Mark Rober

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Mark Rober took his engineering degrees and his nine years with NASA and created a science design YouTube channel that over 19 million subscribers are following. His December 2018 video "Package Thief vs. Glitter Bomb Trap" went viral and as of August 5, 2021, has over 86 million views. This video has been featured on national media news outlets such as CNN and New York Post. He has created Glitter Box 2.0 and 3.0 videos that have millions of viewers.

For several years, his videos receive more than 10 million views each. For a time his channel held the YouTube title for the highest average views per video for an individual creator.

Some of questions he explores on his YouTube channel include How best to survive a grenade blast? Would you sink or float in a pool full of 25 million Orbeez? How do you beat the odds at carnival games? He has appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live! six times.

Rober didn’t talk until age 3 or 4, and, by his own admission, he was spacey. “Everyone just thought I was really dumb,” says Rober. In fact, when he took his first standardized test in the third grade and scored off the charts, his mom was in disbelief, he recalls. “She was like, ‘There’s a mistake. This is definitely not my son.’”
It’s not that she wasn’t proud of him. “I grew up creatively encouraged,” says Rober, crediting his mother, who celebrated and snapped pictures when he nailed together two wood blocks and called it a violin or donned swim goggles to cut an onion.[1]

Rober earned his bachelor's degree from Brigham Young University and his master's degree from University of Southern California. For seven of his nine years with NASA, he worked on the Curiosity Rover. He founded a company called Digital Dudz (a line of smartphone-based Halloween costumes) in his free time while working at NASA and sold it to Morphsuits in the United Kingdom. He quit his job with NASA and worked for that company for two years as chief creative officer. His work with Apple is confidential, and he left in 2019 to pursue YouTube full time.

“I don’t fit the typical engineer mold, but they are my people. I speak their language,” says Rober. “I also have the mind and humor of a 12-year-old. . . . It’s a beautiful combination.”[2]

"He’s using his megaphone to be a teacher and an advocate. He’s taken on issues like climate change and deforestation—rallying the internet to plant 20,000,000 trees along the way." And in early 2021, "he released a video on the cause dearest to his heart: his son’s autism."[3] In the two TED talks he has given, he talks about failure and not concerning yourself with setbacks. “Failures,” he adds, “are opportunities to make successes mean more.”

He is getting his teaching credentials, and during the COVID-19 pandemic, he live-streamed classes and launched an online Monthly.com course.

Rober is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.