The Allure of Modern Dinosaur Artwork

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  • čas přidán 10. 08. 2024
  • Time to balance things out by by detailing why I love the dinosaur art of the modern age, even though I still appreciate the classic vintage stuff as well.
    A very special thanks to the artists used in this video (I would highly recommend checking them out):
    Raven Amos
    John Conway
    Brian Engh
    C. M. Kosemen
    Darren Naish
    Emily Willoughby
    Pedro Andrade
    LADAlbarran2000
    Yoult
    Franz Anthony
    Mark Witton
    Robert Bakker
    Novablue
    Vitaliy Melnik
    Silenced-Dreams
    Rodrigo Vega
    Damir Martin
    Arvalis
    Haghani
    PrehistoryByLiam
    Taliesaurus
    SamSantala
    Exo-bio
    Nix Draws Stuff
    Eurwentala
    Dane Pavitt
    Hyrotriskjan
    Lythroversor
    Osmatar
    Swordlord3d
    Gabriel Ugueto
    Dustdevil
    Jordan K. Walker
    MUSIC:
    0:00 - 0:37 = Dinosaur! (mini-series) - Gerhard Heinz
    0:38 - 0:48 = When Dinosaurs Roamed America - Christopher Franke
    0:49 - 1:09 = Dinosaur! (mini-series) - Gerhard Heinz
    1:10 - 1:55 = Walking with Dinosaurs - Benjamin Bartlett
    1:56 - 4:20 = The Dinosaurs! - Peter Melnick
    4:24 - 5:35 = Jurassic Park - John Williams
    5:36 - 6:52 = Prehistoric Park - Daniel Pemberton
    6:53 - 7:44 = When Dinosaurs Roamed America - Christopher Franke
    7:55 - 8:43 = Chased by Dinosaurs - Benjamin Bartlett
    8:44 - 9:05 = Jurassic World - Michael Giacchino
    9:06 - 9:32 = Chased by Dinosaurs - Benjamin Bartlett
    9:33 - 10:43 = Prehistoric Park - Daniel Pemberton
    10:44 - 11:55 = Allosaurus A Walking with Dinosaurs Special - Benjamin Bartlett
    11:56 - 13:05 - When Dinosaurs Roamed America - Christopher Franke
    Support me on Patreon:
    / hoopsanddinoman
    Subscribe to me on VidLii (in case CZcams takes this video down for no reason):
    www.vidlii.com/user/HoopsAndD...

Komentáře • 3,6K

  • @HoopsAndDinoMan
    @HoopsAndDinoMan  Před 2 lety +205

    Reply to this comment to submit video responses
    (Here's what I mean by that: czcams.com/video/KOHMgFxju1g/video.html )

  • @timothy1701
    @timothy1701 Před 5 lety +325

    For me, dinosaurs have never struck me as "real" looking animals. I could never really imagine them existing on our planet. But modern artwork of dinosaurs, feathers, counter-shading, they look more real than ever. I can fully imagine them being real.

    • @fumomofumosarum5893
      @fumomofumosarum5893 Před 5 lety +45

      true that. as he said, everything looks "scary" if you just take a skeleton and put a layer of skin on it - that doesn't mean that dinos actually looked exactly like that ^^;
      adding extra muscle, fat and feathers / skin flaps would make more sense in an evolutionary sense - let's not forget, those creatures lived for millions of years...

    • @Dell-ol6hb
      @Dell-ol6hb Před 5 lety +5

      timothy1701 yea the feathers and the new art makes me feel like they are real breathing animals

    • @axolotlhappy2340
      @axolotlhappy2340 Před 4 lety +1

      that’s exactly how I feel!

    • @jaisanatanrashtra7035
      @jaisanatanrashtra7035 Před 4 lety +3

      Also I can't accept the statement that they were dull colored like most of the artist depict them there can be a huge variety of colors in them

  • @captainbonkerang
    @captainbonkerang Před 5 lety +592

    It’s also because we see them as animals now instead of great monsters which the vintage stuff was trying to depict.

    • @echopeak5953
      @echopeak5953 Před 5 lety +98

      Yeah, instead of being enormous and terrifying, they're more majestic and admirable, and that's why I love this shift to feathers, which symbolises this change in perspective, they're more exciting because they're more real.

    • @hendriklobe577
      @hendriklobe577 Před 5 lety +23

      Those old scaly depictions and immagery might be a rest of 18th and 19th century rather religious thinking and debating about those fossiles of dragon-like creatures and imagined monsters. Even the term "dino saure" (ancien greek: "deinos" "sauros" reflects that as it means "Terrible/fearfully great/potent reptile".

    • @mrknarf4438
      @mrknarf4438 Před 5 lety +23

      They've always been animals. They have existed, they have walked this very earth. But some animals are scary.

    • @turkeygod6665
      @turkeygod6665 Před 5 lety +16

      @@echopeak5953
      I personally disagree. What excites me more is simply the ancient look of the 1900s dinosaurs. Large bellowing beasts that belong to a time long past which was populated with misty swamps and harsh deserts. Though of course, this is just my opinion.

    • @apexraptor3273
      @apexraptor3273 Před 3 lety +1

      Echo Peak yea and there more spiritual and seen as harmless creatures

  • @Sayushana
    @Sayushana Před 2 lety +201

    People who think birds are timid and peaceful clearly has never encounter a pissed off turkey

    • @gone9820
      @gone9820 Před 2 lety +18

      You know what's worse... a lovebird 😂
      Lovebirds hate anyone that isn't their mate or friend. Even couples fight between eachother. But they're adorable

    • @lazermann112
      @lazermann112 Před 2 lety +16

      / geese

    • @collinfulling3223
      @collinfulling3223 Před 2 lety +20

      Do they even know about the cassowary?

    • @akiraasmr3002
      @akiraasmr3002 Před 2 lety +23

      Did ppl forget harpy eagles and phillipine eagles they eat monkeys and goats and deer they are true raptors

    • @isthatbraised
      @isthatbraised Před 2 lety +7

      Lol people who say that will run when a chicken is chasing them

  • @luigisigmamale
    @luigisigmamale Před 4 lety +151

    Some peeps seem to forget dinosaurs were animals not monsters

  • @thedruid1151
    @thedruid1151 Před 5 lety +1938

    If you wanna make feathered dinos look scary, just cover them in blood from a fresh kill and make the feathers unkempt from the chase.

    • @transnewt
      @transnewt Před 2 lety +178

      Or pull a cassowary and give ‘‘em string like feathers and/or a fleshy neck

    • @justsomewritingfan2202
      @justsomewritingfan2202 Před 2 lety +185

      Or just take inspiration from real life animals with feathers.
      Vultures and Owls can both look pretty scary in the right framing.

    • @Random_Nobody_Official
      @Random_Nobody_Official Před 2 lety +34

      Or do it like a porcupine...
      But instead of turning fur into spikes,
      You turn feathers into spikes!
      I noticed many ceratopsians are shown to
      have something like that on their tails,
      *Edit:* for example look at 7:30.

    • @Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae
      @Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae Před 2 lety +61

      Even modern birds look scary without the blood, the shoebill is an example

    • @l0u13__3
      @l0u13__3 Před 2 lety +3

      Use the old feathers and tar prank on em

  • @DeathbyPixels
    @DeathbyPixels Před 5 lety +397

    I love the new depictions. They look like actual animals, not monsters. They look like they think about their world, as simple or as complicated as those thoughts may be. Something that could even be more afraid of you than you are of it.

    • @mrknarf4438
      @mrknarf4438 Před 5 lety +4

      A 40 feet long lizard shouldn't be more scared of me than I am of it.
      Thinking something that monstrous actually walked this earth was and still is enough to give me the chills, no need to tone them down.

    • @turkeygod6665
      @turkeygod6665 Před 5 lety +5

      I personally prefer the old depictions. But I can't deny those are great pros to the new paleoart.

