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Lindsey Vonn swims with a shark while filming the Shark Week show 'Monster Tag.'
Lindsey Vonn swims with a shark while filming the Shark Week show 'Monster Tag.' (Photo: Courtesy Discovery)

What Shark Experts Really Think About Shark Week

On the 30th anniversary of Shark Week, we called up some shark scientists for a no-holds-barred conversation about the impact of the pop culture phenomenon

Lindsey Vonn swims with a shark while filming the Shark Week show 'Monster Tag.'
(Photo: Courtesy Discovery)

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Discovery Channel鈥檚 kicked off July 22听for the 30th summer in a row. While millions of Americans are reliably entertained by the听documentaries and celebrity specials, marine biologists will often spend the week on social media,听freaking out about distortions and myths put forth by Shark Week programming. Perhaps the best example of this came from shark conservation biologist David Shiffman in 2014, as he live-tweeted his reactions to every single Shark Week show that year鈥斺減seudoscience,鈥 he wrote;听鈥渄angerous and disrespectful.鈥 鈥,鈥澨齎辞虫听蝉耻尘尘补谤颈锄别诲.

Discovery has made its Shark Week content since then. We called up Shiffman鈥攚ho听is听a scientist听at Simon Fraser University and writer for听a听blog called 鈥攁nd several other scientists to talk about what to expect from this year鈥檚 programming, and whether Shark Week is good or bad for sharks.

Also on the line: , the director of conservation and education听at the Seattle Aquarium; ,听a graduate student with the Pacific Shark Research Center at Moss Landing Marine Labs; and , a marine biologist specializing in oceanic whitetip sharks, who also works for , which makes satellite tracking tags for birds and sharks.


Working on Shark Week Shows

JIM WHARTON:听I was approached by Shark Week a few years ago,听after听years of advocating for Alien Sharks听辞苍濒颈苍别. Alien Sharks [a program about deep-sea shark species], in my opinion, is one of the best programs Shark Week has ever produced. It鈥檚 one of the very few that emphasizes other sharks rather than great whites and bull sharks and tiger sharks.听

In 2015听I did commentary for听Ninja Sharks [about species that have evolved to become very effective hunters].听It was听a mixed bag of an experience because the content of Ninja Sharks sounded really good, but听the title was atrocious. From the beginning I was trying to get them to alter the title and a little bit of the approach. I managed to have some impact鈥攖hey sent me an early edit of the show, and there was some very unfortunate fear-based messaging, and to their credit they were willing to soften and change it a little bit.

LUCY HOWEY: I鈥檝e done maybe three shows with them at this point.听I have mixed feelings about it. It鈥檚 nice to get our work out there. One of the big things is just getting the public interested in sharks, and I think Shark Week is great for doing that. But I tried to get them to change the title, Monster Tag. I听told them, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e cheapening this show听by calling it this.鈥 And they kept the name. I must have given them 50 other names. We fought them on the content听and didn't get anywhere. At the very beginning, we wouldn鈥檛 sign the papers to film with them because the non-disclosure agreement听was ridiculous. There was a line in it that said something like they could present us however they wanted, even if it wasn鈥檛 accurate, or even if it was slanderous.听I was like, 鈥淭his is my career. I鈥檓 not going听to sign something that says you can defame me.鈥 They changed the agreement, in their defense.

(A representative from Discovery responded,听鈥淧articipants sign agreements sometimes with us and sometimes with producers. 听We don鈥檛 comment on legal agreements.鈥)

DAVID SHIFFMAN: I have not, and likely will never be, on an actual Shark Week program. But I鈥檝e had lots of productive conversations with people behind the scenes that have started off with 鈥淗ey, you鈥檙e so critical about this. What would you like to see?鈥澨齋o to their credit, they approached me with that, and I听gave them a long list of things, and they have followed up on several of them. There has been a real shift in programming in the last few years. It was really bad in the听days of , and all of that nonsense.听The Alien Sharks and Ninja Sharks programs have been some of my favorites. I鈥檝e been very critical of programming overall but those are the really interesting ones, focusing on species that don't get enough attention, with an emphasis on real behaviors.

VICKY V脕SQUEZ: Moss Landing听has been featured on Alien Sharks,听just about every one of those shows I believe, and I got a chance to be on Alien Sharks: Stranger Fins听last year.听 I feel really lucky to be a part of the show that I was on. I know that a lot of people have had bad experiences with Shark Week and it鈥檚 left a bad taste in their mouth but for me, it鈥檚 just been so positive, so special.听I did not expect myself to become a Shark Week cheerleader over time.

