Originally posted by Richard Tarleton
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Recommended Television Programmes
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View Post...I could read about this much quicker - I don't need to have a portrayal of events in order to gain understanding. TV and film producers do have a vested interest in trying to feed us stuff, so they're not necessarily going to keep things as short as possible.
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Channel 4: Weds 8 Jan - 10pm Apocalypse Cow: How Meat killed the Planet
Hosted by George Monbiot, this looked well worth watching for some presently much-needed good news, although as it happens I only caught the second half of the programme, dealing with new foodstuffs producible from soil bacteria allegededly easily capable of feeding the entire human population of the globe; deer culling in the Scottish Highlands to allow natural re-forestation (but why can't they feed them contraceptives rather than shoot them?); an Oxfordshire farmer who is managing to produce large potato yields by using the naturally surrounding weeds for composting purposes; and a re-greened area of the Netherlands which has been returned to biodiversity and has become a thriving haven for wildlife in 25 years.
I'll try and find the recording tomorrow and watch the whole thing.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostHosted by George Monbiot, this looked well worth watching for some presently much-needed good news, although as it happens I only caught the second half of the programme, dealing with new foodstuffs producible from soil bacteria allegededly easily capable of feeding the entire human population of the globe; deer culling in the Scottish Highlands to allow natural re-forestation (but why can't they feed them contraceptives rather than shoot them?); an Oxfordshire farmer who is managing to produce large potato yields by using the naturally surrounding weeds for composting purposes; and a re-greened area of the Netherlands which has been returned to biodiversity and has become a thriving haven for wildlife in 25 years.
I'll try and find the recording tomorrow and watch the whole thing.
This book - 'Wilding: the Return of Nature to a British Farm' by Isabella Tree - is worth reading in its own right but particularly so for anyone who has watched the documentary and would like to know more about the issues involved.
The documentary covered rather too much in a short space but did avoid vegan sensationalism and dogma, and offered some rather more positive views of the way forward than has been the case of late.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostHosted by George Monbiot, this looked well worth watching for some presently much-needed good news, although as it happens I only caught the second half of the programme, dealing with new foodstuffs producible from soil bacteria allegededly easily capable of feeding the entire human population of the globe; deer culling in the Scottish Highlands to allow natural re-forestation (but why can't they feed them contraceptives rather than shoot them?); an Oxfordshire farmer who is managing to produce large potato yields by using the naturally surrounding weeds for composting purposes; and a re-greened area of the Netherlands which has been returned to biodiversity and has become a thriving haven for wildlife in 25 years.
I'll try and find the recording tomorrow and watch the whole thing.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostHosted by George Monbiot, this looked well worth watching for some presently much-needed good news, although as it happens I only caught the second half of the programme, dealing with new foodstuffs producible from soil bacteria allegededly easily capable of feeding the entire human population of the globe; deer culling in the Scottish Highlands to allow natural re-forestation (but why can't they feed them contraceptives rather than shoot them?); an Oxfordshire farmer who is managing to produce large potato yields by using the naturally surrounding weeds for composting purposes; and a re-greened area of the Netherlands which has been returned to biodiversity and has become a thriving haven for wildlife in 25 years.
I'll try and find the recording tomorrow and watch the whole thing.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostOops! Searching again, I find that Blood for Dracula is, after all, to be found on YouTube:
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
the 3D Flesh for Frankenstein is at:
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
You may need to confirm you are over 18 years old.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View Post'Welcome To HMP Belmarsh' documentary with Ross Kemp on ITV last night. It's on catch up.
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