    • @kamilbalicki8848
      @kamilbalicki8848 Před 4 lety +14

      Yeah it's same with snakes. People think they are scary monsters but in reality they just want to live their own life and very often are scared of humans.

    • @willherondale6367
      @willherondale6367 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes!! This is exactly my feeling too

    • @viliussmproductions
      @viliussmproductions Před 4 lety +1

      But the old dinosaurs looked like lizards...

  • @Thagomizer
    @Thagomizer Před 3 lety +105

    Bearded dragons, Argentine tegus, and Blue-tongued skinks are all scaly, cold-blooded reptiles, and they are cuddly, affectionate pets. Cassowarys and Emus, on the other hand, are feathered and scary as hell.

    • @IamPatrickStar
      @IamPatrickStar Před 3 lety +18

      True, some reptiles are actually quite friendly amd some birds are actually terrifying

    • @Defenestration700
      @Defenestration700 Před rokem

      @@IamPatrickStar Well birds are also reptiles.

  • @itsgonnabeanaurfromme
    @itsgonnabeanaurfromme Před 2 lety +63

    What's weird is how people say "i like the old ones" as if dinosaurs were cartoon characters. Nobody gets to choose what stays "canon"

    • @universal_pawn7442
      @universal_pawn7442 Před 2 lety +14

      Exactly they are living creatures they don't care if you like them or not they were how they were not different canons

    • @universal_pawn7442
      @universal_pawn7442 Před 2 lety +5

      @@cantthinkofaname5046 my favorite preference of human is stone age

    • @Alex34567
      @Alex34567 Před 2 lety +9

      Finally someone with a brain. It's almost as if there is a coalition of people defending outdated science. No one owns a dinosaur or how it looks. They simply just were, and the scientifically supported look of a dinosaur will always be the most realistic depiction until new evidence takes its place.

    • @MultiSpeedMetal
      @MultiSpeedMetal Před rokem

      That's just “Dinosaur” fans vs people interested in the study of ancient extinct animals. To the fans, dinosaurs may as well be a fictional creation that exists to entertain them. A paleontologist is a scientist and as such should have no bias in the outcome of their research and reconstructions.

    • @Tenerens1s
      @Tenerens1s Před 2 měsíci

      exactly. science does not care bout ur feelings, yall. deal with it😂

  • @spinyslasher6586
    @spinyslasher6586 Před 5 lety +151

    The problem is, people tend to view dinosaurs as monsters thanks to these documentaries and movies greatly exaggerating their violent tendencies. People keep forgetting that they are animals, just like the modern ones. They are most of the times very passive, and their behaviour is more complicated than just 'kill prey'.

    • @VeganKebabDoRuky
      @VeganKebabDoRuky Před 5 lety +5

      @Darth Miseinth Yeah, it's almost as if many of the filmmakers of the documentaries don't care (or are as concerned) about educating as much as they are about entertaining audiences. Perhaps they think the casual audience wouldn't be interested by anything but gore, fights, following a convoluted story of a big cat mom struggling to raise her cubs or something random and cute. Or maybe it feels more accomplished as a filmmaker to film and show all the action you got, I dunno, reasons could be many, but at least there's content on the internet that tries to be more throughout.

    • @Drengade
      @Drengade Před 4 lety +2

      @Darth Miseinth well... Technically it did evolve in part for killing, so the term is apt. But no it isn't the full story and it is really annoying.
      For dinosaurs we have the problem that, we don't know as much about their behaviours as modern animals. Sure the occasional fossil may tell us something, or we can infer something from resemblance to modern animals, but the one thing we can almost certainly tell is 'this ate meat' or 'this ate plants', sometimes we can even tell exactly what they ate due to coprolites. If a documentary wants to talk facts without speculation, most information will be on diet.

    • @nugget4yearsago518
      @nugget4yearsago518 Před 4 lety +2

      @Darth Miseinth alligators are fucking chill most of the time

    • @innocentpopsicle6797
      @innocentpopsicle6797 Před 4 lety +10

      @Darth Miseinth ikr. Shark attacks are viewed as a commonplace threat, when really goats "attack" people more, animals are portrayed as "eat, bang, and die", etc.
      It just grinds my gears.

    • @clyelli
      @clyelli Před 4 lety +4

      That's why Walking with Dinosaurs is so great. If you watch it, you will see violence, death and hunt, yes, but only because it is a vital part of nature. You can also see the Ornithocheirus grooming, the giant pack of Iguanodons moving, the Leaellynasaura sleeping in packs through the harsh winter and having a complicated hierarchy. Let's take a look at the Tyrannosaurus vs. Ankylosaurus fight. One blow and it's over, not only over, fatal for the mother Tyrannosaurus. a "documentary" las Jurassic Fight Club would show the Tyrannosaurus then jumping on the back of the Ankylosaurus and biting its neck, I don't know. WwD understands that they are real animals.

  • @kotanightshade8989
    @kotanightshade8989 Před 5 lety +73

    The point about scaly dinosaurs being scary really hit me. For a long time, and in many cases still today, dinosaurs were just monsters, big scary beasts no different than fictional dragons or the like. But they were living breathing animals once, not nightmarish beasts but a part of nature and the ecosystem. Modern art of dinosaurs definitely catches that aspect of dinosaurs much more than earlier depictions

    • @nutyyyy
      @nutyyyy Před 3 lety +1

      What I want to see also is more research on the scales themselves. We know many families of Dinosaurs had scales, but often those that we find are not like lizard or crocodile scales but are their own things. I think having both scaly and feather reconstructions when we aren't certain of what the true internment was like is reasonable. I like a lot of feathered Dino depictions but it depends very much on the lineage and it seems clear that one could secondarily evolve into the other. There must have been many factors that influenced the evolution of scales and feathers, which one was ancestral to all dinosaurs is also a very interesting debate.

  • @cortster12
    @cortster12 Před 2 lety +46

    Modern dinosaur designs are great because they actually look like animals instead of monsters. Well, usually. My biggest issue with 'vintage dinosaur' art is they just stretched skin over the bones without thinking about potential muscle, fat, etc. My favorite way to show how silly this is is by drawing modern creatures the way dinosaurs have been drawn. You get a cat that looks like a vintage dinosaur if you draw a cat this way.

  • @johndogscorner9631
    @johndogscorner9631 Před 4 lety +90

    To all who claim feathered dinosaurs aren’t scary, I have a question for you all.
    Have you ever been confronted by an agitated Goose before?

    • @bursky09
      @bursky09 Před 4 lety +14

      Dude even Chickens in full defense mode instead of running away is intimidating.

    • @weik-2936
      @weik-2936 Před 4 lety +4

      There's a video where you can see a pelican swallowing a pigeon whole

    • @jaisanatanrashtra7035
      @jaisanatanrashtra7035 Před 4 lety

      Or a parenting "BulBul" I don't know what it's called in English they really makes blind the one who intrude their nest

    • @saurodude
      @saurodude Před 4 lety

      I still have childhood nightmares

    • @ashtasheran6970
      @ashtasheran6970 Před 4 lety +2

      Here in brazil we have the quero-quero an man that shit is scary and will attack you

  • @Sabbat322
    @Sabbat322 Před 5 lety +65

    Talks about reptiles as creepy and unnerving, shows a cute lizard getting petted

  • @Peter_Turbo4
    @Peter_Turbo4 Před 5 lety +78

    "If they're not killing each other they're boring"
    *[Laughs in David Attenborough]*

    • @alexruddies1718
      @alexruddies1718 Před 5 lety +14

      "Space is boring and a vast empty void"
      *[Laughs in Carl Sagan]*

    • @tyrannotherium7873
      @tyrannotherium7873 Před 5 lety +2

      You know what’s weird is that David Attenborough work as much as I like his documentaries they put me to sleep for some weird reason now I don’t know why

    • @Yumemaru.
      @Yumemaru. Před 5 lety +1

      😂

  • @jahmocha9542
    @jahmocha9542 Před 3 lety +40

    General public seeing a bald eagle: So majestic and badass!
    General public seeing a feathered dino: Urgh it looks like a chicken I hate it.

