Discovery Channel: Shark Week 2009
Shark Week
Everyone’s favourite week of ocean terror is
back!
Sunday 18 January 2009 - Saturday 24 January
2009
Mysteries of The Shark Coast
SUNDAY 18 JANUARY,
7.30PM
New Zealand Television Premiere
(1 ep x 120
mins)
Australia's northeastern coast is a hotbed for
shark activity. Its tropical seas are home to more sharks
and more different species of sharks, than any other in the
world. However, there's trouble in the sharks' stronghold
down under, as even here the sharks are disappearing. What's
happening to them? Is it something we're doing or do we not
fully understand the real lives of sharks? A special
cross-discipline team made up of Australian marine biologist
Richard Fitzpatrick, a filmmaker, a conservationist and an
adventurer will band together to undertake the largest shark
tagging expedition in Australian history. The rest of the
‘shark investigator’ team is made up of noted shark
documentary filmmaker and host Mike deGruy, scientist M.
Sanjayan and Ph.D and adventurer, Celine Cousteau. Their
mission: to discover the cause for the mysterious decline in
sharks along Australia's coast and figure out how we can
help the situation. Discovery Networks’ mission was to
support them by contributing $US 150,000 to this vital
research which could affect the future of sharks in
Australia. In the documentary, the team of shark
investigators deploy crittercams and remote cameras in
several locations to explore and record secret shark
behaviours and to gather new insight into the still largely
secretive life of the ocean's ultimate
predator.
Mythbusters Shark Week Special
MONDAY
19 JANUARY, 7.30PM
New Zealand Television Premiere (1 ep
x 120 mins)
After taking a bite out of some common shark
myths, the MythBusters are thirsty for more! Grab your wet
suits, spear guns and sunscreen and hit the deep blue to
tackle another bite out of shark folklore. This year the
team is out to test the peeper shark myth which explores
whether gouging a shark's eyes prevents attack.
SURVIVING SHARKS
TUESDAY 20 JANUARY, 7.30PM
New Zealand Television Premiere (1 ep x 60 mins)
What
do sharks really like to eat and how can we stay off the
menu? Host, Les Stroud (‘Survivor man’) jumps into the
water with species of sharks that have particularly bad
reputations including the Bull, Tiger and Reef Shark. Watch
as he tests how these animals determine what’s good to eat
and what's not.
Dirty Jobs: Greenland Shark Quest
WEDNESDAY 21 JANUARY, 7.30PM
New Zealand Television
Premiere (1 ep x 60 mins)
In this special, Mike heads to
the edge of the Arctic Circle, on the northeast side of
Canada (Baffin Island) in search of one of the most
mysterious sharks known to man, the Greenland shark. These
sharks are easily the least understood large shark and
learning more about these slow moving behemoths could help
scientists understand the ecological changes in recent years
occurring so rapidly around the Arctic and what their
immediate impact on the food chain is. When Mike and the
crew arrive they quickly realise the biggest challenge of
this job will be trying to keep from freezing to death. Not
only is the life of the crew in danger, so is their
equipment, as everything is completely frozen.
How Not
To Become Shark Bait
THURSDAY 22 JANUARY, 7.30PM
New
Zealand Television Premiere (1 ep x 60 mins)
Escapologist
Jonathan Goodwin, egged on by his two sidekicks, is thrown
into a perilous situation in order to show us how NOT to
become shark bait. These guys are thrill seekers with a
purpose who want to understand the science behind situations
and test to the limit, everything that the world can throw
at them. The more dangerous it gets, the more the hosts
relish watching their friends learn How Not To Become Shark
Bait.
Ocean Of Fear
FRIDAY 23 JANUARY,
7.30PM
Channel Premiere (1 ep x 60 mins)
This is the
gripping story of the USS Indianapolis ship that was sunk by
Japanese torpedoes in the Philippine Sea on the night of
July 30, 1945 during World War II. Of the 1,200 man crew,
around 300 men go down with the ship and 900 sailors, many
maimed and burned, were plunged into the water and were left
floating helplessly for four days, beset by hunger, driven
mad by thirst and menaced and eaten by hundreds of sharks.
Ocean of Fear examines why the sharks attacked the way they
did and investigates the survival strategies of the men in
the water, including the 300 survivors who fought the
sharks. The ordeal of the crew is a testament to human
endurance in treacherous conditions.
Other Shark
Week programs include:
SHARK ATTACK SURVIVORS - Tuesday
January 20 at 8.30pm
TOP FIVE: EATEN ALIVE - Wednesday
January 21 at 8.30pm
SHARK FEEDING FRENZY - Thursday
January 22 at 8.30pm
PERFECT PREDITORS - Friday January
23 at 8.30pm
SHARKMAN - Saturday January 24 at 7.30pm
ENDS