Bill Nye the Science Guy


Bill Nye the Science Guy is an American half-hour live action science program that originally was syndicated by Walt Disney Television to local stations from September 10, 1993, to June 20, 1998, and also aired on PBS from 1994 to 1999. The show, hosted by Bill Nye, aired for 100 half-hour episodes spanning five seasons. Known for its quirky humor and rapid-fire MTV-style pacing, the show won critical acclaim and was nominated for 23 Emmy Awards, winning nineteen. Studies also found that people that viewed Bill Nye regularly were better able to generate explanations and extensions of scientific ideas than non-viewers.

Origins and creation

While performing in a sketch comedy television show in Seattle called Almost Live! during the 1980s, Nye cultivated a science-explaining TV persona. One famous incident on the show led to his stage name. He corrected another host, John Keister, on his pronunciation of the word "gigawatt", and the nickname was born when Keister responded, "Who do you think you are—Bill Nye the Science Guy?" In 1993, he developed a Bill Nye the Science Guy pilot for PBS member station KCTS-TV in Seattle. Nye collaborated with James McKenna, Erren Gottlieb and Elizabeth Brock to plan and create the show for KCTS. The group pitched the show as Mr. Wizard meets Pee-wee's Playhouse. He successfully obtained underwriting from the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Energy. Nye's program became part of a package of syndicated series that local stations could schedule to fulfill Children's Television Act requirements. Because of this, Bill Nye the Science Guy became the first program to run concurrently on both public and commercial stations.

Format

Nye portrays a hyper-kinetic tall and slender scientist wearing a blue lab coat and a bow-tie. He combines the serious science of everyday things with fast-paced action and humor. Each half-hour show begins with a cold open, where Nye introduces the episode's theme, which leads into an opening credit sequence, and featuring Nye in a computer animated scientific world, along with his head spinning, radio frequencies, and plastic toy dinosaurs flying. In later seasons, the theme song was cut short by a static screen. After the opening credits, announcer Pat Cashman would say "Brought to you by...", in which a product name was related to the episode's theme, followed by Nye walking onto the set, called "Nye Laboratories", which is filled with scientific visuals including many "of science" contraptions announced dramatically, relevant to the theme of the episode. Parodies of movies and television shows configure the facts of the episode's theme. Guest appearances included Christopher Walken, Samuel L. Jackson, Harrison Schmitt, Jenna von Oÿ, Robin Leach, John Ratzenberger, Ross Shafer, Graham Kerr, Gene Siskel, Roger Ebert, Bob Ross, Willard Scott, Richard Karn, Soundgarden, Kenny G, Pat Sajak, Vanna White, Cirque Du Soleil, Suzanne Somers, The Flying Karamazov Brothers, Pat Cashman, John Keister, Candace Cameron, Alfonso Ribeiro, Sinbad, Edgar Martínez, Nate McMillan, Mudhoney, Drew Barrymore, and Taran Noah Smith. Each episode also featured Nye in diverse places, where he interviews people to talk about their work and other contributions, that was focusing on the episode's theme. "Better Eating Through Chemistry" was a recurring segment on Bill Nye the Science Guy. In these skits, Nye portrayed Vivian Cupcake, where she demonstrated scientific recipes, and "Richie, Eat Your Crust" was a recurring segment, featuring Nye and the Family Crust performing an act relating to the episode's theme, as Richie eats his crust.
There are several individual segments that are featured in each episode, such as "Way Cool Scientist", which featured an expert discussing the fact relating to the episode's theme, "Consider the Following", where Nye discussed a certain aspect of the episode's theme, "Nifty Home Experiment", where the audience is shown how to do a simple home experiment relating to the episode's theme, "Try This", where the audience is shown how to try a simple demonstration relating to the episode's theme, "Hey! Look at This", where the expert gives a closer look by relating to the episode's theme, "Check it Out", where the audience is shown how to affect their environmental issues by relating to the episode's theme, "Clever Science Trick", where the audience is shown how to do a simple science trick relating to the episode's theme, and "Did you know that...", where an interesting factoid related to the episode's theme was presented. "Luna Van Dyke, Private Eye" was one of the recurring segments on the show. The segments featured private eye Luna Van Dyke focusing on a story related to the episode's theme. Some half-hour episodes contain a mock song parody and music video in the "Soundtrack of Science" by "Not That Bad Records". "Not that bad" is a catchphrase that Nye will often say in those episodes, substituting a scientific roundup of the episode for the lyrics to a popular song. This is usually the last segment of each episode. Each half-hour show ends with Nye saying, "Well, that's our show. Thanks for watching. If you'll excuse me, I've got some..." before explaining his departure in a clever description of an activity on theme, followed by him saying "See ya!" afterwards. After that, a female announcer says "Produced in association with the National Science Foundation", and "Produced in association with Walt Disney Television" in the PBS version. The credits rolled over bloopers from the episode. Other times, bloopers are shown at the time, they actually happened.
In a study that evaluated the pacing of 87 popular children's programs, Bill Nye the Science Guy was found to be the fastest-paced show on television, with a pacing score of 56.90.

