I just love watching How Its Made. My daughter and I used to watch this together when she was in high school. As she put it, "it's comforting to watch something that is interesting yet has no drama." Drama, IMO, is overdone in America. In recent years, especially, I have found there's more than enough drama and stress in real life. How Its Made helps me escape from that and yet it's worthwhile to watch. Well done!
I’ve been trying to find the computer animated short featured in the How Its Made animation episode since it is technically lost media. I’m wondering if anyone still at discovery has any records of the name of the animation or animation studio that worked on the short? Thank you.
What's funny to me is the segment on animation (here on yt) is completely blank? ua-cam.com/video/eRzQMMKTAOw/v-deo.htmlsi=PMCXN2lNFPXSqR0B is blank...lol
When i first saw this, i was always wondering, how is there enough people wanting to buy a really nice string puppet that a factory for them is actually financially viable? That puppet looked like it would cost the price of a car with that much labor
It looked to me like a puppet theatre company that makes their own puppets. The artists / performers work in the workshop, design and build a puppet, to perform in their own shows. They might have taken commissions from other puppet performers on occasion, but my guess is that this is something done primarily in-house, not for sale. Yes, the materials and labor are expensive, but you put on several shows a week, entertain the people who buy their tickets, and make a modest living in the theatre. They seemed to have a pretty well-established set-up there. My guess is that that marionette video was from the 1980s, more or less. The style of the puppets was very much of that period. I could be off by a bit, but I'd be ridiculously surprised if anyone gave me proof that this was made in the last ten years.
So this UA-cam video dropped just yesterday: April of 2024. But none of the videos in it could possibly be less than twenty years old, probably older! WTF?
Clearly because this is segments from the 90s (into the early 2000s) show ‘How it’s made’. People do this to ensure older media that still has an audience survives and given the views for these videos, there is defiantly still an audience, I don’t think the show has been making new episodes for a very long time although I would love to be proven wrong.
@@RoadkillbunnyUK In that case I wish there was an "original air date" mentioned- or mentioned more obviously. That's a personal peeve of mine on many YT videos that are "rebroadcasts" of older material: please give a very obvious mention of when this was originally made. The internet has sort of become a melting pot of culture- popular and obscure- from the last 100+ years, all poured into one place. Some context is extremely helpful, sometimes. And rarely given.
The show has different narrators for different regions. In the Canadian version, it features Mark Tewksbury (Season 1, 2001) as the host of the show. Lynn Herzeg (Seasons 2-4, 2002-2005), June Wallack (Season 5, 2005) and Lynne Adams (Season 6 onwards, 2006-present) are the narrators. In the U.S. version, Brooks Moore and Zac Fine (Season 9-10, 2007-2008) are the narrators. In the United Kingdom, the rest of Europe, and in some cases in Southeast Asia, the series is narrated by Tony Hirst.
Crazy to think how much this process may have advanced since this was made
This is pretty cheeky for the Science Channel 😮
I just love watching How Its Made. My daughter and I used to watch this together when she was in high school. As she put it, "it's comforting to watch something that is interesting yet has no drama." Drama, IMO, is overdone in America. In recent years, especially, I have found there's more than enough drama and stress in real life. How Its Made helps me escape from that and yet it's worthwhile to watch. Well done!
“Lady Swing” and “Mr X” sound very adult. 😂
After I had read your comment, I was laughing pretty hard! 😂😂😂 They do sound like kinky names 😂
Yeah they do😆!
Hahaha 🤣 Ikr
Ohhhhh, myyyy!
😂😂
That thumbnail 😂 👌
thumtitle is crazy 😂
the innuendos in the first one
The things we don't know but love to learn about!
I love the puppet maker, what a cool job!
that thumbnail is something else. not gonna lie lol.
The 1911 dress form was beautiful 😍
i say this with the most respect, those dudes look like they make puppet.
what a cool career
I love the puppet. So cute! ❤ Very interesting to make the mannequins and the skull of animal. 🤔
Im 4 XPAs in this evening and am finding this video oddly satisfying
That thumbnail is funny🤣!
