Nat Geo's 10,000 Research Grant Recipient
Free | National Geographic
Posted: 1/5/2012
National Geographic has long been associated with Jacques-Yves Cousteau's deep sea exploration, Bob Ballard's discovery of the Titanic and Hiram Bingham's excavation of the lost Inca city of Machu Picchu. But what is at the heart of these great discoveries is often an untold story: the grants that fund these expeditions. The Society celebrates its 10,000th grant award to Krithi Karanth, marking more than a century of grantmaking.
Dana Carvey As Jacques Cousteau
Free | Hulu
Posted: 11/17/2011
Jacques Cousteau gives a Valentine's Day report on romance.
Polar Explorer Will Steger Empowers Emerging Leaders
Free | Current TV
Posted: 11/2/2011
Imagine devoting your life to the exploration of a region of the world so formidable, so intimidating that few people ever visit it. Imagine months of travel in frigid, incapacitating temperatures capable of taking your limbs. Imagine seeing only vast expanses of ice for miles. Now imagine parts of this region no longer exist.
This isn t your imagination. This is the reality of world-renowned polar explorer Will Steger.
While we debate the validity of global warming, Steger has carved out an uncommon perspective about this phenomenon one that is more than 40 years in the making. A legend at age 63, Steger s achievements place him among the best in exploration alongside Jacques Cousteau, Charles Lindberg, Amelia Earhart and Robert Peary as he has completed some of the most significant polar expeditions in history:
the first person to reach the North Pole via dogsled without resupply
a traverse of Greenland that remains the longest unsupported dogsled expedition in history
the first dogsled traverse of Antarctica
the first dogsled traverse of the Arctic Ocean in one season
Steger has received countless awards and distinctions throughout the years but he knows his Arctic achievements are null unless he can rally the next generation of leaders to embrace environmental activism and preserve one of the world s most fragile ecosystems.
Enter Sam Branson, son of Virgin Group mogul Sir Richard Branson.
Steger is galvanizing the next generation of leaders to advocate for the environment and has compiled an international team of 20-something adventurers to give us an Arctic close-up of global warming. The younger Branson an adventurer, musician and author who joined Steger s 2007 expedition to Baffin Island is one member of an impressive team that includes two National Geographic Young Explorer grantees, an Iditarod competitor, a Polar historian and two international record-holders in kite-skiing who hail from Norway, Great Britain, Canada and the United
Jean-Michel Cousteau Explains the Danger of Farmed Fish
Free | Hulu
Posted: 10/8/2011
"I've always said, if you protect the ocean, you protect yourself," says Cousteau. The son of Jacques Cousteau travels to the most extreme locations on Earth, combining science with storytelling, to reveal how the ocean is connected with our own lives.
more Jacques Cousteau Clips & Interviews videos