Journeys with Lauren Millar
Journeys with Lauren Millar
The multi award-winning Journeys with Lauren Millar - a Discovery Channel/TVO adventure series profiling extraordinary people making a tremendous impact on the planet - from a doctor fighting critical illness & injury in a refugee camp in the middle of a war zone in Goma, Zaire to whale researchers in Maine saving the critically endangered right whale - Journeys revealed the personal stories of these exceptional people and let you experience it first-hand!
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Very nice and amazing. Thank you
You sound very similar to Amanda Tapping, Samantha Carter from Stargate SG-1. Made listening to this quite pleasant.
She wanted him to
Thank you for posting! Even after all these years, the work you and the team put in to bring us this was indeed seeing history in the making.
Aprendiendo sobre los rincones del mundo, hoy tocó Monserrat
MONT SERRAT, FROM THE CATALAN LANGUAGE, UNLIKE YOUR FELIPIST CASTILIAN GENOCIDE FOR PURPOSES LANGUAGE, WITH NO NATIVES BECAUSE YOU WERE FORCED TO ABANDON YOUR OWN NATIVE LANGUAGE
Is nice to see this and almost 23 yeas later I work on creation with franco dragone and his way to create still amazing
Must've been exhilarating to be on the tip of the spear like that. wow,. Thanks so much for sharing with us!
This guy is awesome. Livin the life
She has such a lovely relaxing voice.
he is a modern version of John Dykstra John Dykstra 2.0
Interesting video
This eruption is the one that made me into a volcano hobbyist, I have seem many videos and recordings of it, but I'd never seen this documentary of it. Thank you and your team for being so thorough, I can only imagine how scared you've felt back then, since it was this eruption that made scientists create the most advanced ways we have, today, of detecting eruptions, and you could say you were a part of it, even if a small portion. In 2021, we had a smaller, but similar eruption in St. Vincent, and thanks to all the new techs created at Soufrière Hills, no one died, or even injured, that's how much the quality of prediction got in 30 years, so again, I thank you and all the scientists that were on this island, risking their live to improve science.
Genius rebels often share similar journeys…´Captain oh my Captain’…
This... This is an amazing video. Thank you so much <3
Thank you! You're very kind 😊
Back in the 90's I would read about him. Guy in College I knew met him and I was so jealous. I was in Toronto going to design school walking by the Alias building every day on my way to school. While not a full time animator, he inspired me to go into a career of computer graphics. Jurassic Punk made me sad at how he became a cog in the industry and inevitably was replaced by a subordinate that could be tamed. A genuine talent and rebel rouser this guy is.
Absolutely. A genuine talent, total rebel, and all 'round great guy 🙂
kzread.info/dash/bejne/npp6xsqbYtuvYrA.html Hi, I did several tests rendering with Power Animator 9 and none of the renderings were like the link I posted here on KZread. Is this type of rendered image only obtainable in versions prior to 9? If anyone gets an image like the one in the video I would like to know let me know. Thanks.
Indeed. You used the unfortunate limited built-in render capabilities. Back then, and still at the top of its game… Pixar’s stand alone off the shelf RenderMan software was the main go to. Handling RenderMan and its subfunctions since the industry rolled over into the digital realm is a, mainly coder based, skill in itself. Hence the term ‘render wranglers’ exists since the early days. tldr: main pipe line back was(still actually is) to have dedicated modeling in one software package, animating in another and rendering rendering in a 3rd… not even taking in account skinning, rigging, compositing again another needed in+ outputs. Regards, M
@@mmajjouti There is an old version of SoftImage|3D 3.7 Extreme for NT from 1997-1999 timeframe that actually does include RenderMan. I guess you could render out of that in a VM or a Windows 2000 machine if you want. 32-bit limited only, though, unlike SGI workstations that were slower and more expensive than NT boxes, but with the 64-bit addressing of IRIX I guess there are some highly complex scenes you wouldn't be able to recreate on NT due to the 4 GiB limitation of 32-bit addressing.
Good time machine!)
What an amazing video! Fast forward 29 years and Marlene has advanced to become the training headquarters Chief Warrant Officer!
She is truly remarkable!!
Alegria's old show is much better and more beautiful from the music and costumes than the new one
I agree. I went to see the new version and it was disappointing.
Please bring the Show Back
lol! If I had any control at all over that decision, I would indeed bring it back! :)
@@JourneysLaurenMillar I Love Saltimbanco
My co-workers today worked with Spaz at ILM back at the day.
Wow. I bet they have some stories to tell!
@@JourneysLaurenMillar They sure do.
Get ready for this to be revisited after that documentary is released.
Classic old doco - Some really top level work - but pity the cgi has dated so poorly in some of Spaz other films. I bet he wishes he could redo Spawn!!