I’ve been trying to find the computer animated short featured in the How Its Made animation episode since it is technically lost media. I’m wondering if anyone still at discovery has any records of the name of the animation or animation studio that worked on the short?
Thank you.
What's funny to me is the segment on animation (here on yt) is completely blank? ua-cam.com/video/eRzQMMKTAOw/v-deo.htmlsi=PMCXN2lNFPXSqR0B is blank...lol
Scary.
Of course those names came from the 70s. How It's Made really went in (no pun intended) on the jokes
Very nice 😂.
Thumbnail Attraction 😅😂
What a cute penguin
They should consider the first one
WOAH keep the thumbnail PG rated LOL
The faces of the mannequines fears me! Spooky!
wow, makes me want to try making a marionette....
Thumbnail is “totally accurate” as to how I feel about being exposed to it. Chef’s Kiss! 👍🏻👌🏻
So many things i want to say, but i shall not. lmao
👍👍
Any idea the artist or workshop of the marionette?
It's Bob Kramer
When i first saw this, i was always wondering, how is there enough people wanting to buy a really nice string puppet that a factory for them is actually financially viable? That puppet looked like it would cost the price of a car with that much labor
It looked to me like a puppet theatre company that makes their own puppets. The artists / performers work in the workshop, design and build a puppet, to perform in their own shows.
They might have taken commissions from other puppet performers on occasion, but my guess is that this is something done primarily in-house, not for sale.
Yes, the materials and labor are expensive, but you put on several shows a week, entertain the people who buy their tickets, and make a modest living in the theatre. They seemed to have a pretty well-established set-up there.
My guess is that that marionette video was from the 1980s, more or less. The style of the puppets was very much of that period. I could be off by a bit, but I'd be ridiculously surprised if anyone gave me proof that this was made in the last ten years.
Special grinding tool - aka Drexel lol
Born to this world just to get squashed
I really like cheesecake
What kind
Elaine would say otherwise..
So this UA-cam video dropped just yesterday: April of 2024. But none of the videos in it could possibly be less than twenty years old, probably older! WTF?
Clearly because this is segments from the 90s (into the early 2000s) show ‘How it’s made’.
People do this to ensure older media that still has an audience survives and given the views for these videos, there is defiantly still an audience, I don’t think the show has been making new episodes for a very long time although I would love to be proven wrong.
@@RoadkillbunnyUK In that case I wish there was an "original air date" mentioned- or mentioned more obviously.
That's a personal peeve of mine on many YT videos that are "rebroadcasts" of older material: please give a very obvious mention of when this was originally made. The internet has sort of become a melting pot of culture- popular and obscure- from the last 100+ years, all poured into one place. Some context is extremely helpful, sometimes. And rarely given.
Who cares? Still fun to watch!
Wonder how that one guy lost half his finger. 🤔
WTF was going on with that opening scene? its like a bad mushroom trip...
thank you . ( 2024 / June / 17 )
Title should add "and the whole Kardashian family".
These are creepy. I’m waiting for it to jump to how a human centipede is made.
First, a worker takes a 3d scan of your mother...
wtf
is this a real person talking in this or no?
The show has different narrators for different regions.
In the Canadian version, it features Mark Tewksbury (Season 1, 2001) as the host of the show. Lynn Herzeg (Seasons 2-4, 2002-2005), June Wallack (Season 5, 2005) and Lynne Adams (Season 6 onwards, 2006-present) are the narrators.
In the U.S. version, Brooks Moore and Zac Fine (Season 9-10, 2007-2008) are the narrators.
In the United Kingdom, the rest of Europe, and in some cases in Southeast Asia, the series is narrated by Tony Hirst.
Yeah. This is an old show that was made way, way before AI.
@@KleintoonseBreiwinkel ahh i never knew this! i’m from the US
@@KleintoonseBreiwinkel it does make sense that they would have different speakers for certain regions
@@aryanbaviskar1186 you’re actually right. I remember watching the show with my brother growing up. The narrator is just really good at being robotic.
I’m sorry, but mannequins and puppets are creepy af to me!
Soooo...rrrright.
Sus☠️
SUS 💀☠️
Cursed episode