'The Aquarium' Renewed for Season ii by Fauna Planet (Sectional)
Find some adorable first-look photos here
Beast Planet
Fauna Planet has renewed "The Aquarium" for Flavour two, TheWrap has learned exclusively.
The series documents the daily work at the Georgia Aquarium and its global conservation efforts. Season 1 followed the biologists, researchers and aquarists during their day-to-day activities. Animal Planet audiences were introduced to an assortment of animals, including southern bounding main otter pups, Mara and Gibson, who were rescued from the California coast; African penguins Charlie and Lizzie, who have been together for 25 years; a very curious rescued green sea turtle named Tank; and a plethora of other animals that reside at the aquarium including jellies and piranhas.
The staffers also traveled to Cape Town, S Africa to help rehabilitate African penguins and help in the release of a group of these penguins back into the wild.
As well Read: Watch the Most Ambrosial Baby Elephant Reunion on Animal Planet's 'Dodo Heroes' (Sectional Videos)
Below are some photos from the upcoming flavor, which like the cutie penguin pic above, are sectional to TheWrap.
Animal Planet
Beast Planet
Beast Planet
Animal Planet
Fauna Planet
Also Read: Animal Planet's 'The Zoo: San Diego' Unveils Get-go Teaser Trailer, Premiere Appointment (Exclusive Video)
"The Aquarium" is produced for Animal Planet by Left/Right, a Red Arrow Studios company, and Copper Pot Pictures. Banks Tarver, Ken Druckerman, Anneka Jones and Michael LaHaie are the executive producers; Jessie Findlay is co-executive producer for Left/Correct. David LaMattina and Chad Walker are the executive producers for Copper Pot Pictures.
Lisa Lucas is the executive producer for Animal Planet, with Patrick Keegan as supervising producer.
"The Aquarium" debuted back in May to nearly 1 million viewers.
16 Scene-Stealing Animals in Movies, From 'The Wizard of Oz' to 'Captain Marvel' (Photos)
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There are a lot of fun animal movies. Just the animals that near jump out at us are the ones that come up from movies that are Non virtually animals. They're the ones that genuinely steal the spotlight for a moment from their human counterparts and deserve just equally much acclaim. Here are 16 that stole the prove.
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Toto the Canis familiaris – "The Wizard of Oz" (1939)
Is at that place a more famous dog in the history of movies? Capable of infiltrating an army of Oz soldiers and making sure you pay attention to that man backside the curtain, we'd cull Toto, whose real name was Terry, as a pet over Lassie or Rin Tin Tin any day.
MGM -
Asta the Domestic dog - "The Thin Homo" (1934-47)
Another classic animal star, the wire fox terrier Skippy portrayed Asta in "The Thin Human being" films and over a dozen movies overall throughout the 1930s. Skippy starred opposite William Powell, Myrna Loy, Cary Grant, Katherine Hepburn and more.
MGM -
Capuchin Monkey - "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (1981)
The Indiana Jones question that has plagued fans for decades centers on the capuchin monkey perched on the shoulder of a Nazi soldier that manages to exercise the Seig Heil salute. Does that mean the monkey was a Nazi or was it but taught to perform the gesture? And either fashion, did it deserve its untimely fate at the hands of the face-melting Ark?
Paramount Pictures -
Norman the Calf – "City Slickers" (1991)
Winning the part through a literal cattle call, Norman won the part after Baton Crystal came to the ranch where the calf was raised and picked it for having a "sugariness Bambi look" and the "cutest face of all," according to EW.
Columbia Pictures -
Phil the Groundhog – "Groundhog Day" (1993)
Punxsutawney Phil gives a pretty good performance "for a quadraped" in the classic romantic comedy "Groundhog Solar day," in which Murray'southward character Phil Connors snaps, kidnaps the groundhog and gets in a loftier-speed chase. "Don't bulldoze angry!"
