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1-14 of 14
- Meet car enthusiast and TV presenter Tim Shaw and master mechanic Fuzz Townshend as they join forces to rescue rusty classic vehicles from their garage prisons
- Independent car designers are on a mission to get a team of mechanics to design, and build, extraordinary vehicles that will have to exceed their clients' expectations
- Various volunteers take part in staged boating accidents at sea, stranding unfamiliar pairs in life rafts with what ever wreckage they recovered and what ever food they catch, until they reach land or give up and call for help.
- Cameraman Nalla spends two years in the Ranthambore National forest to observe and capture the life journeys of two tiger magnificent sisters and comes back with a poignant tale of love, rivalry, motherhood and a tragic disappearance.
- A compilation of some of the more challenging recoveries by Thord Paulsen and his team taken from the Ice Road Rescue series.
- The Spanish Coastguard are elite professionals who risk their lives daily to protect the 8,000 kilometres of Spanish coastline. Intercepting drug smugglers, traffickers, poachers, and launching rescue missions are their daily challenges.
- Science of Stupid Compilations are themed selections of the best clips from various seasons of Science of Stupid.
- We explode the flaws. shortcomings, and quirks of the human mind through a series of extraordinary tests. The only catch - our subjects have no idea they're taking part of the experiment . Hosted by HG Nelson on National Geographic Channel.
- Three renowned nature photographers document the behavior of three charismatic animal species for National Geographic. Steve Winter installed a photo trap in front of the metropolis of Mumbai to shoot a picture of a leopard on its next foray into town - about 40 of these big cats live in the nearby Sanjay Gandhi National Park. Tim Laman draws attention to the situation of Orang Utans on Borneo by shooting touching pictures of these animals, whose habitats are endangered because more and more rain forest is cleared to make room for oil palm plantations. One of those pictures, for example, is an ape baby reaching for its mother's hand. And underwater photographer Brian Skerry shoots photos of white sharks in front of Cape Cod on the US east coast. They come there more often because their prey, the gray seals, has increased in number. Three men, three missions, one goal: These photographers want to help with their work to better protect these species - especially in places that pit them against the interests of mankind.
- Meet the men and women who face danger and drama at every turn in pursuit of the world's most compelling wildlife shots, including in the middle of shark infested waters.
- Millions of Americans love to gamble. But some forms of gambling are restricted or illegal, pushing it underground, where the rules are very different. Here if you want to play you have to pay. The bookie will extend credit, but "miss a week, you miss a finger." Or worse. In the shadows of the law, people will bet on anything; legal or illegal. Innocent lives are put at risk in a world where only one thing matters--money.
- Increased automobile security means that car criminals are becoming more ingenious than ever. Gangs work together to steal cars. In Santa Maria, California, three cars are stolen every day and police are targeting the thieves rather than recovering vehicles. The criminals, meanwhile, rush to get the cars out of state, and then, overseas. In West Africa, a criminal class has arisen that is willing to pay top dollar for high-end stolen U.S. cars.
- Underworld Inc. follows the drug dollars from American trap houses to wholesalers and transporters, funneling billions into Mexico's money laundry. US authorities are closing in on cartel cash. If drug lords want their narco cheddar cleaned and moved into the banking system, they have to get it to Mexico. Working to stem the tide, the cops hit stash houses, and interdiction teams tail cars suspected of smuggling millions. South of the border, launderers use money changers to turn drug profits to pesos for onward investment in front companies and bogus construction projects. If local authorities pry into these shady businesses, they get warned off - cartel style.