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  • 11:22 Animal Astronauts - The Space Race's Unwitting Pioneers

    Animal Astronauts - The Space Race's Unwitting Pioneers

    463 views / 0 likes - added

    Everyone remembers Yuri Gagarin the first man in space but before his famous flight there had been many more living space pioneers who didn’t really have any choice about being strapped in to an experimental rocket. Patreon : https://www.patreon.com/curio

  • 12:26 Four Pioneers Blazing Their Own Trails

    Four Pioneers Blazing Their Own Trails

    524 views / 0 likes - added

    In this reel, we meet four defiant individuals knocking down barriers and creating new paths, from an instructor teaching yoga for everyone to a rapper finding music without a voice. SUBSCRIBE: https://goo.gl/vR6Acb This story is a part of our Human Condi

  • 04:48 Three pioneers who predicted climate change | BBC Ideas

    Three pioneers who predicted climate change | BBC Ideas

    288 views / 0 likes - added

    We've known about climate change and the warming impact of CO2 for a very long time... Here are three key figures in the history of climate change science - Eunice Foote, Guy Stewart Callendar and Charles Keeling. Not all of them them got the recognition

  • 04:10 Sun Pictures: Henry Fox Talbot and the First Photographs | Pioneers of Photography

    Sun Pictures: Henry Fox Talbot and the First Photographs | Pioneers of Photography

    650 views / 0 likes - added

    The invention of the photograph, in 1839, would forever change the way people looked at the world. But this extraordinary breakthrough cannot be credited to a single individual—while William Henry Fox Talbot labored quietly in England, Louis Daguerr

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  • 03:51 Slices of time: Eadweard Muybridge’s cinematic legacy | Pioneers of Photography

    Slices of time: Eadweard Muybridge’s cinematic legacy | Pioneers of Photography

    491 views / 0 likes - added

    Eadweard Muybridge is remembered today for his extraordinary pictures of Yosemite and his pioneering photographic studies of motion, which ultimately led to the development of cinema.

  • 04:21 Three black scientists you need to know | BBC Ideas

    Three black scientists you need to know | BBC Ideas

    466 views / 0 likes - added

    Space scientist and broadcaster Maggie Aderin-Pocock selects three unsung heroes who are all pioneers in their fields.Made in partnership with The Open University.Made by Team Sass productions.Did you enjoy this video? You might also like 'Three pioneers

  • 07:00 The woman who turns brains into soup: Suzana Herculano-Houzel

    The woman who turns brains into soup: Suzana Herculano-Houzel

    440 views / 0 likes - added

    Ever wondered how many neurons are in the human brain? Meet Suzana Herculano-Houzel, a professor at Vanderbilt University whose pioneering "brain soup" technique made it possible to accurately count the number of neurons in brains of all sizes. From eleph

  • 12:44 Popular Westward Expansion: Crash Course US History #24

    Westward Expansion: Crash Course US History #24

    1,700 views / 5 likes - added

    In which John Green teaches you about the Wild, Wild, West, which as it turns out, wasn't as wild as it seemed in the movies. When we think of the western expansion of the United States in the 19th century, we're conditioned to imagine the loner. The self

  • 02:36 Dancing Professionally With Cerebral Palsy

    Dancing Professionally With Cerebral Palsy

    616 views / 2 likes - added

    When doctors diagnosed Jerron Herman with cerebral palsy hemiplegia, they told him he wouldn't be able to clothe or feed himself, and that he would need assistance with nearly everything he did. Not only did Herman prove them wrong, he went on to realize

  • 01:41 Why There's A Pyramid In Wyoming Dedicated To Crooks

    Why There's A Pyramid In Wyoming Dedicated To Crooks

    474 views / 0 likes - added

    Two of the biggest pioneers in U.S. railroad history were brothers, Oakes and Oliver Ames. And while they were later found out to be criminals, a large granite pyramid would later be erected in southern Wyoming, in their honor. From: AERIAL AMERICA: The W

  • 03:29 After Disaster Strikes, Robots to the Rescue

    After Disaster Strikes, Robots to the Rescue

    636 views / 0 likes - added

    When a natural disaster strikes, it’s engineer Robin Murphy to the rescue. Or rather, it’s Robin and her army of robots. As the director of Texas A&M’s Center for Robot-Assisted Search and Rescue, she’s one of the leading pioneers in using robots to help

  • 07:45 Popular 21 Times Bikini Bottom Was In The Nude  | SpongeBob

    21 Times Bikini Bottom Was In The Nude | SpongeBob

    2,406 views / 3 likes - added

    We now know why it's called Bikini BOTTOM! Clothe all of them when you can but check out the 21 moments when they are in the nude.#BikiniBottom #CringeCompilation #Cartoon Subscribe for More: https://at.nick.com/SpongeBobSubscribe Watch More from SpongeBo

  • 01:32 Robotic Farming of the Future

    Robotic Farming of the Future

    155 views / 0 likes - added

    The University of Sydney's Australian Centre for Field Robotics are pioneers when it comes to robotic farming. Having developed a series of driverless tractors, they give us a sneak peek of how future farms and orchards will operate in the era of mass aut

  • 05:34 Jetson ONE - World's First EVTOL Commute to Work

    Jetson ONE - World's First EVTOL Commute to Work

    210 views / 0 likes - added

    We are incredibly proud to share that after months of rigorous trial and testing we completed the World’s first EVTOL commute. On 21.05.2022 co-founder and Jetson ONE inventor Tomasz Patan flew from home to work. This reduced our commute time by an

  • 04:03 Steve Martin on how to look at abstract art | MoMA BBC | THE WAY I SEE IT

    Steve Martin on how to look at abstract art | MoMA BBC | THE WAY I SEE IT

    321 views / 0 likes - added

    In this episode of "The Way I See It," actor and comedian Steve Martin looks at paintings by two early pioneers of American abstraction and takes us on a journey of seeing—shape and color transform into mountains, sky, and water. Find "The Way I See

  • 13:29 The Masterminds Behind Your Most Beloved Childhood Toys

    The Masterminds Behind Your Most Beloved Childhood Toys

    433 views / 0 likes - added

    In this reel we meet the creators of some of our most beloved childhood toys. We catch up with the inventor of the Super Soaker (who also happens to be a NASA scientist), meet the godfather of tween board games, and learn all about the silly past of silly

