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Natural Born Hustlers

Natural Born Hustlers

Natural_born_hustlers_241x208
  • Premiered: 
    January 13, 2016
    (Click date to see TV listings for that day)

  • Network: PBS
  • Category: Series
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Type: Live Action
  • Concept: 
    A miniseries from Nature 
  • Subject Matter: Animal
  • Tags:

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  • Complete Series
    • Amazon
Legal Full Episodes
Not Available Online
(That We Know Of)

Plot Synopsis

NATURAL BORN HUSTLERS is a three-part documentary series that reveals the modus operandi of some of nature's greatest animal con artists as they outwit predators, line up their next meal, and get the girl. The first episode, "Staying Alive," offers stories about unusual survival techniques. Cuttlefish, for example, elude their many predators with a kind of invisibility cloak. They completely transform themselves to match the colors and patterns of their surroundings. But what is truly remarkable is that they do this despite being color-blind. The secret to how they do it is hidden in their skin, which can sense and possibly even "see" color using a protein usually found only in eyes. And these great illusionists have another trick that no other animal can do. Their skin can also morph from a flat surface to a three dimensional one in order to complete the camouflage. Other ruses revealed include: why burrowing owls, who live underground, mimic the sounds of rattlesnakes; how imitation may not just be the sincerest form of flattery, it can also save your life; and what deception the regal horned lizard employs as a last resort to keep a menacing coachwhip snake at bay. The duplicitous ways in which animals try to secure their next meal is the subject of the second episode, "The Hunger Hustle." Singled out is the devious drongo, a South African bird. In winter, he has to rely on grubs and insects that live underground, but other animals are far better equipped to dig them up, so the drongo devises a con. He serves as lookout while vulnerable social weaver birds are on the ground digging up food. If a predator is spotted, he sends out an alarm call and the weavers head for safety until they get an all clear call from him. But the drongo also issues fake alarm calls, allowing him to eat food the weavers have dug up before issuing an all clear to return. Among other segments: the orchid mantis, which attracts insects by mimicking a flower and why it is even more successful than the real thing; how killer whales use sound to manipulate the behavior of herring to their advantage; and how and why gray squirrels practice sleight of hand to protect the nuts they've gathered to get them through the winter. The series concludes with "Sex, Lies & Dirty Tricks," which explores sneaky mating techniques. For example, a lusty low-ranking male in a mob of red kangaroos considers possible plan A and plan B options when only the alpha male has the right to mate with the females in the group. A male marsh harrier's solution to avoid conflict with a dominant resident male during breeding season is to grow feathers that make him look like female. He fools the resident male, but is able to woo a real female and settle down to raise a family. The final hour also exposes the dark ways brood parasites avoid parental duties, and how their chicks go even further to get the full attention of their foster parents. It's a tough world out there, so it's not surprising that crafty animals turn to disguise, illusion, duplicity and mimicry to beat the odds and live another day.

Production & Distribution

  • Produced by Thirteen