This is my first thread, so please be kind. 
National Geographic has been trailing behind the BBC's now famed Natural History Unit in terms of output and quality over the past few years. There was The Last Lions in '11 and suddenly nothing.
So it was with some surprise that I stumbled upon an ad for the forthcoming Battle for the Elephants in the latest issue. Debuting Stateside on the 27th of February, the program
The series is set to debut on your local PBS station, so check local listings for airtime as always. No word on the possibility of our overseas friends to check it out yet, though.
The PBS site: Battle for the Elephants
National Geographic's companion article from October 2012: Blood Ivory
National Geographic has been trailing behind the BBC's now famed Natural History Unit in terms of output and quality over the past few years. There was The Last Lions in '11 and suddenly nothing.
So it was with some surprise that I stumbled upon an ad for the forthcoming Battle for the Elephants in the latest issue. Debuting Stateside on the 27th of February, the program
About the Film said:explores the brutal slaughter of African elephants for their tusks, fueled largely by China’s demand for ivory.
The film tells the ultimate wildlife story — how the Earth’s most charismatic and majestic land animal today faces market forces driving the value of its tusks to levels once reserved for precious metals. Journalists Bryan Christy and Aidan Hartley take viewers undercover as they investigate the criminal network behind ivory’s supply and demand. In Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, one of the world’s main ports for smuggled ivory, Hartley attempts to buy large quantities of tusks from poachers. In China, Christy explores the thriving industry of luxury goods made from ivory and the ancient cultural tradition of ivory carving.
The series is set to debut on your local PBS station, so check local listings for airtime as always. No word on the possibility of our overseas friends to check it out yet, though.
The PBS site: Battle for the Elephants
National Geographic's companion article from October 2012: Blood Ivory
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