Life on Our Planet (2023) - HD Scene

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 153

  • @YarbroK
    @YarbroK 10 месяцев назад +45

    As much this show have its flaws, I absolutely love the terror birds sizing each other.

    • @ErickZilla1999
      @ErickZilla1999 9 месяцев назад

      It has flaws?

    • @dolsopolar
      @dolsopolar 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@ErickZilla1999 a lot.

    • @xenoraptor4714
      @xenoraptor4714 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@ErickZilla1999one being the Rex has nothing but JP sound stocks, all JP sounds.

    • @anthonybusch4407
      @anthonybusch4407 7 месяцев назад

      @@ErickZilla1999, Not that many actually, just a few minor flaws and plot holes that nobody cares about.

    • @anthonybusch4407
      @anthonybusch4407 7 месяцев назад

      And ​@@dolsopolar, Not a lot, just some.

  • @kaiju115
    @kaiju115 10 месяцев назад +41

    For F*ck sake, the Terror Birds(I’m assuming this supposed to be Phorusrhacos) did not play second fiddle to Smilodon. Phorusrhacos died out before Smilodon appeared in South America, as for its cousin Titanis, its ancestors migrated from South America to North America and it was doing just fine.

    • @saltator8565
      @saltator8565 9 месяцев назад +1

      This would have to be Titanis, as they were the only large terror bird species to survive to the early Pleistocene

    • @anthonybusch4407
      @anthonybusch4407 7 месяцев назад

      Actually, that’s a clinical mistake, Smilodon and Phorusrhacos did live together in South America, but only the type species, Smilodon populator, lived with Phorusrhacos. Smilodon gracilis and Smilodon fatalis live in North America with Titanis. And in case you haven’t heard, Freeman said that Smilodon cunning was “one” reason why Terror Bird became extinct. That means that it was one out of many reasons. So, BBC’s Prehistoric Park, from 2006, was right about these two Pleistocene titans after all. The Terror Birds evolved when South America was an isolated continent, but then, once it was pushed up closer to North America, the predatory mammals, like the Sabre-Toothed Cats, have come down there and outcompeted the birds, knocking them off their perches. So, again, the Smilodon’s mammalian cunning was “one” of many reasons why the Terror Birds went extinct.

    • @saltator8565
      @saltator8565 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@anthonybusch4407 You're straight up wrong. Phorusrhacos went extinct long before Smilodon reached South America.

    • @anthonybusch4407
      @anthonybusch4407 Месяц назад

      @@saltator8565, Uh, No, You’re straight up wrong.

    • @saltator8565
      @saltator8565 Месяц назад

      @@anthonybusch4407 No facts, no rebuttal, just a moron that can't admit when they are wrong.

  • @jamesdrynan
    @jamesdrynan 10 месяцев назад +33

    From its rudimentary start in the seventies, it's amazing how far CGI has come in this series. Excellent all around!

    • @GMKGoji01
      @GMKGoji01 9 месяцев назад

      CGI was created in the 70's?😮

  • @SuprememeCeratosaurus
    @SuprememeCeratosaurus 10 месяцев назад +43

    All that build up of the intense dance just for em to be turned into smilodon fodder. They could’ve at the very least had both of the smilodons kill it, but nah, apparently terror birds are weak enough for just one according to this show

    • @Ledinosour673
      @Ledinosour673 10 месяцев назад +20

      yeah, and to add insult to injury the narrator says smilodon drove the terror birds into extinction, even though the very species being depicted here (titanis walleri) flies in the face of that idea, since it was a terror bird that succesfully migrated from south america to north america and secured a pretty good spot in the food chain

  • @bettybunbun9664
    @bettybunbun9664 9 месяцев назад +16

    Love how they take the position that Smilodon not only caused the Terror Birds extinction by outcompeting them, but that they literally hunted them as prey! No nuance or thought whatsoever, might as well have had some 12 year old cat fanboy write the script.