Sexism in Shark Week

V脕SQUEZ: After going to the in Durban, South Africa, four years ago, there was just this clear representation of diversity. It was amazing seeing so many women scientists, so many people of color.听One thing that had bothered me about Shark Week was, when you look at the Shark Week shows, you're not necessarily seeing that representation. So for Southern Fried Science, I saying how听it would be nice if they looked for this, because it's not necessarily about trying to meet a diversity quota鈥攊t's about the fact that diversity is already there. You can basically trip on it. I听think that's rare in a lot of fields in science. The producer of Alien Sharks: Stranger Fins听told me听when we were out in the field that he actually had read that article and it was one of the reasons why he wanted to include me.听

SHIFFMAN: This year, Shark Week did something that annoyed me a great deal. On their official 听listing all the shows,听any time there's a male scientist in the show, it lists听them by name in the promo. But听any time there's a female scientist, it lists听“a team of scientists”and not their name. And in some cases there was a male scientist listed as 鈥淒r. so and so鈥 and a woman scientist where it listed their name without 鈥淒r.鈥

(A representative from Discovery responded, 鈥淏ecause of the sheer amount of scientists on our air during Shark Week, we rely heavily on the information we get from the production companies.鈥)

HOWEY: This is just speculation, but [with听Monster Tag], I really felt that. My collaborator, Ed, did nothing to get the attention on him but they were really听focusing on him. He was like, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know the answer to this, ask Lucy.鈥澨齀 thought maybe I was imagining it.听

SHIFFMAN: No, you鈥檙e not. It鈥檚 an issue.听And they are absolutely trying to improve. But either one year or two years after Vicky wrote that great blog post,听they had a 听of little three-to-five听minute webisodes听focused on women scientists and scientists of color, but they were on the website, which no one looks at鈥攏ot on the most widely viewed cable news science and environment show in the world. It's nice to see that they're trying, but听the American Elasmobranch Society (a听non-profit professional organization for shark scientists) is听more than half women, and you see Shark Week lineups are almost all men. If you鈥檙e looking for shark researchers and finding all men, at a certain point it鈥檚 not accidental.听

(A representative from Discovery responded, 鈥淲e have made a concerted effort to have more woman scientists on our air and our numbers are up (getting a count). And we are working on continuing in that direction. We are working to make sure that more female scientists represented, and this year we had 12 female scientists on shows.听 The goal is to keep growing that number.)

HOWEY: On Monster Tag, they had celebrities paired with scientists. They听had me with Lindsey Vonn, who loves sharks, and is super brave. They were trying to get her to act more scared, and she was just like, 鈥淲hatever. I fly down a mountain at 120 miles per hour.鈥 She wasn't biting.听I have seen the show and I will say they definitely sensationalized a lot of it.

SHIFFMAN: It鈥檚 not just limited to Shark Week, but Shark Week absolutely perpetuates the idea that this is an old boys鈥 club, and there's macho nonsense associated with it. We worked with a bunch of听film crews [not related to Shark Week]听during my Ph.D. experience. On one occasion, I was the senior scientist onboard and I was reeling in a large shark听and it was too heavy for me. So I handed it to a graduate student on our team听who is a young woman, about five foot three, and is a member of a sorority, perhaps not a stereotypical field researcher, but is one of the hardest-working and strongest people I鈥檝e ever met.听A听producer for this show pulled me aside and said, 鈥淲hy did you let that little girl reel in the shark instead of you?鈥澨鼳nd I said, 鈥淏ecause she's a lot stronger than me.鈥

Not-Quite-Scientific听Programming

SHIFFMAN:听A few years ago they aired, I believe, seven听different episodes featuring a team of non-scientist shark enthusiasts. They鈥檇 have a basic question about shark behavior that scientists had answered 30 or 40 years ago. They didn't ask any scientists, they assumed no one had ever answered it, and their solution was, 鈥淟et's go cage diving with great white sharks in Mexico and see if we can observe this behavior.鈥

WHARTON: I don't know if it's the 30th anniversary thing, but they really have gone all in on the celebrity guests this year. It's a little nuts鈥攊t鈥檚 almost like they've run out of interesting things to say about sharks and so they鈥檙e distracting us with celebrities.听You'd think in an entire week of programming, you could go with enough of the stuff that works but still have plenty of room to take risks. I听feel like Alien Sharks was one of those risks that obviously paid off.

Why not try to broaden your experience instead of just falling back on the same thing for every single show?听There are听always about two or three shows at minimum that are just straight attack porn. They鈥檙e either recreating attacks, or they're talking about shark attacks听being on the rise or being an epidemic. It鈥檚 unfortunate, because it鈥檚 the least important topic to discuss with sharks.听

HOWEY:听I think they feel trapped by what they perceive to be what will sell.听If a program does well and a personality is well received, then they want to bring that individual back over and over again. It鈥檚 funny to think that a network that鈥檚 producing a week about sharks is risk-averse, but that definitely seems like that is one of their criteria.听They just want to do things that they know are going to work. We filmed听an amazing story for the show about pregnant oceanic whitetip sharks. We were doing ultrasounds in the field on them, and then tracking them.听But they were very concerned about getting the sensational shots. You know, 鈥淲e want to see Lindsey in the water with a shark.鈥澨鼳nd I听worked with her on what to say about the sharks, and I think she did a really great job. I听think that they cut out a lot of footage that shows the real science that happened. That鈥檚 disappointing, but it could be worse.

