Paris

E22An Atomic Blast in Paris

4m

Jul 1, 2025

What would happen if an atomic bomb were dropped on Paris? Would those outside the ring highway that surrounds the city make it? According to Professor Moustache, they would, but only if they follow strict instructions given by two Greek researchers on how to survive a blast. Watch out, you’ll have to move quickly…

Happy as a Tardigrade

E23Happy as a Tardigrade

4m

Jul 2, 2025

The tardigrade, an eight-legged micro animal that looks like a teddy bear, can be found everywhere. And Professor Moustache loves them. It may be cute and microscopic, but the tardigrade is extremely resistant! It also only grows at a rate of 3cm per month and uses snails as means of transport.

Mushroom Zombies

E24Mushroom Zombies

4m

Jul 3, 2025

In the TV show “The Last of Us”, people become zombies after a fungus takes over their brains, which was inspired by something that happens in real life. There is a fungus that does exactly that to ants. But don’t worry, Professor Moustache is here to reassure you that the human brain is a tad more complicated than that of an insect.

Monkey Talk

E25Monkey Talk

4m

Jul 4, 2025

If only it were possible for our pets to speak to us and tell us how much they love us… Well, it turns out that scientists have already tried to get monkeys to speak to us using words, signs and symbols. One researcher even managed to recreate the ‘voice’ of a chimpanzee! But would animals actually tell us they love us? Professor Moustache certainly doesn’t think so.

Researchers with Ants in Their Pants

E26Researchers with Ants in Their Pants

4m

Jul 7, 2025

Imagine you’re a tiny ant in a jungle and you find a massive cookie chunk just three metres from your anthill. You rush to grab a piece of the cookie, but how will you find your way back to your anthill? You’ve walked so many zigzags and your eyesight isn’t exactly the sharpest. Professor Moustache dives into the world of myrmecology, the study of ants, to find an answer.

Tiny-Arms-Osaurus Rex

E27Tiny-Arms-Osaurus Rex

4m

Jul 8, 2025

Even though it is a predatory killing machine in many ways, the poor T-Rex has also been a laughing stock because of the size of its arms. Scientists have long wondered why they are so tiny, so Professor Moustache has decided to take a look at their hypotheses.

E28Doggy Supernose

4m

Jul 9, 2025

Professor Moustache finds it a little too easy to make fun of dogs he sees online who would do anything for a biscuit. But if humans were to develop the same sense of smell as dogs, we would quickly realise that actually, humans are totally nose-blind. Maybe we are the ones who should be made fun of?

Anatomy of a Football Fall

E29Anatomy of a Football Fall

4m

Jul 10, 2025

If there is one sport that science has studied in detail, it’s football. We thought we knew everything there was to know about football players, but then female players came along! And now, researchers are finding surprising differences between the two genders – especially when it comes to behaviour.

How Can I Grow My Own Meat?

E30How Can I Grow My Own Meat?

4m

Jul 11, 2025

It is possible to grow meat in a lab without killing cows, like growing a plant in a pot. Now, Nathanaël dreams of harvesting his steaks along his window sill. But turns out growing meat is more complicated than we think. Who’s here to crush Nathanaël’s dreams? Professor Moustache, of course!

Storyline

Professor Moustache and his assistant Nathanaël go the extra mile to answer your questions scientifically. Do we really eat spiders in our sleep? Can we shrink children just like in a film? And what happens when a murder happens in space? All your queries are resolved by our favourite knowledgeable professor.

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