Spiders, Sea Science, and a Super-Sized Flag! - Big Brain Shows
Daily Kids News with Big Brain
Episode 73 June 15, 2026 5:32

Spiders, Sea Science, and a Super-Sized Flag!

In this episode, kids learn how a newly found cave spider in Oregon can be identified with careful observing and DNA clues, then get an official name. Next, they explore coastal science at See More HQ, where scientists measure ocean clues like waves, wind, temperature, and saltiness. Finally, they visit Flag Day fun at a museum and discover how the Star-Spangled Banner is protected with special lighting, temperature control, and gentle conservation.

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📺 Stories in This Episode

🗣️ Talk About It

  • 1

    If you discovered a new animal, what would you name it and why?

  • 2

    What’s one question you’d ask a scientist who studies the ocean?

📜 Read Full Episode Script

TITLE: Spiders, Sea Science, and a Super-Sized Flag! INTRO: Hello, curious humans! Big Brain here—welcome to Episode 73! Today we’re zooming into a secret cave, splashing into coastal science, and visiting a museum where a famous flag gets the VIP treatment. And remember: "If you don't know the news, you are gonna lose!" PARENT CORNER: Today’s stories are all about curiosity: discovering new species, exploring ocean science, and learning history through museum activities. If your child wants to dig deeper, consider a library book on spiders, tides, or U.S. symbols. DISCUSSION: ["If you discovered a new animal, what would you name it and why?","What’s one question you’d ask a scientist who studies the ocean?"] STORY 1: A New Cave Spider in Oregon Gets a Real Name Whoa—did you know there are still animals on Earth that humans haven’t officially met yet? Yep! In Oregon’s Columbia River Gorge, a biologist found a brand-new kind of cave spider, and it just got an official name. Here’s the cool part: caves are like nature’s secret rooms. They’re dark, quiet, and often a little damp—kind of like a giant stone basement. Animals that live there can end up with special features over a long, long time. Some cave creatures rely less on eyesight and more on feeling vibrations, sensing air movement, or using tiny hairs to “read” the world. So how do scientists know it’s truly a new species? They look carefully at details—like body shape and patterns—and they may compare DNA, which is like an instruction book inside living things. If it doesn’t match known species, bingo: new species! And instead of naming it in a boring way, this one got a community-style naming celebration. That’s science with a party hat on—learning together, sharing the discovery, and cheering for nature’s hidden neighbors. Speaking of exploring hidden worlds… let’s surf into the next story—without even getting your socks wet. Visuals: [{"word":"cave","visual_prompt":"Create a glossy, high-energy 3D animated image of a magical cave for a kids' science show. The cave walls look like shiny chocolate rock sprinkled with glowing candy crystals. A goofy cartoon bat in a tiny explorer hat holds a flashlight that shines rainbow beams. Puddles on the floor look like blue raspberry jelly and reflect sparkly lights. Add silly signposts made of popsicle sticks that say 'Science This Way'. Bright saturated colors, toy-like textures, cinematic lighting, playful mood.","type":"image"},{"word":"spider","visual_prompt":"Create a cute, not-scary 3D animated cave spider character for kids. The spider has big friendly eyes, fuzzy pastel legs like pipe cleaners, and wears a tiny safety helmet with a sticker that says 'NEW SPECIES!'. It is standing on a glittery rock like a stage, waving to an audience of tiny ladybugs holding confetti. Bright, saturated Pixar-like lighting, glossy plastic textures, joyful vibe.","type":"image"},{"word":"DNA","visual_prompt":"Create a vibrant 3D animated scene of a DNA double helix made of colorful gummy candies twisting like a spiral slide. A cartoon scientist hamster wearing goggles rides down the helix on a mini skateboard, leaving a trail of sparkles. Background looks like a playful lab made from building blocks and lunchboxes. Super bright, glossy, toy-like aesthetic, energetic motion.","type":"image"},{"word":"naming","visual_prompt":"Create a funny 3D animated 'naming ceremony' scene for a new animal. A giant golden name tag hangs from a balloon, and a smiling cartoon spider stands at a podium made from stacked picture books. The crowd is friendly forest critters holding party horns and confetti poppers. A banner reads 'Welcome, New Neighbor!' Bright saturated colors, cinematic lighting, celebration mood.","type":"image"}] STORY 2: A Hands-On Ocean Science Space Opens: See More HQ Have you ever wished the ocean could send you a message like, “Hi, I’m feeling wavy today”? Well, scientists sort of do that—by measuring what’s happening along the coast, right now! And there’s a new place where families can explore this kind of real-time coastal science: a hands-on exhibit space called “See More HQ” at the Seymour Marine Discovery Center. Let’s break it down. “Coastal science” means studying the edge where land meets ocean—beaches, cliffs, tide pools, and all the busy water in between. Scientists