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Zooming in with “Deep Look,” KQED’s Award Winning Wildlife Video Series

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A close-up of a ladybug swarm. (Josh Cassidy/KQED)

Why is the ocean full of moon jellies? How do snails use fishing nets made of slime? What’s actually happening  when a mosquito sucks your blood? These are just some of the questions that the producers and scientists behind “Deep Look,” KQED’s Emmy-award winning video series, take on. Now in its 11th season, “Deep Look,” uses ultra-high definition video to give viewers an up close – and sometimes microscopic look – at the insects, animals and plants that we can find around us. We’ll talk to the team behind the show, and hear from you: what’s something in the natural world that you’ve given a deeper look, and how did that make you feel?

Guests:

Damon Tighe, biotech educator and naturalist

Sarah Cohen, professor of biology, San Francisco State's Estuary and Ocean Science Center

Gabriela Quirós, supervising producer for Deep Look, KQED

Josh Cassidy, lead producer and cinematographer for Deep Look, KQED

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