  • 12:29 Finding Light in the Dark

    Finding Light in the Dark

    452 views / 0 likes - added

    When darkness falls, most of us hit the sack. But in this reel, we meet people who thrive after the sun goes down. We bust a move with Peter Vosper, learn all about the deep, dark world of gourmet mushrooms in Paris, and gaze into the night sky in Colorad

  • 10:35 The Stories Behind These 5 Commonplace Things Will Impress You

    The Stories Behind These 5 Commonplace Things Will Impress You

    442 views / 1 likes - added

    Great Big Reel 131: New to our channel, or don't have time to look through our back catalog? This video is part of a series of Great Big Reels we've put together for a blast through our world. In this reel, we get the scoop behind some of our favorite ubi

  • 11:56 The Unlikely Origins of Five Everyday Things

    The Unlikely Origins of Five Everyday Things

    438 views / 0 likes - added

    In this reel, we take it back to the very beginning, meeting with inventors and risk takers who changed the game. We learn about the feud that lead to the creation of Lamborghini, find out how one man escaped death seven times to invent the saxophone, and

  • 02:29 The Michelangelo of Microsoft Excel

    The Michelangelo of Microsoft Excel

    582 views / 0 likes - added

    When Tatsuo Horiuchi retired, he decided to try his hand at art. But instead of spending money on paints and brushes, Horiuchi used what he already had pre-installed on his computer—Microsoft Excel. Now, the 77-year-old artist is creating remarkably intri

  • 13:08 The Bold and the Beautiful: Stories of Artists and Designers Breaking New Ground

    The Bold and the Beautiful: Stories of Artists and Designers Breaking New Ground

    461 views / 0 likes - added

    In this reel, we meet some extraordinary artistic innovators, including a NASA-trained physicist using origami to solve complex engineering problems, a team preserving history by creating perfect replicas of classic art, and the man responsible for cursin

  • 02:54 The Sound Master

    The Sound Master

    412 views / 0 likes - added

    In the world of audio engineering, there is still a massive gender gap. But within this industry, Emily Lazar has been blazing a trail forward. Having recorded over 2,000 albums with artists like David Bowie, the Foo Fighters and Madonna, the Grammy-nomin

  • 05:08 How many robots does it take to run a grocery store?

    How many robots does it take to run a grocery store?

    638 views / 0 likes - added

    In Ocado's grocery warehouses, thousands of mechanical boxes move on the Hive. Are they all individual robots? Or is this one giant hive mind? Thanks to Ocado: https://www.ocadogroup.com/technology/technology-pioneers (this video is not sponsored, and the

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  • 12:01 The True Stories Behind Comic Sans and Ctrl-Alt-Del

    The True Stories Behind Comic Sans and Ctrl-Alt-Del

    279 views / 0 likes - added

    Thanks to the brilliance of these four computer programmers we can play Solitaire on our computers, discover Easter eggs in video games, write emails and resumes using the not-so-serious the comic sans font (even though everyone says we really shouldnt) a

  • 12:10 Meet the Ultimate Gamers

    Meet the Ultimate Gamers

    439 views / 0 likes - added

    In this reel, we meet arcade enthusiasts taking their love for the game to new levels. We travel to London to meet Tim Hunkin, the inventor of London’s wackiest arcade, play a game of Pac-Man against Billy Mitchell, and step back in time at a Soviet arcad

  • 09:50 AOL: The Rise and Fall of the First Internet Empire

    AOL: The Rise and Fall of the First Internet Empire

    665 views / 0 likes - added

    Support us on Patreon to get early access to our future videos and to vote on which company we do next: https://www.patreon.com/business_casual Join us at our subreddit and on social media: Reddit: https://reddit.com/r/businesscasual Facebook: https://www

  • 02:02 Engineering the Most Annoying Sound Ever

    Engineering the Most Annoying Sound Ever

    652 views / 0 likes - added

    Alarms come in many forms; from the gentle ping of a text message notification to the wake-up wail of a bedside clock, these sounds are a part of our lives. That's why an alarm that could actually save your life needs to be so attention-grabbing—and inten

  • 06:11 Popular Building a lunar base out of Moon dust

    Building a lunar base out of Moon dust

    828 views / 0 likes - added

    Welcome to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. Here, engineers are dreaming up new technologies that will help build settlements on the Moon or Mars via NASA’s experimental “Swamp Works” lab. With everyone from NASA to Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos looking to send pe

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  • 02:01 Behind the Scenes of the (Actual) Record Industry

    Behind the Scenes of the (Actual) Record Industry

    504 views / 0 likes - added

    You've probably heard that vinyl is back—sales of vinyl records have been on the rise and many people are discovering (or re-discovering!) the joys of record collecting. A lot of those records come from Record Industry. The Netherlands-based company has b

  • 04:17 The Roots Of Dirt | How The Mountain Bike Evolved

    The Roots Of Dirt | How The Mountain Bike Evolved

    620 views / 0 likes - added

    In the 1970's a group of California hippies built a new technology that changed the world. Computers? Nope. They were building the earliest commercial mountain bikes. Off-road bike pioneers Joe Breeze and Charlie Kelly explain how their "goofy hobby" turn

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  • 02:17 Get Lost with the World's Master Maze Maker

    Get Lost with the World's Master Maze Maker

    549 views / 0 likes - added

    For many of us, mazes represent a mysterious unknown, an enigmatic and entertaining puzzle of mythic proportions, and Englishman Adrian Fisher is the world's preeminent maze designer. Over the years, this master of deception has designed over 700 mazes in

  • 02:09 The Family Making Sure Your Bread Stays Fresh

    The Family Making Sure Your Bread Stays Fresh

    450 views / 0 likes - added

    Tucked away in the town of Yakima, Washington is a factory producing an unassuming, yet wildly prolific global product, one that you’ve used your entire life—bread tags. The tiny piece of plastic keeping your bread fresh is all thanks to one family. Throu

  • 02:05 Scaling the Toughest Ice Climb on the Planet

    Scaling the Toughest Ice Climb on the Planet

    474 views / 0 likes - added

    Ice climber Klemen Premrl has been to some of the most spectacular (and frigid) places on the globe. Recently, he and his climbing partner Tim Emmett scaled Helmcken Falls in British Columbia, eight hours north of Vancouver. To climb that stunning frozen

