Episodes

  • Can Cats Talk? The Science Behind Meows, Purrs, and Human Manipulation
    Feb 10 2026

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    Subscribe and prepare to realize your cat has been training you this whole time.

    In this Niche Scientists minisode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole dive into the fascinating research of Dr. Susanne Schötz, a phonetics professor at Lund University—and the scientist behind some of the most groundbreaking work on cat–human communication.

    Her research explores how cats use meows, purrs, trills, and intonation to communicate with humans, how those sounds change based on emotion and context, and why domestic cats are far more vocal than their wild or feral relatives.

    🐾 Why cats use short, high-pitched meows when happy or requesting
    😾 Why vet-meows sound long, low, and dramatic (as they should)
    🎵 How cats adjust melody and pitch specifically for their humans
    🧠 What “solicitation purring” is—and why it mimics a human baby’s cry
    🗣️ Why every cat–human pair develops its own unique dialect

    The big takeaway? Cats aren’t just making noise. They’re fine-tuning a language to get what they want—and humans are surprisingly good at understanding it, especially if they’ve lived with cats before.

    🎧 This episode is part of our Niche Scientists minisode series—short, weird, and full of research that makes you a better, more informed pet parent.

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    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

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    15 mins
  • Echinoderms Explained: Sea Stars, Sea Urchins, and the Ocean’s Weirdest Hydraulics
    Feb 3 2026

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    Subscribe and unleash your inner science goblin. We see you. We respect it.

    In this deep-dive episode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole crack open the bizarre, beautiful world of echinoderms—the “spiny-skinned” sea creatures that are hard on the outside, squishy on the inside, and powered by a literal hydraulic system.

    We’re talking sea stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, brittle stars, feather stars, and sea cucumbers—a group that looks like it shouldn’t make sense… until you learn the rules.

    🌊 The water vascular system and how tube feet work like living suction hydraulics
    ⭐ Why echinoderms don’t have a centralized brain (and why that doesn’t mean “no thoughts”)
    🧬 The wild symmetry twist: larvae start bilateral, then reorganize into radial body plans
    🥒 Sea cucumbers and their most unhinged defense move: evisceration (yes, it’s what it sounds like)
    🌿 Species spotlight: the sunflower sea star—a major predator of sea urchins that helps keep kelp forests alive
    ⚠️ And the real-world crisis: sea star wasting syndrome, which caused catastrophic declines, including over 90% loss of sunflower sea stars in much of their range

    If you’ve ever looked at a sea star and thought “that thing has no business being real,” this episode is your guide to why it does—and why losing them changes entire ecosystems.

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    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

    Track a real wild animal. Support conservation. Feel slightly cooler than you did five seconds ago. Visit the Fahlo tracking bracelets website to get 20% off tracking bracelets with code WildlyKaty.




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    50 mins
  • Snail Racing Science: Why Studying Slime Is a Big Deal
    Jan 13 2026

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    Subscribe and prepare to root for the slowest athletes on Earth.

    In this Niche Scientists minisode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole dive into the bizarre but brilliant world of snail racing—and the scientists who study it to unlock secrets of movement, slime, and survival.

    Every summer in England, snails compete in the World Snail Racing Championships. It sounds ridiculous… until you realize researchers are using these races to study animal locomotion, non-Newtonian fluids, and biomimicry.

    🐌 Why snail slime is both sticky and slippery
    🧪 How snail mucus behaves like a non-Newtonian fluid
    🏃‍♂️ How snails move using muscular waves instead of steps
    🩹 Why snail-inspired adhesives could revolutionize wound closure and surgery
    🤖 How snail movement is inspiring soft robotics for medicine and rescue tech

    Scientists from engineering, biomechanics, and ecology use snail racing data to understand friction control, climate adaptation, and even how future robots might crawl through collapsed buildings or blood vessels.

    It’s slow science. It’s weird science. And it turns out… it’s incredibly important.

    🎧 This episode is part of our Niche Scientists minisode series—short episodes spotlighting the wonderfully specific research quietly shaping the future.

    Support the show

    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

    Track a real wild animal. Support conservation. Feel slightly cooler than you did five seconds ago. Visit the Fahlo tracking bracelets website to get 20% off tracking bracelets with code WildlyKaty.




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    13 mins
  • Natural Navigation: How Humans Find Direction Without GPS
    Jan 6 2026

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    Subscribe and rediscover a skill humans were never meant to lose.

    In this episode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole explore natural navigation—the ancient human ability to find direction by reading the land, sea, sky, plants, and animals instead of relying on GPS.

    Long before maps and satellites, humans navigated forests and oceans using patterns, movement, and observation. And the wild part? That ability never disappeared—we just stopped practicing it.

    🌿 How plants and trees reveal direction through sunlight and wind
    🕷️ Why spiders, lichens, and grazing animals act as natural indicators
    🌞 How the sun, stars, and seasonal patterns guide movement on land
    🌊 How Polynesian wayfinders navigated the open ocean without instruments
    🧭 Why navigation isn’t about knowing where you are—but knowing how to move

    From reading asymmetry in trees to feeling ocean swells beneath a canoe, this episode reframes navigation as presence, pattern recognition, and attention—not coordinates on a screen.

    🎧 Whether you’re an outdoor enthusiast, birder, hiker, paddler, or just someone craving a slower, more grounded way of moving through the world, this episode will change how you look at nature forever.