(A representative from Discovery said, 鈥淲e are an entertainment network and our goal is to expose as many people as possible to the importance of shark conservation, on our air, online and in all of our outreach. 听It鈥檚 science first, but mixed with entertainment to keep the audiences engaged. 听Discovery gives sharks and the men and women who work to protect them a platform to highlight the importance of conserving these beautiful and greatly needed 听creatures of our ocean鈥檚 ecosystem.鈥)

Those Crazy Show Titles

WHARTON:听It鈥檚 funny that the titles sometimes are not indicative of the content. For example,听with听Alien Sharks and Ninja Sharks, the titles keep a lot of people away. Shark advocates, people who are interested in conservation鈥擨 get a lot of feedback from Twitter from听people who have written Shark Week off, and used the titles as a reason not to come back.听

SHIFFMAN: Back when I was much more against what Shark Week was doing, before they made serious efforts to improve, I cultivated some sources within Discovery, and one told me the story of how they come up with the titles.听I鈥檝e been unable to confirm, but this is perhaps worth looking into: The producers have no input at all into their show titles.听

HOWEY: That鈥檚 true. I can confirm that for sure.

SHIFFMAN: They can propose a title, but then the Discovery marketing team and science education team sits听around and watches all of them in a boardroom, allegedly while drinking. And comes up with the titles. Later in the viewing party, the titles get progressively more ridiculous.

V脕SQUEZ: A听little thought on the names of the titles might help people get a better picture. I听think that helps people go and want to听watch that show because they know what they're going to get.

(A representative from Discovery responded, 鈥淧roduction companies are consulted but ultimately it鈥檚 up to the network on what the show names will be.鈥)

How Viewers Can Make a Difference

V脕SQUEZ: The audience needs to remember their power. Shark Week is constantly looking for feedback, and what they do with it is unfortunately out of听our hands, but the one thing that we can听do is encourage audiences to watch the shows that we know are going in the right direction. I鈥檓 the deputy director of a group called the听, and in the past we've put out little Shark Week schedules [with commentary]听tipping the audience: 鈥淲e think this show is going to have strong science content, we think this show might be more fear-based,鈥澨齛nd so on. I think there are听a lot of people out there who are hungry for the right stuff, in terms of content and diversity.

SHIFFMAN: I try to come up with of what to watch and what not to watch. What I've been suggesting is that people watch the good shows and听enthusiastically share on social media, tagging Discovery and听Discovery's execs, to let them know that they're watching.听

V脕SQUEZ: I do know that the execs are听looking at a lot of this in real time. If audiences want their voices to be heard, the best thing would be to say something while that show is premiering. That's what they're really looking for. If you write your opinion two听weeks later, when you're watching a rerun,听it鈥檚 still helpful, in my opinion, but the people that make decisions may not notice it.

Overall, Is Shark Week Good or Bad for Sharks?听

HOWEY: A听couple years ago I听read that one of the most Googled questions of all time was 鈥淲hat would it be like if dinosaurs were still around?鈥澨齏e don鈥檛 want to get to the point where we鈥檙e saying, 鈥淲hat would it be like if sharks were still around?鈥澨齀f听there is anything good that can come out of Shark Week, people protect what they love, and they love what they know. So,听whether you love it because you like to watch the horror,听or the conservation tree-hugger kind of shows鈥攅ither way, they鈥檙e getting exposure for sharks.听Again, I听really disagree with some of things that they鈥檝e done and how they鈥檝e portrayed sharks, but I听think just getting exposure is a powerful tool.听

WHARTON: I know dozens of marine scientists and advocates who grew up on Shark Week and were inspired by it. In the same way that Jaws is often decried听as the worst thing that ever happened to sharks, it also inspired a lot of shark enthusiasts. I听have VHS tapes of some of the first years of Shark Week because I听used to watch them over and over听again. For all of the frustration that we might feel for the way they present sharks, there鈥檚 still a clear signal of听that听enthusiasm that people embrace during Shark Week. This听is the one time of year when we鈥檙e all talking about sharks. So听to totally write it off and just pretend that it鈥檚 not this great opportunity is foolish.

V脕SQUEZ: Yeah. I听grew up watching Shark Week too, and I used to take notes.

SHIFFMAN: Shark Week represents the largest temporary increase in how much Americans pay attention to any science or nature or environment topic at all, of the whole year, and has for decades. Scientists and environmentalists can use this temporary increase in public attention to get real information out there, regardless of the content of the actual shows. It would be great if the actual shows had better content.

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