  • 01:30 The (Fine) Art History of Paint by Numbers

    The (Fine) Art History of Paint by Numbers

    585 views / 0 likes - added

    Who knew that your favorite elementary school pastime had such noble origins? In the 16th century, the great Renaissance artist Michelangelo was so busy that he began assigning sections of his famous ceilings to his students to paint. He used a numbering

  • 02:55 The NASA Engineer Making STEM Sing

    The NASA Engineer Making STEM Sing

    394 views / 1 likes - added

    Growing up, Dajae never saw anyone like her represented in the world of STEM. But after attending Missouri University of Science and Technology as a college athlete, she pursued her love for engineering. Today, she’s an engineer at the NASA facility in Pa

  • 03:02 Playing the World’s Largest Flutes

    Playing the World’s Largest Flutes

    535 views / 0 likes - added

    Paige Long is a world-renowned flutist. She’s also one of a small number of people who can play the three largest flutes in the flute family: the double subcontrabass, the subcontrabass and the contrabass. With tubing that stretches up to 22 feet in lengt

  • 16:55 5 Stories That'll Make You Reach for the Stars

    5 Stories That'll Make You Reach for the Stars

    676 views / 0 likes - added

    We will start this copy with a disclaimer: If you are looking for stories about Hollywood stars, thats so not this reel. Sorry. But this is the internet, and we are confident you will find what you are looking for if you keep searching. Now, if you are lo

  • 10:34 Unearthing Shipwrecks and Finding Friends Under the Sea

    Unearthing Shipwrecks and Finding Friends Under the Sea

    77 views / 0 likes - added

    Some people arent satisfied with whats on the surface. So they dive, exploring rivers, lakes and oceans. Join us as we take the plunge with divers motivated by the thrill of discovering shipwrecks and finding pearls; breath-holding free divers who push th

  • 11:25 5 Unlikely (And Extraordinary!) Stories Behind Everyday Things

    5 Unlikely (And Extraordinary!) Stories Behind Everyday Things

    595 views / 0 likes - added

    Great Big Reel 161: New to our channel, or don't have time to look through our back catalog? This video is part of a series of Great Big Reels we've put together for a blast through our world. In this reel, we explore the often unlikely and extraordinary

  • 03:13 After Learning to Code at 81, She Made a Game for Fellow Seniors

    After Learning to Code at 81, She Made a Game for Fellow Seniors

    318 views / 0 likes - added

    Youre never too old to learn how to code. Three years ago, Masako Wakamiya noticed the lack of fun game apps for senior citizens and created her own at the age of 81. Its called Hinadan, and its inspired by a traditional Japanese doll festival. We met Wak

  • 02:51 Meet the Man Building Human-Sized Nests

    Meet the Man Building Human-Sized Nests

    550 views / 0 likes - added

    In the forestry hills of Big Sur, California, Jayson Fann weaves, bends and shapes eucalyptus and willow branches into incredible human-sized nests. Each of these “earthly temples” weighs in at over 100,000 pounds, often requiring heavy-duty equipment to

  • 02:08 The 12-Year-Old Scientist Taking On Flint’s Water Crisis

    The 12-Year-Old Scientist Taking On Flint’s Water Crisis

    520 views / 0 likes - added

    When Gitanjali Rao first heard about the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, she wanted to help in any way she could. Now, at only 12 years old, Gitanjali is the proud inventor of “Tethys,” a portable device that detects lead in water. Named “America’s Top Y

  • 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.

  • 10:27 How Artists Are Using Technology

    How Artists Are Using Technology

    297 views / 1 likes - added

    These four artists are merging art with technology in the most creative ways. While Geoffrey Drake-Drockman builds interactive cybernetic sculptures, the artists at Factum Arte painstakingly produce replicas of Egyptian art. Janet Echelman weaves massive

  • 03:32 This Amateur Physicist Built a Fusion Reactor in His Backyard

    This Amateur Physicist Built a Fusion Reactor in His Backyard

    390 views / 0 likes - added

    Theres no telling what you can do when you put your mind to it. Take Richard Hull, he built a small-scale fusion reactorin a shed, in his backyard. A retired electronics engineer, Hull took a special interest in nuclear fusion. He lives in Lakeside, Virgi

  • 03:19 How a Suzanne Vega Song Helped Create the MP3

    How a Suzanne Vega Song Helped Create the MP3

    412 views / 0 likes - added

    Karlheinz Brandenburg has listened to Suzanne Vegas Toms Diner thousands of times and never tires of it. In fact, the song holds a special place in his heart because it was instrumental in the creation of the MP3. The German engineer and mathematician is

  • 02:49 Forging Mona Lisa’s Smile: Creating Perfect Replicas of Classic Art

    Forging Mona Lisa’s Smile: Creating Perfect Replicas of Classic Art

    463 views / 0 likes - added

    The employees at Factum Arte are world-class art forgers. But this Madrid-based company is no criminal enterprise. Each piece they create is intended to preserve and protect our cultural heritage. The company has even developed advanced technologies to sc

  • 12:31 Three Teenagers Changing the World for the Better

    Three Teenagers Changing the World for the Better

    436 views / 1 likes - added

    This world is full of teenagers doing incredible things, and they give us hope for the future. While Mexicos Dafne Almazn is the worlds youngest psychologist and a teacher making sure other gifted kids get the education they deserve, Swedens Greta Thunber

  • 02:36 Popular Meet the Man Who Beat 'Pac-Man'

    Meet the Man Who Beat 'Pac-Man'

    836 views / 1 likes - added

    In 1999, Billy Mitchell was the first person to achieve a perfect score in "Pac-Man." His ability to reach the end of the game even stumped "Pac-Man's" creators and designers, who named him the “video game player of the century.” Here’s

  • 02:51 The Grandmas Leading Africa’s Solar Revolution

    The Grandmas Leading Africa’s Solar Revolution

    509 views / 0 likes - added

    Not having access to electricity, life in Ambakivao, Madagascar was dark. A group of grandmothers decided to change that, bringing light to their community by becoming the village’s first solar engineers. With the help of the World Wildlife Fund, they swa

  • 01:58 The Native American Code Talkers Who Helped Win WWI

    The Native American Code Talkers Who Helped Win WWI

    684 views / 1 likes - added

    It was fall of 1918. The Allied military’s tactical movements were jeopardized by the German military’s superior espionage capabilities. Not only were the Germans tapping Allied phone lines, they were able to crack the code. That’s when two Native America

