Personally I think these older educational films had more value than the stuff that is produced now days. It was kept simple but yet very informative. Thanks for preserving these classics that otherwise would have been lost years ago.
Agreed. We have major generational gaps in our data and these videos Bridge sooooo much info that it helps me understand how and why we are here. We have what we take for granted because of what came before us and every generation seems to lose a couple paramount chapters.
This is really neat. My grandfather worked his entire life for Standard Oil. When this film was made he was 49 and had been with the company at least 29 years already.
Years ago I was dumpster diving and found about 40 bound books from Esso oilways magazines, I kept 4 of them and got rid of most of them on Craigslist I only have 2 left super informative magazines mine are all from the 40s during the war effort wish I had the others i read them regularly!
The word 'additive' was doing a lot of work in the 3rd quarter of this, and I loved the narrator's pronunciation of 'temp-ra-choor' and especially 'vacu-um'. Good to have these films still around.
I guess Im asking randomly but does anybody know of a trick to get back into an Instagram account?? I stupidly lost my account password. I love any tips you can offer me
@Terrance Avery I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im trying it out now. I see it takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
As a young engineering student in 1988 i had a course in tribology, the study of lubrication. The excitement of viscosity changes with temperature, and the study of boundary lubrication additives was almost too much excitement for a young man!
I've been rebuilding automatic transmissions 47 years its absolutely amazing how much the difference is in modern technology has changed the way i do my business and I honestly cannot complain 😮
These are so great. The music is just like the old cartoons. These help me sleep sometimes. They’re not boring, I quite enjoy them. The music is just soothing,
Compared to today, this is a topnotch high quality informative educational film. Whereelse can you obtain an almost educational level understanding of the components in crude oil, how and why it's refined into various useful products. It's a tenner......10/10.
Interesting film of what is done to crude oil to make it usable in machinery... But the cartoons seem silly... Late 1940's classic footage... The. Scenes of the Lockheed Constelation and the Steam trains are extremely cool...
Pretty sure the announcer is Ken Carpenter. He's best known as Bing Crosby's announcer. But folks my age probably remember him as the voice for Kraft dinner commercials.
Invisible platelets of slipery oil that heats up and grip to the clutches and then give way for the relieve of the clutches from the grip give a smooth shift is amazing I've been rebuilding automatic transmissions 47 years ❤
Exactly. When the grease fittings go unattended on a 60’s era automobile you can have major suspension problems. You can find yourself without transportation for weeks.
Thank you for saving old films like this one. I love that narrator voice typical for the time. Did people speak differently in the good old days? Or is it just the recording technique from the time?
It's pro-fossil fuels. Produced by one of those eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeevil corporations out to ruin the climate and destroy the ozone layer! NOT politically correct in the Age of Woke.
@ceevee89fly i think that is because archiving studios need some method of generating money. they sell these for documentary makers and remove the bar.
The funny thing is some of the refinery establishing shots in the film have probably been referenced in a USCSB video...because they didn't change out the pipes in the proceeding 60 years.
Here's the issue: Tens of thousands of films similar to this one have been lost forever -- destroyed -- and many others are at risk. Our company preserves these precious bits of history one film at a time. How do we afford to do that? By selling them as stock footage to documentary filmmakers and broadcasters. If we did not have a counter, we could not afford to post films like these online, and no films would be preserved. It's that simple. So we ask you to bear with the watermark and timecodes. In the past we tried many different systems including placing our timer at the bottom corner of our videos. What happened? Unscrupulous TH-cam users downloaded our vids, blew them up so the timer was not visible, and re-posted them as their own content! We had to use content control to have the videos removed and shut down these channels. It's hard enough work preserving these films and posting them, without having to spend precious time dealing with policing thievery -- and not what we devoted ourselves to do. Love our channel and want to support what we do? You can help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
@@jasonligo895 It's Ken Carpenter narrating the film. He also narrated the first in this series, "Gasoline's Amazing Molecules" aka "Inside Story of Modern Gasoline" as the carbon atom.
This video really shows that oil isn’t just oil, it’s liquid science, especially modern synthetic oils. However the elimination of zddp did cause the oil to lose its ability to create a phosphate layer on high stress components such as cam lobes.
