Television program on Discovery Channel
Shark Week
is an annual, week long TV
programming block
at the
Discovery Channel
, which features
shark
-based programming. Shark Week originally premiered on July 17, 1988. Featured annually, in July or early August, it was originally devoted to conservation efforts and correcting misconceptions about sharks.
[1]
Over time, it grew in popularity and became a hit on the Discovery Channel. Since 2010, it has been the longest-running
cable television
programming event in history.
[2]
[3]
Broadcast in over 72 countries, Shark Week is promoted heavily via
social networks
like
Facebook
and
Twitter
. Episodes are also available for purchase on services like
Google Play Movies & TV
/
YouTube
,
Amazon Video
, and
iTunes
. Some episodes are free on subscription-based
Hulu
and
Discovery+
.
History
[
edit
]
The first Shark Week premiered in July 1988, with the first show to air being
Caged in Fear
. A total of 10 episodes aired. Other shows included
Sharks: Predators or Prey
,
The Shark Takes a Siesta
, and
Sharks of a Different Color
. Due to the success of the programming block, Discovery decided to continue it.
In 2000, Discovery Channel aired
Shark Week Uncaged
presented by famous zoologist
Nigel Marven
as a host. Six million 3D
Pulfrich
glasses were distributed to viewers in the United States and Canada for an episode featuring an extinct giant shark, which had 3D segments.
[4]
The programming has been hosted by notable personalities from other Discovery series. In 2005,
Adam Savage
and
Jamie Hyneman
of
MythBusters
hosted Shark Week, which premiered with a two-hour
MythBusters
"
Jaws Special
". In 2006,
Mike Rowe
of
Dirty Jobs
hosted Shark Week, and two
Dirty Jobs
episodes were produced to tie-into the programming, titled "Jobs that Bite" and "Jobs that Bite...Harder". That year, a 446-foot-long (136 metres) inflatable great white shark named Chompie was hung from the Discovery Channel's
Silver Spring, Maryland
headquarters.
[5]
In 2007,
Discovery Channel
celebrated
Shark Week's 20th Anniversary
hosted by
Les Stroud
, host of
Survivorman
. The 20th anniversary included the launch of
Sharkrunners
, a
video game
that uses
GPS
data from tagged sharks in the
Pacific Ocean
. The program
Ocean of Fear
aired on July 29.
In 2014,
Deep Blue
, a large great white shark estimated to be twenty feet long was featured in an episode of Shark Week; she was seen traversing the waters off the coast of Guadalupe Island.
In 2021, the events began streaming on
Discovery+
alongside its broadcasts on the Discovery Channel.
[6]
Shweekend
[
edit
]
In early 2015, Discovery announced a new, shark-themed weekend that would air on the Discovery Channel. The weekend took place in late August 2015, and contained three different programs. The first program, which aired on Saturday, August 29, was
MythBusters vs. Jaws
, followed right after by
Shark Alley: Legend of Dynamite
. The next day, Sunday, August 30, one program aired, called
Air Jaws: Walking with Great Whites
. The purpose of Shweekend was to increase the shark-related content from previous years and to prolong the summer's shark coverage.
[7]
Criticism
[
edit
]
Since its early days, Shark Week evolved into more entertainment-oriented and sometimes fictional programming. By the 2010s, it attracted much criticism for airing dramatic programs to increase viewers and popularity. This fictitious programming, known as
docufiction
, has been produced in the last few years. Examples of such programs include
Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives
,
Shark of Darkness: Wrath of Submarine
,
Monster Hammerhead
,
Lair of the Mega Shark
, and
Megalodon: The New Evidence
. This strategy was successful, especially for the program
Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives
, as it became one of the most watched programs in Shark Week history, primarily for the controversy and backlash it generated.
[8]
The
mockumentary
was based on an ancient giant shark called
megalodon
, which is now long extinct. The airing of this program fueled criticism by the professionals in the science blogger community, as well as science-advocacy bloggers like actor
Wil Wheaton
, and resulted in a boycott of the network.
[9]
Since then, Discovery has increasingly been accused of using
junk science
, pushing dubious theories, creating fake stories, and misleading scientists as to the nature of the documentaries being produced.
