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Ask A Genius 1 – Genius in Pop Culture

2022-03-25

Author(s): Scott Douglas Jacobsen and Rick Rosner

Publication (Outlet/Website): Ask A Genius

Publication Date (yyyy/mm/dd): 2016

You’ve noted a lot of geniuses in popular media, movies, and television. Recently, what’s  the deal? 

There have always been the kids that wore tennis shoes. Garry Coleman had the 200 IQ. There  was Encyclopedia Brown. Now, there’s a flood of geniuses. I would guess that’s because the  world is a fast-moving and fast-changing place. Geniuses somehow offer the possibility of  making sense of the world, which makes sense in terms of who is selling us the genius. 

On TV, it’s CBS, which, over the last 2 or 3 TV seasons, has had about 15 shows dealing with  genius. You’ve got Limitless, where a guy takes a pill and becomes a genius. You’ve got  Elementary. You’ve got Scorpion, which is a crew of geniuses. CBS used to be, and to a large  extent still is, the murder network. 

There are many shows about people getting killed. Every murder show has one genius detective  or forensic expert. The Mentalist was a genius in his own genius way. CBS is also known for  being the network that skews the oldest among viewers. If my theory’s right that people are  nervous about how confusing the world is, old people would be even more confused. 

They might welcome geniuses more. You have a TV genius explaining what’s going on. And it  can be clearly explained by them, which can make older people feel smarter about the world.  Also, geniuses have a hipster aspect to them. 

Geniuses were nerds. Geniuses had no cachet. They were bullied. For the past 30 years, you’ve  had growing numbers of software billionaire geniuses like Bill Gates, Zuckerberg, and others.  Now, geniuses are cool. Maybe, CBS is thinking that they can hold the old people and grab the  new people with the hipster geniuses. 

Some other places include Ron Howard. He is making an Einstein biopic. If you look at the last  two Oscar seasons, something like 6 out of 20 best actor or actress nominees portray geniuses.  Cumberbatch being in Turing. Redmayne being Hawking. Keira Knightley being a girl genius  who wanted to get with Hawking. 

They’re all over the place.

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In-Sight Publishing by Scott Douglas Jacobsen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Based on a work at www.in-sightpublishing.com.

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