    • @Ispeakthetruthify
      @Ispeakthetruthify 9 месяцев назад

      What is so unbelievable about that? These shows are indeed silly, and made for entertainment, but this is probably one of the more valid points made on these types of shows.
      It's no coincidence that terror birds, went into severe decline and eventual extinction, when the large mammalian predators(big cats/canines/bears) entered into South America. It's also no coincidence that terror birds(and other large bird species) only remained on places that were isolated. South America, Australia, Madagascar, New Zealand, various other islands. What did ALL of these places have in common? For tens of millions of years. they had no large placental mammalian predators: No big cats, no large canines, no hyenas, no bears. This allowed large birds to evolve in complete isolation from these predators. It's also no coincidence that around the rest of the world, where large birds had basically dominated the landscape since the extinction of the dinosaurs, that once large mammalian predators appeared...they went extinct. Europe, Asia, Africa, North America...all had large predatory "terror birds" at one time, but with the appearance of said mammalian predators, they went extinct.
      The only safe haven for these types of birds, marsupials, and other types of unique lifeforms...were the isolated continents of South America, Australia, and various islands. And once North and South America became connected, terror birds disappeared rather quickly.
      So yes: Not just Smilodon , and other saber-toothed cats, but also other large mammalian predators, and new large mammalian herbivores that terror birds could not hunt...were responsible for their demise over time. Whether this conflict was direct or indirect, the results were still the same.

    • @bettybunbun9664
      @bettybunbun9664 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@Ispeakthetruthify Terror Birds existed for literally 50 millions years competing against mammals. Many predatory mammals that lived alongside Terror Birds went extinct as well. Does that mean Terror Birds hunted them to extinction?
      If Terror Birds were so inferior how come they survived for 3 million years and had long lasting populations in some parts of North America when these 2 continents united?
      The species of smilodon that came in contact with Terror
      Birds were also far smaller than them. A modern jackal can't kill a secretary bird despite size advantage, but a giant robustly built Terror Bird gets one shotted by some primitive cat? Bullshit.
      Also why would Smilodon hunt a large apex predator as prey when there are much less dangerous animals to kill?

    • @Ispeakthetruthify
      @Ispeakthetruthify 9 месяцев назад

      @@bettybunbun9664 You're getting upset with me, because of the evidence in the fossil record.
      Terror Birds existed and evolved in the splendid isolation of South America. Along with the rest of the South American flora and fauna. It was isolated from the rest of the world for over 60 million years. There were placental mammals that evolved on the South American continent, but the majority of the mammals were marsupials. South America had more marsupials than it's other isolated counterpart, Australia. These were the mammals that the Terror Birds coexisted with for 99% of their existence. They obviously filled a niche that the mammalian predators in their ecosystem couldn't fill. You also saw this in Australia, with large birds and large reptiles(Megalania and land crocodiles), filling the niches that couldn't be filled by mammalian marsupial predators. Which indicates that these marsupial predators, were not as efficient as placental mammalian predators that came to dominate African, North America, and Eurasia.
      The Interchange began to really get going around 3 million years ago. 99% of the species of Terror Birds, were extinct by 2.5 million years ago. That is an EXTREMELY short amount of time, after first contact with various placental mammalian predators that came from North America. Now Titanis made it to North America before the Interchange, and had run of about 3-6 million years, before going extinct. As far as we know, Titanis is the ONLY exception of a Terror Bird, not only moving North successfully, and having a good run competing with placental mammalian predators. But even in the case of Titanis, this was a short run in the evolutionary picture.
      And like I said previously: It wasn't just saber-cats, you had canines, bears, ancestors of modern big cats, and large herbivores that entered South America. All of these new animals spelled doom for Terror Birds in South America. By either hunting them directly, outcompeting them for food, or just disturbing their environment enough to interrupt reproductive processes, and disturb breeding grounds.
      You're getting bent out of shape about Terror Birds not being good enough, but it wasn't just them. South America lost over 50% of it's endemic mammalian population after the Interchange, with over 80% of these mammals being marsupials. It wasn't just the terror birds that were driven to extinction.
      It's not that the Terror Birds were inferior, they were apex animals in their ecosystem. They were just victims of their isolation. All of a sudden, they had to compete with animals that had a FAR wider range of surviving and competing with animals from 3 major connected continents.
      Australia managed to stay isolated longer than South America, hence the reason it still has a portion of it''s unique fauna. Large placental herbivores and carnivores, never made it to Australia naturally. If they had, Australia's unique wildlife would have been driven to extinction long ago. Just look at the havoc the ancestors of the Dingo wreaked on Australia, when they were brought by people a few thousand years ago. Many Australian marsupial predators and prey species, were driven to extinction by the Dingo alone. And more recently, cats, foxes, rabbits, and pigs....have just had catastrophic effects on native Australian wildlife.
      And a jackal may not be able to kill a secretary bird by itself, but a pack of jackals can. That's the main difference between wild canines and wild big cats. A big cat, which is a FAR more efficient solo hunter than wild canine, can definitely take down a Terror Bird. Could the Terror Bird fight back, and kill the cat? Of course. But the fossil record, and history tells us that more often than not: The cat, and various other "invaders" from the North, were too much of a disturbance for the birds to survive.