Amazing how well a lot of Spaz's CGI has held up tho, 20 years later!
As a guy of a certain age I so fell for your hair the second I saw you. But I came for the show. Omg it would take a lifetime to react properly to what you captured. Kudos excelsior über alles. God I am so loving his car with twelve minutes to go. If you have more absolutely wonderful mature content to release on the universe damn you should. You know. Stuff of bygone daze Baby poo pants. Nicely done. Thx forever. Happy summer The Pixar doc upcoming led me here. Appreciate and apparently some say he didn’t get enough cred Time will tell Yeah. Been drinkin Plus the now kegalz
Legalz oops strains
Thanks. Amazing comment, lol! Especially the hair part. Nothin' like 90's hair!
This is amazing! Thanks alot
Glad you like it!
Great project!! But, isn’t it more sustainable planting a mist collecting forest? --> Fog - collecting nets require constant manpower in terms of maintenance. Also, those expensive nets are made of plastic and after 10 years they are trash. What do you think about planting forests that are specialized for catching humidity from the air? The coastal redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) and especially the Pinus canariensis have evolved very long needles specifically to harvest fog. Within a few years, a population of Pinus canar. can be established that collects many times more water than the nets due to the much bigger surface of the millions of needles of a tree compared to the net. The tree grows in a wide range of climatic conditions, it can survive drought, heat and frost. After 25 years the forest starts to produce timber and fuel-wood for local economy. According to German Wikipedia the grown up Pinus canar. harvests on a foggy day 50 l/m² DAILY on average and only needs 1/3 of it. On a km² (~35.000 trees needed), that’s about ~30.000m³ of water going into the ground watershed DAILY. There you can get it by groundwater through aquifier wells or Qanat. I found also a lot of more info in “Plants at the Margin: Ecological Limits and Climate Change”: Even a Nine years old Pinus Canar. Forest is able to harvest 500mm/m² a year throughfall out of the fog in northern Canary. Mostly of it goes in the ground. Problems with raising up the baby trees in the first years? Then the wonderful Groasis Growboxx guarantees a 95% chance even in harsh conditions. It costs only about $1.2 per tree. kzread.info/dash/bejne/nKqXk7mmaa6xotI.html Beside that there are some other trees able to catch fog in bigger amounts: "Acacia macracantha" and Casuarina. Between the trees you could plant the bushes "Eugenia" and "caesalpinia tinctoria". They are fast growing and good for animal feeding. AND then there is the Namib desert grass "Stipagrostis sabulicola". It's able to irrigate itself with fog water and a full grown plant puts about 4l/day to the ground in the hotter Namib. This grass is a perfect material for Permaculture Greening and even building Material. There are also some good working endemic plants in the Atacama. This tree/bush planting combining with some earth works to prevent the desert loosing all the rain water through flash floods is a thing that can change a lot: kzread.info/dash/bejne/dWWTq8-PaLicfM4.html MUST SEE: kzread.info/dash/bejne/fWWmraaRpb2ec5M.html And in the long term this planting binds a huge amount of CO2. --> These are just informations i collected in the internet collateral to the permaculture research for a garden project. No personal experience. Hopefully they can trigger some ideas.
I love your enthusiasm for this. You should get yourself involved in a project! This doc is more than 20 yrs old, so I'm sure the technology has advanced.
@@JourneysLaurenMillar :-). No time, money and scientific background to run such a project. The cloud harvesting technology has evolved - i think the "cloudfisher" is the best commerical available system. But still, it's expensive. As far as i remember, 1000l of not mineralized water (1m³) costs about 5$ (lifetime costs) on a good place.
i was in the volcano 5 months prior to the eruption. i have rock samples from the volvano that have sulpher on them . i saw mud bubles and steam coming out and yes i have pictures . i emailed the mov and nobody was intrested in the rock samples i had collected i thought this very odd . i thought that they would want actual rock samples for testing
Interesting! I think the MOV collected a lot of their own rock samples, before, during & after the eruption. Maybe that's why they didn't need more. What a great "souvenir" to have from such an historic event!
Normally the natives have enough knowledge to understand what is going on in their land and relying on foreign nationalist arrogant “ scientists” that has little respect for natives languages and cultures and shamefully they have to bring their genocidal despicable and shameful spanish and french languages rather than listen the natives.
Its really amazing and innovative work. Thank you for delivering this experience to the world.
Our pleasure!
Thank you for sharing this!
Thanks Flo, appreciate the comment!
Pumpkin pie spice 😎
Wow! What an incredible look inside the creation of Alegria. Wish there was more footage of this quality from the 1994 show.
Thanks so much, @StarO I'm glad you enjoyed it!
the theme song XD thats great
written for the series by Rene Brossard, a Toronto composer. Inspired by Yello I think!