Quantity Discounts on CAS Shows
On behalf of the California Academy of Sciences, whose content we distribute, we’re happy to announce some special pricing for their three award-winning shows: Fragile Planet, Life: A Cosmic Story, and Earthquake.
Here’s how it works. When you buy a license for any CAS show, you can get a 15% discount on a license of equal length for another CAS show. Or, buy licenses of equal length for all three, and get a 20% discount on the total bill. License lengths are 1-, 3- or 10-year terms and prices can be found on each show’s Web page.
Just follow the links above to the shows you want to get more information on pricing and license information. You’ll also find links to trailers and previews so you can watch the show before you buy it.
These are amazing shows and among some of our favorite fulldome presentations. Each one covers important advances in biology, Earth and space sciences. Life: A Cosmic Story answers important questions about how life began.
Fragile Planet examines our home planet, the only haven for life we know of so far, using gorgeous scientific visualizations and cinematic flair.
Earthquake takes audiences on a breathtaking tour of our active planet and examines the tectonic shifts that rock our planet.
These shows fill educational show niches quite nicely and provide satisfying entertainment for general public and family audiences. So, if you’re in the market for new shows to fit your curriculum or your public programming schedule, check out this deal and give us a call!
More Options for Chaos and Order
Love Chaos and Order but want it longer? Shorter? Either way, we’ve got you covered.
Media artists Rocco Helmchen and Johannes Kraas, creators of Chaos and Order – A Mathematic Symphony, have provided us with two additional versions of their epic math-and-music visualization show. You can now choose from a 3-, 4- or 5-movement symphony.
The original 40-minute show contains four movements—Form, Simulation, Algorithm and Fractal. In the new 29-minute, 3-movement edit, the first two movements have basically been combined into one, and the onscreen movement number captions were revised accordingly.
And, especially for the planetarium theaters, there is now a 51-minute extended version, adding a new meditative movement of slowly rolling stars; the dance of the planets in their orbits; the lines, grids, and wheels of the “classic” planetarium projector—though of course now rendered in fulldome, from DigitalSky 2.
We’d be happy to supply any of these shows for you—just contact us!