When Did Bill Nye ‘the Science Guy’ Become So Insufferable?
by Ian Tuttle August 25, 2016 4:00 AM
@iptuttle
For Nye, science is a weapon wielded to advance a certain type of
politics.
Bill Nye — “the Science Guy” — thinks that the recent deadly flooding in
Louisiana is a result of climate change.
That’s not surprising. Bill Nye thinks everything is the result of
climate change. Flooding in Missouri is climate change. Tornadoes in
Kentucky is climate change. Fire in Alaska is climate change. A morning
thunderstorm in Houston is climate change. One time, there was a
blizzard in New York in January. That was climate change, too. The event
doesn’t even have to be weather-related. The Islamic State’s massacre
of 130 people in Paris last year? You guessed it.
When it comes to Bill Nye “the Science Guy,” it’s almost like “science”
has nothing to do with it.
That would not be particularly surprising, either. After all, William
Sanford Nye’s scientific bona fides consists of an undergraduate degree
in mechanical engineering from Cornell, and a stint at Boeing. But you
can be anything you want on television, and in the late 1980s, hard at
work pursuing a career in comedy, Nye landed a recurring bit as Bill Nye
“the Science Guy” on Almost Live!, a Seattle-area sketch-comedy
television show, and a role as Christopher Lloyd’s laboratory sidekick
on Back to the Future: The Animated Series. Nye then leveraged that
success into his namesake PBS Kids show, Bill Nye the Science Guy, which
from 1993 to 1998 filmed 100 half-hour episodes, each focused on a
particular topic (dinosaurs, buoyancy, germs, &c.) and accompanied
by a parody soundtrack (e.g., Episode 75, on invertebrates: “Crawl
Away,” by “S. Khar Go” — a parody of “Runaway” by Janet Jackson).
Somehow, because of this, Nye is now the go-to authority on exoplanets
and dark matter and whether we are living in a computer simulation —
and, of course, environmental policy.
Oddly, being America’s foremost “edutainer” is a sweet gig. When Nye is
not pronouncing on all matters scientific, he pals around with pop stars
and “bonds over Jay Z” with SNL actors. He does q-&-a’s with the
New York Times and Esquire. He sits with Arianna Huffington at the White
House Correspondents’ Dinner and take selfies with rapper DJ Khaled —
who, it turns out, is “concerned about climate change.” (What a
coincidence!) Nerddom would seem to have come a long way from
passing-period swirlies.
Except that Bill Nye is not exactly a nerd. He just plays one on TV.
Whatever Bill Nye was — to be fair, it’s no small accomplishment making
science hip and interesting for millions of students — he is now
primarily the foremost science-side participant in the cycle of personal
validation and political-agenda-pushing that has come to characterize
the relationship between leftwing politics and science. Stipulate that
Bill Nye is a scientist. He then proclaims that climate change is not
only real, but an apocalyptic threat. Rachel Maddow and Touré and all
the other people who already believed that about climate change for
political reasons get a fuzzy feeling, because they have been validated
by a Scientist. They tousle Bill Nye’s zany hair. Rinse and repeat.
Everybody wins.
When Nye is not pronouncing on all matters scientific, he pals
around with pop stars and ‘bonds over Jay Z.’
This cycle was perfectly summed up in Nye’s absurd 2014 debate with
Answers in Genesis founder Ken Ham, a Young Earth creationist, on the
question: “Is Creation a Viable Model of Origins?” Had Here Comes Honey
Boo Boo not still been on television, the debate would have been the
lowest-IQ programming of the year. But watching fringe arguments based
on untenable Biblical literalism be swatted down by a
mechanical-engineering major stirred all the right feelings in the
breast of a certain type of observer, and Nye was hailed as some sort of
intellectual titan. When Ham later announced that publicity from the
debate had made it possible for him to continue building his full-scale
replica of Noah’s Ark — now open in Grant County, Ky. — Nye replied,
with model scientific sobriety: “If [Ham] builds that ark, it’s my
strong opinion: It’s bad for the commonwealth of Kentucky and bad for
scientists based in Kentucky and bad for the U.S. And, I’m not joking,
bad for the world.”
Nye says time and again that he wants to “change the world.” Encouraging
genuine, good-faith debate and open, vigorous scientific inquiry would
be a good place to start. But he’s more interested in using “science” as
an all-encompassing justification for pushing a certain agenda, and
enjoying the rewards that come from giving the appearance of scientific
imprimatur to the Left’s pet causes — and that passes easily for
“intellectual.”
It’s not a coincidence that the great pop icon of Science made his name
hosting a children’s show.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/439330/bill-nye-science-guy-climate-change-its-politics-not-science?utm_source=NR&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=August25Tuttle
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/439330/bill-nye-science-guy-climate-change-its-politics-not-science?utm_source=NR&utm_medium=facebook&utm_campaign=August25Tuttle
No comments:
Post a Comment