-
The Blue Marble : a one marble path chain reaction
After 3 months of work and probably more than 500 fails, I'm happy to present you my best video ever.
Since magnets and marbles I've always wanted to make a big chain reaction in one take with this 2D style !
It's also a "one marble path" which means you have to follow the same marble for all the tricks (in that case the little blue one.) Because everything is in a tilted plane, the hard part was to find different ways of having the marble riding up along the table (magnets, falling weight, catapult ...). To do that, the marble has to be light. And because everything has to be triggered by this little marble, all the tricks are very unstable. Most fails happened when an element fall down earlier than expected.
I learned a lot about chain reaction, and I discovered the amazing power of ...
published: 04 Feb 2018
-
UNT Wind Symphony - Symphony No. 6: The Blue Marble by Julie Giroux
North Texas Wind Symphony
Symphony No. 6: The Blue Marble (2022) - Julie Giroux (b. 1961)
The Big Blue Marble
Voices in Green
Let There be Life
Eugene Migliaro Corporon, Conductor
Recorded live Thursday, April 27th, 2023
Winspear Hall, College of Music
University of North Texas
https://windstudies.music.unt.edu
published: 26 May 2023
-
GUM - The Blue Marble (Official Music Video)
Official music video for The Blue Marble by GUM off his album, The Underdog.
Listen to The Underdog: http://radi.al/TheUnderdog
Follow GUM on Spotify: http://radi.al/GUMSpotify | Follow GUM on Apple Music: http://radi.al/GUMAppleMusic
Credits
Director: Alex McLaren
Cinematographer: Alex McLaren and Sean McAnulty
Editor: Alex McLaren
Visit the Spinning Top Music Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaLEXQ6GWBJKRnHj1oemJ8A
Connect on Social:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gguumm/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jay.w.watson/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jay_w_watson/
More From GUM:
GUM - Gemini (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/88eKXRIHN9M
GUM - Deep Razz (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/jvh9w8KlDJQ
GUM - Anesthetized Lesson (Official Music Video): https://y...
published: 01 Mar 2018
-
The Story Behind Earth’s Most Famous Photo | The Bigger Picture with Vincent Brown | PBS
How did the “Blue Marble,” as it is now known, come to be? Host Vincent Brown learns just how extraordinary a technical feat it was for Apollo 17 astronauts to snap the photograph in 1972, and how early environmentalists hoped that an image of the whole Earth might spark a desire to protect our planet.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: https://www.pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: https://www.youtube.com/PBS/
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS Video App: https://to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
FOLLOW THE BIGGER PICTURE:
https://www.instagram.com/biggerpicturepbs/
FOLLOW US:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PBS/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PBS/
Instagram: https://www.instag...
published: 23 Aug 2022
-
The Blue Marble, the first image ever of the entire globe, changed humanity forever. #space #earth
published: 23 Dec 2022
-
Blue Marble Now 50 Years On
To celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo 17 photograph the 'Blue Marble', Living Earth Orchestra presents a reflection on what our space-view means for understanding the changes on the Earth that have been taking place in the last 50 years.
The video includes 3D Animations showing changes in pollution, land use, natural resources and the impacts on polar sea ice.
Since 2015 NASA have a camera-in-space called EPIC, 1 million miles from the Earth which has been taking Blue Marble images every 2-hours.
Today NASA have commissioned EPIC to take images every 15-minutes of the Earth, the Blue Marble now.
Please Share with anyone, Thank you for watching, here's to celebrating Blue Marble Day!
If you enjoyed our video, we hope you did, have a look at www.livingearthorchestra.com for more...
published: 07 Dec 2022
-
Giroux: The Blue Marble
The Blue Marble
Julie Giroux
The University of Texas Wind Ensemble
Jerry Junkin, conductor
Bates Recital Hall
January 29th, 2023
published: 10 Feb 2023
-
'The Blue Marble' - A Shot from History
Credits:
Script/Voiceover/Graphics/Edit: Aishwarya Iyer
Motion Graphics: Sunny Gautam
Managing Producer: Joel Michael
Executive Producer: Arnab Dutta
FOOTAGE COURTESY : NASA Archives
Apart from citizens vehemently protesting a changing climate and government action, what do you think is common in all these protests?
