Hmm... there's really no thread about this yet? I guess not enough folks could pull themselves away from those awesome Dear vs HerO matches to watch television...
Rise of the eSports Hero aired up here in Canada at 8PM on Global. A VOD of the complete episode will be up on Global's website come Sunday, albeit restricted to Canadian viewers. Folks outside of Canada will unfortunately have to wait until they ink distribution deals in other countries.
To the best of my knowledge, it's the first contemporary eSports documentary to appear on broadcast television in North America, and it aired in an hour-long primetime slot. That's huge. Even opposite the Leafs game and a big figure skating championship, hundreds of thousands of Canadians, the vast majority of whom had probably never heard of eSports, will have watched this documentary tonight.
The film opens with an introduction to Evil Geniuses in the context of a broad overview of StarCraft 2 and its professional scene, including a lot of clips of Artosis and Alex Garfield explaining the business and competition (with a who's who of well known eSports personalities chiming in with sound bites here and there). They hit all the important points, and enormous crowds of screaming fans at MLG Orlando highlighted just how big and exciting these competitions can be.
Geoff "iNcontroL" Robinson takes the spotlight first with a really touching story of his mom skipping rent to send him to WCG and launch his eSports career. Chris "HuK" Loranger and his dad show up next. Without ever having to say so, the filmmakers present the players' families as some of the real heroes of eSports. It makes Greg "IdrA" Fields's lack of parental approval seem even harsher by comparison.
The second act follows the EG players through their run at MLG Orlando 2011. Much of it is just footage of the players and gameplay with minimal editorial commentary. I thought that letting the energy of the tournament speak for itself did a good job of conveying the eSports experience. Anna comforts iNcontroL after an early loss. They move onto IdrA's epic defeat of Boxer (I still remember that match more than 2 years later...) and eventual loss to MC. And finally, HuK going through to win the whole thing, setting him up as the foreigner hope for SC2.
Act three offers a small taste of HuK's problems with management but quickly shifts gears to give us a taste of the training environments, both in Korea and the old EG Lair in Arizona. A significant portion concentrates on Geoff's relationship with Anna. The final segment heads to IPL 4, delving into gamer psychology as IdrA takes a devastating loss to Bomber.
Act four turns to focus more on the management of EG as HuK gets knocked out as well. We even see a montage of Alex Garfield running through the streets of San Francisco. I was quite surprised by how much focus and screen time Alex gets in this documentary. He's always been more of a behind the scenes guy, letting people like iNcontroL or SirScoots be the public face of his company, but in this documentary, he's practically the fourth musketeer.
The second half of that act and most of the fifth deals with Geoff's potential caster transition. Here in late 2013, we have the benefit of knowing how that turned out, but back in 2011 his declining results and attempts to juggle roles created problems. With disappointed performances at MLG Anaheim and high hopes for the upcoming NASL finals in Toronto, the filmmakers set up more conflict. They kinda go out of their way to present Chris as a spoiled little asshole...
Which sets up the final act. Prior to this documentary and the media circuit he did to promote it, I hadn't been aware of just how rough his childhood in Florida had been. Instant sympathy. Despite his crushing 0-3 loss to Alicia in front of the hometown crowd, they manage to end the documentary on an upbeat note.
I though Rise of the eSports Hero did a fantastic job of presenting StarCraft II and eSports to the general public. Indeed, it made a career in eSports seem rather glamourous. Ultimately, however, it was less about the industry than it was about the people. The primary target audience may have the uninitiated laymen, but there were more than enough insider tidbits to satisfy even those of us who've been following the scene for a while. They actually managed to catch Greg smiling in a charming but fleeting birthday party video.
I found that the real take home message of this film was not merely how hard these pro gamers work to achieve their dreams but the importance of the people supporting them, and that's a side of eSports that the fans rarely see. Even if viewers don't appreciate the gameplay footage, the reaction shots of Alex and others in the crowd tell them all they need to know.
That shot near the end of HuK's dad (who clearly doesn't understand the game) standing behind Chris while his brother explains what a colossus is? Priceless. Seriously, HuK's dad is adorable and awesome.
Anna is just as amazing. She has a really touching segment describing how she needs to feel out how much comfort Geoff needs when he loses. The chemistry between the two is undeniable, and every guy watching will be insanely jealous. iNcontroL's story arc in this film ends with him walking down the aisle and kissing the bride.
