Fran Scott

Fran Scott is a science presenter best known for her work on CBBC's Absolute Genius with Dick and Dom. She is the Clothworkers' Science Content Producer at the Royal Institution.[1]

Radio and television

Scott is a science presenter on Children's BBC, where she has presented How to Be Epic at Everything[2] and the BAFTA-nominated Absolute Genius with Dick and Dom.[3] She has also presented and appeared as a judge on Newsround.

Scott has presented two BAFTA-nominated programmes for BBC2, The Imagineers[4] and You Too Can Be An Absolute Genius.[5] She co-presented Factomania for BBC Knowledge and has featured as science presenter on Channel 4's Sunday Brunch.[2] Scott has presented How Dangerous Is Your...? for BBC Radio 4 Extra.[6] In 2018, she became a judge on Channel 4's Lego Masters.

In 2019, Scott appeared on Massive Engineering Mistakes for the Discovery Channel.

Stage

Scott has presented science stage productions for several years, sharing a stage with Professor Robert Winston, Richard Hammond and Professor Brian Cox, among others. Her stage production company, Great Scott! Productions has been commissioned by Google for Education, CBBC and Siemens.[7]

Awards

  • RTS 2013: Best Learning or Education Programme[8]
gollark: That is also true of basically any unsandboxed function.
gollark: It's an extension of the signed disk thing, really.
gollark: > The primary benefit promised by elliptic curve cryptography is a smaller key size, reducing storage and transmission requirements[6], i.e. that an elliptic curve group could provide the same level of security afforded by an RSA-based system with a large modulus and correspondingly larger key: for example, a 256-bit elliptic curve public key should provide comparable security to a 3072-bit RSA public key. - wikipedia
gollark: For RSA, though.
gollark: Er, 32 bytes.

References

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