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  • 01:06 THX Deep Note Trailer 2019 (4K)  Genesis

    THX Deep Note Trailer 2019 (4K) Genesis

    357 views / 0 likes - added

    Listen over headphones for the best experience

  • 02:28 Popular Making the Thinnest Sheet of Paper in the World

    Making the Thinnest Sheet of Paper in the World

    817 views / 0 likes - added

    In Japan, one company is taking paper thinner than it’s ever been before. Hidaka Washi Ltd. creates paper as thin as human skin, using methods that date back a thousand years. The paper is then sent to museums and libraries around the world—including the

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  • 01:37 New York’s Electric Taxis in 1895

    New York’s Electric Taxis in 1895

    401 views / 0 likes - added

    Electric cars may seem like a contemporary, eco-friendly concept, but did you know they made a brief appearance in 19th-century New York City? Back in 1895, hundreds of electric taxis called “Electrobats” cruised the streets of Midtown Manhattan. They had

  • 03:19 The Last of the Gondola Makers

    The Last of the Gondola Makers

    315 views / 0 likes - added

    Without sketches or diagrams to guide them, the Tramontin family has built Venice’s iconic gondolas for five generations. Each flat-bottomed boat is bespoke to its gondolier and takes thousands of hours of labor to complete. Today, Renata Tramontin and he

  • 03:21 Could This Fruit Be the Worlds Most Prized?

    Could This Fruit Be the Worlds Most Prized?

    336 views / 0 likes - added

    Italian farmer Michele Cirelli might just grow the most sought-after fruit in the world. He grows citrons, called etrog in Hebrew, a delicate fruit that is an important symbol in the Jewish celebration of Sukkot every autumn. But he doesnt grow your avera

  • 03:53 Serving Up Delicious Korean Tradition

    Serving Up Delicious Korean Tradition

    409 views / 0 likes - added

    Chef Cho Hee-Sook has dedicated her 36-year career to researching and developing Korean cuisine. At the Michelin-awarded Hansikgonggan restaurant in Seoul, she offers a menu based on dishes once served at Korea’s Royal Palace. Thoughtful preparation deser

  • 03:54 How One Man Circumnavigated the World … By Car

    How One Man Circumnavigated the World … By Car

    688 views / 1 likes - added

    Ben Carlin wanted adventure, and he wanted it bad. He mined for gold in his native Western Australia, but that didn’t go so well. He enlisted in World War II, hoping to be a hero and dispose of bombs—instead, he won the less sexy task of repairing latrine

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  • 02:58 The Swiss Art of Papercutting

    The Swiss Art of Papercutting

    360 views / 0 likes - added

    Its amazing what Anne Rosat can do with a pair of scissors. This 83-year-old artist has been depicting life in the Swiss Alps through the folk art known as papercutting for 50 years. Using scissors, paper, tweezers and glue, she crafts intricate, colorful

  • 01:44 Before Horns, Every Car Had a Flag Man

    Before Horns, Every Car Had a Flag Man

    579 views / 0 likes - added

    As if driving wasn’t stressful enough, imagine a man ushering your car everywhere you went, blowing horns and waving red flags. In a time before the car horn, all automobiles in Britain were required to be escorted by a flag man. With motorists only allow

  • 03:50 This Book Has Served Up Delicious Fare for Centuries

    This Book Has Served Up Delicious Fare for Centuries

    364 views / 0 likes - added

    At the end of 17th century, a woman named Jang Gye-Hyang compiled a recipe book filled with dishes preferred by nobles and how-tos on storing and fermenting food. The text, called Eumsik Dimibang, is as relevant today as it was then—just ask Kim Byung-Jin

  • 24:18 I Climbed An 85ft Cliff With Only 1 Week of Training

    I Climbed An 85ft Cliff With Only 1 Week of Training

    77 views / 0 likes - added

    This week I attempted to scale an 85ft cliff face to overcome my fear of heights. Thank you so much to Genesis for lending us the GV80 and making this episode possible! For more information about the GV80, check out their website at: https://www.genesis.c

  • 07:49 An Ice Castle Brings Magic Before Melting Away

    An Ice Castle Brings Magic Before Melting Away

    548 views / 0 likes - added

    We partnered with Genesis to mentor and celebrate the next generation of filmmakers. Now we’re proud to share our two student film fellows’ short documentaries, which screened in Busan, South Korea, and at the 2018 Austin Film Festival. This short film is