  • 04:12 What Its Like to Walk in Space and Dive 7 Miles Below Sea Level

    What Its Like to Walk in Space and Dive 7 Miles Below Sea Level

    73 views / 0 likes - added

    Dr. Kathy Sullivan has experienced incredible highs and exhilarating lows as an explorer. As a NASA astronaut, Sullivan was the first American woman to complete a spacewalk in 1984. As a geologist and oceanographer, she became the first woman to dive to t

  • 02:00 Changing the Game for Women in Esports

    Changing the Game for Women in Esports

    134 views / 0 likes - added

    In the male-dominated world of esports, fewer opportunities exist for women to compete on the international stage. Enter Asterisk*. The Singapore-based organization has been a pioneer in giving women a chance to participate and prove themselves against th

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

    Meet the Intern Who Wrote Solitaire for Microsoft

    500 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

  • 03:37 How Robots Are Preventing the Spread of COVID-19 in India

    How Robots Are Preventing the Spread of COVID-19 in India

    300 views / 0 likes - added

    The robo-doctor will see you now. Her name is ELF. A humanoid robot, she simulates face-to-face interactions between doctors and patients at a major hospital in India. She helps reduce human interaction to keep people safe during the COVID-19 pandemic, ac

  • 02:33 Sailing the World With Renewable Energy

    Sailing the World With Renewable Energy

    456 views / 0 likes - added

    In 2013, veteran boat racer Victorien Erussard ran out of fuel in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. There were energy sources all around him—the tide, the sun, the wind—but he had no way of harnessing them. This moment of chaos gave way to an idea: the wo

  • 00:16 Earliest born human from 1700's ever seen on film?

    Earliest born human from 1700's ever seen on film?

    586 views / 0 likes - added

    Perhaps the earliest born human in history we will ever see on film. This lady was born in the 1700s (film is from 1905, she is already over 100 in it)."Grandmother Despina". This scene is a part of the very first film shot produced by the Manaki Brothers

  • 02:17 How Australians Are Trading Solar Energy With Their Neighbors

    How Australians Are Trading Solar Energy With Their Neighbors

    316 views / 0 likes - added

    Rooftops on homes across Australia are covered with solar panels. More and more households have been installing them the past 15 years, generating their own low-cost, clean electricity. Dr. Jemma Green is further empowering people as the co-founder and ch

  • 02:46 Meet the Man Who Built His Own Power Plant

    Meet the Man Who Built His Own Power Plant

    538 views / 0 likes - added

    Many parts of rural Kenya lack access to electricity, leaving residents shrouded in darkness as nighttime falls. John Magiro Wangare wanted to change that. Using a local river, scrap metal and dynamo, Wangare built a hydroelectric power station in the tow

  • 11:58 100-Pound Vegetables, Mammoth Meals, and Grasshopper Sushi | THE SHOW, Episode 7

    100-Pound Vegetables, Mammoth Meals, and Grasshopper Sushi | THE SHOW, Episode 7

    601 views / 0 likes - added

    In this episode, we meet some expert gourmands with a taste for the extraordinary. We travel to Wales to a garden growing 100-pound vegetables, learn what it takes to feed elephants and bears from the zoo chef, and get a taste of sustainable sushi featuri

  • 02:52 Bauhaus Ballet: A Dance of Geometry

    Bauhaus Ballet: A Dance of Geometry

    535 views / 1 likes - added

    The Bauhaus Movement produced more than just minimalist buildings and furniture; it also gave way to a dance of geometry. In his 1922 “Triadic Ballet,” prodigious artist Oskar Schlemmer stripped away the genre’s archetypally fluid movements and fabrics, p

  • 03:55 No Limbs Needed for This Mountaineer

    No Limbs Needed for This Mountaineer

    476 views / 0 likes - added

    When he was young, Kyle Maynard's dream was to become a professional athlete. Born with a condition that left him without legs or arms, Kyle never stopped pursuing that goal. In high school, he was a champion wrestler at the state level. In his 20s, he be

  • 02:53 The NASA Engineer Making STEM Sing

    The NASA Engineer Making STEM Sing

    89 views / 0 likes - added

    Growing up, Dajae never saw anyone like her represented in the world of STEM. But after attending Missouri University of Science and Technology as a college athlete, she pursued her love for engineering. Today, shes an engineer at the NASA facility in Pas

  • 02:13 The 100% Real, Absolutely Honest and True Story Behind Snake Oil

    The 100% Real, Absolutely Honest and True Story Behind Snake Oil

    689 views / 0 likes - added

    Ah, the snake oil salesman. We've all heard, used, or maybe even been called this most nefarious nomenclature for no-good swindlers and charlatans before. But what the hell is snake oil anyway that its peddlers are such quacks? Well back in the 1800s, Sta

  • 02:49 The Freakishly Fast World of Robot Sumo

    The Freakishly Fast World of Robot Sumo

    516 views / 0 likes - added

    Welcome to the lightning-fast world of robot sumo, where two robots battle it out for mechanical supremacy. But, keep your eyes peeled—robots that take years to build can be decimated within mere seconds. Robot sumo has developed into a furiously competit

  • 03:41 Summiting Mountains Without Sight

    Summiting Mountains Without Sight

    539 views / 1 likes - added

    Scaling the world’s tallest mountains is a feat in and of its own—doing it while blind is extraordinary. Erik Weihenmayer is the first blind rock climber to summit the tallest peak in every continent, Mount Everest included. At a young age, Weihenmayer wa

  • 01:45 Welcome to Aviation High School

    Welcome to Aviation High School

    553 views / 0 likes - added

    At the Aviation Career and Technical High School, students literally have to earn their wings. Everyday, students take classes in an airplane hangar and work on real aircrafts. The New York City public high school has been training students since the 1930

  • 02:17 Art of the Future: These Interactive Sculptures Respond to You

    Art of the Future: These Interactive Sculptures Respond to You

    656 views / 0 likes - added

    Geoffrey Drake-Brockman makes cybernetic sculptures that appear to come alive with human interaction. Using his background as a computer programmer, this Australian artist makes work that moves, twists and even changes colors in response to a viewer’s mov

  • 02:32 A Portrait of the Puppet Master as a Young Man

    A Portrait of the Puppet Master as a Young Man

    617 views / 0 likes - added

    Puppets—they’re child’s play, right? Spend five minutes watching Barnaby Dixon and you’ll surely disagree. At first, it might seem strange for a 26-year-old to be hand-building puppets in his bedroom and shooting videos of his performances for a living, b