  • @Verativity
    @Verativity Před 4 lety +6

    A Walking With Dinosaurs remake would be incredible to see. The original was amazing to watch, but it doesn't quite hold up anymore, with all the new art styles and theories about dinosaurs. Improvements to special (and practical) effects over the last twenty years would also take the series to a whole new level. Please make this, somebody, anybody!

  • @captainclipy6236
    @captainclipy6236 Před 5 lety +52

    My favourite part of modern dinosaur art is probably the beautiful landscapes people can create for these almost alien creatures. It creates a fantastical view for dinosaurs, and the notion that it could be at least a little bit accurate to real life makes it that much more astounding.
    In conclusion: dinosaurs are my aesthetic

  • @johnhallman3611
    @johnhallman3611 Před 5 lety +68

    With all the remakes and reboots Disney keeps putting out, I wouldn't mind one of "Dinosaur" if it took what we now know of dinosaurs today and applied it to a Fantasia-like story with voiceover narration. While I really hated the Lion King remake for its realistic talking lions, that ascetic would really work for a feature-length dinosaur documentary.

    • @londoncintron680
      @londoncintron680 Před 5 lety +8

      John Hallman Yeah. They could even give their Coelurosaurs feathers like they originally intended to have. They could also feature alvaresaurs and therizinosaurs like what old concept art suggested they’d use.

    • @thescauldron8436
      @thescauldron8436 Před 5 lety +3

      logan cintron the fact that their old concept art would’ve even looked up to date in today’s standards tho. Truly a missed opportunity

  • @lespooksly5364
    @lespooksly5364 Před 3 lety +61

    just imagine any dinosaur with a goose's tongue..... instantly horrifying

  • @stikkychaos
    @stikkychaos Před 3 lety +28

    "Oh, feathered dinos are cuddly timid and cute"
    ENTER THE FLIGHTLESS BIRDS.

    • @bradleyd.waters9561
      @bradleyd.waters9561 Před 3 lety +9

      @seankyle chou Everybody gangsta until a ostrich drop kicks you.

    • @arandomguy656
      @arandomguy656 Před 2 lety

      @seankyle chou Release… THE 2 METERS HIGHT AND MORE TERROR BIRDS WE HAD BEFORE THAT COULD PULL THE CRAP OUT OF SABERTOOTH TIGERS #DEATHCHICKEN AAAAAHHH

  • @hornedgoddess8191
    @hornedgoddess8191 Před 5 lety +211

    wtf where do i find wholesome dino art

  • @jora9655
    @jora9655 Před 5 lety +156

    The algorithm has become surprisingly good at recommending interesting content. Thoroughly enjoyed the video!

    • @sc0repio662
      @sc0repio662 Před 5 lety

      Until it disapproves of something you've watched, then it resets your account purging your liked & favs lists...

    • @josec.6394
      @josec.6394 Před 5 lety +2

      Yeah, I just found a pretty good channel

    • @moralcoach717
      @moralcoach717 Před 5 lety +1

      The algorithm is a rabbit hole to Epstein island

    • @eurydice.
      @eurydice. Před 5 lety

      Please check out Trey the Explainer, and for you big brains out there Cm Koseman. (Also google All tomorrows)

  • @marmalade8915
    @marmalade8915 Před 6 měsíci +29

    As a hardcore dinosaur nerd i have a very hard time respecting people who can't let go of old dinosaurs, the modern ones look like *actual animals* as they should

    • @elmochomo8218
      @elmochomo8218 Před 5 měsíci +3

      And imo look way better they’re more colorful and interesting looking today

  • @Crocy
    @Crocy Před 2 lety +179

    There's a bunch of scary paleoart with feathers, I think dinos are actually more terrifying with feathers

    • @BattlerEvil
      @BattlerEvil Před 2 lety

      Debatable on people's tastes tho

    • @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess
      @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess Před 2 lety

      Feathered dinosaurs look so stupid to me, I rather continue thinking of them as having scales and reptilian (and yes I'm aware birds are reptiles to)

  • @thoughtfuldevil6069
    @thoughtfuldevil6069 Před 5 lety +41

    "Birds are cuddly" said nobody who ever saw a filthy, blood-smeared vulture or a shrieking barn owl with luminous red eyes in the night.

    • @TheBenjaman
      @TheBenjaman Před 5 lety +1

      When you see that at night you should nope the fuck away from it as quickly and carefully as you can

    • @Dell-ol6hb
      @Dell-ol6hb Před 5 lety +1

      Thoughtful Devil yeah birds of prey are amazingly powerful and terrifying predators

    • @leslieshafer6343
      @leslieshafer6343 Před 5 lety +1

      LOL, an owl (I don't know what species it was - it wasn't a Great Horned Owl - but it was as big as one) swooped down less than 2-3 feet from my cars' windshield. It startled the he** out of me!

    • @Raptorworld22
      @Raptorworld22 Před 4 lety +1

      Or a cassowary, those things will disembowel you and dance in your blood.

    • @adamwolfe2848
      @adamwolfe2848 Před 4 lety +1

      Still cute

  • @Convicted_Melon
    @Convicted_Melon Před 5 lety +309

    It's true. Birds are enormous pricks. Even the tiny ones.

    • @Mr.Bluemask
      @Mr.Bluemask Před 5 lety +3

      Especially the tiny ones

    • @ICEknightnine
      @ICEknightnine Před 5 lety +5

      Explains why someone threw a giant rock at the earth, to try and kill all birds with one stone.

    • @MegaPenguin-bl7hd
      @MegaPenguin-bl7hd Před 5 lety +1

      We've recently got a bunch of humming bird feeders, and everytime I sit outside now, all I hear is hummingbirds yelling at each other, chasing each other off despite us having 4 feeders, and slapping each other with their wings.

    • @MelindaColden
      @MelindaColden Před 4 lety +1

      true
      they can be incredibly rough to one another, be it pet or wild birds
      sometimes i think birds are only cute to us because we're so much bigger
      we'd be scared shitless of them if they were larger than us, thats for sure!

    • @SunburnCity
      @SunburnCity Před 4 lety

      Oh in my experience, the tiny ones are the biggest assholes of them all

  • @surgensquire4652
    @surgensquire4652 Před 3 lety +28

    4:20, I have waited for someone to show that dinosaurs are beautiful creatures and not constant fighting, so thank you

    • @bendover2684
      @bendover2684 Před 3 lety +2

      I cant even

    • @surgensquire4652
      @surgensquire4652 Před 3 lety +2

      @@bendover2684 ?

    • @BerryCrush19
      @BerryCrush19 Před 3 lety +2

      @@bendover2684 why you can't even?

    • @miguelcabreracastro6968
      @miguelcabreracastro6968 Před 3 lety +1

      i though the video was about him being bored about feathered dinos xd
      yeah, they were animals, not monsters... we have crazy things going on in the animal kingdom... in every kingdom to be fair, so... just imagining how was it at that time... wow

  • @monstergirlsplz8945
    @monstergirlsplz8945 Před 2 lety +41

    The idea of a Gorgosaurus attracting a mate with intricate structures constructed of bones is super metal and I love it

    • @rayhanmustakim7073
      @rayhanmustakim7073 Před 2 lety +6

      It's plausible. Females can judge how fit and how skilled the males are in hunting based on how many bones and how intricate the structures is

  • @vladprus4019
    @vladprus4019 Před 5 lety +26

    I think this comes from the fact that modern non-avian reptiles seems not that diverse and unfortunetly there are a lot of stereotypes surrounding them. But if look at mesosoic period, well it turns out that boudry between what we commonly think as "bird" and "reptile" is EXTRELY fluid and that prehistoric reptiles were incredibly diverse.
    It is interesting to me that from all this reptiles the only which survived were seemingly simmilar to each other... and also the birds which were completly different from the rest of survivor reptiles.