A hydrocarbon singing about it's use when it was alive and is the result of the great oxygenation event which left a huge band of iron spanning the globe, this hydrocarbon was at one point a algae bloom that decided to convert hydrogen sulphide and sunlight into energy and a by product of oxygen which started iron sulphides to rust out of solution in the sea kill themselves in the process, also the refining process split is called soluble and non soluble oil
The aging of oil wasn’t addressed. If I don’t change the oil in my car for a year or more, because I haven’t driven it much, does the oil need to be changed?
Yes as it’s contaminated by combustion and the additives will break down Modern oils have additives for plastic engine parts to keep them from cracking. They don’t last more than a year in a working engine
Hello Sir my name is Hossam I'm working as marketing manager at lubricant factory in UAE 🇦🇪 I want ask your permission if I can use your videos for arabica to my arabica speakers
Ask a stupid question, get a stupid answer. Yes the film maybe old, but mostly works the same way at any refinery, just newer technology producing as much as 87 gallons of gasoline from 100 gallons of sweet crude oil. These chains of hydrocarbons are 8-9 molecules long, so under pressure, longer molecules are “fractured” to produce more product. Stuff you did not learn in tax payer free school or college where you would have paid lots of money to have them lye to you or under educate by omission.
@@deankay4434 Let me let you in in a small fact, I own 11,200 common shares of an oil company by the name of Exxon Mobile, you've got the wrong person, pal. How's that for stupid?
🔰🇺🇸 I simply love these old documentaries. The singing oil molecules are awesome 👏 - Say ‘Mr. Hydrocarbon’ to an ‘environmentalist’ or a ‘New Green Deal’ person and they’ll throw a hissy-fit; the thing is though, they use all these products every day !
Oil needs to be refined on the whole to suit this purpose rather then to create more pollution as when it runs out what will we use for lubricant let alone energy? Replace it as a energy but use it for a lubricant.
Now look back then it,, oil was the godly sent miracle to man but now a scene of obscene maliciousness meant to deprive thee of thy will to emote or simply egress. But why may we ask has it come to this? When this miracle of gosh was all thy present already primarily.
Because knowing about outdated oil refining techniques will help her govern better right? Why does the right hate ms Cortez so very much? Are you all so stuck in the 1950’s that an intelligent woman with an opinion can upset you so much that you will comment about her in a 50 year old yt vid about oil?
1949 and they had additives?? My Father took out the dip stick on his 10 year old 39 Chevrolet and said "look at that oil son, just as green as the day I put it in", There did not appear to be any detergents or dispersants in that period, Engines still acquired a coating of "shellac'" like stuff in the rocker box.
yeah, if I remember right the very first API standard was SA, which contains no additives whatsoever, before moving onto SB in 1930. very likely a bunch of SA was still around back then though
@@adoreslaurel 91 is 87 if I remember right, which is indeed regular in most of the country. I believe 98 is our 93 which is the highest you can typically easily find
@@cpufreak101 Thanks for that, I like the old story of the Englishman who pulled into get some "Gas" and the attendant said "Regular?" and the customer said "Yes, I am actually, but thanks for asking".
Basically a interesting subject - only, what was wrong with those film makers in the post war era? They put cartonn characters into everything, as if the expected audience are 7 year olds. And when you think it cannot get any worse - they start singing as well! :)
We have been trying to get rid of that greasy orange turd, but the less educated folks of my homeland seem to love him more with every lie filled tweet or ignorant statement out of his gaping word hole.
It's to stop people stealing the footage without paying Periscope for it's licensing. Yes they may not be the creator or owner of the content, but it's existence online in a convenient medium (and removal from obscurity) is owed to their work and effort and it does not come free.
