Dianna Cowern | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Personal information | ||||||||||
Born | Dianna Leilani Cowern May 4, 1989 [1] Kauai, Hawaii, U.S. | |||||||||
Education | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (SB) [1] [2] | |||||||||
Occupation | Science communicator | |||||||||
Website | physicsgirl | |||||||||
YouTube information | ||||||||||
Also known as | Physics Girl Physics Woman [3] | |||||||||
Channel | ||||||||||
Years active | 2011–present | |||||||||
Genre | Science education | |||||||||
Subscribers | 3.22 million [4] | |||||||||
Total views | 405 million [4] | |||||||||
Network | PBS Digital Studios (2015–2020) | |||||||||
| ||||||||||
Last updated: 23 April 2024 |
Dianna Leilani Cowern (born May 4, 1989) is an American science communicator. She is a YouTuber; she uploads videos to her YouTube channel Physics Girl explaining various physical phenomena. She worked in partnership with the PBS Digital Studios from 2015 until 2020, when she discontinued her partnership. [5] She has collaborations with other YouTube personalities, including fellow science communicator Derek Muller of the channel Veritasium , maker Simone Giertz, and mathematics animator Grant Sanderson of 3Blue1Brown .
She developed long COVID after July 2022, which has limited her ability to create new YouTube content. [6]
Cowern was born May 4, 1989, and raised on Kauai island in Hawaii. [7] [8] [9] At that time, her father was a tree farmer and her mother ran a bed and breakfast. [10]
Through most of her early education Cowern was fascinated by mathematics. [10] While in high school, she was inspired by Neil deGrasse Tyson and became interested in communicating science. [11] She studied physics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), graduating in 2011 with a Bachelor of Science. [11] During her time at MIT she researched dark matter. [12]
After graduation, Cowern was a research fellow at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian where she researched low-metallicity stars. [12] Cowern began as outreach coordinator at University of California at San Diego's Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences research unit. [1] She started making science videos while working as a mobile app developer at General Electric. [12]
She started her channel Physics Girl on October 21, 2011. [13] In an interview with Grant Sanderson, she said that some of the earlier videos were later deleted from the channel. [10]
Cowern has also participated in various events as a speaker. In 2015, she participated in a conference organized by the U.S. News & World Report. [14] In February 2017, she gave a talk at Google titled "Becoming YouTube's Physics Girl". [15] In 2018, she gave a keynote at CAST 2018 and at STEMtastic. [16] [17] [18]
In December 2017, she was featured in an interview in APS News. [19] Cowern has been featured in the Huffington Post , Slate, and Scientific American blogs. [20] [21]
On September 25, 2020, Cowern announced on her YouTube channel that she would be ending her five-year partnership with PBS Studios. [22]
On June 23, 2022, she announced she would be producing a science-based talk show for Curiosity Stream's Originals called Proof of Concept. [23] The show started streaming in August 2022. [24]
As of July 2023 [update] , she has over 221 million views on YouTube and over 2.74 million subscribers. [13] On TikTok, in March 2023, she has over 2.8 million likes and over 176,000 followers. [25]
In 2014, she won the top video prize from the Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science at Stony Brook University. [1]
In 2018, Cowern won a Webby Award for Best Web Personality. [26] A year later she was listed in Forbes 30 under 30 in the category of education. [27]
In May 2022, Cowern announced that she had recently married. [28]
In July 2022, Cowern reported that she had developed long COVID. She was hospitalized in March 2023, as her symptoms similar to chronic fatigue syndrome continued to worsen. [29] [30] [6] [31] [32] Her health had not improved as of April 2024. [33] [ failed verification ] A GoFundMe set up by her sister was made to help cover her extensive medical bills, which has so far raised $219,209 from 3,000+ donations as of April 2024.
William Henry Green II is an American YouTuber, science communicator, novelist, and entrepreneur. He produces the YouTube channel Vlogbrothers with his older brother, author John Green, and hosts the educational YouTube channels Crash Course and SciShow. He has advocated for and organized social activism, created and hosted a number of other YouTube channels and podcasts, released music albums, and amassed a large following on TikTok.
Lindsay Ellis is an American author, film critic, and video essayist. Her debut novel, Axiom's End, published in July 2020, became a New York Times Best Seller.
MinutePhysics is an educational YouTube channel created by Henry Reich in 2011. The channel's videos use whiteboard animation to explain physics-related topics. Early videos on the channel were approximately one minute long. As of March 2024, the channel has over 5.7 million subscribers.
Emily Graslie is an American science communicator and YouTube educator. She started volunteering at the Philip L. Wright Zoological Museum at the University of Montana in 2011. After appearing in a VlogBrothers video by Hank Green in 2012, she was asked to join the Nerdfighter network. She presented the educational YouTube channel called "The Brain Scoop" until 2021 and also hosted portions of the Big History series featured on the Crash Course YouTube channel. Graslie was employed by the Field Museum as their first-ever Chief Curiosity Correspondent.
Lia Marie Johnson is an American actress, singer, and internet personality. She first received recognition for her work on her YouTube channel, where she rose to fame for creating skits and song covers. She also made appearances in the Fine Brothers web series Kids React (2010–2011).
