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James Burke Connections - 09 Countdown 

Crónica Panamericana
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Burke connects the invention of the movie projector to improvements in castle fortifications caused by the invention and use of the cannon. The use of the cannon caused changes in castle fortifications to eliminate a blind spot where cannon fire could not reach. This improvement in castle defence caused innovation in offensive cannon fire, which eventually required maps. Thus, a need arose to view and map locations (like a mountain top) from a long distance, which led to the invention of limelight light source, and later the incandescent light. Burke turns to the next ingredient for a movie projector, film. Film is made with celluloid (made with guncotton) which was first invented as a substitute for ivory in billiard balls. Next was the invention of the zoopraxiscope which was first used for a bet to see if a horse's hooves all left the ground at any point while galloping. The zoopraxiscope used frame-by-frame pictures and holes on the side to allow the machine to pull the film forward. Communication signals for railways using Morse's telegraph led to Edison discovering how to speak into a microphone creating bumps on a disc that could be played back-the record player. This final ingredient gave movies sound. In summary, Burke connects the invention of the movie projector to four major innovations in history: the incandescent light, the discovery of celluloid, the projector that uses frame-by-frame pictures on celluloid, and finally, recorded sound.

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20 апр 2024

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Комментарии : 96   
@thomasrice4078
@thomasrice4078 Месяц назад
Connections was a brilliant documentary! It's still relevant today.
@angelafox7627
@angelafox7627 Месяц назад
I watched this today in 2024, after my car (a Tesla with FSD) drove itself (and me) home. It was also on a day when I first spoke with GPT4o, a nice rather humorous and joyfully aware woman voice who was really a computer who quite literally did 90% of the work to write a report that I have been working on. Yet I also remember watching this program in England when it first aired. JB's last statements are as profound today as they were when I first heard them in 1978. Amazing! This show will never date - a true classic.
@brucenye6137
@brucenye6137 Месяц назад
Remember this series, one of the best I ever saw, thanks Mr. Burke and PBS
@rubenjames7345
@rubenjames7345 Месяц назад
One of the most brilliant television series ever made.
@paulrugg1629
@paulrugg1629 Месяц назад
Some of the best TV has to offer, the whole series.
@jaywalker3087
@jaywalker3087 Месяц назад
As a child this man provided more education for me than schools ever did.... Onebof my early Heroes ...
@Jimyblues
@Jimyblues Месяц назад
Even Frank Zappa loved James' 2 shows- Zappa dedicated his album Civilization to James - James Burke was a trailblazer- combining history and science like no one has since.
@cristianmolina8148
@cristianmolina8148 16 дней назад
cool...zappa/burke fan here..
@williammurray1341
@williammurray1341 2 месяца назад
As a teen I planned on watching each episode so I could amaze or bore school friends. Still leaning from the episodes.
@nicholashylton6857
@nicholashylton6857 Месяц назад
My grade school teacher played the whole series over the course of a few weeks. My classmates were usually bored, but I could not wait to see it and explain why they should be blown away too.
@jr7392
@jr7392 Месяц назад
@@nicholashylton6857 Most people are dullards, frankly. The sooner you realize that, the happier you are as you don't expect too much. I'm sorry if that comes off as elitist, lol.
@mickeyfilmer5551
@mickeyfilmer5551 Месяц назад
This man was instrumental in my education choices back in the 1960's and 1970's I'm Just retired and would dearly love to meet this man- who is now 87 yrs young,
@popuptarget7386
@popuptarget7386 Месяц назад
As a kid in the 70s-80s this show was one of my favorites. It made History fascinating
@nicholashylton6857
@nicholashylton6857 Месяц назад
I loved this series growing up too. It showed me the history of... well... anything, is a long and winding road. Not simply a linear A to B to C progression.
@sartainja
@sartainja Месяц назад
Too bad nowadays that we do not have history shows as well produced, written and hosted as this one was back in the 1970’s.