  • 03:05 This Mountain Has Been Home to Monks for 12 Centuries

    This Mountain Has Been Home to Monks for 12 Centuries

    311 views / 0 likes - added

    Amongst the picturesque cliffs of Mount Athos, Greece, lives a community of monks who have been on this sacred piece of land for centuries. Isolated and hard to reach, the mountain is one of the most important places in the Christian Orthodox world. The m

  • 02:41 The Gardens Behind Monet’s Masterpieces

    The Gardens Behind Monet’s Masterpieces

    432 views / 0 likes - added

    Claude Monet led the way in art history as the father of French Impressionism. But his paintings of water lilies and peonies weren’t confined to canvas. In addition to his work as a painter, Monet maintained stunning gardens, the inspiration for his maste

  • 03:05 Crafting Indias 120-Foot-Long Snake Boats

    Crafting Indias 120-Foot-Long Snake Boats

    435 views / 0 likes - added

    Four hundred years ago, the snake boats of India were warships, used by battling kings along the backwaters of Kerala. Today, the long, canoe-like boats are used exclusively for racing. Reaching up to 120 feet in length, each snake boat can accommodate 10

  • 03:30 How the Worlds Best Rose Water Is Made

    How the Worlds Best Rose Water Is Made

    366 views / 0 likes - added

    Youve probably spritzed rose water on your face, or drank rose water tea. Its trendy now, though the aromatic liquid has been a staple for centuries in the Middle East. The worlds best rose water is made by experts like Moshen Ghaffari in Irans Qamsar Dis

  • 02:23 This Incense Is Worth $60,000

    This Incense Is Worth $60,000

    403 views / 0 likes - added

    Its no coincidence that Hong Kong is Cantonese for fragrant harbor. The city was the epicenter of the incense trade in ancient times. Agarwood incense is a treasured commodity today. Harvested from aquilaria trees, it smells like a cross between nutty woo

  • 03:13 A Hidden Art Form You’ll Flip For

    A Hidden Art Form You’ll Flip For

    475 views / 0 likes - added

    Martin Frost is the last working fore-edge painter in the world. Dating back centuries, the delicate art form places intricate scenes on the side of books, cheekily hidden beneath gold gilded pages. The beautiful paintings are only visible to the trained

  • 02:04 The Unlikely Origins of the Rearview Mirror

    The Unlikely Origins of the Rearview Mirror

    380 views / 0 likes - added

    The rearview mirror: a trusty soldier in the pursuit of security, a means of scanning for approaching traffic or monitoring backseat mischief. Surely its inventor had safety on the mind! Well, not quite. In 1911, a racer vying to win the inaugural Indiana

  • 01:57 The Inventor of Cruise Control Couldn’t See

    The Inventor of Cruise Control Couldn’t See

    397 views / 0 likes - added

    Ralph Teetor was an engineer and an all-around amazing guy. He lost his vision as a child, but that didn't slow him down. What did get in his way, however, was his lawyer’s driving. He’d break, then quickly accelerate—all in the name of obeying a conserva

  • 01:50 How the Emperor’s New Toy Gave Way to Your Car

    How the Emperor’s New Toy Gave Way to Your Car

    632 views / 0 likes - added

    While many in history lay claim to inventing the first “self-propelled vehicle,” Beijing’s Forbidden City may be the birthplace of the world’s first automobile, an ancient steam-powered precursor to modern day cars. Even better? It was designed to be a to

  • 03:32 In Japan, Repairing Buildings Without a Single Nail

    In Japan, Repairing Buildings Without a Single Nail

    661 views / 0 likes - added

    In the past, making and developing metal was too costly for carpenters in Japan. So instead of using nails, carpenters called “miyadaiku” developed unique methods for interlocking pieces of wood together, similar to a giant 3D puzzle. Takahiro Matsumoto h

  • 03:30 The Art of Canning the Sea

    The Art of Canning the Sea

    406 views / 0 likes - added

    Canned fish has been around for over a century and has been enjoyed around world. Still, no one loves their fish more than Portugal, where old traditions of fishing, canning and trading have come together to create an art form. What first began as a metho

