Skip to content
Who's in the Video
Bill Nye, scientist, engineer, comedian, author, and inventor, is a man with a mission: to help foster a scientifically literate society, to help people everywhere understand and appreciate the science[…]
Sign up for the Smarter Faster newsletter
A weekly newsletter featuring the biggest ideas from the smartest people

In our very first edition of “Tuesdays with Bill,” Bill (with an assist from Kiera) goes back to the beginning and tells the story of how “Bill Nye the Science Guy” came to be. It was a friend who offhandedly suggested that Bill put his “science explainer” routine on film, and after drawing inspiration from childhood hero


Don Herbert (a.k.a. Mr. Wizard), Bill began to pursue his dream of becoming the next great TV scientist. We think it worked out pretty well.

Do you want to ask Bill a question for a future “Tuesdays with Bill?” Click here to learn how to submit.

Kiera: Hi my name is Kiera and my question for you is what was your influence to start Bill Nye. Like did someone ask you to or why do you still continue it?

Bill Nye:  Kiera that’s a great question. Let the record show I did not cue Kiera to ask this question. She said why did I start doing the science guy. So I had very influential teachers. I had great teachers when I was in school. And then I got a job at Boeing in Seattle. It was a long way. I grew up back East. I grew up in Washington D.C. For those of you not in North America, I went 5,000 kilometers from home, 3,000 miles from home. And I didn’t really know anybody. I started – I was a Big Brother, a United Way Big Brother, and I started volunteering at the Pacific Science Center which is still there, one of my beloved institutions. And I was a science explainer because I’m a mechanical engineer. I took a lot of science. I especially took a lot of physics. I took a lot of physics. And so I was a science explainer and it was fun. And then I was working for these guys. They were all men at a company that they were obsessed with making a profit every quarter, every three months. And you can do that if you’re making Big Think videos, if you’re making paper towels, if you’re printing a magazine. You can plan or publishing anything – you can plan three months. You can do that. But when you’re trying to design a business jet, a navigation system for business jets that was going to be two-thirds as big as the one it was going to compete with in the marketplace you can’t do that in three months. And these guys were obsessed with it. And I just decided I wanted to effect the future.

I wanted to affect people like you Kiera. And I was in a writer’s meeting and we needed six minutes of – not only was I working on a drawing board making just tiny, very precise instruments that can detect the gravitational pull of the moon every day. Not only was I doing that, I was writing jokes for a comedy show in Seattle. And we had to fill six minutes which in television is a long time. And this guy who’s still just a dear friend of mine, Ross Shafer, said why don’t you do that stuff you’re always talking about Bill. That stuff about the science. You could be, I don’t know, Bill Nye, The Science Guy, or something. Ross Shafer is the guy’s name. And then he left. He had to go do his radio show. He was a DJ in Seattle. And I thought that’s a good idea. So I did that. Household uses of liquid nitrogen because, you know, we all have liquid nitrogen around. Of course we do. And it was funny. And that led to this – I had this idea. I want to be the next television science communicator. The next television science educator. I grew up with a guy named Don Herbert whose theatrical name was Mr. Wizard. He was just a great guy and I wanted to carry the torch. And I’m just delighted that you watch the show. I love you Kiera. Thank you.

 


Related