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- Scattered across all 7 seas and from the tropics to the Antarctic are the UK's Overseas Territories, some of the most remote places on the planet. In 2 one-hour programs we explore this natural wealth of life in locations so remote that few have ever visited.
- A captivating world of creepy crawlies exists all around us. And they are the biggest group of animals in the world, outnumbering humans 200 million to one. Thanks to millions of years of evolution, these invertebrates not only survive in almost every landscape known to man, but also thrive by means of fascinating, and sometimes bizarre adaptations. There's the Bombardier beetle that squirts a boiling hot liquid from its anus, the Assassin bug that turns its victims into soup, and the Parasitic wasp that lays her eggs inside her victims, until her young are ready to eat their way out. We end off with the biggest bugs on the planet: the Atlas moth with a wingspan of over 20 centimeters, the Hercules beetle that can carry 850 times its own weight, and the Giant centipede - big enough to catch flying bats from midair.
- In 1930s, the Nazi Party created the Hitler Youth to indoctrinate children and adolescents with Nazi ideology and prepare them to become a child army for Hitler. The first program traces the rise of the movement through to the war.
- 1 hour-long TV special about deep sea exploration of the Galapagos Rift (1980).
- 2023– 44m5.8 (5)TV EpisodeAlbert Lin is in Scotland, searching for an ancient Barbarian Kingdom.
- In Extreme Animal Babies we reveal the different personalities and behaviours of the world's baby animals and find the most extreme examples in each category. The storyline is simple: countdown the ten most extreme babies for any given behaviour or location. The journey to find the answer, however, takes the audience into the complex world of animal behaviour and the reason behind why animal babies do what they do.
- Meet husband and wife team Phil and Lynne Richardson, who live at a water hole with lions, elephants, and baboons in the African bush of northern Zimbabwe's Zambezi Valley. Video technologies like miniature infrared cameras and lenses for nighttime vision help them capture natural behavior without interfering with the wildlife. Join us for the story of an African spring in a remote corner of the Zambezi Valley, a riverine oasis, which is the only source of water for thousands of thirst-driven animals who trek from afar to slake their thirst. Here, animals face the conflict between satisfying their need to drink with defending against predators. A National Geographic Production.
- In January 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released a report on climate change, highlighting the alarming trajectory of our planet. Issues such as rising sea levels, large-scale fires, climate change-induced disasters reminiscent of biblical proportions, scarcity of clean drinking water, escalating ocean acidity, the extinction of animal species, and melting glaciers have become globally recognized environmental challenges. In collaboration with Yale University, the documentary endeavors to delve into the primary causes of this crisis.
- National Geographic reveals an in-depth look at the challenges and dangers of war in this collection of programs that span from World War II to present day.
- 2007– 50m7.7 (6)TV EpisodeFiery Roman Emperor Justinian ordered the rebuilding of the great church of Hagia Sophia in Istanbul almost 1500 years ago. Modern science now uncovers the secret to this vast golden dome's longevity.
- Albert Lin explores Peru in search of the Lost City of the Cloud Warriors.
- Dallas Campbell and Kari Byron travel the globe, meeting the innovators who are creating new ways to power our world into the future.
- This is a seven episode miniseries for children. Each episode focuses on a continent, providing some facts about wildlife and geography (both human and physical). This was produced for National Geographic.
- Former British Paratrooper Karl Bushby embarks on a year-long journey to walk - one step at a time - 3,600 miles from the Pacific shores of Los Angeles to the steps of the Russian Embassy in Washington D.C. His goal: convince Moscow to allow him back in to Siberia, so he can complete his record-setting 20-year, 36,000-mile walk around the world. In 1998, with only $300 to his name, Bushby set out on a challenge to complete the longest continuous walk in human history. Planning to return to his home in Britain on foot, he left the southern tip of South America and walked up through Central America, North America and into Russia, successfully completing the first documented on-foot crossing of the Bering Strait from Alaska to Russia. After trekking nearly 2,000 miles into the grueling Siberian tundra, the Russian government placed a five-year visa ban on Bushby, halting the expedition to which he has already dedicated a third of his life. Now, this modern-day adventurer is walking from Los Angeles to the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C. with his visa application in hand, in hopes of overturning the ban and continuing what he started sixteen years ago. The trek take will Bushby through the Western deserts, over the Rockies, across the Great Plains, over the Appalachians and onwards to the U.S. Capital. As he battles the elements and the emotional toll that comes along with 15 years on the road, we will learn that Karl is the embodiment of perseverance, and that it is indeed possible, if not incredibly rewarding, to steadfastly pursue one's wildest dreams.