  • 02:48 Wearing the Hair of Your Ancestors

    Wearing the Hair of Your Ancestors

    391 views / 0 likes - added

    The Qing Miao women of China have their mothers hair, quite literally. Each household prepares a headdress for their daughter to wear in honor of the women in the family. The headdress is made of real hair pulled from the combs of elders. Yang Er Meil liv

  • 03:11 Making Legal Wigs for British Courts

    Making Legal Wigs for British Courts

    428 views / 0 likes - added

    If a barrister or a judge walked into a London courtroom without wearing a wig, well, everyone would wig out. Its a tradition to wear a legal wig in England. Ede & Ravenscroft, the oldest tailor in London, has been making these head coverings for over thr

  • 02:41 This Turkish Language Isn't Spoken, Its Whistled

    This Turkish Language Isn't Spoken, Its Whistled

    318 views / 1 likes - added

    For three centuries, farmers living in the remote mountains of northern Turkey have communicated great distances by whistling. Its a language called ku dili that is still used to this day, though fewer people are learning it in the age of the cell phone.

  • 03:14 Making Gruyre in the Swiss Alps for Centuries

    Making Gruyre in the Swiss Alps for Centuries

    338 views / 0 likes - added

    Alexandre Muriths family has been making gruyre dalpage in Switzerland for five generations, and there is an art to producing this cheese with a hard texture and no holes. While regular gruyre is made year-round, gruyre dalpage is only made from May throu

  • 02:42 Catching Tiny Fish With Tiny Rods

    Catching Tiny Fish With Tiny Rods

    641 views / 0 likes - added

    Every fisherman today has a big fish story, but in ancient Japan, the tiniest fish was the biggest catch. Tanago fishing is a Japanese tradition dating back to samurai over 200 years ago. A tanago fish can be as small as the nail of a pinky finger; in ord

  • 03:07 This Rare, Golden Cheese Is Only Made in the Polish Mountains

    This Rare, Golden Cheese Is Only Made in the Polish Mountains

    484 views / 0 likes - added

    Tucked away in Poland’s beautiful Tatra Mountains lives a 15th-century cheese making tradition that has been passed down from generation to generation. Known as oscypek, the milky, smoky cheese is made entirely by hand by masters called “bacas.” Tradition

  • 02:49 This Dish Could Kill You

    This Dish Could Kill You

    402 views / 0 likes - added

    When Egypt’s Ministry of Health issues its annual warning to stay away from a local deadly delicacy called feseekh, you would think that most would comply. Instead, thousands flock to their local feseekh eateries every day to enjoy the traditional dish. F

  • 04:15 Popular Something About Super Mario World ANIMATED

    Something About Super Mario World ANIMATED

    1,333 views / 6 likes - added

    WAHOO is back and he's faster than ever! He'll get another speedrunning world record for sure, but at what cost? Liked this parody? Subscribe for more! And please consider sharing and supporting my Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/sidequests Patron contri

  • 00:53 NASA TV spot (unofficial)

    NASA TV spot (unofficial)

    510 views / 0 likes - added

    More at http://www.facebook.com/thesaganseries. Follow me on twitter @ReidGower http://www.twitter.com/reidgower. This was my interpretation of what a NASA promo video could look like. Footage taken from: In the Shadow of the Moon Roving Mars IMAX Space S

  • 03:22 What happens when you collapse an underwater bubble with a soundwave

    What happens when you collapse an underwater bubble with a soundwave

    465 views / 0 likes - added

    In Genesis 1:2-3 it says, "And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the WATERS. And God said, Let there be light: and there was light." Ok.. picture a sphere of wate

  • 03:05 The Master of Shadow Puppets

    The Master of Shadow Puppets

    373 views / 0 likes - added

    Fan Zhengan is keeping the tradition of Mount Tai shadow puppetry alive in Taian, China. The art form was created more than 2,000 years ago. Zhengan, who turns 76 this year, has been at it for 68 years, and hes basically a one-man puppeteering band. He op

  • 03:34 Popular The Man Who Was Godzilla

    The Man Who Was Godzilla

    760 views / 1 likes - added

    Haruo Nakajima is perhaps Japan’s most famous actor, but you wouldn’t necessarily recognize his face. That’s because from 1954 to 1972, he was the man inside the Godzilla costume for 12 consecutive films. At 87 years old, many now consider Nakajima among

