Monday, January 4, 2010

Who Killed the Electric Car?

I thought this was a great program.  But it made me even more cynical about big money's negative influence on the world's societies.

"This film investigates the events leading to the quiet destruction of thousands of new, radically efficient electric vehicles. Through interviews and narrative, the film paints a picture of an industrial culture whose aversion to change and reliance on oil may be deeper than its ability to embrace ready solutions." -http://www.whokilledtheelectriccar.com/




 















Amazon Crude

This program focuses on on the class action lawsuit against Chevron for deliberately contaminating the Ecuadorian Amazon and causing a wave of cancer and miscarriages in the region.
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China Rises (Part 2)

This last installment deals with the crisis concerning China's food supply, then the social inequalities of China.  The clips aren't the best in terms of quality, but they are not too bad.
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China Rises (Part 1)

This documentary examines the many changes the People's Republic of China is undergoing, its rapid economic development and its hosting of the 2008 Olympic Games.
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Space Mysteries: Comets - Target Earth? (National Geographic) HD

I haven't watched this one yet, but the narration seems good.
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The Incredible Human Journey - Out of Africa HD

I downloaded and watched this one a couple of months ago. It was good. This one is part of a whole series called The Incredible Human Journey.  There are others on human origins in Asia, Europe, Australia etc.  I may post them as well,  but I haven't seen them so I will have to preview them first.


"How did we get here? Following a trail of clues from the latest scientific research, Dr Alice Roberts re-traces the greatest ever journey taken by our ancestors. Thousands of years ago one small group of our species, Homo sapiens, crossed out of Africa and into the unknown. Their descendants faced baking deserts, sweat-soaked jungles and frozen wildernesses and risked everything on the vast empty ocean.

Within 60,000 years they colonized the whole world... How did they do it? Why do we, their descendants all look so different? And what did we have that meant we were the only human species to survive?

Using the evidence from genetics, fossils, archaeology and climatology, Dr Alice Roberts uncovers five epic routes our ancestors took across the globe and the obstacles and brutal challenges they encountered along the way. It reveals how our family tree grew and spread out across the world, producing all the variety we see in the human species today - but despite all that diversity, Alice reveals how astonishingly closely related we all are.

Out of Africa.

Alice travels to Africa in search of the birthplace of the first people. They were so few in number and so vulnerable that today they would probably be considered an endangered species. So what allowed them to survive at all? The Bushmen of the Kalahari have some answers - the unique design of the human body made them efficient hunters and the ancient click language of the Bushmen points to an early ability to organize and plan.
Humans survived there, but Africa was to all intents and purposes a sealed continent. So how and by what route did humans make it out of Africa? Astonishing genetic evidence reveals that everyone alive today who is not African descends from just one successful, tiny group which left the continent in a single crossing, an event that may have happened around 70 thousand years ago. But how did they do it? Alice goes searching for clues in the remote Arabian Desert."











NASA HD Tour of the International Space Station

This clip is only ten minutes long, but it has some good footage and a lot of information about the ISS.
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