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Posted by defrost 22 hours ago

David Attenborough's 100th Birthday(www.bbc.com)
653 points | 128 comments
Aboutplants 19 minutes ago|
A true hero in my life. I had VHS copies of Trials Of Life that I wore out through watching over and over as a child. It opened my eyes to the world and wonder of nature. In college I started hunting down every single appearance he had listed in any filmography I could find and have a hard drive in my attic with all but a couple of his earliest Black and White appearances from the earliest part of his career. I haven’t kept up with it with the newest stuff in the past 15 or so years but I definitely need to pull that out and see if I can finalize his catalog.
vr46 14 hours ago||
Top man, lives up on Richmond Hill and absolutely loves it - when asked about his travels and adventures and where he would choose to live, he replied, "I already live there"

Fairly well-known locally is that my favourite bookshop, The Open Book in Richmond, stocks signed copies of all his books. They used to be signed directly on the page, but since he got to the mid-to-late nineties in age, tons of hardbacks are too much, so Helena wanders up there to get a load of bookplates signed these days.

Apart from that, I order all my books from them when I'm in London and a subsequent chat with Madeleine usually lasts ten times as long as the book shopping.

Anyway, I digress, yes, Sir David, amazing body of works and the books are wonderful.

lanza 12 hours ago||
I always find it really weird when somebody on the anonymous internet talks about local places as if we're all neighbors or something. Googling "Richmond Hill" gave me multiple pages of results that had nothing to do with the one that Attenborough lives at.
sho_hn 12 hours ago|||
Not to sound hipster about it, but if it's done in this way I find it charming. I also had to piece it together, which took me on a little virtual travel tour, and had me wonder about what Richmond Hill means to the locals. Rather fitting in context, too.

The "everyone on the internet is American" stuff in e.g. politics or job market convos is a lot more grating.

DavidPiper 11 hours ago||||
I really enjoyed OP's story, and the way they told it. Knowing the location of Richmond Hill is really not the point.
wolvoleo 11 hours ago||
Well yes but it does open the question for me as to what the place is like and why he'd like it so much.
skrebbel 3 hours ago||||
Yes, but it’s refreshing that for once it isn’t a San Francisco neighbourhood!
hnlmorg 1 hour ago||||
London isn’t exactly a small “local place” and there is only one Richmond Hill in London. So I’m not sure what the issue you’re having is.
barrkel 12 hours ago||||
If you're familiar with London, you know where Richmond is and that it's a wealthy area. A search confirms there's a Richmond Hill in Richmond.
Phemist 11 hours ago|||
Or if you've seen Ted Lasso
psvv 11 hours ago||
In hindsight it maybe should have also been obvious from the language alone. "Richmond Hill" feels a bit like saying "Rich Hill Hill" which is basically like saying "Wealthy Desirable Area."
Tagbert 10 hours ago||
BTW there is a linguistic tradition of “hill hill”. When new immigrants come to an area and ask the locals what that hill is called, the locals say “big hill” in their language. The newcomers call it “bighill” hill in their language. I forget the examples but this has happened enough in England that there are places whose names are five hills deep (Brythonic -> Latin -> Saxon -> Norse -> Norman).
tomalpha 1 minute ago|||
One of my favourite quotes from the late Terry Pratchett:

> When the first explorers from the warm lands around the Circle Sea travelled into the chilly hinterland they filled in the blank spaces on their maps by grabbing the nearest native, pointing at some distant landmark, speaking very clearly in a loud voice, and writing down whatever the bemused man told them. Thus were immortalised in generations of atlases such geographical oddities as Just A Mountain, I Don't Know, What? and, of course, Your Finger You Fool.

JimDabell 9 hours ago|||
These are known as tautological place names: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tautological_place_nam...
teiferer 3 hours ago||
Thanks for sharing!

My contribution to this discussion is the place in BTTF which makes fun of this concept, the home of Marty McFly: Hill Valley

Not a tautological name but an oxymoronic one!

vixen99 5 hours ago|||
Aa in the the old English folk song "The lass of Richmond Hill".
vr46 1 hour ago||
That's about Yorkshire, but yes
stuaxo 2 hours ago||||
It's in the Richmond that's in London, not the one in Yorkshire.
serf 12 hours ago||||
would you rather less anecdotes or more hard coordinates?
ASalazarMX 10 hours ago||
I'd bet "Richmond Hill, London" would have been geographically adequate. Don't we criticize USAians for their provincialism?
throwaway2037 2 hours ago||||
Try this search: The Open Book in Richmond UK
jjulius 10 hours ago||||
For me, I know "Richmond" is used numerous places near me locally, so my assumption would've been that "Richmond hill" is too generic a query.

