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  • Because of Mythbusters' widespread love and popularity, a lot of people probably think

  • they know all the secrets behind this explosively entertaining show.

  • That would be a myth, though.

  • Here's a couple fascinating facts about everyone's fave mad scientists.

  • Before appearing in MythBusters, Kari Byron was a student of film and culture at San Francisco

  • State University, and she ultimately wanted to join the special effects industry.

  • That interest eventually led her to M5, the F/X company founded by fellow Mythbuster Jamie

  • Hyneman.

  • She was actually an unpaid intern for a while, and that opportunity eventually blossomed

  • into a job offer to join Mythbusters.

  • "Everybody loves an intern.

  • They work hard, they're trying to prove themselves, and they are cheap or free."

  • But she never lost her artistic streak.

  • If anything, she learned to marry the more explosive elements of the show into her own

  • artistic expression.

  • One very clear example of this is her explosive paintings.

  • To create these works, she lights gunpowder on fire and then scrapes burnt clay away from

  • the page to make a series of haunting images.

  • She likens the process to quote "controlled chaos."

  • "Exploding Pants."

  • "Killer Whirlpools."

  • "Have you ever really looked at the sky?"

  • With so many experiments over the years, you have to wonder if there are any myths the

  • group regrets having busted.

  • Adam Savage apparently wishes he'd ixnayed one segment.

  • Not because the experiment was particularly dangerous or difficult to film, but because

  • it involved... magic.

  • At least, that's how Savage sees it.

  • The experiment itself involved determining whether or not keeping a shaving razor beneath

  • a makeshift pyramid would actually keep it sharper, due to so-called "pyramid power."

  • Savage regrets filming the segment, because he believes it was ultimately impossible to

  • apply the scientific method to that particular experiment.

  • He believes they were tasked with quote "trying to prove a negative," since there was real

  • no way to measure success or failure.

  • Mythbusters was all about science, which means it never let something like corporate sponsorship

  • get in the way of truth.

  • Right?

  • Alas, it sounds like even Mythbusters wasn't immune to advertiser pressure: They reportedly

  • decided to ax an entire episode about RFID, that handy technology that lets you wave your

  • credit card in front of a card reader so you don't have to swipe it.

  • You've no doubt heard that RFID isn't necessarily secure.

  • Well, Mythbusters got wind of that, too, and planned an entire episode about the hackability

  • of the technology.

  • But according to the Register, lawyers for major credit card companies intervened, and

  • the episode never saw the light of day.

  • In 2008, Adam Savage opened up about the situation at a Hackers on Planet Earth conference.

  • "They absolutely made it really clear to Discovery that they were not going to air this episode

  • talking about how hackable this stuff was."

  • He claimed Discovery quote "backed down" because they relied so heavily upon advertising revenue.

  • That sounds like the honest truth, but something must have happened behind the scenes: Savage

  • later backtracked and changed his tune, saying:

  • "The decisionwas made by our production companyand had nothing to do with Discovery

  • ."

  • Whatever you say, Adam.

  • Mythbusters was billed as a "family show," so there were certain things the program simply

  • wasn't allowed to do.

  • For example, they couldn't even show a simulation of a particular body part while testing the

  • legendary "Peeing on the Third Rail Myth," even though they were clearly using a synthetic

  • tube.

  • Oh, and in case you're wondering how that experiment worked out:

  • "One…"

  • "Ayyy!

  • Awww!"

  • Anywayaccording to TV Tropes, censors forbade Mythbusters from airing an entire

  • episode about farting.

  • "Knock yourself out."

  • Undeterred, the team tried a segment on farting later on, but this time they followed all

  • sorts of oddball rules, like only using the word "flatus" instead of "fart," supposedly

  • to make the whole thing sound more scientific.

  • To work around all the bodily functions they couldn't show on screen, the Mythbusters team

  • built a fart machine.

  • "I am planning to build a machine that can also eject a flatus.

  • That's what all this equipment is."

  • The result was really funny and actually rather vulgar... even though they were basically

  • using a whoopie cushion.

