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How conservation icon David Attenborough holds onto hope

How conservation icon David Attenborough holds onto hope

Sir David Attenborough's newest documentary film is 'Ocean with David Attenborough.'
PHOTOGRAPH BY CONOR MCDONNELL © SILVERBACK FILMS AND OPEN PLANET STUDIOS Interview by Brian Resnick
For seven decades, Sir David Attenborough has traversed the globe to document the kaleidoscopic diversity of Earth's ecosystems. At the age of 99, he's narrated so many television programs that his voice has become synonymous with the wonder of the natural world. But in his long career full of wild encounters, one memory still stands out.
In 1957, when Attenborough was in his 30s, he traveled to a shallow warmwater cay on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, where, for the first time in his life, he donned scuba gear to examine corals up close. 'It was a sort of sensory overload,' he says. 'The countless tiny fish swimming between coral branches; the differences between the different coral structures. It opened up for me a whole new appreciation of the intricacies of life in the ocean.'
Today that same view is likely to look disastrously worse. Globally, corals have suffered tremendous loss as a result of human-caused ocean warming, a fact that's not lost on Attenborough.
In the new National Geographic documentary special Ocean with David Attenborough, the pioneering filmmaker reflects on the enormity of loss seen in his lifetime. Sure, there are still sumptuous images of the abundance of ocean life in the film, but they are met in equal measure with depictions of mechanized death and destruction—carbon-sequestering seagrass meadows are violently mowed down by commercial fishing trawlers, great glistening masses of writhing fish are hauled aboard ships by the thousands. Attenborough doesn't mince words: 'Ships from wealthy nations are starving coastal communities of the food source they have relied on for millennia,' he narrates. 'This is modern colonialism at sea.'
(Fish flee for their lives in rare, chilling video of bottom trawling.)
The film's final message, however, is remarkably optimistic. Attenborough fiercely believes in the ocean's power to recover when the right environmental protections are set in place. He holds hope even for that mesmerizing cay in Australia. 'I'd like to think that the reef I first dived on is one of the lucky ones.' David Attenborough introduces Prince Charles and Princess Anne to his pet cockatoo in 1958 at the studio where Zoo Quest, the BBC show that launched his career as a wildlife presenter, was filmed. PHOTO: CENTRAL PRESS/GETTY IMAGES
BRIAN RESNICK: The film seems starkly different from much of your past work in the way it contends with topics like animal death and destruction. Why?
DAVID ATTENBOROUGH: Unlike chopping down a rainforest on land, which can be clearly seen, trawling the ocean floor is largely hidden from view. Most people have no idea it's happening or of the scale with which it occurs.
We wanted to be clear that this film is not antifishing. Humans have always gathered food from the sea, and biologically there's no reason that that cannot continue to happen. Indeed, many fishing operations and fishing communities do fish sustainably. But there are some forms of fishing, and some locations where fishing occurs, that damage the ocean for all of us. By showing the distinction, we hope that viewers will appreciate the difference between fishing that can and should continue well into the future and fishing that is destroying the ocean and depriving fishing communities of their livelihoods.
In your narration, the audience might detect anger in your voice. Is 'anger' the right word?
I certainly feel the senseless loss of the natural world, and I hope that emotion comes across.
What is your advice for people dealing with grief over climate change or loss of the natural world?
We shouldn't lose hope. It can be tempting to give up when confronted with the scale of humanity's consumption and the speed with which we are changing the climate and losing the natural world. But nature is our greatest ally. Wherever we have given nature the space to recover, it's done so, and, as a result of its recovery, our own lives are improved.
The solutions aren't all about sacrifices and aren't all decades away. The marine protected areas we show have all brought benefits in just a few years to the people who live by them, and at the same time, those reserves have drawn down carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and allowed marine species—from turtles to sharks to tuna—to recover. This is a real win-win for nature, for people, and for the climate. We just need to plan for the future, rather than only chasing immediate gains.
What keeps you working?
Because people I like working with keep asking me to. I enjoy the process of filmmaking. But stepping back, I can also see that this sort of storytelling has never been more important. Many of our societies have never been more removed from nature, less in tune with its rhythms and changes. That has brought many benefits, of course, but it does also mean that we don't necessarily notice the changes to our world as acutely as we once would have done.
Whilst scientific publications and debates are vital, most of us are far more likely to engage with a story or a documentary. Our species has always used storytelling to create a shared identity and give explanation and context to the world around us. We are naturally interested in the stories of other people and places, so the onus is on all of us, as well as broadcasters and publishers, to find the ways to tell stories of the natural world and our relationship with it.
(6 of the best Sir David Attenborough series to watch.)
In the film, you talk about entering a later stage in your life. As you reflect on your life, how would you like your work to be remembered?
I hope the collection of work, from Life on Earth through to the films I'm making now, will be seen as the documentation of the natural world in the late 20th and early 21st centuries as we understood it at the time. Perhaps one day it might also be seen to have documented the beginning of a new relationship between humanity and nature, a time when we realized that for our own species to thrive, we require the natural world to also thrive. 'Ocean with David Attenborough' begins airing on National Geographic June 7 and streams globally the next day, World Oceans Day, on Disney+ and Hulu. The film is currently in cinemas in select countries outside the U.S. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
A version of this story appears in the July 2025 issue of National Geographic magazine.

