Saturday afternoon. A small foray into the mall to replenish library, titles urgently need, is what you can not sleep without the hum of a film background, and that I have and I have only seen.
I walk the hallways: drama, comedy, action. Back to travel in the opposite direction: action, comedy, drama. I encourage any title: heaven, Striptease , do you still sell this?
Around the corner I find the documentary section, always so lonely. How about a documentary? Ah, it's not a bad idea, the last I bought was the series Planet Earth on the BBC. Awesome. A must. I've given several times, until I mentioned it to the people.
Snooping. A random bag. Galapagos . Wow! From the BBC too. What a coincidence. There are three DVDs. Do I risk it? Come on, you ...

I've seen in half and, of course, impressive, indispensable. Delightfully narrated by Tilda Swinton portrays a strange, dangerous, but full of beauty and majesty. Highly recommended.
What should feel proud of the legacy the British television documentary that his public, with David Attenborough in the lead, you are creating. The BBC gives meaning to what, at least one server understands, must be a public television.
A few weeks ago the BBC premiered in prime time, Charles Darwin and the Tree of Life , a documentary written and presented by the teacher Attenborough, to mark the second centenary of his birth (Darwin, of course), and in which provided a perfectly wonderful view of the evolution of life on Earth. At the same time, the same day, TVE emitted Look who dances.
Galapagos joins the rest of documentaries that I already have the BBC: Blue Planet , Deep Blue , Planet Earth , Earth and Science supernatural .
Roque.