| Philip Cary Plait | |
|---|---|
Phil Plait at The Amazing Meeting on January 20, 2007. |
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| Born | Washington, D. C. |
| Residence | Boulder, Colorado |
| Citizenship | United States of America |
| Nationality | American |
| Fields | Physics, astronomy, science communication |
| Institutions | Sonoma State University |
| Website | |
| Bad Astronomy Website | |
Philip Cary Plait, Ph.D. (a.k.a. The Bad Astronomer) is an American astronomer and skeptic who runs the website BadAstronomy.com. He formerly worked at the physics and astronomy department at Sonoma State University. In early 2007, he resigned from his job to write Death from the Skies. On August 4, 2008, he became President of the James Randi Educational Foundation.[1] He served in that position until January 1, 2010, when he was succeeded by noted skeptic D. J. Grothe.[2]
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Plait grew up in the Washington, D.C. area. He received his Ph.D. in astronomy from the University of Virginia in 1994 with a thesis on SN 1987A, which he studied with the Supernova Intensive Study (SINS). He first worked with the COBE satellite and then with the STIS on the Hubble Space Telescope for five years. He currently resides in Boulder, Colorado[3] and writes full time, but often hosts special events and serves as an adviser and commentator in several capacities, including events focusing on skepticism, such as SkeptiCamp.[4]
Plait performed web-based public outreach for the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and other NASA-funded missions while at Sonoma State University from 2000 to 2007. Prior to that, during the 1990s, he was part of the Hubble Space Telescope team at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, working largely on the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph.
Plait has been featured on TV and on such websites as Space.com. He has also appeared on two Penn & Teller: Bullshit! episodes. On season 3 he argued against the Apollo moon landing conspiracy theory and on season 7 against astrology. His work has also appeared in the Encyclopædia Britannica Yearbook of Science and the Future and Astronomy magazine. He has a regular column in Night Sky magazine called "Straight Talk", which has appeared since the magazine's first issue. Plait is also a frequent guest on the SETI Institute's weekly science radio show Are We Alone?.
His first book, Bad Astronomy: Misconceptions and Misuses Revealed, from Astrology to the Moon Landing "Hoax" deals with much the same subject matter as his website. His second book, Death from the Skies, describes ways astronomical events could wipe out life on Earth and was released in October 2008.[5] Bad Astronomy was the first in a science book series on myths and misconceptions that includes the book Bad Medicine.
In 2004, Plait served the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry as one of their fellows.[6]
In March 2008, Plait had an asteroid named after him by the late astronomer Jeff Medkeff. Asteroid 2000 WG11 was renamed 165347 Philplait.[7][8]
On July 22, 2010, Discovery Channel released a short video on YouTube of an upcoming television series called Phil Plait's Bad Universe.[9] Plait later announced it was a three-part documentary series first airing in the United States August 29, 2010.[10][11]
Badastronomy.com is a website dedicated to clearing up public misconceptions about astronomy and space science in movies, the news, print, and on the Internet. Plait also debunks several pseudoscientific theories related to space and astronomy, such as Planet X, Richard Hoagland's theories, and most famously, the moon landing "hoax". In March 2006, Science magazine's NetWatch feature lauded the Bad Astronomy website, praising in particular the Bad Astronomy Blog, which Plait began in March 2005. This blog was also a finalist for the 2006 Blog award (the "Bloggie"), in the "best topical weblog" category since the Bloggies, like many blog awards, do not have a specific science category. Plait used to write the occasional science article for The Huffington Post.[12] However he claims that he was "embarrassed" by this and now criticizes them for their stance on anti-vaccination and New Age antiscience.[13][14]
On January 28, 2007, a new segment of the blog called Q & BA[15] was announced. The feature consists of a video blog where questions sent by the blog's readers are answered. New videos were originally posted every Monday, but because of time management issues, Plait decided to temporarily stop making new videos.
In early September 2005, the Bad Astronomy message boards were merged with the Universe Today message boards to form a more robust, combined site, titled BAUT forum, standing for the "Bad Astronomy and Universe Today Message Board".[16]
Plait is interviewed on the Monster Talk podcast, with Blake Smith, Karen Stollznow, and Ben Radford. Plait talks Martian bacteria, Godzilla, and about the movie Five Million Years to Earth.[17]
Bad Astronomy was a co-winner of best science blog in the 2007 Weblog Awards.[18] The website was also named Time.com's 25 Best blogs 2009.[19]
Plait is married and has one daughter.[20]
| Year | Film | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | "Captain Disillusion: Fame Curve Collection" | himself | Video short |
| 2010 | "Bad Universe" | himself - Death Stars Alien Attack! Asteroid Apocalypse |
TV series documentary |
| "Known Universe" | himself - Stellar Storms Cosmic Collisions |
TV series documentary | |
| 2008 | "Naked Science" | himself - Hubble's Amazing Universe | TV series documentary |
| 2007 | "Is It Real?" | himself - Life on Mars | TV series documentary |
| "The Zula Patrol" | Science adviser - Larva or Leave Me/Egg Hunt There Goes the Neighborhood |
TV series | |
| 2006 | "Nova" | Science adviser - Monster of the Milky Way | TV series documentary |
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