Sentences with phrase «watch documentaries like»

You can watch documentaries like Indie Game: The Movie, you can find great collections of indie game art work, and you can even learn game design or different types of game programming online and in books.
I wish more people would take time to watch documentaries like Food Inc. and Earthlings and wake up and realize what horrific and unsanitary practices are going on in beef, pork and poultry processing facilities here in the United States.
And after reading books like Ina May Gaskin's Guide To Childbirth and watching documentaries like The Business of Being Born, I was further motivated to seek midwives and a birth environment that encouraged a more natural, trust - your - body approach to childbirth.
And after reading books like Ina May Gaskin's Guide To Childbirth and watching documentaries like The Business of Being Born, I was further motivated to seek midwives and a birth environment that encour...

Not exact matches

According to The Farm 51's creative director Wojciech Pazdur, the VR app experience will be similar to watching a documentary, only the experience will be interactive and aiming to place the viewer right there in Pripyat, sort of like virtual tourism.
He has also edited cool stuff, like photo essays from the Canadian tar sands to the streets of Cairo, a profile of Vine's hottest star, and documentaries on the binge - watching world record and hacking the grid.
«Why the hell they would watch a lousy f — cking video like that is something I will never know,» says Rebney in the documentary Winnebago Man.
Like a surprisingly large number of millennials, it seems, Vogt in part got interested in animal welfare after binge - watching a series of Netflix documentaries on the topic.
As far as the scholarly aspect of it, it reads like he didn't go to Rome so much as watch that one scene in Life Of Brian as though it were a documentary.
I watched some documentaries too like Forks Over Knives that were really informative.
Like many others (I figure), I fell into a YouTube rabbit hole at my desk job a few years ago and ended up watching hours of Hillsborough documentaries and recaps.
I like to watch a lot of his documentaries and his vlog, and I think he's just come up from nothing really.
Its like basing all your political beliefs on watching one Michael Moore documentary.
It was like watching a good childbirth documentary with interviews of midwives, doulas, chiropractors and other couples who went through the course and had great birth experiences.
The information is fresh, the research is up to date and it is very enjoyable to watch the DVD which is like a documentary with the interviews of obstetricians, midwives, doulas, chiropractors and other couples who are sharing their natural birth stories.
Did you watch the documentary and as a woman, does it make you feel like you much choose a birth with as little intervention as possible because it's best?
It seems like you are watching a good documentary, not a class.
The information is fresh, the research is up to date and it is very enjoyable to watch the DVD which is like a documentary with the interviews of obstetricians, midwives, doulas, chiropractors and other couples who are sharing their natural birth stories.
In all the documentaries I've watched on plant - based diets and juicing, and many of the books I've read on similar topics, this little green herb comes up time and time again paired with words like «cleanser» and «detoxifier.»
I've been doing some reading, watching a few documentaries lately like What the Health, and becoming more aware of the background behind a vegan lifestyle.
Ambitious intellectual who likes to have fun and adventures who also doesn't mind sitting on the couch and watching the latest movies or documentaries.
I like reading and watching documentaries abo..
I am quite busy with work and my band but when I have time I like to play online mmorpgs, such as WoW and Wartune, watch movies, science documentaries and TV series» online.
I also like to watch off beat films, documentaries, and shows like Dexter & Hemlock Grove...
I also like to watch documentaries too.
I like watching documentaries and cop shows.
Each projects a feral sexuality, a rangy angularity that's reminiscent of graceful wild animals, beautiful but dangerous, and watching them at work is like seeing a superior wildlife documentary with sex and slaughter thrown in for good measure.
Written by an actual therapist following his own experiences, this gripping drama offers an extremely realistic view of prison that makes us feel like watching a documentary, and it is brutal and touching when it needs to be, anchored by superb performances (O'Connell is a revelation).
Doglegs is more challenging than a feel - good documentary like Murderball; the motivations of its protagonists are often difficult to understand — BDSM is frequently invoked as a justification for able - bodied heel «Antithesis» Kitajima's taunting of disabled face «Sambo» Shintaro — and some of the wrestling scenes are uncomfortable to watch.
All you'll need is a high - speed internet connection to watch our award - winning series like «Homeland», «Shameless» and «Ray Donovan», star - studded hit movies, groundbreaking documentaries, hilarious comedy specials and action packed sports including live championship boxing events.