I really hope that Landrock and the others behind this documentary can get it into the hands of viewers outside of Canada, because you all need to see it. And it's definitely something you want to show to your friends and family to help them understand just why you love eSports.
Thanks for putting this up! Props to Landrock and others! It's good to see that there are some people we can rely on for a SC2 documentary (unlike one project...)
Ah, I've been talking about this in the Incontrol Global interview thread.
It was a solid coverage all-around. Didn't try to glorify or demonize E-Sports or players in any significant way, and the focus on the players really let you get a feel for what they do and what the actual scene is like in a meaningful way.
(As an aside, the clip of Greg's birthday cake is actually an EG video . It also has a part with Anna making the cake, it should be on EG's youtube channel)
That was excellent. Incredible to see a very raw look at behind the scenes - things like what Alex Garfield said to Greg after Boxer tied up the series 3-3 at MLG Orlando, and how demanding the players can be with their managers. The documentary flew by, I would have loved more!
It's also kind of amazing (and unfortunate) how much they had to distill down from for a full year's worth of filming all to fit into a 1 hour timeslot.
It saddens me that we'll probably never see a more in-depth coverage from the material they gathered.
On October 27 2013 13:15 WolfintheSheep wrote: Ah, I've been talking about this in the Incontrol Global interview thread.
It was a solid coverage all-around. Didn't try to glorify or demonize E-Sports or players in any significant way, and the focus on the players really let you get a feel for what they do and what the actual scene is like in a meaningful way.
(As an aside, the clip of Greg's birthday cake is actually an EG video . It also has a part with Anna making the cake, it should be on EG's youtube channel)
Hmm... there's really no thread about this yet? I guess not enough folks could pull themselves away from those awesome Dear vs HerO matches to watch television...
Rise of the eSports Hero aired up here in Canada at 8PM on Global. A VOD of the complete episode will be up on Global's website come Sunday, albeit restricted to Canadian viewers. Folks outside of Canada will unfortunately have to wait until they ink distribution deals in other countries.
To the best of my knowledge, it's the first contemporary eSports documentary to appear on broadcast television in North America, and it aired in an hour-long primetime slot. That's huge. Even opposite the Leafs game and a big figure skating championship, hundreds of thousands of Canadians, the vast majority of whom had probably never heard of eSports, will have watched this documentary tonight.
The film opens with an introduction to Evil Geniuses in the context of a broad overview of StarCraft 2 and its professional scene, including a lot of clips of Artosis and Alex Garfield explaining the business and competition (with a who's who of well known eSports personalities chiming in with sound bites here and there). They hit all the important points, and enormous crowds of screaming fans at MLG Orlando highlighted just how big and exciting these competitions can be.
Geoff "iNcontroL" Robinson takes the spotlight first with a really touching story of his mom skipping rent to send him to WCG and launch his eSports career. Chris "HuK" Loranger and his dad show up next. Without ever having to say so, the filmmakers present the players' families as some of the real heroes of eSports. It makes Greg "IdrA" Fields's lack of parental approval seem even harsher by comparison.
The second act follows the EG players through their run at MLG Orlando 2011. Much of it is just footage of the players and gameplay with minimal editorial commentary. I thought that letting the energy of the tournament speak for itself did a good job of conveying the eSports experience. Anna comforts iNcontroL after an early loss. They move onto IdrA's epic defeat of Boxer (I still remember that match more than 2 years later...) and eventual loss to MC. And finally, HuK going through to win the whole thing, setting him up as the foreigner hope for SC2.
Act three offers a small taste of HuK's problems with management but quickly shifts gears to give us a taste of the training environments, both in Korea and the old EG Lair in Arizona. A significant portion concentrates on Geoff's relationship with Anna. The final segment heads to IPL 4, delving into gamer psychology as IdrA takes a devastating loss to Bomber.
Act four turns to focus more on the management of EG as HuK gets knocked out as well. We even see a montage of Alex Garfield running through the streets of San Francisco. I was quite surprised by how much focus and screen time Alex gets in this documentary. He's always been more of a behind the scenes guy, letting people like iNcontroL or SirScoots be the public face of his company, but in this documentary, he's practically the fourth musketeer.
