Casey P. Rachel Glenn Nancy as Nancy. Jessica Lee Self as Self. Jennifer Lin. John Keister Self as Self …. Amy Broder Amy as Amy …. Hiromi Dames Hiromi as Hiromi. More like this. Watch options.
Storyline Edit. It's "Mr. Wizard" for a different decade. Bill Nye is the Science Guy, a host who's hooked on experimenting and explaining. Picking one topic per show like the human heart or electricity , Nye gets creative with teaching kids and adults alike the nuances of science.
Did you know Edit. Bill Nye's scientific lecture about balance explains how something moves by giving it either a push or a pull. The size of its change relates to the strength or amount of force involving a push or pull.
S2, Ep Bill Nye sheds light on solar flares, eclipses, sunspots, fusion, and solar energy, and visits an enormous solar energy farm outside Sacramento, California, to demonstrate how the sun is the source of energy for all living things on Earth. Bill Nye's lecture is all about our brain which physically understands the words we see and hear. It controls our heart, our oxygen, our body temperature, and even our stomach. Our brain smells, sees, thinks, moves, and remembers all kinds of things all the time as long as it operates everyday.
This terrestrial biome is Bill Nye's lecture about conservations for every forest all over the world. Bill Nye's scientific lecture about momentum which is the product of mass and velocity of physical movement. Bill Nye's zoological lecture is all about reptiles. There's something in the air. Bill Nye's scientific lecture is all about the atmosphere, its five different levels, and how it protects the Earth.
He also soars into the heavy topic of atmospheric air pressure and radio waves. Bill Nye gets aerobic about the importance of respiration when he jogs, bikes, swims, and scuba dives. Discover how to measure how much air each breath contains, and make a model lung in a nifty home experiment.
Our emails are made to shine in your inbox, with something fresh every morning, afternoon, and weekend. Does it hold up in ? Warning: contains spoilers. In the US, Bill Nye inspired an entire generation of scientists and science enthusiasts—including me. Each episode followed the same structure: one scientific topic, covered dozens of ways, over the span of 30 minutes about 22 without commercials.
Each episode was built to feel like flipping through the channels on your television. Growing up, I idolized Nye. I still have a picture from when I met him at an aquarium: I was seven, and he was signing a book on ocean exploration.
The show was nominated for 23 Emmy awards, and won 19 of them. And from an educational standpoint, it worked. Across elementary and middle schools in the US my own included , the show often took the place of science lessons on days when the teachers were off—something Nye joked about at an annual meeting of the National Science Teachers Association in the documentary Bill Nye: Science Guy. He mixes the serious science of everyday things with fast-paced action and humor.
Each episode began with a cold open, where Nye introduced the episode's topic, which leads into an opening credit sequence, and shows Nye in an animated scientifically world, such as Nye's disembodied 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, Pat Cashman would say "Brought to you by Science-related film, TV, and commercial parodies configure the facts of the episode's topic.
There are several individual segments featured in each episode, such as "Way Cool Scientist", which featured an expert discussing on the episode's topic, "Consider the Following", where Nye discussed a certain aspect of the episode's topic, "Nifty Home Experiment", where the audience is shown how to do a simple home experiment relating to the episode's topic, "Try This", where the audience is shown how to try a simple demonstration relating to the episode's topic, "Hey, Look at This", where the expert gives a closer look by relating to the episode's topic, "Check it Out", where the audience is shown how to affect their environmental issues by relating to the episode's topic, and "Did you know that The segments featured Luna Van Dyke focusing on a story that is related to the episode's topic.
This is usually the last segment of each episode. When the show was over, Bill thanks the viewers for watching before explaining in a clever description of a topic's activity.
0コメント