This is one of the most remarkable documentary series I've seen recently. Amazing! Must watch!

#evolution #documentary #bbc #human #Anthropology #Paleontology


In this new series, paleoanthropologist Ella Al-Shamahi reveals humanity's incredible story across 300,000 years of human evolution and how – thanks to new discoveries – we're learning that the story is stranger and more surprising than we ever imagi…

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in reply to Tio

Ok, I had to watch after encouragement. Ended up watching half of documentary at double (sometimes triple) the speed. Expectation matched reality: documentary is slow & holds little information.

I used to watch science documentaries when I was a teenager decades ago, when everything was fresh new and my english was poor (but still topics were complex like physics). So it was very engaging for a duration of a few months back then, but now, I see most science documentaries as slow with little content & use.

Better example of useful video is this I recently discovered: youtube.com/watch?v=R7FAAfK78_… about climate change science explained in 25 minutes, about important topic for everyone to know. His few videos are fantastic overall.

in reply to Mindaugas

I think maybe you got too used with short content?

The documentary reveals new information that is quite recent about the history of homo sapiens and it is very well made. Of course if you already know this info maybe you won't find it that interesting, but as someone who watches tons of documentaries, this one is particularly well made.

To watch it on double or triple the speed is, to me, the best way to ruin any such documentary. Information is not only about the content, but the delivery too: music, phase, scenery, storytelling, etc..

in reply to Tio

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in reply to Mindaugas

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to Tio

in reply to Mindaugas

Based on your answers, my initial prediction seems to be correct: "if I judge the usefulness of it [...] I guess it is just love for documentaries alone."

Is not just the love of documentaries, whatever that means. I explicitly explained how information gets understood and retained better or worse depending on how it is transmitted. Watching that documentary may make you not only remember the facts, but understand this immense story of humans, and also how scientists do their work, what motivates them, etc..

I appreciate your positive words about TROM II. I am happy you found that interesting enough to watch it all.

in reply to Tio

I watched it a long time ago, and it gave me a new perspective on how to understand ourselves. The fact that we are the only species on this planet that can fantasise really blew my mind. It makes sense why we create gods, religions, countries, flat-Earth ideas, and so on. It’s a unique human skill — one that has made us resilient and adaptable in a changing world.