Post by Ace on Aug 17, 2007 13:10:18 GMT -5
Discovery Channel: Blue Planet
In The Loop
Water covers two-thirds of earth, yet we know less about the deep oceans than we do about the surface of the moon. This week we want to immerse you in this largely unexplored world with a return to BLUE PLANET: SEAS OF LIFE.
Featuring new information, new high-definition content and a new narrator in Pierce Brosnan, BLUE PLANET reveals the sea and its inhabitants at their most fearsome and alluring.
Be sure to tune-in Sunday, August 19 and Sunday, August 26 at 8 p.m. ET/PT for all four parts of this extraordinary program. Also, take a deeper dive into BLUE PLANET with exclusive video, games, and more at Discovery.com.
Jane Root
President and General Manager
Discovery Channel
=======================================
Sunday, August 19
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Deep
8:00 pm/ 12 am repeat (60 minutes)
Some of the weirdest life forms on earth live miles below the ocean surface. Meet a cast of fantastic creatures including the Fangtooth. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Frozen Seas
9:00 pm/ 1 am repeat (60 minutes)
Breathtaking, rare footage shows how animals survive crippling polar winters. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
Sunday, August 26
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Coral Seas
8:00 pm/ 12 am repeat (60 minutes)
A coral reef is one of the most stunning sights on earth; a riot of color, teeming with fish. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Open Ocean
9:00 pm/ 1 am repeat (60 minutes)
The open ocean is a vast expanse of liquid space. It is here that the ocean's fiercest, fastest and most ruthless predators stalk their prey. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
=============================================
I know the documentary Deep Blue which PB narrated was footage taken from the much larger Blue Planet series but this is 4 hours that he's narrating so I assume it's new narration for the US audience or it's really sparse.
In The Loop
Water covers two-thirds of earth, yet we know less about the deep oceans than we do about the surface of the moon. This week we want to immerse you in this largely unexplored world with a return to BLUE PLANET: SEAS OF LIFE.
Featuring new information, new high-definition content and a new narrator in Pierce Brosnan, BLUE PLANET reveals the sea and its inhabitants at their most fearsome and alluring.
Be sure to tune-in Sunday, August 19 and Sunday, August 26 at 8 p.m. ET/PT for all four parts of this extraordinary program. Also, take a deeper dive into BLUE PLANET with exclusive video, games, and more at Discovery.com.
Jane Root
President and General Manager
Discovery Channel
=======================================
Sunday, August 19
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Deep
8:00 pm/ 12 am repeat (60 minutes)
Some of the weirdest life forms on earth live miles below the ocean surface. Meet a cast of fantastic creatures including the Fangtooth. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Frozen Seas
9:00 pm/ 1 am repeat (60 minutes)
Breathtaking, rare footage shows how animals survive crippling polar winters. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
Sunday, August 26
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Coral Seas
8:00 pm/ 12 am repeat (60 minutes)
A coral reef is one of the most stunning sights on earth; a riot of color, teeming with fish. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
Blue Planet - (Blue Planet: Seas of Life)
Open Ocean
9:00 pm/ 1 am repeat (60 minutes)
The open ocean is a vast expanse of liquid space. It is here that the ocean's fiercest, fastest and most ruthless predators stalk their prey. Includes new information, interviews and a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the award-winning series.
=============================================
I know the documentary Deep Blue which PB narrated was footage taken from the much larger Blue Planet series but this is 4 hours that he's narrating so I assume it's new narration for the US audience or it's really sparse.