Showing posts with label Futurama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Futurama. Show all posts

04 January 2008

The math of Futurama

Dr. Sarah's Futurama Math, from Sarah Greenwald. Apparently a new Futurama DVD was just recently released, if you care about that sort of thing. (Personally, I like the show but not enough to go out of my way to watch it.) The DVD includes a lecture on the math of Futurama. I didn't know that a lot of the writers of the show had serious mathematical training, but it doesn't surprise me at all.

Also, simpsonsmath.com from Greenwald and Andrew Nestler. I like this one more, because I can get The Simpsons but not Futurama on my dirt-cheap cable package, so the Simpsons references are more current to me. I linked to this one a long time ago, but you probably weren't reading this blog then, because at the time I had maybe one percent of the readers I have now.

(In a not-all-that-strange coincidence, I'm reading William Poundstone's biography of Carl Sagan. Sagan was born in 1934, and often cited the "real" Futurama, a pavillion at the 1939 New York World's Fair, as one of the first things that pushed him towards being a scientist.)