  • 03:17 The Road to Invention

    The Road to Invention

    469 views / 0 likes - added

    Kommy Weldemariam knows how technology can change the world. As an IBM computer scientist and master inventor, he’s on the front line of the change revolution, harnessing the power of computing to tackle problems, big and small. Sometimes, that change sta

  • 03:54 Meet the 26-year-old Aerospace Engineer Searching for Life on Other Planets

    Meet the 26-year-old Aerospace Engineer Searching for Life on Other Planets

    356 views / 0 likes - added

    The universe is full of mystery. Its riddled with questions that challenge us to go further than weve ever gone before. But in order to reach the answers that pique our curiosity, we need to leave the familiar behind. For Elio Morillo and his mother, leav

  • 02:57 Hop Onboard the Shortest Flight in the World

    Hop Onboard the Shortest Flight in the World

    662 views / 0 likes - added

    Got a tight 80 seconds to spare? It’s all the time you need to fly commercial across the Orkney Islands. The word’s shortest nonstop flight is a tiny hop between the islands of Westray and Papa Westray in the United Kingdom, a mere 1.7 miles (

  • 04:05 How This Action Sports Star Built His Own Prosthetic Leg

    How This Action Sports Star Built His Own Prosthetic Leg

    339 views / 0 likes - added

    In 2008, Monster Mike Schultz, a pro snowmobile racer, had his left leg amputated above the knee. Seven months later, he was zooming around on a dirt bike wearing a prosthetic leg that he designed and built himself. Today, the action sports star is at the

  • 02:51 How Sea Lions Are Inspiring the Future of Underwater Transport

    How Sea Lions Are Inspiring the Future of Underwater Transport

    530 views / 0 likes - added

    Don’t be fooled by a sea lion’s big, sweet eyes and playful demeanor—these guys move through water like a torpedo. While most animals swim using a tail or fluke, sea lions clap their fore flippers into their bodies to propel themselves to incredible speed

  • 03:07 Sounds of the Nightmare Machine

    Sounds of the Nightmare Machine

    456 views / 0 likes - added

    What happens when a horror movie composer and a guitar maker join forces? They create the world’s most disturbing musical instrument. Affectionately known as "The Apprehension Engine," this one-of-a-kind instrument was commissioned by movie composer

  • 03:02 How Data Drives Innovation and Human Performance

    How Data Drives Innovation and Human Performance

    580 views / 0 likes - added

    These days, data science is everywhere—down to the shoes on your feet. Whether it’s joint kinematics, thermal cameras or high-speed video, the bridge between data and athletic apparel has never been stronger. No one knows that better than Keith Stern, Hea

  • 02:32 Popular Building a Better Ship for Tsunami Survival

    Building a Better Ship for Tsunami Survival

    1,188 views / 7 likes - added

    In March 2011, a massive earthquake and resulting tsunami ravaged Japan's eastern coast. At the time, Chris Robinson was in the middle of a business meeting, but the subject of his meeting immediately turned to ways of helping people in similar disasters.

  • 02:32 Exploring the Deep Sea for Shipwrecks and Sunken Planes

    Exploring the Deep Sea for Shipwrecks and Sunken Planes

    689 views / 1 likes - added

    For the past 32 years, Steven Saint Amour has been unearthing sunken ships and aircrafts from extreme depths that other crews simply cannot reach. As co-founder of the Eclipse Group, he specializes in deep-sea search and recovery and has become the go-to

  • 14:43 Class Is In Session At These 5 Schools For Extraordinary Abilities

    Class Is In Session At These 5 Schools For Extraordinary Abilities

    529 views / 0 likes - added

    Great Big Reel 140: New to our channel, or don't have time to look through our back catalog? This video is part of a series of Great Big Reels we've put together for a blast through our world. In this reel, we register at five different schools for extrao

  • 02:43 Playing for Laughs at London’s Wackiest Arcade

    Playing for Laughs at London’s Wackiest Arcade

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    Every arcade’s got “Pac-Man,” “Donkey Kong” and “Space Invaders.” But if you’ve got a hankering for something other than pinball, pop into Novelty Automation, the one and only arcade with gaming gems like “Pet or Meat,” “Autofrisk” and “Crankenstein.” Spr

  • 02:23 The Traveling Telescope Inspiring Africa’s Next Astronomers

    The Traveling Telescope Inspiring Africa’s Next Astronomers

    435 views / 0 likes - added

    If there’s anyone in education who is aiming for the stars, it’s Kenyan astronomer Susan Murabana. On a mission to inspire Africa’s young people—and especially young women—to become scientists, Murabana and her husband started The Travelling Telescope, an

  • 16:16 8 Incredible Tales Of Real Life In Space With NASA Astronaut Leland Melvin

    8 Incredible Tales Of Real Life In Space With NASA Astronaut Leland Melvin

    576 views / 0 likes - added

    Great Big Reel 146: New to our channel, or don't have time to look through our back catalog? This video is part of a series of Great Big Reels we've put together for a blast through our world. In this reel, we get the scoop on real life in space with 8 st

  • 03:13 Popular Sky Dancing: How One Dance Group Defies Gravity

    Sky Dancing: How One Dance Group Defies Gravity

    774 views / 0 likes - added

    For the past 25 years, the dance company BANDALOOP has been merging rock climbing with concert stage dance. Founded by Amelia Rudolph, the goal of the dance company is to enliven natural and manmade vertical spaces with awe-inspiring spectacle. Though the

  • 03:08 Ride a Wooden Bike Down the Swiss Alps

    Ride a Wooden Bike Down the Swiss Alps

    523 views / 0 likes - added

    Skiing and sledding down a mountain? Amateur hour. Try rolling through on a wooden bike. Say hello to the Velogemel, a snow bike local to the Swiss town of Grindelwald. Named for the Swiss words for bike (“velo”) and sled (“gemel”), the mighty Velogemel a

  • 12:37 5 Stories Of Incredible Science In Action

    5 Stories Of Incredible Science In Action

    549 views / 0 likes - added

    Great Big Story 143: New to our channel, or don't have time to look through our back catalog? This video is part of a series of Great Big Reels we've put together for a blast through our world. In this reel, we celebrate the pioneering spirit of some of o

  • 02:31 Popular How One Horse Inspired the Invention of Movies

    How One Horse Inspired the Invention of Movies

    703 views / 0 likes - added

    This is a story about a horse—a horse whose fate was inextricably tied to the invention of film. It all started in 1872, when eventual Stanford University founder Leland Stanford made a bet with some colleagues. The bet in question concerned whether, at a

