Rockettes Mesmerize The Audience With Amazingly Slow Toy Soldiers Falling Down
There is something oddly pleasing to see a bunch of objects fall down in a domino-like effect. Whether it is actual <a href="https://rumble.com/v359e7-dominoes-clash-of-clans.html" target="_blank">domino tiles</a> or something like toy soldiers, seeing them fall in perfect succession is almost spine-tingling. Many have attempted to perform such a feat, but only one dance group has manage to practice and perfect the move - the famed Rockettes!
The dance group has become almost synonymous with Christmas and the Nutcracker ballet. But even if you have never actually been to the ballet to watch the 200-year-old classic Christmas performance, the Rockettes will literally enthrall you with their own!
Dressed like <a href="https://rumble.com/v4uw8t-worlds-largest-collection-of-toy-soldiers-auctioned.html" target="_blank">toy soldiers</a>, with the recognizable white pants, red shirts and plumed hats, the girls are lined up and facing the prop cannon. Their leader give them the ‘cue’ by blowing towards them and one by one all 36 dancers begin to fall backwards into each other’s arms.
Now mind you that this is no ordinary feat and they don’t just topple down. Instead, like is an agonizingly slow trust fall, the girls fall into each other’s arms, up until a point where about 10 of them are propped on one another. They go as slow as the music allows them and the audience is in a trance!
What really made their collapse on stage so fascinating was that not only did the girls look like actual toy soldiers, but the fall was so realistic, it almost got us fooled, too! Simply brilliant!
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Front seat on Disney World's Seven Dwarfs Mine Train - POV
Front seat on Disney World's Seven Dwarfs Mine Train - POV
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Insane Close-Up Zoom Of Jupiter And Its Moons
Do you like the Moon? Are you curious about space, planets, and stars? Well, if you are, then we have a lot of thing in stock because we too love everything related to astronomy. The Universe has billions of galaxies, each providing millions or billions of stars. The space among the stars and galaxies is principally blank. However, even areas far from stars and planets include distributed scraps of dust or a few hydrogen atoms per cubic centimeter. Space is likewise loaded with the transmission, magnetic fields, and high energy particles.
It is an unknown area for most humans we believe that a lot of you have dreamed at least once going to space. Haven't you? Well, with technology these days, we might not be able to go to space, but at least we can see the Moon from close and some other planets. To make it more clear what we are talking about, check out the video, and prepare to be amazed!
You won't believe this unreal zoom-in on Jupiter and four of its moons using a Canon SX60. Amazing! Craters on the Moon, wildlife from afar, your child's face on a crowded school stage... the PowerShot SX60 HS camera gives you the reach to capture it all. How amazing is this footage?
Have you ever seen how wonderful Jupiter looks? It's really an amazing planet and thanks to this footage we can see a little bit of how it really looks. Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and by a wide margin the biggest mass object in the close planetary system of the various planets. <a href="https://rumble.com/v4ydvv-five-things-you-didnt-know-about-jupiter.html" target="_blank">Jupiter</a> is double the size of the various planets consolidated.
Jupiter's climate was additionally observed to be very fierce. It is likewise realized that Jupiter turns quicker than any extraordinary planet. This demonstrates Jupiter's breezes are driven in enormous part by its inward warmth as opposed to from Sun based contribution as on Earth.
Because we are really amazed by today's technology, we are going to show you another close-up and this time is from the Moon. This <a href="https://rumble.com/v63cf5-close-up-of-the-moon-captured-from-the-ground.html" target="_blank">close-up of the Moon</a> it’s mesmerizing!
Jesse Schermann surprised himself when he captured this clip. The New Zealand native was playing with his Nikon P-900 camera when he decided to zoom in on the Moon. Surprisingly the camera's zoom allowed Jesse to see the fine details on the Moon's surface including the visible craters. Wow!
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How My Garden Grows
Daily pictures of my garden in Murrells Inlet, SC. April 12 - May 28
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Eclipse August 2017 - Murrells Inlet, SC
Time lapse of the 2017 Solar Eclipse, taken from my backyard in Murrells Inlet, SC.
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AOC's Climate Change Proof - Hot in the Summer
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's proof of climate change - hot in the summer.
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