    • @anthonybusch4407
      @anthonybusch4407 7 месяцев назад

      Well then, that just goes to show that Prehistoric Park, a documentary that came before this one, was right about these two Pleistocene titans after all.

    • @theotheseaeagle
      @theotheseaeagle 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Ispeakthetruthify Titanis, the species shown in the video coexisted with smilodon gracilis in North America for millions of years. Most of the south American species were long since extinct by the time smilodon reached their environment

  • @MrAtrox98
    @MrAtrox98 10 месяцев назад +71

    Behold, a cougar sized species of Smilodon magically taking down what IRL would’ve been a natural predator for it, a grizzly bear sized Titanis. Never mind in the figurative sense, Smilodon gracilis wasn’t even the literal top cat in its habitat, since both Homotherium and Xenosmilus were larger.

    • @TheCriticalCarcharodon
      @TheCriticalCarcharodon 10 месяцев назад +22

      Its hilarious that in reality Smilodon gracilis is so short it only comes up to the terror bird's ankle

    • @Mac14329
      @Mac14329 10 месяцев назад +2

      “Magically”? I don’t see any magic here.

    • @TheCriticalCarcharodon
      @TheCriticalCarcharodon 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@Mac14329 Without magic Titanis would've ripped Smilodon to shreds

    • @Mac14329
      @Mac14329 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheCriticalCarcharodon No. It was already too late when the Titanis saw the Smilodon coming. Also, the Smilodon had company.
      No magic.

    • @TheCriticalCarcharodon
      @TheCriticalCarcharodon 10 месяцев назад +16

      @@Mac14329 I think you missed the part where this is essentially like if a documentary tried pushing that cougars were lion sized and could take down grizzly bears.

  • @cm94returns19
    @cm94returns19 10 месяцев назад +19

    Titanis 1: Im out of here 2:14
    Titanis 2: Where you I'm not done with you 2:19 OH SHIT!!! 2:21

  • @peateargriffin9932
    @peateargriffin9932 10 месяцев назад +11

    Daggum I hate how this ends. Had a beautiful scene just crash’s and burn because muh mammalian bias

  • @Flokiabob311
    @Flokiabob311 9 месяцев назад +9

    I saw this series first and now I’m finally watching Prehistoric Planet. PP is amazing. Really groundbreaking and interesting stuff. And they weren’t afraid to hold back the animals getting eaten or killed by other animals.
    Life on our Planet seems like a cheaper version, but still not bad. I LOVED the scene where Chicxulub came and hit the Earth, but other than that I wasn’t that interested. I thought it was hilarious how they tried to downplay the animal deaths. They prey animals just seemed to fall asleep and let the predators eat them without any resistance 😂. Also, they made the CG animals act too much like humans. I’ve watched enough nature documentaries in my life to know wild creatures do not smile and frown 😂😂😂.
    It’s like they HAD to get Morgan Freeman to do the voiceover because without him they knew they didn’t have much. And on that note, Morgan’s voice sounded strange at times. Almost like it was AI Morgan Freeman 😂

