Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

MythBusters host Grant Imahara dead at 49

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

Former MythBusters and White Rabbit Project host Grant Imahara died suddenly Monday. He was 49.

In a statement delivered to news outlets, a spokesperson for Discovery, which aired the shows, said: “We are heartbroken to hear this sad news about Grant. He was an important part of our Discovery family and a really wonderful man. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family.”

The spokesperson declined to offer any details regarding the time or cause of death. Imahara died shortly after suffering a brain aneurysm, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

The trained electrical engineer and roboticist gained some of his experience at Lucasfilm’s THX division before heading to Industrial Light and Magic. During his time there, he worked on movies that included George Lucas’s Star Wars prequels, several Matrix movies, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, and Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines.

The California-born Imahara went on to co-host several hundred episodes of the popular MythBusters show on The Discovery Channel, starting out with season 3 in 2005 and working with the show until 2014.

Two years later, Imahara co-hosted a single season of Netflix’s White Rabbit Project alongside Tory Belleci and Kari Byron.

Soon after news broke of Imahara’s untimely passing, MythBusters co-host Adam Savage tweeted: “I’m at a loss. No words. I’ve been part of two big families with Grant Imahara over the last 22 years. Grant was a truly brilliant engineer, artist, and performer, but also just such a generous, easygoing, and gentle PERSON. Working with Grant was so much fun. I’ll miss my friend.”

Kari Byron tweeted simply: “Sometimes I wish I had a time machine” together with a photo of herself with Imahara.

As news of his death spread on Monday night, those who Imahara inspired also began to pay tribute to a popular man who achieved much in a life cut tragically short.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Amazon pulls back from Sam Altman film ‘Artificial’ as it may have hit too close to home
Amazon MGM Studios walked away despite strong test screenings and a finished cut
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman during the Uncapped podcast in June 2025.

Amazon MGM Studios just backed out of releasing Artificial, Luca Guadagnino's movie about OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

According to Deadline, the studio confirmed it will no longer distribute the nearly finished film, even though it had been in the works for roughly a year and had already screened well in early test audiences.

Read more
Planning to watch House of the Dragon season 3? HBO Max is offering a big discount
House of the Dragon is back, and HBO Max is making your binge watch a little cheaper
matt-smith-daemon-house-of-the-dragon-season-3

For those waiting for a perfect time to jump back into HBO Max, a fresh discount and a new season premiere of House of the Dragon might be the perfect deal. The platform is currently discounting its annual subscription plans ahead of the House of the Dragon season 3 release.

The latest season drops Sunday, June 21, at 9 pm ET/PT on HBO. It will also be available to stream on HBO Max, with eight episodes rolling out weekly. Considering how House of the Dragon is one of HBO's biggest current shows, this deal isn't subtle. The company is clearly looking to bring in new and returning subscribers.

Read more
Taika Waititi’s new film ‘Klara and the Sun’ imagines a dystopian sci-fi future without internet, and Jenna Ortega as an android
Waititi adapts Kazuo Ishiguro's emotional novel about love and AI
Adult, Male, Man

Taika Waititi’s next movie may be his most unexpected yet. The filmmaker behind Thor: Ragnarok has unveiled the first look at Klara and the Sun, his adaptation of Kazuo Ishiguro’s bestselling 2021 novel.

Waititi tells Vanity Fair this was one of the hardest things he has tried to adapt once he started unpacking its themes of loneliness, love, and what it even means to be human.

Read more