In the Americas With David Yetman

Season 3

TV-G
Take a fresh look at the lands that make up much of the Western Hemisphere. Each country contains landscapes, peoples, and history that have not received the attention they deserve on the world stage. In the Americas with David Yetman undertakes a new approach to travel and adventure. From Japanese immigrants in the Amazon to descendants of poor Italians in Chile, from Mayan temples in Guatemala to ancient fortresses in Mexico, from the glacier-carved frigid barrens of northern Canada to the timeless villages of the Altiplano in Perú. The series takes viewers to parts of Brazil mostly unknown to the outside world, to the wild mountains of western Argentina, to festivals in Colombia and the often ignored Great Lakes of the United States. We approach volcanoes in Hawaii, Chile, and Alaska, ride rafts, boats, ferries, horses, and motorcycles. We visit peoples who can replace conversation with whistling, islanders who have cooked the same meals for ten thousand years, and pastoralists who live at an altitude too high for any activity except herding llamas. We meet people from all walks of life and let them tell their stories, show us their homes, take us about their work, and tell us how they came to be who they are. We show the histories of natives and immigrants, islanders and mainlanders, rural folk and city-dwellers. In the Americas with David Yetman undertakes a new approach to travel and adventure-with a decided bias in favor of our western continents and islands.

Where to Watch In the Americas With David Yetman • Season 3

10 Episodes

  • ABC Islands: The Dutch Legacy in the Caribbean
    E1
    ABC Islands: The Dutch Legacy in the CaribbeanThe last vestiges of the once-mighty Dutch empire live on in the Caribbean in the ABC Islands-Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao. Islanders speak four languages, one of which is their very own, as they explain. We visit Curaçao, now independent, and wander the streets of Willemstad, its capital city. In its colonial buildings we find hints of a past glory made possible by slave trade. After a short flight by puddle jumper we land in Bonaire, still a colony, where we don Scuba gear to mingle with its incomparable marine life and hunt down the Lionfish intruders. Then we witness the extraction of uncountable tons of salt from Bonaire's tidal flats. Finally we trek into a national park where dense groves of tall cacti are home hordes of lizards and lagoons harbor tranquil flamingos.
  • Bahian Reconcavo of Brazil: Quilombos, Candomblé, and the Mata Atlantica
    E2
    Bahian Reconcavo of Brazil: Quilombos, Candomblé, and the Mata AtlanticaThe Reconcavo region of Brazil is visited. Included: preserving and restoring the Mata Atlantica (Atlantic Forest).
  • Episode 3
    E3
    Episode 3
  • Sierra Nevada and the Making of California
    E4
    Sierra Nevada and the Making of CaliforniaThe mighty Sierra Nevada is our most important mountain range. It influences much of California's weather and produces most if its water. It was once the greatest barrier to transcontinental transportation and communication. It is a symbol of earthquakes, which created it. Tectonic geologist Eldridge Moores helps host David Yetman decipher the mysteries of the range's origins and describes the sierras' importance.
  • Episode 5
    E5
    Episode 5
  • Lake Superior: Circling the Sweet Water Ocean
    E6
    Lake Superior: Circling the Sweet Water OceanIt's the world's largest lake, vast enough to create its own climate. Lake Superior separates the U.S. and Canada, on the east by a portage canal. For a thousand years the lake has seen vibrant cultures and trade in copper. Canadian shores harbor unending forests and some of the coldest towns in the Americas. Within its waters is Isle Royale National Park.
  • Nicaragua- Land of the Shaking Earth Emerges
    E7
    Nicaragua- Land of the Shaking Earth EmergesFor two hundred years Nicaragua suffered from the double insult of shaking earth-earthquakes and volcanic eruptions-and military and political interventions from the north. Today a democratic Nicaragua is promoting its diversity of cultures, its Spanish colonial heritage, and its natural wonders. Misquito Indians from the Caribbean coast and descendants of Aztecs, who hardly know each other, still flourish within the country. Nicaragua's lakes, forests, and volcanoes are finally earning the accolades they deserve.
  • Episode 8
    E8
    Episode 8
  • Episode 9
    E9
    Episode 9
  • Episode 10
    E10
    Episode 10
  • David Yetmanhimself - narrateur / Writer / Producer
  • Alain Ghazalhimself - french voice
  • Daniel DuncanDirector / Producer
  • Jeanna FrenchEditor

 

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