This fully illuminated photograph of the Earth was first taken by an astronaut from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in 1972 on his way to the moon. This image that we take for granted today became embedded in the consciousness of generations to come, because it shaped their understanding of the planet in ways that facts and figures could not. As people noticed continents floating across a blue blanket of oceans protected by a thin layer of the atmosphere, juxtaposed with other planet...
published: 07 Jun 2022
-
WESTWOOD VS AC FLORA | #WESTWOODVSACFLORA #WESTWOOD #ACFLORA
Thank you for visiting my channel. Please support and subscribe to Blue Marble
For more videos click below:
https://www.youtube.com/bluemarblemediagroup?sub_confirmation=1
Website: www.bluemarblemediagroup.com
Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/bluemarblemediagroup
TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@bluemarblemediagroup?lang=en
Donations: cash.app/$bluemarblemediagroup
#bluemarblemediagroup #acflora #acflorahigh #acflorahighschool #acflorabasketball #westwoodredhawksvsacflora #westwoodvsacflora #westwoodredhawks #westwood #westwoodhigh #westwoodhighschool
published: 08 Jan 2024
-
Quickie: New Epic Photo of the Earth (Blue Marble 2015)
NASA released a new Photo of the Earth called Blue Marble 2015 and it is Epic, so In this Awesomist Quickie we go back to update an older video regarding a viral image comparing two composite photos. I wonder if there will be any noticeable differences.
SPOILER ALERT: There aren't.
The Awesomist covers a wide range of video topics and ideas all neatly categorized into specific play lists to keep everything organized. Topics include reviews, top 10 lists, technology, language, dancing, music and information, Travel Vlogs and How To Videos all with a humorous twist.
To watch the videos mentioned in the video above follow the links below.
Awesomist Explains Pluto:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eaAe0P_VcQ
Awesomist Quickie Earth 2.0:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sA3rbHUJ5CI
Aweso...
published: 05 Aug 2015
1:33
The Blue Marble : a one marble path chain reaction
After 3 months of work and probably more than 500 fails, I'm happy to present you my best video ever.
Since magnets and marbles I've always wanted to make a bi...
After 3 months of work and probably more than 500 fails, I'm happy to present you my best video ever.
Since magnets and marbles I've always wanted to make a big chain reaction in one take with this 2D style !
It's also a "one marble path" which means you have to follow the same marble for all the tricks (in that case the little blue one.) Because everything is in a tilted plane, the hard part was to find different ways of having the marble riding up along the table (magnets, falling weight, catapult ...). To do that, the marble has to be light. And because everything has to be triggered by this little marble, all the tricks are very unstable. Most fails happened when an element fall down earlier than expected.
I learned a lot about chain reaction, and I discovered the amazing power of the hot glue gun !
https://wn.com/The_Blue_Marble_A_One_Marble_Path_Chain_Reaction
After 3 months of work and probably more than 500 fails, I'm happy to present you my best video ever.
Since magnets and marbles I've always wanted to make a big chain reaction in one take with this 2D style !
It's also a "one marble path" which means you have to follow the same marble for all the tricks (in that case the little blue one.) Because everything is in a tilted plane, the hard part was to find different ways of having the marble riding up along the table (magnets, falling weight, catapult ...). To do that, the marble has to be light. And because everything has to be triggered by this little marble, all the tricks are very unstable. Most fails happened when an element fall down earlier than expected.
I learned a lot about chain reaction, and I discovered the amazing power of the hot glue gun !
