INTERVIEW

TV Show ReGenesis Generates Interest in Science

Written by Diane Kristine
Published January 02, 2008

Battlestar Galactica. Star Trek. Doctor Who. Television is good at science fiction. It's not so good at science fact. Some of the most popular shows today, like House and CSI, sacrifice accuracy to entertainment. While that might make fans happy, it makes scientists cringe.

Canadian series ReGenesis, entering its fourth season this year, tries to give both science and entertainment equal weight. Peter Outerbridge stars as David Sandström, who leads a team at the fictional North American Biotechnology Advisory Commission, exploring social, political, and ethical issues related to science.

Dr. Aled Edwards is a scientific consultant for the show, and it's his mandate to keep the show's writers from taking storytelling shortcuts that lead to those instant lab results on House or absolute certainty on CSI. "ReGenesis is the most accurate scientific drama out there, no holds barred, for sure," he claimed in a recent interview.

Peter Outerbridge and Wendy Crewson in ReGenesisHe finds it difficult to watch those other popular programs, but isn't offended by their use and misuse of science either. "It's almost like watching a cartoon, where Batman or Superman or House is the same. When I watch Superman, I don't get upset: 'Hey, men can't fly!'" he laughed. "When I watch those shows, I turn off my scientific brain. I say I'm watching mindless entertainment here. Because if I put on my scientific brain, I'd get upset. So I just watch it and think this is not science, this is not medicine, this is television."

While he's proud of ReGenesis's devotion to basing its fictional stories on fact, he doesn't lay claim to documentary-like accuracy either. "None of these scientific programs are ultimately the truth because we have boring jobs. I sit on my ass all day in front of the computer. The action takes place in the head and you don't see anything. There's no shooting. But it's fun for people to start to realize what we do." 

Besides his position on the faculty of the department of medical biophysics at the University of Toronto, Edwards is a structural biologist who heads the Structural Genomics Consortium. That non-profit organization has a mission to place human protein information in the public domain with no patents, allowing it to be freely used by other scientists. His involvement with ReGenesis stems from that work.

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Diane is a publications manager who's addicted to television, movies, and books and justifies her pop culture obsessions by writing about them for Blogcritics. She also runs the TV, Eh? website, a compilation of news and information about Canadian television series.
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TV Show ReGenesis Generates Interest in Science
Published: January 02, 2008
Type: Interview
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: SF, Video: Drama, Sci/Tech: Science, Sci/Tech: Biotechnology, Interviews, Video: Television
Writer: Diane Kristine
Diane Kristine's BC Writer page
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