In addition to Sunday night hate - watches like Girls and Looking and binge - able classics like The Wire, The Sopranos, and Deadwood, HBO Go has a slew of movies and documentaries to offer as well.
But while «I Am Chris Farley» is an enjoyable tribute that will make you want to spend the next few hours watching old «SNL» skits and film clips on YouTube, the documentary feels like it's just barely scratching the surface at times, especially in regards to Farley's struggle with substance abuse.
0:00 — Intro 2:45 — Headlines: RIP Sidney Lumet, Wayne Kramer Drops Out of Headshot, Will and Jaden Smith in M. Night Shyamalan's Sci - Fi Film, Michael Shannon is General Zod 18:30 — Review: Your Highness 43:10 — Review: Hanna 1:03:00 — Trailer Trash: Warrior, Anonymous 1:11:15 — Other Stuff We Watched: Arthur, 12 Angry Men, Taking On Tyson, Atonement, The Killing, Tough Enough, The Windmill Movie, Taxi Driver, The Toy, Three Kings 1:40:45 — Junk Mail: Reed, The Expendables 2 Directors, Spoilers, Unlikeable Main Characters, Comic Book Recommendations, Directors We'd Like to See Direct a Documentary, Movies vs. Video Games, Cult Classics 2:10:25 — This Week's DVD Releases 2:13:00 — Outro
«This infamous moment really drew us in when we watched the documentary for the first time, because I, like, totally relate to that.
The cinematography and acting were great, but take out the eerie music and 2 creepy (ish) parts and it was like watching a really long history channel documentary (which I also normally love.)
If you really like the movie, though, you'll want to watch «Bringing Predestination to Life» (1:16:30), a feature - length making - of documentary that takes us through production week by week.
Not only is the video mesmerizing to watch with all of this lovely cinematography, but they completely nailed the selection - picking out, really, all the best cinematography, including from excellent documentaries like Chasing Coral (one of my favorites), Casting JonBenét, and Kedi.
For the most part, Mackenzie lets the material speak for itself, capturing the fear, claustrophobia and machismo of prison with such staggering authenticity that it's like watching a fly - on - the - wall documentary.
Wall Street didn't do a lot for me, but I liked it for the most part, and the presence of the excellent audio commentary and documentary make this a DVD worth watching.
The film's writer and director Shaun Monson last made the 2005 documentary Earthlings and since then seems to have watched Terrence Malick's The Tree of Life (2011) several times to simulate his hippy - like aspirations.
The film is exceptionally written — every line of dialogue sounds like something a person might actually say and, as someone who was a high school senior in 2002, it felt so authentic that I thought I was watching a documentary about my generation's coming - of - age instead of a comedy - drama from the co-writer of Frances Ha and Mistress America.
With acting this strong and a good story to boot, you get a sense of realism like you are almost watching a documentary.
Also disappointing was Something Better To Come, a Danish / Polish documentary that embarks on the Boyhood - like project of watching a Russian girl from age 10 to 24 as she grows up in a massive landfill 13 miles away from the Kremlin.
Our Brand Is Crisis, like its documentary inspiration, understands that the key to victory in Bolivia was reframing the election: Anyone who watched George W. Bush defeat John Kerry in 2004 will recognize Jane's fear - mongering tactics, the way she sells Castillo's unpopular years in office as the exact experience the country needs during a time of uncertainty and financial hardship.
Their on screen chemistry felt like I wasn't watching a movie, but rather a documentary on the life of a family that has lost so much, but managed to as sturdy as they possibly could before it was too late.
It doesn't feel as if we're watching a documentary, but there are moments when the film feels as if we are witnessing some clandestinely captured visual record of something intensely private or distasteful, like a video of an intimate encounter or a crime recorded on, well, a cellphone.
This, nonetheless, allows a submenu to give the option to watch any portion of the documentary by itself, breaking it up into 12 short segments which each run a few minutes long (like last fall's disappointing bonus disc of The Lion King).
I don't forget when I'm eyeballing some little shitbag outside a club, some nineteen - year - old in a two - hundred quid jacket who's trying to impress his bird by giving me some mouth; but when I'm watching something on TV, like a documentary or something, or when I'm putting the kids to bed, or when I'm reading, I don't think, you know, fucking hell I'm big.
You also watch too many documentaries from like so - called sort of successful people to realize like they're like, a lot of times they're still hungry for the affirmation, for the validation, for the identity, and that kind of never goes away.
Watch documentaries, seek out training in essential life skills like money management, take different kinds of classes in various mediums.
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