  • @NicholasLionRider
    @NicholasLionRider Před 5 lety +68

    I think the point you nailed was the fact that modern depictions eliminate a "status quo". You can look at the old lizard like depictions of the early 1900s and a T-rex always looked the same. Then you have the Jurassic Park era where every T-Rex has looked like the one from '95 since then. Now we are at this age of scientific discovery where we know a lot about the dinosaurs we study but using that knowledge it opens up the can of worms of how little we know. I can say "T-rex had feathers" and I know it "should have fat somewhere" but we don't know any of that information. It might have only had a few feathers like an Ostrich, or fully covered like a chicken. Could have had an elephant style trunk or a camel style hump of soft tissue that was wiped clean of the remains over millions of years. I can take any dinosaur and using probable cause and evidence from modern day, make ridiculous alien style monsters. A triceratops could have had large bits of flesh from its nose to its frill and the "horns" it was popular for could just be internal supports like a whale's skull. In many ways, the new age of science has also seemed to lead to the age of misinformation and opens up the flood gates to radical ideas with nothing to say "no that is definitely wrong". Its why people run back to their Jurassic Park depictions. A scary dilophosaurus with a frill that spits venom and has no feathers, has no real evidence for it, but at the same time, there isn't a lot of evidence that could disprove it "couldn't". People like definitive stances when it comes to scientific discoveries and I think its why the public has been so hesitant to accept the new age of dinosaur depictions. If everyone came together and said "This is definitively what a T-rex looks like, make your games/toys/movies using this style" people would be fine. But with no baseline people resort back to what they are familiar with and what was cool, aka, Jurassic Park.

    • @TrainerAQ
      @TrainerAQ Před 5 lety +3

      Someone should make a depiction on what a whale looks like using just it's skeleton. I'm sure the result would be wild!

    • @Dilopho
      @Dilopho Před 5 lety +5

      T. rex is one of those ones that changes constantly because we have so many remains. I think that currently, it's thought T. rex was born with a full feather coating and then lost it all as it grew, replaced with thick hide and some crocodile-esque scales- based on skin impressions from other Tyrannosaurs. But we'll never really know for sure! It's wonderful! I mean, look at Deinocheirus and Therizinosaurus- first they were thought to be turtles, then carnivorous theropods, then ornithomimids, and they turned out to be something wayyy weirder!

  • @awesomearchivist1705
    @awesomearchivist1705 Před 2 lety +250

    Want to make dinosaurs scary again have you ever seen a owl? I know I know the mononykus from prehistoric planet is like a barn owl but cute but in my opinion *owls are terrifying.* (i blame lost tapes owl man) but you see where I'm going.
    Imagine a owl like troodon with black soulless shiny eyes chasing you through the woods without making a sound. Yeah F that.

  • @DangerVille
    @DangerVille Před 4 lety +41

    I love your videos, I can’t stop watching them! Looking forward to your next video! :)

  • @pux0rb
    @pux0rb Před 5 lety +17

    There are actual preserved melanosomes in the feathers of dinosaur fossils that scientists can analyze under a microscope and compare to modern ones. They have the full color scheme and patterns for a few species, giving us a glimpse at what they actually looked like as far as color goes. I hope paleontologists make more discoveries in the future about other aspects of dinosaurs' appearance. I get excited thinking about how cool they might end up looking.

  • @zackp9103
    @zackp9103 Před 5 lety +36

    11:36 this is a traced art work. Original painting was done by Jordan K. Walker.

  • @DonPatrono
    @DonPatrono Před 3 lety +13

    "Bowerbirds builds structures out of sticks and plants and then surround them with colored berries and flowers"
    NEVER FORGET OUR BROTHER RON

  • @randomgfan1942
    @randomgfan1942 Před 4 lety +15

    Dinosaurs will always be cool. No matter how many changes they go through, they will always be fantastic to me.

  • @thescauldron8436
    @thescauldron8436 Před 5 lety +27

    The fact that people are still fighting about feathers since like 10 years ago in the internet 😂😂

  • @cortster12
    @cortster12 Před 5 lety +37

    I love modern depictions because they look like real animals. I've never thought the older stuff looked like animals, more like fantasy creatures.

  • @MilQuetoastMushrooM
    @MilQuetoastMushrooM Před 8 měsíci +18

    *Me crying because I’ll never know what dinosaurs truly looked like*

    • @Curlyheart
      @Curlyheart Před 7 měsíci +2

      *pats your back*

    • @Yi65193
      @Yi65193 Před 7 měsíci +3

      At least we know almost exactly how psittacosaurus looked like😆

    • @GalvyTheTom
      @GalvyTheTom Před 23 dny

      Hey, Sinosauropteryx and Psittacosaurus are pretty well-understood

  • @insectilluminatigetshrekt5574

    Remember that everyone accepts eagles as a badass symbol of courage and strength, this alone disproves the idea that feathers make something weak.

  • @oscarstainton
    @oscarstainton Před 5 lety +21

    A new video on dinosaur art from this channel??
    I see that as an absolute win!

  • @TheSilversepiroth
    @TheSilversepiroth Před 5 lety +41

    The guy who first discovered Utahraptor (I'm terrible at names, I've looked up his name several times and still can't remember it) described what he thought it would look like to be the target of his discovery, and honestly its terrifying. He theorized that it had feathers complete with eye spots that would leap out from the underbrush and latch on their target with their arms while the legs kick as fast as a cat could, exerting hundreds of pounds of force. Now I don't know about you, but if an eagle with teeth the size of a polar bear, I'd frankly shit myself

    • @primo2296
      @primo2296 Před 5 lety +2

      That’s not terrifying, that’s a cassowary.

    • @Tymdek
      @Tymdek Před 5 lety

      His name is James "Jim" Kirkland.

    • @000Krim
      @000Krim Před 5 lety

      TheSilversepiroth :0

    • @jade4781
      @jade4781 Před 5 lety

      Knowing how much damage a simple cat can do, Id rather die than have to live in a world with those.

    • @Ucatty2
      @Ucatty2 Před 5 lety +2

      I think Australia still has some kicking around. Look up the cassowary.

  • @v.i.pflame7607
    @v.i.pflame7607 Před 3 lety +27

    Its all fun and games making fun of the feathered rex for being too cuddly or not intimating/scary..
    *Until you realize feathers dont change the fact it has a bite force of seven tons.*

  • @chloesibilla8199
    @chloesibilla8199 Před rokem +16

    Old art: nostalgic
    New art: if feels like a real animal

  • @pastlife960
    @pastlife960 Před 5 lety +15

    I love that last image of the dromaeosaur looking at those flying pterosaurs. It’s almost as if it’s thinking “soon my descendants will outcompete and destroy you. But not yet...”

  • @sajaak940
    @sajaak940 Před 5 lety +53

    I don’t get how feathered dinos aren’t scary.
    Square up with a Cassowary, then get back with me.

    • @dumonga9594
      @dumonga9594 Před 5 lety +3

      Cassowary: Allow us to introduce ourselves..

    • @thescauldron8436
      @thescauldron8436 Před 5 lety +5

      Lmao you don’t need to get a cassowary. Get a goose or heck a rooster. Or an angry peafowl.

    • @commanderclown8620
      @commanderclown8620 Před 5 lety +3

      @@thescauldron8436 I once saw this post about some guy who had recently moved to america and encountered a goose. According to him he "Did not like the cobra chicken."

    • @Defenestrationflight
      @Defenestrationflight Před 5 lety +1

      @@thescauldron8436 just kick them. Like seriously, boot them and problem over for you.

