Each team of three will be stranded at one of the most haunted locations in America and record the entire experience with hand-held cameras. The footage from the subjects' cameras will be supplemented by strategically-placed security cameras at each location, creating a suspenseful, completely unscripted first-hand account of each group's stay.
Over the course of the confinement, the subjects contend with increasingly pervasive feelings of fear and desolation, resulting in an experiment that represents a unique combination of psychology and the paranormal. Add content advisory. User reviews 4 Review. Top review. Haunted Hunt. There is something familiar yet refreshingly different about Syfy's new show Stranded. The end result is a fast hour full of paranormal suspense experienced by brave amateur ghost hunters who are left 5 days to explore locations which are deemed haunted.
At first, I was skeptical as to the show's credibility, authenticity and merit due to those behind its creation were also responsible for the gimmicky Paranormal Activity films; this is no longer the case. My suspicious doubts were obliterated once I realized that the first two locations were previously investigated by TAPS and certified as haunted or at least containing paranormal activity.
I respect Ghost Hunters, so I figure if something's happening to Stranded's stranded "cast" then the happenings are apt to be legit. All in all it's a fun ride and I implore you to watch further. Details Edit. Release date February 27, United States. United States. Blumhouse Productions Ping Pong Productions. Technical specs Edit. Top cast Edit. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. Add content advisory. Did you know Edit. User reviews 94 Review. Top review. Expedition Minus. This is such a diluted program that doesn't merit having Josh Gates' name attached.
The two 'hosts' have no charisma - to date the subject matter is laughable. Nothing you can't find information on with an hour's worth of Internet research. There already exists several shows delving into the paranormal, mysteries, etc. Very disappointing. OperaTarte Feb 21, A series of hands-on tests are conducted to learn more about the diet of these predators — and discover which shark has the strongest jaws, how often a shark needs to eat and why, and what senses incite a shark to attack.
This premiere program observes sharks in their environment in oceans around the globe, including tracking the migration of a baby shark in Bimini, attaching cameras to the social lemon shark to see how they relate to one another, and investigating a newly discovered great white behavior.
Some great whites have been tracked migrating from the West Coast of the United States to a blank spot on the map in the mid-Pacific at the same time every year — but why? Also investigated are new scientific applications and technologies being developed using the unique properties of shark skin — from mimicking its barnacle-shedding properties on the outer side of ships, to its bacteria-resistant properties to coat medical applications such as operating tables and catheter tubes.
As Dave and Ryan immerse themselves in this extraordinary ancient ritual, they gain knowledge that could help humans and sharks coexist. Michael Rutzen is on an unbelievable quest -- to hypnotize, in open water, one of the most dangerous animals on the planet — the great white shark. Rutzen has been working with sharks for many years to study their body language. He believes if he can put sharks into a sleep-like state called tonic immobility, he could reveal a completely different side to their nature that might inspire people to want to protect, rather than destroy, these incredible apex predators.
Using their signature sci-tech style of explosive experimentation, the MythBusters hit the deep blue from California to the Bahamas to investigate myths about sharks.
They are honing in on some doozies this year: Do dogs attract sharks? Do the vibrations caused by a flapping injured fish attract sharks? Does chili powder repel sharks?
Survivorman's Les Stroud hosts this look at how best to play it safe in the water, while testing popular theories of how to survive shark encounters. Les travels to the Bahamas and South Africa to test whether the behavior of Caribbean reef sharks and great whites changes depending upon the time of day.
While in South Africa, Les and marine biologist Jeremiah Sullivan conduct an analysis of the great white's bite, and test whether kicking and splashing attracts sharks, and if it's safer to stay in a group or tread water alone if stranded in the ocean. Do shark encounters happen more frequently in the morning or night? This special chronicles six recent shark attacks that took place at different times of day.
Top shark experts weigh in on what time of day is better or worse for avoiding sharks. With over species of sharks, they don't all live in the warm waters of the tropics -- some inhabit the freezing cold waters of the Arctic.
These large sharks are slow-moving behemoths, and learning more about them will help scientists understand the rapid ecological changes affecting that part of the world, and how the Greenland shark impacts the food chain there. Mike assists shark scientists with their research as they tag and release a large male Greenland shark. By the end of the trip, Mike gains a deep appreciation for the men and women who are studying this elusive shark in one of the most extreme climates known to humankind.
Sharks may have a bad reputation, but you actually have a very slim chance of being attacked by one. A thrill-seeking team with a purpose -- escapologist Jonathan Goodwin, former lawyer turned Survivor: Cook Islands winner and adrenaline junkie Yul Kwon, marine biologist Jeremiah Sullivan and scientist Dr.