The second half of that act and most of the fifth deals with Geoff's potential caster transition. Here in late 2013, we have the benefit of knowing how that turned out, but back in 2011 his declining results and attempts to juggle roles created problems. With disappointed performances at MLG Anaheim and high hopes for the upcoming NASL finals in Toronto, the filmmakers set up more conflict. They kinda go out of their way to present Chris as a spoiled little asshole...
Which sets up the final act. Prior to this documentary and the media circuit he did to promote it, I hadn't been aware of just how rough his childhood in Florida had been. Instant sympathy. Despite his crushing 0-3 loss to Alicia in front of the hometown crowd, they manage to end the documentary on an upbeat note.
I though Rise of the eSports Hero did a fantastic job of presenting StarCraft II and eSports to the general public. Indeed, it made a career in eSports seem rather glamourous. Ultimately, however, it was less about the industry than it was about the people. The primary target audience may have the uninitiated laymen, but there were more than enough insider tidbits to satisfy even those of us who've been following the scene for a while. They actually managed to catch Greg smiling in a charming but fleeting birthday party video.
I found that the real take home message of this film was not merely how hard these pro gamers work to achieve their dreams but the importance of the people supporting them, and that's a side of eSports that the fans rarely see. Even if viewers don't appreciate the gameplay footage, the reaction shots of Alex and others in the crowd tell them all they need to know.
That shot near the end of HuK's dad (who clearly doesn't understand the game) standing behind Chris while his brother explains what a colossus is? Priceless. Seriously, HuK's dad is adorable and awesome.
Anna is just as amazing. She has a really touching segment describing how she needs to feel out how much comfort Geoff needs when he loses. The chemistry between the two is undeniable, and every guy watching will be insanely jealous. iNcontroL's story arc in this film ends with him walking down the aisle and kissing the bride.
I really hope that Landrock and the others behind this documentary can get it into the hands of viewers outside of Canada, because you all need to see it. And it's definitely something you want to show to your friends and family to help them understand just why you love eSports.
Just wanted to say thank you so much for your kind words. They really mean a lot and go so far. <3
Someone on twitter recommended the addon "Hola" (http://hola.org/). It allows you to change your vpn to Canada and the video will buffer then start. It's working for me. I'm excited to watch right now! Eeee!!!
Someone on twitter recommended the addon "Hola" (http://hola.org/). It allows you to change your vpn to Canada and the video will buffer then start. It's working for me. I'm excited to watch right now! Eeee!!!
Someone on twitter recommended the addon "Hola" (http://hola.org/). It allows you to change your vpn to Canada and the video will buffer then start. It's working for me. I'm excited to watch right now! Eeee!!!
thanks worked instantly. just follow the instructions.
Why would you release a documentary about global esports, only for Canadians to watch. That stinks. I wont be changing my vpn cause of their dumb ass website policy. GlobalTV the irony.
On October 27 2013 23:32 NightOfTheDead wrote: Why would you release a documentary about global esports, only for Canadians to watch. That stinks. I wont be changing my vpn cause of their dumb ass website policy. GlobalTV the irony.
Just wanted to mention that the Hola thing doesn't seem to work in the 64-bit version of Firefox( a.k.a Nightly) but switching back to norm FF it worked great. Thanks for this A great look at the people and passion of E-sports.
On October 27 2013 23:32 NightOfTheDead wrote: Why would you release a documentary about global esports, only for Canadians to watch. That stinks. I wont be changing my vpn cause of their dumb ass website policy. GlobalTV the irony.
On October 27 2013 23:32 NightOfTheDead wrote: Why would you release a documentary about global esports, only for Canadians to watch. That stinks. I wont be changing my vpn cause of their dumb ass website policy. GlobalTV the irony.
Honestly this documentary was pretty outstanding from virtually every facet.
Truly sad that only people in Canada get to watch it, edit; I actually emailed global complaining that it was only for Canadians to view online. I wonder if they'll get back to me.
This was a really well-done documentary. I'm sorry that non-Canadians don't get to see it just yet. I think it's just as dumb as when Canadians don't get to see Hulu, or any other US-based online video. If you can do some sort of proxy thing to bypass the IP restrictions, do it.
I'm confused. Does EG have two docs coming out? I remember the one being made by someone named Mary I think. Is that a different one and still scheduled to come out?
On October 28 2013 02:07 Canucklehead wrote: I'm confused. Does EG have two docs coming out? I remember the one being made by someone named Mary I think. Is that a different one and still scheduled to come out?
