Somehow, this is more informative than that Brony documentary · 7:13pm May 26th, 2021
For reference, the Brony documentary I'm referring to is Bronies: The Extremely Unexpected Fans of My Little Pony:
For reference, the Brony documentary I'm referring to is Bronies: The Extremely Unexpected Fans of My Little Pony:
I've got something to watch tonight!
EDIT: Annnnd the comments have almost unaminously decried it as a bad documentary. Likely because it doesn't show the dark side of the fandom, though I have yet to watch it, so I don't know about that.
I'm gonna look for A Brony Tale - Exploring an Unusual Fandom and watch them both to compare.
Koyaanisqatsi (1982) - A collection of expertly photographed phenomena with no conventional plot. The footage focuses on nature, humanity and the relationship between them. (This film has pretty much no dialogue. It's all about the experience, and it is one. The visuals are interesting, and most of the score is great.)
So, I'm browsing through Yayponies for comic issues when I happen to notice a new heading I've never seen before: "Bronies II." There's 12 episodes of this thing, whatever it is. What could it be? I wonder. And so I download them to check them out.
There are two great documentaries out there that should be seen by anyone who enjoys comics in general, and comic strips in particular.
The first is Stripped, which is about strips in general and the future of the comic strip in todays world. A fate that is quite uncertain given the decline of newspapers.
I watched these all the time as a kid, why did I ever stop?
According to this video, being a horse is 100% Days of Our Lives nonstop.
Here's what I think is the sequel, which I haven't had time to watch yet.
Incredible documentary series on Netflix. Trying to sort out how I feel about it.
Apparently, we're In hybernation/dead right now. Just ask this pony fan.
If there is one thing you watch today, please let it be this. It's an informative, thought-provoking, and inspirational little mini-documentary using only past footage, no voice-overs. It examines Lauryn Hill's impact on popular culture, but not just that-- maybe also the impact on society and the empowerment of millions.
From executive producer Jon Favreau, narrator David Attenborough, and composer Hans Zimmer, comes a dinosaur documentary that is sure to be called the next Walking with Dinosaurs.
For those of you who have Apple TV+, are you planning on watching this?
With Prehistoric Planet just about to air next week, here are some little clips of scenes from the series that depict dinosaurs and other prehistoric reptiles living in coasts, deserts, freshwater, ice worlds, and forests.
One of Apple TV+'s most-watched and most-well-received dinosaur documentary series returns for five new tales, 66 million years in the making!
Hopefully there'll be a Prehistoric Planet 3-12 in the future, along with a franchise of spin-offs!
At last, we have a "The Making of..." for Prehistoric Planet!
Some behind-the-scenes content about the research for Prehistoric Planet.
Episode 1) Coasts
Could T.rex Really Swim?
Episode 2) Deserts
Flamboyant Flyers
Episode 3) Freshwater
Did Velociraptor Have Feathers?
Episode 4) Ice Worlds
Did Dinosaurs Hunt in Packs?