  • Twerking Stormtroopers prohibited

  • Mythbusters was a geeky show.

  • You can gloss over that fact as much as you like, but pretty much every cast member was

  • unabashedly geeky.

  • And if you watched the show, you were pretty geeky, too.

  • And what's the holy grail of geekdom?

  • "But I was going to Toshi's station to pick up some power converters!"

  • As you can imagine, it's not particularly easy to work something like Star Wars into

  • your mythbusting franchise.

  • After all, Star Wars is a closely guarded property, and there are hoops to be jumped

  • through before you can start busting lightsaber and stormtrooper myths.

  • Adam Savage told The Hollywood Reporter he was surprised how open Lucasfilm turned out

  • to be with their permissions.

  • The team wasn't allowed to animate lightsaber effects, but other than that, they were pretty

  • much given free rein.

  • There was one important provision: Savage joked that MythBusters couldn't depict stormtroopers

  • shaking their money-makers.

  • He told The Hollywood Reporter:

  • "I don't think they wanted us to twerk with a Stormtrooper or something like that."

  • Makes sense.

  • The LucasFilm people probably didn't want another Christmas special on their hands.

  • "Please, please, I have enough aggravation."

  • The Mythbusters had some very public mishaps, but people might not entirely realize just

  • how common it was for the cast to injure themselves in the line of duty.

  • According to CNet, Mythbuster accidents ran the gamut from explosions to an injury by goat.

  • goat.

  • In fact, Adam Savage once said the show was quote "four minutes of science and 10 minutes

  • of me hurting myself."

  • "He holds his breath, tugs on the door, pushes his whole weight against it, but nothing happens."

  • In one infamous experiment, the team wanted to find out if an explosion could actually

  • 'knock the socks off'" a mannequin.

  • The explosion wound up shattering the windows of a nearby home.

  • Ironically, the blast quite literally knocked a woman off her couchsort of like knocking

  • the socks off a mannequin, but not really.

  • Co-host Tory Belleci's on-set accidents included getting kicked in the crotch by a goat, and

  • spectacularly wiping out while trying to jump over a red wagon on a bicycle.

  • a bicycle.

  • "I'm okay!"

  • Savage was the recipient of one of the show's more serious injuries; He once broke his hand

  • on a blast chamber.

  • Surprisingly, most of the injuries on the show were fairly minorjust stitches and broken fingers.

  • broken fingers.

  • Not bad for a show with a premise that's firmly grounded in blowing stuff up.

  • Hopefully, the safety experts were well-compensated.

  • No one deserved that paycheck more.

  • Mythbusters is real science, not mad science.

  • It's not like they ever received orders to build a death ray or something.

  • Except that time President Obama quite literally gave them orders to build a death ray.

  • "MythBusters is about is testing out various hypotheses, and I think we've got a big out

  • that hasn't been thoroughly tested."

  • "Which one is that?"

  • "Well, it is Archimedes solar ray."

  • In a 2011 lecture, Savage said he'd never met anyone with as much charisma as Obama.

  • "Then Obama walks in and immediately releases all the tension.

  • I've never seen anything like it.

  • He walked in, he introduced himself to us, he shook hands with the crew."

  • The former president goes on to gently admonish Savage and Jamie Hyneman for failing to thoroughly

  • test the solar ray back in 2006, when they first attempted to create it.

  • The likely-mythical device dates all the way back to the second century, and it was designed

  • to ignite the sails of enemy ships with highly-focused mirrors.

  • The team recruited 500 people with mirrors to retry the experiment.

  • Once again, they failed to prove the concept.

  • According to Gizmodo, the president's appearance on Mythbusters was actually part of a White

  • House initiative to get kids more interested in science, and let's face it: A death ray

  • is the perfect gateway drug to the world of physics and beyond.

  • "Keep those mirrors on the sail!

  • Oh!

  • Oo!

  • He just took out one of your great cameramen!"

Because of Mythbusters' widespread love and popularity, a lot of people probably think

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