Unlisted Videos All Videos All Videos Submit Video



WATCHxWITNESS: Death Valley




In July 2021, YouTube set all unlisted videos uploaded before 2017 to private (unless the channel owner had opted out). In the weeks leading up to this change, Archive Team archived many pre-2017 unlisted YouTube videos. If this video was uploaded before 2017 and has gone private, there is a chance that a 360p archived version can be viewed on archive.org via the site's Wayback Machine as follows:

1. Enter the YouTube URL in the Wayback Machine form or click on the following link:
https://web.archive.org/web/20210000000000*/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6ClPxU60_w

2. Right-click on a blue entry in July in the calendar.

3. Click 'Copy link address'.

4. Paste the copied link address into your web browser's address bar and press enter.










Uploaded to YouTube by: Green Label Sound
Date submitted to Unlisted Videos: 10 July 2018
Date uploaded/published to YouTube: 16 October 2013

Tags:




Description:

Mass Appeal's premiere photographic documentary series WATCHxWITNESS recently wove through the South West. With a sense of adventure and mischievous wonderment, the two dudebros Jason Goldwatch and 13thWitness captured epic imagery of both humanity's beautiful gradients and nature's grand intentions - traveling West on a road trip to no where in particular.

Under the guidance of the two's explicit mantra "EXPLORE EVERYTHING" the co-conspirators push urban exploration and photography experimentation's edge to capture incredible night skies, unending valleys, awe-inspiring rock formations and curious desert residents. The result? The creation of both stunning still and moving images.

WATCHxWITNESS combines the visual talents of infamous director, Jason Goldwatch and enigmatic photographer 13thWitness, bringing viewers a documentary-style expedition through some of the world's most harrowing and stunning locales, where the duo ventures to retrieve images meant to arrest audiences through shock and awe.

Through their moving images, you will see the intersection of past and present, and human kind's innate ability to adapt and reinterpret.