Change Player Size
Watch this video in a new window

Yann Arthus-Bertrand captures fragile Earth in wide-angle

http://www.ted.com In this image-filled talk, Yann Arthus-Bertrand displays his three most recent projects on humanity and our habitat -- stunning aerial photographs in his series "The Earth From A...  
 
Customize

More From: TEDtalksDirector

Ray Kurzweil: A university for the coming singularity8:42
22,504 views
Jonathan Drori: Why we're storing billions of seeds6:35
15,004 views
Yves Behar's supercharged motorcycle design3:53
25,483 views
Felix Dennis' odes to vice and consequences17:25
28,116 views
Jay Walker on the world's English mania5:03
22,629 views
Tony Robbins: Why we do what we do, and how we can do it better22:30
1,737,192 views
Dan Ariely asks, Are we in control of our decisions?17:27
65,533 views
Stephen Hawking: Asking big questions about the universe10:13
673,641 views
The TED Fellows program6:46
19,895 views
Qi Zhang's electrifying organ performance8:33
53,166 views
Clay Shirky: How cellphones, Twitter, Facebook can make history17:03
35,289 views
Richard St. John: "Success is a continuous journey"5:09
17,789 views
Kevin Surace invents eco-friendly drywall4:32
6,683 views
John La Grou plugs smart power outlets5:24
6,392 views
Tom Shannon's gravity-defying sculpture11:56
33,760 views
Eric Lewis plays chaos and harmony4:55
19,470 views
Sean Gourley on the mathematics of war7:20
53,952 views
Theo Jansen: The art of creating creatures10:10
542,074 views
Barry Schwartz: The paradox of choice20:22
246,215 views
Brian Cox: What went wrong at the Large Hadron Collider3:30
53,566 views

QuickList(0)

Featured Videos

Upgrade to Flash Player 10 for improved playback performance. Upgrade Now or get more info.
318 ratings
Sign in to rate
20,779 views
Want to add to Favorites? Sign In or Sign Up now!
Want to add to Playlists? Sign In or Sign Up now!
Want to flag a video? Sign In or Sign Up now!

Statistics & Data

Loading...

Video Responses (0)

This video has no Responses. Be the first to Post a Video Response.
Sign in to post a Comment

Text Comments (137)   Options

Loading...
yazalamaful (3 weeks ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
cried listening to 14:55...
wcifo (1 month ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
14:55 :*(
it really touched me
damnyouzabitch (4 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
about how ignorance (such as your own) may prevent us from stopping the demise of our planet and civilization.
damnyouzabitch (4 months ago) Show Hide
 0
Marked as spam
lol god (if he exists) doesn't and shouldn't solve man's problems. the earth is ours to take care of
westboundNinja1 (5 months ago) Show Hide
+1
Marked as spam
I want so bad to be a part of TED
fahadjuma (5 months ago) Show Hide
+1
Marked as spam
Yann Just hits the Bulls eye when he said " We do not want to believe what we know"!!! That all i have to say in the subject... simple words... and the deepest meaning.
Salute to You Bertnard
Bocbo (6 months ago) Show Hide
+4
Marked as spam
Money talks, if the world is in trouble it's because the ultra wealthy want it that way, as long as they don't suffer they could care less if all the rest of us suffer and die, only when they choke on poison air or retch their guts out on rotten food will they want the rest of us to do something, first step to a new world , kill the rich.
bersaba (4 months ago) Show Hide
+1
Marked as spam
Bocbo, "Kill the rich"? If there was 2 people on the entire globe alive, there would still be 'rich' and 'poor'. My point is killing the rich would still leave rich. That's not an answer.
GolceaVlad (6 months ago) Show Hide
+2
Marked as spam
We all know what we are doing. We all follow a pattern. We should stop doing that, but the problem is that we don't know what to do to stop, or the solution in stopping.

Instead of showing what's wrong, they should show a solution, and what each one of us can do, or stop doing, because we're definetly doing something wrong.
Dreamrio (6 months ago) Show Hide
+1
Marked as spam
I am with you, but I also agree with the speaker who tries to show how much humans damage this world and where humans can start to fix it. It will be good to know the scale of damage. There are many individual works to make world green, but the speed of growing damage is faster than healing. Evolution does not let us sit back from our daily crazy-unstoppable competition routine. We MUST find direction-changeable value in evolution. Without it, we are doomed.

Would you like to comment?

Join YouTube for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.