Jimmy DiResta

Jimmy DiResta (born April 3, 1967) is a New York-based designer,[1] artist, and video producer. He enrolled in the School of Visual Arts in 1986 and graduated in 1990 with a BFA degree. In 1993, he formed a now-defunct toy design company/store called "DiResta" in the East Village which created Gurglin Gutz.[2] He went on to teach at the School of Visual Arts.[3]

Jimmy DiResta
DiResta with dog, Woody
Born
Jimmy DiResta

(1967-04-03) April 3, 1967
Other namesJames Diresta
OccupationDesigner, artist, fabricator, TV personality
Years active1990–present
RelativesJohn DiResta

Career

In 2003, DiResta served as set decorator and co-host on "Trash to Cash" with his brother, John DiResta,[4] on Fox Television (FX Network). In 2006, he co-hosted Hammered with John & Jimmy DiResta, on HGTV.[5] The show focused on the marriage of Jimmy's craftsmanship and John's humor. The show's tagline was "Jimmy can make anything and John can make anything funny."[6] In 2009, Jimmy hosted "Against the Grain" on the DIY Network.[7]

In 2011, he co-hosted Dirty Money with his brother, John, on Discovery Channel. The DiResta brothers set out scouring every corner of New York City, from dumpsters to flea markets.[8][9]

Since his TV career, he has entered the YouTube media business, publishing on the Make: and Core77 channel as well as his own.[10][11] He co-hosts the weekly "Making It" podcast since October, 2014[12] together with David Picciuto and Bob Clagett.[13]

In 2016, Make: published a book co-written by Jimmy DiResta and John Baichtal entitled "Workshop Mastery with Jimmy DiResta."[14]

In 2017, DiResta traveled to California to be a part of NBC's Making It, hosted by Amy Poehler and Nick Offerman, as an on-camera helper. Rejecting the name, "The Master Helper", DiResta wanted just to be referred to by name.[15]

DiResta now has the nickname "Jimmy Two Shows" as both his podcast and the show share a name.[15]

gollark: Browsers provide a useful cross-platform environment which is well-sandboxed but still has decent access to a lot of stuff, which allows you to run an application in a few seconds without installing anything, and which can interact easily with some server somewhere.
gollark: The interwebâ„¢ is *good*.
gollark: It would take much longer to implement, be significantly less readable, run somewhat faster, and have more security issues.
gollark: Also, C makes sense for some things, but not that many. Programming my current eternally unfinished web project in C would be extremely stupid.
gollark: I will not go away unless I go away.

References

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