Style of Wight issue 70 BIOSPHERE SPECIAL

Page 114

Style speaks to T V science presenter

On style Style is that which comes over substance. That said, we all know what our own personal aesthetic is, so saying I don’t believe in style is clearly tosh. Style is what happens when you get something right: when I’ve done a live stage show, and the audience is really pumped up and everybody’s excited, I know I’ve done that well – and – stylishly.

On infinite worlds and tiny monsters A lot of people get very excited by deep space and stuff like that. I’ve never been interested. I can appreciate it, but it doesn’t get me excited, because I can’t touch it. A few years ago, we built a garden pond, and now it’s full of the most amazing critters, like Hyrdra, these tiny tentacled, glowin-the-dark immortal monsters that self-regenerate and contain a deadly neurotoxin. These guys are literally in any pond in the country, hanging underneath the weeds.

On school trips and the shock factor Like many children from London, I came to the Island on a school trip and ended up at Blackgang Chine; I had the little bottle of coloured sand on my shelf as a kid for years. Subsequently, of course, I’ve filmed on the Island for various programmes – the One Show and others that preceded it – and been involved in a few festivals, from Hullabaloo to the Isle of Wight Literary Festival. I remember the literary festival as being good, fun, and very peculiar in its own beautiful way – I don’t think they knew what hit them. Most expect you to either stand up and do a straight talk with a book, or sit down on a couch and answer some questions. But that’s not what I do. I said I need three tables, a data projector, a mop and bucket, and all the smoke alarms off. Then in the show itself I did all sorts of crazy stuff and they loved it.

On stinging nettles and All the Small Things One of the most interesting things to look at under a microscope are stinging nettles: the stings themselves are fantastic to look at – a millimetre long needle, razor sharp and full of horrible toxins. Kids love that (wear gloves!) and it’s a great source material. And stone: dinosaur footprints are great, but the Isle of Wight is full of fossiliferous rock, soft sand stones and chalk full of amazing detail right under our noses. And you only need a tiny pebble.

On unsung Island heroes Robert Hooke – born in 1635 in Freshwater – was a fantastic guy, a

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Marty Jopson

styleofwight.co.uk

really important scientist in the 1600s, but he doesn’t get much love. I like him because he’s a complicated character: brilliant, argumentative, wonderfully gregarious and outgoing and also a complete genius. He was a fantastic communicator of science, which is something I’m very passionate about, and published a book called Micrographia which I consider one of the first true popular science books, and the first that allowed ‘ordinary people’ to see the microscopic world, which, at that point, was a hugely new and exciting thing. A lot of what he did was overshadowed by people like Newton, who was the big man of science at the time, a bit like Brian Cox rolled into Robert Winston rolled into Gary Barlow. Hooke probably deserves a bigger part in the history of science, but he doesn’t get it.

On the invention the world needs right now In the last few months we’ve seen – in horrible, stark reality – that we need science and technology to enable our societies to flourish. We need people to understand how science works, because they don’t. We need people to understand that science is messy, and the world is complicated, and that when you see a bunch of scientists arguing it doesn’t mean the science is wrong, it means they are moving towards it being more correct.


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Articles inside

Style speaks: to TV science

3min
pages 114-116

Summer in soft-focus: subtle

1min
pages 92-95

Growth in nature – with

1min
page 113

Natural beauty, inner calm

2min
pages 81-83

A business plan is not a straitjacket – with Dale Howarth

3min
pages 109-110

Out and about on Biosphere Island – with Hannah Lisseter

1min
pages 111-112

Play the long game: with

2min
page 80

People with style: Fiona Taylor

2min
pages 84-86

From brownfield barn to beautiful bespoke home – with

3min
pages 87-91

Beauty in the biosphere: green

4min
pages 77-79

Slowing down: from fast fashion

2min
pages 75-76

Style with substance: fashion

2min
pages 72-74

We’re open! 14-page feature

12min
pages 59-71

Recipe inspiration: 10 things to

2min
pages 53-55

Interview: Cush Jumbo on filming

3min
pages 48-52

Fresh summer salad: recipe by

1min
page 56

Behind the cover – with designer

1min
page 47

Seasonal vegetable: sugar snap

1min
pages 57-58

Photography competition

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page 46

Biosphere book reviews – with

2min
page 43

Biosphere from above: Alfie in

1min
pages 44-45

Researching rockpools – with

2min
page 42

Kids art activity: become an eco

2min
pages 38-39

Foible & Folly: unearthing

3min
pages 40-41

Style spectrum: Theo Vickers

1min
pages 34-37

Beyond the biosphere: team

3min
pages 32-33

Before the biosphere: the Island’s

4min
pages 30-31

Lead interview: Rewilding the

8min
pages 18-21

Supporting spectacular seagrass

2min
pages 26-28

30dayswild – with the

1min
page 22

Luccombe and Dunsbury: a rewilding story – with National

1min
page 29

News from Mountbatten

2min
page 17

Style picks: our favourite stylishly

2min
pages 14-15

Charity and community

2min
page 16

Tribe and Tide: navigating Island

2min
pages 23-25
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