Modern Marvels

Modern Marvels

Title card since 2007
Created by Bruce Nash
Narrated by Max Raphael (current)
Harlan Saperstein
Will Lyman
Greg Stebner
Bill Ratner
Jack Perkins
David Ackroyd
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 19
No. of episodes 690 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Don Cambou
Running time 44 minutes
Production company(s) Jupiter Entertainment
Release
Original network History Channel, H2
Original release January 1, 1995 (1995-01-01) – April 11, 2015 (2015-04-11)
External links
Website

Modern Marvels is an American worldwide television series on the History Channel. The program focuses on how technologies affect and are used in today's society. It is among History's first, and longest-running, programs, having first aired on History's first day of broadcasting on January 1, 1995.

Since its debut, Modern Marvels has produced over 650 one-hour episodes covering various topics involving (to list a few) science, technology, electronics, mechanics, engineering, architecture, industry, mass production, manufacturing, and agriculture. Each episode typically discusses the history and production of several related items; for instance, an episode on distilled spirits discusses the production of bourbon in Kentucky, scotch whisky in Scotland, and tequila in Mexico. To fit the network's format, Modern Marvels focuses a significant portion of the episode on the history of the subject.[1]

The show began to premiere new episodes in January 2010, not having done so through all of 2009.[2] In August 2010, History Channel began to air older episodes that had been edited to fit a 30-minute time slot, under the title Modern Marvels: Essentials.

In October 2011, Modern Marvels began airing first-run episodes on History 2 (formerly History International) in addition to its main run on History Channel.

Engineering Disasters

Not to be confused with Extreme Engineering.

Occasionally, the show airs a special spin-off called Engineering Disasters. These periodic episodes describe the circumstances of situations in which technology does not work correctly, such as building collapses and airplane crashes, resulting in spectacular (and sometimes fatal) failures. Including an episode on New Orleans and another on the 1970s, 24 original Engineering Disasters episodes have been on on Modern Marvels. The packaging on the box set of Engineering Disasters 4-20 plus New Orleans describes the series as such: "Dark clouds with silver linings, Modern Marvels: Engineering Disasters presents the tragic, yet invaluable, handmaidens of technological progress." [3]

A former title screenshot of Modern Marvels

Introduction

Distinct from other History Channel series, the introduction of Modern Marvels features visuals and sounds of a bolt being turned by a ratchet wrench, followed by a partially computer-generated sequence involving construction workers building and hanging the title.

Narration

A few narrators have been used in the history of the series. The most current and longest-running is Max Raphael, who has also narrated other History Channel series, such as Command Decisions.

The History Channel has repackaged some episodes that originally aired in other series and stand-alone specials into episodes of Modern Marvels, such as Ice Road Truckers, which originally aired in 2000 as part of the series Suicide Missions. These episodes are not narrated by Raphael.

Production

Bruce Nash is credited with creating the series. Don Cambou has acted as executive producer on over 350 episodes for Actuality Productions, the production company behind the series.

Episodes

See also

References

  1. Archived September 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. Modern Marvels Episode Guide. History.com.
  3. Modern Marvels: Engineering Disasters - (5 DVD set, back panel)
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