There are big names behind this show which starts with some stunning visual film sequences from the Wellcome Trust. Dr Mark Pallen, author of The Rough Guide to Evolution, made sure it had sufficient scientific rigour and it stars Baba Brinkman, one of the worlds great intelligent rappers. The show sets out to do two things make a comparison between the evolution of Rap and Darwins theories of evolution; and portray both sides of the ongoing creationist / evolutionist argument. It does so in a mixture of PowerPoint slides (yes, typical of scientific conferences text-heavy, featuring quotes from Darwin, read out verbatim or paraphrased) - groan; original and parody rap numbers great; conversational narrative - fast! The pace of the show goes at the speed of well, almost as speedily as youd need to travel to get from dinosaur to twitterer in 5 minutes. Slackers beware the words come fast and furious and almost feel like a bombardment of Socratic dialogue at some points. You need to listen very carefully to follow the thread of thought, which is logical and well-presented. There are moments of relief, but I did feel a bit as if Baba was rushing to cram seventy-five minutes worth of material into a sixty-minute slot. What Baba does is amazing his knowledge of rap genres and styles is encyclopaedic (the guys done a degree on Chaucer and rap, for heavens sakes)! Hes obviously read up on the evolutionist arguments. He does indulge in laying logical traps for the audience to fall into, failing to sufficiently define terms such as nature or Africa(n) until after hes laid out the arguments, which leaves the potential for audience members to be drawn down familiar paths only to find out theyve had the ground (whether logical or high moral or other) removed from under their feet. Its a suspect strategy, but it eliminates the chance attentive listeners will opt out from the beginning if they dont buy into the given definitions of terms, or at least, as I did, listen with caution to his arguments while his terms remained undefined.His most interesting and original argument has to do with the link he makes between a Canadian study of homicide statistics and the rap phenomenon. He is keen to explain, not justify, he says, then comes out with statements like, Darwins left Freud in the dustbin, which he then explains and ends up justifying brilliantly.The show ends in a flash of verbal fireworks, with Baba exclaiming, the truth hurts thats how evolution works. He likens truth to acid burning into the mind to dissolve pride. With the enthusiasm of a zealot, however well-presented his arguments are, he is in danger of dissolving peoples hopes, dreams, crutches along with their pride. Whether he ultimately succeeds in his aim of presenting evolutionism in a light so inarguably appealing that people totally embrace it and Darwins utopian, universalist ideals which stem from it remains to be seen. He certainly provides a volatile and unstable catalyst for the process.