Sally Le Page

Sally Le Page

I aim to bring science further into popular culture by making science videos that make you laugh, make you feel and make you think.

Shed Science - My "flagship" series, all about the really interesting bits of biology. I might sing, animate, stick my head in cow poo; whatever it takes to best explain the quirks of nature.

Nature Dates - I take non-science KZreadrs out into nature for the day to show that you don't have to be a biologist to enjoy wildlife.

Evolution Live - A livestreaming course all about evolution, going from the very basics and building up week by week to university level.


Dr Sally Le Page is a British evolutionary biologist, science KZreadr and presenter.

Is lab-grown meat worth it?

Is lab-grown meat worth it?

How to catch 859 swans

How to catch 859 swans

I'm a DOCTOR*!!!

I'm a DOCTOR*!!!

Science is boring

Science is boring

Пікірлер

  • @Aftonafton-r4w
    @Aftonafton-r4w3 күн бұрын

    Swoons

  • @alexfido2935
    @alexfido29359 күн бұрын

    Its so funny its been 5 years since this, and Hank's priorities and favourite platforms and probably for Sally too has changed so much. The way things have changed since the Before Times are wild.

  • @kristinabaker3271
    @kristinabaker327111 күн бұрын

    I love it! Saved it to my phone so I can make one 🥰🥰

  • @sopernovashrez
    @sopernovashrez20 күн бұрын

    love her voice

  • @cxa24
    @cxa2425 күн бұрын

    Why there will only be one woman on the ship. Nobody knows if she is alone or not

  • @alexb2082
    @alexb2082Ай бұрын

    If you want some advice on how to get my partner to watch more science videos, make the dinosaurs get voted off an island or do a true crime documentary.

  • @chloe.d178
    @chloe.d178Ай бұрын

    I appreciate the aggressive nonsexualness. I have a lot of trauma with men and truthfully Hank Green is healing to me. He has curated a safe, comfy, accepting, accessible place to learn no matter who you are. I have a ton of respect for him and the work he does. And I appreciate it greatly.

  • @zeph0shade
    @zeph0shadeАй бұрын

    Since the title says this is 3 DIY microscopes with a laser pen, I'm going to go ahead and assume I can use a laser for the last one too. So, do I just look directly into the light or what?

  • @mariabalakrishnan796
    @mariabalakrishnan796Ай бұрын

    Your enthusiasm is contagious. Thank you!

  • @tristanlambert2258
    @tristanlambert22582 ай бұрын

    Fantastic video 😍😍😍 How have I only just come across these wonderful videos with such well presented content.

  • @carlosorff
    @carlosorff2 ай бұрын

    Great video, I just found it amusing, that while using the laser there was no warning, but turning on the headlight - "Don't stare at the light for too long"

  • @declanwk1
    @declanwk12 ай бұрын

    i've often felt I had to some how apologise for my love of nature. It is great to see someone proclaim it so openly.

  • @Ann__333
    @Ann__3332 ай бұрын

    I love that you're actually using stuff you have laying around... keep it simple. Reuse. Recycle.

  • @pinkroses135
    @pinkroses1352 ай бұрын

    I cost 533 bananas

  • @pinkroses135
    @pinkroses1352 ай бұрын

    This just tells me how important potassium is lol

  • @laighla9594
    @laighla95942 ай бұрын

    this video is AWESOME and helpful.

  • @john-michaelrobinson3994
    @john-michaelrobinson39943 ай бұрын

    When it burns does bioplastic release toxins like traditional plastic?

  • @Karammellou
    @Karammellou3 ай бұрын

    Great idea, thank you for sharing!!

  • @williamrodriguez4110
    @williamrodriguez41103 ай бұрын

    she makes very nauseating videos

  • @TJCarpenter
    @TJCarpenter3 ай бұрын

    This belongs on pornhub.

  • @__WJK__
    @__WJK__4 ай бұрын

    Can someone please tell me why we're so focused on greenhouse gasses, while we continue to overlook the environmental toxicity timebomb that plastics are creating(?) Putting all our eggs into greenhouse gas reduction, is hardly going to matter when biological life/DNA synthesis succumbs to disease-related plastic toxicity.

  • @CargodHera
    @CargodHera4 ай бұрын

    I so relate to Hank talking about having to fire people! The first time I had to fire someone, I cried and felt so bad that the employee I was hiring ended up comforting ME! LOL!

  • @oogrooq
    @oogrooq4 ай бұрын

    He's a little more full of himself than I thought.

  • @sciencekidbj
    @sciencekidbj4 ай бұрын

    Interesting talk. I felt like the name is distracting though. So many topics are covered that are completely disconnected from the name of the video. It made me confused as to what to expect from the video and the need to skip to the part related to video title and then back track for the rest of it. Still, maybe that distracted and confused feeling is just me.

  • @stephanierichards150
    @stephanierichards1504 ай бұрын

    I came here for the Hank and am subbing for the Sally. Thanks for giving me another long-form channel to watch!

  • @thelastcube.
    @thelastcube.4 ай бұрын

    i wanna grow up to be like hank green

  • @Claire-tk4do
    @Claire-tk4do5 ай бұрын

    She is SUCH a good interviewer!!!

  • @NotKyleChicago
    @NotKyleChicago5 ай бұрын

    Finally I know something that I can see better than. Thanks, Mexican cave fish!

  • @33andy33gmail
    @33andy33gmail5 ай бұрын

    Fantastic interview technique. Asked all the right questions to keep the conversation interesting and flowing while letting the celeb do most of the talking. You could put a number of news presenters and TV interviewers to shame

  • @rebeccavantassell4646
    @rebeccavantassell46465 ай бұрын

    I absolutely appreciate hearing that you cry when you have to fire people. That's something I've never been able to get over as a business owner.