[10]
[11]
In early 2015, Discovery President
Rich Ross
vowed to remove this type of programming from future Shark Week lineups.
[12]
There has also been criticism from scientists that have been featured in episodes of Shark Week. Jonathan Davis, a 29-year old marine biologist was featured in an episode of Shark Week called Voodoo Shark. The episode is meant to discuss the legend of the 'Rooken', and suggests that Davis strongly believes in said legend. Davis had believed he was being featured to talk about his research, but instead was blindsided by this portrayal. He also recounts that while filming, "One of the guys was like, "Oh, maybe you should just let it bite you, that would be so exciting.' And I was just thinking to myself, 'Are you kidding me? You really think I wanna let the shark bite me just for ratings? Are you serious?' "
[13]
More criticism was leveled at Discovery in 2017 when the network heavily promoted a race between Olympic gold medal winner
Michael Phelps
and a great white shark that turned out to be computer generated, but based on actual speeds of such animals, and Phelps wearing illegal swim gear.
[14]
Content analysis
[
edit
]
A 2022 study reviewed trends in the content covered by Shark Week. Of the 272 Shark Week programs produced, 43% had titles using words with negative connotations in context (such as "attack", "fear", "deadly"). The relative proportion of in-context negative titles is stable through time, rising at the same rate as the overall number of shows. Of the 201 shows that could be viewed by the authors, around 74% referenced shark bites or other negative portrayals of sharks. 63% of shows used positive language in reference to sharks, though this language was often only used briefly.
[15]
About 37% of shows are research-oriented, though in some years (2009?2012, 2020) less than a quarter of shows involved research. Research methods are skewed towards expensive and television-friendly techniques such as satellite telemetry tagging, drones, and
ROVs
. In contrast, actual shark science is oriented more towards methodical research related to life history and reproduction, which are more practical for conservation work. Uncertainty and repeatability are frequently eschewed in presentation, in favor of controversy or authoritative results. Of the people labelled as "experts" or authorities by Shark Week programs, 41% have over 26 peer-reviewed publications, while 23% lack any contribution to the scientific literature. Little distinction is made between experiential (non-scientific) and scientific experts.
[15]
The demographics of Shark Week "experts" mirrors the underrepresentation of
women
and
people of color
in STEM fields. 94% of "experts" featured by Shark Week are white, and 79% are male. 24 shows featured at least one non-white "expert" and 60 involved at least one woman "expert". Several non-doctorate men were referred to as "Dr.", and several doctorate-holding women were not labelled with their title. The most commonly featured country is the United States (24.2% of episodes, with California, Florida, Hawaii, and Massachusetts as the predominant states), followed by the Bahamas (15%), South Africa (15%), New Zealand (10%), Australia (10%), and Mexico (10%). Black researchers are rarely featured despite the fact that both the Bahamas and South Africa are majority-black countries.
[15]
79 living species of sharks have been featured in Shark Week, along with several species of
batoids
(rays and kin),
chimaeras
, and extinct forms. The most common species to be featured are
great white sharks
(
Carcharodon carcharias
, 18.4% of episodes),
tiger sharks
(
Galeocerdo cuvier
, 12.2%),
bull sharks
(
Carcharhinus leucas
, 9.6%), and
hammerhead sharks
(Sphyrnidae, 8.4%). Some species with extensive scientific literature are rarely featured, such as
bonnetheads
(
Sphyrna tiburo
),
sandbar sharks
(
Carcharhinus plumbeus
), and the
spiny dogfish
(
Squalus acanthias).
Threats to sharks are alluded to by a majority (53%) of shows, with 14% mentioning the fin trade, though only 3% identify particular measures that viewers could take towards shark conservation. No Shark Week shows have recommended government action or donations to shark conservation groups.