    • @milhy6567
      @milhy6567 Před 5 lety +2

      When i was 8 i got close and personal with some male peacocks and let me tell you that the big colorful feathers made them all the more scary.

  • @Araxen232
    @Araxen232 Před 4 lety +18

    In my opinion, adding feathers to the dinosaurs actually makes them more intimidating and terrifying. A giant lizard is definitely intimidating but it doesn’t click in your mind as something that could exist, but we already have giant birds, so the feathers just make the sight hit much closer to home than scales.

    • @brandonshmandon1799
      @brandonshmandon1799 Před 4 lety +5

      D'Angelo We also have plenty of giant reptiles on earth today. Gators, Crocs, Komodo Dragons, and Iguanas. I do like both feathered and non feathered dinosaur depictions, but to say that a fully scaled dinosaurs is something that doesn’t seem like something that did exist is a bit daft. Their were still a number of dinosaurs that lacked or had very little to no feathers such as Carnotaurus or most of the sauropods.

    • @nugrahapalin7481
      @nugrahapalin7481 Před 4 lety +3

      Giant chicken is not half as scary as a monstrous lizard. The widespread myth of dragon all over the world is not without it's reason.

    • @anakinskywalker2707
      @anakinskywalker2707 Před 4 lety

      Depend,if the feathers were given to a trex or allosaurus than its not only lame but also suck.however,put the feathers on yutyrannus or utahraptor than it will be fitting.

  • @croisaor2308
    @croisaor2308 Před 2 lety +39

    I don't understand why people are so mad about new varieties of dinosaurs.
    Look at how diverse the species of earth are just today and now imagine what dinosaurs looked like across hundreds of millions of years. There's space for both the old and new designs across all that time.
    The bird ones might be more accurate with current science but that doesn't mean every single dinosaur looked like that.

    • @andy-the-gardener
      @andy-the-gardener Před 2 lety +2

      absolutely. we have only discovered a tiny fraction of the animals of the past. almost everything one can imagine, as long as its rooted in biological reality, may well have evolved. theres almost unlimited scope for imagination. different species of t-rex for example, may have looked very different, like lions, tigers and leopards look very different. its almost certain closely related species would have evolved to look very different

  • @EdwardClayMeow
    @EdwardClayMeow Před 4 lety +69

    Feathers on dinosaurs, in some cases, actually make them more intimidating to me. It makes some of them look smarter and more fit, hence, more threatening.
    On the flip side, some dinosaur art of baby dinos are super adorable. In all, I like the many ways dinosaurs have been depicted since the 80's. So with or without feathers, they can look pretty menacing.

    • @morrius0757
      @morrius0757 Před 4 lety +1

      Could you imagine stumbling across a large raptor and it starts puffing and widening its feathers out in a threatening display while gaping its mouth wide open? That's terrifying.

    • @108wee
      @108wee Před 4 lety +1

      yeah! like what do these guys have against eagles and I guess raptors as a whole? I thought eagles looked pretty intimidating enough without the extra size.

    • @gijsbrans2338
      @gijsbrans2338 Před 4 lety +1

      Also creepy in some cases. Imagine a animal like a dakota raptor or utah raptor. They're large, like the size of a lion or larger, and were probably just as dangerous, but might've just looked like harmless big birds.

    • @Thatguy-of5re
      @Thatguy-of5re Před 4 lety

      Just gonna this image here of one of the cutest things I've ever seen in my life.
      twitter.com/eawilloughby/status/1167991214857183232

  • @angeleaterstudios1004
    @angeleaterstudios1004 Před 4 lety +112

    I appreciate the use of the old-school CZcams layout for the screenshots near the beginning

  • @Narko_Marko
    @Narko_Marko Před 10 měsíci +16

    Be it with feathers or not, i want dinosaurs to be depicted as what they are, animals and not just killing machines.

  • @blitz8425
    @blitz8425 Před 3 lety +12

    I'm glad you made the point about Dinosaurs being represented less like monsters, and more like animals in modern paleo art. For me, that's what I love about them. My favorite dinosaur is Allosaurus, and to me as interesting as it would be to see them hunt, what I would really like to do is see them do everything else. How they interacted with other Allosaurus', how they slept, how they groomed themselves, all of that. To me the most fascinating thing about Dinosaurs is that they were animals with their own unique sets of behaviors, that we will never be 100% certain on.

  • @Rodrigo_Vega
    @Rodrigo_Vega Před 5 lety +21

    Neat video!
    I'm glad to see that my not-at-all serious Spinosaurus and the cringe-worthy drawings I did as a teenager are still making the rounds.

  • @thegreatgoldfilms6311
    @thegreatgoldfilms6311 Před 5 lety +14

    I accept both vintage AND modern styles of dinosaurs

  • @paolopasaol9700
    @paolopasaol9700 Před 3 lety +23

    General Public: Birds are timid, friendly and a minor nuisance
    Cassowary: *AIGHT, WHO'S GIZZARD NEEDS A CLAWIN?*

    • @eduardofreitas8336
      @eduardofreitas8336 Před 3 lety +1

      dude, I photograph birds for a living and let me tell you. They are vicious beasts through and through, most are just tiny and we don't pay attention to their crimes.

  • @thomasmonroe7947
    @thomasmonroe7947 Před 4 lety +11

    I grew up in the 60’s, 70’s.....sort of...
    and latched on to dinosaurs as early as I can remember.
    I loved the tail draggers as much as the more recent conceptualizations.
    As a boy, I had always thought that the image of plodding, slow witted animals was incorrect and was pleased when my mind’s eye view of a more bird like animal was presented in Adrian Desmond’s ‘The Hot Blooded Dinosaurs’.
    The book reconfirmed what I’d always intuited.
    I can appreciate a Neave Parker print as much as a John Gurche.
    Charles Knight’s paintings will never lose their luster of a very exciting take on earlier life just as Doug Henderson’s work captures an environment that just so happens to be inhabited by some amazing and fascinating animals.
    I have my books full of tail draggers on the same shelf as Don Gluts seven volume Dinosaur Encyclopedia, Dinosaurs: A concise Natural History, everything Greg Paul has written and many others.
    There’s much that has been brought to light, corrected, etc.
    There’s still a lot of interpretation and inference that occurs.
    Some might be on target, some, not so much.
    That’s okay.
    Some questions may never get answered.
    But, one thing’s for sure, dinosaurs will never get old.
    They’re too damn fun.

  • @bigtimehardline03
    @bigtimehardline03 Před 4 lety +32

    They were monsters then. The art showed them as so disconnected from modern animals, that it had a fantastical, whimsical tone. Nowadays, dinosaur art depicts them as closer to animals we've become used to.

    • @Zarastro54
      @Zarastro54 Před 4 lety +1

      StalePangolin This is it. This is an excellent explanation.

  • @TangmoMopet
    @TangmoMopet Před 5 lety +13

    Perfectly balanced, as all thing should be.

    • @SxVaNm345
      @SxVaNm345 Před 5 lety +3

      👍

    • @samuraijackoff5354
      @samuraijackoff5354 Před 5 lety

      Dinosaurs: All your arguments of feathers and no feathers, and where did that being you? Back to me.

  • @Ishidalover
    @Ishidalover Před 2 lety +9

    There's a meme in the online art community that has an artist placing a small cake (their work) next to a larger, more elaborate cake (someone else's work), and they lament/assume that no one will enjoy their little cake. Later, another person comes up, holding two forks, and rejoices, "Oh boy! Two cakes!!" ...I think that's how I feel about "both sides", I'm just happy to be a part of it! Art and science will always be linked together, and it's important to allow both areas of study to flourish. Also, who isn't excited about New Dinosaurs? Don't be a boomer. Live a little. Have some imagination. Life is too short to die on that grumpy old hill yk

  • @supersharkboiii
    @supersharkboiii Před 3 lety +22

    I personally love modern dinosaur artwork, mostly because it's much better reconstruction wise compared to old dinosaur artwork. The thing I don't like is when people decide to simply put feathers on every dinosaur in the book. Not all dinosaurs had feathers, just take carnotourus (sorry if I misspelled that). It was proven to have scales and most likely didn't have many feathers, if any.

