Tag Archives: Hamster

Mid June Blog: July PubSci is back on! Plus June hot press info, a new Events Programme, and amazing things to do.

TONIGHT

If you’re coming to The Old King’s Head for tonight’s PubSci, here’s an important update:

  1. It’s warm today – which means it’s gonna be even warmer in the upstairs room.
    • We have to keep windows closed due to noise from outside, so wear light clothes and bring a small fan
      • We’ll ventilate before the talk and during the break so if you sit by a window please leave it open until the the event starts.
  2. It’s football today, so the pub will be busy and noisy downstairs.
    • Please be patient with the staff, know what you’re ordering and remember that you can order at the foot of the stairs, but please wait at the open door and don’t enter the bar area.
      • If you’re eating, order early (there are menus and a Specials board upstairs) and listen out for your name / order.
  3. It’s not just any football, it’s England’s first game of the men’s World Cup
    • Greg, the landlord, told me he could have filled the pub three-times over with football bookings, and it’s a sign of PubSci’s long relationship with the Old King’s Head that he’s honouring our event booking tonight.
      • Please be super-lovely to the staff, and spend loads at the bar!
  4. The match kicks off at 9pm, when PubSci usually wraps up and it could get noisy from 8.30
    • We’ll pack up the screen and projector during the break, and finish the Q&A no later than 8.45
      • Please keep questions clear and brief, without long statements or pronouncements
  5. We’ll be handing the room back to anybody who wants to watch upstairs
    • For once, there won’t be lots of time for socialising after the event
    • As soon as we finish, we need to quickly turn the room around (possibly literally) and open the doors
      • Please help by returning your glasses to the downstairs bar and your plates to the upstairs bar.
      • If we need to move chairs, please help us with that too so we can keep musing the pub
  6. Don’t be put off
    • The side door will be open, so you won’t need to struggle through a sea of footy fans when arriving or leaving
Somebody shaking round, white pills out of a bottle

July’s PubSci is back on!

We postponed Marcus du Sautoy’s planned July talk s it clashed with the first semi-final of the World Cup. However, I have arranged a different talk for the following week when the football is all over.

Yellow smiley face

On Wednesday 22nd July, Dr Parry Hashemi from Imperial College will talk on The Sound of Serotonin –
Listening to Brain Cells
.

Serotonin is popularly known as the happiness molecule but its relationship with depression is complex, and measuring neurotransmitters in living brains remained a challenge for years.

Now Dr Hashemi’s team at Imperial College has developed a revolutionary, non-invasive technique for diagnostically tracking serotonin levels in real time and turning the results into music.

Tickets will be available on Eventbrite soon.

30th June 2026: Of Doubtful salmon and Hovering Hamsters

Can hamsters levitate? Do salmon emote? Did herring inspire a Doctor Who spoof? Science communicator and host of PubSci, Richard brings some of the quirkiest stories of animals in science to the London Fortean Society in a not-to-be missed event on Tuesday 30th June: The Levitating Hamster and the Salmon of Doubt.

A hamster riding on a doubtful-looking salmon

This is not a PubSci event, so you’ll need to book through London Fortean Society at https://wegottickets.com/f/21077. Their venue is The Bell on Middlesex Street, London E1 7EX (Liverpool Street / Aldgate East).

There’s a new event programme

The PubSci Spring / Summer Programme has finally been uploaded. You’ll notice it doesn’t go very far into the future – that’s because the world cup and August’s total solar eclipse have changed a few plans – but it’s still worth looking at and printing out.

A radio show to delight your ears

Episode #8 of The Science Show was broadcast on Monday 1st June and is available to stream now as a podcast. In this show:

• George Holdaway joins me to discuss the latest science news including: How fungi can trigger ice and rain; the perilous state of Antarctic ice; NASA’s moon base plans; Pluto and Plutino; and String Theory emerging from nowhere

• George and I take a Random Walk from Mercury to Murder via Evangelista Torricelli, Toxic Hats, and Tycho Brahe.

Dr Parry Hashemi from Imperial College London talks neurotransmitters, brain organoids, and turning serotonin into music.

• Plus details of the best science-related events in London and beyond – including this weekend’s Great Exhibition Road Festival where Dr Hashemi’s team has an amazing interactive installation that allows you to listen to happiness in the brain! – and, as always on the truly unique Science Show, we throw in some excellent music for good measure.

Stream it here https://tinyurl.com/TheScienceShow-Episode-8

And I’m delighted to say that, within days up release, Show 8 shot to the top of the Science charts and reached number 23 among all podcasts on Mixcloud! A huge Thank You to those who listen in live or stream the podcast. If you haven’t yet, you can find out what you’ve been missing at https://www.mixcloud.com/The_Science_Show/

Anyhoo, I’ll be back with an update soon. Meanwhile, I hope to see you all tonight.

Richard (Science communicator and PubSci organiser/host)

17th June 2026

May update: PubSci tonight, tube strike cancelled and other news

Good News for Science Fans

Great news for anyone attending tonight’s PubSci (Weds 20th May): The double tube strikes that had been planned for this week were called off on Monday.

A grid showing days affected by tune strikes 19th to 22nd May 2026

We were already a safe bet for travel, falling on the only midweek evening with no expected disruptions, but with many people opting to work from home due to trouble getting into town, it looked like take-up for tonight’s event was going to be lower than usual.

