Science Rules! with Bill Nye - podcast cover

Science Rules! with Bill Nye

Stitcher & Bill Nyewww.stitcher.com
Bill Nye is on a mission to change the world — one voicemail at a time. Bill and science writer Corey S. Powell take your burning questions and put them to the world's leading experts on just about every topic in the universe. Should you stop eating cheeseburgers to combat climate change? Could alien life be swimming inside the moons of Jupiter and Saturn? Does your pet parakeet learn to sing the way that you learned to speak? Bill, Corey, and their special guests will answer those questions and convince you that... science rules!

Episodes

Jane Fonda Fights Climate Change With Fire... Drills

The famed actress and activist says she’s learned a lot from getting arrested at her own climate rallies in D.C. last year. She fills us in on the need to address injustice while we fight global warming, how the COVID pandemic has changed her activism, and how individuals can step up when governments fail them.

Sep 10, 202043 minEp. 57

Failed Stars and Other Strange New Worlds

Jacqueline Faherty from the American Museum of Natural History explains the mysteries of brown dwarfs — bigger than planets, smaller than stars — and reveals how she's improving STEM by making it more diverse.

Sep 03, 202047 minEp. 56

Bringing Psychology to Disney, Iraq, and You

Eric Haseltine reveals how he used neuroscience to create best-selling toys and to protect U.S. troops from roadside explosives. He also shares some tips to help you (yes, you!) fix your suboptimal behaviors.

Aug 27, 202050 minEp. 55

Conspiracies? Fake News? We Connect the Dots

You'd never fall for a conspiracy theory, right? Yeah, keep telling yourself that. Psychologist Rob Brotherton explores the history of conspiracy theories — including a famous fake-news scare that was itself fake news — and explains why it's so hard to avoid them.

Aug 20, 202049 minEp. 54

Coronavirus: Long-Term Health Effects

More than 99 percent of people who get COVID-19 recover. But many unknown chronic effects may await those people all the same.

Aug 18, 202026 minEp. 84

The Day the Dinosaurs Died

It’s the most famous mass extinction of all time, but we’re only just starting to understand the impact that killed the (ancient) dinosaurs. Geophysicist Joanna Morgan takes us to the crater to imagine the day the asteroid hit and the nightmarish aftermath.

Aug 13, 202045 minEp. 53

Natalie Portman Is Keeping Science in the Family

She’s famous for her science fiction movies (the “Star Wars” prequels, Thor , Annihilation ), but hard science runs through Natalie Portman’s veins. We discuss her early research in chemistry and psychology, her environmental activism, and her strategies to keep her kids’ curiosity alive during the pandemic.

Aug 06, 202046 minEp. 52

Coronavirus: Back to School?

Arne Duncan — former Secretary of Education under President Obama — walks us through what needs to be done for schools to reopen safely in the fall.

Aug 04, 202034 minEp. 81

Architecture vs. Waste

For decades, William McDonough has been leading the movement toward sustainable architecture. His goal is to create a garbage-free society through what he calls “cradle to cradle” design.

Jul 30, 202045 minEp. 51

Save the Bears, Save the World!

There are just eight species of bear on Earth — and when they do well, we do well, according to conservation ecologist Chris Morgan, host of The Wild .

Jul 23, 202045 minEp. 50

Coronavirus: Can a Stranger’s Blood Save Your Life?

Dr. Arturo Casadevall has been promoting “convalescent plasma” as a treatment for disease since before the pandemic took hold in the U.S. He explains what it is, how it helps with COVID-19, and why we need much, much more.

Jul 21, 202028 minEp. 78

The OTHER Microsoft Guy Who Wants to Save the World

Nathan Myhrvold, the company's former Chief Technology Officer, has a plan to rebuild the electrical grid, re-engineer the climate, and ... make a scientifically perfect pizza.

Jul 16, 202055 minEp. 49

Do You Need More Grit in Your Life?

Psychologist Angela Duckworth studies the ways some people muster grit — passion and perseverance — to overcome adversity. She joins Bill and Corey to answer your questions about how the same psychological techniques could change your own behavior ... for good.

Jul 09, 202044 minEp. 48

How to Do Anything — With xkcd!

Randall Munroe, creator of the sciency webcomic, offers ridiculously complex ways to do simple things and indulges all our scientific “what-ifs.”

Jul 02, 202044 minEp. 47

How We Humans Found Our Voices

Erich Jarvis studies songbirds to understand how humans evolved speech. Along the way, he’s made discoveries about why we stutter, which animals can dance, and how to thrive as an underrepresented minority scientist. His research can be seen in the Netflix docuseries Babies .

Jun 25, 202043 minEp. 46

Coronavirus: What Lies Ahead? It Depends

It seems like every day brings a different prediction for how bad this pandemic will get. We set out to find what the data really say.

Jun 23, 202031 minEp. 72

Coronavirus: To Protest or Not to Protest?

In most cases, the danger of transmitting COVID-19 makes avoiding large gatherings a no-brainer. Could the social changes the protestors are demanding lead to long-term health benefits that are worth the short-term risks?

Jun 05, 202031 minEp. 70

Coronavirus: Contact Tracing 101

A key to staying safe from COVID-19 is contact tracing — breaking the chain of transmission from person to person. Kelly Driscoll, head of the Community Tracing Collaborative in Massachusetts, explains how contact tracing works and what it can do to block the spread of the virus.

May 27, 202023 minEp. 67

Coronavirus: So, What’s the Plan?

We are definitely not out of the woods yet with COVID-19, but communities across the world have either eased their lockdowns already or are planning to do so within the next few weeks. Michael Osterholm, a professor of public health advising the state of New York on its reopening plan, explains how this pandemic will play out.

May 22, 202023 minEp. 66

Coronavirus: Why Does This Keep Happening?

This isn’t the first pandemic humanity has faced. From the black death to Spanish flu, from AIDS to Ebola; we’ve been here before. But historian Mark Honigsbaum, author of The Pandemic Century , says that the complacency and hubris of scientific experts keep preventing us from learning from the past.

May 19, 202025 minEp. 65

Coronavirus: Being Comfortable with Uncertainty

Researchers are moving at unprecedented speed, but they’re still struggling to understand this pandemic. What does the novel coronavirus do to our bodies? Virologist Dr. Angela Rasmussen answers questions about what happens when we get COVID-19, the role immunity and how small scientific discoveries will be the key to understanding this disease.

May 15, 202021 minEp. 64

Coronavirus: The Search for Antiviral Drugs

The hunt to find antiviral drugs has pressed on as we await a vaccine. Remdesivier is the latest treatment that has been touted to help patients suffering from COVID-19. But does this and other antiviral drugs really help cure patients? Scientist Derek Angus helps answer this and understand what role Antiviral drugs play in our community.

May 13, 202023 minEp. 63

Coronavirus: Facing Existential Crises

David Wallace-Wells has rung the alarm about climate change in the pages of New York Magazine and his book, The Uninhabitable Earth . Now he’s trained his sights on our latest all-encompassing challenge, covid19. Wallace-Wells tells us why climate change and pandemics are related, and he’ll examine humanity’s ability to solve existential crises.

May 08, 202026 minEp. 62

A 21-year-old’s Guide to Alien Worlds

There are billions and billions of planets out there. What could they be like? Could any of them be alive? Exoplanet-hunter and undergraduate MIT student Charlotte Minsky is helping to vet discoveries of possible planets outside our solar system. She tells us what she finds, and how she finds them.

May 07, 202043 minEp. 45