govikings
govikings
Go Vikings!
4K posts
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
govikings · 3 days ago
Photo
Tumblr media
622 notes · View notes
govikings · 3 days ago
Photo
Tumblr media
🧡💙🧡💙🧡💙
18 notes · View notes
govikings · 3 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Pesto chicken avocado orzo salad
565 notes · View notes
govikings · 3 days ago
Photo
Tumblr media
George Wyman, Bradbury Building, 304 Broadway, Los Angeles, California, 1892-94.
273 notes · View notes
govikings · 3 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
243 notes · View notes
govikings · 3 days ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Water lily in Viet Nam
223 notes · View notes
govikings · 4 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
1972 “ Boat tail” Buick Riviera
364 notes · View notes
govikings · 4 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
158 notes · View notes
govikings · 4 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars
1K notes · View notes
govikings · 4 days ago
Text
tuna poke bowl
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
govikings · 5 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
5K notes · View notes
govikings · 5 days ago
Text
I had a 1987 Volvo 240 turbo. She was a tank!
Tumblr media
1983 Volvo 240GLE
372 notes · View notes
govikings · 5 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Bora Bora is literally heaven on earth! 💙 - Author: FeatherFizz
301 notes · View notes
govikings · 5 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
415 notes · View notes
govikings · 5 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
125 notes · View notes
govikings · 5 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
Spielberg’s marine masterpiece transformed the movies – and us
The original blockbuster turned fear of sharks into decades of persecution but, at long last, the tide may be turning
Fifty years ago the world was changed for ever by a shark. On 20 June 1975, cinemagoers in the US were the first to experience the visceral thrills and oceanic spills of Jaws.
Based on a novel by Peter Benchley and directed by Steven Spielberg, Jaws tells the story of a great white shark terrorising the beach town of Amity Island, prompting police chief Martin Brody, marine biologist Matt Hooper and grizzled fisherman Quint to hunt it down. It earned rave reviews from critics and became the first movie to take more than $100m in theatrical rentals.
Typically summer months were quiet for cinemas but Jaws was deliberately timed for when people were at beach resorts and accompanied by the tagline: “See it before you go swimming!” The film opened on 464 screens in North America and was boosted by a major TV advertising campaign, still unusual at the time and marketing stunts such as themed ice-creams.
Tumblr media
It’s the original blockbuster, it inspired an entire genre of “sharksploitation” entertainment, and it transformed what millions thought about sharks, for better and for worse.
In many ways, Steven Spielberg’s marine masterpiece was an accident. In 1973, the novelist Peter Benchley came up with the title Jaws just 20 minutes before his final deadline. “What does it mean?” asked his editor. “I haven’t the faintest idea,” replied Benchley, “but at least it’s short.”
Nicknamed Bruce (after Spielberg’s lawyer), the mechanical shark used in the film malfunctioned so much that it appeared in the final edit for a mere four minutes, and not fully until nearly an hour in. Instead Spielberg focused on fear and threat, and the rest is history.
Yet perhaps he did his job too well. Ross Williams, editor of The Daily Jaws website, says the film “cast a long shadow over sharks. It turned fear into frenzy, and that fear translated into decades of persecution.”
After 1975, shark killing and trophy hunts soared globally. All this despite statistics showing that in the US a human is more likely to be bitten by a New Yorker than a shark.
Tumblr media
Research suggests that between 1986 and 2000, in the north-west Atlantic Ocean, there was a population decline of 89% in hammerhead sharks, 79% in great white sharks and 65% in tiger sharks, many of which were caught in fishing nets.
Figures published in Science have estimated shark deaths from fishing at 80m a year, 25m of which are threatened species.
The zoology writer Jules Howard says that “in the case of great whites it’s a hit job … it’s depressing, since sharks like these are not monsters. They’re complex, communicative beings that happen to be very well adapted for killing things. You’d think we’d see the similarities, somehow.”
Spielberg expressed his remorse on the BBC’s Desert Island Discs, saying: “The decimation of the shark population because of the book and the film … I really truly regret that.”
Tumblr media
And yet Jaws has had positive effects too. Benchley became involved in marine conservation, as did the film’s underwater photographers Ron and Valerie Taylor and Rodney Fox.
Speaking to the Guardian from Australia, Fox says the fascination with sharks sparked by Jaws “culminated in not just the conservation of sharks, but to a care and understanding of the important role they play in the wider marine environment”.
Howard is just one of many who bear this out: “I remember that feeling,” he says. “Seeing the film. Buying the shark books. Understanding sharks in a deeper way. Wanting to shout loud to see them respected, conserved, saved.”
Williams adds: “It’s not about fearing sharks any more. It’s about fearing a world without them.”
Meanwhile, the public consciousness is more shark-infested than ever. Many have played it for cheap thrills and, increasingly, laughs, such as Roboshark, Ghost Shark, Sharkenstein, 5-Headed Shark Attack and of course Sharknado.
But others, like last year’s Something in the Water, have tried to replicate the fear of Jaws while showing sensitivity to the animals. Its British director, Hayley Easton Street, says: “I wanted the sharks to just be animals that need to find food, not vicious killers hunting humans.”
Today the ocean’s apex predator is part of our lexicon, in phrases such as “jumping the shark”, and they have even swum into populist politics.
Boris Johnson invoked the mayor from Jaws during the pandemic for keeping the beaches open; while Donald Trump has speculated on the relative merits of being electrocuted or attacked by a shark.
Tumblr media
Perhaps most notoriously of all, Korean company Pinkfong’s version of the children’s song Baby Shark is the most watched YouTube video of all time, racking up 15bn views and counting. No great white has ever caused that much trauma.
Would Jaws get made now? In a 1995 essay for Smithsonian magazine, Benchley reflected: “If I were to write the book today, the shark would have to be the victim.”
These astonishing animals are still fighting to escape the shadow of the film, but thanks to the next generation of scientists, advocates and reformed storytellers, the tide may finally be turning.
As awareness has grown, applications to study marine science have risen at universities around the country. That is an outcome of Jaws that people now understand. In fact the ocean community embraces Jaws as a positive for ocean science, ocean research and conservation.
Daily inspiration. Discover more photos at Just for Books…?
7 notes · View notes
govikings · 5 days ago
Photo
Florence, Italy - Ponte Vecchio Bridge
Tumblr media
114 notes · View notes