Production

The show was created in 1992 by Bill Nye, James McKenna and Erren Gottlieb, produced by McKenna/Gottlieb Producers, Inc, in partnership with KCTS in Seattle. The following year, the production companies entered a distribution agreement with Buena Vista Television, a subsidiary of Disney. As part of the agreement, the profits of the show were split between Disney and the production team, with Disney owning full distribution rights across broadcasting, home video, and digital streaming. McKenna and Gottlieb all met while McKenna was a producer on Almost Live!, a Seattle-based comedy show.
The announcer for the program was Pat Cashman, whom Nye knew from his time on Almost Live!.
Before his show launched, Nye had previously worked alongside Christopher Lloyd in , where he played Doc Brown's assistant and demonstrated several experiments.
The show has been likened to the next-generation version of Watch Mr. Wizard. The show ran about the same time as and covered similar topics to Beakman's World, in fact sharing one crew member, editor/writer/director Michael Gross.
The show was primarily funded by the National Science Foundation, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the annual financial support from the viewers/stations of the PBS network. Other funding sponsors included Ore Ida, The Boeing Company, and Intel.
Despite Disney's association and ownership with the show, it has never aired on any network owned by Walt Disney Television.

Theme song

The Bill Nye the Science Guy theme song was written by math teacher turned songwriter Mike Greene. It was inspired by Danny Elfman and Oingo Boingo, when composing the theme, and used his voice for singing the "Bill Nye the Science Guy" refrain. It consisted of Pat Cashman saying the show's title in a distorted male voice, and the word "Bill" is repeated throughout as a percussive shout. An electric guitar was used during the theme song, followed by a woman saying "Science rules!", "Inertia is a property of matter", and "T-minus seven seconds".
"I used my voice for the first demo to send to the producers, Jim and Erren," he said. "After they approved it, I hired singers because I wanted to make it better. I hired a guy to sing it who sounded pretty cool. He had like a rock‑and‑roll kind of voice, so it sounded pretty slick. Then as another option, I hired a girl to sing it to give it a bit more R&B kind of sound. Then I sent those versions to Jim and Erren, and they said, 'Why have you got them on it? We want your voice. It’s funnier.' I thought, 'My voice is funnier??? Good thing I’m not touchy about my singing!' So we kept my voice on there."
Set to a house beat, Greene enlisted rappers to repeat the word "Bill!" as a percussive shout. "I can’t name them, because it was against their contract to do outside things without permission from their record company," Greene noted. "It was kinda funny, because they were in my studio one day to record a song. I was working on the Nye theme as they walked in and I told them, 'Hey, do me a favor and go in the booth and chant ‘Bill, Bill, Bill’ over and over again.' They had no idea what it was for, but they're cool, so they did. It sounded great, so that's the version we kept. The show didn't air until a year later, so it wasn't until then that they understood what this was really for."

Impact

In conjunction with the production of Bill Nye the Science Guy, KCTS-TV conducted several research studies that evaluated how effective the program was as an educational tool. In one study, it was found that viewers of the program made more observations and sophisticated classifications than non-viewers. In surveys of elementary students who watched the program, most children concluded that Nye made “kids like science more.” When surveyed whether Nye was a scientist or actor and comedian, most students asserted he was a scientist, though many said both. Students also described Nye almost equally as both “funny” and “smart,” and believed he was a "source of good information."

Series overview

Episodes

100 half-hour episodes were produced.