  • 02:52 Turning Science Fiction Into Robotic Realities

    Turning Science Fiction Into Robotic Realities

    370 views / 0 likes - added

    For some, science fiction movies conjure ideas about a faraway—perhaps impossible—future. For Yoshiyuki Sankai, they provide inspiration for tangible, life-changing technologies. Sankai is CEO of Cyberdyne, a billion-dollar company that shares its name wi

  • 02:36 Flying High With the First Family of Skytypers

    Flying High With the First Family of Skytypers

    525 views / 0 likes - added

    Ever considered writing a message in the clouds? Greg and Stephen Stinis are the guys to call. The father-son team run the Chico, California-based company SkyTypers, where they pilot airplanes to "write" messages and advertisements in the sky using specia

  • 02:32 This Indoor Skydiver Dances on Air

    This Indoor Skydiver Dances on Air

    519 views / 0 likes - added

    Inka Tiitto is a dancer, who also happens to be a world champion indoor skydiver. Demonstrating grace and impressive control over her movements, Tiitto blends dancing and flying in ways you have to see to believe. SUBSCRIBE: https://goo.gl/vR6Acb This sto

  • 08:18 Building the Engine That Will Take Us to Mars

    Building the Engine That Will Take Us to Mars

    313 views / 1 likes - added

    Franklin Chang Daz is a pioneer. As a child, he dreamed of going into space. As an adult, he made his wish come true. Diaz was the first naturalized U.S. citizen from Latin America to become an astronaut. After making seven trips into space, the MIT-educa

  • 02:25 How an Architect Is Turning Air Pollution Into Gorgeous Tile

    How an Architect Is Turning Air Pollution Into Gorgeous Tile

    125 views / 0 likes - added

    Tejas Sidnal is an architect who believes people in his profession have a responsibility to rid the world of air pollution. Which is why he founded Carbon Craft Design, a startup in Mumbai, India that upcycles carbon emissions into construction materials.

  • 02:35 How mail gets delivered to ships that are at sea

    How mail gets delivered to ships that are at sea

    543 views / 0 likes - added

    If you’re a sailor aboard a freighter in the Great Lakes, it’s very difficult to get ashore to shop for supplies or mail a letter. Luckily, there’s one small tugboat that has been delivering mail, packages, and goods to ships in these la

  • 06:01 Meet the 90-Year-Old Armchair Archaeologist | TED + GBS Present Torchbearers

    Meet the 90-Year-Old Armchair Archaeologist | TED + GBS Present Torchbearers

    564 views / 0 likes - added

    Space archaeologist Sarah Parcak is a modern-day Indiana Jones. She analyzes satellite imagery in order to find ancient sites hidden from view. With GlobalXplorer, an online platform using the power of the crowd to find, protect and monitor archaeological

  • 04:04 Oceanic Trouble? Summon These Aquanauts! | That's Amazing

    Oceanic Trouble? Summon These Aquanauts! | That's Amazing

    454 views / 0 likes - added

    Our oceans are in imminent danger—marine life is dying at an alarming rate due to pollution, overfishing and climate change. Summon the aquanauts! These diver-scientists are a real-life team of superheroes from all over the globe conducting cutting-edge r

  • 06:33 The Magic of Making Sound | That's Amazing

    The Magic of Making Sound | That's Amazing

    673 views / 0 likes - added

    In Hollywood, everything is magic and make-believe, even sounds. When you watch a film that immerses you completely in its world, you’re probably hearing the work of sound artists. If the work is done right, you won’t be able to tell that the “natural” so

  • 02:44 The Beekeeper Making Electronic Music With Bees

    The Beekeeper Making Electronic Music With Bees

    364 views / 0 likes - added

    Everyones buzzing about Bioni. Hes a British beekeeper and producer making electronic music incorporating the sounds of bees. You cant really bring bees into a recording studio, of course. Theyd swarm the mic. So Bioni records the insects buzzing in their

  • 02:46 Popular A (Football) League of Their Own

    A (Football) League of Their Own

    919 views / 3 likes - added

    When Sam Gordon started playing football as a 9-year-old, there were no girls-only teams for her to join. So she played with the boys, and excelled. Not long after, Gordon's father uploaded a clip of his daughter breaking tackles and scoring touchdowns. T

  • 02:30 The Strange History of Soviet X-Ray Records

    The Strange History of Soviet X-Ray Records

    307 views / 0 likes - added

    Hips dont lie. But a hip x-ray in the Soviet Union of the 1950s might not have been what it appeared to be. In fact, if it was round, it was likely a record. Let us explain. At a time when the Soviet government strictly forbade western music from the like

  • 03:52 Why Parents Should Play Video Games With Their Kids

    Why Parents Should Play Video Games With Their Kids

    328 views / 0 likes - added

    Many parents think of video games as either a total waste of time, or an activity for their kids to pursue on their own. But Dr. Sinem Siyahhan encourages parents to play video games with their kids. An associate professor at California State University s

  • 04:59 Launching Flowers Into Outer Space

    Launching Flowers Into Outer Space

    598 views / 0 likes - added

    When it comes to flower arrangements, Japanese artist Makoto Azuma is quite literally pushing the boundaries out of this world. It all started 20 years ago, when the one-time rock musician took a part-time job at a flower shop. There he began to appreciat

  • 02:55 The Teens Launching Africa’s First Private Satellite

    The Teens Launching Africa’s First Private Satellite

    416 views / 0 likes - added

    It’s one thing to metaphorically reach for the stars, but what if teenagers could actually explore space? Bjarke Gotfredsen, the founder of an electronics and technology development company called XinaBox, is helping make that happen for students in Cape

  • 05:13 Closer to a Cure: Combating Alzheimer's With New Compute Technology

    Closer to a Cure: Combating Alzheimer's With New Compute Technology

    478 views / 1 likes - added

    The human brain remains a complex mystery. But, if we dare to dream big—and have the proper tools and data to fuel those ambitions—we may one day discover cures for diseases as devastating as Alzheimer’s. At the German Center for Neurodegenerative Disease

  • 02:55 Popular Japan’s Post Box Under the Sea

    Japan’s Post Box Under the Sea

    760 views / 2 likes - added

    When the small Japanese seaside town of Susami needed a tourism boost, an unlikely resident came to the rescue: the town’s postmaster. Together with the local diving community, former postmaster Toshihiko Matsumoto helped establish the world’s first under