  • 02:59 Feast Your Eyes on Korea's Oldest Street Food Market

    Feast Your Eyes on Korea's Oldest Street Food Market

    600 views / 0 likes - added

    First established in 1905, Seoul's Gwangjang Market is considered the oldest continually functioning food market in South Korea. It’s one of those places that has withstood the test of time, and been passed down through generations. If you want to try the

  • 02:56 Popular The Art of Making 9-Foot Noodles by Hand

    The Art of Making 9-Foot Noodles by Hand

    795 views / 0 likes - added

    In a Chinese village of 300 people, 51-year-old Lin Fagan continues a centuries-old tradition of making noodles by hand. But these aren’t just any noodles—these thread-thin suo noodles measure nine feet in length and take 16 hours to produce. Fagan and hi

  • 02:18 Popular Why Is the ‘Mona Lisa’ So Famous?

    Why Is the ‘Mona Lisa’ So Famous?

    761 views / 0 likes - added

    What’s so great about the Mona Lisa? Sure, she’s got that smile, but what makes her *the most famous painting in the world*? Well, Mona’s got a wild past—one that involves larceny, false allegations, Napoleon Bonaparte and Pablo Picasso. Here’s the story

  • 02:54 Here’s the Real Story Behind General Tso's Chicken

    Here’s the Real Story Behind General Tso's Chicken

    626 views / 0 likes - added

    General Tso's chicken is a staple in American Chinese restaurants. But the most popular Chinese dish in the United States is virtually unknown in China. Say what? This is the story behind your favorite sweet and spicy, gooey and crunchy mess in a takeout

  • 05:53 In Korea, Setting the Table With Tradition

    In Korea, Setting the Table With Tradition

    530 views / 0 likes - added

    Seoul may be a glitzy high-tech capital, but honoring dining tradition is central to Korean culture. Ceramicist Yi Yoon-Shin and carpenter Sol Yi-Hwan create stunning porcelain dishes and wood furniture, respectively, that combine old materials and crafts

  • 05:16 Fishing and Eating Like Ancient Hawaiians

    Fishing and Eating Like Ancient Hawaiians

    447 views / 0 likes - added

    Gargantuan luau dinners and Hawaiian pizza have nothing to do with authentic Hawaiian cuisine. Originally a simple diet based around root starches and fish, chefs in Hawaii are combating clichés and crafting Hawaiian menus that are more in harmony with th

  • 02:24 Kimchi: A Story of Love and Patience

    Kimchi: A Story of Love and Patience

    514 views / 0 likes - added

    For South Korea, kimchi is a symbol of national pride, and Kim Myung-Sung makes some of the best fermented vegetables around. Originally inclined to make a delicious gift for his wife, he has since committed his life to making the perfect kimchi. Here's h

  • 02:45 The Subtle Art of Emography

    The Subtle Art of Emography

    435 views / 0 likes - added

    A master calligrapher understands the subtleties of his characters and knows how to transform them into a language all people can understand. With 50 years of experience studying and practicing traditional Korean calligraphy, artist Huh Hwe-Tae took inspi

  • 02:26 This 101-Year-Old Tattoo Artist Is the Last of Her Kind

    This 101-Year-Old Tattoo Artist Is the Last of Her Kind

    642 views / 0 likes - added

    Whang-Od is the last remaining mambabatok—a tattoo artist in the Philippines using traditional hand-tap methods. At 101 years old, she is the last master of the thousand-year-old trade that first began as a way to honor warriors in battle. Using a hammer

  • 02:54 Popular Meet the Inventor of the Rubik’s Cube

    Meet the Inventor of the Rubik’s Cube

    1,002 views / 2 likes - added

    Since the 1980s, the Rubik’s Cube has captivated the minds of puzzle solvers around the globe. But how did one of the world’s most addictive and prolific puzzles come to be? It all began in the beautiful city of Budapest, in the beautiful mind of Ernő Rub

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  • 02:22 The Last of the Stilt Fishers in Sri Lanka

    The Last of the Stilt Fishers in Sri Lanka

    314 views / 0 likes - added

    Anura Wijewikrama fishes two hours each morning and two hours each evening. And like his grandfather and father before him, he does so on handmade stilts driven into the sand. He is one of the few still carrying on the practice, which is exclusively found

