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How can I watch Mick Fanning shark documentary?

How can I watch Mick Fanning shark documentary?

AVAILABLE 8PM EST SEPTEMBER 15, 2020 ON OUTSIDE TV & OUTSIDE TV+ Watch Save This Shark on your favorite streaming device or free TV platform with the Outside TV App or Streaming Channel Outside TV+. Mick Fanning is on a new mission to explore shark conservation.

Is Mick Fanning scared of sharks?

Surf long enough in the ocean, he says, and you can sense when something’s not right in the water. There were many times in Fanning’s career when he sensed the presence of sharks. He always fought through his instinct to take flight and kept on surfing. He stayed in the water.

Who is Mick Fanning married to?

Karissa Dalton
Fanning was married for eight years to entrepreneur Karissa Dalton. On 31 January 2016, he announced that they were divorcing.

How can I save the sharks?

Here are nine key ways you can help give back and protect our ocean’s sharks this Shark Week.

  1. Take action to help protect sharks from marine debris.
  2. Keep an eye out for sharks.
  3. Take the pledge to decrease your single-use plastic usage.
  4. Volunteer at the International Coastal Cleanup.

Is Mick Fanning retired?

2018
Mick Fanning/Career end

Australian surfing legend Mick Fanning has announced he will come out of retirement to compete as a wildcard at this month’s World Surf League leg in Narrabeen. Following a stellar 17-year career, Fanning stepped away from elite surfing in 2018, admitting he could no longer give 100 per cent to the sport.

How can I watch save this shark?

Save This Shark airs on National Geographic on Foxtel, Fetch and Sky from 15 September.

Who did Mick Fanning have a baby with?

Australian surfing icon Mick Fanning and fiancée Breeana have welcomed their first child together. The three-time world champion announced, via Instagram, that his fiancée Breeana Randall had given birth to their first child Xander Dean Fanning on August 10.

Have any laws been passed to protect sharks?

On January 4, 2011, the Shark Conservation Act of 2010 was signed into law, amending the High Seas Driftnet Fishing Moratorium Protection Act and the MSA. The Shark Conservation Act requires that all sharks in the United States, with one exception, be brought to shore with their fins naturally attached.