Columbia Pictures -
Mr. Jinx the Cat – "Meet the Parents" (2000)
Deep down every cat possessor wants to believe that they might train it every bit well as Robert De Niro figures out how to railroad train Mr. Jinx to use the toilet. Just don't try to milk your ain cat.
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Baxter the Dog – "Anchorman" (2004)
"Y'all know I don't speak Spanish!" Ron Burgundy's multi-lingual, cheese-loving, pajama-wearing pet deserves some sort of medal for getting punted into the San Diego Bay. The original domestic dog that played Baxter, Peanut, died in 2010, and a replacement, Quince, was bandage to play Baxter in the sequel.
DreamWorks Pictures -
Tiger – "The Hangover" (2009)
Yes, Mike Tyson really does have iii pet tigers. The screenwriters even rewrote the script to include Tyson when they decided they wanted a tiger to appear in the Wolfpack'south hotel suite.
Warner Bros. -
Joey the Horse - "War Horse" (2011)
We'll give that "War Equus caballus" is technically a movie near an animal, but Steven Spielberg's sweeping war epic is actually so constructive in part because of the 15 horses that managed to give an expressive, unified operation as the wonder-horse Joey.
DreamWorks -
Uggie the Dog – "The Artist" (2011)
A true performer and in a manner inspired by Asta from the Gilded Hollywood era, Uggie oftentimes stole the stage from star Jean Dujardin both onscreen and off, making the rounds during the flick's printing cycle and even getting his hand prints at the Chinese Theatre. Sadly, Uggie was put downwards in 2015 at age 13 after a battle with prostate cancer.
Warner Bros. -
True cat – "Inside Llewyn Davis" (2013)
The cat Oscar Isaac's Llewyn Davis holds in the Coen Brothers' film isn't but a lost house pet: information technology's a symbol for all of Davis's failures equally a person, as a musician and as someone who can feel empathy. Plus it'southward surprisingly comfy on the subway.
CBS Films -
Daisy the Domestic dog - "John Wick" (2014)
Lesson learned: exercise not mess with John Wick's dog. This adorable, 1-yr-quondam beagle at the time of filming won the job over a dozen other puppies in the filmmakers search for "the cutest dog in the globe" and managed to warm the middle of even the most cold-blooded of assassins as played past Keanu Reeves.
Summit Amusement -
Black Phillip the Goat – "The Witch" (2016)
The goat in Robert Eggers'due south indie horror gem "The Witch" is a very real, 210-pound billy goat named Charlie that gives such a devilishly good operation, turning completely demonic in a surprise twist, that A24 really made an awards campaign promo for it. The same goat even afterwards showed up in A24'due south "It Comes at Dark."
A24 -
Lilliputian Man the Bird - "I, Tonya" (2017)
The bird perched on Allison Janney's shoulder in "I, Tonya" might've won her an Oscar. Janney actually "auditioned" 3 carve up birds for the role and this one "merely sat there and was then sweet," she told the New York Times. But when the time came to film, it kept pecking at her oxygen tank, forcing her to step upward her game and focus.
Neon -
Olivia the Westie - "Widows" and "Game Nighttime" (2018)
This fluffy star in the making appeared in not one but 2 2018 hits, the thriller "Widows" and the one-act "Game Night." Olivia gave an peculiarly good performance when Brian Tyree Henry's character in "Widows" was forced to violently pick her up past the scruff. But all's well that ended well when the two reunited on a talk show.
Fox/Warner Bros. -
Goose the Cat - "Captain Marvel" (2019)
The important thing to know about Goose is that he'due south not actually a cat, just rather a "flerken," a vicious, multi-tentacled space beast who can gobble up an army of conflicting soldiers and go out a permanent scratch for one Nick Fury.
Marvel
Toto, I've got a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore
There are a lot of fun animal movies. But the animals that well-nigh jump out at us are the ones that come from movies that are Non well-nigh animals. They're the ones that genuinely steal the spotlight for a moment from their human counterparts and deserve just equally much acclaim. Here are 16 that stole the show.
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