GLOOMY!
Bleak, caliginous, cheerless, dim, dreary, forlorn, obscure, somber, tenebrous... Or rather... I DIDN'T SEE IT! I had to turn the volume down or altogether change the channel every so (very) often to avoid looking at all those horrible scenes of people hurting animals. Whether they were sharks -- which I don't really like, or elephants -- which I adore; the hurting and killing for whatever reason was too much for me to handle.
I understand that those things happen, unfortunately, they are all true, and I hope this documentary, which by the way, was very, very well done, illuminated those who were unaware that those atrocities DO happen, so that they, too, let their fingers do the work and search and check the organizations mentioned during the program and do something about it. We can all help all this greedy, inhumanity be stopped (and for those who may be asking, I, too, do my part, and I leave it at that).
The part that I really, really enjoyed was seeing Anderson diving and swimming with the sharks! Wow! That was a great segment: interesting, risky, illuminating, scary (to see Anderson so close to those beasts), just plain beautiful! Oddly enough I kept seeing the images of the two divers and the sharks, and I kept thinking Who is taking the pictures?! The cameraperson was never mentioned and he/she too was in the same danger as Anderson and his guide; more so since he couldn't watch out for himself, he had to keep an eye on the action. I really felt I wanted to be there; I would NEVER go shark diving without a cage (nor in a cage, for that matter), but knowing Anderson was there would give me the courage to do it, to go with him -- to protect him? To be protected by him? Or like they kidded about, to have it all on video and have Anderson and me be eaten by a shark over and over again on television for ever after. How romantic!!!
updated 4:09 p.m. EST, Thu December 11, 2008
Anderson Cooper free dives with great white sharks in South Africa
(CNN) -- "Planet in Peril: Battle Lines" traveled to a place off the coast of South Africa known as "shark alley," one of the best places in the world to see great white sharks.
Shark tourism has become big business, bringing in more than $30 million every year to South Africa.
The experience is a major draw for tourists, but it's controversial. Local surfers and swimmers say it is changing shark behavior and may be causing more attacks.
Anderson Cooper swam with these great white sharks -- without a cage -- as part of his report for "Planet in Peril: Battle Lines," airing Thursday at 9 p.m. ET on CNN.
He talked about the experience Thursday morning with "American Morning" anchors John Roberts and Kiran Chetry.
Anderson Cooper: We went diving with great white sharks. There is a big controversy over whether or not these cage tour operators are actually changing sharks' behavior. They chum the water to attract the sharks, tourists get in the water, and so we had the opportunity to go cage diving and also to go free diving with the sharks, which is a pretty rare thing. There's not many people on the planet who actually do it, probably for very smart reasons.
You'll see that tonight on "Planet in Peril." Actually, swimming with great white sharks without a cage, which is among the most remarkable experiences of my life, I've got to say.
Kiran Chetry: What do they call that, a free dive with sharks?
Cooper: Yeah, we went free diving with the sharks. The water is chummed with blood, so it's bloody water, and I was just about to get in, and I turned to the guy and said, "Do you have any recommendations?'" And he said, "Project confidence."
Chetry: There you go. Thanks.
John Roberts: He also told you not to breathe, right, because they don't like the noise of the bubbles?
Cooper: Right, they don't like air bubbles.
Roberts: So, meantime you're down there hyperventilating.
Cooper: It's all well and good to say "OK, don't take a breath," but your heart is beating so fast when a huge great white shark is close to you, that you can't hold your breath. So I was actually breathing more and causing more air bubbles. And the sharks open up their mouths and extend their jaws when they're nervous, and that makes me very nervous.
Roberts: You're reminded of when Roy Scheider [in the movie "Jaws"] said, "We're gonna need a bigger boat."
Cooper: For me, I think it was, "I need to get back in the boat."
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