We get a Stephen Hawking view of Aliens. Makes me think of Carl Sagan on Alien Abduction and Cosmos, who making love to an alien is like making love to a petunia.
We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while listening to a narration on big galaxies and speculating on alien environments.
There is an annoying English narrator, instead of a good California neutral accent. Drives me up the wall as the narrator cannot pronounce evolution.
We are treated to a compare and contrast to Star Wars and Star Trek. Speculation from spontaneous to asteroids. Just add water. Now voyaging to the vastness beyond our solar system.
He prefers to talk about the observatory in Hawaii. I prefer the one in Griffith Park as I know it. And we are off again into space. Space is alive.
We get speculation on the chemistry of life. The average male hold about 6 gallons of water. This implies that the average female cannot old water.
Stephen Hawking likes as a standard abduction story a person lost alone in nowhere at night. I prefer "I Married a Monster from Outer Space" (1958). Again, Carl Sagan preferred petunias.
Looks like we will have to wait and see when they get here.
We start out with a large numbers overview. There are lots of psychedelic graphics to have something to watch while listening to a narration on big galaxies and speculating on alien environments.
There is an annoying English narrator, instead of a good California neutral accent. Drives me up the wall as the narrator cannot pronounce evolution.
We are treated to a compare and contrast to Star Wars and Star Trek. Speculation from spontaneous to asteroids. Just add water. Now voyaging to the vastness beyond our solar system.
He prefers to talk about the observatory in Hawaii. I prefer the one in Griffith Park as I know it. And we are off again into space. Space is alive.
We get speculation on the chemistry of life. The average male hold about 6 gallons of water. This implies that the average female cannot old water.
Stephen Hawking likes as a standard abduction story a person lost alone in nowhere at night. I prefer "I Married a Monster from Outer Space" (1958). Again, Carl Sagan preferred petunias.
Looks like we will have to wait and see when they get here.