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How to watch 'Ocean with David Attenborough' online from anywhere
How to watch 'Ocean with David Attenborough' online from anywhere

Tom's Guide

time15 hours ago

  • Tom's Guide

How to watch 'Ocean with David Attenborough' online from anywhere

"After almost 100 years on the planet," says the world's most famous naturalist in "Ocean with David Attenborough", "I now understand the most important place on Earth is not on land, but at sea." His latest film – a theatrical release in May to coincide with his 99th birthday – is available to watch and stream from June 7. Here's how to watch "Ocean with David Attenborough" online from anywhere with a VPN. ► U.S. date and time: "Ocean with David Attenborough" premieres on National Geographic on Saturday, June 7 at 9 p.m. ET/ 6 p.m. PT and be available to stream globally the next day.• U.S. — NatGeo via Sling TV or Fubo | Disney+ or Hulu• Watch anywhere — try NordVPN And that message is the need to help the ocean recover from the effects of unprecedented challenges such as destructive fishing techniques and mass coral reef bleaching because a healthy ocean keeps the entire planet stable and flourishing. The tone is as serious as you would expect but not downbeat. The celebrated broadcaster and filmmaker has lived through the great age of ocean discovery and takes us through spectacular sequences featuring coral reefs, kelp forests and the majesty of the open ocean. He then draws on a lifetime of knowledge to reveal how Earth's vast, interconnected waterways can be restored. Here's everything you need to watch "Ocean with David Attenborough" online from wherever you are. If you're not at home in the U.S. when "Ocean with David Attenborough" streams, you can still tune in via a virtual private network, or VPN. A VPN makes it appear that you're surfing the web from your home location — meaning that you can access the streaming services you already pay for. It's all totally legal and easy to do. We've tested many different VPN services and our favorite is NordVPN; it offers superb speeds, excellent customer service and a no-questions-asked 30-day money-back guarantee, so you can try it out first to see if it's right for you. But you've got other VPN options too, so check out our full list of the best VPN services. There's a good reason you've heard of NordVPN. We specialize in testing and reviewing VPN services and NordVPN is the one we rate best. It's outstanding at unblocking streaming services, it's fast and it has top-level security features too. With over 7,000 servers, across 110+ countries, and at a great price too, it's easy to recommend. Get 70% off NordVPN with this deal Using a VPN is incredibly simple. 1. Install the VPN of your choice. As we've said, NordVPN is our favorite. 2. Choose the location you wish to connect to in the VPN app. For instance, if you're visiting the U.K. and want to view a U.S. service, you'd select U.S. from the list. 3. Sit back and enjoy the show. Head to your service and stream "Ocean with David Attenborough" online from wherever you happen to be. "Ocean with David Attenborough" premieres on National Geographic on Saturday, June 7 at 9 p.m. ET/ 6 p.m. PT and will be available to stream globally the next day ("World Oceans Day") on Disney+ and Hulu. Don't have cable and want to tune in to future Nat Geo shows? If you've cut the cord, try Sling TV. The Sling Blue package costs from $40 per month and comes with more than 30 channels including National Geographic. Best of all, Sling is offering 50% off the first month. Fubo is another option. A Pro Plan costs $75 per month but gives you 121 channels, including National Geographic. Traveling outside the U.S.? You can always use a VPN — we recommend NordVPN — to watch Hulu from anywhere on the planet. Sling TV offers two packages, both of which start from $40 a month. You'll either Sling Blue or Sling Blue + Orange to watch "Ocean with David Attenborough" on National Geographic. Plus, right now, Sling is offering your first month for HALF PRICE!. If you love TV, you might want to check out Fubo. It's got a 7-day free trial so you don't need to pay upfront and has dozens of sports channels, including National Geographic, NBC, USA and NBCSN via its $79.99 per month Pro Plan. "Ocean with David Attenborough" will drop on National Geographic and Disney Plus in the U.K. on Sunday, June 8 (World Oceans Day). Disney Plus subscriptions in the UK start at £4.99 per month (with Ads). You'll find NatGeo on Sky (channel 129), Virgin Media (channel 266), BT (channel 317) and TalkTalk (channel 317). Don't forget: U.S. nationals visiting the U.K. who don't want to wait that long can use a good VPN to access their usual streaming services from abroad. We recommend NordVPN. As with the U.K., "Ocean with David Attenborough" will drop on National Geographic and Disney Plus in Australia on Sunday, June 8 (World Oceans Day). A Disney Plus Subscription costs from $13.99 per month or $139.99 annually. However, if you are Down Under for work or on vacation, don't despair. You only need a VPN to access your usual provider back home and catch the show. We recommend NordVPN. It was to coincide with Attenborough's 99th birthday. The streaming release dates a month later tie-in with 'World Oceans Day', June's United Nations Ocean Conference 2025 in Nice, France, and midway through the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030). 'My lifetime has coincided with the great age of ocean discovery. Over the last hundred years, scientists and explorers have revealed remarkable new species, epic migrations and dazzling, complex ecosystems beyond anything I could have imagined as a young man. In this film, we share some of those wonderful discoveries, uncover why our ocean is in such poor health, and, perhaps most importantly, show how it can be restored to health. This could be the moment of change. Nearly every country on Earth has just agreed, on paper, to achieve this bare minimum and protect a third of the ocean. Together, we now face the challenge of making it happen.' We test and review VPN services in the context of legal recreational uses. For example: 1. Accessing a service from another country (subject to the terms and conditions of that service). 2. Protecting your online security and strengthening your online privacy when abroad. We do not support or condone the illegal or malicious use of VPN services. Consuming pirated content that is paid-for is neither endorsed nor approved by Future Publishing.

