An educational series that explains everyday objects and makes complex science accessible through experiments and playful explanations. It shows how discoveries like waves enabled the smartphone, and explores radioactivity, dark energy, and blood circulation, featuring Curie, Röntgen, Newton, and Einstein, showing science is understandable and engaging.

Where to Watch Innovation Effect • Season 2

13 Episodes

  • Nanotechnology: The Superpowers of the Invisible
    E1
    Nanotechnology: The Superpowers of the InvisibleNanotechnology enables us to manipulate matter at an incredibly small scale. This episode traces its evolution from early concepts to today’s breakthroughs, revealing how these technologies are already transforming everyday life in electronics, energy, medicine, and many other fields.
  • Materials: From Flint to Silicon
    E2
    Materials: From Flint to SiliconThis episode explores the history of materials, from ceramics and metals to alloys, concrete, Bakelite, and plastics. It shows how these innovations have shaped societies and examines how bio-based and smart materials could help address today’s environmental, technological, and societal challenges.
  • Blood Circulation: At the Heart of the Human Body
    E3
    Blood Circulation: At the Heart of the Human BodyThis episode traces the discoveries and misconceptions that shaped our understanding of blood circulation, from Hippocrates to William Harvey’s groundbreaking description of the circulatory system. It also explores the discovery of blood groups and the medical advances it enabled, from safe transfusions to major breakthroughs in modern medicine.
  • Earth History: From Chaos to Order
    E4
    Earth History: From Chaos to OrderEarly 20th-century radiometric dating revealed the Earth's true age for the first time, showing it is over 4 billion years old, far beyond earlier estimates of only thousands of years. This breakthrough replaced earlier religious or empirical assumptions and laid the foundation for modern geology.
  • The Photoelectric Effect: When Light Knocks Out Electrons
    E5
    The Photoelectric Effect: When Light Knocks Out ElectronsThis episode explains how light can release electrons from materials, generating usable energy, and how sunlight interacts with matter. It also highlights Scheele’s discovery of photosensitivity, which laid the groundwork for technologies such as solar panels, camera sensors, and automatic screen brightness systems.
  • Nuclear Fusion: When Humans Create Suns
    E6
    Nuclear Fusion: When Humans Create SunsThis episode explains nuclear fusion, the energy source of stars, and follows its history from hydrogen bombs to modern research aimed at controlling plasma. It highlights tokamaks designed to replicate the Sun’s fusion reactions on Earth, offering the hope of clean, nearly limitless energy.
  • The Scientific Method: The Path to Knowledge
    E7
    The Scientific Method: The Path to KnowledgeFrom Newton’s apple to early thinkers like Thales, this episode explores how simple observations become scientific theories. It outlines the key steps of the scientific method and shows how scientists such as Copernicus challenged established worldviews, reshaping our understanding of the universe.
  • Lasers: A Versatile Beam of Light
    E8
    Lasers: A Versatile Beam of LightUsed today in eye surgery, tattoo removal, and many other fields, lasers have roots in the work of Niels Bohr and Albert Einstein. This episode also explains how CDs and speed cameras work and clarifies why Darth Vader’s lightsaber belongs to science fiction rather than real science.
  • Time: A Fast-Forward Explanation
    E9
    Time: A Fast-Forward ExplanationWe experience time passing constantly, but its perception and measurement have evolved over history. From ancient sundials like the gnomon to pendulum clocks and time zones, humans developed ways to coordinate complex societies. Biological rhythms in the body also play a role, while Einstein’s theory of relativity revived the idea of time travel.
  • Radioactivity: Radiation to the End
    E10
    Radioactivity: Radiation to the EndThe Chernobyl nuclear disaster 40 years ago brought the dangers of radioactivity into public awareness, though low-level radiation is naturally present in the environment. This episode highlights the contributions of Wilhelm Röntgen, Marie Curie and others in studying artificial radioactivity, leading to nuclear reactors and the atomic bomb.
  • Parasites: The Unwanted Co-Inhabitants
    E11
    Parasites: The Unwanted Co-InhabitantsParasites have existed for over 500 million years, mastering survival by living at the expense of others. This episode explores tiny organisms capable of causing massive epidemics and examines possible links between the deaths of Tutankhamun, George Washington, and the fall of the Roman Empire.
  • Dark Energy: The Great Unknown
    E12
    Dark Energy: The Great UnknownOnce thought to be stable by Newton and later Einstein, the universe is now known to be expanding at an accelerating rate. This episode explores the search for dark energy, the mysterious force believed to drive this expansion and remain one of the biggest unsolved questions in cosmology.
  • Fossil Fuels: Blessing and Curse
    E13
    Fossil Fuels: Blessing and CurseHydrocarbons have long served as efficient fuels, already used by Neanderthals, the Inca, and the Persian civilizations. Since the 2000s, unconventional fossil energy sources such as shale gas have rapidly expanded through fracking. This episode explores how long these resources can still be used and what their consequences are for the climate.
  • Candice SansanoSelf - Narrator (voice)
  • Julien MasdouaSelf - Narrator (voice)
  • Abdel MostefaDirector
  • William EguientaDirector / Producer / Supervising Editor
  • Nicolas AlbernyWriter
  • Jean MachExecutive Producer
  • Nicolas LesoultProducer
  • Maïssa GonetProducer
  • Léa HerbéAssistant Editor
  • Alexandre DechelAnimation Supervisor
  • Guillaume De TaisneAnimation Supervisor