Watch 'Horizon' 2009-2010 Online

powered by JustWatch yellow logo
US
UK
CA
AU
TR
FR
DE
IT
NL
IN

2009-2010 Episodes

1. Do I Drink Too Much?

October 13th, 20091 hr

Alcohol is by far the most widely used drug - and a dangerous one at that. So why are so many of us drinking over the recommended limits? Why does alcohol have such a powerful grip on us? How much of our relationship with this drug is written in our genes? What are the real dangers of our children drinking too young? Addiction expert John Marsden, who likes a drink, makes a professional and personal exploration of our relationship with alcohol. He undergoes physical and neurological examinations to determine its impact, and finds out why some people will find it much harder than others to resist alcohol. Even at the age of 14 there may be a way of determining which healthy children will turn into addicts. John experiments with a designer drug being developed that hopes to replicate all the benefits of alcohol without the dangers. Could this drug replace alcohol in the future?

2. The Secret You

October 20th, 20091 hr

With the help of a hammer-wielding scientist, Jennifer Aniston and a general anaesthetic, Professor Marcus du Sautoy goes in search of answers to one of science's greatest mysteries: how do we know who we are? While the thoughts that make us feel as though we know ourselves are easy to experience, they are notoriously difficult to explain. So, in order to find out where they come from, Marcus subjects himself to a series of probing experiments. He learns at what age our self-awareness emerges and whether other species share this trait. Next, he has his mind scrambled by a cutting-edge experiment in anaesthesia. Having survived that ordeal, Marcus is given an out-of-body experience in a bid to locate his true self. And in Hollywood, he learns how celebrities are helping scientists understand the microscopic activities of our brain. Finally, he takes part in a mind-reading experiment that both helps explain and radically alters his understanding of who he is.

3. Fix Me

October 27th, 20091 hr

Horizon follows the emotional journey of three young people with currently untreatable conditions to see if, within their lifetime, they can be cured. Sophie Morgan is determined not to spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair. She is tempted by the online claims of unregulated private clinics promising a cure using stem cells. Anthony Bath was just 20 when his right leg was amputated after a botched pinning procedure. In Finland, Anthony witnesses one of the world's first operations in which stem cells are used to replace bone. Dean Third was diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy, a condition in which his damaged heart could cause his death at any moment. Desperate for a cure, he visits Dr Anthony Mathur from University College London to witness the world's first trial using stem cells taken from bone marrow.

4. Who's Afraid of a Big Black Hole?

November 3rd, 20091 hr

Black holes are one of the most destructive forces in the universe, capable of tearing a planet apart and swallowing an entire star. Yet scientists now believe they could hold the key to answering the ultimate question - what was there before the Big Bang? The trouble is that researching them is next to impossible. Black holes are by definition invisible and there's no scientific theory able to explain them. Despite these obvious obstacles, Horizon meets the astronomers attempting to image a black hole for the very first time and the theoretical physicists getting ever closer to unlocking their mysteries. It's a story that takes us into the heart of a black hole and to the very edge of what we think we know about the universe.

5. Why Do We Talk?

November 10th, 20091 hr

Talking is something that is unique to humans, yet it still remains a mystery. Horizon meets the scientists beginning to unlock the secrets of speech - including a father who is filming every second of his son's first three years in order to discover how we learn to talk, the autistic savant who can speak more than 20 languages, and the first scientist to identify a gene that makes speech possible.

6. How Long is a Piece of String?

November 17th, 20091 hr

Alan Davies attempts to answer the proverbial question: how long is a piece of string? But what appears to be a simple task soon turns into a mind-bending voyage of discovery where nothing is as it seems.

90

7. The Secret Life of the Dog

January 6th, 20101 hr

We have an extraordinary relationship with dogs - closer than with any other animal on the planet. But what makes the bond between us so special? Research into dogs is gaining momentum, and scientists are investigating them like never before. From the latest fossil evidence, to the sequencing of the canine genome, to cognitive experiments, dogs are fast turning into the new chimps as a window into understanding ourselves. Where does this relationship come from? In Siberia, a unique breeding experiment reveals the astonishing secret of how dogs evolved from wolves. Swedish scientists demonstrate how the human/dog bond is controlled by a powerful hormone also responsible for bonding mothers to their babies. Why are dogs so good at reading our emotions? Horizon meets Betsy, the world's most intelligent dog, and compares her incredible abilities to those of children. Man's best friend has recently gone one step further - helping us identify genes responsible for causing human diseases.

8. Why Do Viruses Kill?

January 13th, 20101 hr

Just months ago, the world stood in fear of an emerging new disease that threatened to kill millions. A new flu variant H1N1 had arrived. In the UK alone, 65,000 deaths were predicted. Yet to date, these dire warnings have not materialised. If this latest pandemic has taught anything, it is just how little is understood about the invisible world of viruses. But that has not stopped scientists trying. Horizon follows the leading researchers from across the world, who are attempting to unravel the many secrets of viruses to understand when and why they kill.

9. Pill Poppers

January 20th, 20101 hr

Over a person's lifetime they are likely to be prescribed more than 14,000 pills. Antibiotics, cholesterol lowering tablets, anti-depressants, painkillers, even tablets to extend youth and improve performance in bed. These drugs perform minor miracles day after day, but how much is really known about them? Drug discovery often owes as much to serendipity as to science, and that means much is learnt about how medicines work, or even what they do, when they're taken. By investigating some of the most popular pills people pop, Horizon asks, how much can they be trusted to do what they are supposed to?

