Pandemic Library, Episode 3: Slow TV (Originally Posted April 14)
Sometime in the last year I heard a story about "slow TV," a video genre in which an event is filmed from beginning to end - most famously, a seven hour ride on an historic Norwegian train that runs across the southern part of the country. Apparently there were lots of interviews, and shots of the interior of the train as well as the scenery outside the windows.
Just imagine: seven hours of video, all of it on one train ride. Hundreds of thousands of Norwegians watched. So many viewers that the NRK, the Norwegian public broadcasting network, filmed several more documentaries, including a ten-hour train ride in winter and the first 24 hours of the opening of fishing season. For an overview, follow the link
Clearly, we live in a slow time, at least for the last several weeks and for an indefinite time to come. I believe that slowing down is good for us: slow food? Always tastier than fast food. Slow reading? My favorite way to revisit favorite books. Slow walking? Let's me go farther, in the end.
I don't know about slow videos; check out the latest installment of Pandemic Library and let me know what you think.
Just imagine: seven hours of video, all of it on one train ride. Hundreds of thousands of Norwegians watched. So many viewers that the NRK, the Norwegian public broadcasting network, filmed several more documentaries, including a ten-hour train ride in winter and the first 24 hours of the opening of fishing season. For an overview, follow the link
Clearly, we live in a slow time, at least for the last several weeks and for an indefinite time to come. I believe that slowing down is good for us: slow food? Always tastier than fast food. Slow reading? My favorite way to revisit favorite books. Slow walking? Let's me go farther, in the end.
I don't know about slow videos; check out the latest installment of Pandemic Library and let me know what you think.
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