Remember....
Posted by BriGuy1965@reddit | mythbusters | View on Reddit | 17 comments

This is why I bought a clipboard with a pen holder and always carry a tape measure. If you do both of these things, you will never be questioned and can get into the White House bedrooms while the president and first lady are necking.
Attempt_Gold@reddit
Jamie: What were we testing again?
Adam: Don't know; don't care! [dancing and beatboxing]
MSL007@reddit
I just watched one of his YouTube videos where he said that someone (can’t remember who) said this to him, and he immediately realized it would be memorable, asked to use it on the show.
Biosci777@reddit
THIS. Is why I record *everything* in my lab notebook.
Supervisor: so, what have you been doing today? just screwing around again?
Me: Nope! I did science!
PuddleCrank@reddit
I said that before ringing my friends door at 6:30pm on a Wednesday with 35 dollars of hot chocolate powders and a spreadsheet. (Like an adult)
ballman666@reddit
Failure is always an option!
Little_Routine8583@reddit
He looks super high in this pic
VGM_Aeternus@reddit
Unless you're in a 21 cfr environment in which case screwing around and science become almost incompatible
ExcaliburZSH@reddit
I use this line when doing science experiments with my students
RedditHoss@reddit
I say it to my kids all the time when we’re experimenting with recipes in the kitchen
NASATVENGINNER@reddit
And of course…I reject your reality and substitute my own!
Tothe_blueberry@reddit
I use this one on the regular
QUARTERMASTEREMI6@reddit
Yeah, it’s perfect for all and any situation 🤭😆
kjm16216@reddit
I coach a robotics team and tell the kids this all the time.
Bobo_da_hobo01@reddit
I just watched one of the original episodes where they used 20 year old balloons to lift the man in the chair
Protiguous@reddit
ugh, thanks for that last visual.. gotta go puke now.
RotaryDane@reddit
At least you can rest assured that the myth is thoroughly busted on that last paragraph.
DangerSwan33@reddit
My friends and I used to do a lot of homebrewing, and for the first ~10 or so batches, we weren't great at documentation. Some batches turned out better than others, and we never quite knew why.
Then at some point, we bought a big white board for the garage, and started writing down exact measurements/processes, started collecting a standard set of data points throughout the brew, and overall just documenting things better.
My biggest contribution to all of this was writing this quote at the top of the whiteboard.