  • @dawning5285
    @dawning5285 10 месяцев назад +11

    A 2m and (maybe over) 150 kg Titanis attacked by, at best, a 1m x 100kg smilodon gracilis.
    Good job Netflix, you immediately loosed against Prehistoric Planet.
    With the cringy "WE MAMMALS ARE THEH BEST" quote too.

  • @frailvoid5844
    @frailvoid5844 9 месяцев назад +7

    I feel this scene would look a lot better if the birds had more prominent shadows

  • @vishnuvardhanduggireddy
    @vishnuvardhanduggireddy 10 месяцев назад +74

    Sabertooth killing terror bird like it's a deer. Not even a fight

    • @KwasiAfriyie-dc5jo
      @KwasiAfriyie-dc5jo 10 месяцев назад +9

      It's more of a Hunt.

    • @jthomas8263
      @jthomas8263 10 месяцев назад +6

      This is Smilodon gracilis, hunting a Terror Birds!

    • @vishnuvardhanduggireddy
      @vishnuvardhanduggireddy 10 месяцев назад +24

      I mean, I don't think a terror bird would go down so easy. There is not even a fight, and sabertooths were specialized killers so would they even risk attacking terror birds. The show overall is not very accurate I feel. Prehistoric Planet did a great job In portraying creatures

    • @daddypool4474
      @daddypool4474 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@vishnuvardhanduggireddy not even gonna bring that terror birds that coexisted bodied smilodons with at least 3 times the size. They were much smaller cause stuff like titanis and iirc homotherium were true apex predators while smilodons hid in their shadows as comparably smaller game hunters

    • @Liksterr97
      @Liksterr97 10 месяцев назад +7

      Y’all act like the bird was paying attention…..I’m pretty sure all animals that got caught lacking ended up as prey to something else. It happens- just because it’s not in the fossil record doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.

  • @RomulusTheWild6693
    @RomulusTheWild6693 10 месяцев назад +19

    Fun fact terror birds did manage to survive another 3 million years after the ismuse of panama joined the continents so despite being ultimately out competed they were still successful untill about 1.5 million years ago

    • @Ledinosour673
      @Ledinosour673 10 месяцев назад +2

      they were NOT outcompeted, for frick's sake they succesfully managed to *SPREAD* into North America, what actually got them was the climate change!

    • @bkjeong4302
      @bkjeong4302 10 месяцев назад +17

      They weren’t outcompeted. Their extinction was due to other reasons, namely climatic changes leading to habitat loss.

  • @daliborjovanovic510
    @daliborjovanovic510 10 месяцев назад +14

    Could a Smilodon gracilis potentially take down a Titanis? Yes, I can believe that. Would it be this ridiculously easy? Nope. Giant flightless birds are more than capable of fighting back. Even regular prey animals for big cats like deer or zebra can and will fight back. Would Titanis be this comedically oblivious to another predator standing right behind it? I also highly doubt it.

  • @PSDavison727
    @PSDavison727 10 месяцев назад +73

    I like the terror birds design
    I like the sounds they make
    However
    I highly doubt a single Smilodon could
    Easily take down a terror bird like shown here

    • @TheMightyN
      @TheMightyN 10 месяцев назад +9

      If a Lion is gutsy to hunt Water Buffalo alone, bet on a big cat's ingenuity to overpower a Phorusrhacid

    • @PSDavison727
      @PSDavison727 10 месяцев назад +28

      @@TheMightyN I mean I doubt that this Smilodon can take down the terror bird with such ease
      It’s shown again but even dumber
      When a cave lion takes down a teenage mammoth with such ease