- published: 04 Feb 2018
- views: 6570118
24:42
UNT Wind Symphony - Symphony No. 6: The Blue Marble by Julie Giroux
North Texas Wind Symphony
Symphony No. 6: The Blue Marble (2022) - Julie Giroux (b. 1961)
The Big Blue Marble
Voices in Green
Let There be Life
Eugene Migliar...
North Texas Wind Symphony
Symphony No. 6: The Blue Marble (2022) - Julie Giroux (b. 1961)
The Big Blue Marble
Voices in Green
Let There be Life
Eugene Migliaro Corporon, Conductor
Recorded live Thursday, April 27th, 2023
Winspear Hall, College of Music
University of North Texas
https://windstudies.music.unt.edu
https://wn.com/Unt_Wind_Symphony_Symphony_No._6_The_Blue_Marble_By_Julie_Giroux
North Texas Wind Symphony
Symphony No. 6: The Blue Marble (2022) - Julie Giroux (b. 1961)
The Big Blue Marble
Voices in Green
Let There be Life
Eugene Migliaro Corporon, Conductor
Recorded live Thursday, April 27th, 2023
Winspear Hall, College of Music
University of North Texas
https://windstudies.music.unt.edu
- published: 26 May 2023
- views: 4797
4:45
GUM - The Blue Marble (Official Music Video)
Official music video for The Blue Marble by GUM off his album, The Underdog.
Listen to The Underdog: http://radi.al/TheUnderdog
Follow GUM on Spotify: http://ra...
Official music video for The Blue Marble by GUM off his album, The Underdog.
Listen to The Underdog: http://radi.al/TheUnderdog
Follow GUM on Spotify: http://radi.al/GUMSpotify | Follow GUM on Apple Music: http://radi.al/GUMAppleMusic
Credits
Director: Alex McLaren
Cinematographer: Alex McLaren and Sean McAnulty
Editor: Alex McLaren
Visit the Spinning Top Music Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaLEXQ6GWBJKRnHj1oemJ8A
Connect on Social:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gguumm/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jay.w.watson/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jay_w_watson/
More From GUM:
GUM - Gemini (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/88eKXRIHN9M
GUM - Deep Razz (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/jvh9w8KlDJQ
GUM - Anesthetized Lesson (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/bvSKgWBHIOE
https://wn.com/Gum_The_Blue_Marble_(Official_Music_Video)
Official music video for The Blue Marble by GUM off his album, The Underdog.
Listen to The Underdog: http://radi.al/TheUnderdog
Follow GUM on Spotify: http://radi.al/GUMSpotify | Follow GUM on Apple Music: http://radi.al/GUMAppleMusic
Credits
Director: Alex McLaren
Cinematographer: Alex McLaren and Sean McAnulty
Editor: Alex McLaren
Visit the Spinning Top Music Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaLEXQ6GWBJKRnHj1oemJ8A
Connect on Social:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gguumm/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jay.w.watson/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jay_w_watson/
More From GUM:
GUM - Gemini (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/88eKXRIHN9M
GUM - Deep Razz (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/jvh9w8KlDJQ
GUM - Anesthetized Lesson (Official Music Video): https://youtu.be/bvSKgWBHIOE
- published: 01 Mar 2018
- views: 754741
11:22
The Story Behind Earth’s Most Famous Photo | The Bigger Picture with Vincent Brown | PBS
How did the “Blue Marble,” as it is now known, come to be? Host Vincent Brown learns just how extraordinary a technical feat it was for Apollo 17 astronauts to ...