Season 1 (1993–94)

Series No.No.Title"Soundtrack of Science" Parody songOriginal Airdate
211MagnetismN.S. Kool J. – "Opposites Attract"
Parody of "Jump" by Kriss Kross; artist name is a parody of LL Cool J
February 18, 1994
November 7, 1994
222WindWind Dee – "Wind Is In Your Hair"
Parody of "Groove Is in the Heart" by Deee-Lite
February 25, 1994
November 8, 1994
233Blood and CirculationAB+ – "Blood Stream"
Parody of "Love Shack" by The B-52's
March 4, 1994
November 9, 1994
244Chemical ReactionsChemical Reactions – "Don't Try This at Home"
Parody of "State of Attraction" by Paula Abdul
March 11, 1994
November 10, 1994
255Static ElectricityThe Sticky Socks – "Static Electricity"
Parody of "Turning Japanese" by The Vapors
March 18, 1994
November 11, 1994
266Food WebFood Webby Web – " Food Web"
Parody of "Who Am I ?" by Snoop Dogg
March 25, 1994
November 14, 1994
277Light OpticsQueen Lighteefa – "B.E.N.T."
Parody of "U.N.I.T.Y." by Queen Latifah
September 10, 1994
December 5, 1994
288Bones and MusclesSteppenbone – "Bones In My Body"
Parody of "Born to Be Wild" by Steppenwolf
September 17, 1994
December 6, 1994
299OceanographyGulfstream Girls – "Deep Ocean Currents"
Parody of "California Girls" by The Beach Boys
September 24, 1994
December 7, 1994
3010HeatLeHot – "LeHeat"
Parody of "Le Freak" by Chic
October 1, 1994
December 8, 1994
3111InsectsUB Buggy – "Jah Mon, Insects Rule"
Style Parody of UB40
October 8, 1994
December 9, 1994
3212BalanceTorquer – "Balance This"
Parody of "Get Off This" by Cracker
October 15, 1994
December 12, 1994
3313The SunDeep Yellow – "My Favorite Star"
Parody of "Highway Star" by Deep Purple
October 22, 1994
December 13, 1994
3414BrainEn Lobe – "Whatta Brain"
Parody of "Whatta Man" by En Vogue with Salt-n-Pepa
October 29, 1994
December 14, 1994
3515ForestsJohn Cougar Loggincamp – "Second Growth"
Style Parody of John Mellencamp
November 5, 1994
December 15, 1994
3616CommunicationMary Chapin Communicator – "How Can We Communicate?"
Parody of "He Thinks He'll Keep Her" by Mary Chapin Carpenter
November 12, 1994
December 16, 1994
3717MomentumMomentisey – "The Faster You Push Me"
Parody of "The More You Ignore Me, the Closer I Get" by Morrissey
November 19, 1994
December 19, 1994
3818ReptilesNo music video – the commercial-free PBS version of the episode, however, had a brief spoof entitled "Cold Blooded".
Parody of "Hot Blooded" by Foreigner
November 26, 1994
December 20, 1994
3919AtmosphereWarm -n- Wetta – "Fresh Aire"; artist name is a parody of Salt N PepaDecember 2, 1994
December 21, 1994
4020RespirationAli Veoli – "What A Pair"
Style Parody of Tatyana Ali
January 7, 1995

Season 3 (1995)

