This features in a scene (episode 9-ish) of The Trials of Life, the Attenborough series from 1990 that has tons of pathbreaking camerawork. It's all now free to watch and still holds it own against the more modern BBC stuff.
JubilantJaguar
Coincidentally, last night I watched Waterloo (1970) which is now free to watch. It has literally 15,000 costumed extras in its battle scene. Supposedly the largest such reenactment in any movie. Very impressive indeed.
This is a bit mangled but I guess you're saying, "I don't just believe authority, I'm an independent thinker". But where did you get your opinions from? Did you do the research yourself - including the hard science that you (or I) know almost nothing about in detail? Of course you didn't. Ultimately you just believed someone. The point of "authority" is it means we're not just believing anyone.
Is it so weird, really, to worry about this new world where authority counts for nothing, where journalistic ethics have gone out the window, where everyone just finds their own personal pundit who expresses their prejudices better than they can themself? This is going to end badly.
Sure. That theory is covered in the article. It's particularly well-written and clear.
Spend a few weeks camping or hostelling. Then you'll see how many of your possessions you really need.
Exact opposite here. Missed almost none of it and wondered why I had wasted so much money buying it.
Indeed, false alarm.
They're in the middle on the first floor!
Hmm. Is there a problem with the image? I can't get the full-size version. Working fine on other articles.
Who is The Honest Sorcerer and why should we care what they think?
Sorry to be that person but this forum is primarily a text medium. It would be helpful to have, if not the whole transcript, at least a couple of lines to explain what the video is about and why it's worth watching. Thanks.
Yeah, and there's also an uncomfortable paradox there too. Tropical ecotourism is generally powered by long-haul air travel, which is disastrous for the per-capita carbon emissions of the ecotourists and basically unsustainable at scale. One argument that squares the circle is that the near-term benefits of ecotourism - avoiding imminent extinctions and so on - outweighs the extra climate disruption. Somewhat convincing. But this is not a debate I see much sign of, certainly not among ecotourists. All that said, there's no doubt that ecotourism has been a godsend for environmental protection in places like Costa Rica and Ecuador.