Steven Gotz
May 22nd, 2007, 07:31 AM
http://www.uwolchallenge.com/challenge3/SLG_UC3_gibbons.mov
I was on my way to a local lake to get some footage of alligators or birds or whatever might be in the area. I got some footage, but nothing spectacular. While sitting quietly, waiting for something to happen, it ocurred to me that if everyone who wanted to see alligators came to that spot, instead of going to Gatorland or some other theme park, the entire area would be trampled and useless as an animal habitat. On my way home, I realized that "The Wild" was only a theme, and I could capture images of wild animals that people can't normally see in the wild, courtesy of zoos or Disney's Animal Kingdom theme park.
So, while the theme of the challenge is "The Wild", this video was shot in a somewhat controlled environment within the Disney Animal Kingdom in Florida. These animals are seen by millions of visitors each year.
While the purpose of the challenge relates to video, it is impossible to create a video that is as effective at fostering a love for nature in children around the world as the opportunity to see animals with their own eyes, and not though a camera lens.
White-cheeked gibbons are lesser apes, found in a stretch of forest that encompasses part of China, northern Laos, and northwestern Vietnam. I am thankful that there are loving, caring animal specialists supervising the exhibits at Disney and all of the wonderful zoos around the world. Otherwise, the White-cheeked Gibbon would not ever be seen by many people at all.
I hope you can imagine how thrilled I was to get the shots of this mother and her baby. They were not what I intended to use as my subjects on that particular day, but they were just too cooperative to pass up. Maybe next time you'll get tigers or gorillas or bats.
Instead of using our videos as a way to just show these sometimes spectacular images to the world, perhaps our real goal is really to encourage people to go to where they can see them for themselves? If not in "The Wild" then perhaps in a zoo or theme park.
If you are observant, you'll see that the opening title starts with "The Wild" and morphs into something else as it drops.
I was going to add a voiceover, but at the last minute I decided to just let people look at the images without a story behind it.
I was on my way to a local lake to get some footage of alligators or birds or whatever might be in the area. I got some footage, but nothing spectacular. While sitting quietly, waiting for something to happen, it ocurred to me that if everyone who wanted to see alligators came to that spot, instead of going to Gatorland or some other theme park, the entire area would be trampled and useless as an animal habitat. On my way home, I realized that "The Wild" was only a theme, and I could capture images of wild animals that people can't normally see in the wild, courtesy of zoos or Disney's Animal Kingdom theme park.
So, while the theme of the challenge is "The Wild", this video was shot in a somewhat controlled environment within the Disney Animal Kingdom in Florida. These animals are seen by millions of visitors each year.
While the purpose of the challenge relates to video, it is impossible to create a video that is as effective at fostering a love for nature in children around the world as the opportunity to see animals with their own eyes, and not though a camera lens.
White-cheeked gibbons are lesser apes, found in a stretch of forest that encompasses part of China, northern Laos, and northwestern Vietnam. I am thankful that there are loving, caring animal specialists supervising the exhibits at Disney and all of the wonderful zoos around the world. Otherwise, the White-cheeked Gibbon would not ever be seen by many people at all.
I hope you can imagine how thrilled I was to get the shots of this mother and her baby. They were not what I intended to use as my subjects on that particular day, but they were just too cooperative to pass up. Maybe next time you'll get tigers or gorillas or bats.
Instead of using our videos as a way to just show these sometimes spectacular images to the world, perhaps our real goal is really to encourage people to go to where they can see them for themselves? If not in "The Wild" then perhaps in a zoo or theme park.
If you are observant, you'll see that the opening title starts with "The Wild" and morphs into something else as it drops.
I was going to add a voiceover, but at the last minute I decided to just let people look at the images without a story behind it.