Before starting into entertainment, Nye worked as a consultant and in the aeronautics industry. At one time while working on the A-12 stealth attack aircraft, Nye had level-three security clearance with the U.S. Department of Justice. Nye is also a member of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal.
Nye told the St. Petersburg Times in 1999 that he applied to be a NASA astronaut every few years, but was always rejected.Davis, Pamela (1999 October 11). Bill Nye, the successful guy. St. Petersburg Times.
Nye has been a licensed mechanical engineer in Washington since 1983.
Nye got his television start performing on a Seattle-area sketch comedy show called Almost Live!, and appeared regularly on the show for many seasons. He left the show to start producing Bill Nye the Science Guy in 1992. Once famous, Bill returned as a guest-star for an episode that opened with a skit of Nye not being recognized and having trouble entering the King 5 building. Nye was also the mute assistant of Dr. Emmett L. Brown in the live-action segments of The Animated Series (1991–1993).
Nye hosted the Emmy Award-winning educational television program Bill Nye the Science Guy from 1992 to 1998. Each episode, 100 in all, aimed to teach a specific topic in science to a preteen audience, yet garnered a wide adult audience as well. The show was and still is popular as a television show and as a school resource. He has written several books as The Science Guy. In addition to hosting the show, he was also a writer and producer for it.
Bill Nye has starred alongside Ellen DeGeneres, Alex Trebek, and the tourists of Walt Disney World in "Ellen's Energy Adventure", an attraction playing since 1996 in the Universe of Energy pavilion inside Epcot at Walt Disney World Resort.
Nye hosted the attraction "Cyberspace Mountain" at Walt Disney World's interactive arcade theme park Disneyquest. The attraction allows guests create their own roller coaster, that they get to ride in simulator form.
Nye also hosted the Science & Nature category in the 2004 Atari video game Trivial Pursuit Unhinged, along with Terry Bradshaw, Brooke Burke, John Cleese, Whoopi Goldberg, and John Ratzenberger.
Nye appeared in the episode "Scorched" (2005) of the CBS TV drama NUMB3RS as a professor in the combustion lab of the same university where David Krumholtz's character works.*
In 2005, Bill Nye hosted 100 Greatest Discoveries, an award-winning series for Discovery's Science Channel produced by Thinkfilm, Inc. in Washington, DC.
Appeared in the science facts capsules on the Back to the Future animated series, hosted by Christopher Lloyd in his role of Doctor Emmet Brown.
Bill Nye currently writes a column on the MSN Encarta website called Ask Bill Nye.
Nye is also the vice president of The Planetary Society, an organization that advocates space science research and the exploration of other planets (like Mars).
He holds several patents—one for a ballet shoe, another for a magnifying glass that uses water.
In 2001, he was appointed as Frank H.T. Rhodes Class of '56 University Professor at Cornell University for three years. The professorship has since been extended to 2006. He has received two honorary doctorates, one from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and another from Goucher College.
On Friday, February 3, 2006, Nye was married to Blair Tindall.Tindall and Nye had been engaged for five months. The pair exchanged watches instead of rings, “as a symbol”, Nye explained, “of man’s reckoning with time”.LA Weekly: [http://www.laweekly.com/index.php?option=com_lawcontent&task=view&id=12617&Itemid=9 Bill Gets Hitched Tindall is the author of Mozart in the Jungle and is a former concert oboist. The two exchanged vows at Richard Saul Wurman’s The Entertainment Gathering 2006 conference where Nye spoke. They were married by the Rev. Rick Warren, pastor and author of The Purpose Driven Life. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma, accompanied by MIT Media Lab professor Michael Hawley on the piano, performed a wedding march. The engagement was announced by Nye, while appearing on the December 19, 2005 episode of talk show The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.
1955 births | American television personalities | Back to the Future actors | Cornell University alumni | Cornell University faculty | Daytime Emmy Award winners | Skeptics | Living people | Mechanical engineers | People from Washington, D.C. | Scientists | Seattleites | Notable baseball fans
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