The NASA Jet Propulsion laboratory has released a final video from on board the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission spacecraft named Ebb, which was deliberately crashed into the lunar surface in December after completing its gravity-mapping mission to the Moon. The video is the clearest and most breathtaking video of the lunar surface seen since the end of the Apollo program, and is not the kind of simulated or stop-motion "videos" we have often seen, but rather a straight-up recording of the the lunar surface flying by, as a human being would see it looking out the window of a crewed spacecraft (just somewhat faster in order to make the scenery go by in a more timely fashion) - I recommend going full-screen and selecting the HD 720p resolution:
This is the kind of media that really puts you there, and I've always been puzzled as hell at NASA's general refusal to equip most probes with this kind of capability, which is why they almost always end up releasing so-called "videos" that are clumsily stitched together from still photographs taken long intervals apart. Speaking for myself, that kind of thing does more harm than good, making the audience feel like it's some kind of animated / unreal environment - they can't relate it to their own sensory experiences. But the video above is definitely relatable, because it's basically what you'd get with someone holding a camera up to a window. If they could deliver this kind of fly-over of Mars, or asteroids, or Venus, Mercury, moons of Jupiter, etc. - pretty much anything - it would definitely quicken pulses and feed the public appetite for more.
And on a style note, getting the Sun glare in the first images is brilliant, because it puts the environment in context - you've got a black sky with a shining Sun in it and the rolling grey lunar surface below, so it very much gives the viewer a sense of place. There are two things NASA probes are designed to do: Science, and entertainment to make the public want to keep funding such science. THIS is the way to do the latter. NASA should start having such video capabilities as a general standard for their planetary probes, regardless of transmission bandwidth constraints - whether it takes a day or a month to upload the thing, it's worth it.