  • 02:28 The Chinese Village Where Everyone Skis

    The Chinese Village Where Everyone Skis

    403 views / 0 likes - added

    Some residents of Hemu Village practically live on skis. Winter lasts seven months in this remote part of China, and its really the best way to travel up and down the mountains and through the forest. Ma Liqin, a herder, zips around on a pair made out of

  • 03:00 Welcome to the City of Violins

    Welcome to the City of Violins

    628 views / 0 likes - added

    Cremona, Italy, is a city with a very special (and very musical) history. It’s a city of master craftsmen who specialize in one thing—violins. Since the mid-16th century, Cremona has lived and breathed violins. The northern Italian city is credited as the

  • 02:24 The Art of Fishing With Birds

    The Art of Fishing With Birds

    493 views / 1 likes - added

    Along the scenic Lijiang River in China, brothers Huang Yuechang and Huang Mingde have been keeping up a centuries-old tradition of fishing with cormorant birds. Forgoing nets and modern fishing poles, these brothers have cultivated relationships with the

  • 03:30 Popular Spinning Silk from the Sea

    Spinning Silk from the Sea

    788 views / 0 likes - added

    For over a thousand years, Chiara Vigo’s family has been keeping up an ancient tradition, spinning silk from the sea. Creating the sea silk, or byssus, involves an intricate process shrouded in secrecy. Living on the Sardinian coast, Chiara follows in her

  • 02:50 Popular Who Put the Hole in the Donut?

    Who Put the Hole in the Donut?

    776 views / 2 likes - added

    Football and a rags-to-riches story—perhaps the only things that America loves more than donuts. But the delectable rings of sugar and dough didn't always appear in their now-ubiquitous circular form. So where did the donut’s shape (and its signature hole

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  • 02:37 Popular The Origin of the Hip-Hop Air Horn

    The Origin of the Hip-Hop Air Horn

    862 views / 0 likes - added

    Born on a B-side of a Bob Marley and the Wailers record, the air horn sound has been associated with reggae and Jamaican dancehall music since the 1960s. What was once a staple of the club scene in Jamaica has now become a global hip-hop phenomenon, thank

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  • 02:00 Handcrafting Giant Lanterns in China

    Handcrafting Giant Lanterns in China

    387 views / 0 likes - added

    The courtyard behind Bai Junpings workshop is packed with lanterns, rows and rows of red and gold lanterns. Its a traditional occupation in the village of Tuntou, China, dating back to ancient times. Bai makes tens of thousands of lanterns every year. Som

  • 02:43 This Turkish Ice Cream Doesn't Melt

    This Turkish Ice Cream Doesn't Melt

    382 views / 1 likes - added

    Ankara might be the capital city, but Kahramanmara is Turkeys undisputed ice cream capital. Atilla Kanbur is the fourth generation in his family to make delicious Turkish ice cream, churning out 5 tons of the sweet stuff a day. Whats so special about Turk

  • 03:12 Popular The Iconic ‘Seinfeld’ Theme Song Was Totally Improvised

    The Iconic ‘Seinfeld’ Theme Song Was Totally Improvised

    853 views / 0 likes - added

    Whether you’re a “Seinfeld” devotee or not, the iconic synth-bass sounds of the sitcom’s theme music are unmistakable. And the man behind the improvised riff is just as original. Meet composer Jonathan Wolff; he’s responsible for writing the theme songs t

  • 02:57 The Legend of the San Nicolas Cookie

    The Legend of the San Nicolas Cookie

    250 views / 0 likes - added

    San Nicolas cookies are soft and delicious. But theyre much more than a yummy treat to the people of the Philippines. These cookiesnamed after an Italian saintare said to possess healing powers. Chef and food historian Atching Lillian Borromeo makes them

  • 02:30 Sketching the Slopes: The Artist Behind Ski Trail Maps

    Sketching the Slopes: The Artist Behind Ski Trail Maps

    615 views / 0 likes - added

    When you're strapping on your bindings and preparing to hit the slopes, you probably aren't focusing on the artistry that goes into ski maps. But for Jim Niehues, that's life. The ski map artist paints every tree, shadow and mountain peak on trail maps fo

