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A panel discussion after a show of some of an upcoming documentation at a chic hotel in Soho, London, is not the usual place for a prince to sit. But Prince WilliamThis is a special moment – and one that he feels incredibly passionate about.
For he presents a new Docu series that premieres at BBC EarthY Youtube channel on May 23, and, in a departure for Royal, William, 42, follows the Showbusiness Spell Book. Sex part series Caregiverwhich highlights the dangerous and decisive work of Rangers who works to keep wildlife around the world, is the culmination of 18 months of work for the prince and his team.
William sat in an open -necked shirt, Blazer and Khakis and was a natural communicator when discussing a topic that he has become well -spoken in. It was his idea to make the films, focus on six different places around the world and tell six different convincing stories, to increase awareness of what the animal life protectors do and the dangers.
He reinforces self -reinforcing the “gate crash” briefing and it was “anti -limactic” to have him there. Royal told the host Michaela Strachan, who has worked in British wild animal exhibitions for decades, that it was his desire for the programs “to educate, show off, highlight, highlight the brilliant men and women who are at the forefront and front line for preservation around the world.”
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“This is one of the most dangerous jobs on the planet,” William said. “Many people think being a soldier, like a police officer … These jobs are dangerous and people put their lives on the line. I don’t think people realize it’s the same for these guys and girls around the world.”
“Rangers are particularly unknown and invisible; they are the unspoken heroes in the natural world,” he added.
IN First sectionOn May 23, the focus is on Congo rainforest and the protected area of Dzangha-Ska, where a reformed Poacher Modiki piano is now fighting for the wildlife he once hunted. William says in his introduction, “I have been lucky enough to travel to Africa many times over the years, and the continent has always had a special place in my heart.”
With relatively short driving times in between six and 10 minutes, the brief films on Youtube are shown, given that they reach new and international communities, which may not always have environmental considerations at the top of their priorities.
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When he talked to British Wildlife TV presenter Strachan, William added that while he has talked about the environment and wildlife a lot, “This is especially special to me because I have many friends and people I have met over the years on my travels and went abroad who live this life daily and, from when I was very younger, still do the job that I saw.” ”
“The feedback I get from them now and have been for quite some time is how much more dangerous the job has become.”
Other episodes will release every Friday-incubating one that focuses on the people who work to care for coexistence between the snow leopards and local communities high up in the Himalayas in India. Another explores Mexico’s Sea of Cortez, which was once called “the world’s aquarium”, and the story of a reformed illegal fisherman who is now striving to protect this threatened ecosystem. Then there is the community -led struggle to preserve the inheritance and protect the ancestors’ countries in CARU’s domestic country in Brazil from environmental degradation.
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Prince William told the panel discussion that TV icon David Attenborough Be a “great inspiration” for him who grew up, in presenting areas that most people are not allowed to visit and hope that his series can have a similar effect. But in these animal performances you do not see those who “protect the camera, who protect everyone who knows the tracks that the animals go on, will point everyone in the right direction to get the pictures they need to do the series,” William said. “Without them there is nothing to go and see.”
As he sat alongside William was Rohit Singh, the Vice President of International Ranger Federation, Who has advised the prince about the series. Singh says: “Looking at these sections is extremely moving. I have spent most of my career in the bush. It is really good to see that these stories are told in the most honest way. What I really liked about this series is that it talks about the diversity of Rangers.”
He had some sharp facts about obstacles in the future if they would get the global urged the desire from the planet that preserved 30% of biodiversity on land and sea by 2030, with so few wildlife protection in place. There is only one rank for the area on 11,000 football pitches, Singh said. “It’s impossible to do the job,” Singh said. There is a need for 1.5 million all over the world, and yet, he says, there are more hairdressers in the UK than there are Rangers in the world’s protected areas.
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William added by these animal heroes that he is advocating: “I like to see Ranger as the glue between the human world we live in and the natural world. And finding the balance between the two is crucial.”
“If you put people here and animals here, nothing works. They have to be symbiotic in the middle and these Rangers are the ones that unite everything. All progress must come from the Ranger community valued, respected.”
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Experienced TV -host Strachan said that William gave a vote to the voiceless. “Having your stamp on this, having your voice and your face presenting this is huge,” she says. “It will have a great impact.”
For the prince, he said he had a lot to learn about presenting – and would ask Strachan for tips.