    Support the show

    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

    Track a real wild animal. Support conservation. Feel slightly cooler than you did five seconds ago. Visit the Fahlo tracking bracelets website to get 20% off tracking bracelets with code WildlyKaty.




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    43 mins
  • The Scientists Who Studied Pee, Poop, and Won Prizes
    Dec 30 2025

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    Subscribe and prepare to learn something you will never un-know.

    In this Niche Scientists minisode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole spotlight two researchers whose work sounds ridiculous… until you realize it’s brilliant.

    Meet Dr. David Hu and Dr. Patricia Yang, engineers who study fluid dynamics by asking the questions no one else would:

    • Why do almost all mammals pee in the same amount of time?
    • Why is wombat poop shaped like a cube?
    • And how can studying animal waste improve engineering, medicine, and early cancer detection?

    🚽 Why mammals over 3 kg empty their bladders in ~21 seconds
    🐘 How urethra length turns gravity into an efficiency tool
    🧊 The real reason wombat poop is square (and it’s NOT the sphincter)
    🏆 How this research earned two IG Nobel Prizes
    🧠 Why “weird” science often leads to the biggest breakthroughs

    What starts as slow-motion videos of animals peeing ends up influencing biomimicry, manufacturing, plumbing systems, and colon cancer diagnostics.

    🎧 This episode proves that curiosity-driven science—even the gross kind—can quietly change the world.

    Support the show

    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

    Track a real wild animal. Support conservation. Feel slightly cooler than you did five seconds ago. Visit the Fahlo tracking bracelets website to get 20% off tracking bracelets with code WildlyKaty.




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    17 mins
  • DNA Explained: How Genetics Shape Who You Are (and Why It Matters)
    Dec 23 2025

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    Subscribe and unleash your inner science goblin. We see you. We respect it.

    DNA isn’t magic—but it is one of the most powerful instruction systems in the universe.

    In this deep-dive episode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole break down genetics, DNA, and inheritance in a way that actually makes sense—no lab coat required. From the tiny molecular code inside your cells to the ethical questions surrounding modern gene editing, this episode connects the science to real life.

    🧬 What DNA actually is (and what it doesn’t do)
    🧠 The difference between DNA, genes, RNA, and proteins
    🧬 How traits are inherited—and why genetics isn’t destiny
    🧪 How modern genetics is used in medicine, conservation, and forensics
    ✂️ What CRISPR can do—and why ethics matter more than ever

    Along the way, we untangle common myths, explain why humans are more just as similar as we are complex and explore how environment, stress, and experience interact with your DNA.

    🎧 Whether you’re a science nerd, a biology student, or someone who just wants to understand how their body works, this episode gives you the basic tools to think critically about genetics—and why it matters far beyond the classroom.

    Support the show

    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

    Track a real wild animal. Support conservation. Feel slightly cooler than you did five seconds ago. Visit the Fahlo tracking bracelets website to get 20% off tracking bracelets with code WildlyKaty.




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    47 mins
  • Whale Earwax Holds a Hidden History of the Ocean
    Dec 16 2025

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    Subscribe and prepare to learn something you absolutely did not know existed.

    In this Niche Scientists minisode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss dives into one of the strangest—and most important—jobs in science: whale earwax archivist.

    Yes. That’s a real thing.

    Certain whales build massive earwax plugs over their lifetime, adding a new layer every six months. And scientists have learned how to read those layers like tree rings—revealing a whale’s age, stress levels, exposure to pollution, and even the history of human impact on the ocean.

    🐋 What whale earwax is actually made of
    📏 Why these plugs can grow over 10 inches long
    🧪 How scientists read them like biological timelines
    🌍 What they reveal about climate change, pollution, and industrialization
    📉 And why whales are basically the ocean’s canaries in a coal mine

    It’s gross. It’s fascinating. And it turns out to be one of the most powerful tools we have for understanding long-term ocean health.

    🎧 This episode is part of our Niche Scientists minisode series—short episodes spotlighting the wildly specific research that quietly changes how we understand the world.

    Support the show

    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

    Track a real wild animal. Support conservation. Feel slightly cooler than you did five seconds ago. Visit the Fahlo tracking bracelets website to get 20% off tracking bracelets with code WildlyKaty.




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    16 mins
  • The Science of Swearing: Can Cursing Actually Help You?
    Dec 2 2025

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    Subscribe and let your curiosity swear a little. We won’t tell. 😉

    In this Wildly Curious minisode, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole kick off their new Niche Scientists series with a deep dive into Dr. Richard Stephens—a psychologist who studies something we all do (sometimes loudly): swearing.

    From pain tolerance to powerlifting, Dr. Stephens’ research shows that strategic cursing can actually make you stronger, tougher, and maybe even a little bit smarter about when to drop an F-bomb.

    🤬 Can swearing really reduce pain?
    💪 Does cursing make you physically stronger?
    🧠 What happens in your brain when you let it fly?
    🚫 And why swearing too often makes it less effective?

    It’s the perfect mix of science, psychology, and sass—because sometimes the best way to say “ouch”... is to not say “ouch.”

    🎧 This is our first episodr of our Niche Scientists minisodes—short, weird, and full of science you didn’t know you needed.

    Support the show

    🎉 Support us on Patreon to keep the episodes coming! 🪼🦤🧠 For more laughs, catch us on YouTube!

    Track a real wild animal. Support conservation. Feel slightly cooler than you did five seconds ago. Visit the Fahlo tracking bracelets website to get 20% off tracking bracelets with code WildlyKaty.




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    11 mins