Early work After graduation, Imahara was hired as an engineer for Lucasfilm's
THX division; he then moved to the company's visual effects division,
Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), where he worked for nine years. While at ILM, he was involved in several films, including
The Lost World: Jurassic Park,
Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace,
Galaxy Quest,
A.I. Artificial Intelligence,
Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones,
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines,
The Matrix Reloaded,
The Matrix Revolutions,
Van Helsing, and
Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith. As an official Artoo Technician, he made a
cameo appearance in the
mockumentary R2-D2: Beneath the Dome. He was also credited as chief model maker for Industrial Light & Magic on such projects as "Galaxy Quest" in 1999 wherein he designed custom circuit boards to provide the lighting effects on the NSEA-Protector space ship engine nacelles.
MythBusters ,
Kari Byron,
Jamie Hyneman, Imahara, and
Adam Savage in 2012 Imahara joined
MythBusters on the invitation of friend and occasional employer
Jamie Hyneman and former ILM colleague Linda Wolkovitch, who was an associate producer of
MythBusters. He joined as the third member of the Build Team alongside
Kari Byron and
Tory Belleci, replacing former
MythBusters welder
Scottie Chapman. His colleagues often jokingly refer to him as the "
geek" of the Build Team. He often built robots that were needed for the show and specialized in operating computers and electronics for testing the myths.
White Rabbit Project Imahara reunited with Byron and Belleci for the 2016
White Rabbit Project, a
Netflix Original Series, in which the team investigated topics such as jailbreaks, superpower technology, heists, and bizarre World War II weapons, evaluated against a defined set of criteria and explored through experiments, builds, and tests. The complete first season of the series was released on Netflix on December 9, 2016. Despite receiving good reviews, the series was not renewed.
Other work In addition to his role on
MythBusters, he is known for his appearances on
BattleBots, where he designed and competed with his robot
Deadblow. By 2018, he was selected as one of the judges for the eighth season on
BattleBots. He made a cameo appearance on Syfy's
Eureka and the web series
The Guild. Other works include designing the circuit that creates the rhythmic
oscillation of the arms of the modern
Energizer Bunny; He was a mentor for the
Richmond High robotics team Biomechs #841 for the
FIRST Robotics Competition, lending his expert guidance on how to create the right robot for the right job. Imahara was profiled in the magazine
IEEE Spectrum for an issue focusing on engineering dream jobs. in 2010 One of Imahara's independent projects, during early 2010, was constructing a robotic
sidekick for
Craig Ferguson, host of
The Late Late Show. The robot, named
Geoff Peterson, was unveiled on ''The Late Late Show's'' April 5, 2010, episode. It was controlled and voiced by comedian and voice actor
Josh Robert Thompson. In 2012, Imahara's likeness was used in the popular webcomic
America Jr, in which he appeared as himself as a celebrity judge for a competition to select the country's Surgeon General. In 2012, Imahara had a cameo role on the finale of
Eureka, in the episode titled "Just Another Day", as a robotics scientist operating EMO. Imahara portrayed
Hikaru Sulu in all 11 episodes of the web series
Star Trek Continues. Imahara was a guest on
TWiT's Triangulation (episode 121) on September 25, 2013. He also partnered with
Mouser Electronics to kick off their "Empowering Innovation Together" campaign, where he hosts several webisodes. In 2014, Imahara appeared in a series of videos showing the behind-the-scenes process of how several
McDonald's foods are made. He made an appearance in the 2015 TV movie
Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No! Imahara took an active part in advising Team USA in a giant-robot battle between American company MegaBots and Japanese company Suidobashi Heavy Industry. Imahara hosted the second season of the web series
The Home of the Future, produced by
The Verge in partnership with
Curbed. On October 18, 2017, Imahara tweeted that he had been consulting for
Walt Disney Imagineering for six months, for a "top secret" project. On May 21, 2018, he was included as an author on the
Disney Research paper "Stickman: Towards a Human Scale Acrobatic Robot", which explores the creation of "a simple two degree of freedom robot that uses a gravity-driven pendulum launch and produces a variety of somersaulting stunts". On June 29, 2018, Disney revealed that the Stickman prototype had evolved into an innovative, autonomous, self-correcting, acrobatic style of audio-animatronic figure, named
Stuntronics, which will be utilized within
Disney theme parks throughout the world. In March 2020, while Imahara was working as a consultant for Disney Research and a mechanical designer at Spectral Moon, he built a fully
animatronic model of
Baby Yoda with the intention of touring
children's hospitals with the lifelike robot to cheer up sick children. Imahara spent three months on the personal project doing the mechanical design, programming and
3D printing and completed it four months prior to his death. ==Personal life==