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- "She Creates Change" is an anthology series that chronicles how six adolescent girls from around the world achieve things they once thought impossible. Told through both animation and live-action film, the true stories of Yashika, Diksha, Naifat, Dewmini, Trang, and Keya do more than inspire; they are a testament to how empowering girls can transform the world.
- Filmed over three years in various regions of Nepal, Emmy Winner and multiple Emmy nominated Docu-Series "FESTIVALS" tells the story of the five most unique cultural annual festivals practiced in Nepal. It is visually stunning and has captured Nepal's vibrant ethnic folk traditions, unfolding the ancient myths and legends and experiencing the divinely inspired mystical cultures and the diversity of its people.
- The stage is set for the start of the thirty-five million dollar South Australian abalone season. Introductions to the two - three person crews based out of Port Lincoln highlight the treacherous ocean conditions, unpredictable weather and the growing risk of shark attacks that plague their working lives. But there's big money to be made for the quota owners and these hired crews if they can strike abalone. If they don't - it can mean big losses and more days battling the dangerous conditions. There's trouble from day one for hired guns, Dominic Henderson, aka "the Dominator" & his crewmate 'Skin'. Desperate to get a jump on the other crews, their planned early morning departure falls flat as one of their boat engines fail. Staring down the barrel of a big loss for the day, they pull out all stops to get on the water. Their first dive sees 'the Dominator' battle a surging underwater sandstorm in an attempt to fill their catch target. Howard Rodd and his diver Peter Clarkson, head out to an old abalone bed hoping to see growth since they were last there two years earlier. After a disappointing start to their first dive, Peter strikes abalone 'gold' and pulls a massive haul from the ocean bed before heading out to another stretch of ocean hoping to replicate their previous catch. David Buckland, aka "Bucky" and his sheller Damon are no strangers to the abalone game. But Bucky's recent investment into an expensive quota licence to fish abalone, has left him financially exposed after the global financial crash. He's a fighter, however having the weight of a huge loan and the death of his brother to a Great White Shark hanging over his head he's under huge pressure to bag a big catch on every dive.
- A documentary on the Beslan school siege, which was attacked by Chechen separatists, taking more than a thousand women and children hostage.
- Lonely Planet Six Degrees explores 16 cities around the world from a somewhat different perspective.
- The Very Edge of China is 3-part Discovery Channel mini-series in which a team of international scientists and explorers travel to China's most extreme places. At the highest, the lowest, the coldest and hottest locations they investigate clues left over millions of years to reveal the beauty, the bounty, the violence and fragility of the place we call home.
- China is synonymous with the engineering miracles and culture it has handed to history - wonders such as the Great Wall and Confucianism. But as the most populous country and the fastest growing economy in the world, 21st century China is as characterised by its modern triumphs as it is by its past. Man Made Marvels fuses together the nation's past and present by unpacking some of China's most innovative engineering wonders.
- Taiwan Travel Documentary - Janet Hsieh and co-hosts travel around the country to discover all things weird and wonderful in Taiwan.
- In the first decades of the 13th Century an inexorable wave of change swept out of the east. Centered in the very heart of Asia, Genghis Khan and his tribe of mobile warriors globalized the world by sheer horsepower and entrepreneurial will. A new and disruptive force had risen to innovate, seed, blend and collaborate in new ways. Born of this tectonic shift, Travelers came to see for themselves. Their iconic journeys revealed the ways of a trans-formative culture. In today's era of rapid change there is a new Mongolian, a people that call China home. They are defined by a timeless penchant for new ideas even as they've hold on to their ancient customs. How today's Mongols adapt to this equally disruptive age, may provide clues to how the rest of us may embrace change in the 21st century. Into to this new, wild east, today's generation of modern Marco Polo's have come to experience the spirit that drives today's China. Through their personal observations, adventures and recordings and by evoking the quotes of Marco Polo and Genghis Khan viewers will get to know Inner Mongolia and the culture of Genghis Khan anew.
- About the wide range of glamorous female stars during the golden age of the 60's and 70's of the Hong Kong cinema. A sentimental journey to the good old days and once again look at the expansive epic costume dramas and Huangmei operas in which actresses played both the male and female roles.