Yes that is "Good Game" you're talking about, I assume its still yet to be released.
It was not that good it would have been better if they made it longer than 44 min they left alot of stuff out they could have included and talk about the other players more like Machine whos fallen off like what is he even up lately and others even puma the decision to pick up a korean and all that stuff
overall i didnt really like it that much it was ok
On October 28 2013 03:11 URLateral wrote: It was not that good it would have been better if they made it longer than 44 min they left alot of stuff out they could have included and talk about the other players more like Machine whos fallen off like what is he even up lately and others even puma the decision to pick up a korean and all that stuff
overall i didnt really like it that much it was ok
It aired on TV in a time slot. You're not allowed to just "make it longer".
On October 28 2013 03:23 Beyond Magic wrote: I always like to watch esport documents, this one felt slightly too dramatic. I think it lacked more detailed information about esports and progamers.
I get that the documentary was meant for "normal" people but.....
Overall id say it was okay 7/10
Shoutout to EG and those who made this documentary, Very good for Esports.
They had an hour time slot. How in-depth would you like them to go while still making sense to someone who has never heard of or played Starcraft?
That was a great documentary. All though it is kind of a 'blast from the past' it was still awesome and it was interesting to follow some of the things that goes on behind the scenes. Big shout out to the people that made the documentary and to everyone on the EG team. That of course includes the people that works behind the scenes.
On October 28 2013 04:24 Noocta wrote: If there an official reason to why this is reserved for canadians ? I can't for the life of me think of a reason that would make sense.
Global TV generally owns only the Canadian distribution rights to the shows they air, so they can't legally show them outside of the country.
On October 28 2013 04:24 Noocta wrote: If there an official reason to why this is reserved for canadians ? I can't for the life of me think of a reason that would make sense.
Because broadcasting/distribution laws are a bitch.
Thought this was amazingly well done and very interesting. Really enjoyed it. Learned a bit, verified a bit... idk i thought it was awsome. and am appreciative of it.
On October 28 2013 03:23 Beyond Magic wrote: I always like to watch esport documents, this one felt slightly too dramatic. I think it lacked more detailed information about esports and progamers.
I get that the documentary was meant for "normal" people but.....
Overall id say it was okay 7/10
Shoutout to EG and those who made this documentary, Very good for Esports.
They had an hour time slot. How in-depth would you like them to go while still making sense to someone who has never heard of or played Starcraft?
Obviously you can't have _everything_ in 1 hour, just generally i think it contained too much drama instead of general information of esport related things.
On October 28 2013 03:23 Beyond Magic wrote: I always like to watch esport documents, this one felt slightly too dramatic. I think it lacked more detailed information about esports and progamers.
I get that the documentary was meant for "normal" people but.....
Overall id say it was okay 7/10
Shoutout to EG and those who made this documentary, Very good for Esports.
They had an hour time slot. How in-depth would you like them to go while still making sense to someone who has never heard of or played Starcraft?
Obviously you can't have _everything_ in 1 hour, just generally i think it contained too much drama instead of general information of esport related things.
What would you have wanted in 45 minutes? I don't think this is perfect for someone on teamliquid, but definitely keeps it much more interesting for the TV viewer than watching?... Carbot videos? Too much gameplay? I think they covered interesting stuff.
Amazingly well done documentary. Did a great job at conveying what esports is and why many people love it. It was about the idea and feeling so it didn't really matter much that the events were a bit dated, which is really unavoidable to some extent when doing a documentary on a field moving as quickly as esports is at the moment.
On October 28 2013 03:23 Beyond Magic wrote: I always like to watch esport documents, this one felt slightly too dramatic. I think it lacked more detailed information about esports and progamers.
I get that the documentary was meant for "normal" people but.....
Overall id say it was okay 7/10
Shoutout to EG and those who made this documentary, Very good for Esports.
They had an hour time slot. How in-depth would you like them to go while still making sense to someone who has never heard of or played Starcraft?
Obviously you can't have _everything_ in 1 hour, just generally i think it contained too much drama instead of general information of esport related things.
General information is boring, and terrible for viewing unless you're specifically asking for just facts and numbers.
If you want new people to care about E-Sports and treat it as legitimate, then following a few players around, getting people invested in them, and showing what it means to be a "Pro Player" is the perfect way to do it.