ere's the issue: Tens of thousands of films similar to this one have been lost forever -- destroyed -- and many others are at risk. Our company preserves these precious bits of history one film at a time. How do we afford to do that? By selling them as stock footage to documentary filmmakers and broadcasters. If we did not have a counter, we could not afford to post films like these online, and no films would be preserved. It's that simple. So we ask you to bear with the watermark and timecodes. In the past we tried many different systems including placing our timer at the bottom corner of our videos. What happened? Unscrupulous TH-cam users downloaded our vids, blew them up so the timer was not visible, and re-posted them as their own content! We had to use content control to have the videos removed and shut down these channels. It's hard enough work preserving these films and posting them, without having to spend precious time dealing with policing thievery -- and not what we devoted ourselves to do. Love our channel and want to support what we do? You can help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
@@PeriscopeFilm that's funny, I've been watching these Periscope documentary videos for MONTHS and never even noticed the counter! I guess I am so enthralled with the content that I failed to notice ❤
Personally I think these older educational films had more value than the stuff that is produced now days. It was kept simple but yet very informative. Thanks for preserving these classics that otherwise would have been lost years ago.
yeah I love these, but do you have an examples of "stuff produced now days" that you don't like?
@@KarlMarcus8468 🔰🇺🇸 Yea, like 95% of the garbage produced these days.
Agreed. We have major generational gaps in our data and these videos Bridge sooooo much info that it helps me understand how and why we are here. We have what we take for granted because of what came before us and every generation seems to lose a couple paramount chapters.
Right!! Now days they are too worried about inclusiveness. It's disgraceful.
Exactly. Gets straight to the point and moves on.
These old films are great
This is more interesting than 99.99% of what's on tv.
TV is to politically correct today I don't watch anything on TV
This is really neat. My grandfather worked his entire life for Standard Oil. When this film was made he was 49 and had been with the company at least 29 years already.
Years ago I was dumpster diving and found about 40 bound books from Esso oilways magazines, I kept 4 of them and got rid of most of them on Craigslist I only have 2 left super informative magazines mine are all from the 40s during the war effort wish I had the others i read them regularly!
I could watch these videos all day. Thanks for uploading!
Glad you like them! Consider becoming a channel member th-cam.com/video/ODBW3pVahUE/w-d-xo.html
Every once in a while I'll notice the music, which is really adds to the whole effect
The word 'additive' was doing a lot of work in the 3rd quarter of this, and I loved the narrator's pronunciation of 'temp-ra-choor' and especially 'vacu-um'. Good to have these films still around.
Yes it is, and thank you for asking. As a matter of fact young man, it is soo clean, you can lick the ground under the refinery!
Yes, now they worlds leader in oil production. This leads to oil, petrol, diesel, lubricants and plastics. You’re welcome!
I guess Im asking randomly but does anybody know of a trick to get back into an Instagram account??
I stupidly lost my account password. I love any tips you can offer me
@Milo Hugo Instablaster :)
@Terrance Avery I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im trying it out now.
I see it takes a while so I will reply here later with my results.
As a young engineering student in 1988 i had a course in tribology, the study of lubrication. The excitement of viscosity changes with temperature, and the study of boundary lubrication additives was almost too much excitement for a young man!
From the Greek 'tribo', meaning 'I rub' or 'to rub' . . . loosely, the study of things which rub.
@@markreeter6227 p
I’m enthusiastic about lubrication.
Gotta love the lyrics at the end .
Amazing how much was already known and developed then, yet today's lubricants would probably have been a marvel to them.
Almost nothing changed from 1949 except of hungry for money and trying to kill auto industry.
I've been rebuilding automatic transmissions 47 years its absolutely amazing how much the difference is in modern technology has changed the way i do my business and I honestly cannot complain 😮
These are so great. The music is just like the old cartoons. These help me sleep sometimes. They’re not boring, I quite enjoy them. The music is just soothing,
A very good education video created on long time before with good visualization... Salute to all creaters...
We know the art of story telling is lost when we don't see anymore oil molecule 'heros'.
Periscope is just simply awesome youtube channel.
Excellent and informative.
Thanks for sharing.
Compared to today, this is a topnotch high quality informative educational film. Whereelse can you obtain an almost educational level understanding of the components in crude oil, how and why it's refined into various useful products.
It's a tenner......10/10.
A very informative and interesting motion picture.
The Super Constellation (01:09) is far and away the most beautiful aircraft ever mass produced
The animation is done by Manny Gould; the ending song is just like his animation for Bob Clampett and Bob McKimson for Warner Bros.
Interesting film of what is done to crude oil to make it usable in machinery... But the cartoons seem silly... Late 1940's classic footage... The. Scenes of the Lockheed Constelation and the Steam trains are extremely cool...