    • @SupahTrunks7
      @SupahTrunks7 Před 3 lety +2

      I agree. I love my floofs but some dinos like carnotaurus didn't have any feathers (but that doesn't bar them from fun colors and skin flaps and keratin sheaths on their horns etc. so there's still lots of speculative fun to be had)

    • @archosauropre-historico8708
      @archosauropre-historico8708 Před 3 lety +1

      I tottaly agree with you (yeah, you misspelled Carnotaurus)

    • @miguelcabreracastro6968
      @miguelcabreracastro6968 Před 3 lety +1

      yeah, yeah, probably... most certanly, not all dinos needed feathers

  • @nathanc9866
    @nathanc9866 Před 4 lety +19

    The thing that I don’t like is the idea that having feathers automatically makes it uncool. I’ve seen so many terrifying interpretations of feathered dinosaurs that it makes me mad when someone feathers take away the possibility of a scary dinosaurs.

  • @Caradepato
    @Caradepato Před 5 lety +20

    I'm in a similar boat to you, I really enjoy old dinosaur art and modern. There are a couple of things I dislike with said art of either periods, but thats just things I generally dislike with animal art (such as making things look unreasonably evil or spiky).

  • @brandenapexo604
    @brandenapexo604 Před 2 lety +33

    People getting mad over the appearance of a prehistoric animal be it scientifically accurate or not is absolute nonsense, it doesn’t take away from how magnificent and diverse these creatures were, these aren’t fantasy comic book monsters, listen to science people.

    • @lShadowdark
      @lShadowdark Před 2 lety +1

      The thing is that artists most of the times say "screw science" and just makes a 10 foot chicken and call it a T-rex

    • @yuyaricachimuel555
      @yuyaricachimuel555 Před rokem

      @@lShadowdark seems like a thing that was done back then too, though.
      Just look at the Dinosaur Renaissance that took place in the 60s through the 80s and look at the dinosaurs we got in movies *at the same time*.

  • @DarthInsomnis
    @DarthInsomnis Před 2 lety +35

    “Like Pelicans eating live pigeons”
    Excuse me, they do what?
    Also great vid man. Me personally I love the idea of dinosaurs being portrayed as just normal animals. Feathered dinosaurs too are badass and beautiful, with Deinocheirus being my favorite dinosaur.

  • @brandonshmandon1799
    @brandonshmandon1799 Před 5 lety +15

    I enjoy both style of dinosaurs, each has their unique appeal.

    • @DeviljWheat
      @DeviljWheat Před 5 lety +3

      Retro paleoart is an important reminder of how far we've come to understand dinosaurs. I don't look down upon it. Rather, it inspires me to keep seeking the truth.

  • @Gaaraape
    @Gaaraape Před 5 lety +19

    Just the thought that we won't really be able to definitely know how dinosaurs actually looked like gives me anxiety

    • @thescauldron8436
      @thescauldron8436 Před 5 lety +1

      Gaaraape we can from a telescope more than 66 million light years away. Maybe that’s the only way to solve the whole “was spinosaurus bipedal or not” argument at this point

    • @ScionStorm1
      @ScionStorm1 Před 5 lety

      Scientists are now developing methods to detect what kind of pigments dinosaurs had so we have a better idea of what colors and patterns dinosaurs actually were.

    • @lowpointfair4653
      @lowpointfair4653 Před 4 lety

      Most animals have camouflage to fit into their enviromenIt so is it not better to look at a species enviroment?

  • @northropi2027
    @northropi2027 Před 4 lety +64

    This is gonna sound, like, aggressive, but a few of the comments shown at the beginning really... Get me. How is modern paleoart less creative? Old stuff look nice, yes, but the tendency to stick to earthen tones and shrinkwrapping approach to body shape are quite restrictive. The discovery of feathers and greater acknowledgement of non-bone structures that artists are free to speculate on provides a much broader sandbox and an end result of more diverse appearances. What looks better is obviously subjective but how are you going to say that it's less creative?
    And does the one guy lamenting that modern dinosaur depictions are less draconic than classic ones realize that both Dragons and Long weren't just big lizards themselves, that they had frills and hair and spines and stuff that feathers, if anything, bring them closer to?

    • @rjrinal2516
      @rjrinal2516 Před 3 lety +4

      Completely agree, like the fact that people think that modern dinosaurs all look like non-threatening chickens makes me laugh, and cringe, all at the same time. I personally like modern depictions much more than the old ones, with feathers, and the ones that display unique behaviors, too. Plus it's not like they all looked like chickens, like stop being a......thing, and just take the time to get a feel for the aesthetic designs of these real, once living creatures instead of taking a brief glance and immediately bashing on it because feathers make them look goofy and weird. Besides, not all dinosaurs had feathers, small theropods had them for sure, even tyrannosaurs had some partial feathering, abelisaurs are a canidate for this, too, but some theropods, esspecially the early, less derived ones, and some sauropods, don't have direct evidence of feathers, neither do most ornithiscians, but it's never too crazy to assume that some had some type of covering.

  • @TIMWReigo
    @TIMWReigo Před 3 lety +22

    After watching the dinosaur popularity video and now both videos talking new and old art form of dinosaurs, I love how casual you are and show that these animals that once ruled this planet is something that captures everyone's imagination. When I was a kid growing up from elementary school to middle school and very little of it in high school I was laughed at for being dinosaur obsessed. I still am to this day and I'm 23 years old. The science of these seemingly other worldly creatures sure yes due to society can be boring but when it comes down to it: Dinosaurs have been here longer then us, they're bigger than us, faster and surpass all survival tactics to humans. Humans need tools to survive out somewhere in some environment for a week to one's entire life. Dinosaurs didn't. No animal truly does. I'm one of those science nerds that do look into the science of dinosaurs but I just love seeing in some media depictions of these large animals. Sure half of them are no accurate but the feeling is still there.

    • @chubibi06
      @chubibi06 Před 3 lety +1

      tbh, comparing the human species abilities to those of the Dinosaurs is quite fallacious. Of course one species disposes of less features than a whole clade, composed of hundreds, could developp over 180 Million years (not including post K-T/ K-Pg extinction avian dinosaur here...)
      And in our defense, if we human today couldn't survive long without tools, it's because our own evolution was determined by those very tools we learnt to create and handle (and we don't lack feature we can be proud of : depht perception thanks to our binocular vision ; a huge stamina, an omnivorous diet...)
      But as another Dinosaur-obsessed nerd (always been, always be), i too am excited about depiction of these fantastic animals. Wether i stumble on some vintage artwork from my childhood or some new work illustrating an article about a new discovery, i can't help but be amazed by all the creativity our predescessor sparked into our unbound imagination ; always pushing further what's real and what's still fictive our bound to become unaccurate (but still inspiring).

  • @SxVaNm345
    @SxVaNm345 Před 5 lety +11

    I’ve always loved both the classic and modern dinosaur artwork, to me the golden age of Dino art never ended. I like your introspective take on this controversy. People have their own likes & dislikes, and ideas about what is considered good or bad.

  • @shrain
    @shrain Před 5 lety +58

    As a huge dino fan, I really enjoyed this video. It's a very wholesome take on the 'evolution' of dino theories, art, and facts.

