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Millions of people watch a 24 -hour rolling live stream

MONews
3 Min Read

In the last six years, millions of people have been in the movement of northern Sweden every spring every spring.

“Great Moose MIGRATION” traces the animal by swimming across Angerman River and travels to the green summer pasture.

The 24 -hour program of SVT Play, a streaming platform for Sweden’s national broadcasters, started a week ahead of the schedule because of the warmer weather in April on Tuesday.

The broadcast has become a “slow TV” phenomenon and has grown a highly loyal fan base since its founding in 2019.

The 60-year-old CAIT BORJESSON, fascinated by the annual life line after finding a chance in Covid-19 Pandemic, said the TV began for 16 hours since it started on Tuesday.

“It’s incredibly comfortable,” she said. “There are natural sounds of birds, winds and trees. Otherwise, it feels in nature.”

In the case of CAIT, watching the migration is a traditional tradition every year and booked a discount for three weeks to fully immerse yourself in the broadcast.

She said the stream is “like treatment,” and it helps to anxiety and panic attacks.

And she is not alone. SVT’s LivesStream has a wide range of audiences, including a memorable moment, including a Facebook group with more than 77,000 members, and a shared fascination on the migration.

The main part of the trip occupied by SVT is next to the anger, Cool Bug Village in northern Sweden.

Goran Ericsson, the dean of the Department of Forest Sciences, Swedish University of Agriculture Science and Science Advisor, returned to the summer range after compiling spots at a better temperature in winter. Said.

“Historically, this is progressing after the ice age,” he said. “In spring and summer, mousse spreads more equally in the landscape.”

He added that about 95 percent of mousse in northern Sweden travels every year.

“Early spring happens sometimes,” he said. “We are still within the normal fluctuations.”

He added that more than 30 cameras are used to capture mousse when they pass through vast landscapes.

The show attracted almost millions of viewers in 2024 during its launch in 2019 and 9 million viewers in 2024.

MINH-XUAN Truong, a researcher at the Swedish Agricultural Sciences College of Agricultural Sciences, who surveyed live stream viewers, enjoys experiencing nature through this slow TV style in a fast-proceeding media environment.

“Many people say it’s like an open window of the forest,” he says. “If you ask if you prefer music in the background, or if you prefer commentary, you can say that you prefer the sound of wind, birds and trees alone.”

Sweden’s forests have about 300,000 mousations. Animals are known as “King of Forest” in Scandinavian countries.

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