The BEST episodes written by Savas Georgalis
#1 - Toxic Revenge
Life After People - Season 2 - Episode 2
Toxins and chemicals are released in a world without people, and these deadly gases turn lakes and rivers into pools of acid.
Watch Now:AmazonApple TV#2 - How Big, How Far, How Fast
The Universe - Season 7 - Episode 1
The biggest objects, farthest distances, and fastest speeds are made relatable through extreme physical analogies.
Watch Now:AmazonApple TV#3 - Armed & Defenseless
Life After People - Season 1 - Episode 8
The fate of mankind's machinery of war: a sunken nuclear missile explodes, Pearl Harbor comes under renewed attacks, snow causes urban avalanches, and dairy cows are threatened. Featuring Denver, Hawaii, and a mysterious abandoned island near New York City.
Watch Now:Amazon#4 - Roads to Nowhere
Life After People - Season 1 - Episode 9
A look at the world of transportation and what will become of them after man disappears, including cars and trains, roadways, oil refineries, and Detroit. Also, the Alamo would be threatened, dogs would become wild again and long-horn cattle population will rise quickly.
Watch Now:AmazonApple TV#5 - Prehistoric New York
Discovery Channel Documentaries - Season 2009 - Episode 19
200 million years PREHISTORIC NEW YORK was a region that was a semi-tropical landscape rattled by earthquakes and scarred by lava flows. It was home to a bizarre array of amphibians and reptiles, including the dinosaur Coelophysis, a meat-eating, ostrich-like creature. Mastodons roamed the streets of what is now Manhattan. Scientists believe the honey locust trees that now line Fifth Avenue near Rockefeller Center evolved their thorns to protect them from munching by these mastodons.
#6 - First Apocalypse
History Channel Documentaries - Season 2009 - Episode 36
FIRST APOCALYPSE looks at how we can learn from the dinosaur's fall from grace and how much our own fate may be intertwined with theirs. Are we doomed to follow in the dinosaurs footsteps or can we face down extinction? Perhaps this fear is why we are so fascinated by the demise of a species that lived millions of years ago. If something so large that ruled the earth for so long can be wiped out in a matter of centuries, what does that say about our ultimate survival? The world we live in may already be in the throws of its own mass extinction... a new apocalypse.