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  • 05:17 He Could be the First American Amputee in the Olympics

    He Could be the First American Amputee in the Olympics

    310 views / 0 likes - added

    Being born without lower legs didnt keep Blake Leeper from playing baseball and basketball when he was a kid. After being fitted with prosthetic limbs, Leeper took a lot of falls, but he always got right back up. In college, he discovered running, the spo

  • 03:02 Illuminating the Creative Side of Code

    Illuminating the Creative Side of Code

    578 views / 1 likes - added

    Miral Kotb has two great loves: coding and dance. While they might seem like they have nothing in common, Miral has discovered a new, innovative way to combine her two passions. Through her project, iLuminate, she’s letting the creative side of code beam

  • 03:10 He Voiced ‘The Animaniacs’ and Other ‘90s Cartoons

    He Voiced ‘The Animaniacs’ and Other ‘90s Cartoons

    433 views / 0 likes - added

    You know his voice from your favorite ‘90s cartoons; he gave life to Pinky from “Pinky and the Brain,” Yakko from “Animaniacs,” and even Raphael in the original “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” series. His name? Rob Paulsen. Meet the voice actor who helped

  • 02:55 Popular Meet the Street Artist Transforming Dubai

    Meet the Street Artist Transforming Dubai

    801 views / 1 likes - added

    For most of his life, artist Myneandyours lived and worked in his native London. But after 28 years there, he felt the pull to help create a culture, rather than simply be a part of one already well established. So, Myneandyours took his creative talents

  • 04:24 Making Strides in the Race to Better Treat Cancer

    Making Strides in the Race to Better Treat Cancer

    339 views / 0 likes - added

    In the fight against cancer, time is of the essence. Precision oncology is changing the way patients with cancer are treated, tailoring therapies and treatment plans based on what is happening to each individual patient and their tumor. This process invol

  • 02:57 Elevating the Underground: Subway Opera

    Elevating the Underground: Subway Opera

    531 views / 0 likes - added

    While New York City's subway riders are glued to their smartphones, a small group of singers is bringing light to the underground with opera. Opera Collective is a group of around 30 New York City opera singers who perform in a rather unusual venue: subwa

  • 01:20 The Ancient Salt Pans of Peru

    The Ancient Salt Pans of Peru

    543 views / 0 likes - added

    Originally built by the Incas, the manmade salt pans in Maras, Peru, have endured for over 500 years. Beneath the Qaqawiñay mountains runs a salty fresh spring, which empties into 3,000 mountainside pools. The sun heats them, evaporating the water and lea

  • 03:22 What It Takes to Be the World’s Fastest Marathon Runner

    What It Takes to Be the World’s Fastest Marathon Runner

    535 views / 0 likes - added

    Kenenisa Bekele is one of the world’s fastest marathon runners. He runs 26.2 miles in half the time it takes the average runner. Every year, the world’s top long-distance runners compete in the Berlin Marathon in a bid to break the world record (of two ho

  • 41:01 'That's Amazing' Episode 7 | Artists of Our Natural World

    'That's Amazing' Episode 7 | Artists of Our Natural World

    530 views / 0 likes - added

    In the seventh episode of "That's Amazing." meet a team of imaginative Foley artists creating unique sounds for motion pictures, a Hawaiian family who has made world class ukeleles from rare koa trees for decades, a pair of artists creating lifelike portr

  • 03:10 Meet the Man Bringing Hip-Hop to the Deaf

    Meet the Man Bringing Hip-Hop to the Deaf

    547 views / 1 likes - added

    Although he’s had profound hearing loss his entire life, Matt Maxey didn’t learn to sign until he was 18 years old. He began to practice his ASL by signing along to the lyrics of his favorite artists and uploading videos to YouTube. Now, as the CEO and fo

  • 02:52 Popular Why We Dunk Cookies in Milk

    Why We Dunk Cookies in Milk

    1,038 views / 0 likes - added

    Like Romeo & Juliet or Batman & Robin, milk & cookies is a pairing that’s just meant to be. But what makes dunking cookies in milk so satisfying? To find the answer, we turned to science. Scientist, chemistry professor and certified dunking expert Matt Ha

  • 02:58 How CERN Is Uncovering the Secrets of Our Universe

    How CERN Is Uncovering the Secrets of Our Universe

    279 views / 0 likes - added

    Extra dimensions, dark matter and new particlesthe universes deepest secrets are being explored by physicists at CERNs Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Switzerland. The particle collider is a mind-blowing tool for scientific advancement, being used to r

  • 20:33 3 (More) Unexpected Stories Behind Your Favorite Video Games

    3 (More) Unexpected Stories Behind Your Favorite Video Games

    395 views / 0 likes - added

    What ever happened to the Street Fighter II champion who simply disappeared one day? How did one man become Nintendos Original Gaming Master? And how did a game so bad become so iconic? Join us as we delve into the untold stories behind your favorite vide

  • 03:07 Why These Scottish Sheep Eat Seaweed

    Why These Scottish Sheep Eat Seaweed

    426 views / 0 likes - added

    Welcome to picturesque North Ronaldsay. This remote island, located way, way north in Scotland, is home to 50 people and some very special sheep. In order to free up grassland for cattle, humans in the early-19th century confined the flock, found nowhere

  • 02:30 Popular The Wright Brothers, First Successful Airplane (1903)

    The Wright Brothers, First Successful Airplane (1903)

    1,288 views / 8 likes - added

    Human Achievements / Firsts Wilbur Wright was born on April 16, 1867, Millville, Indiana and Orville Wright was born on August 19, 1871, Dayton, Ohio. Both brothers were pioneers credited with inventing the first airplane. Please consider supporting our v

  • 03:34 The History Behind Italy’s Ancient City of Glass

    The History Behind Italy’s Ancient City of Glass

    515 views / 1 likes - added

    For over a thousand years, the island of Murano—just outside Venice, Italy—has been known throughout the world for their exquisite glass manufacturing. After realizing how valuable their glass exports were, the Venetian elite made it illegal for glass mak

  • 03:19 Enter Japan’s Bizarre Museum of Rocks With Faces

    Enter Japan’s Bizarre Museum of Rocks With Faces

    574 views / 0 likes - added

    If you’re ever in Japan, consider a trip to Chineskikan, located two hours outside Tokyo in the city of Chichibu. The peculiar museum is the only one of its kind, dedicated entirely to rocks that look like human faces. Owned and operated by Yoshiko Hayama