Beautiful ❤God's bless you ❤❤
Pretty sure the announcer is Ken Carpenter. He's best known as Bing Crosby's announcer. But folks my age probably remember him as the voice for Kraft dinner commercials.
It's him. He also narrated films like this.
Thanks for the film!
Invisible platelets of slipery oil that heats up and grip to the clutches and then give way for the relieve of the clutches from the grip give a smooth shift is amazing I've been rebuilding automatic transmissions 47 years ❤
The ending song is the best!
Very informative I've always marvelled at how they can produce such massive quantities to satisfy the huge demand. Fantastic substance.
Who knew that oil gets an oiliness additive.
Oiling the oil?
I learned a lot...thanks.
Lubrication the difference between a good time and a bad time !
Exactly. When the grease fittings go unattended on a 60’s era automobile you can have major suspension problems. You can find yourself without transportation for weeks.
I live a few blocks from that refinery all the lab's in the show are now a college (cal college) and the refinery is now owned by BP oil.
Thank you for saving old films like this one. I love that narrator voice typical for the time. Did people speak differently in the good old days? Or is it just the recording technique from the time?
I haven't learned this much about lubrication since Dr. Ruth Westheimer was on the air.
Very informative and interesting
Manju❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
cheesy, but somehow still feel like im learning something
Very informative! Why do we no longer produce pictures like these?? The US was such a great country in the years after the War.
It's pro-fossil fuels. Produced by one of those eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeevil corporations out to ruin the climate and destroy the ozone layer! NOT politically correct in the Age of Woke.
I will not argue with this.
Why would someone give thumbs down on this?
They probably more of the dry lubricant type of guys
The racism
@ceevee89fly i think that is because archiving studios need some method of generating money. they sell these for documentary makers and remove the bar.
outstanding!!!
The funny thing is some of the refinery establishing shots in the film have probably been referenced in a USCSB video...because they didn't change out the pipes in the proceeding 60 years.
The same way Mr. Skakin taught us. R.I.P.
These are great videos but they need to put the timer clock somewhere else or not at all !
Here's the issue: Tens of thousands of films similar to this one have been lost forever -- destroyed -- and many others are at risk. Our company preserves these precious bits of history one film at a time. How do we afford to do that? By selling them as stock footage to documentary filmmakers and broadcasters. If we did not have a counter, we could not afford to post films like these online, and no films would be preserved. It's that simple. So we ask you to bear with the watermark and timecodes.
In the past we tried many different systems including placing our timer at the bottom corner of our videos. What happened? Unscrupulous TH-cam users downloaded our vids, blew them up so the timer was not visible, and re-posted them as their own content! We had to use content control to have the videos removed and shut down these channels. It's hard enough work preserving these films and posting them, without having to spend precious time dealing with policing thievery -- and not what we devoted ourselves to do.
Love our channel and want to support what we do? You can help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
I love oil.
Modern oil is a lot better today too
This was produced by Jerry Fairbanks' studio.
It sounds like Jam Handy narrating.
@@jasonligo895 It's Ken Carpenter narrating the film. He also narrated the first in this series, "Gasoline's Amazing Molecules" aka "Inside Story of Modern Gasoline" as the carbon atom.
This video really shows that oil isn’t just oil, it’s liquid science, especially modern synthetic oils. However the elimination of zddp did cause the oil to lose its ability to create a phosphate layer on high stress components such as cam lobes.
This was "slick"
I love cartoons
I wanted to see the shell sign and scary music in the open.
anyone know what kind of carburetor that was @ 20:23????.... early type of fuel injection i think...
“All except the most severe conditions”.... what would you use then?
A hydrocarbon singing about it's use when it was alive and is the result of the great oxygenation event which left a huge band of iron spanning the globe, this hydrocarbon was at one point a algae bloom that decided to convert hydrogen sulphide and sunlight into energy and a by product of oxygen which started iron sulphides to rust out of solution in the sea kill themselves in the process, also the refining process split is called soluble and non soluble oil
I heard removing the wax could be painful.
Why is the SMPTE code on these clips?
So licensees can specify the exact segment(s) for which they wish to pay royalties.
Never thought of that. Thanks
The aging of oil wasn’t addressed. If I don’t change the oil in my car for a year or more, because I haven’t driven it much, does the oil need to be changed?
