It's just a jump to the left, etc.

In a stunning display of high-speed photography, Jeff Lieberman, a drummer-turned-sculptor-turned-MIT-scientist, employs unthinkably fast video—325,000 frames per second—with the modest goal of understanding how everything in the world works. That's the conceit behind Discovery's Time Warp, a (near) merger of art and science in which Lieberman uses ultra-slow-motion footage to show viewers what, exactly, happens when a Champagne bottle is popped, glass shatters, and an egg hits a spinning fan. (Spoiler alert: It's messy.) On tonight's episode, he shows us what really happens during break dancing, and how a bullet-fired underwater goes askew. The images are striking, but the volume's probably better left turned down—as in the trailer below.


8:30 p.m., Discovery

Tags: Media

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