Big History is an American television documentary series narrated by Bryan Cranston, which originally aired on H2 in 2013. It won the 35th Annual News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Graphic Design and Art Direction.[1]
Each episode covers a single topic from history and shows connections between that topic and various fields of science and social science. Sixteen half-hour episodes aired in the first season, followed by a two-hour finale drawing connections between the sixteen topics.[2] The series has been criticized by Media Life Magazine for its factual inaccuracies.[3]
The series takes its title from a coinage by David Christian who describes Big History as an emerging academic discipline and approach to history that is less interested in wars and monarchs than it is in the way events are connected thematically and even molecularly, back to the Big Bang.[4]
In England, salt-producing towns have names ending in "wich" such as Greenwich.
In the late 1840s, James W. Marshall and his business partner John Sutter try to keep their discovery of gold in California a secret.
Frederic Tudor sets up the ice trade in the early 1800s in the Boston area.
In the 1700s, the Montgolfier brothers fly with hot-air balloons in France.
In the 1800s in England, George Cayley designs gliders. Next, in 1852, Henri Giffard invents an airship with an imperfect engine.
At the Battle of Crécy (1346), the longbow is the secret weapon of the English.
Ötzi the Iceman was probably looking for metal in the Alps Mountains over 3,000 years ago.
During World War II, the Lorenz cipher turned letters into numbers. In Britain, Colossus was the name of an artificial brain.
The 2013 meteor explosion in Russia was approximately 55 feet while, but it was 30 times more powerful than the Hiroshima atomic bomb (according to the narratory Bryan Cranston).
The Rinderpest virus became a major threat to the cattle population.
After the 1846–1860 cholera pandemic, London builds the first water sewer system.
The mines of Laurion near ancient Athens contain lots of silver. Around 480 BCE, the Greeks use silver to pay their men and build warships.
Thaler was the name of the silver coin in the Holy Roman Empire's Czech region. Today, the English word "dollar" is derived from "thaler."
Spanish conquerors found lots of silver near Potosí.
The Alpide belt stretches across two continents: from the Himalayas to the Alps.
The 35th Annual News & Documentary Emmy Award for Outstanding Graphic Design and Art Direction was awarded to the team of Flight 33 Productions:
Creative Director Steffen Schlachtenhaufen
Art Directors Dominique Navarro, Chris Ramirez
Visual Effects Supervisors Matt Drummond, Christopher Gaal, John R. McConnell
Compositors Dean Guiliotis, Carter Higgins, Brad Moylan, Ian Pauly
Lead 3D Visual Effects Artist Michael Ranger
3D Artist Scott Bell, Jennie Bozic, Keith Yakouboff, Sebastiano D’Aprile, Mario Cardona
Lead FX Artist Nico Sugleris