The Mysterious Origins of Man

The Mysterious Origins of Man is a pseudoarchaeological television special that originally aired on NBC on February 25, 1996.[1] Hosted by Charlton Heston, the program presents the fringe theory that mankind has lived on the Earth for tens of millions of years, and that mainstream scientists have suppressed the fossil evidence for this. Some material included was based on the controversial Forbidden Archeology, a book written by Hindu creationists Michael Cremo and Richard L. Thompson about anomalous archeological finds reported mainly in early scientific journals.[2]

The Mysterious Origins of Man
GenreDocumentary
Written byJohn Cheshire
Bill Cote
Directed byBill Cote
Narrated byCharlton Heston
Composer(s)Fritz Heede
Production
Producer(s)John Cheshire
Bill Cote
Carol Cote
CinematographyBill Cote
Running time46 minutes
Production company(s)BC Video Inc.
Release
Original networkNBC
Original releaseFebruary 25, 1996 (1996-02-25)
External links
Website

Content

The Paluxy tracks

The Zuiyo-maru carcass

The Missing Link

Java Man

Lucy

Tiwanaku

Stonehenge

Giza pyramids

Piri Reis map

Atlantis

Pole shift hypothesis

Interviewees

Michael Cremo, co-author of Forbidden Archeology

Dr. Richard Thompson, co-author of Forbidden Archeology

Virginia Steen-McIntyre, PhD, Geologist

Carl Baugh, Anthropologist and young-Earth creationist

David Hatcher Childress, author

Richard Milton, author of Shattering the Myths of Darwinism

Graham Hancock, author of Fingerprints of the Gods

Robert Bauval, author of The Orion Mystery

Rand Flem-Arth, co-author of When the Sky Fell

Reception

The program was widely criticized by the scientific community. Donald Johanson said it was "absolutely shameful, and it sort of sets us back 100 years".[3] Jim Foley of TalkOrigins called it a "pseudo-scientific mishmash of discredited claims and crackpot ideas".[4]

However, the criticism did not prevent NBC from re-broadcasting the special on June 8, 1996. In response, John Carman wrote in the San Francisco Chronicle, "You'd think the NBC brass would be a touch embarrassed by the program, and eager to let the little furor fritter away into oblivion. But then you really would be a simpleton. NBC, a subsidiary of the science giant General Electric, does not exist to sharpen minds. Science, schmience. If there was money to be made from it, NBC would tell you the Earth is flat because of repeated indentations from space aliens on pogo sticks."[5]

Dave Thomas wrote in Skeptical Briefs that "quality science was nowhere to be found" in the program, as it had people of questionable credentials interviewed and failed to interview the leading researchers in their respective fields.[6] Thomas further explained the show failed to challenge the extraordinary claims.[6]

Creationist Ken Ham criticized the production in the February 1996 Answers in Genesis newsletter in a review titled "Hollywood's 'Moses' Undermines Genesis."[6] Ham attacked fellow creationist Baugh's claims, saying, "According to leading creationist researchers, this evidence is open to much debate and needs much more intensive research. One wonders how much of the information in the program can really be trusted!"[6]

See also

References

  1. Kardon, Fred, ed. (February 25, 1996). "Sunday Evening". Preview. The Pantagraph. 159. Bloomington, Illinois: Donald R. Skaggs. p. 7 via Newspapers.com. Charlton Heston hosts 'The Mysterious Origins of Man" at 6 p.m. Sunday on NBC.
  2. Wodak, Jo; Oldroyd, David (1996). ""Vedic Creationism": A Further Twist to the Evolution Debate"". Social Studies of Science. 26: 192–213. doi:10.1177/030631296026001012.
  3. Holden, Constance (March 8, 1996). "Anti-evolution TV show prompts furor". Science. Vol. 271 no. 5254. p. 1357. doi:10.1126/science.271.5254.1357a.
  4. Jim Foley. "NBC's 'The Mysterious Origins of Man'". TalkOrigins Archive. June 12, 1996. Retrieved on August 18, 2008.
  5. Carman, John (June 7, 1996). "NBC's Own Mystery Science". San Francisco Chronicle. p. D1.
  6. Thomas, Dave (March 1996). "NBC's Origins Show". Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. Retrieved 2007-02-19.
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