Oil is made from dinosaurs. It's been a long time in the making and takes a long time to break down just sitting around.
@@jeremyperala839 lol, the dinosaurs reanimated themselves through rising from the depths of Earth, and now have evolved into the 1% ers. 😉
Yes as it’s contaminated by combustion and the additives will break down
Modern oils have additives for plastic engine parts to keep them from cracking. They don’t last more than a year in a working engine
I just lubricants could talk, I just did not know how well they sing!
Everything is better with lube on it! Yeh.
What is that @ 00:52
Lube. Sweet.
Hello Sir my name is Hossam I'm working as marketing manager at lubricant factory in UAE 🇦🇪
I want ask your permission if I can use your videos for arabica to my arabica speakers
You can use the TH-cam community tool to add subtitles to our videos. Any reposting or reuse is strictly prohibited without a license.
@@PeriscopeFilm thank you for your reply
Post War optimisms
One of the most important fluids in the world, that nobody cares about. The world literally and figuratively grind to a halt without it.
That guy had an oily voice. A slippery slope unless he got cracking to refine it.
Does anybody know the name of the narrator?
Black gold indeed. You don't want to be around when it, & natural gas run out.
i didn't watch the video but can it explain why every time i fire my M1 Carbine i get smacked right in the face with a bunch of oily guck
They had great pharmaceuticals then.
Humanity owes to John Rockfeller !!
One of the Robber Barons.
What lube was used in clock towers that were built hundreds of years before this lubricating oil was discovered? 🤔
Lard?
Eye of Newt?
Castor or fish/whale.
Whale oil. Isn't it ironic that petroleum saved the whales?
@@andyharman3022 according to Greenpeace and others, now pollution is killing whales and more. That's called a pretend save. ..not real. 🤷♀️
So amazing yet so old and outdated.
Yet you still bought more today! Wow!
@@deankay4434 what are you talking about?
Ask a stupid question, get a stupid answer. Yes the film maybe old, but mostly works the same way at any refinery, just newer technology producing as much as 87 gallons of gasoline from 100 gallons of sweet crude oil. These chains of hydrocarbons are 8-9 molecules long, so under pressure, longer molecules are “fractured” to produce more product.
Stuff you did not learn in tax payer free school or college where you would have paid lots of money to have them lye to you or under educate by omission.
It is lube. Your bicycle, red wagon, car needs it. Or you walk!
@@deankay4434 Let me let you in in a small fact, I own 11,200 common shares of an oil company by the name of Exxon Mobile, you've got the wrong person, pal. How's that for stupid?
I miss the 50's. Life was so much better back then. Nobody was woke nor did they care.
Racist rube.
Glad you enjoyed it. But it wasn’t so great for everyone.
Chances are your car too needs lubricating oil for its proper functioning.
Turns out Natural Gas is about 80% Methane gas. i didn't know that until today.
Someone should show this to those kids protesting in the streets.
People just want things done more responsibly. Soon, all trains will have pantograghs.
🔰🇺🇸 I simply love these old documentaries. The singing oil molecules are awesome 👏
- Say ‘Mr. Hydrocarbon’ to an ‘environmentalist’ or a ‘New Green Deal’ person and they’ll throw a hissy-fit; the thing is though, they use all these products every day !
Monkey poop Ceesco, people just want this dirty but essential work done responsibly. Don't post like a rube.
Oil needs to be refined on the whole to suit this purpose rather then to create more pollution as when it runs out what will we use for lubricant let alone energy? Replace it as a energy but use it for a lubricant.
interesting
KY JELLY...
"Ha ha, I am a colour impurity"
I'll spare you folks any & all jokes concerning "lubricant", since they have nothing to do with any mechanical. 😅
✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨
Poly Alpha olefin and base oil use formula
Looks like a bad acid trip
Who knew?
The refineries, how disgusting. I can't believe we have let ourselves get to such a state, for money. We are doomed.
"Temp Ra Tours"
Now look back then it,, oil was the godly sent miracle to man but now a scene of obscene maliciousness meant to deprive thee of thy will to emote or simply egress. But why may we ask has it come to this? When this miracle of gosh was all thy present already primarily.
