As well as liking unicorns, having her hair braided and ballet dancing, Princess Charlotte is an active child who loves playing tennis, horse riding, searching for creepy crawlies and exploring the great outdoors.
19.04.2021 - 23:19 / nme.com
Greta Thunberg has opened up about meeting Sir David Attenborough.Attenborough features in Thunberg’s new BBC three-part documentary on climate change, A Year To Change The World.Speaking to Greg James on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show, Thunberg said she looked up to Attenborough and said the moment she met him was “indescribable”.Thunberg said: “Whatever he says you agree with it basically.
I have so much respect for him. He’s done so much in his life, he has so many stories to share.”You can see
.As well as liking unicorns, having her hair braided and ballet dancing, Princess Charlotte is an active child who loves playing tennis, horse riding, searching for creepy crawlies and exploring the great outdoors.
When the planet went into lockdown over the Covid-19 pandemic, the animal kingdom took notice. Within little time at all, species adapted to the retreat of humans, exhibiting different behavior and in some cases venturing into territory formerly bustling with people and automobile traffic.
EXCLUSIVE: The Practice alum Camyrn Manheim is reuniting with David E. Kelley on Big Shot, his series on Disney+. Manheim is set to recur, along with Daisha Graf (The High Note) and Dale Whibley (There’s Someone Inside Your House) on the series starring John Stamos, from Kelley, Dean Lorey, Brad Garrett and ABC Studios, part of Disney Television Studios.
Environmental activist Greta Thunberg uses her social media platform to draw light on numerous socio-political issues. Amid the rise in Coronavirus cases and the commencement of the pandemic’s second wave, several people are getting tested positive for the virus every single day.
Valentina I. Valentini Cinematographer Jannicke Mikkelsen is used to working with non-traditional filmmaking techniques, methods and in unique environments.
George may be heir and Charlotte "the spare" but Louis has a flair that could soon eclipse them both. Grinning widely as he masters a balance bike, this was the confident young Prince on his first day of nursery school.
Naman Ramachandran Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg is getting the deepfake treatment from U.K. broadcaster Channel 4 to commemorate Earth Day (April 22).On Thursday, Channel 4 is releasing a TikTok parody, which appears to star Thunberg.
Launched in time for tomorrow’s Earth Day, Apple’s The Year Earth Changed documentary special, narrated by David Attenborough, has premiered as the #1 unscripted program on the platform.
coronavirus pandemic. Thunberg, a 2020 Nobel Peace Prize nominee, said while she grew even more knowledgeable about climate change, there were moments that surprised her, like meeting with Polish coal miners.“I had expected them to not be willing to change, but they were willing to change.
Tim Dams Once seen as rather elitist and niche, the documentary feature market is expanding as audience demand for real life stories continues to grow.Documentaries have become a huge genre in their own right, says Lia Devlin, head of distribution at Altitude Films, whose slate includes “Tina,” “Zappa,” “David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet,” and festival hit “Gunda,” which it releases this June.“Audiences have reappraised the documentary genre.
The world can bring the global COVID-19 pandemic under control in the coming months provided it distributes the necessary resources fairly, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) told a news briefing on Monday.
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticThere’s little in this world more soothing than turning on a nature documentary and hearing David Attenborough’s calm, steady voice. Even as a disembodied narrator, the 94-year-old presenter has become such a ubiquitous presence that watching any nature doc without him feels strange, as if trying to put on a shoe before realizing it’s on the wrong foot.