- Registrado
- 13 de Ago, 2018
>Dr. Pimple Popper
Signing up for Discovery+ rn.
Can't resist my all-consuming fetish. Pray for me.
Signing up for Discovery+ rn.
Can't resist my all-consuming fetish. Pray for me.
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I'll even give the first two episodes of that a thumbs up because it wasn't a tinfoil hat circle jerk. They had opposing views that largely discredited most of the nonsense. But after that it was pure crazy.There is a limit to how much you can milk the "Ancient aliens help the Nazis build flying saucers, or did they?" plot.
Not really, the shit changes started way back during the Bush era. If they were playing misleading "a landslide will cause a thousand-foot wave to destroy the east coast of the US" programs in 2004, four years before Obama was even elected, the cracks were already there. Come to think of it I don't think there were many documentaries or anything really educational by the time 2008 even rolled around anyways, so I'd say the cuts were in response to already cut programming, and not the opposite.What happened to both Discovery and History is the Obama administration cut off the funding. Prior to that the US government gave out millions of dollars a year for the production of educational programming which is how most of this stuff was funded.
She used to give away her wares for free on Youtube. Fucking Discovery taking away my second person pimple popping satisfaction.>Dr. Pimple Popper
Signing up for Discovery+ rn.
Can't resist my all-consuming fetish. Pray for me.
The cracks started to show around 2004 I want to say. That was when I saw my dad had put on a dubious program that he and my mom were watching. It quickly went from about how a landslide caused a locally massive tsunami in an Alaskan bay in the 50's to how a volcanic eruption will cause one of the Canary Islands to split in half and collapse, and send a massive wave across the Atlantic that will destroy the east coast. Complete with shitty CGI cities being destroyed by a thousand+ foot wave and a scientist saying that people on the east coast should run for high ground if they hear about an eruption in the Canary Islands. This is more or less physically impossible, but the program still aired without disclaimers.
The absolute last straw was a "documentary" about opening ta new "tomb" discovered in the Valley of the Kings. This was around 2006 or so, and the "documentary" some months or a year later, well after the opened it up and found that it was basically just a storage cache. In particular the program was about opening a sealed coffin that turned out to be empty. All of this was major news back when it happened, so I thought the program would be about how they go about opening the tomb/artifacts/coffin and how they preserve it as it's prepared to open. Nope, it was 59 minutes of going "is there a new mummy in the coffin?!?!?!?!" and the last minute going "oh yeah it was finally opened on this date and only had supplies in it". I found it incredibly deceptive since the ads made it sound like there'd actually be something substantial in the program, and never tuned into Discovery again.
en.wikipedia.org
In a BBC television documentary broadcast in 2000, experts said that they thought that a landslide on a volcanic ocean island is the most likely future cause of a megatsunami.[40] The size and power of a wave generated by such means could produce devastating effects, travelling across oceans and inundating up to 25 kilometres (16 mi) inland from the coast. This research was later found to be flawed.[41] The documentary was produced before the experts' scientific paper was published and before responses were given by other geologists. There have been megatsunamis in the past,[42] and future megatsunamis are possible but current geological consensus is that these are only local. A megatsunami in the Canary Islands would diminish to a normal tsunami by the time it reached the continents.[43] Also, the current consensus for La Palma is that the region conjectured to collapse is too small and too geologically stable to do so in the next 10,000 years, although there is evidence for past megatsunamis local to the Canary Isles thousands of years ago. Similar remarks apply to the suggestion of a megatsunami in Hawaii.[44]
the streaming service bubble can pop anytime now
Paying for it at all should be ad free.
I don't subscribe to them so I wouldn't know but if so then I'm glad I haven't.Didn't Hulu start airing ads even for paid subscribers?
If that's the case the cracks are even older than I thought, if they possibly were airing this four years earlier than I knew about. It's a far cry from the documentary about sending a robotic probe with a camera into the depths of the great pyramid I remember watching with my family in the mid 90's. Nothing dubious, or misleading, just straight forward "we sent a camera up into tiny tunnels in the pyramid and this is what we found". If I knew what it was called I would actually watch it again.I'm sure I've seen that, but it looks like we can blame the BBC for hyping it in 2000:
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Megatsunami - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
NOVA did a doc about the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. That companion page lists the allegedly faulty info about the Canary Islands.
Not really, the shit changes started way back during the Bush era. If they were playing misleading "a landslide will cause a thousand-foot wave to destroy the east coast of the US" programs in 2004, four years before Obama was even elected, the cracks were already there. Come to think of it I don't think there were many documentaries or anything really educational by the time 2008 even rolled around anyways, so I'd say the cuts were in response to already cut programming, and not the opposite.
That's because they wanted to catch up to Discovery, which was well ahead of them on that front. Ice Road Truckers was just a lame imitation of Deadliest Catch (which itself I was never interested in watching), but obviously some people were interested in a History version of what Discovery was already doing. But really, if they weren't interest in getting the facts of a famous volcanic eruption right in one of their regular programs, in a presumed attempt to make it more "interesting" (it didn't, the truth is way more interesting), they were destined to die in some way or another.Around the early Obama years, that's when History fully jumped the shark with Ancient Aliens, ghosts and conspiracies fully becoming the norm, and the first wave of reality show BS cementing itself.