Cecil the lion and world's most endangered animals projected on Empire State Building

The live video projection was part of a project aimed to raise awareness for animals which are on the verge of extinction

Alexandra Sims
Sunday 02 August 2015 17:18 BST
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160 species were shown in the display including a snow leopard, a bald eagle and a golden lion tamarin
160 species were shown in the display including a snow leopard, a bald eagle and a golden lion tamarin

Images of Cecil the lion and a number of the world's most endangered animals were projected on to the side of the Empire State Building in what has been billed as a first-of-its-kind live video projection.

The event was part of a project aimed to raise awareness for animals which are on the verge of extinction.

The project was created by film maker Louie Psihoyos

The project, created by film maker Louie Psihoyos who won an Oscar for his feature-length documentary “The Cove”, displayed a looping reel of colourful images of the endangered animals over a 33-floor span of the southern face of the Empire State Building.

160 species were shown in the display including a snow leopard, a bald eagle and a golden lion tamarin.

Cecil, the lion that was shot and killed by a U.S dentist during an allegedly illegal hunt in Zimbabwe in July, was one of the animals displayed on the landmark building as part of the show.

Crowds of people watched the display from the streets

According to NBC New York Psihoyos said at the event: “There's only 3,500 wild male lions out there. The gun lobby keeps them from being on the list but they are endangered.”

”Cecil — I mean what a — at least there are other lions left. I've photographed some species where it's the last male of a species, like the Rabbs' Fringe-limbed tree frog.“

Song "One Candle" played as the images were shown

40 projectors were used to shine the images on to the skyscraper which stands at 150ft tall.

According to reports the song “One Candle” was played as the projections beamed down on midtown New York.

40 projectors were used in creating the light show

The event was organised as part of a promotion for a new Discovery Channel documentary, Racing Extinction, which will be televised in December.

Additional reporting by Associated Press

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