![]() (That’s more than twice the length of the Empire State Building.) Producer Orla Doherty reveals to TV Guide Magazine what was needed to bring sea life to our screens. It filmed on all seven continents, in all five oceans and required some crew members to dive as deep as 3,000 feet underwater. Pulling off such a fact-filled follow-up to the 2001 science special Blue Planet was no easy feat. ![]() Did you know a cuttlefish supposedly changes its colors so it can hypnotize crabs in order to eat them? Or that scavengers can feed off a 30-ton whale carcass for more than a year? Neither did we. BBC America’s eight-episode documentary about the world’s waters and all the cute, scary and squishy things that live in them taught us enough facts to fill, well, an ocean. ‘Planet Earth: Blue Planet II’ Explores How We Can Save the Planetīreathtaking and eye-popping, Planet Earth: Blue Planet II is the ultra-cool science lesson we wish we’d had in school.Peabody Awards 2019 Nominees: ‘Barry,’ ‘Americans,’ ‘Good Place’ & More.
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