@CraftAero
@CraftAero Месяц назад
Filmed with a potato and watched on a turnip... back in the day. Yet, here I am watching it again like it's new.
@sartainja
@sartainja Месяц назад
@@CraftAero because we have went from 3 channels to 250 channels and still nothing is on.
@georgeflores3552
@georgeflores3552 23 дня назад
Currently watching Connections (2024) on Curiosity Stream. Will never tire of JB😊
@Cortinaman63
@Cortinaman63 2 месяца назад
As a child Actor I worked on Episode 06"Thunder In The Sky" made in 1976, and shown in 1978, playing a Saxon child, I have clips of the scenes and information on making it, in one of the nostalgic videos of working in the TV & Film industry, on my channel, if anyone is interested, originally I uploaded the full episode but it was stopped by YT, so I did the edited version to get around it at the time, so why some can and some can't upload?, I will never understand YT policies.
@amitpatil5151
@amitpatil5151 2 месяца назад
Nice to know.
@kurtwillig4230
@kurtwillig4230 2 месяца назад
His "Day The Universe Changed" is even better.
@nicholashylton6857
@nicholashylton6857 Месяц назад
They are simply incredible.
@CraftAero
@CraftAero Месяц назад
Both are awesome.
@Tmanaz480
@Tmanaz480 13 дней назад
When I was a young person, James Burke helped bring me out of the "great man" concept of history we were all taught in the 20th century.
@bender7565
@bender7565 8 дней назад
In the early days of cable I never missed Tom Hulkin's Secret Life and Mr. Burke. The stuff he tied together made my brain hurt in a good way. He put all his shows om the internet for free. He wrote the shows before the internet worked, smart man,
@BackToTheBlues
@BackToTheBlues Месяц назад
Quality show I loved when I was young. And from an adult point of view - quality outfit, James!
@pgs1796
@pgs1796 Месяц назад
Connections was an excellent documentary series hosted by an always pithy James Burke. You always got the sense he was challenging your way of thinking.
@stevenwiederholt7000
@stevenwiederholt7000 Месяц назад
44:34 "But as David Brinkley once said, the one function TV news performs very well is that when there is no news, we give it to you with the same emphasis as if there were." An Evening with Michael Crichton November 15, 2005
@ralphedelbach
@ralphedelbach Месяц назад
Great TV programs. We used one of his articles in the text "Society, Ethics and Technology" years ago. The contents of his writings and easy-to-read style are outstanding. Super-nice fellow too.
@sreggird60
@sreggird60 Месяц назад
Watched this in high school and it was discussed in history class.
@davidarbuckle7236
@davidarbuckle7236 Месяц назад
I watched Neil Armstrong walk on the moon from my Dad's living room floor. We were cheering, and it was glorious.
@Deinonuchus
@Deinonuchus Месяц назад
I was six. I remember it, mostly. My grandfather was convinced that they would sink into the moon dust and die.
@sartainja
@sartainja Месяц назад
Remember it. Was only 3 years old. People thought that something might attack the astronauts.
@davidarbuckle7236
@davidarbuckle7236 Месяц назад
@@sartainja I was just worried that they might get stranded. But it was amazing to watch.
@CraftAero
@CraftAero Месяц назад
Today my "phone" can pull a GPS map of, not only the house I was in (still there), but the area of that house where I actually sat and watched the original moon landing... within a few feet. Little did we know the "trickle-down" of technology to come from the knitted-bead ROM computers on board.
@roberticvs
@roberticvs Месяц назад
Fun Fact: James Burke was the broadcaster for the BBC when Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon.
@richardgalli7262
@richardgalli7262 27 дней назад
I really enjoyed James Burke's series, always entertaining.
@SPotter1973
@SPotter1973 Месяц назад
THIS EAS MY ALL TIME FAVORITE SHOWS!!! THANKS FOR REPOSTING 🙏😁😊
@kahnadah
@kahnadah 2 месяца назад
When James was summing up Edison's ethos, he forgot one thing: Steal other people's ideas so you can make the money they should have.
