- Crowe’s Nest by Elizabeth Powell Crowe - http://blog.epcrowe.com -
Alaska
Posted By Libbi On 25 April 2008 @ 07:57 In News | 1 Comment
|
TOUGHER IN ALASKA: A New Weekly Series on History(TM) Premiers on Thursday, May 8 at 10 pm ET/PT |
| Tougher in Alaska Host Geo Beach. (PRNewsFoto/History(TM), Mark Brinster) NEW YORK, NY UNITED STATES |
|||
| Tougher in Alaska Host Geo Beach. (PRNewsFoto/History(TM)) NEW YORK, NY UNITED STATES |
|||
Throughout history, Alaskans have had to fight for survival. Even now,
everything is STILL Tougher in Alaska - the last American frontier.
Geo Beach travels to extreme locations in this giant state, from wind-swept
Arctic tundra to rugged coastal mountains - mining for gold, fishing for
salmon, and tackling other tough, uniquely Alaskan activities. NEW YORK, April 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Everything is tougher in Alaska.
From earning a living to burying the dead, everyday life here has always
been shaped by severe weather, rugged terrain and vast distances between
communities. The people who call Alaska home have a long history of
overcoming adversity and adapting to their extreme environment. Host Geo
Beach, who has lived in Alaska for more than 25 years, is on a quest to
find out what it really takes to survive and thrive in Alaska. The new
series TOUGHER IN ALASKA premieres Thursday, May 8, 2008 at 10 pm ET/PT on
History(TM).
(Photo: [13] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-a )
(Photo: [14] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-b )
(Logo: [15] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051031/HISTORYLOGO )
It wouldn’t be a tough show without a tough host, and TOUGHER IN ALASKA
host Geo Beach is just that. Since moving to Alaska, Geo has worked as a
logger, firefighter and medic, and commercial fisherman — including winter
crabbing on the Bering Sea. He knows his way around oil spills and
industrial kitchens, construction sites and law enforcement. Like most
Alaskans, Geo has endured plenty of waves, winds and blizzards while living
here. Armed with his own experience and the centuries of Alaskan tradition,
Geo reveals the guts, self-reliance, ingenuity and technology it takes to
survive and prosper in this challenging land considered America’s last
frontier.
Each episode of TOUGHER IN ALASKA charts an expedition through the
far-flung corners of the huge Alaskan state — from the tops of mountains
to the depths of the Bering Sea. It investigates unique aspects of life in
Alaska, looks at how Alaskan pioneers got things done in the past, and
explores how they overcome harsh conditions to get things done today. Along
the way, we meet a lot of plucky Alaskans — all following in the footsteps
of the great explorers who originally survived and thrived in the extreme
environment.
The first week of TOUGHER IN ALASKA (May
finds Geo hunting for gold
in the great Alaskan wilderness, something people have been doing since the
1870s, when the promise of gold first lured men north to Alaska. Today,
with the cost of gold skyrocketing, the race is on once again and Geo joins
in on the chase. He’ll see how individual prospectors around the state use
ingenious techniques (including a giant underwater vacuum) to get the gold
out, and he’ll join a team of hard rock miners in the frontier mining town
of Wiseman as they blast through 250 feet of rock in the hopes of hitting
the mother lode. TOUGHER IN ALASKA: GOLD MINING premieres May 8 at 10 pm
ET/PT.
In future episodes, Geo tackles different, demanding adventures and
locations — vividly illustrating how living in Alaska is just plain harder
than it is in the Lower 48. Some upcoming topics:
SALMON FISHING (premieres 5/15)
Each summer in late June, more than 2,000 fishing vessels converge on
Alaska’s Bristol Bay to await one of the greatest natural spectacles of the
north: the annual run of millions of sockeye salmon to their spawning
grounds. Bristol Bay is the most productive and best-managed commercial
salmon fishery in the world with an average annual catch of ten million
fish valued at more than one hundred million dollars. What follows the fish
during the short, three-week run is an altogether man-made spectacle of the
highest order: thousands of highly competitive fishermen doing serious
battle with one another in their specialized, high-performance boats. Host
Geo Beach will be on deck with two crews as they navigate the bay looking
for the mother lode of sockeye, or red salmon. It’s all about getting the
fish in the nets. But staying up all night, avoiding collisions with other
boats and confrontations with other fishermen, and keeping the peace with
the State Troopers who patrol the crowded fishery by land, sea, and sky
just makes it more interesting.
