Author Topic: Planet Earth on Discovery Channel  (Read 6627 times)

Todd

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« on: April 01, 2007, 07:55:18 pm »
8-10 pm tonight. Last week\'s show was fantastic. Tonight\'s show is about to start and I\'m looking forward to some more really cool shit!
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estahwhaddup

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #1 on: April 01, 2007, 08:00:02 pm »
me too!!!
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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #2 on: April 01, 2007, 08:18:05 pm »
ah!! Our cable got shut off! Have wanted to watch this.
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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #3 on: April 01, 2007, 09:29:11 pm »
i missed it last week. pretty intense shit tonight though...
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Todd

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #4 on: April 01, 2007, 10:44:40 pm »
You can check out some video clips of the show here.
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weekapaug19

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #5 on: April 02, 2007, 08:15:36 am »
great show....i only wish I had high def. tv
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Todd

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #6 on: April 02, 2007, 08:50:46 am »
Yeah, an hd tv would def. make it sooo much better.
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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #7 on: April 02, 2007, 09:34:27 am »
This show in HD is absolutely amazing. It\'s stuff like this (and sports, of course) that made me buy an HDTV last summer. Some of their camera shots are fantastic and I hope they release the whole series on DVD at some point. I like watching the short clips at the end of the episodes that shows them in the elements taking their shots and the kind of crap they had to endure to wait for the \'perfect shot\' as they call it. Very educational and very captivating.
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weekapaug19

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #8 on: April 02, 2007, 10:17:26 am »
I saw a banner last night saying you can buy it all on DVD....probably $$$$ tho
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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #9 on: April 02, 2007, 10:18:06 am »
I am loving this series. They did a great job.
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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #10 on: April 02, 2007, 10:41:52 am »
so what is it about...
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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #11 on: April 02, 2007, 10:46:18 am »
Quote from: obsession600;140883
I am loving this series. They did a great job.


:that: I actually cried when the polar bear was dying last night! :(  
best video clip is the bird of paradise mating dance :lol:
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Todd

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #12 on: April 02, 2007, 10:56:35 am »
Quote
More than five years in the making, Planet Earth redefines blue-chip natural history filmmaking and continues the Discovery Channel mission to provide the highest quality programming in the world.

Award-winning actress and conservationist Sigourney Weaver narrates this 11-part series. You\'ll be amazed by never-before-seen animal behaviors, startling views of locations captured by cameras for the first time and unprecedented high-definition production techniques.

Features:

    * 11 episodes and bonus materials on five DVDs
    * Behind-the-scenes featurettes on each episode
    * A behind-the-scenes look at the equipment, technology and danger that went into the making of this incredible series
    * "The Future" bonus documentary – a three-part companion series revealing the vulnerability of the natural history of earth.

Pole to Pole
Follow the sun as it touches the lives of creatures across the planet, bringing a fresh understanding of how the world is interconnected. From African herds migrating hundreds of miles in search of water to desperate animal hunts, Pole to Pole examines how the seasons produce the greatest spectacles on Earth.

Mountains
Tour the planet\'s mightiest mountain ranges and meet the rare animals that inhabit them. From a never-before-seen hunt by snow leopards on the treacherous slopes of the Himalayas to a family of pumas struggling to survive the unstable weather of the Andes, Mountains reveals life on the planet\'s highest peaks.

Deep Ocean
Explore the depths of the planet\'s oceans and discover some of this mysterious world\'s most spectacular species. From light shows performed by squids to the blue whale, the largest animal to ever exist, Deep Ocean investigates the waters that cover two-thirds of the Earth\'s surface yet remain largely unknown.

Deserts
Voyage to the world\'s harshest environments and learn how life manages to keep a precarious hold in every desert. From the llama-like guanacos of Chile\'s Atacama Desert that survive by licking dew from cactus spines to lions that scour arid Namibia for antelopes, Deserts unravels the secrets behind survival in unimaginable conditions.

Ice Worlds
Venture to the poles of our planet and find the harshest wild lands, where seasonal change is extreme. From emperor penguins which defy the coldest conditions on Earth to the polar bear that emerges from hibernation with her new cubs, Ice Worlds explores an ecosystem in which few could survive.

Shallow Sea
Dive into the planet\'s shallow waters where sunlight reaches the seabed and find an explosion of life. From the rarely seen cooperation between snakes and fish hunting for food to the journey of a humpback whale and her newborn calf traveling thousands of miles in search of food, Shallow Seas explores the rarely seen sights of the world\'s mighty oceans.

Great Plains
Trek to the Earth\'s largest land habitats, where vast open spaces play host to the biggest groups of animals in the world. From the 2,000 mile migration undertaken by three million caribou in the Arctic tundra to a pride of 30 starving lions hunting elephants, Great Plains reveals the most impressive migrations and boldest hunts on the planet.

Jungles
Delve deep into this ecosystem, beyond the flourishing plant life, and find an environment that tests each animal\'s survival skills. From the elaborate mating rituals of New Guinea\'s birds of paradise to the territorial battles of chimpanzees, Jungles examines an environment that occupies only three percent of the planet and yet is home to more than half the world\'s species.

Fresh Water
Follow rivers as they course from mountain to the sea, nourishing unique and dramatic wildlife. From the world\'s deepest lake inhabited by the only species of freshwater seal to a stunning look at the world\'s highest waterfall, Fresh Water offers a unique perspective on the secret lives teeming in our purest waters.

Seasonal Forests
Investigate these temperate regions and find some of the most elusive creatures and well-adapted plant life on Earth. From the giant sequoia tree ten times the size of a blue whale to the trackless Siberian forests where just 40 Amur leopards remain, Forests brings to life a seemingly familiar world that remains largely unexplored.

Caves
Descend into the only habitat not directly driven by sunlight to discover some of the most peculiar creatures on Earth. From Borneo\'s Deer Cave where five million bats roost to cave swiftlets that build nests from saliva, Caves digs deep into an underground world few people have ever explored.

The Future: The Future, Environment & Conservation
Explore the vulnerability of nature in this poignant look at what the future may hold for the planet\'s most endangered wild animals and places – and ultimately ourselves! This three-part companion series includes Saving Species, Into the Wilderness and Living Together.

The whole series is 7 hours 53 minutes on 5 DVDs for $79.95.
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davepeck

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #13 on: April 02, 2007, 11:02:29 am »
Quote from: Todd;140892
The whole series is 7 hours 53 minutes on 5 DVDs for $79.95.

$55.99 at amazon:

Planet Earth

EDIT: apparently this is the original BBC version. same content, different narrator, and more footage. the US version is narrated by Sigourney Weaver; the BBC version by David Attenborough.

Quote
# including 90 minutes not shown on the Discovery Channel
# 110 minutes of behind-the-scenes footage (included on standard-definition DVD release only)
# Planet Earth: The Future: 150-minute companion series (included on standard-definition DVD release only)

Todd

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Planet Earth on Discovery Channel
« Reply #14 on: April 02, 2007, 11:41:47 am »
Good looks!!

Check out the trailer on the Amazon link. The bird of paradise at 5:40 is one of my favorites.
« Last Edit: April 02, 2007, 11:41:47 am by Todd »
Light travels faster than sound. That is why some people appear bright...until you hear them speak.