How did the “Blue Marble,” as it is now known, come to be? Host Vincent Brown learns just how extraordinary a technical feat it was for Apollo 17 astronauts to snap the photograph in 1972, and how early environmentalists hoped that an image of the whole Earth might spark a desire to protect our planet.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: https://www.pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: https://www.youtube.com/PBS/
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS Video App: https://to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
FOLLOW THE BIGGER PICTURE:
https://www.instagram.com/biggerpicturepbs/
FOLLOW US:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PBS/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PBS/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/PBS/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pbs
Shop: https://shop.pbs.org/
#BiggerPicturePBS #Space #Photography
ABOUT THE SERIES:
Images can tell powerful stories. One iconic photograph can symbolize an entire era. But if we expand the frame and examine the moment in which it was taken, a very different story can emerge. In this series of documentary shorts, Harvard University historian Dr. Vincent Brown meets with curators, photographers and other experts to challenge common assumptions about iconic American images.
THE BIGGER PICTURE is a co-production of Timestamp Media LLC and The WNET Group, in association with Harvard University’s History Design Studio at the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research, and Vision Maker Media.
Additional Ironbound Community photographs by Patricia Cortado.
Major funding for THE BIGGER PICTURE was provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional funding was provided by the Anderson Family Charitable Fund, the Tamara L. Harris Foundation, the William Talbott Hillman Foundation, the Phillip and Edith Leonian Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Additional funding for the digital production of THE BIGGER PICTURE was provided by Chasing the Dream – a public media initiative from The WNET Group, reporting on poverty, opportunity, and justice in America, and supported by The JPB Foundation, The Peter G. Peterson and Joan Ganz Cooney Fund and Sue and Edgar Wachenheim, III.
https://wn.com/The_Story_Behind_Earth’S_Most_Famous_Photo_|_The_Bigger_Picture_With_Vincent_Brown_|_Pbs
How did the “Blue Marble,” as it is now known, come to be? Host Vincent Brown learns just how extraordinary a technical feat it was for Apollo 17 astronauts to snap the photograph in 1972, and how early environmentalists hoped that an image of the whole Earth might spark a desire to protect our planet.
This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS station: https://www.pbs.org/donate
Subscribe to the PBS channel for more clips: https://www.youtube.com/PBS/
Enjoy full episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS Video App: https://to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR
FOLLOW THE BIGGER PICTURE:
https://www.instagram.com/biggerpicturepbs/
FOLLOW US:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PBS/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/PBS/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/PBS/
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pbs
Shop: https://shop.pbs.org/
#BiggerPicturePBS #Space #Photography
ABOUT THE SERIES:
Images can tell powerful stories. One iconic photograph can symbolize an entire era. But if we expand the frame and examine the moment in which it was taken, a very different story can emerge. In this series of documentary shorts, Harvard University historian Dr. Vincent Brown meets with curators, photographers and other experts to challenge common assumptions about iconic American images.
THE BIGGER PICTURE is a co-production of Timestamp Media LLC and The WNET Group, in association with Harvard University’s History Design Studio at the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research, and Vision Maker Media.
Additional Ironbound Community photographs by Patricia Cortado.
Major funding for THE BIGGER PICTURE was provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Additional funding was provided by the Anderson Family Charitable Fund, the Tamara L. Harris Foundation, the William Talbott Hillman Foundation, the Phillip and Edith Leonian Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Additional funding for the digital production of THE BIGGER PICTURE was provided by Chasing the Dream – a public media initiative from The WNET Group, reporting on poverty, opportunity, and justice in America, and supported by The JPB Foundation, The Peter G. Peterson and Joan Ganz Cooney Fund and Sue and Edgar Wachenheim, III.
- published: 23 Aug 2022
- views: 59310
5:00
Blue Marble Now 50 Years On
To celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo 17 photograph the 'Blue Marble', Living Earth Orchestra presents a reflection on what our space-view means for u...
To celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo 17 photograph the 'Blue Marble', Living Earth Orchestra presents a reflection on what our space-view means for understanding the changes on the Earth that have been taking place in the last 50 years.
The video includes 3D Animations showing changes in pollution, land use, natural resources and the impacts on polar sea ice.
Since 2015 NASA have a camera-in-space called EPIC, 1 million miles from the Earth which has been taking Blue Marble images every 2-hours.
