Kari Byron, Grant Imahara and Tory Belleci respond to the resulting crash during their test of whether a snowplow can split a car in two.
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MythBusters: Snowplow Split Reaction Shot
Kari Byron, Grant Imahara and Tory Belleci respond to the resulting crash during their test of whether a snowplow can split a car in two.
Was this myth TERRIFYING? Did Grant get sick? Why test the conga line formation? Will commercial planes ever fly in a V? Kari, Grant and Tory answer these questions and more.
Kung-fu fans Kari, Grant and Tory take you behind the scenes of this pop-culture classic, revealing their prototype close-calls and recreation ... um, issues. Then, find out their WORST subjects in school.
How could the MythBusters be certain there wasn't any wildlife left in that tree? And what was their dynamite substitute made of? Kari, Grant and Tory explain.
From tree (pine) to bow (remote) to payload (binary), Kari Byron, Grant Imahara and Tory Belleci lay out their plan to take on the viewer myth of the Dynamite Ax.
Our camera gives you a vantage point of the MythBusters shooting at a merry-go-round that you'd never have in real life (unless you were superhuman AND bulletproof).
"Cheap" merry-go-round bearings, razor wire, fire and ... figure skaters. Kari Byron, Tory Belleci and Grant Imahara give you the inside scoop on their Firearms Force tests.
Why didn't the team user a wider selection of ammo? In video games, when you shoot an oil or propane tank, it blows up ... is this gaming baloney? Kari, Tory and Grant answer your Gas Room Boom questions.
Kari, Grant and Tory address which minimyth result blew their mind, and, in response to a rather random question, reveal what their favorite beverages are.
See what happens when Tory Belleci adds a wooden dowel to Buster's back when testing whether a convict could use a cannon to blast himself to freedom. (It's not pretty.)
The best kind of science experiments involve beakers, test tubes, and funky colored water. Watch as Kari Byron demonstrates just how sticky water molecules can be.
Everyone loves to play with bubbles, but do you know how to stick your finger in a bubble without popping it? Watch as Kari explains the science behind bubbles.