Cinematic Adventures
Explore our cinematic journeys through Africa's breathtaking wilderness
Long Way Down is a documentary series that follows actors and friends Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman on a 15,000-mile motorcycle journey from the northernmost tip of Scotland to the southernmost tip of South Africa.
In Toughest Place to be a... Farmer, Devon dairy farmer Richard Gibson travels to northern Kenya to live with the Samburu tribe, experiencing extreme drought, constant battles for water, and the threat of conflict as he learns traditional cattle herding, relying on minimal food (maize and milk) and facing predators like lions while bonding with his host elder over the shared love for their animals.
Primal Survivor – Blood Warriors (part of the Survive the Tribe series on National Geographic) follows survival expert Hazen Audel as he lives with Kenya's Samburu tribe, learning their cattle-dependent, drought-defying ways, and then undertakes a solo challenge to prove his manhood by helping the tribe find water and protect their vital livestock from threats, ultimately becoming a "Blood Warrior" through extreme endurance and dedication to tribal customs.
Tribal Teens was a 2016 Channel 5 reality series where overprivileged, lazy British teenagers were sent to live with remote indigenous tribes (like the Samburu in Kenya or Ashaninka in Peru) to challenge their bad habits, teaching them responsibility through extreme culture shock.
Primal Survivor – Desert Warriors is a National Geographic episode (Series 4, Episode 2) where survival expert Hazen Audel faces harsh Kenyan deserts, navigating crocodiles, snakes, and bees to reach the Rendille warriors guarding their camels, demonstrating indigenous survival skills in extreme heat.
Unknown Waters with Jeremy Wade is a National Geographic series where the famed angler explores remote rivers and seas to find giant, elusive, or mysterious fish, focusing on specific species like Atlantic Salmon and Bull Sharks, while also uncovering local folklore and the environmental health of these waters, starting in July 2021.
Expect blood, tears and heart-in-mouth action as explorer Ed Stafford takes on the best explorers in the world in a battle across Discovery's screens in order to be the First Man Out - a show in which survival is only half the battle.
Primal Survivor: Extreme African Safari features Hazen Audel's solo trek across East Africa's Great Rift Valley, confronting desert dangers in the Chalbi Desert with tribes like the Gabra, navigating perilous terrain, battling wildlife, and using traditional skills to find water (like cow's blood) and food, all culminating in reaching a migrating camel train and tackling coastal challenges near Watamu, Shimoni, and Arabuko Sokoke Forest for a massive bat colony, showcasing extreme solo survival in the wilderness for National Geographic.
The "Vampire Spider" is the Evarcha culicivora, an East African jumping spider featured in National Geographic, known for preying on blood-filled mosquitoes to get blood, not biting humans, making it an ally in fighting malaria by targeting mosquitoes that carry the disease.
Equator 360 is a five-part Cinematic Virtual Reality journey that takes viewers around the globe to experience the magical, mysterious, and beautiful ribbon of ecological diversity we call the Equator.
To find water she may have to walk 2 hours or 2 days, up and down mountainsides, across deserts, risking attack by men who do not want her water but her body.
The "Dying of Lake Turkana" feature in National Geographic, often associated with photographer Randy Olson and writer Neal Shea, highlights the severe threat to the lake from upstream developments, particularly Ethiopia's Omo River projects (dams, plantations) that drastically reduce freshwater flow, risking turning Kenya's "Jade Sea" into a dust bowl and displacing its people.
In this episode Peter Trego will be playing on a dust-bowl pitch in the Kenyan Savannah, where giraffe and zebra graze just beyond the boundary.
On a hot spring morning, Galte Nyemeto stood by the shore of Lake Turkana scanning for crocodiles. The water was shallow, the odds of reptiles low, but Nyemeto, a traditional healer of the Daasanach tribe, had come with a patient, and it would be very bad luck—spiritually and otherwise—for the ceremony to be interrupted.
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