- A young Londoner gets an exciting offer to work in his dad's bar in Thailand, but when he arrives, he soon discovers a world of temptation that he can't resist, breaking his father's golden rule.
- Glacier National Park is going through dramatic changes; the glaciers that give this wilderness its name will soon be gone, and the park will never be the same.
- Hand-built at Learjet's factory in Wichita, Kansas, the 60XR offers fighter jet performance with the latest technology in yacht style luxury.
- A little girl stumbles into a sacred grove near her village in south India. She disturbs the spirit of the forest, who takes her on an adventure to illuminate the origins of this ancient swampland.
- Wildlife filmmaker Bertie Gregory goal is to find stories that get people to fall in love with the natural world and show that looking after wildlife is more than just a nice thing to do, it's crucial to all our futures.
- This Nat Geo feature aims to see the pandemic from the eyes of India's frontline soldiers, who battle against unprecedented odds for humanity's future.
- Movie creators visit all seven continents to present various species of birds, the only animal that can be found everywhere in the world.
- The remains of a royal massacre uncovered at an abandoned Maya city are providing clues to the ancient mystery of why that civilization collapsed 1,200 years ago.
- 2011– 45m7.0 (8)TV EpisodeThe victory of WWII may have been an achievement between, among others, the Americans, run by their democratically elected government, and the Soviets, run by the Communists. It, however, marked the beginning of a global power struggle between the two factions, which would be better known as the Cold War. Because the Americans had the ultimate weapon of annihilation in the nuclear bomb, that power struggle was largely through public relation campaigns, in among other propaganda battlegrounds as the Italian election following the war, in Berlin as Stalin and the Soviets tried to seize it in its entirety, and more formally in war on the Korean peninsula. Official and unofficial propaganda campaigns also happened on the home front. In the US, much of it was through network television, whose shows depicted American family life as perfect. But the global situation brought about strong anti-Communist sentiments, which allowed the McCarthy Communist witch hunts to occur. On the Soviet side, Stalin did whatever he needed, including falsely accusing, imprisoning and murdering people, in order to show he was in control. Much of his propaganda campaign was in order to raise money for nuclear bomb research at the expense of the Soviet peoples. But Stalin's death and the fact of the Soviets developing a nuclear bomb would change the face of the Cold War.
- Albert Lin travels to deserts of Sudan to search for a forgotten kingdom.
- Songs, celebrities and lots of humor that teach children great values while they roar with laughter watching Eco and Nube, the first NatGeo Kids explorers, living with some crazy animals.
- The St. Valentine's Day Massacre of 1929 is a legendary event in US History. However, the story of that day in urban Chicago, Illinois remains largely unsolved. Take a closer look, alongside a team of experts and Johnny Fratto, the son of Al Capone's associate Louis "Lew" Fratto to uncover the myths, truths, and unknowns surrounding the historic, yet largely unsolved, crime of the century.
- The documentary attempts to reveal a 4.500-year-old mystery: how the island of Keros, the oldest marine sanctuary of mankind, was the birthplace of a new way of life, which is closer to the world as we know it today.
- The intriguing story of Australia's South Sea Pearl, the rarest and most valuable marine gem, is a story of a remarkable collaboration. Forged from nature, it begins in one of the most remote and dramatic landscapes on earth.
- Forced out of his father's territory by a rogue male, this is the story of Kumal, a young Indian tiger and his remarkable journey to adulthood in the wilds of central India. Time and space is running out, and to continue his legacy, he must find a territory of his own and a mate. Harassed by local villagers and hampered by his poor hunting skills, he is left on the brink of starvation. He must adapt quickly to a life on his own or his very survival will be at stake.
- A look inside Nissan's mega factory, where cutting edge aerodynamics, hi tech engineering and a handcrafted V6 engine create a mass produced super car, envisioned to be direct competition to Porsche, Lamborghini and others.
- While, despite the title, less than half this program occurs after the dinosaurs went extinct, viewers are introduced to a wide variety of our furry ancestors and a bird or two including a few that coexisted with the dinosaurs.
- A National Geographic special documentary of the first year of Putin's attack of Ukraine. Told and shown from the perspective of local soldiers and civilians, it makes very clear the old adage "War is Hell." The courage and determination of the people of Ukraine is beyond admirable and not to be underestimated. They are what stands between Putin and Europe.