Series No.No.Title"Soundtrack of Science" Parody songOriginal Airdate
411The PlanetsNo music videoJanuary 14, 1995
422PressurePSI Garden – "Pressure"
Parody of "Spoonman" by Soundgarden
January 21, 1995
433PlantsRhoda Dendron – "Cross Pollination"
Parody of "Human Behaviour" by Björk
January 28, 1995
444Rocks and SoilSedimentary Fools – "Rocks Rock Harder"
Parody of "Basket Case" by Green Day
February 3, 1995
455EnergyThe ERG's – "N-R-G"
Parody of "Sabotage" by the Beastie Boys
February 10, 1995
466EvolutionEvolver – "Survival"
Style parody of Seether by Veruca Salt
February 17, 1995
477Water CycleJ.A.C. – "Water Cycle Jump"
Parody of "Jump" by Kris Kross
March 24, 1995
488FrictionGrace Slip – "Friction Happens"; artist name is a parody of Grace SlickMarch 31, 1995
499GermsDose of Soap – "Just Wash Your Hands"
Parody of "Don't Turn Around" by Ace of Base
April 7, 1995
5010ClimatesClimate Report – "Whether the Weather"
Parody of "Lucas with the Lid Off" by Lucas Secon
April 14, 1995
5111WavesBig Amplitude – "Baby I Love Your Wave"
Parody of "Baby, I Love Your Way" by Big Mountain
April 21, 1995
5212Ocean LifeJames Baleen – "Power To The Plankton"
Style Parody of James Brown
April 28, 1995
5313MammalsFake Fur – "Jennifer's A Mammal"
Parody of "Institutionalized" by Suicidal Tendencies
September 8, 1995
5414Spinning ThingsHouse of Spin – "Spin Around"
Parody of "Jump Around" by House of Pain
September 15, 1995
5515FishSalmon Dave – "I'm a Sole Man"
Parody of "Soul Man" by Sam & Dave
September 22, 1995
5616Human TransportationCarpoolio – "Move Groove"
Parody of "Fantastic Voyage" by Coolio
September 29, 1995
5717WetlandsMaria and the Mudflats – "Where the Land is Wet"October 6, 1995
5818BirdsLL Bloo J. – "Talkin' Bout Birds"; artist name is a parody of LL Cool JOctober 13, 1995
5919PopulationsShirell Crow – "All We Need To Do"
Parody of "All I Wanna Do" by Sheryl Crow
October 20, 1995
6020Animal LocomotionBjorn Turun – "Loco Motion"
Parody of "Everything Zen" by Bush''
October 27, 1995

Season 4 (1995–97)

Series No.No.Title"Soundtrack of Science" Parody songOriginal Airdate
611Rivers and StreamsTalking Headwaters – "Take Me to the River"
Parody of "Take Me to the River" by Talking Heads
November 3, 1995
622NutritionKnute Trishan – "Good Food"
Style Parody of Nine Inch Nails/Trent Reznor
November 10, 1995
633Marine MammalsMarina Cesealia – "Breathe Like Me"
Parody of "I Know" by Dionne Farris
November 17, 1995
644EarthquakesMistah Richter – "Earthquake Rumble"
Parody of "Insane in the Brain" by Cypress Hill
November 24, 1995
655NTV Top 11 CountdownMudhoney – "Bill Nye The Science Guy Theme"December 1, 1995
666SpidersFoo Spighters – "This is A Spiders Life"
Parody of "This Is a Call" by Foo Fighters
January 5, 1996
677Pollution SolutionsNo music videoJanuary 12, 1996
688ProbabilitySteven Odd – "50 Fifty"
Parody of "Loser" by Beck
January 19, 1996
699PseudoscienceDare L. Pseudo – "Pure Proof"
Parody of "100% Pure Love" by Crystal Waters
January 26, 1996
7010FlowersDaisy Birdsenbees – "So Many Flowers"February 2, 1996
7111ArchaeologyMob Barley – "Diggin'"
Parody of "Jamming" by Bob Marley
February 9, 1996
7212DesertsDeserette – "Always Dry"
Parody of "You Oughta Know" by Alanis Morissette
February 16, 1996
7313AmphibiansP-Swamp All Stars with DJ Hoppy – "The Amphidelic Mothership Metamorphisis"
Style Parody of George Clinton the P-Funk All Stars
February 23, 1996
7414VolcanoesVolcanique – "Lavaflows"
Parody of "Waterfalls" by TLC
January 31, 1997
7515InvertebratesS. Khar Go – "Crawl Away"
Parody of "Runaway" by Janet Jackson
February 7, 1997
7616HeartVinny Vein and the Pumpers – "Gimme Back My Heart"February 14, 1997
7717InventionsEn Vent and the Process – "It's An 'ing Thing"February 21, 1997
7818ComputersLa Binary – "One Zero 001"
Parody of "Be My Lover" by La Bouche
April 25, 1997
7919FossilsEtchton Stone – "Fossil Man"
Parody of "Rocket Man" by Elton John
September 5, 1997
8020TimeThe Tim E. Zone Experience – "Time Time Time Time Time..."
Parody of "Time Has Come Today" by The Chambers Brothers
September 12, 1997

Season 5 (1997–98)