Marty Jopson -- travel to the Bahamas to test shark attraction theories on lemon, tiger and Caribbean reef sharks, focusing on the sensory perception of sharks including colors, vibrations, smells and other attractors. In the process, viewers learn strategies for staying safe when in the water. Australia's northeastern coast is a hotbed for shark activity. Its tropical seas are home to more species of sharks than anywhere else in the world. But there's trouble in the sharks' stronghold Down Under — even here the sharks are disappearing.
What's happening to them? A special team made up of pioneering Australian marine biologist Richard Fitzpatrick; noted shark documentary filmmaker and host Mike deGruy; lead scientist for the Nature Conservancy M.
Sanjayan, Ph. Their mission: to discover the cause of the mysterious decline in shark populations here, and find out if we can help the situation. To do so, the team deploys underwater animal cams and remote cameras to explore and record shark behavior and to gather new insight into the still largely secretive life of the ocean's ultimate predator.
A 9 foot long shark cruises just off the New Jersey beaches. In this Episode, it was shown about the first multiple shark attack in American history, and this is the reason we are fear of sharks today. In this Episode, Shark Week had featured the places where the most deaths have occurred due to shark attacks. Survivorman Les is taking on the deadliest waters around the world. His quest is simple — which water is the deadliest? His mission is simple — which water is the deadliest?
In this Episode, it was shown that what happens, when a great white breaks through a pound aluminum shark cage and traps the divers inside. Shark week Episode 3 story is about a member of a Navy Seals who was attacked in the water of Florida by sharks.
Shark week Episode 4 will show the stories from , where almost 50 incidents occurred at U. Sharkbite Summer revisits the attack sites and — using news archive, interviews with victims, witnesses, surgeons, family members and shark experts — builds an exact picture of the bloody summer of In this Episode, the Great White is one of the most feared predators on earth as well as one of its most efficient hunters.
In this Episode we will see the Shark after Dark. Sharks are most aggressive and most active in the dark but the fact is we know extremely small things about the nocturnal nature of these creatures. Matt Watson confronts the most spectacular and unpredictable of all sharks - the Mako Shark. Up-close, he escapes a near lethal attack and succeeds in tagging a Mako from a sinking rubber raft. An exploration is taken into the topic of shark attacks, of which there have only been 25 recorded in Texas in the last years, and how 18 of those attacks have occurred in the last 20 years, with the summer of being a crest in attacks.
The Great White is one of the most feared predators on earth as well as one of its most efficient hunters. The Great White Shark patrols the shores of more than fifty percent of the world's inhabited coastlines, and despite having killed thousands of people, we know almost nothing about them! Sharks are most aggressive and most active in the dark, but the fact is, we know very little else about the nocturnal nature of these creatures.
Now, armed with the latest in infrared thermography cameras and night vision technology, a team of divers descends into the sharks dangerous after-dark hunting ground and study how Sharks behave after the sun goes down. The bite-by-bite account of America's notorious "Summer of the Shark" in Sharkbite Summer revisits the attack sites and -- using news archive, interviews with victims, witnesses, surgeons, family members and shark experts -- builds an exact picture of the bloody summer of The true story behind the bloody shark attacks of that inspired the movie 'Jaws'.
A nine-foot long shark cruises just off the New Jersey beaches. For centuries its ancestors have done exactly the same. But today there's unusual company. Human Beings. Off the coast of South Africa, massive great white sharks blast from the water, pulling a sneak attack on their seal prey. Shark expert Chris Fallows and filmmaker Jeff Kurr arrive on the scene to investigate the aerial attacks using state-of-the-art technology including an HD camera that shoots in super slow motion - 2, frames per second.
This enables the team to slow down a breaching shark from one second of real time to almost a minute - and in so much detail you can literally count every tooth in the shark's mouth! Fallows and Kurr also employ a submarine and remotely-operated helicopter to capture this incredible footage. Watch the power of a shark bite filmed with the latest high-speed, high-definition cameras from extraordinary angles - ending up literally inside the jaws of sharks.
Matt heads to the Great Barrier Reef to tag a fearsome tiger shark. But to secure the satellite tags, he has to wrestle one and drill holes into its dorsal fin. Hear from a Navy Seal who was attacked by a bull shark in the murky waters of the Sydney Harbor while participating in an anti-terrorism exercise; a fisherman attacked by a pair of bull sharks while standing in the shallow waters of Breton Sound in Louisiana; a surfer in Jongensfontein, South Africa, who was attacked by a great white shark; a vacationer snorkelling at the Great Barrier Reef in Australia who was attacked by a reef shark; and a surfer attacked by a tiger shark in Oahu, Hawaii.
But when he gets the chance to get off the couch and be in the show, he gets in way over his head. And Ferguson starts to have second thoughts about getting close to the apex predators of the sea.