How conservation icon David Attenborough holds onto hope
How conservation icon David Attenborough holds onto hope

National Geographic

time3 days ago

  • National Geographic

How conservation icon David Attenborough holds onto hope

Sir David Attenborough's newest documentary film is 'Ocean with David Attenborough.' PHOTOGRAPH BY CONOR MCDONNELL © SILVERBACK FILMS AND OPEN PLANET STUDIOS Interview by Brian Resnick For seven decades, Sir David Attenborough has traversed the globe to document the kaleidoscopic diversity of Earth's ecosystems. At the age of 99, he's narrated so many television programs that his voice has become synonymous with the wonder of the natural world. But in his long career full of wild encounters, one memory still stands out. In 1957, when Attenborough was in his 30s, he traveled to a shallow warmwater cay on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, where, for the first time in his life, he donned scuba gear to examine corals up close. 'It was a sort of sensory overload,' he says. 'The countless tiny fish swimming between coral branches; the differences between the different coral structures. It opened up for me a whole new appreciation of the intricacies of life in the ocean.' Today that same view is likely to look disastrously worse. Globally, corals have suffered tremendous loss as a result of human-caused ocean warming, a fact that's not lost on Attenborough. In the new National Geographic documentary special Ocean with David Attenborough, the pioneering filmmaker reflects on the enormity of loss seen in his lifetime. Sure, there are still sumptuous images of the abundance of ocean life in the film, but they are met in equal measure with depictions of mechanized death and destruction—carbon-sequestering seagrass meadows are violently mowed down by commercial fishing trawlers, great glistening masses of writhing fish are hauled aboard ships by the thousands. Attenborough doesn't mince words: 'Ships from wealthy nations are starving coastal communities of the food source they have relied on for millennia,' he narrates. 'This is modern colonialism at sea.' (Fish flee for their lives in rare, chilling video of bottom trawling.) The film's final message, however, is remarkably optimistic. Attenborough fiercely believes in the ocean's power to recover when the right environmental protections are set in place. He holds hope even for that mesmerizing cay in Australia. 'I'd like to think that the reef I first dived on is one of the lucky ones.' David Attenborough introduces Prince Charles and Princess Anne to his pet cockatoo in 1958 at the studio where Zoo Quest, the BBC show that launched his career as a wildlife presenter, was filmed. PHOTO: CENTRAL PRESS/GETTY IMAGES BRIAN RESNICK: The film seems starkly different from much of your past work in the way it contends with topics like animal death and destruction. Why? DAVID ATTENBOROUGH: Unlike chopping down a rainforest on land, which can be clearly seen, trawling the ocean floor is largely hidden from view. Most people have no idea it's happening or of the scale with which it occurs. We wanted to be clear that this film is not antifishing. Humans have always gathered food from the sea, and biologically there's no reason that that cannot continue to happen. Indeed, many fishing operations and fishing communities do fish sustainably. But there are some forms of fishing, and some locations where fishing occurs, that damage the ocean for all of us. By showing the distinction, we hope that viewers will appreciate the difference between fishing that can and should continue well into the future and fishing that is destroying the ocean and depriving fishing communities of their livelihoods. In your narration, the audience might detect anger in your voice. Is 'anger' the right word? I certainly feel the senseless loss of the natural world, and I hope that emotion comes across. What is your advice for people dealing with grief over climate change or loss of the natural world? We shouldn't lose hope. It can be tempting to give up when confronted with the scale of humanity's consumption and the speed with which we are changing the climate and losing the natural world. But nature is our greatest ally. Wherever we have given nature the space to recover, it's done so, and, as a result of its recovery, our own lives are improved. The solutions aren't all about sacrifices and aren't all decades away. The marine protected areas we show have all brought benefits in just a few years to the people who live by them, and at the same time, those reserves have drawn down carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and allowed marine species—from turtles to sharks to tuna—to recover. This is a real win-win for nature, for people, and for the climate. We just need to plan for the future, rather than only chasing immediate gains. What keeps you working? Because people I like working with keep asking me to. I enjoy the process of filmmaking. But stepping back, I can also see that this sort of storytelling has never been more important. Many of our societies have never been more removed from nature, less in tune with its rhythms and changes. That has brought many benefits, of course, but it does also mean that we don't necessarily notice the changes to our world as acutely as we once would have done. Whilst scientific publications and debates are vital, most of us are far more likely to engage with a story or a documentary. Our species has always used storytelling to create a shared identity and give explanation and context to the world around us. We are naturally interested in the stories of other people and places, so the onus is on all of us, as well as broadcasters and publishers, to find the ways to tell stories of the natural world and our relationship with it. (6 of the best Sir David Attenborough series to watch.) In the film, you talk about entering a later stage in your life. As you reflect on your life, how would you like your work to be remembered? I hope the collection of work, from Life on Earth through to the films I'm making now, will be seen as the documentation of the natural world in the late 20th and early 21st centuries as we understood it at the time. Perhaps one day it might also be seen to have documented the beginning of a new relationship between humanity and nature, a time when we realized that for our own species to thrive, we require the natural world to also thrive. 'Ocean with David Attenborough' begins airing on National Geographic June 7 and streams globally the next day, World Oceans Day, on Disney+ and Hulu. The film is currently in cinemas in select countries outside the U.S. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. A version of this story appears in the July 2025 issue of National Geographic magazine.