@strawman6085
@strawman6085 2 месяца назад
If only you were as smart
@MichaelKingsfordGray
@MichaelKingsfordGray 2 месяца назад
@@strawman6085 You can't even recall your own name.
@strawman6085
@strawman6085 2 месяца назад
@@MichaelKingsfordGray And you can't even make a decent argument.
@EmitOcean20
@EmitOcean20 2 месяца назад
​@@strawman6085I agree with you. The host would also but he is old if alive. 😢
@myriaddsystems
@myriaddsystems Месяц назад
Thinking on, your probably right about Edison - he was, I think, a thoroughly dislikable, and dishonourable individual
@richardmeo2503
@richardmeo2503 Месяц назад
I saw this as a younger lad. Good show, interesting ideas.
@occamraiser
@occamraiser Месяц назад
I saw this and remember most of it from 50? years ago. THAT's how good this stuff was.
@richardmeo2503
@richardmeo2503 Месяц назад
@@occamraiser It showed me how interconnected things are. I was FDNY Capt and survived 9/11. I ended up writing a History series tracing 9/11 back to WW I, when Ottoman Empire was broken up. Connections
@tobyw9573
@tobyw9573 Месяц назад
Fantastic way to teach history!
@andrewwilliams9599
@andrewwilliams9599 Месяц назад
Brilliant. Although you did forget that that very same year--1923--Lee deForest also perfected a means of recording sound on film. That process was used to make DeForest Phonofilms, the idea for which was stolen by 20th Century Fox and altered sufficiently--or so Fox thought)--that it didn't infringe on DeForest's patent. The court found for DeForest--12 years later. By then, completely broke from legal costs, he had moved on to greener pastures.
@grahamvincent6977
@grahamvincent6977 28 дней назад
Wonderful. Of its time, and for all time.
@platovsky
@platovsky 24 дня назад
amazing !!! i love this
@frankstrawnation
@frankstrawnation 27 дней назад
35:35 What a nice surprise to hear Villa-Lobos in a BBC documentary.
@puirYorick
@puirYorick 2 месяца назад
A great series. I hope you upload the rest , his sequels C2, C3 and his Day The Universe Changed as well.
@oobrocks
@oobrocks 2 месяца назад
Like so many, I watched two guys walking on the moon July 22 1969 🎉❤😊
@CraftAero
@CraftAero Месяц назад
Yep, there's fewer and fewer of us every year.
@oobrocks
@oobrocks Месяц назад
Yes
@larryaldrich4351
@larryaldrich4351 Месяц назад
I've heard it said that James Burke was the United Kingdom's version of Walter Cronkite.
@jodywho6696
@jodywho6696 Месяц назад
You, James are one of the reasons I could, as a highschool drop out, could kick my doctor husband's butt at Jeapody ✨😊✨
@robertusa1234
@robertusa1234 Месяц назад
The moon race. The worlds biggest $ick measurement contest between two superpowers
@ncdave4life
@ncdave4life Месяц назад
Episode date: Dec. 12, 1978
@occamraiser
@occamraiser Месяц назад
And this is one of the reasons I worship the BBC. Anyone who wants all TV to be commercial wants to live in a world of wannabe celebrities who think that being famous is the same as being important. But, I have to admit that the program should have been called 'interesting stuff, selected for having some tenuous links'. :)
@rayvelasco2059
@rayvelasco2059 2 месяца назад
Most Excellent ¿
@jangelbrich7056
@jangelbrich7056 Месяц назад
At 45:00 "Planned Obsolescence" explained - 50 years ago, and it is still valid as if it was yesterday
@user-xq6me6pd7q
@user-xq6me6pd7q Месяц назад
Its even more valid now as modern technology gives us stuff that is purpose designed to last 14 months, just beyond its warranty. We have things such as lead free solder and plastic that clips together once and then cannot be opened without breaking it are prime parts of that process. Look at many cars that rust suddenly and fatally at 6 years old. Even paint that fades and flakes inside 2 years.