    • @TheMightyN
      @TheMightyN 10 месяцев назад

      @@PSDavison727Exactly how tall is the Mammoth? ruclips.net/video/F0TfkBlzk7A/видео.htmlsi=BczAfICX2arYja57

    • @spinosaurusstriker
      @spinosaurusstriker 10 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@TheMightyN a smilodon is not a lion and a titanis is not a buffalo

    • @TheCriticalCarcharodon
      @TheCriticalCarcharodon 10 месяцев назад +15

      This documentary has a major case of big cat bias. In reality it would be the terror bird ambushing and taking down the cat and not the other way around. They had to upsize smilodon in order to make this scene possible.

  • @SK-ij6ng
    @SK-ij6ng 10 месяцев назад +14

    according to this Life on Our Planet: If u bite, it'll fall down and dead

    • @TheCriticalCarcharodon
      @TheCriticalCarcharodon 10 месяцев назад +7

      Especially if you're several times larger than the thing biting you

    • @SK-ij6ng
      @SK-ij6ng 10 месяцев назад

      @@TheCriticalCarcharodon yea😂

  • @DiarrheaIsUnbreakable
    @DiarrheaIsUnbreakable 10 месяцев назад +17

    The portrayal of Titanis is so disrespectful

    • @TheCriticalCarcharodon
      @TheCriticalCarcharodon 10 месяцев назад +11

      If you have to oversize an animal by 3x in order to get the desired encounter between it and another species, you should probably realize that's not how things would've gone in reality.

    • @Oinker-Sploinker
      @Oinker-Sploinker 10 месяцев назад

      @@TheCriticalCarcharodon so angry calm down little fella it's just a show. lol

    • @Ledinosour673
      @Ledinosour673 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Oinker-Sploinker it's a show meant to be educational, this myth is about to spread like wildfire because of it, so shut up

    • @somerandomdudeonline637
      @somerandomdudeonline637 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@Oinker-Sploinkercalm down Little fella it's someone saying their opinion

  • @frailvoid5844
    @frailvoid5844 9 месяцев назад +3

    2:26 why does the feline in back look like it's running in place like a glitching game character lol

  • @GuestAccount-gs2uo
    @GuestAccount-gs2uo Месяц назад

    The first dancers of prehistory....

  • @Deutalios818
    @Deutalios818 10 месяцев назад +7

    That is not how birds move

    • @nigerjohnson4977
      @nigerjohnson4977 10 месяцев назад +1

      So how do they then

    • @Deutalios818
      @Deutalios818 10 месяцев назад

      @@nigerjohnson4977
      Not like that.
      Just look at footage of ostriches and cassowaries and you should see now these types of bird should move like.

    • @spinosaurusstriker
      @spinosaurusstriker 10 месяцев назад

      @@nigerjohnson4977 see ostriches and other similar birds, they don't vibrate like videogame characters when they emite sound.

  • @Jayy997
    @Jayy997 10 месяцев назад +5

    The CGI in this is hilariously bad compared with Prehistoric Planet

  • @abubakartayyab22
    @abubakartayyab22 10 месяцев назад +4

    Where can I watch it in streaming?

    • @FlixVybz
      @FlixVybz  10 месяцев назад +5

      Netflix

  • @jonathanroberts-bj7yl
    @jonathanroberts-bj7yl Месяц назад +1

    No Dodo birds in this.

  • @nathanalvarado289
    @nathanalvarado289 10 месяцев назад +14

    Show was misleading

    • @naillik1517
      @naillik1517 10 месяцев назад

      Why?

    • @BugsandBiology
      @BugsandBiology 10 месяцев назад +20

      @@naillik1517Smilodon did not drive terror birds into extinction, and they’re greatly oversized in this video. The only Smilodon species that lived alongside terror birds was S. gracilis, which was much smaller.