Series No.No.Title"Soundtrack of Science" Parody songOriginal Airdate
811ForensicsKrime Seen – "We Will Find You"
Parody of "We Will Rock You/We Are the Champions" by Queen
September 19, 1997
822Space ExplorationThe Space Princess of Galactic Grooviness – "Planets All"
Parody of "Set U Free" by Planet Soul
September 26, 1997
833GenesAlice in Genes – "It's Called Genetics"
Parody of "Killing in the Name" by Rage Against the Machine; artist name is a parody of Alice In Chains
October 17, 1997
844ArchitectureThe Artist Formerly Known as Archie T. – "Makin' Plans"
Parody of "All Mixed Up" by 311; artist name is a parody of The Artist Formerly Known As Prince
October 24, 1997
855FarmingChris Ballew – "Farm Food"
Parody of "Peaches" by The Presidents of the United States of America, of which Ballew himself is a member
October 31, 1997
866Life CyclesRoberta Fungi – "Everything Has A Life Cycle"
Parody of "Killing Me Softly" by Roberta Flack
November 14, 1997
877Do-It-Yourself ScienceNye & The Family Crust – "Do It Yourself Science"
Parody of "Hell" by Squirrel Nut Zippers; artist name is a parody of Sly and the Family Stone
November 21, 1997
888AtomsThird Nye Blind – "Atoms in My Life"
Parody of "Semi Charmed Life" by Third Eye Blind
November 28, 1997
899Ocean ExplorationThe Posies – "Voyage of the Aquanauts"
A parody of their 1993 song "Flavor of the Month". The Posies are an alternative rock group from Bellingham, Washington.
December 5, 1997
9010Lakes and PondsThe Froggy Boyz – "Fond of Lakes and Ponds"
Parody of "Tha Crossroads" by Bone Thugs-n-Harmony
February 21, 1998
9111SmellTurbinator Two – "Come On Use Your Brain "
Parody of "C'mon N' Ride It " by Quad City DJ's
February 28, 1998
9212CavesBatilda & Guano – "Cave Thing"
Parody of "Shake Your Groove Thing" by Peaches & Herb
April 25, 1998
9313FluidsWeflo – "Drip it"
Parody of "Whip It" by Devo
May 2, 1998
9414ErosionEarth, Wind & Ice – "Causing the Erosion"
Style Parody of No Doubt; artist name is a parody of Earth, Wind & Fire
May 9, 1998
9515Comets and MeteorsHalley Comet – "Got Me Looking"
Parody of "Shadowboxer" by Fiona Apple
May 16, 1998
9616StormsMighty Mighty Thundertones – "Stormin"
Style Parody of The Mighty Mighty Bosstones
May 23, 1998
9717MeasurementThe Meter Men – "Every Measurement You Make"
Parody of "Every Breath You Take" by The Police
May 30, 1998
9818PatternsDownward Spiral – "Patterns of Joy"
Parody of "Breathe" by The Prodigy; artist name reference to Nine Inch Nails.
June 6, 1998
9919Music"There's Science In Music"
Melodic Style Similar To That Of "The Time Warp" by Richard O'Brien
June 13, 1998
10020Motion 'Slow Moe – "All in Motion"
Parody of "Hot for Teacher" by Van Halen''
June 20, 1998

Awards

During its run, Bill Nye the Science Guy was nominated for 23 Emmy Awards, winning nineteen.
Daytime Emmy Awards
released the series in its entirety on DVD, as part of the series' 20th anniversary. In the United Kingdom, it was distributed on VHS by ViewTech, Bristol. In 1994 and 1995, Walt Disney Home Video released five volumes of Bill Nye the Science Guy, such as "The Human Body: The Inside Scoop", "Powerful Forces: All Pumped Up", "Dinosaurs: Those Big Boneheads", "Reptiles & Insects: Leapin' Lizards", and "Outer Space: Way Out There". All five volumes were released on VHS, containing two episodes. As of May 2017, the 1996 episode "Probability" is edited from its original airing, with a segment removed featuring a cast member saying there are only two genders. Netflix denied allegations they edited it saying "It was delivered to us that way by Buena Vista TV." A set of 31 episodes is also available for purchase on the iTunes Store, though they have been split into two separate volumes; one containing 14 episodes and the other containing 17 episodes.

Video game

A computer game based on the series, titled , was released in 1996 for Windows and Macintosh by Pacific Interactive.

Syndication

Reruns of Bill Nye the Science Guy aired on Noggin from 2000 to 2002. From 2016 to 2019, reruns of the program have been aired on MeTV on Sunday mornings.