@Mtlmshr
@Mtlmshr Месяц назад
At 63 years old I finally know what Lyme light actually is?!?
@CraftAero
@CraftAero Месяц назад
"Lyme", unfortunately, is a disease. Lime (light) is what you were looking for.
@flashcar60
@flashcar60 Месяц назад
No credit to Phil Farnsworth, the real inventor of television?
@jonnijon8370
@jonnijon8370 Месяц назад
When the BBC was good
@RideAcrossTheRiver
@RideAcrossTheRiver 11 дней назад
Shouldn't have zoomed to full screen.
@gfdggdfgdgf
@gfdggdfgdgf Месяц назад
If only there was a word for 1000 million...
@CliffSedge-nu5fv
@CliffSedge-nu5fv 22 дня назад
That is a pretty recent invention, or at least there was a lot of controversy over it. British today still prefer multiples of one million.
@johnrobertson2749
@johnrobertson2749 21 день назад
British billion is 1,000,000 Million.Not the US version of only 1000 Million.
@superman00001
@superman00001 Месяц назад
The opening scene took 6 months to film. He was bald when they began.
@MistahJigglah
@MistahJigglah Месяц назад
When the Soviets fell, not a single warhead went off. Will The West be as gracious?
@garyplewa9277
@garyplewa9277 2 месяца назад
Philo Farnsworth invented television and Vladamir Zvorkin took Philo's idea and modified enough of the design to avoid patent infringement, essentially stealing his idea. But the true inventor of raster scan television was Farnsworth, who thought of the concept while plowing successive rows in a farm field.
@MichaelKingsfordGray
@MichaelKingsfordGray 2 месяца назад
What about Baird?
@davidatovar
@davidatovar 2 месяца назад
That's why we bought A PHILCO television.
@hammondpickle
@hammondpickle Месяц назад
@@MichaelKingsfordGray Logie Baird is alive and happily living in Jellystone Park with his sidekick Boo-Boo.
@ChrisSmith-lo2kp
@ChrisSmith-lo2kp Месяц назад
thanks dad for working to put americans on the moon
@fellowcitizen
@fellowcitizen 27 дней назад
China just planted a flag on the far side of the moon ❤
@MrPither999
@MrPither999 2 месяца назад
The words British and genius should never be uttered without the word comic between them. A British genius is like a British dentist.
@johneagle4384
@johneagle4384 2 месяца назад
???? Explain, please.
@f0urstr1ng
@f0urstr1ng Месяц назад
Isaac Newton. Shakespeare. Alan Turing. George Orwell. Logie Baird. And all of the comic geniuses too.
@SubscribeYouBatardss
@SubscribeYouBatardss Месяц назад
Oh! Damn it! They lost the technology and now they cant go ''back to the moon'' 55 years later! They should be more carefully next time! 🤣🤣🤣
@EthanAllenLumley
@EthanAllenLumley 25 дней назад
The guys who did this retired 30 plus years ago😢 9:53
@SubscribeYouBatardss
@SubscribeYouBatardss Месяц назад
LOL It's 2024 guys. Are we still going to talk like the moon landing was real?
@larryaldrich4351
@larryaldrich4351 Месяц назад
If it wasn't, it should have been.
@getoffamylan6844
@getoffamylan6844 Месяц назад
True that. Everyone knows they really landed on Mars and filmed it in Black and White so it looked like a moon landing.
@johncaputo5538
@johncaputo5538 Месяц назад
Are we still going to talk like you're real?
@codetech5598
@codetech5598 Месяц назад
It's funny to listen to Burke talk about how it was an unbelievable achievement, yet he fully believes it.
@rozzgrey801
@rozzgrey801 25 дней назад
Yes, it's 2024, the moon landing conspiracy theory failed as they had no evidence it was in any way faked. The idea Apollo was faked was too weak to withstand any scrutiny.
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