Today NASA have commissioned EPIC to take images every 15-minutes of the Earth, the Blue Marble now.
Please Share with anyone, Thank you for watching, here's to celebrating Blue Marble Day!
If you enjoyed our video, we hope you did, have a look at www.livingearthorchestra.com for more information on our future projects.
Find us on on:
Instagram @livingearthorchestra - www.instagram.com/livingearthorchestra
Twitter @livingeo - www.twitter.com/livingeo
LinkedIn: Living Earth Orchestra - www.linkedin.com/company/livingearthorchestra/
https://wn.com/Blue_Marble_Now_50_Years_On
To celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo 17 photograph the 'Blue Marble', Living Earth Orchestra presents a reflection on what our space-view means for understanding the changes on the Earth that have been taking place in the last 50 years.
The video includes 3D Animations showing changes in pollution, land use, natural resources and the impacts on polar sea ice.
Since 2015 NASA have a camera-in-space called EPIC, 1 million miles from the Earth which has been taking Blue Marble images every 2-hours.
Today NASA have commissioned EPIC to take images every 15-minutes of the Earth, the Blue Marble now.
Please Share with anyone, Thank you for watching, here's to celebrating Blue Marble Day!
If you enjoyed our video, we hope you did, have a look at www.livingearthorchestra.com for more information on our future projects.
Find us on on:
Instagram @livingearthorchestra - www.instagram.com/livingearthorchestra
Twitter @livingeo - www.twitter.com/livingeo
LinkedIn: Living Earth Orchestra - www.linkedin.com/company/livingearthorchestra/
- published: 07 Dec 2022
- views: 76468
26:05
Giroux: The Blue Marble
The Blue Marble
Julie Giroux
The University of Texas Wind Ensemble
Jerry Junkin, conductor
Bates Recital Hall
January 29th, 2023
The Blue Marble
Julie Giroux
The University of Texas Wind Ensemble
Jerry Junkin, conductor
Bates Recital Hall
January 29th, 2023
https://wn.com/Giroux_The_Blue_Marble
The Blue Marble
Julie Giroux
The University of Texas Wind Ensemble
Jerry Junkin, conductor
Bates Recital Hall
January 29th, 2023
- published: 10 Feb 2023
- views: 9027
4:00
'The Blue Marble' - A Shot from History
Credits:
Script/Voiceover/Graphics/Edit: Aishwarya Iyer
Motion Graphics: Sunny Gautam
Managing Producer: Joel Michael
Executive Producer: Arnab Dutta
FOOTAGE CO...
Credits:
Script/Voiceover/Graphics/Edit: Aishwarya Iyer
Motion Graphics: Sunny Gautam
Managing Producer: Joel Michael
Executive Producer: Arnab Dutta
FOOTAGE COURTESY : NASA Archives
Apart from citizens vehemently protesting a changing climate and government action, what do you think is common in all these protests?
This fully illuminated photograph of the Earth was first taken by an astronaut from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in 1972 on his way to the moon. This image that we take for granted today became embedded in the consciousness of generations to come, because it shaped their understanding of the planet in ways that facts and figures could not. As people noticed continents floating across a blue blanket of oceans protected by a thin layer of the atmosphere, juxtaposed with other planets incapable of hosting lives, they realized that there was in fact, ‘No Planet B.’
What is the story behind this iconic picture though?
En route to the moon, when commander Eugene Cernan called Harrison Schmitt, the Lunar Module pilot to take a look at the home they had left behind, he casually replied saying “Ah, you seen one Earth, you’ve seen them all.” until he actually viewed it from the window of his spacecraft. After the crew returned ten days later, photos from the camera onboard were developed at the Johnson Space Center. Photos of the mission adorned the front page of several newspapers that year. Astronaut Bill Anders of Apollo 8 once stated that “It’s ironic that we had come to study the Moon when the trip to the moon was really discovering the Earth.”