[15]
Programming information
[
edit
]
Year
|
Dates
|
Host
|
Additional information
|
1988
|
|
No host
|
|
1989
|
|
No host
|
|
1990
|
|
No host
|
|
1991
|
|
No host
|
|
1992
|
|
No host
|
|
1993
|
|
No host
|
|
1994
|
|
Peter Benchley
[16]
|
|
1995
|
|
No host
|
|
1996
|
|
No host
|
|
1997
|
|
No host
|
|
1998
|
|
No host
|
|
1999
|
|
No host
|
|
2000
|
|
Nigel Marven
[17]
|
|
2001
|
|
Nigel Marven
[18]
|
|
2002
|
|
Nigel Marven
[19]
|
|
2003
|
|
No host
|
|
2004
|
|
The cast of
American Chopper
[20]
|
|
2005
|
|
Adam Savage
,
Jamie Hyneman
[21]
|
|
2006
|
|
Mike Rowe
[22]
|
|
2007
|
|
Les Stroud
[23]
|
|
2008
|
July 27 ? August 2
|
Jamie Hyneman, Adam Savage, Mike Rowe
[24]
|
Both a new
MythBusters
shark special
and a shark-themed episode of
Dirty Jobs
premiered for the event.
|
2009
|
August 2 ? August 8
|
Les Stroud
[25]
|
The season premiered with
Blood in the Water
, a recreation of the
Jersey Shore shark attacks of 1916
.
|
2010
|
August 1 ? August 7
|
Craig Ferguson
[26]
|
The programming block featured six brand-new shark specials.
[27]
It was advertised by the second appearance of the giant inflatable shark attached to the Discovery Channel building nicknamed "Chompie".
[5]
Shark Week 2010 was rated the most viewed Shark Week ever with 30.8 million unique viewers.
[28]
Shark Week is now the longest-running program event on cable.
[29]
|
2011
|
July 31 ? August 6
|
Andy Samberg
[30]
|
Programming featured seven specials.
[27]
|
2012
|
August 12 ? August 18
|
Philip DeFranco
[31]
|
"Chompie", the 446-foot-long, great white shark, was once again hung on the Discovery Channel headquarters building.
[5]
To honor the series' 25th anniversary, viewers were encouraged to vote via
Twitter
or
Facebook
on which item a mechanical
megalodon
shark would crush with its
hydraulic
jaws in the "Shark Week Chompdown".
[32]
|
2013
|
August 4 ? August 10
[33]
[34]
|
Josh Wolf
[35]
|
The event began with
Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives
, a fictitious documentary-style film which hypothesized the
megalodon
shark existing in present times.
[36]
A marketing campaign for the event launched during Discovery's
Skywire Live
, featuring a newscast covering the return of "Snuffy The Seal" to the ocean, only to see a shark jump out and devour the seal on camera (carrying the slogan "It's a bad week to be a seal").
[37]
[38]
An
aftershow
?Shark After Dark Live
?was also introduced, hosted by
Josh Wolf
.
[39]
|
2014
|
August 10 ? August 16
|
Josh Wolf
[40]
|
The programming block featured fourteen programs, including five
Shark After Dark LIVE
episodes shown for the first five days after two new programs each night.
|
2015
|
July 5 ? July 12
[41]
|
Eli Roth
[42]
|
The block lasted eight days,
[41]
and consisted of 14 new episodes,
[43]
including a special titled
Shark Week Sharktacular
that premiered on June 23. It highlighted the best moments in Shark Week history, and previewed Shark Week 2015.
[44]
Also, eight special "Sharkopedia Edition" episodes aired.
[45]
For the third year in a row, five
Shark After Dark LIVE
episodes hosted by will premiere on the first five nights.
[42]
|
2016
|
June 26 ? July 2
|
Eli Roth
|
|
2017
|
July 23 ? July 29
|
Eli Roth
|
To celebrate its 29th anniversary, selected U.S. theaters, beginning July 18, showed a "best of" episode from 2016 while also debuting a new 2017 special.
[46]
|
2018
|
July 22 ? July 28
|
Shaquille O'Neal
|
To celebrate its 30th anniversary, Shark Week created a limited edition Shark Week Box for dedicated fans to complement the Shark Week Experience.
