Series


Published this video the day of the election.

Blurb: In Arlington, Virginia, police outfit ordinary cars with cameras, microphones and GPS to catch car thieves in the act. Jorge Ribas finds out how they do it.

Some of the segments I’ve produced from my visit to the Ozarks in Arkansas with Nature Conservancy karst ecologist Mike Slay (more videos to come):


Raw: Mud Cave


Caves Saved from Above


3 Questions: Life in Caves

Three segments I produced from my shoot in North Carolina’s Outer Banks:


Divers Plumb Depths for U-Boats


Cool Jobs :: Deep Sea Detectives


WWII U-Boars Hit Close to Home

I only regret that I didn’t get to try this. It looks fun as hell. Though I think I’d opt for dogs and not reindeer.

After 9 days in Alaska, we’re back in the ‘Lower 48′ with piles of tapes from which Kasey-Dee and I plan to produce a ton of stories for discovery-news.com.

We’ll post ‘em on here as well. Here’s a ‘Zoo Logic’ about how varied sled dogs are. I’d always thought they were just huskies and malamutes, and had preconceived images of big ol’ Siberian Huskies pulling mushers along the arctic tundra. I could not have been more wrong. Modern Iditarod sled dogs - Alaskan Huskies as they’re called (not a recognized breed) - have everything in them from pointer to greyhound. Iditarod dogs are smaller, faster and leaner than the ones in Denali National Park, which are more of the traditional, freight-carrying dog. But not quite as small as the ones I saw sprint racing at Fur Rondy.

Synopsis: Not just one animal this time, but a whole ecosystem! (Well, exhibit actually).

Synopsis: Maybe the coolest animal I’ve ever seen.

Synopsis: Archaeologist Julie Schablitsky digs for the truth behind Maryland’s historic sites, even if that means debunking a few myths along the way.

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