Company overview
C21 Digital Screenings hosts a monthly ‘Hot Properties’ screenings event on the platform to help connect programme suppliers and content buyers. Check out the latest shows from the world’s leading suppliers.
Programming Profile
01-04-2021
As spring arrives and the world gets a look at what life may be like after Covid, the world of production is preparing with a variety of factual shows, drama series, formats and kids’ shows.
While March’s Hot Properties saw a trend towards commending the efforts of frontline health staff, April’s offering contains four factual shows with a focus on survival and danger.
UVic news - University of Victoria
uvic.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uvic.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Filming firsts: Capturing wildlife behaviour that s brand new to science
cbc.ca - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbc.ca Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Monarch butterflies use steady, strong air currents to reach their wintering grounds in Mexico.
Social Sharing
CBC ·
Wind drives of nature’s most epic migrations - Wild Canadian Weather
The Nature of Things2 months ago
5:09 comments
Every fall, steady, predictable winds assist one of the world s most spectacular migrations. In
Wild Canadian Weather, we follow a female monarch butterfly as she sets off on an epic journey in early fall, all with the help of a good breeze.
Each autumn, monarchs take to the skies rising up to 1,200 m to reach strong, steady air currents to propel them south 4,000 km south to Mexico.
The Prairie Storm Chasers have turned a passion into a life-saving mission.
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CBC ·
These storm chasers track tornadoes in the Dominator: Wild Canadian Weather
The Nature of Things2 months ago
4:29
A passion for the weather fuels the Prairie Storm Chasers who drive around in an aerodynamic vehicle that looks as if it belongs to Darth Vader, and issue warnings to the public.4:29 comments
Every year, about 80 tornadoes touch down in Canada. These devastating winds are spawned from supercells, massive spinning storms that form when hot summer air breaks into the cold atmosphere.
While satellites are often used to forecast the weather it can be impossible to see tornadoes this way the clouds are too thick. So, the only way to get reliable tornado warnings is to get close.