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Mar 14
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Summary for : National Geographic: Hooked Gone Monster Fishing
Follow along with more adventures of Hooked with a catfish the size of a grizzly bear, and a thousand-pound marlin.source:channel.nationalgeographic.com
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Summary for : National Geographic: Hooked Gone Monster Fishing Follow along with more adventures of Hooked with a catfish the size of a grizzly bear, and a thousand-pound marlin.source:channel.nationalgeographic.com
Summary for : National Geographic: Explorer – Marijuana Nation Reporting from secret farms and not-so-secret grow houses of marijuana cultivators, Lisa Ling goes into their world where marijuana is not just a drug but a way of life.source:channel.nationalgeographic.com
Summary for : National Geographic: The Heroin Trade Documentary Every time a heroin addict buys a bag of heroin on the street, they are supporting this bloody industry. In addition to destroying their own life and the lives of those around them, heroin addicts contribute to the death of thousands every year. Without demand, drug lords and the heroin trade would not survive.source:heroin.net
Summary for : National Geographic – Afghan Heroin: The Lost War Afghan Heroin: The Lost War is a one-hour documentary which investigates how the war on terror in Afghanistan has unleashed heroin into the mainstream.Heroin is one of the most addictive drugs on Earth. Some 90 per cent of the drug is grown in Afghanistan and this hard hitting documentary investigates how the War on Terror has inadvertently unleashed a massive supply of the deadly drug.source:LocateTv.com
Summary for : National Geographic: Explorer – Worlds Most Dangerous Drug Methamphetamine is one of the hardest drugs to quit. Its abuse is ravaging rural communities and cities alike. NGC correspondent Lisa Ling goes inside this global epidemic to find out what makes meth so addictive and destructive.source:channel.nationalgeographic.com
Summary for : National Geographic: Explorer – Inside LSD Could LSD be the next drug in your doctor’s arsenal? New experiments have a few researchers believing that this “trippy” drug could become a pharmaceutical of the future. Outlawed in 1970, the street drug developed a reputation as the dangerous toy of the counterculture, capable of inspiring either moments of genius or a descent into madness. Now science is taking a fresh look into this psychedelic world, including the first human LSD trials in more than 35 years.source:channel.nationalgeographic.com
Summary for : National Geographic: Megastructures – Icebreaker Get an inside look at the planning and engineering behind creating some of the greatest buildings and machines ever made. ‘MegaStructures’ takes you inside the superstructures and all the inner workings that muscle together to make the structures function as a whole. Megastructures are all around… More us; skyscrapers in big cities, subway trains years ahead of their time. Discover these and more!.source:www.tv.com
Summary for : National Geographic: Ultimate Factories – Jack Daniels Ultimate Factories travels to Lynchburg, Tennessee, where tradition and technology intersect to make 150 million bottles of Jack Daniel’s Old No. 7 each year. The factory holds enough whiskey to fill 3 million bottles at any given time, fermented with yeast that descends from the same used in the original batch 140 years ago. |
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