moment. one of the first things that i right now i m on the speaker as a bureau for the blood services. i basically motivate people. i go to colleges and companies and motivate people to donate blood. because i know how important that is firsthand. yeah. you lost a lot. yes. a whole lot. and secondly, i also protect the sharks. i help conservation of sharks, i help keep them alive. andy, and phillipe as well, why are we killing all these sharks? is it for steaks? is it for kabobs? they re worth a lot of money. a bowl of soup in china can go for $150 a bowl. and it s a luxury item as well. that s the thing that s frustrating, it s mostly for when they cut off the fins, they re still alive and dump them back in the water. this is happening, they re decimating shark populations
society. are more sharks being killed than being replenished in our oceans? i think so. you know, the rate of over 100 million sharks a year being killed is far faster than we can replenish them, and we know from research in most countries, most oceans around the world, that shark populations are plummeting from baselines just a few decades ago. and this is one of the greatest fisheries crisis that we re facing. a lot of people are complacent in that, they look and think of a shark as the only good shark is a dead shark, that s not true. would you say it s really about changing our image of what a shark is? i know there was an animated movie shark tale that came out a few years ago, he was a good guy. and i think that people need to change their perception. certainly. i think it s a good point. the hammerhead population in the northeastern atlantic, has
bolder on the tracks in wind river canyon. the lead engine knocked into a river. two man crew safe. the wreck also calling a diesel fuel leak. crews say there won t be much environmental damage because the water current is quickly dispersing the diesel. california. a wildfire forcing a partial evacuation of a mobile home community in riverside county. the blaze burning hundreds of acres. no report of any injuries or damage. florida. a researcher in miami who was bitten by a shark now talking about the attack. he says he was on the job when it happened. my colleague and i were beside the boat to take measurements on the shark. and i had the tape. it turned its head, came up and grabbed my left elbow. the scientist says he plans to continue his research on dwindling shark populations. and that s a fox watch across america. the afghan president here in the united states paying tribute to