watch things like water temperature, wave height, wind, and even how salty the ocean is. Those clues help people understand animal habitats, plan beach safety, and learn how the ocean changes from day to day. The best part? This exhibit is built for exploring with your hands and your brain at the same time. Interactive spaces can feel like a science playground—press a button, watch a map change, move a model, and suddenly you understand something that used to sound complicated. It’s also bilingual, which means more families can jump in and learn together. Science is for everyone—whether you say “hello,” “hola,” or “hi-ya!” Now, from ocean waves to a waving flag… let’s head to a museum that’s holding a super special celebration. Visuals: [{"word":"ocean","visual_prompt":"Create a glossy 3D animated ocean scene where the waves are made of sparkling blue soda and fizzy bubbles. A smiling cartoon octopus wears a lab coat and uses a giant bendy straw like a telescope. Tiny fish zip around like colorful toy cars. Bright saturated colors, energetic motion, cinematic lighting, playful science vibe.","type":"image"},{"word":"science","visual_prompt":"Create a kid-friendly 3D animated 'science HQ' room made from giant building blocks. There are big buttons, glowing screens showing cartoon tide charts, and a silly robot crab rolling around delivering sticky notes. Everything looks like glossy plastic toys with bright, saturated colors and warm cinematic lighting.","type":"image"},{"word":"waves","visual_prompt":"Create a funny 3D animated wave machine demonstration: a clear tub filled with bright turquoise water and floating rubber ducks wearing tiny goggles. A kid-safe crank handle made of licorice twists makes the water form perfect waves that sparkle. Add confetti-like sea foam. Toy-like, glossy, Pixar-inspired lighting.","type":"image"},{"word":"map","visual_prompt":"Create a vibrant 3D animated map table showing a coastline shaped like a giant taco. The 'sand' is crushed golden cookies, and the 'water' is shiny blue gelatin. A cartoon scientist penguin points at moving icons with a giant neon pointer. Bright saturated colors, glossy textures, fun learning mood.","type":"image"}] STORY 3: Flag Day Fun at the Smithsonian (And a Famous Flag Lives There) Quick question: have you ever seen a flag so important it inspired a song? That’s part of what Flag Day celebrations are about—learning how a flag became a symbol people recognize and remember. At the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, Flag Day included kid-friendly activities like storytime and family programs. Now, flags aren’t magic cloth—so why do people care about them? A flag is like a team logo for a whole country. It can show up at schools, parks, sports games, and big celebrations. It reminds people of shared ideas and history. And here’s the museum connection: the Smithsonian is home to the original Star-Spangled Banner, the flag that inspired the U.S. national anthem. Imagine a flag that’s been around for a very long time—carefully protected so it doesn’t crumble like an old cracker! Museums use special lighting, careful temperature control, and gentle conservation work to keep important objects safe. Kid programs make history feel like something you can touch with your imagination. When you hear a story, make a craft, or ask a question, history stops being a dusty word and starts being a real-life adventure. That’s our trio of brain snacks for today: a newly named cave spider, ocean science you can play with, and a famous flag with a big story behind it. Visuals: [{"word":"flag","visual_prompt":"Create a cheerful 3D animated scene of a huge friendly flag character waving like a cape. The flag has big googly eyes and a smile, and it’s holding pom-poms made of confetti. The flagpole is a giant striped candy cane planted in a cookie-dough ground. Bright saturated colors, glossy toy-like texture, celebratory mood.","type":"image"},{"word":"museum","visual_prompt":"Create a vibrant 3D animated museum interior designed for kids: dinosaur-shaped benches, shiny floors like polished candy, and big display cases made of clear bubble gum glass. A cartoon raccoon tour guide holds a tiny microphone and a map. Bright saturated colors, cinematic lighting, playful learning vibe.","type":"image"},{"word":"storytime","visual_prompt":"Create a cozy 3D animated storytime scene: kids and friendly animal characters sit on giant plush floor pillows shaped like stars. A librarian owl reads a big book that glows with floating pictures in the air. Warm, saturated lighting, glossy Pixar-like style, calm happy mood.","type":"image"},{"word":"conservation","visual_prompt":"Create a kid-friendly 3D animated conservation lab scene where careful 'artifact helpers' work gently. A cartoon sloth in white gloves uses a tiny soft brush to dust a pretend flag inside a glass case. Tools look like colorful plastic toys. Add a thermometer and soft lamps with smiley faces. Bright, safe, non-scary, glossy 3D style.","type":"image"}] OUTRO: That’s the news, brain buddies—three stories, lots of learning, and zero boring. Keep those neurons firing! See you next time!

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