Lilly Saini Singh is a Canadian YouTuber, television host, comedian, actress and writer. Singh began making YouTube videos in 2010. She originally appeared under the pseudonym Superwoman, her YouTube username until 2019. In 2016, she was included in Forbes list of world's highest paid YouTubers ranking third and earning a reported $7.5 million. By 2017, she was ranked tenth on the Forbes list of the world's highest-paid YouTube stars, earning a reported $10.5 million; as of February 2022 she has 14.7 million subscribers and over three billion video views. Forbes named her one of the 40 most powerful people in comedy in 2019. She has received an MTV Fandom Award, four Streamy Awards, two Teen Choice Awards and a People's Choice Award. In addition, Singh has received nominations for a Daytime Emmy Award and two Canadian Screen Awards.
PBS Digital Studios is a non-profit organization through which PBS distributes original educational web video content. Based in Arlington, Virginia, it comprises both original series and partnerships with existing YouTube channels. Most of the series are about science, popular culture, art, food, news, and music.
BrainCraft is an educational video series on YouTube created by Australian science communicator Vanessa Hill. Hill's videos use stop motion and paper craft animation to explain neuroscience, psychology and human behavior. BrainCraft is part of the PBS Digital Studios network.
Mark Rober is an American YouTuber, engineer, inventor, and educator. He is known for his YouTube videos on popular science and do-it-yourself gadgets. Before he became a YouTuber, Rober was an engineer with NASA for nine years, where he spent seven years working on the Curiosity rover at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He later worked for four years at Apple Inc. as a product designer in their Special Projects Group, where he authored patents involving virtual reality in self-driving cars.
Dorothy Miranda Clark, known mononymously as Dodie, is an English singer, songwriter, author and YouTuber. Dodie began her career uploading original songs and covers to YouTube. As of August 2023, her main channel has over 196 videos, over 2.01 million subscribers and over 431.66 million views, and her second channel has over 203 videos, over 882k subscribers and over 100.46 million views.
Wendy Jie Huang, better known as Wengie or WRAYA, is a Chinese Australian YouTuber, vlogger, pop singer, and voice actress.
Madeleine Moate is a British television presenter, podcaster, YouTuber and children's author best known for presenting the CBeebies series Maddie's Do You Know? for which she was awarded the Best Presenter BAFTA at the Children's BAFTAs 2017. Moate is a science communicator; she studied theatre, film and television at Bristol University.
Sabine Karin Doris Hossenfelder is a German theoretical physicist, philosopher of science, author, science communicator, YouTuber, musician, and singer. She is the author of Lost in Math: How Beauty Leads Physics Astray, which explores the concept of elegance in fundamental physics and cosmology, and of Existential Physics: A Scientist’s Guide to Life’s Biggest Questions.
Kizuna AI is a Japanese virtual YouTuber (VTuber) currently part of Kizuna AI Inc., a subsidiary of digital entertainment company Activ8. From her debut in 2016 until 2021, she was the most subscribed VTuber on YouTube, with more than 4 million subscribers across three YouTube channels, 1 million subscribers on Chinese video platform Bilibili. Kizuna AI posted her first YouTube video on her "A.I.Channel" on 29 November 2016. A second channel, "A.I.Games", was opened in March 2017 for gaming content, and a third, "A.I.Channel China", opened in June 2019 for a Chinese audience. After a live concert held on 24 February 2022, she went on indefinite hiatus.
Blaire White is an American YouTuber and political commentator. Describing her politics as center-right, many of White's videos have been centered around social issues such as transgender people, feminism, and Black Lives Matter.
Nikita Nguyen, known professionally as Nikita Dragun, is an American internet personality, YouTuber, make-up artist, and model.
Emma Frances Chamberlain is an American social media personality, YouTuber, podcaster, businesswoman and model. She won the 2018 Streamy Award for Breakout Creator. In 2019, Time magazine included her on its Time 100 Next list, and its list of The 25 Most Influential People On The Internet, writing that "Chamberlain pioneered an approach to vlogging that shook up YouTube's unofficial style guide."
Toby Hendy is a science communicator and YouTuber who focuses on educational content relating to physics, mathematics and astronomy.
Jaiden Dittfach, known online as Jaiden Animations, is an American YouTuber and animator, known for her story-time animations. Her videos explore a variety of topics, spanning from her experiences to personal stories. She now primarily creates videos centered around video game stories.
Rebecca Smethurst, also known as Dr. Becky, is a British astrophysicist, author, and YouTuber who is a junior research fellow at the University of Oxford. She was the recipient of the 2020 Caroline Herschel Prize Lectureship, awarded by the Royal Astronomical Society, as well as the 2020 Mary Somerville Medal and Prize, awarded by the Institute of Physics. In 2022, she won the Royal Astronomical Society's Winton Award "for research by a post-doctoral fellow in Astronomy whose career has shown the most promising development".
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Since July, I've been struggling with what's called "Long COVID." [...] mine is very similar to Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS).
Health update - Dianna now has a PICC line inserted into her arm. The PICC is used to help Dianna receive IV medications and fluids without having an adverse reaction to them. The PICC is threaded up the arm through a large blood vessel that extends into the chest.