Ask A Genius 1492: Television, Writing, Alien, and the Poetry of Physics

In this in-depth conversation, Rick Rosner reflects on how five years of watching well-written television with his wife, Carole, has sharpened his writing skills and ability to anticipate dialogue and plot twists. He shares insights on Noah Hawley’s upcoming Alien series, the evolution of science fiction horror, and the role of originality in storytelling. Rosner also discusses Mel Brooks’s creative longevity, his own struggles with writing about the future amid AI and political upheaval, and broader reflections on cosmology, intelligence, and scientific discovery. With humor and humility, he compares himself to Feynman, Gamow, and Darwin—highlighting the complexity of intelligence.

Ask A Genius 1480: Deep Ocean Implosions and the Ethical Collapse in Gaza

Rick Rosner discusses the catastrophic consequences of submersible implosions at extreme ocean depths, clarifying earlier misconceptions and emphasizing the near-instantaneous nature of such deaths. The conversation shifts to Israel's military actions in Gaza and the West Bank, where Rosner critiques the disproportionate violence and political motivations behind the ongoing conflict. While acknowledging the justice in confronting Hamas, he condemns the execution of the war as corrupt and potentially genocidal, reflecting on global inaction and moral failures.

Ask A Genius 1441: What the Manosphere Gets Wrong: Rick Rosner on Masculinity, Gym Culture, and Absurdity

Rick Rosner and Scott Douglas Jacobsen dissect the contradictions in the manosphere, mocking its clichés—from hypergamy rants to jaw exercises and alpha-male posturing. Rosner shares personal anecdotes, critiques toxic tropes, and offers a grounded take on masculinity, aging, and self-image in an internet-saturated culture obsessed with status and performance.

Ask A Genius 1399: The Anti-Natalist Bomber, Artificial Consciousness, and the Philosophy of Game Over

Rick Rosner discusses a suicide bombing at a fertility clinic by an anti-natalist extremist, tying it to dark philosophies like negative utilitarianism. The conversation explores mortality, artificial consciousness, and civilization’s deep-rooted life drive, critiquing societal denial of suffering—from slaughterhouses to AI ethics—and the politics of abortion and engineered immortality.