[47]
|
2019
|
July 28 ? August 4
|
Rob Riggle
|
|
2020
|
August 9 ? August 16
|
Josh Gates
|
|
2021
|
July 11 ? July 18
|
Josh Gates
|
|
2022
|
July 24 ? July 30
|
Dwayne Johnson
[48]
|
All Elite Wrestling
, whose
Dynamite
and
Rampage
shows air on Discovery-owned channels, participated in Shark Week with a shark cage-themed match; their
Fight for the Fallen
event benefited ocean wildlife charities.
|
2023
|
|
Jason Momoa
[49]
|
|
Home media
[
edit
]
Shark Week
DVD and Blu-ray releases
Title
|
Release
date
|
Format(s)
|
No. of
episodes
|
Contents
|
Air Jaws / Air Jaws II
|
2002
|
DVD
|
1
|
Includes two episodes.
|
Anatomy of a Shark Bite
|
2005
|
DVD
|
1
|
Includes the title episode (2003) and "Future Shark" (2000).
|
Great White Shark: Uncaged
|
2007
|
DVD
|
1
|
Single episode.
|
Shark Week: 20th Anniversary Collection
|
2007
|
4×DVD
|
14
|
Various Shark Week episodes.
|
Discovery Channel: Shark DVD Set
|
2007
|
3×DVD
|
6
|
Includes six episodes (2003?2005).
[50]
|
Shark Week: Ocean of Fear
|
2008
|
2×DVD
|
6
|
The complete 2007 season, the 20th season, including
Ocean of Fear
.
|
Shark Week: The Great Bites Collection
|
2009
|
2×DVD
|
9
|
The complete 2008 season, plus three bonus episodes.
|
Blu-ray
|
Shark After Dark
|
2010
|
DVD
|
1
|
Single episode; not to be confused with
Shark After Dark LIVE
.
|
Shark Week: Jaws of Steel Collection
|
2010
|
2×DVD
|
8
|
The complete 2009 season, the 22nd season, plus two bonus episodes.
[51]
Includes the two-hour
docudrama
Blood in the Water
, which was the season premiere of the 22nd season.
|
2×Blu-ray
|
Shark Week: Favorites
|
2011
|
2×DVD
|
5
|
Various Shark Week episodes
|
Shark Week: Restless Fury
|
2011
|
2×DVD
|
8
|
The complete 2010 season.
|
2×Blu-ray
|
Shark Week: 25th Anniversary Collection
|
2012
|
DVD
|
4
|
Includes four popular episodes from recent seasons.
|
Blu-ray
|
Shark Week: Fins of Fury
|
2013
|
2×DVD
|
6
|
The complete 2011 season.
|
2×Blu-ray
|
Shark Week: Predator of the Deep
|
2014
|
DVD
|
5
|
The complete 2012 season.
|
Shark Week: Dominating the Deep
|
2015
|
3×DVD
|
13
|
The complete 2013 season.
|
Shark Week: Jawsome Encounters
|
2016
|
3×DVD
|
13
|
The complete 2014 season.
|
Shark Week: Shark 'n' Awe! Collection
|
2017
|
6×DVD
|
32
|
The complete 2015 and 2016 seasons.
|
Shark Week: Sharktacular Adventures
|
2017
|
3×DVD
|
15
|
The complete 2017 season.
|
Shark Week: 30 Years of Jaw-Dropping Discovery
|
2018
|
Blu-ray + 2×DVD
|
10
|
Includes five recent episodes on Blu-ray and DVD, and five "vintage" episodes on DVD only.
|
MythBusters: Jaws Special
|
Unknown
|
DVD
|
1
|
MythBusters
Shark Week special; includes
unaired mini-myths
.
|
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
General references
[
edit
]
Inline citations
[
edit
]
- ^
Cohen, Matt (August 14, 2014).
"The history of Shark Week"
.
The Week
. Retrieved
July 16,
2015
.
- ^
Swenson, Kyle (March 26, 2018)
"Stormy Daniels, Donald Trump and 'Shark Week': 'He made me sit and watch'"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
Fetters, Ashley (August 13, 2012).
"The Evolution of Shark Week, Pop-Culture Leviathan"
.
The Atlantic
. Retrieved
August 3,
2013
.
- ^
Bartless Manufacturer “swims with sharks” in Upcoming 3D Television Event
, 3dglassesonline.com, August 11, 2000.
- ^
a
b
c
"Return of "Chompie" In Silver Spring Building Marks 25th Anniversary of Shark Week"
. July 31, 2012
. Retrieved
August 5,
2012
.