  • 03:14 Hes the Most Licensed Artist in History

    Hes the Most Licensed Artist in History

    385 views / 0 likes - added

    Chances are youve seen Romero Brittos joyful, colorful works of art even if you dont know him by name. Hes the most licensed artist in history, and his art is everywhere. Exhibited in museums, train stations and hotels. Featured at sporting events like th

  • 02:51 Snowboarding Without the Snow

    Snowboarding Without the Snow

    691 views / 2 likes - added

    How many people can say they invented a sport? Very few, and Jason Lee is among them. In the early 1990s, Lee and a buddy built a snowboard/skateboard hybrid with a little mountain bike thrown in, dubbed it the mountainboard and created what would become

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  • 03:14 Skis of Glory: The Rise, Fall and Return of Ski Ballet

    Skis of Glory: The Rise, Fall and Return of Ski Ballet

    594 views / 0 likes - added

    Before slopestyle skiing and the X Games, one sub-species of freestyle skiing ruled them all: ski ballet. You heard right—ballet ... on skis. In the 1980s, fans flocked to see their favorite skiers put on ski ballet clinics with high-difficulty jumps, fli

  • 06:37 The Mad Genius Behind Chuck E. Cheese’s

    The Mad Genius Behind Chuck E. Cheese’s

    556 views / 0 likes - added

    The entire history of video games can be traced back to a creative genius by the name of Nolan Bushnell. In 1972, Nolan co-founded Atari, a multi-billion dollar company that changed the face of gaming forever. At the time, arcades were as popular as ever,

  • 05:09 At Notre Dame, Football Goes Robotic

    At Notre Dame, Football Goes Robotic

    580 views / 0 likes - added

    At the University of Notre Dame, football is sacred. Student spirit for the game pervades all of campus—if you’re not on the team, you’re certainly rooting for the Fighting Irish come game day. But for one club of engineering students, s

  • 02:54 Building Ancient Robots in Switzerland

    Building Ancient Robots in Switzerland

    677 views / 0 likes - added

    In a country known for their intricate watchmaking, one man is taking the mastery of machinery to another level—and to another era. Meet François Junod, a craftsman bringing back the ancient art of automata. Building automata dates back to ancient Egypt a

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  • 03:05 The Master of Shadow Puppets

    The Master of Shadow Puppets

    372 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

  • 02:29 Why Swans in England Get the Royal Treatment

    Why Swans in England Get the Royal Treatment

    595 views / 1 likes - added

    In the United Kingdom, you may eat ducks, chickens, geese, but NOT swans—NOT EVER. Why? Because all swans in the UK can belong to Queen Elizabeth II, and are officially protected. Every year in England since the 12th century, the queen’s swan marker and h

  • 03:13 Swim With Manta Rays, the Ocean’s Peaceful Giants

    Swim With Manta Rays, the Ocean’s Peaceful Giants

    502 views / 1 likes - added

    For as long as she can remember, Dr. Andrea Marshall wanted to be a marine biologist. Now, she’s living out her dream with one of the ocean’s most amazing creatures. That is, Marshall studies and helps protect giant manta rays. While Marshall’s work takes

  • 05:10 Why the triple axel is such a big deal

    Why the triple axel is such a big deal

    509 views / 0 likes - added

    Triple axels can turn skaters into legends. This is why. Watch the rest of Skate Week, and our other sports explainers, here: http://bit.ly/2FfxM17 Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Note: The video states Mirai Nagasu was the second American

  • 02:44 Popular The Wright Brothers: First Flight - 1903 - History in Color

    The Wright Brothers: First Flight - 1903 - History in Color

    1,002 views / 3 likes - added

    December 17, 1903. The Wright brothers – Orville (August 19, 1871 – January 30, 1948) and Wilbur (April 16, 1867 – May 30, 1912) – were two American aviation pioneers generally credited with inventing, building, and flying the worl

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  • 10:12 Birds In A Truck Riddle

    Birds In A Truck Riddle

    462 views / 1 likes - added

    Watch my newest video, "The Game You Win By Losing (Parrondo's Paradox)": https://youtu.be/PpvboBJEozMDownload Angry Birds 2 from your app store today! https://c.singular.net/api/v1/ad?st=59571402224&pcn=Vsauce2&psn=Vsauce2&h=133970888f55d20b2a1077b676434

  • 09:41 How slow motion works

    How slow motion works

    381 views / 0 likes - added

    This video is sponsored by Raycon. To get 15% off, click here: http://buyraycon.com/vox Slow motion is a key part of modern visual culture, from iPhone selfies to movies. So how does it work?Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjOIn this episode of

  • 19:55 Felix Baumgartner Space Jump World Record 2012 Full HD 1080p [FULL]

    Felix Baumgartner Space Jump World Record 2012 Full HD 1080p [FULL]

    431 views / 0 likes - added

    The Mission - Red Bull Stratos, a mission to the edge of space, will attempt to transcend human limits that have existed for 50 years. Supported by a team of experts Felix Baumgartner plans to ascend to 120,000 feet in a stratospheric balloon and make a f

  • 01:33 Vilnius and Lublin in Poland became the first two cities to connect through a virtual Portal

    Vilnius and Lublin in Poland became the first two cities to connect through a virtual Portal

    326 views / 0 likes - added

    Welcome to PORTAL where Lithuania's capital, Vilnius and Lublin in Poland became the first two cities to connect through this virtual ‘bridge’! Born in Vilnius, Lithuania, PORTAL is a new wave community accelerator, aiming to bring people of d

  • 06:38 When Giant Fungi Ruled

    When Giant Fungi Ruled

    647 views / 0 likes - added

    420 million years ago, a giant feasted on the dead, growing slowly into the largest living thing on land. It belonged to an unlikely group of pioneers that ultimately made life on land possible -- the fungi. Produced in collaboration with PBS Digital Stud

  • 11:16 Popular Why Aliens Might Already Be On Their Way To Us

    Why Aliens Might Already Be On Their Way To Us

    1,920 views / 5 likes - added

    Be a part of our first Limited Drop, which honors our Cosmic Pioneers and their noble expeditions: https://kgs.link/limited-drop. Stocks are limited so grab yours before theyre gone for good!Sources & further reading:https://sites.google.com/view/sources-

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