10. Don't Grow Old

February 3rd, 20101 hr

For centuries scientists have been attempting to come up with an elixir of youth. Now remarkable discoveries are suggesting that ageing is something flexible that can ultimately be manipulated. Horizon meets the scientists who are attempting to piece together why we age and more vitally for all of us, what we can do to prevent it. But which theory will prevail? Does the 95-year-old woman who smokes two packets of cigarettes a day hold the clue? Do blueberries really delay signs of ageing or is it more a question of attitude? Does the real key to controlling how we age lie with a five-year-old boy with an extraordinary ageing disease or with a self-experimenting Harvard professor? Could one of these breakthroughs really see our lives extend past 120 years?

90

11. To Infinity and Beyond

February 10th, 20101 hr

By our third year, most of us will have learned to count. Once we know how, it seems as if there would be nothing to stop us counting forever. But, while infinity might seem like an perfectly innocent idea, keep counting and you enter a paradoxical world where nothing is as it seems. Mathematicians have discovered there are infinitely many infinities, each one infinitely bigger than the last. And if the universe goes on forever, the consequences are even more bizarre. In an infinite universe, there are infinitely many copies of the Earth and infinitely many copies of you. Older than time, bigger than the universe and stranger than fiction. This is the story of infinity.

12. What Makes a Genius?

February 17th, 20101 hr

Could you have come up with Einstein's theory of relativity? If not - why not? This is what Marcus du Sautoy, professor of mathematics, wants to explore. Marcus readily admits that he is no genius, but wants to know if geniuses are just an extreme version of himself - or whether their brains are fundamentally different. Marcus meets some remarkable individuals - Tommy, an obsessive artist who uses his whole house as his canvas; Derek: blind, autistic, and a pianist with apparently prodigious gifts; Claire who is also blind, but whose brain has learnt to see using sound. Marcus is shown how babies have remarkable abilities which most of us lose as teenagers. He meets a neuroscientist who claims he has evidence of innate ability, a scientist who's identified a gene for learning, and Dr. Paulus, who has discovered how to sharpen the brain... by electrically turbo-charging it.

13. Did Cooking Make Us Human?

March 2nd, 20101 hr

Horizon examines the evidence that our ancestors' changing diet and mastery of fire prompted anatomical and neurological changes that took us out of the trees and into the kitchen.

14. Is Everything We Know About the Universe Wrong?

March 9th, 20101 hr

There's something very odd going on in space - something that shouldn't be possible. It is as though vast swathes of the universe are being hoovered up by a vast and unseen celestial vacuum cleaner. Sasha Kaslinsky, the scientist who discovered the phenomenon, is understandably nervous: 'It left us quite unsettled and jittery' he says, 'because this is not something we planned to find'. The accidental discovery of what is ominously being called 'dark flow' not only has implications for the destinies of large numbers of galaxies - it also means that large numbers of scientists might have to find a new way of understanding the universe. Dark flow is the latest in a long line of phenomena that have threatened to rewrite the textbooks. Does it herald a new era of understanding, or does it simply mean that everything we know about the universe is wrong?

All Seasons

2024

2024

Jul 22, 2024
2022

2022

Mar 31, 2022
2021

2021

Jan 4, 2021
2020

2020

Jan 16, 2020
2019

2019

Jan 23, 2019
2018

2018

Feb 5, 2018
2017

2017

Jan 19, 2017
2016

2016

Mar 16, 2016
2014-2015

2014-2015

Aug 18, 2014
2013-2014

2013-2014

Aug 12, 2013
2012-2013

2012-2013

Jul 23, 2012
2011-2012

2011-2012

Aug 8, 2011
2010-2011

2010-2011

Sep 26, 2010
2009-2010

2009-2010

Oct 13, 2009
2009

2009

Jan 26, 2009
2008

2008

Jan 15, 2008
2007

2007

Mar 13, 2007
2006

2006

Jan 12, 2006
2005

2005

Jan 13, 2005
2004

2004

Jan 8, 2004
2003

2003

Jan 9, 2003
2002

2002

Jan 10, 2002
2001

2001

Jan 25, 2001
2000

2000

Jan 12, 2000
1999

1999

Jan 28, 1999
1998

1998

Feb 19, 1998
1997

1997

Feb 27, 1997
1996

1996

Jan 8, 1996
1995

1995

Jan 9, 1995
1994

1994

Jan 10, 1994
1993

1993

Jan 4, 1993
1992

1992

Jan 6, 1992
1991

1991

Jan 7, 1991
1990

1990

Jan 8, 1990
1989

1989

Jan 9, 1989
1988

1988

Jan 4, 1988
1987

1987

Jan 5, 1987
1986

1986

Jan 6, 1986
1985

1985

Jan 7, 1985
1984

1984

Jan 9, 1984
1983

1983

Jan 10, 1983
1982

1982

Jan 11, 1982
1981

1981

Jan 5, 1981
1980

1980

Jan 14, 1980
1979

1979

Feb 26, 1979
1978

1978

Jan 6, 1978
1977

1977

Jan 7, 1977
1976

1976

Jan 5, 1976
1975

1975

Jan 20, 1975
1974

1974

Jan 7, 1974
1973

1973

Jan 4, 1973
1972

1972

Jan 3, 1972
1971

1971

Jan 4, 1971
1970

1970

Jan 5, 1970
1969

1969

Jan 2, 1969
1968

1968

Jan 2, 1968
1967

1967

Jan 17, 1967
1966

1966

Jan 2, 1966
1965

1965

Jan 6, 1965
1964

1964

Feb 4, 1964
Specials

Specials

Dec 25, 1966