Especially since he will not have the protection of a cage. Everything Ferguson sees and experiences reminds him of what he has learned from watching the Discovery Channel.
The results are funny, scary, and ultimately very moving. Terrified of getting in the water and too proud not to, Ferguson makes the leap into an ocean full of hungry sharks. In , fear gripped beaches along the coast of California and Mexico in the wake of multiple horrific shark attacks.
Host Terry Schappert puts his Special Forces training to the test to demonstrate to viewers how to survive devastating shark attacks. Terry immerses himself in several deadly scenarios and reveals the secrets to escaping terrifying shark encounters alive. Great white sharks, in large numbers, are now suddenly being found swimming among surfers and vacationers just off beaches from South Africa to Australia, and up and down the coast of California.
Just why they're there and just what they're doing is a mystery that Chris Fallows and an international team of sharks scientists are trying to figure out. Jaws Comes Home tells the story of passionate shark expert and U.
Fisheries scientist, Greg Skomal, as he documents six remarkable months following five great whites with names like Curly and Ruthless. His mission: to understand more about their recently discovered, 1,mile journey up and down the eastern seaboard and to reveal all he can about these much-maligned hunters.
It was the central premise of the hit movie Jaws that still haunts people today: that certain sharks may "go rogue" and decide to go after humans.
But does the science back this up? In this hour, we'll weave stories of some of the most horrific shark attacks in history with the larger scientific detective story of whether or not individual sharks ever develop a taste for human flesh and go Rogue.
In the summer of an unprecedented wave of shark attacks sweeps the eastern coast of Australia. Australian shark experts and fishery managers scramble to understand what is happening. Could it be that that the gradual dwindling of the sharks' natural prey due to overfishing has brought man to the top of the shark's food chain? Will the summer of be a prelude of things to come?
December the height of tourist season in South Africa. Merry vacationers from around the globe descend on an idyllic resort town along the sunny coast to enjoy the summer.
It's not long until the white sands are clogged with dead bodies and the sapphire waters are red with blood. The culprit? The authorities suspected a single, massive rogue shark with a taste for human flesh. Dave and Cody of Dual Survival dive in to investigate why no two species of shark attack in the same manner. Through a series of groundbreaking tests and the use of innovative high-tech camera technologies, they'll examine the shark's unique savagery and specialized methods of killing, revealing exactly why they're so deadly.
Most of us think of sharks as blank-eyed killing machines, but in Shark City, we'll get to know a handful of them as individuals.
We'll follow the sharks of the Bahamas through their days and nights to find out how they size each other up, what they like to eat and what it is that they're afraid of.
This show will feature the amazing talents and hilarious insights of our Chief Shark Officer, Andy Samberg. Travel the waters of the world to meet people who made some pretty dumb mistakes around dangerous sea creatures, including sharks, as well as folks who were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. Each story includes actual footage of the events and expert analysis. Colossus is a massive foot great white that dominates all other sharks in the area. Kurr and his team push the envelope even further with a new camera specially designed for the shoot, new angles and new hair-raising encounters And what they discover in this yearlong filming expedition is a true scientific breakthrough: dozens of great whites clustered in shallow water, feeding on smaller sharks and rays — with Colossus dominating the grounds and nearly eating the camera.
A team of wildlife cameramen, led by Shark Week veteran Andy Casagrande, heads to Gansbaai, South Africa to try to secure a shot of a great white shark that no one has been able to get Their mission is to capture a previously unseen, and some say impossible, angle of a great white shark's Polaris breach. Their task quickly turns into a race against time as weather and luck work against them and their window of opportunity to film this extremely difficult shot closes fast.
Using state-of-the-art camera technology and their own ingenuity, the crew attempts to film a bird's-eye-view of the breach at super high speed, which would put them in the company of some of the greatest cameramen ever to work on Shark Week, who have pushed the limits of camera technology and their own will to get "impossible" shots. Will this team join the ranks of the greats?
To celebrate the monumental 25th anniversary of Shark Week, Discovery is resurrecting the largest shark to ever swim in our oceans, a predator so fierce he could have bitten a T. The size of a city bus, these prehistoric sharks were as large as 60 feet long and weighed at least , pounds. This shark was the ultimate Jaws: Megalodons had serrated teeth, each six inches long, set in jaws six feet wide and eight feet tall. In response to questions raised by a Miocene era crime scene, a team of engineers and paleontologists work together to design and build this monster, to see just what he was capable of.
This year marks the 25th anniversary of what has become a truly epic week in television — and no celebration would be complete without the MythBusters. Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman have put themselves in some pretty hair-raising scenarios to bust the biggest shark myths over the years, and now they count down their top 25 of all time. The duo also takes on new myths, shows never-seen-before footage and reveals the 1 shark myth that will quite literally blow people away. Get ready to go back in the water as the MythBusters' best shark moments are unleashed!