Heartbreaking Video Shows Fish Fleeing Huge Nets
Heartbreaking Video Shows Fish Fleeing Huge Nets

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Heartbreaking Video Shows Fish Fleeing Huge Nets

David Attenborough has become the voice we associate with all things beautiful in nature, but he's never shied away from showing the harrowing destruction that humans visit upon our planet. This, however, might be the biggest gut-punch he's delivered yet. In his latest documentary "OCEAN," Attenborough presents us with unique footage showing the devastating effects of bottom trawling on the seafloor, right where the action is happening. The filmmakers placed a camera underwater, showing us the actual view of the trawl net as it sweeps up countless poor sea creatures, who desperately try to out-swim their doom. It's an unprecedented look — but it doesn't make for easy viewing. "I have seen the bycatch on the deck of trawlers, but like everybody else, I had never seen what the trawl does underwater," Enric Sala, a marine ecologist who served as executive producer and scientific advisor on Ocean, told IFLScience in a recent interview. "Being at the level of the net and seeing all these poor creatures trying to escape the net, that's something that nobody else had seen." Bottom trawling is a widely used method of fishing that involves dragging an enormous net across the seafloor, ensnaring hundreds if not thousands of aquatic creatures in a single sweep. It's a blunt approach that doesn't discriminate between species. Most of the fish that get caught aren't even what the fishermen are looking for, but they perish anyway. "Over three-quarters of a trawler's catch may be thrown away," Attenborough narrates in the documentary. "It's hard to imagine a more wasteful way to catch fish." Trawling also ravages the seafloor itself, as the heavy chain or beam that keeps the net open smashes into any rock or aquatic fauna in its path, while dredging up literal tons of sediment. "The trawlers tear the seabed with such force, that their trails of destruction can be seen from space," Attenborough says. It gets worse. As the seabed is thrown up, so are the vast stores of carbon it harbored. A massive 2024 study estimated that some 370 million metric tons of carbon dioxide is released by bottom trawling every single year. That puts it "on the scale of global aviation," Sala said, which produces nearly a billion tons annually. In terms of both the greenhouse impact and the sweeping scale of the damage wreaked to local habitats, it's the ocean's equivalent to deforestation. One study estimated that bottom trawlers scrape 1.9 million square miles of seafloor per year, roughly equivalent to 1.3 percent of the entire ocean. "It's happening everywhere around the ocean, including in many of our protected areas," Toby Nowlan, the director and producer on OCEAN, told IFLScience. "The difference being that this is as destructive as bulldozing your local ancient woodland, or the Amazon rainforest." "If my local ancient woodland, Leigh Woods, was just bulldozed, the entire city would be up in arms, but this is what's happening underwater," Nowlan added. "The whole reason [people aren't up in arms about trawling] is that it's remained hidden from view." Not anymore. More on the ocean: Benevolent Orca Pods Are Adopting Baby Pilot Whales in an Apparent Effort to Clean Up the Species' Image

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