SAY

Manifesto: Denouncing Discovery Communications for Victimizing Sharks for Profit

Target:
Discovery Channel Communications.
Since 1987, Discovery Channel has annually presented 'Shark Week.' This week-long series of programs featuring sharks claims to present facts about sharks, and its popularity has earned the company millions of dollars.  In reality, Discovery uses sharks for the horror-show effect that draws a wide audience. Shark Week dramatizes shark attacks, blood and the animals' unusual dentition, to frighten viewers. 

We call for an International boycott of all of Shark Week's programs until Discovery Communications stops using sharks dishonestly for profit in horror shows, and starts presenting them as the important marine animals that they are, now in danger of extinction.

Since 1987, Discovery Channel has annually presented 'Shark Week.' This week-long series of programs featuring sharks claims to present facts about sharks, and its popularity has earned the company millions of dollars.  In reality, Discovery uses sharks for the horror-show effect that draws a wide audience. Shark Week dramatizes shark attacks, blood and the animals' unusual dentition, to frighten viewers. 

We call for an International boycott of all of Shark Week's programs until Discovery Communications stops using sharks dishonestly for profit in horror shows, and starts presenting them as the important marine animals that they are, now in danger of extinction.

Manifesto :
Denouncing Discovery Communicationsfor Victimizing Sharks for Profit


We, the organizations, researchers, and divers who foresee the imminent extinction of the large shark species, demand a stop to Discovery Communication's dishonest use of sharks for profit.

Since 1987, Discovery Channel has annually presented 'Shark Week.' This week-long series of programs featuring sharks claims to present facts about sharks, and its popularity has earned the company millions of dollars.

Discovery Channel is owned by Discovery Communications, which claims to be "dedicated to upholding the highest standards of professional and ethical conduct."

Discovery's scientific credibility and reputation has resulted in the wide-spread belief in the truth of the shows televised on Shark Week.

In reality, Discovery uses sharks for the horror-show effect that draws a wide audience. Shark Week dramatizes shark attacks, blood and the animals' unusual dentition, to frighten viewers. Since no true sea monsters have been discovered, Discovery has cast sharks in that role, following in the footsteps of the movie "Jaws".

But "Jaws" was advertised as a fictional horror film, whereas Discovery presents its horror shows as scientific truth. A recent example consisted of stuffing a dummy's wet suit with fish pieces and letting the dummy snorkeller float at the surface. Not surprisingly, a tiger shark, who had been attracted to the area, tried to get to the food source by biting the 'snorkeller'. The viewers were not told that the dummy's wetsuit was filled with smelly fish parts, and Discovery presented the producer's fraudulent sequence as evidence that sharks are likely to attack any swimmer in the sea. This is just one of countless ways in which Discovery Communications has lied to its viewers to show sharks as dangerous.

The fact is that no shark species target humans for food and people all over the world swim and dive with sharks for pleasure, the same species that Discovery infers will attack and kill people.

Scientists who's work has been used for Discovery's Shark Week have found it twisted and misrepresented by the company. For those who are familiar with sharks, Shark Week is nothing more than tabloid journalism, and does not reflect modern scientific knowledge.

Until recently, even the dangers to sharks from overfishing was covered up by Discovery, because they considered conservation to be an unpopular subject.

So after Shark Week 2007, the authors, representing the Shark list (now The Shark Group), sent a letter to Discovery Channel, outlining the above concerns. It was signed by 352 people and resulted in a three and a half hour meeting with Discovery executives. The Shark Week phenomenon and lack of ethics in its portrayal of sharks was openly discussed, but Discovery's representatives saw no problem with it. While they did include some information on the need for shark conservation in 2008, they continue to present sharks as monster man-eaters, thus reinforcing the biggest obstacle to their protection.

Therefore, since:

  • Discovery Communications uses endangered marine animals to provide horror shows for profit, facilitating their mass slaughter with almost no public sympathy, nor protest

  • Discovery has so effectively convinced their millions of viewers that sharks deserve to be hated, that many people think that sharks should be hunted to extinction

  • Discovery has created a wave of fear of the sea, in people who grew up watching Shark Week

  • Discovery executives know exactly what they are doing, and call it 'shark pornography,' while they bring in millions of dollars

  • Discovery excuses itself by claiming it is only giving the public what it wants, though the public's love of horror shows has nothing to do with their responsibility for having made sharks the subject of that horror

  • Discovery is as responsible for the decline of sharks towards extinction as the market for shark fin soup



We call for an International boycott of all of Shark Week's programs until Discovery Communications stops using sharks dishonestly for profit in horror shows, and starts presenting them as the important marine animals that they are, now in danger of extinction.