  • 09:50 The Art of Becoming a Tightrope Clown

    The Art of Becoming a Tightrope Clown

    333 views / 0 likes - added

    Jungwoon Woo is studying to be a professional tightrope clown. A sophomore at the Korea National University of Arts in Seoul, the 22-year-old is a student of jultagia form of Korean tightrope walking that dates back to the Silla period. An endangered cult

  • 02:52 Keeping the Flame Alight With the Last of the Lampists

    Keeping the Flame Alight With the Last of the Lampists

    447 views / 0 likes - added

    Jim Woodward is a lampist. A what, you ask? A lampist's main job is to keep the enormous, delicate glass lenses of lighthouse lights in tip-top shape so that ships at sea stay safe. But over the years, glass lenses have fallen out of vogue. Now, most of t

  • 03:54 Frances Family of Bell Makers

    Frances Family of Bell Makers

    296 views / 0 likes - added

    From the 19-ton Savoyarde at the Sacr-Coeur in Paris to replicas of the Liberty Bell that can be found all over the United States, the Paccard family has been making bells since 1796. There are currently three generations of Paccards working side-by-side

  • 03:48 Creating the Worst Video Game of All Time

    Creating the Worst Video Game of All Time

    652 views / 1 likes - added

    The video game 'E.T, The Extraterrestrial' for Atari 2600 is considered one of the biggest flops in gaming history. Yet the game's designer, Howard Scott Warshaw, says he couldn't be prouder of that honor. This is the story of an awesomely bad video game.

  • 02:26 Popular Like Volleyball With Your Feet: The Korean Sport of Jokgu

    Like Volleyball With Your Feet: The Korean Sport of Jokgu

    1,305 views / 1 likes - added

    With a history that dates back over 1,300 years, jokgu is the only ball sport that originated in South Korea. It requires great skill, balance and technique. Picture four-per-side volleyball on grass, but played with the feet, and you have the basic idea.

  • 02:40 Inside Jurassic Park’s Most Iconic Special Effect

    Inside Jurassic Park’s Most Iconic Special Effect

    659 views / 0 likes - added

    Steven Spielberg’s 1993 film “Jurassic Park” was a landmark cinematic achievement due in large part to its groundbreaking special effects. But it wasn’t the appearance of the raptors, the brontosaurus or the T. Rex that caused Spielberg and his crew to th

  • 03:01 Eating (and Breathing) Dragon’s Beard in Singapore

    Eating (and Breathing) Dragon’s Beard in Singapore

    539 views / 2 likes - added

    For years, dragon’s beard candy—aka, the cotton candy of the East—was not readily available in Singapore. That is, until Auntie Lili came onto the scene. In 1988, she brought the sweet treat over to Singapore, using a centuries-old technique that requires

  • 02:22 Eating Chinas 1,000-Year-Old Egg

    Eating Chinas 1,000-Year-Old Egg

    322 views / 0 likes - added

    Century eggs dont look anything like the eggs you might be used to. Cut one open, and youll find an albumen thats brown jelly and a yolk thats shades of black and brownish green. They are considered a delicacy in China, dating back to the Ming Dynasty. Qi

  • 02:24 How Ancient Palestinian Soap Is Made

    How Ancient Palestinian Soap Is Made

    333 views / 0 likes - added

    Ahmed Darwish el Fakhouri spends his days surrounded by olive oil soap stacked up higheach precious bar waiting to be wrapped and sold after a drying out period of two to three months. He is the third generation of his family to run one of the oldest soap

  • 03:07 Trying the Hardest Cheese in the World

    Trying the Hardest Cheese in the World

    639 views / 0 likes - added

    Dinesh Gale is a cattle farmer who makes chhurpi in Tipling, Nepal. Its a hard cheese that comes from the milk of chaurithats a cross between a yak and a cow. Chhurpi smells smoky and tastes sweet, and you chew it like you would a piece of gum. It is also

  • 02:35 Meet the Intern Who Wrote Solitaire for Microsoft

    Meet the Intern Who Wrote Solitaire for Microsoft

    501 views / 0 likes - added

    In 1988, Wes Cherry was an intern at Microsoft when he created a game that would change the lives of office workers forever. That game was Solitaire. At the time there weren't many desktop computer games and most households still didn't have personal comp

