Dayton Daily News

March for Science a moment made for Bill Nye

‘Science Guy’ says fight is political, but not partisan.

- By Caitlin Gibson

The moment he appeared on the stage in a black jacket and red bow tie, the crowd hit near-deafening decibels. A sea of iPhones appeared, everyone stretching and jostling for the best possible photo angle. They cupped their hands to their mouths, screaming his name.

“Greetings, fellow citizens,” Bill Nye said to the thousands huddled beneath umbrellas and hand-lettered signs. “We are marching today to remind people everywhere, our lawmakers especially, of the significan­ce of science for our health and prosperity.”

Near the foot of the stage, a young woman with a bright green pixie cut shouted: “I love you!”

It was a significan­t moment — for science, for William Sanford Nye, and for the masses who have followed him for decades, from fuzzy TV screens in their middle school classrooms to the grounds of the Washington Monument at Saturday’s March for Science. He is beloved by millennial­s who came of age watching the ’90s-era PBS series “Bill Nye the Science Guy,” a role that made him an icon: half mad professor, half Mr. Rogers, perpetuall­y clad in a pale blue lab coat and bow tie as he unveiled the science of eroding mountains or orbiting comets with theatrical flourish.

More than 20 years later, the 61-year-old still wears the bow ties, and he still punctuates his speech with impassione­d catchphras­es. (“It’s not magic, it’s science!” is his new favorite.) But now his disheveled locks and vaguely Vulcan eyebrows are streaked with gray, and his persona has assumed a new edge. He’s become more than the zany educator-entertaine­r who charmed kids with cartoonish sound effects. He is an activist for science, leading those now-grownups into political battle.

Of all the roles he’s played, this is the one he was preparing for all along.

“I did imagine it could come to this,” Nye said Friday, during a visit to The Washington Post the day before the march.

By “this,” he meant the legions of scientists, doctors, engineers and concerned members of the public taking to the streets of Washington and more than 600 cities worldwide. Their demonstrat­ion was a response to the rise of anti-scientific notions — the anti-vaccinatio­n movement and climate change denial in particular — and a retort to the Trump administra­tion, which has proposed deep budget cuts for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the National Institutes of Health.

In the weeks before the march, many called this kind of mass protest from the scientific community unpreceden­ted. But Nye was not surprised.

The current “anti-science thing,” he said, had been on the rise for decades. “People were denying pollution in 1970, saying it’s a-OK.”

He took note of the early warning signs as a young man in Seattle, where he got his start in broadcasti­ng with a local sketch-comedy show. He was also volunteeri­ng on weekends at the Pacific Science Center and with the Big Brothers/Big Sisters program.

“I realized that kids are the future,” he said. “The reason I made the ‘Science Guy’ show was quite deliberate. If we can get young people excited about science, then we have a shot. I knew I was fighting the fight.”

The fight is political, but not partisan, he emphasizes. Still, he’s drawn his share of partisan critics. Some, like Sarah Palin, have questioned whether Nye is actually qualified to speak on behalf of science: “Bill Nye is as much a scientist as I am,” she once declared.

Nye chuckles in response: “Well, Ms. Palin, you’re wrong.”

To be fair: He did make his name as an entertaine­r. “I’m not a research scientist,” he acknowledg­ed, like his good friend and fellow science celebrity Neil deGrasse Tyson, who climbed the academic ranks as an astrophysi­cist. Nye earned his bachelor’s in mechanical engineerin­g at Cornell then went to work for Boeing. His fancier science credential­s — designing an interplane­tary sundial used by NASA, and becoming CEO of The Planetary Society, a space advocacy group co-founded by Carl Sagan — came after his TV fame.

Still, his education was grounded in the scientific method. And, he argues, it doesn’t take a paleontolo­gist to defend evolution, or a meteorolog­ist to comprehend the perils of climate change.

“When you become scientific­ally literate, I claim, you become an environmen­talist,” he said. “Somewhere along the way, there has developed this idea that if you believe something hard enough, it’s as true as things discovered through the process of science. And I will say that’s objectivel­y wrong.”

And so, at a moment when science is at the forefront of public discussion, Nye has found himself in the spotlight once again — though in truth, he’s never quite left it. Since ‘Science Guy’ ended its five-year run in 1998, Nye has hosted other science education programs, sold out lecture halls and written best-selling books. He’s also racked up pop culture cred, with appearance­s on “Dancing with the Stars,” “The Big Bang Theory” and “Inside Amy Schumer.” He debuted a new 13-episode Netflix series on Friday, “Bill Nye Saves the World,” with a more urgent tone, and aimed at a broader audience, than his public TV days.

His fans include former President Barack Obama, who invited Nye to visit the Everglades with him on Earth Day 2015, and more than 4 million Twitter followers. But none are so devout as the twentyand thirty-somethings who mob him everywhere he goes. (He happily obliges the selfie-seekers, always reminding them: “Look at the lens, not at yourself!”)

Nye isn’t married, and he never had children of his own — a neurologic­al illness runs in his family, which “really affected my life choices,” he said. So he focused on other people’s children instead, determined to pass his own passion for science on to them. The little ones who watched his show became the young adults who would march beside him.

“The scope of it is really astonishin­g,” he said, with more awe than swagger. “There are millions of kids who watched the show. I’m very proud of that.” He smiled slightly. “But I don’t think I quite get it.”

But then it’s the day of the march, and he’s in a white van driving him and the other event leaders to the starting point, and the streets are lined with signs that say “Science, not Silence” and “Facts Matter,” and maybe he’s starting to get it a little bit more.

“Look! This is so, so freaking cool,” he says, pointing out the window.

“Look at all the people,” he says when he steps outside, and again when he takes his place behind the big “March for Science” banner and starts shuffling down Constituti­on Avenue beneath a steady rain.

“Can I get a picture? I became a scientist because of you,” a young woman asks him, and Nye puts his arm over her shoulders.

It ends just before 3 p.m. in front of the Capitol, where the massive crowd gathers around Nye and his fellow co-chairs for one last group photo.

“Can we get a thank you for Bill Nye?” one man bellows, and another adds: “Bill Nye, you’re the voice of a generation!”

The chant starts up again: “Bill! Bill! Bill!”

Nye bows his head slightly, then raises his hand into the air, three fingers outstretch­ed. It’s the motion of a teacher trying to quiet a classroom, reminding his students to focus — not on him, but on what he taught them. He counts down: “Three, two, one!”

And they answer in heartfelt unison: “SCIENCE!”

 ?? HILARY SWIFT / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Bill Nye attends the March for Science in Washington on Saturday. Thousands of scientists and science advocates demonstrat­ed in Washington and in smaller events around the world to support, defend and celebrate the scientific enterprise.
HILARY SWIFT / THE NEW YORK TIMES Bill Nye attends the March for Science in Washington on Saturday. Thousands of scientists and science advocates demonstrat­ed in Washington and in smaller events around the world to support, defend and celebrate the scientific enterprise.

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