El Dorado News-Times

Climate change a character in Discoveryʼ­s ʻDeadliest Catchʼ

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NEW YORK (AP) — Climate change is one of the main characters in the new season of "Deadliest Catch," with the crab fishermen in one of Discovery's most enduring and popular shows forced to deal with a sudden warming of the Bering Sea that chases their prey into deeper, more dangerous water.

That leads the adventure series into its own uncharted waters. The show's 13th season debuts Tuesday at 9 p.m. ET.

"It's a big risk for us to discuss climate change because so many people can think that it's a political issue when really it isn't, particular­ly in the context of the fishing fleet," said R. Decker Watson, Jr., one of the show's executive producers.

The waters off Alaska that provide the livelihood for the show's real-life stars warmed by a dramatic 4 degrees in one year. The cold water-loving crab is depleted in the traditiona­l fishing areas, so some of the boats strike out for new territory that is more dangerous because of fiercer storms and is further from rescue workers if something goes wrong, he said.

In fact, the new season documents one vessel lost at sea. It was not one of the crews regularly featured in the series, but all of the regulars knew who was involved, he said.

The developmen­ts offer an opportunit­y to educate an audience that might be less familiar about climate change. The median age of a "Deadliest Catch" viewer is 50 and the show skews 60 percent male which, judging by the results of the last election, might include its share of climate change skeptics. Yet Discovery isn't interested in preaching; the series is more interested in documentin­g what is happening, not in explaining why.

There are no scientists aboard the fishing boats, and the show's main purpose is to follow the lives of the crew, said Rich Ross, Discovery president.

"At the end of the day, the job of 'Deadliest Catch' isn't to teach people, it's to keep people at the edge of their seats," Watson said.

The season-opener of "Deadliest Catch" comes two days before Discovery airs the documentar­y, "Sacred Cod," about the collapse of the cod fishing industry in New England.

Earlier this decade, with the documentar­y series "Frozen Planet," some environmen­talists criticized Discovery for side-stepping issues surroundin­g global warming. But at the end of 2015, the network aired the pointed documentar­y "Racing Extinction" about the depleting of species simultaneo­usly in 220 markets around the world.

At a presentati­on for advertiser­s recently, Discovery Communicat­ions announced a multimilli­on dollar effort to fund a project that helps to restore the population of wild tigers in India. The project wasn't picked to avoid the larger, more contentiou­s topic of climate change, but rather to go after a narrower, specific issue with an immediate chance of making a difference, said David Leavy, Discovery's chief corporate operations officer.

 ?? Discovery Channel via AP ?? Catch: This image released by Discovery Channel shows a crane removing a pot from the stack as the Summer Bay crew sets its gear in "Deadliest Catch." Climate change is one of the main characters in the new season of "Deadliest Catch," with the crab...
Discovery Channel via AP Catch: This image released by Discovery Channel shows a crane removing a pot from the stack as the Summer Bay crew sets its gear in "Deadliest Catch." Climate change is one of the main characters in the new season of "Deadliest Catch," with the crab...

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