  • @jamiehudgins9416
    @jamiehudgins9416 Před 2 lety +50

    It's explained in jurassic park that the dinos are innacurate because they have other DNA mixed in to fill the gaps, such as frogs for most and blue specifically has monitor lizard

    • @ndog0639
      @ndog0639 Před 2 lety +4

      It doesn't actually make sense tho bcs frogs would completely fuck up the genome in ways that it doesn't in movie and the innacuracies in the movies would just not be caused by frog DNA. No problem with movies taking artistic liberties but just say it how it is

    • @ein_blinde_Nashorn
      @ein_blinde_Nashorn Před 2 lety +1

      I don’t get why everyone ignores this to say “they’re inaccurate!!!!!!!!”

    • @Mezworld
      @Mezworld Před 2 lety +1

      @@ein_blinde_Nashorn Because they still call it a Trex in the films and act like its a trex instead of 'weird frog monster'

    • @vaalalves
      @vaalalves Před 2 lety

      @@Mezworld The Trex is literally the most accurate dinosaur in the whole jurassic park franchise.
      Pick a different one, the Trex did not have feathers.

    • @prehistoricnerd2068
      @prehistoricnerd2068 Před 2 lety +1

      Invalid. In the Jurassic world dominion prologue, they still got the dinosaurs wrong. The giganotosaurus isn't even in the right place. So this argument can't be used anyway. Before you say anything, you can't just vomit feathers on a dinosaur and call it accurate. That's not how it works.

  • @weirdguygames4294
    @weirdguygames4294 Před 4 lety +17

    Hoopsanddinoman: Makes video defending vintage dino art and worries that people wont agree with him.
    [Everyone liked that]
    Also hoops: Makes video defending modern dino art and worries that people wont agree with him.
    [Everyone liked that]

  • @titanofserpents4315
    @titanofserpents4315 Před 5 lety +11

    I love both old and new dinosaur art. It's very interesting to see what paleo artists can come up with!

  • @weik-2936
    @weik-2936 Před 5 lety +13

    We need a new Dinosaur movie (I don't think a Jurassic Park movie can do it, too caught up in the past), that brings the modern understanding of Dinosaurs to the public eye

    • @flightlesslord2688
      @flightlesslord2688 Před 5 lety +1

      Well that isn't Jurassic Park's fault, they need to keep to continuity, unless there is a whole story arc in the film about making the Dinosaurs more accurate

    • @batspidey7611
      @batspidey7611 Před 5 lety +1

      Indeed.

  • @ThePotatoSapien
    @ThePotatoSapien Před 2 lety +22

    I feel like the way we depict dinosaurs will never truly be one hundred percent accurate, but we’re getting closer and closer. It’s kind of like that thing where you walk forward half the distance between you and your destination, then walk half the new distance again, then again, and again, each time getting a little closer, but never truly reaching it. It’s sad that we’ll never truly see real (non-avian) dinosaurs, but, in my opinion, we’re already much closer than we were even just a decade ago. Each step we take, whether it’s from quadrupedal lizards to kangaroo crocodiles, or from swamp-dwelling behemoths to active predators, or from alien-like reptiles to more familiar creatures, each step we take is important.
    That’s why I still really respect the old paleoart, especially from the Dinosaur Renaissance. It is outdated now, but we wouldn’t be where we are today if not for the popularization of movies and media like Jurassic Park.
    Moral of the story is…
    Respect the scaly wrist-breaking monstrosities, but anyone who says birds aren’t scary can just try and offend a cassowary. Just do it. You’ll see. :)

  • @warehog3000
    @warehog3000 Před 4 lety +15

    As a kid who both watched jurassic park and had a grandpa that had an Emu farm. I can tell you that yes feathered dinosaurs can be terrifying.

  • @thejurassicman661
    @thejurassicman661 Před 5 lety +14

    That was just, amazing to watch. You've grown to become an inspiring channel. NO! Educator, of the ancient world

  • @beanoptodon
    @beanoptodon Před 5 lety +14

    Viewing the vintage stuff as more of a fantasy because of the lack of knowledge of the subject gives that allure to me. I love the modern stuff as an adult because of the attention to how things were back then, in any way they could have been.
    Also feathers are amazing on dinosaurs.

  • @pineappleoverlord9k462
    @pineappleoverlord9k462 Před 2 lety +39

    this is why prehistoric planet released in 2022 is just so fucking good.
    its honestly one of the best depictions of dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures

    • @user-it2kq4ty9q
      @user-it2kq4ty9q Před 2 lety

      it went out of its way to show dinosaurs doing things other than fighting like eating salt and trying to fuck

  • @ukan1527
    @ukan1527 Před 11 měsíci +20

    As someone who also grew up with old dinosaur art being the status quo I highly, highly prefer the modern takes. I loved dinosaurs to death back then, don't get me wrong, but I always found the depictions unsatisfactory. Truth be told, most artist back then had zero clue how to do dinosaur anatomy so a lot of them seem to have just decided to wing it and do whatever. That's all fine and well, but I'm a sucker for anatomy, something as insignificant as a weirdly flexible tail can completely ruin an art piece for me. Ever since I was a kid I've wanted to see dinosaurs as real as possible, as if I'm watching a photograph, and old dinosaur art doesn't have that feel. It feels like drawings of mythical beasts, which to me seems like yet another barrier placed between me and seeing a dinosaur for real. Modern dinosaur interpretations often don't evoke that feeling, in fact a lot of them have such good anatomy, such believable posing that they look a lot more real to me even if it's a simple piece drawn with pencils and crayons, and has little to no background imagery. Modern depictions feel alive, you feel like you're looking at a real animal even if the reconstruction isn't 100% accurate (and how can it be?).

  • @thomasgif1834
    @thomasgif1834 Před 5 lety +28

    One of my favorite parts of modern dinosaur art is how diverse it all feels. Modern dinos all feel like separate species of animals, while vintage dinosaur art is just a bunch of lizards slightly rearranged.

  • @fridastenfeldt5808
    @fridastenfeldt5808 Před 5 lety +148

    You really think you can just sneak that Prehistoric Park music in there without me noticing?

  • @giorgigarsevanidze6334
    @giorgigarsevanidze6334 Před 3 lety +18

    I used to like dinosaurs as a kid because I thought they were cool. Now I like dinosaurs because there's so much room for interpretation when it comes to their appearance and I think that's exciting.

  • @Lepurcinus
    @Lepurcinus Před 2 lety +17

    It's amazing how so much media exposure of dinosaurs looking and acting like monsters made people eventually come to hate the idea of animals looking and acting like animals. Especially treating their appearance as if they were fictional characters that you could criticize for not being "well designed or not be scary".

  • @Geebrowtar13
    @Geebrowtar13 Před 5 lety +26

    "scales feel rough" uhm hello have u ever touched a snake? they are so smooth

    • @celox6796
      @celox6796 Před 5 lety +4

      They are but most people, especially "feATHERs ArEn'T SCarY" plebians don't realize that. He's talking about people's perceptions, not reality.

    • @lemmingscanfly5
      @lemmingscanfly5 Před 5 lety +1

      That's just the slime :^)

    • @98Dreadboy
      @98Dreadboy Před 5 lety +1

      Snakes are meant to be smooth so that they can move around on the ground think more of a crocodile they are quite rough and scaly.

    • @MsHyphyone
      @MsHyphyone Před 5 lety +2

      You ever touch a rattlesnake? Lots of snakes and lizards have rough scales.

    • @piranhateeth2791
      @piranhateeth2791 Před 5 lety +2

      Geebrowtar13 yes on a snake, but have you ever felt a crocodile? They're rough and ragged. It all depends on the animal.

  • @1979Cactus
    @1979Cactus Před 5 lety +41

    Looking through the comments I feel like I'm one of the few that prefers the middle way, being that creatures such as T-Rex being completely covered in feathers would seem really impractical, seeing as it would have a great difficulty trying to preen all places. Smaller Dinosaurus, such as Dromeosaurs, I can see being covered in eagle-like feathers. Heck, my favorite artwork of a Dakotaraptor is one in the scheme of a Spanish Eagle. Do I need my dinosaurus to be scaly and scary? no. Do I need all of them to be covered in feathers or have strange bodyparts? no.
    Reptiles still co-exist with mammals in the world we live in, and they don't look like one another. As such I feel like the same could be said for Dinosaurs.