- ^
"Discovery's Shark Week 2021 Swims off with Jawsome Lineup Featuring More Hours of Shark Programming Than Ever Before"
.
- ^
Andy Dehnart
(August 28, 2015).
"The first-ever Shweekend arrives, but how did Shark Week do?"
.
Reality Blurred
. Retrieved
February 20,
2016
.
- ^
Black, Riley (August 9, 2013).
"It Came From Basic Cable"
.
National Geographic
. Archived from
the original
on May 17, 2021
. Retrieved
June 6,
2021
.
- ^
Welsh, Jennifer.
"People Are Boycotting Shark Week Because Of A Fake Documentary About A Giant Shark"
.
Business Insider
. Retrieved
July 6,
2015
.
- ^
"When Wildlife Documentaries Jump the Shark"
.
NPR
. August 30, 2014
. Retrieved
March 11,
2018
.
- ^
Grant, Bob.
"Shark Week Veers Into Fiction . . . Again"
.
The-Scientist.com
. Retrieved
July 6,
2015
.
- ^
de Moraes, Lisa (January 8, 2015).
"Fake Stuff Out At Discovery Channel, Promises New Chief Rich Ross: TCA"
.
Deadline Hollywood
. Retrieved
July 6,
2015
.
- ^
Ulaby, Neda (July 6, 2015).
"After Sketchy Science, Shark Week Promises To Turn Over A New Fin"
.
NPR
. Retrieved
April 25,
2023
.
- ^
Lutz, Tom (July 24, 2017).
"Viewers angry after Michael Phelps loses race to computer-generated shark"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
July 26,
2017
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Whitenack, Lisa B.; Mickley, Brady L.; Saltzman, Julia; Kajiura, Stephen M.; Macdonald, Catherine C.; Shiffman, David S. (November 3, 2022).
"A content analysis of 32 years of Shark Week documentaries"
.
PLOS ONE
.
17
(11): e0256842.
Bibcode
:
2022PLoSO..1756842W
.
doi
:
10.1371/journal.pone.0256842
.
ISSN
1932-6203
.
PMC
9632781
.
PMID
36327262
.
- ^
Zad, Martie.
"Discovery's 'Shark Week' Features Three World Premieres"
.
washingtonpost.com
. WP, LLC
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
Kelleher, Terry.
"Picks and Pans Review: Giants: Sharks"
.
people.com
. Meredith Corporation
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
"How Big a Threat Are Sharks?"
.
cnn.com
. Cable News Network (CNN)
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
Liebensen, Donald (August 11, 2002).
"6 new documentaries join 15th 'Shark Week' lineup"
.
chicagotribune.com
. Tribune Interactive
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
Schaefer, Megan (July 14, 2014).
"
'Shark Week' 2014: Take A Bite Out Of These 12 Facts That You Probably Didn't Know About The Discovery Channel Ser"
.
ibtimes.com
. IB Times, LLC
. Retrieved
August 21,
2020
.
- ^
Kaplan, Don (July 17, 2005).
"Shark Week ? Biting Festival Returns for 18th Year"
.
nypost.com
. NYP Holdings, Inc
. Retrieved
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2020
.
- ^
O'Hare, Kate (July 28, 2006).
"Rowe explores dirty secrets of 'Shark Week'
"
.
mtstandard.com
. The Montana Standard
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
Bierly, Mandy.
"The PopWatch Interview: 'Shark Week' host Les Stroud"
.
ew.com
. Meredith Corporation
. Retrieved
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.
- ^
Blas, Lorena.
"Shark Week encounters through the years"
.
usatoday.com
. Gannett
. Retrieved
August 21,
2020
.
- ^
"Shark Week Is Back... And Its Got Bite! Shark Week 2009 Schedule Released"
.
underwatertimes.com
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
Bettinger, Brendan (June 15, 2010).
"Craig Ferguson Will Host Shark Week Starting August 1"
.
collider.com
.
Collider
Cryptomedia, Inc
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
a
b
"Shark Week: TV Shows"
. Discovery Channel. Archived from
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on September 22, 2012
. Retrieved
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2012
.
- ^
Walker, Hunter (August 10, 2010).
