Science starts at home.
A host-driven, live-action educational show set in the household offers homemakers a new relationship with science programming. Questions like, “Do hot leftovers really spoil in the fridge?” are answered with simple thermodynamics and microbiology.
The host, a theatrical stay-at-home-mom, explains “like you’re five” everything you always wondered about in your own home life. Episodes share practical guidance that makes science accessible and immediately useful to everyday people—regardless of education level, previous difficulties with STEM, or other personal circumstances.
People deserve freedom from the crippling anxieties and somber consequences of misinformation about climate change, 5G, vaccines, and other complex topics.
This starts with engaging, relevant education in scientific reasoning. For example, Learning Science in Informal Environments by the National Research Council says, “Students who viewed [Bill Nye the Science Guy] regularly were better able to generate explanations and extensions of scientific ideas.”
This biracial woman-hosted show affirms that regardless of our gender, race, education, wealth, or occupation, everyone can command an understanding of our environments to feel confident, safe, and effective in our daily choices.
Hello
I'm Victoria "Tori" Onyeabor
I grew up working in the family’s tech company from age 13, became a corporate biomedical engineer, and then left to start my own businesses, first as a professional actor and then as a book editor managing a team of 12 contract editors for 5 years.
In entertainment, I worked as a TV commercial actor for GoDaddy and Geico, a live broadcaster for T-Mobile, a live game show host for Home Depot, and a science show host and scriptwriter for the education company Pearson (now Savvas).
As a homemaker and mother of two (2.5 years old and 2.5 months old), I feel driven to support homemakers with funny, accessible, evidence-based household science.