I'll be honest, when I read the film title, I was expecting something else.
slippery
We should demand this film mandatory for AOC and her ilk
Doesn't the film require a basic level of intelligence to understand, though?
Because knowing about outdated oil refining techniques will help her govern better right?
Why does the right hate ms Cortez so very much?
Are you all so stuck in the 1950’s that an intelligent woman with an opinion can upset you so much that you will comment about her in a 50 year old yt vid about oil?
@@nh-oj8ne If she was so intelligent, she would be right, and we wouldn't have to call her wrong.
@@nh-oj8ne Well, if she WAS an intelligent woman, then you might have a point. Right now, I'd put her on a par with a retarded wallaby
@@nh-oj8ne Her opinions would have some validity if she would back them up with facts.
I would bet money that's Ward Cleaver or rather Hugh Beaumont doing the talking.
You would. Lose that bet, he sounds nothing like beavers father.
It sounds like Jam Handy, from other documentary films at the time. He had his own film making business.
1949 and they had additives?? My Father took out the dip stick on his 10 year old 39 Chevrolet and said "look at that oil son, just as green as the day I put it in", There did not appear to be any detergents or dispersants in that period, Engines still acquired a coating of "shellac'" like stuff in the rocker box.
yeah, if I remember right the very first API standard was SA, which contains no additives whatsoever, before moving onto SB in 1930. very likely a bunch of SA was still around back then though
@@cpufreak101 Down under it would not surprise me at all, petrol we call 91, in the USA would be called something like 88? [if that is "regular"]
@@adoreslaurel 91 is 87 if I remember right, which is indeed regular in most of the country. I believe 98 is our 93 which is the highest you can typically easily find
@@cpufreak101 Thanks for that, I like the old story of the Englishman who pulled into get some "Gas" and the attendant said "Regular?" and the customer said "Yes, I am actually, but thanks for asking".
Basically a interesting subject - only, what was wrong with those film makers in the post war era? They put cartonn characters into everything, as if the expected audience are 7 year olds. And when you think it cannot get any worse - they start singing as well! :)
poor asphalt
I'm an "UnDesirable" :[) LoL
That was the best and worst cartoon ever.. 😁
It seems violent. I actually felt bad for the undesirable pollutants. Punching them, kicking them etc. I felt that was mean.
Just wait until we go on a field trip to the slaughterhouse with Periscope.
Hey guys, let's all wear suits and breathe fumes!
get rid of your president and you will be fine
Did your boyfriend teach you to say that?
You must hate the truth... as most dems, greens and left do.
Awwwwwwwww....have you hugged your bunny in your puppy-filled safe space while crying through the lyrics to "koom-by-ya", today, eifion?
I never met that molecule and I know all the best molecules, nobody knows as much about lubircating molecules as I do....the orange buffoon.
We have been trying to get rid of that greasy orange turd, but the less educated folks of my homeland seem to love him more with every lie filled tweet or ignorant statement out of his gaping word hole.
I will not watch videos with a counter in them
because you've never tried to convert film to digital
It's to stop people stealing the footage without paying Periscope for it's licensing.
Yes they may not be the creator or owner of the content, but it's existence online in a convenient medium (and removal from obscurity) is owed to their work and effort and it does not come free.
ere's the issue: Tens of thousands of films similar to this one have been lost forever -- destroyed -- and many others are at risk. Our company preserves these precious bits of history one film at a time. How do we afford to do that? By selling them as stock footage to documentary filmmakers and broadcasters. If we did not have a counter, we could not afford to post films like these online, and no films would be preserved. It's that simple. So we ask you to bear with the watermark and timecodes.
In the past we tried many different systems including placing our timer at the bottom corner of our videos. What happened? Unscrupulous TH-cam users downloaded our vids, blew them up so the timer was not visible, and re-posted them as their own content! We had to use content control to have the videos removed and shut down these channels. It's hard enough work preserving these films and posting them, without having to spend precious time dealing with policing thievery -- and not what we devoted ourselves to do.
Love our channel and want to support what we do? You can help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
@@PeriscopeFilm that's funny, I've been watching these Periscope documentary videos for MONTHS and never even noticed the counter! I guess I am so enthralled with the content that I failed to notice ❤