There are very few movies we can honestly say truly changed the world — but Jaws is one of them. Careers were made, fortunes created, and ways of directing and scoring movies and shooting special effects were all changed forever when it was released. But the impact the film had on the oceans and their inhabitants was as big as the audience it found — and just as surprising. In the aftermath of the film's release, great white sharks were vilified and killed, leading to their near-disappearance from the eastern seaboard.
At the same time, public fascination with sharks led to a golden age of shark science that completely changed our view of the ocean and how it works. And as the science began showing us how real sharks behave, it spurred a worldwide conservation effort whose earliest champion was Jaws author Peter Benchley.
During a routine search and rescue mission over the Pacific in WWII, an American plane crashed into shark-infested waters. This is the inspiring true story of two war heroes — one an Olympian, one a pastor's son — who managed to survive a record-breaking 47 days at sea in a life raft.
They subsisted on only the food they were able to catch from the ocean and the water they were able to collect from the rain, all while fighting off a gang of sharks that were their constant companions. But when they finally did reach land, it was only the beginning of their troubles. What happened to these men is one of the greatest tests of faith, will and endurance of our time. They've been through the ultimate nightmare: hand-to-jaw combat against the ocean's apex predators, losing limbs and barely escaping with their lives.
Yet even after the attacks, they're still fighting, but what for will surprise you. Amazingly, dozens of shark attack victims around the world have devoted their lives to saving their attackers. They have turned what could have been tragedy into their life's mission, becoming some of the most powerful shark advocates on the planet. Meet the Shark Survivors and hear their stories of resilience and triumph as they fight what they consider the ultimate battle: saving sharks and our oceans.
Ten of the most terrifying animal attacks filmed by eyewitnesses. Some of the world's biggest predators - a 15 foot shark, raging elephants, and a half ton bull turn their attention towards people who are in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Right outside the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco is home to some of the biggest great white sharks in the world Teams of scientists from Stanford University's Hopkins Marine Station in Monterey Bay have spent years tagging and tracking these sharks to find out why they come here, why they leave and where they go when they do — out into the Pacific on the Great White Highway. But the sharks have kept much about their lives completely secret, leaving researchers with little information about what they spend their summers doing and almost no idea about where they mate or bear their young.
Now, armed with new technologies, the team is hoping to wire the ocean and find out how these sharks live their lives — and why California is one of the biggest stops on the Great White Highway.
Shark Week celebrates its 25th anniversary with a jaw-dropping look back at the greatest breaches, brushes, and bites with the ocean's apex predator. One controversial scientist believes that the shark responsible could be Megalodon, an metre relative of the Great White that is one of the largest and most powerful predators in history.
A crew of scientists and shark experts examine evidence and fearlessly seek answers to the many questions surrounding one of the last great ocean mysteries while creating the largest chum slick in history. An all-new "shark cam" provides spectacular footage of Great White Sharks off the shores of Cape Cod as they shark hunt seal colonies, come close to shore in just over one metre of water, and take a chilling interest in one specific area.
Bull Sharks have moved to the bayous of Louisiana, nicknamed "Voodoo Sharks" by the local shrimp fishermen. These dominant and startling predators can live in both salt and fresh water. For the first time, "Shark Week" uses real shark attack footage captured by eye-witnesses to examine first-hand accounts from a nurse who lost her arm in an attack while vacationing in Mexico and an Australian Navy Diver who lost an arm and a leg.
Follow a scientist on the brink of a breakthrough as he reveals the life cycle of the Great White Shark for the first time, including mating and pupping. Using state of the art tracking technology, experts will search for the elusive Great White breeding grounds, aiming to protect the area, and re-populate their numbers.
TOP 10 SHARKDOWN updates the international shark attack files for the 21st century and takes a closer look at the sharks viewers won't want to meet at the beach this summer - and the ones swimmers and surfers are most likely to encounter. Jeff Kurr examines two fatal shark attacks near Vandenberg Air Force Base in California and tries to determine if one shark was responsible for both attacks. Examines the trend of sharks moving in closer to shorelines and whether there is a connection between declining shark populations and the increase in shark attacks.
Follow American and Japanese scientists as they descend into the deepest and darkest unexplored oceans on Earth in search of some of the more incredible and bizarre sharks on the planet. Abalone diving can be both lucrative and dangerous when it happens in one of the most deadly shark feeding grounds, known as the "Great White Gauntlet", off the south coast of Australia.
This foot shark is said to be the largest great white shark of all time. Locals believe that this shark is responsible for countless fatal attacks, but its existence has never been proven.
This documentary explores the evidence and asks the question: can Submarine exist? Now, a team of scientists and anglers look to explore the mystery and find out if the legend could be real.
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