Join us as we recount our top 5 animal conservation stories – particularly the case of the northern white rhino.
Tag Archives: BBC
Calendar News: “Leap Years And Why We Need Them” (BBC Video)
It’s a leap year which means there’s an extra day in the calendar – 29 February 2020. But why do we need it? The answer is a little more complicated than you may think.
Wildlife: A Golden Eagle Flying In “Stunning” Slow Motion Video (BBC Earth)
How do feathers work? See just how the Golden Eagle carries its massive frame through the air in stunning slow motion.
Video Profiles: 80-Year Old Scotsman Don Cameron, Hot Air Balloon Pioneer
For more than half a century, Scotland-born Don Cameron has been a pioneer in the world of hot air balloons. He built and flew western Europe’s first modern hot air balloon in 1967, before founding his company Cameron Balloons from the basement of his flat.
The company has since become one of the world’s largest balloon manufacturers, making hundreds of balloons each year. It is the market leader in special-shaped balloons, producing the likes of Darth Vader, Vincent van Gogh and a dinosaur.
Video by Morgan Spence
Wildlife Video: “Otters Band Together To Survive Collapsing Glacier Ice”
Otters band together to survive collapsing glacier ice | Spy In The Wild – BBC
Narrated by David Tennant.
Nature Videos: BBC Earth’s “Best Of The Decade”
The last 10 years have been unforgettable. Here are our favourite moments from the last decade, let us know yours in the comments.
Planet Earth http://bit.ly/PlanetEarthPlaylist
New Year’s 2020: London Celebrates On The Thames
In London, some 12,000 fireworks lit up the capital’s skyline, with 100,000 tickets being bought for the event. Big Ben’s chimes sounded the start of the display, despite them being silent this year while renovation work is completed.
New Interviews: 86-Year Old Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (BBC Podcast)
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is the leading liberal Judge on the US Supreme Court. At 86 she has spent many decades fighting for women’s rights, including equal pay and access to abortion. A pioneer, this is a rare interview with a living legend. Razia Iqbal presents this special programme from New York as she receives the $1m Berggruen Prize for philosophy and culture.
Travel: “The Fight To Stop Venice From Flooding” (BBC News Video)
t’s a month since high tides struck Venice, causing devastating flooding. The city’s mayor estimated damage at over a billion euros.
A system of floodgates called MOSE, under construction for years, should have prevented the disaster. But it’s been delayed and mired in corruption.

So is MOSE the lifeline Venice needs – or is it doomed to failure?
Museum Insider: How Composer Steve Reich Reads Sculpture (MoMA/BBC Video)
In this episode of The Way I See It, our radio collaboration with BBC, we’ve captured composer Steve Reich’s audible awe as he sees his friend Richard Serra’s monumental 2015 sculpture Equal for the first time. As Reich puts it, he and Serra are “in tune to the same frequencies,” so their meeting in Manhattan in the 1960s and subsequent friendship was both important and inevitable.
Working in sound and steel respectively, both Reich and Serra rejected traditional compositional structures—one of harmony and the other of form—to give shape to their work. Reich is the recipient of countless awards, including two Grammys, a Pulitzer, and, recently, the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale. His works are performed in concert halls all over the world, and recently at Glastonbury Festival. Find “The Way I See It” on BBC Sounds or wherever you get your podcasts. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000…