Talk
part of Alumni and Family Weekend
If
you like your science and engineering with a dash of humor, then you should be
at the University of Rhode Island, Friday, Oct. 20 for Bill Nye The Science
Guy.
The bow-tie-wearing scientist, engineer,
inventor, author and comedian will perform at URI’s Ryan Center. URI’s Student
Entertainment Committee, Alumni and Family Weekend Committee and Spectra by
Comcast Spectacor, the Ryan Center’s management firm, are presenting the event
as part of Alumni and Family Weekend and
URI’s 125th Anniversary celebration.
Tickets, from $16 to $20, are available
to students starting Thursday, Sept. 7 at 10 a.m. Tickets start at $30 for the
general public beginning Friday, Sept. 8 online at www.theryancenter.com.
You can also charge by phone at 1-855-387-4849, or you can get tickets at the Ryan Center box office, 1 Lincoln Almond Plaza. Register for the Ryan Center Cyber Club at http://www.theryancenter.com/cyber-club for access to a pre-sale opportunity, also Sept. 7.
You can also charge by phone at 1-855-387-4849, or you can get tickets at the Ryan Center box office, 1 Lincoln Almond Plaza. Register for the Ryan Center Cyber Club at http://www.theryancenter.com/cyber-club for access to a pre-sale opportunity, also Sept. 7.
Nye’s mission is to foster a
scientifically literate society, and help people everywhere understand and
appreciate the science that makes the world work. Making science entertaining
and accessible is something Nye has been doing most of his life.
“My family is funny,” he said. “I mean funny in the sense that we make people laugh, not just funny looking.”
While growing up in Washington, D.C., in
the 1970s, Nye spent afternoons and summers de-mystifying math for his fellow
students. When he wasn’t hitting the books, he was hitting the road on his
bicycle. He spent hours taking it apart to see how it worked. Now he commutes
by bike in Los Angeles and New York.
His fascination with how bicycles,
airplanes and other things work led him to Cornell University and a degree in
mechanical engineering in 1977. Soon after, Boeing recruited him as an
engineer, so he went to Seattle.
“I’ve always loved airplanes and flight.
There’s a hydraulic resonance suppressor ‘Quinke’ tube on the 747 horizontal
stabilizer drive system that I like to think of as my tube.”
In Seattle, he combined his love of
science with his flair for comedy where he won a Steve Martin look-alike
contest and developed dual careers as an engineer by day and a stand-up comic
by night.
Eventually he left his engineering job and made the transition to a night job as a comedy writer and performer on Seattle’s homegrown ensemble comedy show, “Almost Live” in 1986.
Eventually he left his engineering job and made the transition to a night job as a comedy writer and performer on Seattle’s homegrown ensemble comedy show, “Almost Live” in 1986.
This is when “Bill Nye the Science Guy”
was born. The show appeared before Saturday Night Live and later on Comedy
Central, originating at KING-TIV, Seattle’s NBC affiliate. With fellow KING-TV
alumni, Jim McKenna and Erren Gottlieb, Nye made a number of award-winning
shows, including his well known, “Bill Nye the Science Guy.”
While working on that show from 1992 to
1998, he won seven national Emmy Awards for writing, performing and producing.
He also wrote five children’s books:
Big Blast of Science, Bill Nye’s Considering the
Following, Bill Nye The Science Guys’ Big Blue Ocean, Bill Nye the Science
Guy’s Great Big Dinosaur Dig and Bill Nye the Science Guy’s Great big Bopok of
tiny Germs.
After a debate with a creationist who
believes the world is only 6,000 years old, Nye wrote his first book for a
general audience, Undeniable–Evolution and
the Science of Creation, which was featured on The New York Times Bestsellers List.
He is now working on his next book for a
general audience on the subjects of energy and climate change. His next kids’
book will be about space exploration.
Along with big-picture thinking about
global issues, Nye remains involved in a good-natured rivalry with his
neighbor, actor and fellow environmentalist, Ed Begley. They compete to see who
can save the most energy and produce the smallest carbon footprint. Nye has
4,000 watts of solar power and a solar-boosted, hot water system.