Delightfully irreverent Underdogs isn’t your parents’ nature docuseries

The narrator Ryan Reynolds celebrates the exclusion of nature in the new Natgeo Docuaries Underdogs.
Many of us have seen one or two (or three) documentaries at some point in our lives, so a familiar format: respectfully, the comprehensive images of regal animals (preferably with a Tony British accent). UnderdogsA new document from National Geographic requires a definitely different and unusual approach. The five -part series described by Ryan Reynolds with a funny disrespect emphasizes the less cool and glorious creatures of nature: excluded and benchwarmers, “unusual hygiene options” and “unattrained court rituals”. As if Suicide team or Thunderbolts*Apart from these creatures, there is actually.
PERIOD PREFERENCE, “Underdogs It is a large cave that has a brighter shining brighter than a license pad, thanks to its millions of mucus -covered shovel shine shine shine shine shine, including a scene that has never been elephant, including a special cave in New Zealand for the first time in New Zealand. All over the world, the superstars that are overlooked like this 7/24 make maximum efforts and continue to work for all showing the natural world, polar bears, sharks and gorillas.
Each of the five sections is built around a certain species. “Super Heroes” emphasizes the amazing superpowers of honey pornings, pistol shrimp and invisible glass frog; “Sexy monsters” focus on strange mating habits and follow the form of a romantic advice column; “Terrible Parents” emphasizes the worst practices of nature by following the outline of a parenting guide; “Total Grossout” is exactly what it seems; And “unusual suspects”, a macak’s makak’s so -called robbery tale to bring together a macak’s deception and disguise masters (an inner man, a trap, an autumn man, etc.). Even Green Day wrote and recorded A special theme song For opening loans.
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