It would also go on to become the most reproduced image of the Earth in the years to come, according to NASA archives.
More than 20 thousand miles away from home, with the sun above the spacecraft, the astronauts thought that the Earth displayed a silvery smooth shine and appropriately named it ‘Blue Marble’. This was a small window they had when the Earth and moon weren't partially shadowed.
What does this ‘small window’ mean?
Ideally, while landing on the moon the astronauts needed the sun behind them at an angle of 7-12 degrees above the horizon so that they could see boulders on the moon that would otherwise not be visible. But they also ended up seeing parts of the Earth that would otherwise not be visible . They departed from Florida at night, launching toward a nearly full moon on December 7, 1972.
Interestingly, the original image is inverted because it was taken by a weightless man who did not know what was up or down. Media outlets realigned it to meet earthly perceptions.
At that time,whether this photo was seen as a symbol of the planet’s wondrous yet fragile state or an affirmation of our ability to dominate and manipulate it … is a matter of perception. Today however, one might look at this photo differently. It reminds us that mankind’s technological advancements must be used to combat the climate crisis since we have ‘only one earth’ to save.
“You wish you could take a person in
each hand, one from each side in the various conflicts, and say, Look. Look at it from this perspective. Look at that. What’s important?”
-Astronaut Russell Scheickhart, in describing his experience from space on the Apollo9 mission
https://wn.com/'The_Blue_Marble'_A_Shot_From_History
Credits:
Script/Voiceover/Graphics/Edit: Aishwarya Iyer
Motion Graphics: Sunny Gautam
Managing Producer: Joel Michael
Executive Producer: Arnab Dutta
FOOTAGE COURTESY : NASA Archives
Apart from citizens vehemently protesting a changing climate and government action, what do you think is common in all these protests?
This fully illuminated photograph of the Earth was first taken by an astronaut from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in 1972 on his way to the moon. This image that we take for granted today became embedded in the consciousness of generations to come, because it shaped their understanding of the planet in ways that facts and figures could not. As people noticed continents floating across a blue blanket of oceans protected by a thin layer of the atmosphere, juxtaposed with other planets incapable of hosting lives, they realized that there was in fact, ‘No Planet B.’
What is the story behind this iconic picture though?
En route to the moon, when commander Eugene Cernan called Harrison Schmitt, the Lunar Module pilot to take a look at the home they had left behind, he casually replied saying “Ah, you seen one Earth, you’ve seen them all.” until he actually viewed it from the window of his spacecraft. After the crew returned ten days later, photos from the camera onboard were developed at the Johnson Space Center. Photos of the mission adorned the front page of several newspapers that year. Astronaut Bill Anders of Apollo 8 once stated that “It’s ironic that we had come to study the Moon when the trip to the moon was really discovering the Earth.”
It would also go on to become the most reproduced image of the Earth in the years to come, according to NASA archives.
More than 20 thousand miles away from home, with the sun above the spacecraft, the astronauts thought that the Earth displayed a silvery smooth shine and appropriately named it ‘Blue Marble’. This was a small window they had when the Earth and moon weren't partially shadowed.
What does this ‘small window’ mean?
Ideally, while landing on the moon the astronauts needed the sun behind them at an angle of 7-12 degrees above the horizon so that they could see boulders on the moon that would otherwise not be visible. But they also ended up seeing parts of the Earth that would otherwise not be visible . They departed from Florida at night, launching toward a nearly full moon on December 7, 1972.
Interestingly, the original image is inverted because it was taken by a weightless man who did not know what was up or down. Media outlets realigned it to meet earthly perceptions.
At that time,whether this photo was seen as a symbol of the planet’s wondrous yet fragile state or an affirmation of our ability to dominate and manipulate it … is a matter of perception. Today however, one might look at this photo differently. It reminds us that mankind’s technological advancements must be used to combat the climate crisis since we have ‘only one earth’ to save.
