American Genius

American Genius

2015
American Genius
American Genius

American Genius

7.9 | NR | en | Documentary

Behind every great genius was a great rival - an unstoppable adversary whose incredible vision, determination, and ambition is their match. Out of their struggles came the world's most brilliant inventions, the spoils of the heated battle between competitors.

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Seasons & Episodes

1
EP8  Edison vs. Tesla
Jun. 22,2015
Edison vs. Tesla

Celebrated inventor Thomas Edison goes to war with his former assistant, Nikola Tesla, to determine who will power the world with electric light.

EP7  Oppenheimer vs. Heisenberg
Jun. 22,2015
Oppenheimer vs. Heisenberg

J. Robert Oppenheimer and Werner Heisenberg are in the world's largest arms race to build the first atomic bomb.

EP6  Colt vs. Wesson
Jun. 15,2015
Colt vs. Wesson

Samuel Colt and partners Edwin Smith & Daniel Wesson become locked in the first true “arms” race, as they compete to perfect the world’s first revolver.

EP5  Space Race
Jun. 15,2015
Space Race

America and the Soviet Union, deadlocked in the Cold War, set their sights on the final frontier — space. Go inside the more than decadelong struggle between the two superpowers as they both set out to conquer the moon. German scientist Werner Von Braun leads the charge for the U.S. and Sergei Korolev for the Soviets, but in the race to space, only one side can get there first.

EP4  Hearst vs. Pulitzer
Jun. 08,2015
Hearst vs. Pulitzer

The newspaper redefined the way America tells its stories, but its rise to prominence was born out of a bitter rivalry between a man who built himself up from nothing and the wealthy son of a business tycoon. Follow William Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer as they push the limits of journalism in unthinkable ways, forever changing the media landscape.

EP3  Farnsworth vs. Sarnoff
Jun. 08,2015
Farnsworth vs. Sarnoff

A young Midwestern farm boy creates an innovation that forever changes the future of communication, only to have it stolen away by one of America's greatest media moguls.

EP2  Wright Brothers vs. Curtiss
Jun. 01,2015
Wright Brothers vs. Curtiss

The Wright Brothers build and fly the world’s first airplane, but they keep it a secret, leaving an opening for motor designer, Glenn Curtiss, to swoop in and compete to be the first to fly in public.

EP1  Jobs vs. Gates
Jun. 01,2015
Jobs vs. Gates

In the 1980s, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs break out in a heated battle to bring the personal computer to the masses.

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7.9 | NR | en | Documentary | More Info
Released: 2015-06-01 | Released Producted By: Stephen David Entertainment , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website: http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/american-genius/
Synopsis

Behind every great genius was a great rival - an unstoppable adversary whose incredible vision, determination, and ambition is their match. Out of their struggles came the world's most brilliant inventions, the spoils of the heated battle between competitors.

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Cast

Jeff Wilburn

Director

Producted By

Stephen David Entertainment ,

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Trailers

Reviews

TxMike I was able to view this series on Netflix streaming programming. Actors play the various key roles in each episode.As each episode states clearly this is based on real people and real history but some details have been changed and some incidents dramatized for the program. Still I would believe that each story is substantially true as each has the input and commentary of a number of historians. Following represents the order that I viewed them.In "Oppenheimer vs. Heisenburg" we see the race to build a nuclear bomb that would change the outcome of WW2. Heisenberg was working for the Germans, Oppenheimer for the Americans. Each was aware of the great energy involved, as stated by Einstein's E = m x c x c, but Oppenheimer's team won the race, and the bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki ended the war.In "Wright Brothers vs. Curtiss" we see how the Wrights actually flew first and stymied by the patents, Curtiss had to develop new flying technology, some of it still in use today. The Wrights refused to partner with Curtiss and his more powerful engines and never were a factor as aviation blossomed.In "Farnsworth vs. Sarnoff" we see how a 15-yr-old high school student and farm boy, Farnsworth, actually first conceived of the idea of television, and as an adult made the first working version. But Sarnoff of wealthy and powerful RCA used legal challenges to stymie Farnsworth until RCA's designers could develop a TV that didn't infringe on patents, a classic case of the rich and powerful getting their way, and in this case formed NBC.In "Colt vs. Wesson" we see how the two gun makers each started to develop a revolver pistol about the same time in the 1800s. Both were successful by slightly different routes. Colt's big invention was to develop assembly lines for manufacturing instead of just making one weapon at a time. Wesson was instrumental in developing self- contained ammunition.In "Space Race" we see how at the end of WW2 the Americans captured most of the German V2 rocket technology, but Russia got some also. Russia put up the first satellite in 1957, and then the first man in space, but the Americans, scared to be beaten, put the first men on the Moon in 1969.In "Jobs vs. Gates" we see how each man came along when computers were first being made smaller and affordable for individual use. Gates was a software whiz, Jobs was a visionary for new equipment and applications. Each went on to build companies that became giants of the industry via quite different but symbiotic routes. In "Edison vs. Tesla" the greatest pure inventor of all time is pitted against the man who had the vision for a more efficient, more versatile way to generate and use electricity, alternating current. Edison rejected Tesla's ideas, driving him away and towards Westinghouse. Ultimately Edison's direct current approach found very limited ongoing uses while Tesla's alternating current has become the standard.In "Hearst vs. Pulitzer" we see that Pulitzer, an immigrant, was motivated by an interest in getting the truth out to the readership, while Hearst was a spoiled rich kid who just wanted to make his mark. Motivated by what he saw Pulitzer doing in New York, after turning the small San Francisco newspaper into a success, he went to New York to compete, to defeat Pulitzer, by hiring away his best staff, by undercutting his newspaper cost, and by focusing on the sensational. Eventually they both had to cooperate but turned news media towards what it remains today.
Craig This Scientist A vs. Scientist B "documentary" plays upon personal contests to hold the audience, since viewers surely will lack the curiosity sufficient to gut through the many ad breaks and aggravating recaps. "Mothra vs. Godzilla", this ain't! Anyone with the slightest knowledge of history will have difficulty enjoying this version of it. The footage is poorly chosen, mostly from History Channel reenactments, I think. There are World War II GI's packing M-16s in the Space Race episode. The filming on "period" sets deserves some credit, but you can see the "museum" signs here and there. There is an 1840s map of the British-American contested Oregon Country is in the background of the 1880s "Austrian" factory office in "Edison vs. Tesla"! Sloppy is a charitable call on this poor effort.
bmprofessor87 My only real question is why is this show on Nat Geo? Who the heck is Giorgio A. Tsoukalos and why is the History channel full of bullcrap about ancient aliens and reality television when it should be replaced with shows like American Genius.To talk about the show, I mean it's obviously dramatized some. The real people didn't necessarily say or do exactly what the show portrays, but they make sure that the accomplishments the inventors achieve are all factual and very real. The people you learn about in this show are tremendous inspirations and I'm glad some of the lesser known's are receiving their days. The American public education system doesn't teach about men like Filo Farnsworth or Glen Curtiss and learning about them has been captivating. Can't wait for this weeks episode with Oppenheimer and Heisenberg.
captkinkie The episode leaves the viewer with the impression that Farnsworth only had a single patent relating to TV when in fact he had over 100 patents issued in years before WW][. Also I take issue with the scenes of the so-called labs where Farnsworth ( & Sarnoff's crew ) worked didn't really look like working labs at all and featured actors handing vacuum tubes as if they were objects of great curiosity, however there was no evidence of anybody slaving over a hot soldering iron to actually assemble anything. I guess I should cut them a bit of slack, they producers of this bit wanted to feature the DRAMA & the technology obviously took a back-seat.