This from Wikipedia regarding previous updated versions:
Cosmos had long been unavailable after its initial release because of copyright issues with the included music, but was released in 2000 on worldwide NTSC DVD, which includes subtitles in seven languages,remastered 5.1 sound, as well as an alternate music and sound effects track.
That's surprising. Aside from the Vangelis cues, most of the music in Cosmos was public-domain stuff -- classical music, traditional ethnic music, things like that. Don't tell me they had to dump the Vangelis cues. It wouldn't be Cosmos without them.
That hardly seems fair, cutting its length by fully a quarter. Why not recut it so that it ran for 17 episodes? Then you'd only need to cut 15 minutes in total -- okay, maybe more since you'd need to cut in new titles in each one.Despite being shown again on the Science Channel, the total amount of time for the original 13 episodes (780 minutes) was reduced 25% to 585 minutes (45 minutes per episode) in order to make room for commercials.
Actually I'm underwhelmed with Greene as a science popularizer. The superficial reason is that he's not as charismatic or pleasant a speaker as Sagan. The deeper reason is that the information he provides in his TV specials often places simplicity or flashiness above scientific accuracy. I found a number of the ideas he conveyed in The Fabric of the Cosmos to be misleading, frivolous, or outright inaccurate. Like when he was talking about a "slice through time" intersecting different parts of the universe and completely ignored lightspeed time lag, assuming a simultaneity across intergalactic distances that simply does not exist. Or when he presented vanishingly improbable fringe concepts -- like quantum teleportation being used on humans or an infinite multiverse allowing duplicate Earths -- as if they were reasonable possibilities. Sagan didn't do that. He presented science in an entertaining way, and he used science fiction conceits like a starship and time travel as rhetorical devices to escort the viewers to the places and times he wanted to talk about, but he didn't embellish the facts, didn't compromise accuracy for the sake of sounding cool.I recently enjoyed Brian Greene's 4 part Nova series based on his book called "The Fabric of the Cosmos".
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/fabric-of-cosmos.html
Much like Sagan, he is able to convey complex ideas in a way that even someone like me (a math moron) can understand conceptually and I think he makes a very good "heir apparent" to what Sagan did for bringing science to the masses.
Hmm...well I found him entertaining enough. In terms of the accuracy of the science, I just don't know enough about it to know what is considered "fringe", however, Greene made it clear some of the concepts, such as the multiverse, were not provable and not agreed upon by physicists. He explained that they crossed the line into philosophy and/or metaphysics.
Back on topic...I grew up with Sagan and Cosmos and would say that I learned much of what I know about astronomy, and physics from the show. I'd love to see a follow-up with Mr. Sternbach's involvement.