"Discovery's 'Shark Week' Sets Ratings Record"
.
thewrap.com
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
"Discovery Channel's 23rd Annual 'Shark Week' Is Most-Watched Ever; Seen by 30.8 Million People"
.
TV by the Numbers
. August 10, 2010. Archived from
the original
on July 15, 2012
. Retrieved
September 20,
2012
.
- ^
Nededog, Jethro (August 4, 2011).
"
'Shark Week' Exclusive: Attack of the Andy Samberg (Video)"
.
hollywoodreporter.com
.
The Hollywood Reporter
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
"Philip DeFranco + 'Shark Week' = Jawsome"
.
Discovery.com
. Discovery, Inc
. Retrieved
July 23,
2020
.
- ^
"25th Anniversary of 'Shark Week Week' to Premiere Sunday August 12 on Discovery"
.
TV by the Numbers
. June 27, 2012. Archived from
the original
on June 30, 2012
. Retrieved
June 27,
2012
.
- ^
"Discovery Channel's post on Vine"
.
Vine
. Archived from
the original
on July 12, 2013
. Retrieved
June 28,
2013
.
- ^
"
'Shark Week' Returns to Discovery Channel August 4 With the Most Hours of Shark Programming Ever"
.
TV by the Numbers
. Archived from
the original
on July 14, 2013
. Retrieved
June 28,
2013
.
- ^
"Shark Week 2013 TV Shows"
. Discovery. 2013. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
- ^
Rich Juzwiak.
"Shark Week Opens with Fake Megalodon Documentary"
.
Gawker
. Archived from
the original
on August 8, 2013.
- ^
"Discovery's New 'Shark Week' Ad: Offensive or Funny? (Video)"
.
The Hollywood Reporter
. June 27, 2013
. Retrieved
April 16,
2020
.
- ^
"Poor Snuffy the Seal is mauled by a Great White in Discovery Channel's Shark Week advert"
.
The Drum
. Retrieved
April 16,
2020
.
- ^
Yahr, Emily (August 9, 2013).
"After the show is the after-show ? TV networks look to capitalize on biggest hits"
.
Washington Post
.
- ^
"Shark Week 2014"
.
Press.discovery.com
. Discovery Communications, Inc
. Retrieved
August 17,
2021
.
- ^
a
b
Levin, Gary (January 29, 2015).
"Shark Week bites earlier in 2015"
.
USA Today
. Retrieved
July 5,
2015
.
- ^
a
b
de Moraes, Lisa (June 2, 2015).
"Eli Roth To Host Shark Week's Late Night 'Shark After Dark'
"
.
Deadline Hollywood
. Retrieved
July 6,
2015
.
- ^
Kondolojy, Amanda (June 16, 2015).
"Discovery Channel Announces 'Shark Week' 2015 Schedule"
.
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. Archived from
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on June 17, 2015
. Retrieved
July 6,
2015
.
- ^
Reyes, Traciy (June 23, 2015).
"
'Sharktacular': Discovery Channel Thrills Fans With A Sneak Peak Of Shark Week July 2015"
. Inquisitr
. Retrieved
July 6,
2015
.
- ^
"Listings for 'Sharkopedia'
"
.
TV Guide
. Archived from
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on July 6, 2015
. Retrieved
July 6,
2015
.
- ^
"Shark Week 2017 to Premiere in Theaters"
. March 30, 2017.
- ^
"Shark Week Box"
. Archived from
the original
on April 14, 2018
. Retrieved
April 13,
2018
.
- ^
Garvey, Marianne.
"
'Shark Week' lineup to feature Dwayne Johnson as host"
.
amp.cnn.com
. CNN Interactive Group, Inc
. Retrieved
July 15,
2022
.
- ^
Bell, BreAnna (May 17, 2023).
"Jason Momoa Joins Discovery Channel's Shark Week as Master of Ceremonies"
.
Variety
. Retrieved
May 17,
2023
.
- ^
"Shark DVD set"
.
Eastern Illinois University Booth Library
. Archived from the original on August 28, 2022
. Retrieved
August 28,
2022
.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (
link
)
- ^
"Shark Week: Jaws of Steel Collection"
.
Amazon
. July 13, 2010.
External links
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