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We signed the "Manifesto: Denouncing Discovery Communications for Victimizing Sharks for Profit" petition!
# 1,538:
1:11 pm PST, Nov 6, Alexandra MAUVE, France
# 1,537:
1:04 pm PST, Nov 3, Matthias Baer, Germany
# 1,536:
7:54 am PST, Nov 3, Marisa Barkhoff, Germany
# 1,535:
7:26 am PST, Nov 2, Sabrina Nedrow, South Carolina
# 1,534:
1:42 am PST, Nov 1, Perlot Benoît, France
# 1,533:
5:02 am PDT, Oct 31, Helle Collin, Denmark
# 1,532:
8:24 pm PDT, Oct 27, Elise Margulis, New Jersey
# 1,531:
10:26 pm PDT, Oct 26, Mandi TT, California
# 1,530:
5:59 am PDT, Oct 26, K. Finsterbusch, Germany
# 1,529:
5:53 am PDT, Oct 26, Julie Farrell, Australia
# 1,528:
4:50 pm PDT, Oct 25, Tierney Grinavic, Maryland
# 1,527:
4:04 pm PDT, Oct 25, Liz Duane, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
# 1,526:
12:17 pm PDT, Oct 25, Ally Heffernan, Fiji
# 1,525:
11:39 am PDT, Oct 25, Jacki Bolanowski, Virginia
# 1,524:
11:35 am PDT, Oct 25, Richard Lefler, New Jersey
Education should not include fear mongering. We all realize that the Discovery Channel is a business and needs to make money but does that income truly need to come at the cost of the animals misleadingly portrayed on Shark Week? Shark Week has jumped the shark and is now pushing the fear factor for profit. This needs to end, now.
# 1,523:
3:36 am PDT, Oct 25, Yvonne Porath, Germany
Please stop showing the sharks as a horror object just because of the viewing ratings. You increase the bad image of the sharks with your movies but as a "Discovery Channel" you should do the opposite. The sharks are in danger of extinction and you do everything that the people don't care of the sharks more than ever. We need awareness training to save the sharks and the ocean which we all are dependent on and you have the best platform to do this. So, why don't you use this opportunity to do the important awareness training? Because it brings no money?
# 1,522:
10:06 pm PDT, Oct 24, Sabine Van Nes, Germany
# 1,521:
7:11 pm PDT, Oct 24, Luzini Silvester, Malaysia
# 1,520:
5:25 pm PDT, Oct 24, Pierre Ofzareck, Germany
To do what Discovery Channel is doing in this case is the last thing we already need. One of the biggest problems we have have in case of protect the sharks from extinction is to get the fear off, most humans have about. What Discovery Channel is doing is exactly what I call "a broadside to everyone who is interest to keep the ocean live in balance. Probably the will remember what the do, when the sharks are finally gone and we all run out the air to breathe. Shame on you Discovery Channel!
# 1,519:
3:02 pm PDT, Oct 24, Michaela Michal, Austria
Today we know better - Horror shows about sharks are completely out of place on the Discovery Channel
# 1,518:
6:17 pm PDT, Oct 23, Kathleen Lybarger, Nevada
I was very disapointed with this years shark week and the discovery channel. Instead of shark conservation, they promoted shark killings!!
# 1,517:
8:23 am PDT, Oct 20, Forest Venkat, India
# 1,516:
6:23 am PDT, Oct 18, Sarah Simpson, United Kingdom
# 1,515:
12:00 am PDT, Oct 18, Alexa Peters, Texas
# 1,514:
4:55 pm PDT, Oct 14, Elle Simpson, Pennsylvania
# 1,513:
6:58 am PDT, Oct 7, Annick Van noeyen, Belgium
# 1,512:
8:42 pm PDT, Oct 6, Jocelyne HUTH, France
# 1,511:
11:41 am PDT, Oct 4, THEODORE SPACHIDAKIS, Greece
# 1,510:
11:22 am PDT, Oct 4, Yrna miriana Saptono, Indonesia
# 1,509:
11:17 am PDT, Oct 4, Nicolette Ludolphi, Germany
# 1,508:
8:57 am PDT, Oct 2, Łukasz Ziębicki, Poland
# 1,507:
12:56 am PDT, Oct 1, Name not displayed, France
# 1,506:
8:20 pm PDT, Sep 30, Glenn Brown, Nebraska
# 1,505:
2:45 am PDT, Sep 30, Tournoux Marc, France
# 1,504:
8:05 am PDT, Sep 29, Le Guével Pablo, France
Sharks are not animals or subjects of horrific shows, but animals of vital importance. Indeed, all of them depends on the food chain, starting with the man.
# 1,503:
9:40 pm PDT, Sep 28, Jackie Baut, Philippines
# 1,502:
3:55 am PDT, Sep 26, Vanessa Collazo-Gutierrez, California
# 1,501:
1:51 pm PDT, Sep 25, Candice Lynn, Maine
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