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6,8/10
1073
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Vielfältige persönliche Geschichten aus aller Welt zeigen, wie Leben, Leidenschaften und Ziele durch die verschiedenen komplexen Systeme des menschlichen Körpers ermöglicht werden; Erzähler ... Alles lesenVielfältige persönliche Geschichten aus aller Welt zeigen, wie Leben, Leidenschaften und Ziele durch die verschiedenen komplexen Systeme des menschlichen Körpers ermöglicht werden; Erzähler Jad Abumrad.Vielfältige persönliche Geschichten aus aller Welt zeigen, wie Leben, Leidenschaften und Ziele durch die verschiedenen komplexen Systeme des menschlichen Körpers ermöglicht werden; Erzähler Jad Abumrad.
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I'm a student nurse. I like how the human world is explained with so many real stories and medical aspects mixed up well. Would like more of the show! ( The damn word count when writing comments)
I'm a student nurse. I like how the human world is explained with so many real stories and medical aspects mixed up well. Would like more of the show!
I'm a student nurse. I like how the human world is explained with so many real stories and medical aspects mixed up well. Would like more of the show!
I'm a student nurse. I like how the human world is explained with so many real stories and medical aspects mixed up well. Would like more of the show!
I'm a student nurse. I like how the human world is explained with so many real stories and medical aspects mixed up well. Would like more of the show!
I'm a student nurse. I like how the human world is explained with so many real stories and medical aspects mixed up well. Would like more of the show!
I love documentaries,but netflix have dumped all over the fact side of them to try and push an agenda from the concepts of gender to only using females as the experts. Dull American nasel tones drone on without giving you much in the way of an education about the topic. I'd give it a miss.
Love this series by Netflix. A lot of hard work has gone into making this spectacular masterpiece.
I just have one beef with it. In the third episode they were discussing fasting and they chose a Hindu to highlight it's benefits. Puhleez! If there is any one religion that is associated with fasting, it's Islam. Thirty consecutive days of not eating, drinking or smoking anything from dawn to dusk. And this fasting is a must for every Muslim, unless he is too ill.
I believe Netflix missed the trick here. Would have loved to have had them explore this phenomenon, from a scientific perspective.
Anyways, this is a brilliant effort. A must watch.
I just have one beef with it. In the third episode they were discussing fasting and they chose a Hindu to highlight it's benefits. Puhleez! If there is any one religion that is associated with fasting, it's Islam. Thirty consecutive days of not eating, drinking or smoking anything from dawn to dusk. And this fasting is a must for every Muslim, unless he is too ill.
I believe Netflix missed the trick here. Would have loved to have had them explore this phenomenon, from a scientific perspective.
Anyways, this is a brilliant effort. A must watch.
Filled with facts I learned well over 10 years ago. Sprinkled in some very rare new information, along with some director's idea of cool shots of people walking and totally unnecessary B footage.
It's like they took 1 episodes worth of info, and spread it out over a series. Then they sprinkled in some agendas, and bewildering choices of footage.
I was very excited to watch this, but ended up tapping out, and skipping ahead for most it in search of anything interesting.
It's like they took 1 episodes worth of info, and spread it out over a series. Then they sprinkled in some agendas, and bewildering choices of footage.
I was very excited to watch this, but ended up tapping out, and skipping ahead for most it in search of anything interesting.
"Human: The World Within" (2021 release; 6 episodes of about 53 min. Each) is a new documentary series that looks at what makes us who we are as humans. As Episode 1 "Birth" opens, we are in "Los Angeles, California", and we get to know Alex and Ali, as the voice-over explains to us what "attraction" is all about from a medical perspective. Alex and Ali are professional tango dancers, and have been married for 14 years. Turns out that lust and attraction are fueled by hormones (but not the same kind). We are then introduced to Jacqueline, a 31 yr. Old immigrant from China and expecting for the first time. At this point, we are 10 min. Into Episode 1.
Couple of comments: this is a new documentary series airing on PBS, taking a look at the wonders that are our bodies. As one commentator puts it with amazement: "From one cell to a human being". The first episode "Birth" at times feels like Sex Education 101 but that's okay. It's not a bad thing to get a reminder course on things that many of us take for granted. Yet it also goes much deeper than that: the episode also looks at things like infertility (which occurs a lot more frequently that you might think), miscarriages, and other challenges. And of course also at the pregnancy process itself. Did you know, for example, that the placenta is the only temporary organ that we humans get (only during the pregnancy)? Episode 2 "Pulse" looks at the central role played by the heart, in every possible sense. Future episodes will look at how we "Fuel" our bodies, how we "Defend" our bodies against pain and suffering, etc. The camera work is top-notch, and the initial 2 episodes are well-paced and flew by in no time. I can't wait to see the remaining episodes.
Episodes 1 and2 of "Human: The World Within" premiered this week on PBS and are now available on PBS On Demand and other streaming platforms. New episodes air on Wednesday evenings at 9 pm Eastern. If you have any interest in how the human body functions or simply are in the mood for a good documentary, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this is a new documentary series airing on PBS, taking a look at the wonders that are our bodies. As one commentator puts it with amazement: "From one cell to a human being". The first episode "Birth" at times feels like Sex Education 101 but that's okay. It's not a bad thing to get a reminder course on things that many of us take for granted. Yet it also goes much deeper than that: the episode also looks at things like infertility (which occurs a lot more frequently that you might think), miscarriages, and other challenges. And of course also at the pregnancy process itself. Did you know, for example, that the placenta is the only temporary organ that we humans get (only during the pregnancy)? Episode 2 "Pulse" looks at the central role played by the heart, in every possible sense. Future episodes will look at how we "Fuel" our bodies, how we "Defend" our bodies against pain and suffering, etc. The camera work is top-notch, and the initial 2 episodes are well-paced and flew by in no time. I can't wait to see the remaining episodes.
Episodes 1 and2 of "Human: The World Within" premiered this week on PBS and are now available on PBS On Demand and other streaming platforms. New episodes air on Wednesday evenings at 9 pm Eastern. If you have any interest in how the human body functions or simply are in the mood for a good documentary, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
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- WissenswertesDiverse personal stories from around the world reveal how lives, passions and goals are facilitated by the human body's various complex systems; narrator Jad Abumrad.
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