National Geographic Explorer (or simply Explorer) is an American
documentarytelevision series that originally premiered on
Nickelodeon on April 7, 1985, after having been produced as a less costly and intensive alternative to
PBS's National Geographic Specials by
Pittsburgh station
WQED. The first episode ("Herculaneum: Voices from the Past") was produced by WQED and featured long-time Explorer cameraman Mark Knobil, who is the few staff members with the franchise during all 24 seasons. The program is the longest-running documentary television series on
cable television. Presented every Sunday from 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm, the original series was three hours in length, containing five to ten short films. Although the
National Geographic Society had been producing specials for television for 20 years prior to Explorer, the premiere of the series required an increase in production from 4 hours of programming a year to 156 hours. Tim Cowling and Tim Kelly were the executive producers for the series during this transition.
In its 36 years on television, Explorer has worked for five television outlets. In February 1986, Explorer moved to
TBS, where it had a successful run until September 1999, when it moved to
CNBC. In October 2001, the series moved to
MSNBC. In June 2003, the series was relaunched on MSNBC as Ultimate Explorer, with
Lisa Ling as the host. On July 8, 2004, Explorer joined the
National Geographic Channel.
National Geographic Explorer has earned more than 400 awards, including 52
Emmy Awards, 13 Cable ACE awards, the Family Television Award, the Genesis Award, the DuPont-Columbia Silver Baton Award, the Peabody Award, four gold medals at the International Film and Television Festival of New York, as well as being nominated for two
Academy Awards.[1][2]
The original Explorer series ended in 2011 and then was started again in 2015 with the help of original programming president Tim Pastore, hosted by British journalist
Richard Bacon,[3] with executive producers Lou Wallach, Jeff Hasler and Brian Lovett.[4] The series is broadcast on
National Geographic's 171 channels around the world.[4] In 2018, Bacon was replaced by
Phil Keoghan who is best known for hosting The Amazing Race.[5]
Plot / Format
Variety magazine described the series: "The new-model 'Explorer' is described as a weekly 'docu-talk' series that will feature magazine-style field reporting, celebrity guests and talk show segments shot in front of a studio audience."[4]
National Geographic Explorer began broadcasting in April 1985 on
Nickelodeon. The following year, the show moved to
TBS. Each episode was made by an independent production company with a National Geographic staffer serving as an associate producer. Local actor
Bingo O'Malley was selected by Herculaneum: Voices from the Past producer Joe Seamans as host. Herculaneum was extended for broadcast on PBS in 1987 under the title, In the Shadow of Vesuvius".[6]
The show bounced between CNBC (which was subject to interruptions in the fall and late spring/early summer due to World Series and NBA Finals postgames from NBC Sports), then MSNBC and finally National Geographic Channel. In April 2010, the show celebrated its 25 year with a special, "Explorer: 25 Years".[6]
Episode list starting with the change in title to simply Explorer
Season 1 (2005)
"Collapse", a forensic look at the chain of events leading up to some of the world's most fatal
structural disasters, including the worst structural failure to take place in the U.S. prior to 9/11
"Episode 1" originally broadcast November 14, 2016 - host
Richard Bacon, stories of death and features interviews with comedian
Larry Wilmore and environmental activist
Erin Brockovich.
"Episode 2" originally broadcast November 21, 2016
"Episode 3" originally broadcast November 28, 2016
"Episode 4" originally broadcast December 5, 2016 -
Russian gender camps,
Uganda’s Hollywood and blows up a bus for science,
David Banner,
Chris Kluwe and
Gavin Mcinnes debate the meaning of manhood.
"Episode 5" originally broadcast December 12, 2016
"Episode 6" originally broadcast December 19, 2016
Season 10 (2017)
"Episode 1" originally broadcast March 6, 2017
"Episode 2" originally broadcast March 13, 2017 - host
Aasif Mandvi, investigates US Terrorist watchlist
"Episode 3" originally broadcast March 20, 2017 - host
Nick Schifrin, interview with His Holiness the
Dalai Lama[8]
"Episode 4" originally broadcast March 27, 2017
"Episode 5" originally broadcast April 3, 2017 - host
Dan Rather, Iceland’s gene pool could unlock the cure to diseases like
Alzheimer’s;
Ryan Duffy investigates the rhino horn black market.
"Episode 6" originally broadcast April 10, 2017
"Episode 7" originally broadcast April 17, 2017
"Episode 8" originally broadcast April 24, 2017
"Episode 9" originally broadcast May 1, 2017 - investigates
Mexico’s violent war on drugs, an looks into
Oklahoma’s disappearing cattle, plus actor and activist
Mandy Patinkin.
"Episode 10" originally broadcast May 8, 2017
"Episode 11" originally broadcast May 15, 2017 - host
Jeff Goldblum, in-depth look at Big Pharma, prescription drugs and the opioid epidemic.
"Episode 12" originally broadcast May 22, 2017
"Episode 13" originally broadcast May 29, 2017
"Episode 14" originally broadcast June 5, 2017 - host
Ted Danson about a rare surgical procedure. Plus why
NASA’s newest star, is a world-famous chef.