"Has the universe ever winked at you?Watch Mary Carey All Babe Network (2013)"
It's the cryptic question alien-worshipper and Earth-Trisolaris Organization member Tatiana (Marlo Kelly) poses to Auggie (Eiza González) in Netflix's 3 Body Problem. And it's the one in the back of the nanotechnologist's mind when she and fellow "Oxford Five" member, physicist Saul (Jovan Adepo), find themselves staring at a sky full of stars blinking across the world.
SEE ALSO: What exactly is the three-body problem in '3 Body Problem'?In episode 1 of David Benioff, D.B. Weiss, and Alexander Woo's sci-fi epic, based on Liu Cixin's books, the world sees the night sky flickering simultaneously, prompting widespread news coverage and watercooler chats the next day. As it's happening, Saul decodes the stars using a strange breakfast cereal toy code-cracker Tatiana gave to Auggie, finding it matches the numbers in Auggie's countdown.
But what exactly happened here, and how did the stars suddenly flicker?
In episode 2 after the phenomenon, Saul tells Dr Ye Wenjie (Rosalind Chao) his theory about the blinking stars: "It's bullshit. It never happened." When Wenjie questions this, noting that the entire world witnessed the blinking lights, Saul doubles down. "Sure, everyone on Earth. But you know who didn't see it? Webb, Hubble, CHEOPS. None of the satellites saw it. You know why? Because it never happened. It was a deepfake."
Saul's bang on the money, though he hasn't figured out who created such an illusion. So, who did? It all comes down to the sophon, the technology deployed by the impending alien race, the San-Ti, who responded to Wenjie's transmission sent in 1968. In episode 5, when Jin and Thomas Wade (Liam Cunningham) speak to the San-Ti AI warrior through the VR headsets, they tell them the aliens have created a sentient supercomputer by focusing energies on a single proton, then creating "a mind as large as a world".
In episode 5, the San-Ti demonstrate the sheer power of the sophon, reflecting the world upon itself and fashioning a giant eye in the middle of it all, informing the "bugs" of Earth they're under constant surveillance by an alien race. It's Christopher Nolan's Inceptionmeets George Orwell's 1984and it scares the shit out of the human race, as intended. The flickering stars seem like mere party tricks, a glimmer of the San-Ti's sinister intention to make humanity "learn how to fear again."
"In place of truth, we give you miracles," the San-Ti warrior explains. "We wrap your world in illusions. We make you see what we want you to see."
This item, given to Auggie by Tatiana on their first meeting for the purposes of looking at the stars, is a strange one. Right out of a box of Toasty-O-Sters breakfast cereal, the code-cracker allows Saul to figure out the stars are flashing numbers that correspond with Auggie's countdown. It's not Morse code, as Saul explains, but instead he cracks an alien code using this tiny piece of plastic. Auggie mentions the cereal Toasty-O-Sters hasn't been made since 1963, which is five years before Wenjie sent her first message to the San-Ti.
So why on Earth are the San-Ti, a technologically advanced alien race, using an out-of-production 1960s cereal toy as their chief means of communication with one scientist on Earth?
But ANYWAY, now you and the world knows the blinking stars aren't just a cosmic phenomenon. They're a direct threat.
How to watch:3 Body Problemis now streaming on Netflix.
Topics Netflix
School district warns families about 'scary clowns'The Pence vs. Kaine VP debate didn't get many viewersGoogle's Pixel and Pixel XL smartphones to go on preThe 8 most impressive social good innovations from SeptemberIn the interest of blowing your mind, Grimes just dropped 7 new music videos'Toy Story' Vans are actually for adultsRolling Stones tease music from first studio album in over a decadeIndian startup SmartVizX is trying to solve real estate's big problem with VRTrump live tweeted the vice presidential debate, because it didn't contain enough of him5 years after Steve Jobs' death, we still don't have our next great visionary'Toy Story' Vans are actually for adultsGoogle's Pixel and Pixel XL smartphones to go on preWhy watch Pence vs. Kaine? Because this is the real presidential debate.Blue Origin successfully tests its rocket escape system in flightThe dark side and the light of likable IkeTim Kaine shows his family values by inviting married lesbian couple to VP debateWhen Kim Kardashian returns to social media, it will be very different'Racist' Fox News piece blasted by AsianTim Kaine shows his family values by inviting married lesbian couple to VP debateTwitter is out of time, despite Jack Dorsey's best turnaround efforts Diary, 1995 by Melissa Febos Have a Carrot: Picture Books by The Paris Review Mary Gaitskill’s Veronica and the Choreography of Chicken Soup by The Paris Review Odysseus’s Kinesphere by Annie I Remember All Too Well: Taylor Swift and Joe Brainard by JoAnna Novak Like Disaster by Rachel Heise Bolten For the Record, the Review Has Not Abolished Fiction by The Paris Review Emma Cline, Dan Bevacqua, and Robert Glück Recommend by The Paris Review Love, Loosha by Lucia Berlin and Kenward Elmslie More Summer Issue Poets Recommend by The Paris Review Desolation Journal by Jack Kerouac The Review’s Review: Real Housewives Edition by The Paris Review Ben Lerner, Diane Seuss, and Ange Mlinko Recommend by The Paris Review Diary, 2001 by Nell Zink The Sixties Diaries by Ted Berrigan The Entangled Life: On Nancy Lemann by Krithika Varagur Bona Nit, Estimat (An Ordinary Night) by Robert Glück Twilight Zone Dispatch: The Last Stop and the Book of Revelation by Nicolette Polek A Brighter Kind of Madness: On Leonard Cohen by Ottessa Moshfegh Memory of a Difficult Summer by Clarice Lispector
2.0368s , 10133.8515625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Mary Carey All Babe Network (2013)】,Fresh Information Network