  • @brianphilbrook5262
    @brianphilbrook5262 9 месяцев назад +1

    Really taking some liberties aren’t we

  • @homieoliver680
    @homieoliver680 10 месяцев назад +2

    Why was this edit out of netflix?

  • @Spenceham-km3nv
    @Spenceham-km3nv 9 месяцев назад +1

    you know what guys you could all use the bald eagle DNA to fill in the gaps of there genome to resurrect the terror birds from being extinct and you all can use the puma DNA to fill in the gaps of the genomes of the saber toothed cats to save them from being extinct as well too

  • @_robustus_
    @_robustus_ 9 месяцев назад

    O my, sabre-tooth jaguars!

  • @sumirsookdeo9443
    @sumirsookdeo9443 9 месяцев назад +3

    That's a the suggestion for the birds going extinct? Lol wth what type of scientific research is this?

  • @KMDragonS
    @KMDragonS 9 месяцев назад +1

    Sabertooth: what do you know a dinner and a show

  • @ryanmatthewfrancisco5448
    @ryanmatthewfrancisco5448 9 месяцев назад +1

    The Lord Of The Rings The Return Of The King And The Life On Our Planet

  • @Zjelezyaka-antion
    @Zjelezyaka-antion 10 месяцев назад +4

    смилодон повалил животное весом 300 фунтов как трепичную игрушку, а птица будто не сопротивлялась. в реальности мне кажеться смилодон бы получил не одну травму от когте и клюва этого животного. мне не нравиться это шоу, очень много ошибак в плане поведенчиских основ у животных и в плане нереалистичной физики.

  • @holliegould3463
    @holliegould3463 10 месяцев назад

    me: i wonder if all this loud noise is gonna attract any unwan-" 🐈

    • @Ledinosour673
      @Ledinosour673 9 месяцев назад +1

      the writers: *hehe mammal bias go brrrrr*

  • @josephburns8400
    @josephburns8400 9 месяцев назад

    Those fkn birds n their beaks scare me more than the cats!

  • @DariyonLandellHycheKrattTCl
    @DariyonLandellHycheKrattTCl 10 месяцев назад +2

    I love Sabertooth Design looks more like a Clouded Leopard.

    • @canonbehenna612
      @canonbehenna612 10 месяцев назад +1

      I was thinking jaguar

    • @SarahGraceBennett
      @SarahGraceBennett 9 месяцев назад +1

      Fun fact: clouded leopards aren't leopards, but rather the closest living relatives of saber-toothed cats

    • @DariyonLandellHycheKrattTCl
      @DariyonLandellHycheKrattTCl 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@SarahGraceBennett Correct, Modern Day Sabertooth Cat

    • @blueblaze27
      @blueblaze27 9 месяцев назад

      @@SarahGraceBennett no? clouded leopards just look like saber-toothed cats. the saber-tooth cats belong to a separate lineage of cats and aren't closely related to any living cat species

  • @kellywalker1664
    @kellywalker1664 9 месяцев назад

    Birb got sirbed.

  • @MasterKen1803
    @MasterKen1803 10 месяцев назад +1

    So theory about Terror Birds being extinct because of Smilodons is true after all

    • @anthonybusch4407
      @anthonybusch4407 7 месяцев назад

      Indeed, Prehistoric Park is the holder of that theory, and inspired Life On Our Planet to do the same.

    • @abbaparaja1906
      @abbaparaja1906 6 месяцев назад +1

      Wrong titanis are large powerful predator with string pecking order that would destroy those pussy cats into pulp and terror birds still going strong during the pleistocene and the saber tooth that coexisted with the terror birds the smilodons gracillis are much smaller and would never try to take on a powerful terror bird.

  • @aaronnava2985
    @aaronnava2985 9 месяцев назад

    At the end when the bird watches the other one get eaten it's like bye falicia

  • @-bielle2985
    @-bielle2985 9 месяцев назад +4

    This is embarrassingly bad and inaccurate 🤦‍♂️