  • 03:59 Making $35,000 Bonsai Scissors

    Making $35,000 Bonsai Scissors

    521 views / 0 likes - added

    When it comes to Japanese craftsmanship, knives often get all the glory. But in the city of Sakai, where traditional metalwork goes back centuries, there is one man who has built his legacy on something a little different. Master blacksmith Yasuhiro Hirak

  • 02:34 How Curious George Escaped Nazi Germany

    How Curious George Escaped Nazi Germany

    622 views / 0 likes - added

    Curious George is the mischievous child that still lives inside us all, a swinging catastrophe with an envious joie de vivre. But everyone’s favorite chimp almost didn’t make it to the page. The story goes way back to 1940 as Nazi forces prepared to invad

  • 03:25 Building Beautiful Monsters in Mexico

    Building Beautiful Monsters in Mexico

    697 views / 2 likes - added

    All across Mexico, fantastical creatures can be found dotting the streets, covered in bright colors, giant wings, bulging eyes and viper tongues. These are alebrijes, papier-mâché creations that have become a staple of Mexican folk art. But how did these

  • 02:48 Popular In Japan, Shaved Ice Goes Gourmet

    In Japan, Shaved Ice Goes Gourmet

    868 views / 0 likes - added

    Kakigori is a traditional Japanese shaved ice dessert dating back to the late 1800s. Originally meant for Japan’s elite, today it’s become a summer staple for everyone. Some, like chef Aya Eguchi, still abide by ancient methods of preparation, using ice f

  • 04:07 This Is Where Your Wine Corks Come From

    This Is Where Your Wine Corks Come From

    588 views / 0 likes - added

    Uncorking a bottle of wine after a long day is one of the few true pleasures in life. But ever wonder where that small cork—aka the last thing standing between you and your favorite red—comes from? In Portugal, there’s a long and rich history of harvestin

  • 12:22 Creation from the Void: Crash Course Mythology #2

    Creation from the Void: Crash Course Mythology #2

    653 views / 0 likes - added

    Today on Crash Course Mythology we’re starting in on creation stories. This week, we’ll focus on the creation of the universe out of nothing, or Ex Nihlio creation. Basically, a god decides to make a universe out of nothing. We’ll look a

  • 10:47 Popular Sega And More Mature Video Games: Crash Course Games #8

    Sega And More Mature Video Games: Crash Course Games #8

    1,499 views / 6 likes - added

    So we ended the last episode nearing the close of the 1980s and Nintendo had become the dominant player in the home console market, but Sega, originally a slot machine game company during World War 2, was looking to get its own console into players’ homes

  • 17:49 EVIL MOM Gets CUSTODY OF THE CHILD (Dhar Mann)

    EVIL MOM Gets CUSTODY OF THE CHILD (Dhar Mann)

    645 views / 1 likes - added

    NEW APP UPDATE! Get here: https://www.dharmann.com/app-update/ Unlock EXCLUSIVE CONTENT, get EARLY ACCESS to videos and more with Dhar Mann Plus! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to our channel by clicking here https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_hK9fOxyy_TM8FJGX

  • 15:15 Popular Deep Time: Crash Course Astronomy #45

    Deep Time: Crash Course Astronomy #45

    727 views / 0 likes - added

    As we approach the end of Crash Course Astronomy, it’s time now to acknowledge that our Universe’s days are numbered. Stars will die out after a few trillion years, protons will decay and matter will dissolve after a thousand trillion trillion trillion ye

  • 24:16 HOMELESS MAN Is Richer Than A MILLIONAIRE | Dhar Mann Studios

    HOMELESS MAN Is Richer Than A MILLIONAIRE | Dhar Mann Studios

    96 views / 0 likes - added

    Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to my channel by clicking here https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_hK9fOxyy_TM8FJGXIyG8Q?sub_confirmation=1 Watch my favorite videos: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLnBCOhf_VBTVGGC7OryYH7wO87PCostB3REMEMBER - We're not jus

  • 03:51 This Dangerous Mosquito Lays Her Armored Eggs  in Your House | Deep Look

    This Dangerous Mosquito Lays Her Armored Eggs in Your House | Deep Look

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    The Aedes aegypti mosquito, which can transmit dengue fever and Zika, makes a meal of us around our homes. And her eggs are hardy. They can dry out, but remain alive for months, waiting for a little water so they can hatch into squiggly larvae.Please join


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