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One thing missing from the exhibit that is a big part of the show are explosions. Hyneman said there was just no way in an enclosed space to safely blow stuff up.
And visitors, particularly teenage boys, will be saddened to find that Hyneman and Savage could not pull off -- though not for lack of trying -- a flatulence exhibit.
It turns out that there are two key ingredients that together add up to a memorable olfactory experience, which led Hyneman to look for a way to create some kind of "fart vending machine" that for a quarter would combine those ingredients.
"I figured teenage boys would be lined up around the block for that one," he said. "The problem is the stuff is toxic... so we just couldn't pull it off."
Even without such a contraption, the show's stars hope the exhibit will bust what they say is the biggest myth of all: Science is just for nerds.
"Science is cool," said one of the show's stars, Kari Byron, as she looked around the exhibition.
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If you go...
MYTHBUSTERS: Through Sept. 3 at Museum of Science and Industry, 57th Street and Lake Shore Drive, Chicago; http://www.msichicago.org/ or 773-684-1414. Open daily 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Timed ticketing; adults, $25, children 3-11, $18 (general admission plus $10).
Who gets wetter: The person who walks in the rain or the one who runs? And in the story of the three little pigs, was the house made of bricks really stronger than the ones made from straw and sticks?
Now, a new exhibition at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry will attempt to answer those questions and others.
"MythBusters: The Explosive Exhibition," is modeled after the Discovery Channel's show "MythBusters." Visitors can do the same experiments they've seen the hosts of the show conduct for years. One area features a shed equipped with hoses and nozzles allowing visitors to test whether the runner or walker gets wetter in the rain.
The show opens Thursday and runs through Sept. 3.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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