ELECTRIC LINEMEN (premieres 5/22)
What does it take to keep the power on in a state where more than half
of its people live off the grid, and plunging temperatures, high winds and
heavy snow loads can snap even the hardiest overhead electrical wires and
transmission towers? Host Geo Beach flies out to the remote village of
Kasigluk to help install power poles and string electrical wire by hand
(there are no bucket trucks in the bush) and he’ll dig in with the linemen
of the Golden Valley Electric Association during the infamously bitter
winters in Fairbanks as they brave temps as low as minus 40, just to keep
the lights on and heating systems going in the state’s second largest city.
LOGGING (premieres 5/29)
Logging is a difficult profession anywhere, but in Alaska’s Southeast
Panhandle, unforgiving coastal mountains, steep valleys, and ugly weather
make this work even tougher. Host Geo Beach will learn first-hand about it
when he embeds with veteran loggers in Ketchikan, located in the heart of
the Tongass National Forest, the nation’s largest. They’ll teach him how to
fell giant spruce trees with a single chainsaw, “choke and chase” them with
a cable-logging machine, and deliver them on teeth-chattering logging roads
and rocking barges to the mill. And he’ll join the most extreme loggers of
them all — heli-loggers — who fly deep into rugged stretches and steep
areas where no roads can go to haul the valuable logs out of the
wilderness.
Other topics covered include: Railroading … Roads … Forces of
Nature … Garbage … Salvaging … Fairbanks Winter … Disconnected …
Policing … and Frozen Freeway. In these episodes, Geo struggles against
bitter winter weather to keep the electricity flowing to Alaska’s second
largest city, triggers a “controlled” avalanche, and tempts fate in one of
the most active seismic zones in the world. As always, Alaska dishes up
lots of real work, risks, and excitement.
The new series TOUGHER IN ALASKA is produced for History by Moore
Huntley Productions. Executive Producer for History is Carl H. Lindahl.
Executive Producer is David Huntley.
The official mini-site for the TOUGHER IN ALASKA series,
[16] http://www.history.com/tougher-in-alaska, will feature images and video,
including our host Geo Beach, who will share insights about the Alaskan
lifestyle and daily activities in the last American frontier. The site will
also include interactive maps, history content on Alaska, and background
information to supplement the programs. A teaser page with on-air promos
will launch first, followed by the official mini-site on April 23.
History(TM) and History HD(TM) are the leading destinations for
revealing, award-winning, original non-fiction series and event-driven
specials that connects history with viewers in an informative, immersive
and entertaining manner across multiple platforms. Programming covers a
diverse variety of historical genres ranging from military history to
contemporary history, technology to natural history, as well as science,
archaeology and pop culture. Among the networks program offerings are hit
series such as Ax Men, Battle 360, The Universe, Cities of The Underworld
and Ice Road Truckers, as well as acclaimed specials including King, Life
After People, 1968 With Tom Brokaw, Lost Book of Nostradamus, Star Wars:
The Legacy Revealed and Sherman’s March. History has earned four Peabody
Awards, three Primetime Emmy(R) Awards, 10 News & Documentary Emmy(R)
Awards and received the prestigious Governor’s Award from the Academy of
Television Arts & Sciences for the network’s Save Our History(R) campaign
dedicated to historic preservation and history education. Take A Veteran to
School Day is the network’s latest initiative connecting America’s schools
and communities with veterans from all wars. History’s website, located at
[17] http://www.History.com, is the definitive historical online source that
delivers entertaining and informative content featuring broadband video,
interactive timelines, maps, games podcasts and more.
SOURCE History(TM)
Related links:
Article printed from Crowe’s Nest by Elizabeth Powell Crowe: http://blog.epcrowe.com
URL to article: http://blog.epcrowe.com/archives/17
URLs in this post:
[1] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[2] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[3] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[4] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[5] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[6] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[7] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[8] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[9] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[10] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[11] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[12] Image: http://blog.epcrowe.comjavascript:void(0)
[13] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-a: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-a
[14] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-b: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-b
[15] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051031/HISTORYLOGO: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051031/HISTORYLOGO
[16] http://www.history.com/tougher-in-alaska,: http://www.history.com/tougher-in-alaska
[17] http://www.History.com,: http://www.history.com/
[18] http://www.History.com: http://www.history.com/
[19] http://www.history.com/tougher-in-alaska: http://www.history.com/tougher-in-alaska
[20] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-a: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-a
[21] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-b: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080415/NYTU136-b
[22] http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051031/HISTORYLOGO: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20051031/HISTORYLOGO
[23] http://photoarchive.ap.org: http://photoarchive.ap.org/
[24] photodesk@prnewswire: http://blog.epcrowe.commailto:photodesk@prnewswire.com
Click here to print.