Kari Byron | |
---|---|
![]() Byron in 2010 | |
Born | Kari Elizabeth Byron (1974-12-18)December 18, 1974 (age 50) |
Alma mater | San Francisco State University |
Occupation(s) | Television host and co-founder EXPLR Media |
Years active | 2003–present |
Television |
|
Spouse | |
Children | 1 |
Website | karibyron |
Kari Elizabeth Byron[1] (born December 18, 1974) is an American television host, best known for her role on theMythBusters andWhite Rabbit Project series.
Byron was born in the Bay Area, California and graduated fromSan Francisco State University in 1998 with a Bachelor of Arts in film and sculpture. Byron was a cast member ofMythBusters from 2004 to 2014 where she was part of "The Build Team". From 2010 to 2011, Byron hostedHead Rush, aimed at science education and teens, andLarge, Dangerous Rocket Ships. From 2011 to 2014, she presentedPunkin Chunkin on theScience Channel. She co-hostedNetflix'sWhite Rabbit Project in 2016 andCrash Test World in 2019. Byron is also the co-founder of EXPLR Media, an education streaming service. Outside of television, Byron is an artist and author. She wrote a memoir titledCrash Test Girl in 2018.
Byron was born in theBay Area, California. She graduated fromLos Gatos High School inLos Gatos, California, and studied atSan Francisco State University, graduating in May 1998 with aBachelor of Arts in film and sculpture.[2] She spent the following year backpacking, primarily inSouth Asia, and was involved in a number of art projects.[3]
Byron was a cast member onMythBusters from 2004 to 2014. Along with fellow cast membersTory Belleci andGrant Imahara she was part of what is commonly referred to as "The Build Team" or B Team. This Build Team worked withAdam Savage andJamie Hyneman to test the plausibility of various myths throughout their tenure with the show.[4] She and the others also hosted their own segments. She became involved in the show after persistently showing up at Hyneman'sM5 Industries workshop in a desire to get hired by his company. She and the other Build Team members were given a more prominent role beginning with the show's second season. Not having had a long history in show business, Byron at first found it difficult to act naturally with this more visible position but gradually became more accustomed to it.[5]
During the second half of the 2009 season, Byron was onmaternity leave and was temporarily replaced byJessi Combs.[6] From 2010–2011, Byron had her own show,Head Rush, on the Science Channel, geared toward science education and teens.[7][8]
Byron has also hosted the 2010 and 2011 editions ofLarge, Dangerous Rocket Ships for the Science Channel. She and Belleci made a guest appearance on the October 3, 2012, episode of the Discovery seriesSons of Guns. They test-fired some of the weapons in the Red Jacket shop and watched as the staff re-tested a myth previously busted by the Build Team: that apropane tank could explode if struck by a bullet. She left the show in 2014.
Byron and Belleci hosted coverage ofPunkin Chunkin on theScience Channel from 2011 to 2014.[9] In 2015, Byron and Belleci hostedThrill Factor, a new show for theTravel Channel.[10]
Looking back on her time onMythBusters, she says that she made lifelong connections with the cast and crew. Specifically, she said, "I made family with these people, I take them everywhere I go."[11]
Byron, along with Imahara and Belleci, hosted the Netflix productionWhite Rabbit Project,[12] released on Netflix on December 9, 2016. The series focused on unusual aspects from history and pop culture.[13]
Byron is currently host of the seriesCrash Test World.[14] The first season of six episodes aired onScience Channel starting January 8, 2021.[15][16][17]
Byron is currently the co-founder of EXPLR Media, an education streaming service.[18][19][20] "I want our audience to be able to look at every show that we do and find somebody that looks like them."[21]
Byron married artist Paul Urich in March 2006. They have a daughter.[22] On June 26, 2019, Byron petitioned for separation from Urich and their marriage was dissolved on March 20, 2020.[23]
She was previously avegetarian, but now describes herself aspescetarian.[24]
Byron continues to create art, including paintings created by igniting gunpowder.[25] In 2018 she published a memoirCrash Test Girl, withHarperOne.[26] Byron is credited with creating the original cover art, and providing interior art, forcanvas: poems (Viewless Wings Press, 2021), using the black powder technique.[27]
InCrash Test Girl, Byron states she has "contended with severe bouts ofdepression" since she was twelve. She states she has depressive episodes "a few times a year"; in addition, she hadpostpartum depression, more severe than her normal depression, for six months after her daughter was born.[28]
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