“You wish you could take a person in
each hand, one from each side in the various conflicts, and say, Look. Look at it from this perspective. Look at that. What’s important?”
-Astronaut Russell Scheickhart, in describing his experience from space on the Apollo9 mission
- published: 07 Jun 2022
- views: 12636
48:40
WESTWOOD VS AC FLORA | #WESTWOODVSACFLORA #WESTWOOD #ACFLORA
Thank you for visiting my channel. Please support and subscribe to Blue Marble
For more videos click below:
https://www.youtube.com/bluemarblemediagroup?sub_...
Thank you for visiting my channel. Please support and subscribe to Blue Marble
For more videos click below:
https://www.youtube.com/bluemarblemediagroup?sub_confirmation=1
Website: www.bluemarblemediagroup.com
Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/bluemarblemediagroup
TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@bluemarblemediagroup?lang=en
Donations: cash.app/$bluemarblemediagroup
#bluemarblemediagroup #acflora #acflorahigh #acflorahighschool #acflorabasketball #westwoodredhawksvsacflora #westwoodvsacflora #westwoodredhawks #westwood #westwoodhigh #westwoodhighschool
https://wn.com/Westwood_Vs_Ac_Flora_|_Westwoodvsacflora_Westwood_Acflora
Thank you for visiting my channel. Please support and subscribe to Blue Marble
For more videos click below:
https://www.youtube.com/bluemarblemediagroup?sub_confirmation=1
Website: www.bluemarblemediagroup.com
Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/bluemarblemediagroup
TikTok | https://www.tiktok.com/@bluemarblemediagroup?lang=en
Donations: cash.app/$bluemarblemediagroup
#bluemarblemediagroup #acflora #acflorahigh #acflorahighschool #acflorabasketball #westwoodredhawksvsacflora #westwoodvsacflora #westwoodredhawks #westwood #westwoodhigh #westwoodhighschool
- published: 08 Jan 2024
- views: 441
2:24
Quickie: New Epic Photo of the Earth (Blue Marble 2015)
NASA released a new Photo of the Earth called Blue Marble 2015 and it is Epic, so In this Awesomist Quickie we go back to update an older video regarding a vira...
NASA released a new Photo of the Earth called Blue Marble 2015 and it is Epic, so In this Awesomist Quickie we go back to update an older video regarding a viral image comparing two composite photos. I wonder if there will be any noticeable differences.
SPOILER ALERT: There aren't.
The Awesomist covers a wide range of video topics and ideas all neatly categorized into specific play lists to keep everything organized. Topics include reviews, top 10 lists, technology, language, dancing, music and information, Travel Vlogs and How To Videos all with a humorous twist.
To watch the videos mentioned in the video above follow the links below.
Awesomist Explains Pluto:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eaAe0P_VcQ
Awesomist Quickie Earth 2.0:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sA3rbHUJ5CI
Awesomist Explains Earth 1978 vs 2012:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_v6eC75pBk
Make sure you subscribe for more Awesome videos.
https://wn.com/Quickie_New_Epic_Photo_Of_The_Earth_(Blue_Marble_2015)
NASA released a new Photo of the Earth called Blue Marble 2015 and it is Epic, so In this Awesomist Quickie we go back to update an older video regarding a viral image comparing two composite photos. I wonder if there will be any noticeable differences.
SPOILER ALERT: There aren't.
The Awesomist covers a wide range of video topics and ideas all neatly categorized into specific play lists to keep everything organized. Topics include reviews, top 10 lists, technology, language, dancing, music and information, Travel Vlogs and How To Videos all with a humorous twist.
To watch the videos mentioned in the video above follow the links below.
Awesomist Explains Pluto:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eaAe0P_VcQ
Awesomist Quickie Earth 2.0:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sA3rbHUJ5CI
Awesomist Explains Earth 1978 vs 2012:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_v6eC75pBk
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- published: 05 Aug 2015
- views: 15890