Someone on twitter recommended the addon "Hola" (http://hola.org/). It allows you to change your vpn to Canada and the video will buffer then start. It's working for me. I'm excited to watch right now! Eeee!!!
Damn, thx man! Seems to be working for me aswell, watching from Denmark :D
very touching, these moments when huk won i remember it i stayed up for so long. this was awesome and i still can't believe idra first got kicked out of EG and then we lost him completely. he was the icon of foreign sc2 of foreign dedication. i mean we still have huk and nani, and now snute and scarlett. but he was the first, at least for me, who was outstanding. i am going to go in a corner and QQ a little.
Someone on twitter recommended the addon "Hola" (http://hola.org/). It allows you to change your vpn to Canada and the video will buffer then start. It's working for me. I'm excited to watch right now! Eeee!!!
On October 27 2013 23:32 NightOfTheDead wrote: Why would you release a documentary about global esports, only for Canadians to watch. That stinks. I wont be changing my vpn cause of their dumb ass website policy. GlobalTV the irony.
Ironic indeed
canada finally has something that everyone else wants
On October 27 2013 23:32 NightOfTheDead wrote: Why would you release a documentary about global esports, only for Canadians to watch. That stinks. I wont be changing my vpn cause of their dumb ass website policy. GlobalTV the irony.
Ironic indeed
canada finally has something that everyone else wants
Nonsense. When the world wanted Justin Bieber and Celine Dion, we were happy to hand them over.
At the commercial break before the last ten minute segment. Great documentary so far I'd say but I hate having to relive HuK's NASL 3 run. That was SUCH a heartbreak of a tournament as a Canadian starcraft fan. Worth it to relive MLG Orlando though
Great documentary, I enjoyed every aspect of it. As for the portrayal of Huk it was very vague as to what Huk was doing that was demanding in the documentary and portrayed the manager much more sympathetically. It was because of that bit of theater that I had a hard time rooting for him (Even knowing what the result would be ahead of time.) to win and felt like he got a taste of Karma. But that would have more to do with the slot time and the drama there is private between Huk and management. I wont speculate much on it but I can relate in so far as where I work I've been with the same crew for 3 years, I love those people to death, they support me I support them. However those bonds of friendship in a professional setting allows people to take liberties with one another. I have said "Fuck you" and meant it and had to walk away several times. That is the reality of spending 84 hours a week together, and the folks at EG spend more then that amount of time together. What struck me most was how hard Geoff took his performances. I assumed that although Geoff was a player at that time, that he tried and although he got poor results that it didn't hurt him as much as this portrayed. It showed the other side of the coin the deeply motivated person coming to terms with the reality that it was time to hang up the mouse and move on to the other side of the industry.
And I don't mean to be rude to the international fans it sucks for you not to be able to see it direct from global without installing something but I have to say suck it up to the Americans. For once your on the wrong side of distribution rights and the QQ is epic. To get to experience HULU and a netflix that's worth paying for I've had to do much more then install a single program. So sorry to say I don't have sympathy that for once your mildly inconvenienced by it; now you know how the rest of the world feels when they would like to watch a TV show but get that, "Cannot be played from your location" notice. Install the program and do what the rest of the world does and move on with it.
I'm watching it now, and oh my god it's amazing. Really fantastic. Except for watching Idra lose to MC. That still makes me sad. The finals should have been Huk/Idra at MLG Orlando 2011.
Great documentary, surprised at how honest a lot of people from EG were and not just a giant PR firm. It made me like Idra and InControl a lot more. Never really disliked them but it really fleshed them out as human. Big props for InControl cause he took his losses pretty hard and that's not something we've ever really seen.
On October 28 2013 06:22 Undead1993 wrote: very touching, these moments when huk won i remember it i stayed up for so long. this was awesome and i still can't believe idra first got kicked out of EG and then we lost him completely. he was the icon of foreign sc2 of foreign dedication. i mean we still have huk and nani, and now snute and scarlett. but he was the first, at least for me, who was outstanding. i am going to go in a corner and QQ a little.
Honestly Idra was once a really good player but he lost his real passion long ago and became toxic as a role model for foreigners, the scene (and Idra himself) is better off with him retired.
