A one-of-a-kind wildlife series: “Spy in the Wild”
By JR T.
@StyleWithSense (1954)
February 10, 2020 3:24am CST
This series popped in one of my recommended videos earlier while I was watching YouTube. When I watched the episode I was really amazed how animals would interact to foreign objects that closely resembles of their kind.
Spy in the Wild is a British nature documentary television series, produced by BBC Natural History Unit, John Downer Productions and PBS. This innovative five-part series employs more than 30 animatronic spy cameras disguised as animals to secretly record behavior in the wild.
These animatronic spy cameras disguised as animals invade the wild to reveal how animals behave when it comes to love, friendship, intelligence and mischief.
One particular episode I watched was this Gorilla and interacting with the robot gorilla (as posted in the photo above). Do you watch Wildlife series? If so, have you watched Spy in the Wild?
3 people like this
3 responses
@Hannihar (130218)
• Israel
13 Feb 20
@StyleWithSense
That is a robot. I thought it was real. Do you get or watch National Geographic where you are? I have never watched what you watched. It looks interesting.
1 person likes this
@Hannihar (130218)
• Israel
13 Feb 20
@StyleWithSense
It certainly does look real. You are welcome.
1 person likes this
@StyleWithSense (1954)
•
13 Feb 20
Yes it is a robot! It does look like a real baby gorilla pretty fascinating right? Yes we have National Geographic channel on cable TV but recently we opted to use Roku where you can watch stream channels using your Smart-TV. I do watched Natgeo Presents back in the day. Thanks for your response!
1 person likes this
@heaytheblogger (2876)
• Philippines
10 Feb 20
This is interesting seeing how the ape reacted to the robot as if it's his kind. I saw this series too its good!
1 person likes this
@StyleWithSense (1954)
•
10 Feb 20
Yes, we can also see on the series how this animals do their day-to-day lives without even disrupting them. Also good to see their communicative part through a robotic lens! Thanks for your reply!
1 person likes this