- An intimate dusk til dawn journey to meet the chefs behind Hong Kong's best street food.
- Big wave pioneer Ross Clarke-Jones and two-time world champion Tom Carroll are two Aussie surfing legends who have spent the last few years scouring the ends of the earth to ride the most dangerous waves they can find. Now they're taking their search to New Zealand to endure the freezing temperatures, rugged terrain and inhospitable conditions of remote Fiordland in Storm Surfers: New Zealand, sequel to the highly successful Storm Surfers: Dangerous Banks. Hunting waves the size of a four-storey building involves strategy, timing, preparation and tracking the largest oceanic storms in the world. That's where meteorologist and surf forecaster Ben Matson comes in. Using the latest storm prediction technology, he helps Ross and Tom track swells and time their arrival to a matter of hours in a mad, high-stakes race against time and the elements to conquer and film massive waves. Their latest adventure into the unknown of Fiordland sees them joined by local big wave surfer Doug Young as they overcome almost impossible terrain, deal with the harshest conditions of their careers, have Mother Nature test their tracking skills to the limits, and come face to face with an Antarctic storm.
- Steve Crombie is a twenty-nine year old Australian thrill-seeker who's travelled half way round the world in search of adventure, but has never looked in his own backyard. That's about to change. Steve is now embarking on a 7,000km, bone-breaking motorcycle journey along one of Australia's most beautiful landscapes: The Great Dividing Range. The remote and picturesque mountain range is home to a colourful cast of characters and thrill-seeker delights, with world class climbing, caving, fishing, skiing and white water rafting for the lonely traveller. Steve Crombie is taking his bike into the unknown heart of the country, on a quest to discover it all.
- Atlas 4D Programme Summary: Atlas 4D explores the most dramatic regions on earth. The first three episodes feature Africa's Great Rift Valley, the Mediterranean Sea and the Hawaiian Islands. Using state of the art computer graphics, Atlas 4D will travel through the fourth dimension, rewinding and fast-forwarding through millions of years. Whole landscapes will evolve and disappear as the films uncover the hidden connections between landscape, natural history and people: Why was an ice age crucial to the success of Polynesian settlers in Hawaii? What was it about volcanoes that was crucial to the Roman Empire? How did the formation of the Rift Valley lead to the birth of humankind? All this and much, much more will be revealed in Atlas 4D.
- Join our hosts Diana, Luke and Mae for a travel odyssey throughout wonderful Indonesia. With local celebrity Nadya Hutagalung as their guide, be blown away by the spectacular landscapes, and follow the adventurers on their once-in-a-lifetime adventures to discover and unlock the archipelago's countless natural and cultural treasures.
- Two thousand years ago, this province was the centre of the Chinese Empire. The gateway between the Eastern world and the West, and now it is about to be revived as ancient history meets the cutting edge of the 21st century.
- Join the inquisitive Angus Fonatine as he goes behind the scenes to see what makes a true five star experience tick.
- A modern team of divers sets out to learn the secrets of the super battleship Yamato, the greatest ship of the Second World War.
- Festival of Tihar is a five-day cultural event that shows reverence to the Gods, celebrating the bonding between humans and animals. During the festival, crows, dogs, cows, oxen, and brothers are worshiped, respectively.
- With the help of an animal expert, Harrison finds out how chameleons change colour and viewers find out if they're lion sighted in a colour blindness test. A physicist explains why there are some colours that we can't see, and viewers get a bug's eye view of the world in order to discover how bugs see things that are invisible to humans! Harrison carries out an experiment to see if kids will turn their noses up at a batch of blue scrambled eggs!
- Harrison visits an entomologist who explains to him how insects that eat insects can replace the poison farmers use to keep bad bugs away from their crops. Harrison is joined by a biologist who puts on a fascinating show and tell with all kinds of live bugs. He then puts school kids to the test by asking them to eat everyday products that most of us don't realize contain...you guessed it...bugs! And viewers find out that a lot of household products are made using insects (everything from carpets to lipstick!). MY GREAT CHALLENGE: Harrison sets up a faceoff between Team Bee and Team Butterfly to see who the best pollinator is! IN THE FIELD: Our roving correspondent Sidney visits a food scientist and a chef who cook her up a tasty bug stir-fry!