Fortunately we’ve experienced a flurry of bookings since Monday and only a handful of places now remain. But if you delayed booking a ticket for any reason, now’s your chance to grab one. Free / cash on the door tickets are all gone but you can scroll scroll down a little to see the donation tickets (as always, it’s pay what you want / can).

The Incredible Future of Organ Transplants — tonight at PubSci

Tonight at the Old King’s Head, pioneering surgeon Mr Pankaj Chandak tells the incredible past, present and future of organ transplantation — from scalpels to SciFi and beyond. Pankaj is a transplant surgeon at Great Ormond Street Hospital (among others) with several medical firsts under his belt. He was also medical advisor and director on the celebrated TV series The Crown, in which he also acted. BOOK NOW

A gowned surgeon looking at a 3D model in the operating theatre
Our speaker, Pankaj Chandak, in the operating theatre

Tune in, check out the science, enjoy the music on The Science Show

April’s speaker, Joanna Bagniewska was my interview guest on the latest episode of The Science Show, which was broadcast over the air and streamed live on Bank Holiday Monday 4th May.

A woman reading a book while a bear looks over her shoulder. The book is The Modern Bestiary.

We had a great chat about bestiaries, beasts, writing books and how zoologists might be the ones to save us from the great AI robot takeover. If you want to know more, the show is now available to stream as a podcast here on Mixcloud.

As always the show also covers science news and discussion, science and science crossover events in London and beyond, a fabulous Random Walk – this month meandering through the surprisingly long history of drug use (both psychedelic and pharmaceutical) – plus a healthy dose of really good music. This month my guest co-presenter and walking companion was science teacher extraordinaire, Geoff Burgess.

A badge saying The Science Show Episode 7 reached number one in the Mixcloud science shart

I’m delighted to say that for the second month running, The Science Show is the Number One Science Podcast on Mixcloud.

The Science Show has been running on Resonance 104.4 FM since October 2025, and was presented by myself and Mike Lucibella for the first six episodes. It is independent, unfunded, and written, produced and edited by presenters.

Please do give it a listen. The next episode broadcasts over the air on Resonance 104.4 (DAB and FM) at 3pm on Monday 1st June, and if you’re outside the South East, you can stream it live on RadioPlayer from the Resonance website.

The What’s On section of June’s show includes news of the Great Exhibition Road Festival on 6th & 7th June – so make sure to listen during the first week it’s available – and my interviewee will be a *past PubSci speaker, Parry Hashemi, who will be presenting an interactive science-art project over the festival weekend.

[*July 2019: Not all in your head – “What if a simple skin test could diagnose depression?”]

Coming up in June

As mentioned above, the Great Exhibition Road Festival is the first weekend in June with lots to see and do. It’s a fabulous annual event for all the family, celebrating science, art and culture. Definitely one not to be missed. Note that whilst most events are drop-ins, some require pre-booking so be sure to check out the programme in advance.

June’s PubSci is on Wednesday 17th when Dr Caroline Copeland from King’s College London picks up the thread of May’s Random Walk on The Science Show to discuss the tension between UK drugs policy and the science of drug toxicity. Caroline is a Senior Lecturer in Pharmacology & Toxicology at King’s College London, and the Director of the National Programme on Substance Use Mortality, and brings a highly informed perspective to the risks presented by recreational drugs, both the legal and the illegal ones.

A graph comparing harms caused by different drugs, both to the user and to others
Recreational drug harms compared (David J Nutt etc al, 2010)

Tickets for that will be available early next week are available on Eventbrite now. We can expect this to be a popular topic, so put the date in your diary now grab your ticket ASAP (and subscribe to the PubSci Google Calendar to make sure you can always get your booking in early).

FWIW there’s a big football match the same night, when England take on Croatia in the 2026 FIFA men’s football World Cup – but don’t worry, the game doesn’t kick off until 9pm which is when PubSci finishes, so footy fans can do both in the same evening and non-footy fans can avoid it altogether!

You may have noticed that the new events programme isn’t out yet. This is because I’m negotiating around some dates issues but if you subscribe to our calendar you’ll be the first to know when new talks are scheduled. You can also follow PubSci’s events on Eventbrite to be notified when tickets are available. And sign up to our own mailing list on any page on this site.

Later in June – A Levitating Hamster and a Doubtful Salmon?

On Tuesday 30th June, your very own PubSci organiser and event host, Richard (that’s me!) is giving a humorous but informative talk for the London Fortean Society called the Levitating Hamster and the Salmon of Doubt.

A hamster riding on a doubtful-looking salmon
The Levitating Hamster and the Salmon of Doubt

I’ll be looking at the stranger ways animals have contributed to science – including some of the funniest, quirkiest and most bizarre cases – and asking: Can a hamster levitate? Does a salmon emote? Did herring inspire a Doctor Who spoof? And just why are there so many cats in science?

Tickets are available from the London Fortean Society via WeGotTickets, costing just £5.50

Note: The venue is The Bell on Middlesex Street (Aldgate East tube) which has stairs up to the meeting room.

That’s it for now. Hope to see some of you at the Bell, and see you tonight!

Richard, PubSci organiser and host. x