I absolutely loved this when I was younger! Looking forward to watching it again after so many years.
On the rare occasions when I play a game of pool, a little piece of my brain remembers the pool-table section from this video as I try to make bank shots.
Wow, I used to think of this when playing pool as well, but at some point I internalized it and completely forgot where I learned it. Well, not forgot, but he memory became disassociated from the action, until you reminded me.
I'm pretty sure The Phantom Tollbooth, Alice in Wonderland, and Donald Duck in Mathmagic Land have merged in my brain into one school animated film blob.
Which one had "Inchworm" in it?
P.S. It's a billiards table.
You got one, two, three, four, five, six pockets in a table.
Pockets that mark the diff'rence
Between a gentlemen and a bum
With a capital "B,"
And that rhymes with "P" and that stands for pool!
Wow. I don't think I've come across anyone else who has even heard of The Phantom Tollbooth. I haven't seen it in years but it was one of my favourites. I don't remember an inchworm in either that or AiW, and I haven't seen the linked video.
My teacher read it to us in elementary school. I don't recall if I ever saw it as a movie, but I might have. The only thing I remember is from the very beginning, a spelling bee (insect)?
All week long your River City
Youth'll be fritterin' away,
(I say your young men'll be fritterin'!)
Fritterin' away their noontime, suppertime, choretime too!
Get the ball in the pocket,
Never mind gettin' Dandelions pulled
Or the screen door patched or the beefsteak pounded.
The first time I saw this as a young math nerd, I remember being so indignant when the little man said π was equal to:
3.141592653589747…
Rather than:
3.141592653589793…
Didn’t they fact-check anything? :) Of course, the voice actor probably just got it wrong. And this came out around the same time as Rocky and Bullwinkle—it’s not as if anyone noticed or cared at the time that Boris and Natasha don’t sound anything like Russians…
Supposedly several writers for the Simpsons are formally trained mathematicians. I've often wondered why they haven't gotten together to make videos about math. Perhaps something like the Khan Academy, but done by folks who have the perfect combination of academic knowledge, story telling ability, great writing skills, access to animation/production, lots of money, etc.
One of my favorite math-related scenes in The Simpsons is where Prof. Frink is standing on stage in front of a group of scientists and not getting attention.
Prof. Frink: "Looking for some order. Some order please with the eyes forward and the hands neatly folded."
(Audience not paying attention.)
Prof. Frink: "Hrm..."
Prof. Frink: "Pi is exactly three!"
(Collective gasp from the audience. Prof. Frink now has their attention.)
---
Edit: Went looking for part of the quote which I couldn't catch, found a book which seems interesting. Simon Singh, 2013. The Simpsons and Their Mathematical Secrets [1]. Singh is also known for his 1997 book Fermat's Enigma [2] and his 1999 book The Code Book [3]. The former of the books I've heard is interesting and the latter of which I enjoyed very much back when I read it.
I think every elementary school student saw the film in school (in the San Jose, CA area anyway). They could have shown it monthly, and it would never get old.
Odd thing is, as I looked for this on Youtube, there are numerous Donald Duck cartoons labeled with this title that are completely unrelated. Clickbait?
On the rare occasions when I play a game of pool, a little piece of my brain remembers the pool-table section from this video as I try to make bank shots.