- Harrison investigates intriguing facts about the moon, like why people think wolves howl at the moon (they don't), whether the moon really turns people into werewolves, who the first men on the moon were and why the moon appears to follow us. Viewers at home test out their jumping skills as Harrison demonstrates where we'd be without gravity! MY GREAT CHALLENGE: Using nothing more than a light, their wits, and funny headgear, challengers must figure out why the moon is sometimes full and why at times, it disappears! IN THE FIELD: Harrison goes to...the Moon! Okay, maybe not the actual moon, but a simulated moonscape created by the Space Agency, where astronauts practice their extraterrestrial techniques and test out new equipment. There, a lunar geologist provides the answers to more kid questions, explaining how the Moon was formed and why there are craters.
- Harrison is visited by a very special guest - a parrot - and he tries to figure out if he can understand what it's saying! Meanwhile, viewers get to test out their ability to communicate with dogs. Harrison also discovers why humans speak so many different languages. My Great Challenge: Kids use their hands to pantomime ideas in an effort to communicate like our distant ancestors. In the Field: Harrison sets off to the Sea Aquarium to see if dolphins can understand sign language.
- With the aid of a wind-tunnel and a four-time national radio-controlled airplane champ, Harrison takes to the school yard to discover why some things fly better than others and viewers find out what it really takes to leave the ground. My Great Challenge: Challengers take part in a paper airplane experiment to see who can make the best wing. In the Field: Harrison goes out into the field with a bird trainer to get a close up look at two of the best flyers in the animal world - an owl and a falcon.
- Harrison is visited by a microbiologist who helps him take a close look at an invisible world and figure out how to stop viruses from hurting us. In the name of science, Harrison performs a top secret experiment at an elementary school to find out how quickly germs can spread. Viewers at home learn how to grow their own fungus. My Great Challenge: Harrison tests school kids by seeing who among them can get their hands the cleanest. In the Field: Roving reporter Sidney puts on a full containment suit and goes to a high-security lab where the most dangerous viruses in the world are studied. There, she discovers that not all germs are bad, and - surprise - we actually need some of them to survive!
- Harrison sets off on an investigation of such sleep phenomena as yawning, snoring, and sleepwalking. Along the way he shows kids how to make other people yawn and how to make it seem like they are fast asleep (with fake snoring!). Viewers get to find out what causes nightmares and how to make bad dreams go away. My Great Challenge: The challengers must have slept in today....there is no great challenge in this episode. In the Field: Harrison explores a sleep lab where he is hooked up to an EEG machine that monitors his brainwaves.
- Harrison gets permission from his school to build a very large volcano and with the help of a real-life volcanologist he creates a grand finale in the form of one of the largest Mentos and cola eruptions ever concocted on television! Viewers learn what to do if the earth starts shaking. My Great Challenge: Oozing lava must have swallowed up the challengers today. There is no great challenge in this episode. In the Field: Roving reporter Sidney visits an exhibition on volcanoes and earthquakes, and gets to make her own mini-earthquake. She meets an adventurer who goes down inside active volcanoes and gets a live demonstration of how his flame-proof suit works when one of his friends sprays him with liquid fire!
- Harrison is visited by a real-life television weatherman who shows us how he predicts the weather. Viewers will learn how to gauge wind strength and direction from famous storm chaser George Kourounis as Harrison talks to him live from a location in America's Tornado Alley. My Great Challenge: Harrison and the weatherman create an in-studio challenge where kids try their hand at presenting a weather forecast in front of a green screen. In the Field: Terrible storms must be in the area today...there is no In the Field segment in this episode.
- Angel Salazar hires Videobob and his crew to convert a 1963 Cadillac convertible into a vehicle from "Scarface" but the car has many issues.
- Videobob and his crew are hired by a local 'Ghostbusters' fan club to convert an early 1960s Cadillac ambulance into the 'Ghostbusters' Ecto 1.
- Videobob and his crew are hired by the wife of a man who is obsessed with Knight Rider to build a K.I.T.T. replica car for her husband's 40th birthday.
- A dinosaur park in Texas hires Videobob and his crew to create a 'Jurassic Park' type vehicle for the staff, but some things go wrong.