Yes Theory‘s longest feature-length documentary has arrived on YouTube. The adventurous group led by Thomas Brag, Ammar Kandil, and Matt Dahlia is behind Project Iceman, an acclaimed film set in Antarctica.
Project Iceman centers on extreme athlete Anders Hofman and his quest to complete a long-distance triathlon in Antarctica. Kandil, who directed the doc, met Hofman in 2019, four years after the launch of Yes Theory. A deal with Burning Boat Films helped bring Project Iceman to life, but the project still presented plenty of challenges for its crew. Kandil and co. endured frigid temperatures, 93-mile-per-hour winds, and encounters with predators like leopard seals.
Despite those hurdles, Kandil got the footage he needed to document Hofman’s journey. The triathlete finished his subzero feat in 72 hours and 54 minutes, burning more than 30,000 calories along the way.
Yes Theory has shared two other feature-length documentaries. Those two videos have collectively pulled in more than 27 million views.
Project Iceman centers on extreme athlete Anders Hofman and his quest to complete a long-distance triathlon in Antarctica. Kandil, who directed the doc, met Hofman in 2019, four years after the launch of Yes Theory. A deal with Burning Boat Films helped bring Project Iceman to life, but the project still presented plenty of challenges for its crew. Kandil and co. endured frigid temperatures, 93-mile-per-hour winds, and encounters with predators like leopard seals.
Despite those hurdles, Kandil got the footage he needed to document Hofman’s journey. The triathlete finished his subzero feat in 72 hours and 54 minutes, burning more than 30,000 calories along the way.
Yes Theory has shared two other feature-length documentaries. Those two videos have collectively pulled in more than 27 million views.
- 12/22/2023
- by Sam Gutelle
- Tubefilter.com
It feels a little strange to say this in August, but the 2023 Streamy Awards are officially over, and they handed out a grand total of 50 awards to this year’s top creators.
This was the first year Tubefilter and dick clark productions held Streamys in the summertime, but the change of season didn’t mean everything changed: For the fourth time in a row, MrBeast took home Creator of the Year, and for the second time in a row, Kai Cenat snagged Streamer of the Year.
As for Show of the Year, that went to Michelle Khare and her daredevil series Challenge Accepted.
This year’s ceremony was hosted by MatPat, and featured dozens of presenters, including Dylan Mulvaney, Ryan Trahan, The Try Guys‘ Keith Habersberger and Zach Kornfeld, Smosh‘s Anthony Padilla and Ian Hecox, TikTok Npc streamer Pinkydoll, Colin and Samir, Dream, Michelle Khare, Anna Sitar, Austin Creed,...
This was the first year Tubefilter and dick clark productions held Streamys in the summertime, but the change of season didn’t mean everything changed: For the fourth time in a row, MrBeast took home Creator of the Year, and for the second time in a row, Kai Cenat snagged Streamer of the Year.
As for Show of the Year, that went to Michelle Khare and her daredevil series Challenge Accepted.
This year’s ceremony was hosted by MatPat, and featured dozens of presenters, including Dylan Mulvaney, Ryan Trahan, The Try Guys‘ Keith Habersberger and Zach Kornfeld, Smosh‘s Anthony Padilla and Ian Hecox, TikTok Npc streamer Pinkydoll, Colin and Samir, Dream, Michelle Khare, Anna Sitar, Austin Creed,...
- 8/28/2023
- by James Hale
- Tubefilter.com
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