Adam Savage, one of the original hosts, is back—this time with six junior scientists, all between 12 and 15 years old. Together, they use their smarts and STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, and math) to test myths and label them as “busted,” “confirmed,” or “plausible.” The show will air on the Science Channel this winter. “The kids are amazing,” says Savage. “They’re all so unique and deeply scientifically oriented.”
In each episode, the kids split into two teams. Each team tackles a different myth. They figure out how to test the myth, build the machines to test it, collect data, and run the numbers on the results. Then they prepare for the big reveal in the finale.
The day I visited, the MythBusters wanted to see if dominos could knock over increasingly larger dominoes, with the last domino being large enough to crush a car. The lineup went from a regular-sized domino that the cast named Dominic to Domino No.12, weighing more than 7,000 pounds.