  • @NotKyleChicago
    @NotKyleChicago5 ай бұрын

    I'm now thinking of hedgehog being possibly call hawhogs due to haw being hedge.

  • @NotKyleChicago
    @NotKyleChicago5 ай бұрын

    Coming here after the interview with Matt Parker and I was reminded of his video about the most expensive book due to the discussion about flies.

  • @NotKyleChicago
    @NotKyleChicago5 ай бұрын

    Great interview. 😊

  • @NotKyleChicago
    @NotKyleChicago5 ай бұрын

    I don't think I ever heard of a "compere" before, so didn't know what the word was. It's like an MC/ emcee

  • @lizardchild2004
    @lizardchild20045 ай бұрын

    The irony of zeroing in on this one aspect that he specifically tries to avoid in order to keep the content pure, and making a video title out of it!! 😂 Despite the clickbait, great interview.

  • @squish7073
    @squish70735 ай бұрын

    Ignorance is a privilege and thank goodness for people like Hank Green for using his talent, abilities, privileges and heart to make others aware! This is what the world needs more of and less people that rather “escape”.

  • @noahgray9451
    @noahgray94515 ай бұрын

    Lol she wants him to stop talking about politics soooooo bad but science IS political

  • @ilikenothingtoo
    @ilikenothingtoo5 ай бұрын

    Beakman's world was great, there was a female lead who changed over the 5 seasons, Liz, Josie and Phoebe. Josie was my favorite.

  • @cyberpunk1618
    @cyberpunk16185 ай бұрын

    People talking about how nice twitter is, oh 2019 xD

  • @cannibalbananas
    @cannibalbananas5 ай бұрын

    I loved Beekman. Watched it as often as I could.

  • @xrockangelx
    @xrockangelx5 ай бұрын

    I just finished acclimating to curly-haired Hank, so now it's interesting to watch flat-hair Hank.

  • @timeven4769
    @timeven47695 ай бұрын

    Welcome the mighty stickleback to Lake Michigan! They are noteworthy for their historical significance in ethology and their ornate mating behavior. Apparently they're an invasive species in Lake Michigan -- as are coho salmon dnr.illinois.gov/.../wafthreespinestickleback.html The threespine stickleback has been in Lake Michigan since 1980. It lives along the shores of the lake where it finds a shallow, sand bottom. Spawning occurs in shallow vegetated areas over mud or sand. The male builds an oblong nest of plant material that is held together with a sticky secretion from the kidney. Niko Tinbergen's studies of the behaviour of this fish were important in the early development of ethology as an example of a fixed action pattern. More recently, the fish have become a favourite system for studying the molecular genetics of evolutionary change in wild populations and a powerful "supermodel" for combining evolutionary studies at molecular, developmental, population genetic, and ecological levels. The nearly complete genome sequence of a reference freshwater stickleback was described in 2012, along with set of genetic variants commonly found in 21 marine and freshwater populations around the world. Some variants, and several chromosome inversions, consistently distinguish marine and freshwater populations, helping identify a genome-wide set of changes contributing to repeated adaptation of sticklebacks to marine and freshwater environments. The adaptations seen in oceanic threespine sticklebacks make them an ideal organism for the study of parallel evolution. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stickleback The Curious Behavior of the Stickleback N. Tinbergen Scientific American Vol. 187, No. 6 (December 1952), pp. 22-27 (6 pages) WHY STICKLEBACK? alisonbelllab.web.illinois.edu/why-stickleback/

  • @pdbowman
    @pdbowman5 ай бұрын

    Grateful I came across this. I’ve been an appreciative viewer of Eons for a few years but had never heard any of the people involved in making the show interviewed. There’s so much to think about here. And I’m a greater fan of Kallie as host and shaper of the program than I already was, now. Thank you.

  • @sandragoodman2059
    @sandragoodman20595 ай бұрын

    Great interview!

  • @hjpatterson
    @hjpatterson5 ай бұрын

    I was in performance for 34 years, mostly live theatre but a lot of TV and one big film in which my troupe were a small but constant character. The way "talent" was used was, indeed, ironic and dismissive - like, cameramen are important, grips, gaffers, continuity, director, props, art, set dressing, all crucial - and way, way, way down at the end of the list, the least important part of production, the thing you point the camera at for a minute. "Okay, everybody's ready to go, let's get the "talent" in here...

  • @chriscrowe11
    @chriscrowe115 ай бұрын

    Just stumbled upon both this video and this channel/podcast, and I cannot believe how much I appreciated the amount of "dead air" in this conversation. Allowing the guest time to actually *consider* questions and be deliberate with their wordchoice was a shocking change of pace to other podcasts I've watched which seem to be allergic to silence. Every time Hank took time to digest a question I realized I would do the same, and that made me really engage with whats being said instead of simply using the conversation as background nosie

  • @trikepilot101
    @trikepilot1015 ай бұрын

    I remember Beakman!

  • @char1194
    @char11945 ай бұрын

    After Hank recently went on his string of podcasts and interviews I've been binging them like one every few days and I'm embarassed to admit that I didn't realise this video was 4 years old till near the end when I tabbed back in and saw that he still had straight hair, which I realise must be such a bizarre way to tell time

  • @IrisGlowingBlue
    @IrisGlowingBlue5 ай бұрын

    Nah, I think going by people's hair style-eras is a decent way to immediately date something (genuinely) p: