lego cruise ship sinks youtube

lego cruise ship sinks youtube

lego cruise ship sinking

Lego Cruise Ship Sinks Youtube

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Lego OrcaJaws LegoJaws WeregonnaneedabiggerboatJaws BoatMovie JawsThe MovieEpic LegoAmazing LegoLego FunForwardBoat - Jaws theme? At first I was hoping someone had done Gillian's IslandLego BientôtLego RmsLego TeamTitanicLego TitanicKid BuildsBuilds Giant000 BricksLego BricksForwardKid Builds Perfect Replica Of The Titanic Using Only LEGO [Video] - This kid, assuming his name is Lasse Ankersø, used 30,000 LEGO bricks to complete this insanely intricate and perfect replica of the Titanic. Mar 05 - Mar 12 2017 Mar 26 - Apr 02 2017 Apr 16 - Apr 23 2017 Apr 23 - Apr 30 2017 May 14 - May 21 2017 May 21 - May 28 2017 May 28 - Jun 04 2017 View Details Nemo II Mar 16 - Mar 19 2017 Apr 05 - Apr 09 2017 Apr 16 - Apr 19 2017 Apr 19 - Apr 23 2017 May 03 - May 07 2017 May 14 - May 17 2017 May 17 - May 21 2017 May 28 - May 31 2017 May 31 - Jun 04 2017 View Details Nemo III Other users came searching for: +1 3058 487 326




+1 6042 439 774 +593 2 2 508 800/ Thanks for sending your message! We'll get back to you shortly. There was a problem sending your message. Please complete all the fields in the form before sending.A teenager recreated iconic moments in history from the dawn of civilisation to the modern era - and did it all using Lego.Morgan Spence, from Kilbarchan, Renfrewshire, spent four weeks making a stop motion video with the toy figures in his bedroom.The 16-year-old directed the two-minute film to show prehistoric cave paintings, the assassination of Caesar, the defeat of the Spanish Armada and the fall of the Berlin Wall. Labour of love: Morgan Spence spent four weeks making a stop motion video with the toy figures The 16-year-old directed the two-minute film to show scenes from the Athenian Democracy in 500BC Morgan, who has made Lego flicks for years, accumulated more than a million views on a video last yearMorgan, who has been making stop motion Lego clips for years, previously accumulated more than a million YouTube views for his Brick Flicks video featuring scenes from Hollywood films.




For 'Brick History', Morgan once again used models and scenes already made by Lego masterbuilder Warren Elsmore to create his movie.He said: 'Warren contacted me saying he had history models and I jumped on the opportunity to be able to use them.'After the success of Brick Flicks I wanted to stick to a formula that appealed to lots of people. Scenes from the assassination of Caesar in 44BC were included in the clip showing iconic moments in history The schoolboy included scenes from the Viking Invasion in 793 to feature in his stop motion flick The defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 featured in the 'Brick History' video created by the animation expert'I thought they would make a really nice film. I went over in October and picked up ones he had made and took them to my bedroom studio.'I chose the most iconic scenes and got to bring to life these incredible model once again.'Morgan, a high school pupil, made each scene 10 seconds long and added music and sound effects.The video features 14 historic moments from 15,000BC to 1989.




Big dreams: Morgan hopes to one day work in TV or film and has already started a course in filmmaking For 'Brick History', Morgan used models and scenes already made by Lego masterbuilder Warren Elsmore Morgan got into stop motion movie making in 2011 after creating a film for a WW2 project at school Prehistoric cave paintings 15,000BCAthenian Democracy 500BCThe First Silk Road Bedouin Tribes 206BCAssassination of Caesar 44BCViking Invasion 793ADDefeat of the Spanish Armada 1588Brunel builds the Great Western Railway 1833Sir Isaac Newton's Theory of Gravity 1867Suffragette Movement 1903RMS Titanic sinks 1912First 'Talkie' film 1927Martin Luther King 'I Have A Dream' 1963Apollo 11 Moon Landings 1969Fall of the Berlin Wall 1989 'All the models were quite challenging to start with. The Titanic was challenging because I couldn't make the boat sink - I had to raise up the water,' said Morgan.'So I had thousands and thousands of little pieces pulling up on top of the model - it made an absolute mess but the effect seemed to work really well.'The Martin Luther King 'I Have A Dream' speech is such an iconic moment and instantly recognisable.




It was very difficult to change heads to get the speaking effect.'Each one had to be individually changed. That worked particularly well.'I really enjoyed shooting all the models. They were so colourful and such a broad range.'Morgan now plans to take time off from his hobby as he prepares to sit his exams this year.He said: 'Film making is just like a hobby but I like to do it regularly. I'll be glad to have a break - maybe in the summer I'll pick it up again.' Morgan said that The Titanic was challenging to create because he couldn't make the boat sink The secondary school pupil made each scene 10 seconds long and added music and sound effects Morgan now plans to take time off from his Lego hobby as he prepares to sit his exams this yearThe Lego fan got into stop motion movie making in 2011 after creating a film for a WW2 project at school.He then started combining filmmaking with Lego and soon branched into commercial work.As well as his classic film scenes video, Morgan has also created clips of the Seven Wonders of the World and a music video for DJ Paul Oakenfold.He hopes one day to work in TV or film and has already started a course in filmmaking at the Royal Conservatoire in Glasgow.




Morgan said the Martin Luther King 'I Have A Dream' speech is instantly recognisable as an iconic speech One very small step for man: Scenes from the Apollo 11 Moon Landings in 1969 featured in the flick The stop motion Lego video concluded with iconic scenes from the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989Don't miss an episode—subscribe here! (Images and footage provided by our friends at Shutterstock. This transcript comes courtesy of Nerdfighteria Wiki.) Hi, I'm John Green, welcome to my salon, this is mental_floss on YouTube, and... 1. Did you know that every cruise ship contains a morgue? Every year, about 200 people die on cruise ships, so the ships need a place to store the bodies. There are typically some body bags and a room with 6-10 refrigerated storage units, because, you know, if you die, just to be clear, the cruise is not turning around. You might be dead, but grandma's still going to Venice! Anyway, that's the first of many weird things aboard cruise ships that I'm gonna share with you in this video today.




2. Many cruises have a brig or jail cell, although it's really just a small room and you have to do something very bad to get locked up in there.  Depending on what the offender did, they may be arrested at the next port of call, or just returned to their cabin and put on home arrest. 3. The MSC Divina cruise offers aqua cycling lessons, so there are pools that contain actual underwater bikes for exercise. I don't wanna generalize, but those pools also probably contain norovirus. 4. Any ship that has over 50 passengers is required by law to contain a hospital and at least one doctor. This is primarily for minor issues, though, like, you know, norovirus. If there's a serious medical emergency, helicopters can be sent to airlift passengers to a hospital. 5. Many cruises, including Royal Caribbean and Carnival, sell really expensive pieces of art onboard. In fact, paintings and prints by artists like Picasso, Rembrandt, and Dali have been sold on cruise ships. 6. In addition like, the rock climbing and swimming, most cruise ships also have really quiet spaces, like libraries.




In fact, a few ships employ full-time librarians to manage their library rooms. 7. On a few cruises from the Norwegian cruise line, there are ice bars. The bars provide coats and gloves for the 25 guests that are allowed in at one time. The room is rarely warmer than 17 degrees Fahrenheit, and boy, is all that ice and coolant a good use of our world's resources. 8. A few Royal Caribbean ships contain a 23-foot-tall glass chamber, which you can enter to feel like you're skydiving. In the chamber, there's an upward flowing wind of over 100 miles per hour, so you get lifted off the ground. 9. I guess Royal Caribbean is really the brand for daredevils, because they also have ziplines on their ships Oasis of the Seas and Allure of the Seas. They're 82 feet long and 9 decks tall. 10. Those two ships, along with a few others, also have surf simulators, so people can learn how to surf while 34,000 gallons of water pump through the machine per minute. 11. There's also a hand-carved carousel on the Allure of the Seas.




Basically, you're not gonna get bored there. You might get norovirus, but you won't get bored. 12. Many cruise ships host regular Alcoholics Anonymous meetings for passengers. You might not realize it, because they're often announced as a 'Friends of Bill W.' meeting. He was the co-founder of AA. 13. Because people can't spend a seven-day cruise without a desperate need to go ice skating, some modern cruises are equipped with ice rinks. Some even feature ice shows. 14. There are sometimes dogs aboard cruise ships, service dogs have been allowed for years, but as of 2013, some cruises have added kennels for pets. You can't bring your pet into your cabin, but you are allowed to go play with it in the kennel. 15. Norwegian Cruise Lines makes it a point to celebrate many holidays, including Festivus from Seinfeld.  According to their website, "We can't promise a Festivus pole, but we will have gingerbread-making contests and special menu items." 16. On the MSC Divina, there's a Formula One race car simulator.




It's a single seat car with video screens all around so the guest can get the full race car experience, except for the smell of the exhaust. 17. The MSC Divina also contains a 4D cinema, promising a virtual reality experience that is not just 3D through glasses, but also has things like vibrating seats and wind gusts. 18. And there are some Royal Caribbean cruises that have robot bartenders in what's known as the Bionic Bar. The robots are programmed to get liquor from the right bottle and then add it to a cocktail mix. Of course, they always add the exact right amount, which, you know, on a cruise ship is never quite enough. I do genuinely like cruises, but boy do they under-serve. 19. Anyway, some cruise ships also have blind date programs, in which people can be set up on dates. Even weirder, some have what's known as a gentleman host program, in which women are taken to dinner and dancing by single, male employees of the cruise ship. 20. Speaking of things that make me shudder, there's a ropes course on the Norwegian Breakaway cruise, it has over 40 elements, including a plank that brings you eight feet over the ship's side.




And underneath the ropes course, there's minigolf, so that our descendants can look back at us and be disgusted by our excess. 21. There's a cruise ship named The World which travels—wait for it—the world, and sells condos onboard. There are 165 total residences, including apartments and studio apartments.  Some live on the cruise full-time, others just hop on and off for vacations. 22. Speaking of living on cruises, after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, students at Tulane University in New Orleans moved onto cruise ships for temporary housing. Some professors also moved onboard so they could keep teaching. 23. Royal Caribbean boasts that it has the first food truck at sea. It's called the Seaplex Dog House and it serves hot dogs. You can find it over by the bumper cars, because, you know, why not? 24. And finally, I return to my salon to tell you that some people choose cruise ships over nursing homes when they reach a certain age. One woman who does this, Lee Wachtstetter, says that it costs about $164,000 per year, which is comparable with a fancy retirement home, and it has better service and tons of programs, like dances and entertainment. 

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