Video duration: 322 seconds
Global video hits: 2405975
Stephen Wiltshire from London is a star among savants. Stephen is autistic. He did not speak his first words "pencil" and "paper" until he was 5. Yet, when he was 11 he drew a perfect aerial view of London after only one helicopter ride. For this film we're testing the "Living camera" in Rome. (ColourField production)
Video duration: 317 seconds
Global video hits: 1239830
Stephen Wiltshire has been called the "Human Camera." In this short excerpt from the film Beautiful Minds: A Voyage into the Brain, Wiltshire takes a helicopter journey over Rome and then draws a panoramic view of what he saw, entirely from memory.
Video duration: 163 seconds
Global video hits: 21986
Stephen appeared on ABC News Good Morning America on the 13th of February 2008. Stephen wowed the viewers with a quick sketch of Piccadilly Circus after a 10 minutes glimpse of the landmark. Stephen has also been named as Person of The Week on ABC World News with Charles Gibson. Nick Watt and Olivia Sterns reports.
Video duration: 318 seconds
Global video hits: 8149
Stephen Wiltshire has been called the "Human Camera." In this short excerpt from the film Beautiful Minds: A Voyage into the Brain, Wiltshire takes a helicopter journey over Rome and then draws a panoramic view of what he saw, entirely from memory
Video duration: 271 seconds
Global video hits: 768
Jaime Maussan viaja a Inglaterra en busca del sitio donde apareció el último Crop Circle reportado en la temporada 2008, además Giorgio Bongiovanni explica a Jaime Maussan lo que para el significa esta señal en los campos de cultivo.
Video duration: 314 seconds
Global video hits: 218
An Insight into a working day during the harvest on an English arable farm in Wiltshire. This video shows the harvesting of oil seed rape, from the initial cutting in the field to the haulage back to the grain store on the farm.
Video duration: 110 seconds
Global video hits: 127
Liddington Castle is the highest point in the county of Wiltshire. It is south of Swindon, and is clearly visible on Google Maps Satellite view, east of the village of Chiseldon. It was probably abandoned when the Saxons invaded.