"David Attenborough Richmond hill" would've been the way. I'd hardly fault OP for my own choice in query.

msikora 12 hours ago||||
Richmond Hill, London
saalweachter 7 hours ago||
Now I just hear the Cinema Sins "ding!".
DANmode 9 hours ago|||
and when you googled the book shop name?
notahacker 12 hours ago|||
Whilst we're doing random anecdotes that vaguely link to him, my late grandfather remembered David from his Wyggeston days as a good rugby player, which is a funny way to imagine him. Apparently he had the voice even then, but not so much to say about the world.
why-el 9 hours ago||
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richmond_Hill,_London
CSMastermind 12 hours ago||
He was just mentioned on today's Lateral podcast with Tom Scott.

Apparently, he's the reason tennis balls are yellow.

I guess they were traditionally white but when they started broadcasting matches on TV it was too hard to see the ball.

David who was at the BBC at the time suggested they use yellow balls instead so they would come through on camera. Ever since then tennis balls have been yellow.

wvbdmp 11 hours ago||
Amazing. It’s relatively easy to find color photos of this, for example one of the very last pics here, from 1970: https://www.esquire.com/sports/g36954688/wimbledon-1970s-pho...

But what is the oldest color photo of white ball tennis?

Also, do we have a good source for this story, because it’s not mentioned on Wikipedia: ”In 1972, the International Tennis Federation introduced yellow balls, as these were easier to see on television. Wimbledon continued using white balls until 1986.”

aidenn0 3 hours ago||
The only color photo of a ball in that link that I saw was #32 which is from 1978, which would support the idea that Wimbledon did not switch in 1972.
wvbdmp 1 hour ago||
Oh yeah, you’re right, I just gave it a quick scan for balls and thought they were all from 1970.
cody_ellingham 11 hours ago|||
What do you mean tennis balls are yellow? I always thought they were green? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tennis_ball#/media/File:Closeu...
probabletrain 10 hours ago||
They're officially yellow. Many people (~50% in my experience) perceive this colour as green though.

> Tennis balls are fluorescent yellow in professional competitions

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tennis_ball

DANmode 9 hours ago||
Yellow and green are shown in the linked image.
burlesona 11 hours ago||
Mind blown. Thanks for sharing!
LightBug1 8 minutes ago||
The best of us.
forinti 13 hours ago||
I just love those documentaries where he starts off in Europe following some bird and ends up on a rock in the middle of the ocean. And he's been at it since when the world was much bigger. What a life!
deferredgrant 13 hours ago||
I wonder how many scientists and engineers were first pulled toward their field by an Attenborough documentary. That kind of slow cultural influence is hard to measure.
whyenot 12 hours ago||
A lot, especially in organismal biology / field biology. We even name things after him, like carnivorous plants (Nepenthes attenboroughii), the whole genus Sirdavida, a hawkweed (Hieracium attenboroughianum), ... more than 50 taxa in all.

The unfortunate thing is that the area of biology he has drawn people to is difficult to make a living in. Jobs are few, there is intense compettion for them, they don't pay well, and there is often little job security. In some ways it is the Art History of a STEM discipline.

sen 7 hours ago||
> We even name things after him, like carnivorous plants (Nepenthes attenboroughii), the whole genus Sirdavida, a hawkweed (Hieracium attenboroughianum), ... more than 50 taxa in all.

I assumed there’d be 1 or 2 would be, but 50+ is wild. I just went down the rabbit hole of “things named after Sir David Attenborough” and it’s a lot!

block_dagger 11 hours ago||
I wasn’t pulled toward the field of study, but came away with a great appreciation and wonder for nature. My parents recorded many of his documentaries on Betamax tapes in the 1980s and my brother and I watched all of them many times in our formative years. Happy birthday to a truly great human.
_jx 4 hours ago||
He definitely influenced my life and choices; some of the strongest memories of my youth in the '80s are tied to his documentaries Life on Earth and The Living Planet. I was lucky to live in the countryside and near a beautiful lake but his documentaries expanded my horizons so much more. I didn't love watching TV but that content was a magic window. They were dubbed by the magnificent voice of Claudio Capone and skillfully commented by Piero Angela, who died recently at 93. Piero was the most prominent Italian science journalist and his own career shaped TV and spanned 70 years. Their work made me and my family definitely more environmentally conscious. I don't doubt this content will have a lasting impact on humanity even if we can't clearly discern its effects right now.

Happy Birthday David! I'm so happy you are still alive and well.

thamer 16 hours ago||
Searching for David Attenborough on Google also shows a tribute, with drawings of animals and a "Thank You Sir David".

https://www.google.com/search?q=david+attenborough

Cider9986 16 hours ago|
I like that Google does easter eggs like this.

Of course, they'll still put tracking links in the share button. Got to get that sweet data of who shared David Attenborough's birthday.

omnee 1 hour ago||
An outstanding voice for nature for all these years, and how kind nature has been to him in return. Long Live Sir David!
owenpalmer 13 hours ago|
One of the most iconic voices.

https://youtu.be/P3ump1Buszo?si=0DoXiDTqZOyTBUst

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