Spyke

The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Q6Fzbgs_Lg

Aaron created RSS, and was an early developer of Reddit. A visionary of accessible information and information technology.

Since his death, the direction the internet has gone has been in ways that he would very much be taking issue with.

26
lemm.ee

I thought you said:

The BBC made and excellent documentary on pig butchering screams

I was like fuck 😳

3
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Lmao but fr I wish that scam had a different name, one that makes it a bit more apparent how the scam works. I get the idea of the hog being fattened and slaughtered, but that's way too metaphorical imo

3

Oh that’s funny. I thought pig butchering scams involved, somehow, shenanigans around the business of literally butchering pigs. Geez

3
Capreply
lemm.ee

Ha! And I can still read it even after you deleted it. How embarrassing /s

3
Capreply
lemm.ee

This is perfect! I can't wait. Do you have a favorite?

1
lemmy.zip

Brian Deer's 2004 documentary "MMR: What they didn't tell you"
It's an investigation on basically the father of Anti-vax sentiment/misinformation, uploaded to YouTube by Brian himself.

https://youtu.be/7UbL8opM6TM

6

Everything from the chanel -> History Time. Pete Kelly is an awesome story teller and works really hard on making in depth historical documentaries, some three hours long.

2
lemmy.world

I really liked "small brained american" travelling from Ireland to Japan (on a motorcycle). It starts slow and kind of boring in the UK but the later parts are so good. Less commentary, just showing life. He is visiting "dangerous" countries like Ukraine, Iraq and Myanmar, but focussing on the normal people's everyday lifes, while being a "small brained american".

The whole playlist:

https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfY1ilUy0PimHk3jKFuX01G7tXlj0dGPf&si=5Obpko3wMZZKlJQS

2
lemmy.world

The Century of the Self, a multi-part series on the Genesis of contemporary US Public Relations and propaganda, politics and the godfather of it all, Edward Bernays.

Watched it once 20 years ago and still think of it in reference to many broken business, government and political approaches.

Link to part 1 below from bot.

2

The Fog of War w robert mcnamara. A fascinating and honest telling of the vietnam war from one of its main architects. In it, the guy basically admins to committing war crimes. Not big on history/war documentaries, but this is one that really made an impact on me and changed the way I see the world. Not depressing or gory, at least I didn't think it was.

2

The only videos that YouTube manages to convince me to watch are by clickspring. So satisfying to watch metal being machined, and much to learn too.

2

Citizenfour documentary on edward snowden. Great if you're interested in or curious about privacy/spying/technology. Not great if you aren't.

1
midwest.social

PBS NOVA is great. That playlist has 20 documentaries on it about a range of topics, most just under an hour long, one that is just under two hours long.

1
feddit.rocks

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

PBS NOVA

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.

2

I am honestly very disappointed by documentaries in general. Rarely do I find them informative enough or not biased. They are generally made for the masses who know 0 (or even less than that?) about a subject.

If your goal is education, I suggest a book or a course. Now, for motivation and just "time wasters", they are fine.

The one documentary I watched and enjoyed was alphaGo. It was nice feeling the stress of the match and seeing how they handled it, the setups and whatnot.

1

This one is kinda like a documentary. The Marcus House channel spends most of its time documenting the latest developments in the design, construction, and testing of the SpaceX Starship.

It’s a really interesting show. To make it into a “single documentary” one could watch every episode. But that documentary would be super fucking long.

House talks about various little design problems and solutions. There’s sort of a spy briefing feel to it, in a subtle way, because SpaceX doesn’t share all the informaron about what’s going on, so he speculates about what certain observed things means. They’ve got drones and pod-mounted cameras watching the place in Texas where they’re building out the facility. The facility is really interesting too. They’re basically building a factory to mass produce the biggest rocket ever.

If you think Musk is a tech bro asshole narcissist baby I literally don’t care. Just go watch something else. Incidentally zero of the show is about Musk but you can’t mention anything even related to Elon Musk without a chorus of hate so can we please just skip it this time? It’s a cool show about engineering and construction.

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