    • @lowpointfair4653
      @lowpointfair4653 Před 5 lety +1

      Finally Someone who thinks like me, look at t rex for example most people think its complety scaly or complety feathered but what if they were neither, like we have no skin impression on the back,shoulders, side of the stomach,neck and top of the head, thats like half the animal yet people claim that its complety scaly, what if it had a cape or protofeathers,or were more like us aka having reduced size feathers, we know of two tyrannorosauroids that had feathers one is yutyrannus and the other one is like the founding species of the glade. Dromeosauroids on the other hand, were mostly complety feathered we have a lot of evidence to support this.like skin impression on various species showing feather covering all over the body, Dromeosaurs or raptors Is most likely the ancestor of bird. Then they are dinosaurs that have very little probability of having feathers like sauropods or stegosaurs

    • @helfiaskomirotaino
      @helfiaskomirotaino Před 5 lety

      i mean yeah we basically know now that the adult trex probably only had a thin covering of feather-like structures on its back and probably would have had mostly bare skin because of its size

  • @DamiesEvilTwin
    @DamiesEvilTwin Před 2 lety +27

    We know some dinos had feathers. We know some had skin and scales. We even know some had hair-like structures. And most interesting of all, we've actually found fossils of "in progress" evolution of feathers dinos. The thing is that since organic materials don't fossilize as well (and typically take like, roundabout ways to it), there's a CRAPLOAD of things that still are within the realm of very, very possible AND plausible.
    It's also surprising to me that people will think dinosaurs are violent killing machines constantly eating each other, but then also turn up their nose at the idea that a dino could have fat stores of any kind.

    • @carso1500
      @carso1500 Před 2 lety +10

      And we have even found dinosaurs with both scales and feathers, sometimes on top of one another
      And imo the problem with a lot of people is that they don't consider dinosaurs as animals that existed a long time ago but more like monsters, cool giant monsters to kill in videogames and books and movies and because of this anything that makes then less "cool" gets instantly dismised

  • @speedracer2008
    @speedracer2008 Před 2 lety +20

    Not going to lie, as a kid, I did draw dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals killing things a little too much. Now, I'm actually taking the time to draw dinosaurs and other prehistoric mammals doing other things. For example, I recently did a drawing of a Nanuqsaurus, a tyrannosaur that lived in the Arctic, 69.1 million years ago, completing a nest. Also, I did a drawing of a gorgonopsid called Inostrancevia with its infants, in response to how a lot of paleoart seems to heavily depict gorgonopsids hunting pareiasaurs, like Scutosaurus. The drawings that depict animals that are hunting things have points to them, such as a drawing I made of Velociraptor fighting Protoceratops, in reference to the iconic Fighting Dinosaurs fossil from Mongolia.

  • @nono9543
    @nono9543 Před 5 lety +16

    I’ve always loved dinosaurs and get kinda shocked on how angry people get with some of the new depictions.
    It’s not like you’re not allowed to have your own perception of a prehistoric creature. We’re likely *NEVER* gonna know 100% what these creatures look like.
    It’s weird how mean people can be in arguing what version of a creature is universally better.

  • @swapertxking
    @swapertxking Před 5 lety +30

    With off hand experience with chickens and other fowls, I really could picture what the smaller raptors would be like if you snagged them and held them upside down. A flurry of fluttering feathers and talons.

    • @MrDrManPerson
      @MrDrManPerson Před 5 lety +1

      Birds are actually pretty scary if you think about them in large scale. Their hyper speed twitchy movement, their hard beaks and sharp claws, really could do some damage on humans if the scale was magnafied.

  • @orbic521
    @orbic521 Před 2 lety +20

    Thank you for this.
    Honestly the idea that some people would turn their head at feathered dinosaurs because they aren't "scary enough" is so silly to me. It's an animal, not a pokemon design. It doesn't owe humans the appearance of looking cool or scary. If a dinosaur is scientifically proven to have cute, fluffy feathers then so be it; it's like saying lions shouldn't have big poofy manes because it's not scary enough and then being genuinely upset about them continuously having manes and fur.

    • @yuyaricachimuel555
      @yuyaricachimuel555 Před rokem

      It’s funny because a scientifically accurate dinosaur could be intimidating to be around, be they for their size, or just the way they look at you, depending what dinosaur we’re talking about of course, and depending how much knowledge one has on them at the same time.
      Just like how meeting a lion face to face for the first time would be pretty scary, simply because you know it’s an apex predator, and you don’t know if it’s had its fill already.

  • @goldeneagle8740
    @goldeneagle8740 Před 2 lety +19

    "Birds are generally thought of as timid, friendly, and a minor nuisance at most"
    Golden eagles which throw goats off cliffs to kill them: "Timid? I'll show you TIMID-"

  • @WarChallenger
    @WarChallenger Před 5 lety +12

    The free range of depictions is really what I think draws in so many people to draw dinosaurs. It's open to interpretation because there's simply no feasible way of knowing exactly what they looked like with so little remaining of the time frames. This video was great, man. Informative, emotional, and to the point. Seeing all the different depictions was also really interesting.

  • @EtherBotGames
    @EtherBotGames Před 4 lety +131

    this video sparked my imagination and made me weirdly giddy about something i almost never think about

    • @lightningmcqueen8514
      @lightningmcqueen8514 Před 4 lety

      Same man. It's pretty inspirational.

    • @BM-yy8db
      @BM-yy8db Před 4 lety

      This right here! I am not a dino person, they don't really hold my interest that much. But this video and the vintage one before it, they make me want to try my hand at dino art, and they give me that renewed interest in reading up on dinosaurs

  • @jonbolitho-jones7614
    @jonbolitho-jones7614 Před 3 lety +19

    Just fangirled seeing the Dinosaurs in the Wild Tyrannosaurus at 5.10 again. I worked on that.

  • @pogmog
    @pogmog Před 4 lety +26

    I'm surprised there was no mention of the cassowary... "the world's most dangerous bird" which looks like it could fit into the new style of dino-drawings.

  • @Herr_Damit
    @Herr_Damit Před 5 lety +25

    I really like the modern depictions of Dinosaurs. Also, I think that now that every dinosaur looks different depending on the artist, it's easier for kids to understand that the facts presented are not necessarily true. I remember taking everything I read about Dinosaurs as true, because every book presented them in the same way.
    Also, I do not think that modern depictions look less scary. Quetzalcoatlus was not the quadrupedaled, intimidating badass he is today .

    • @tricksor6589
      @tricksor6589 Před 5 lety

      ikr ive seen some modern quetz depictions walking on its four limbs towering over prey and jesus fucking christ they are scarier than therizinos and rexes combined

    • @pixelfox9666
      @pixelfox9666 Před 5 lety +1

      Many paleontologists now believe that most if not all dromaeosaurids ("raptors") would subdue their prey using something called "raptor prey restraint" -- they'd jump onto the prey's back, latch on with their foot claws (which were all but useless for slashing, but amazing at piercing and would have made excellent climbing hooks), then use their wing-like arms like a tight-rope walker to keep their balance while literally eating their prey to death. I don't understand the "feathered dinos aren't scary!" crowd.

  • @captainstroon1555
    @captainstroon1555 Před 3 lety +16

    I love me some fluffy dinosaurs. The age of reptiles had its charm, but seeing it as the age of birds instead is new and exciting. Especially that last picture was amazing. Not only because of the beautiful artwork but because of the story it tells.

  • @SnakesAnimations
    @SnakesAnimations Před 4 lety +3

    "scales feel rough, unsettling"
    *shows a lizard being happily petted*