The Electric Boy Can you see me? Can you hear me? How? I could be thousands of miles away, and yet, when you turn on whatever device is bringing my image and voice to you, I'm there. Instantaneously. How is that possible? To our ancestors, it would've seemed like sorcery. For them, speed of communication was only as fast as the swiftest horse or sailing ships. Our messages travel invisibly at the speed of light. How did we attain such mythic powers? It all began in the mind of one person. A child of poverty of whom nothing was expected. In fact, if this man had not lived the world we know might not exist today. Sooner or later, someone would've likely figured out some of his discoveries. But if Michael Faraday had never lived, we might still be living as our ancestors did in the 17th century. Unaware of armies of invisible servants awaiting our commands. This is the story of how we learned to make electrons do our bidding. In a way, it begins with the greatest genius who ever lived-- Isaac Newton. This is Woolsthorpe, Newton's ancestral home. He walked these fields, tormented by mystery. Newton, the man who figured out the formula for the motions of the planets around the Sun, wanted to know how does the Sun make the planets act that way without touching them? How do all the apples know how to fall? Another genius was puzzled by another aspect of the same mystery. You see, son? No matter how I turn the compass, the needle always points the same way. Except But how? They do not touch. I didn't hear a "Thank you," Albert. I can still remember this. The experience made a deep and lasting impression on me. Something deeply hidden had to be behind things. Between the lifetimes of Einstein and Newton, there lived another genius, one of equal stature. The man who solved the mystery that stumped Newton, also laid the foundation for Einstein's revolutionary insights. And for the way we live now. In 1791, in a squalid slum in the suburbs of London, Michael Faraday was born. He showed little promise at school. Pray tell us a word that begins with the letter R. Well? Wabbit? The word is "Rabbit. " Once again, and correctly this time. Wabbit? Do you mock me? Have I not told you how to pronounce the letter R? Surely you can at least tell us your name? Michael "Fawaday," ma'am.