![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimqnqsMu1-SYgSBzXNxFpbKGD8UIEQ-UCkH-1trCvcPeVIZypw5mTD9l1ILTDiaoc55-SxV6xWh0e-7-5Kt-N6-v4DZ94UDyVQROeQZ_TyxVhLWu20S2w5KILZwhYedmlIQySyiZoW9j4/s400/The+Cove.jpg)
Of particular note at the festival was the screening of "The Cove." This is an incredibly powerful film and a righteous indictment of Japan's slaughter of dolphins. Not your cup of tea? Ah, but that's the point; this is not something to be swept under the rug. Check out their web site to learn more and where you can see it. It is a MUST SEE.
On Saturday, I moderated/participated in a shark conservation panel discussion. My fellow panelists were Melanie Marks, CEO of Shark Trust Wines, and Dr. Greg Stone, SVP of Ocean Projects for Conservation International, providing a consumer/commerce and scientific perspective respectively, along with my perspective as a filmmaker. It was a lively discussion with much input from the receptive audience, different ideas, and some healthy differences in opinion. But in the end, we were all united in the same goal: to make the public and the decision makers aware of the consequences of losing top predators like sharks through large-scale commercial shark fishing. Afterwards, festival staff congratulated me on a panel discussion that held the audience's interest - even as we ran late and made some folks late for their next event.
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