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Brady John Haran (born June 18, 1976) is an Australian-born independent Australian journalist and journalist known for his educational videos and documentary films produced for BBC News and his YouTube channel, most notably > Periodic Video and Numberphile . Haran is also a co-host of the Hello Internet podcast along with fellow YouTuber CGP Gray. On August 22, 2017, Haran launched a new podcast titled The Unmade Podcast .


Video Brady Haran



Careers

Reporter and filmmaker

Brady Haran studied journalism for a year before being employed by The Adelaide Advertiser . In 2002, he moved from Australia to Nottingham, England. In Nottingham, he worked for the BBC, started working with films, and reported for East Midlands Today, BBC News Online and BBC radio stations.

In 2007, Haran worked as a film-maker at the residence for Nottingham Science City, as part of an agreement between the BBC and The University of Nottingham. His "Test Tube" project started with the idea of ​​producing a documentary about their scientists and research, but he decided to upload his raw footage to YouTube; from that point "Video Period" and "Sixty Symbols" was developed. Haran then left the BBC to work full time making a YouTube video.

YouTube

Following "Test Tube", Haran decided to create a new YouTube channel. In his first 5 years as an independent filmmaker, he made over 1500 videos. In 2012, he is the producer, editor and interviewer behind 12 YouTube channels such as Periodic Video Table , Sixty Symbols and Numberphile . Martyn Poliakoff received the Royal Society of Chemistry's Nyholm Prize for Education in 2011 to work on taking chemistry education to a wider audience; this includes his work with Haran on Periodic Video Table .

Working with Poliakoff, Haran's video explaining chemistry and science for non-technical people gets positive recognition. Together, they have created over 500 short videos that include other related elements and chemical topics. Their YouTube channel already has over 159 million views. Also, Haran and Poliakoff wrote an article in the journal Nature Chemistry and an essay in the journal Science that discusses the impact of the Video Periodic Table .

Haran often collaborates with professionals and experts, who often appear in his videos to discuss subjects relevant to their work. Especially his Periodic Video series featured chemist Martyn Poliakoff, with the series also featuring chemist Stephen Liddle. The Numberphile Channel has hosted a variety of guests and presenters, including James Grime's mathematician Elwyn Berlekamp John Conway, Persi Diaconis, Rob Eastaway, David Eisenbud, Edward Frenkel, Hannah Fry, Ron Graham, Lisa Goldberg, Barry Mazur, Ken Ribet and Terence Tao, computer scientist Don Knuth and Carlo H. SÃ © Â © quin, scientists Brian Butterworth, Ed Copeland, Laurence Eaves, and Clifford Stoll, and scientific writer and scholar Alex Bellos, Steve Mold, Matt Parker, Tom Scott, and Simon Singh.

Halo Internet

In January 2014, Haran launched the Hello Internet podcast along with co-host CGP Gray, creator of other YouTube educational content. Podcasts culminated as the # 1 iTunes podcast in the UK, USA, Germany, Canada and Australia. It was voted one of Apple's best new podcasts of 2014. The Guardian puts the podcast among the top 50 of 2016, naming episode 66 ("A Episode Classic") this year's episode. This paper describes podcasts as having "deep debate and funny banter".

This podcast features discussions related to their lives as a professional creator for YouTube, as well as their interests and intrusions. Common topics include tech etiquette; film reviews and TV shows; aircraft accidents; vexillology; futurology; and the difference between the personality and lifestyle of Gray and Haran.

Podcast Unmade

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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