On October 28 2013 06:22 Undead1993 wrote: very touching, these moments when huk won i remember it i stayed up for so long. this was awesome and i still can't believe idra first got kicked out of EG and then we lost him completely. he was the icon of foreign sc2 of foreign dedication. i mean we still have huk and nani, and now snute and scarlett. but he was the first, at least for me, who was outstanding. i am going to go in a corner and QQ a little.
Honestly Idra was once a really good player but he lost his real passion long ago and became toxic as a role model for foreigners, the scene (and Idra himself) is better off with him retired.
I don't see how the "scene" is better off without him when he bought the most attention to it and also probably the most viewers no matters how good or bad he was playing.
On October 28 2013 06:22 Undead1993 wrote: very touching, these moments when huk won i remember it i stayed up for so long. this was awesome and i still can't believe idra first got kicked out of EG and then we lost him completely. he was the icon of foreign sc2 of foreign dedication. i mean we still have huk and nani, and now snute and scarlett. but he was the first, at least for me, who was outstanding. i am going to go in a corner and QQ a little.
Honestly Idra was once a really good player but he lost his real passion long ago and became toxic as a role model for foreigners, the scene (and Idra himself) is better off with him retired.
I don't see how the "scene" is better off without him when he bought the most attention to it and also probably the most viewers no matters how good or bad he was playing.
Better for himself is probably right though.
Yeah, but he had a bad mindset which was transferred to his fans. Probably 50% of his viewers watched him in hope of seeing rage anyway, they didn't actually like him. The whole thing was just toxic and overall not good for the community.
Besides, as a fan/player and not a member of EG's staff, I don't care about viewer counts, I'm more interested in foreign players getting better at starcraft.
"In 2013, Chris won several eSports tournaments, reclaiming his spot as one of North America's top Starcraft II players."
Guess I really haven't been following SC2 closely enough.
he did win some of these smaller na lan tournaments. and got into the final of the red bull training grounds. it's true.
Getting to the final =/= winning.
Only thing Huk has won this year was Lan Hammer. Not to take anything away from that win but he has most certainly not won "several tournaments" this year.
"In 2013, Chris won several eSports tournaments, reclaiming his spot as one of North America's top Starcraft II players."
Guess I really haven't been following SC2 closely enough.
he did win some of these smaller na lan tournaments. and got into the final of the red bull training grounds. it's true.
Getting to the final =/= winning.
Only thing Huk has won this year was Lan Hammer. Not to take anything away from that win but he has most certainly not won "several tournaments" this year.
And the MLG Summer Invite.
Honestly, this is all documented on SC2 earnings...
Loved the documentary! It was awesome to get to hear what Alex Garfield said to Idra in the booth when he played Boxer! I remember watching that tournament and noticed that Idra was tilting when he started to lose so many games to Boxer and then we got to see that Garfield went in there and talked to him and he won the game after! Always wondered what he said to Idra to make him win the final game ;D
"In 2013, Chris won several eSports tournaments, reclaiming his spot as one of North America's top Starcraft II players."
Guess I really haven't been following SC2 closely enough.
who else is a top NA player in terms of the same accomplishments? Huk has had a good 2013, not as great as when he was winning MLGs or playing in GSL but still much better than usual.
On October 29 2013 12:14 URLateral wrote: I agree they over exaggerated that shit way too much like at IPL saying EG is the only team possilbe of taking down Koreans... what?
Well, 2011 it was mostly true, with the notable exception of Stephano. At least they did show Stephano in clips.
You guys being overly critical need to look at this from the perspective of someone who knows little to nothing about esports. A documentary like this is made to bring awareness and draw attention to something, and I think this does a great job of that. It's engaging and captures the audience's attention.
Finally SC2 has its own good documentary. Reminded me a lot of the National Geographic documentary on Brood War, which is actually what got me into starcraft in the first place.
The documentary is a bit outdated, but it still gets the message across.
For a 45 min documentary I thought it was really, really good, it actually brought up a ton of emotions I thought it wouldn't. To the crew, keep up the good work, to EG, I hope all you guys find strength in all the hardship of gaming and that you come out stronger, both as competitors and as people.
Well, it wouldn't be EG if it wasn't a publicity stunt so it was just ok, also for me it’s way too outdated. For this kind of content I liked the fast release time of CompLexity's Generations a lot more
Can someone PM me a link to the documentary that I can watch from the US without using an addon? The youtube link from a few pages ago got removed and was really looking forward to watching this.