Shark Week 2023 has reached our shores, offering 20 hours worth of new shark shows for your viewing pleasure. We've put together a handy guide on how to watch Shark Week 2023, including lists the live TV air times, streaming services, and some of our standout shows that you don't want to miss.
Last year's proceedings were hosted by Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, but this time Discovery has tapped the shoulder of Aquaman himself, Jason Mamoa, to be the MC for Shark Week 2023.
Shark Week has been around since 1988 and it's meant to help us celebrate and understand these beautiful creatures, rather than build up fear. It didn't always live up to that mantra, but these days Discovery does a good job of showing these magnificent animals off to the world and exploring the scientists that study them.
Anyone worried that this means it's gotten boring, well we've got two words for you - Cocaine Sharks. We also get to see some of the weirdest sharks looking in the ocean in Alien Sharks: Strange New Worlds. Check out both those links above for our exclusive interviews with the scientists behind these shows.
On top of Discovery’s renowned T.V. event, National Geographic is running its own month of shark-centric programming with SharkFest 2023, which we highly recommend too.
July 23 - July 30Shark Week 2023 started on July 23 (Sunday) and is running through until July 30 (Saturday).
The official kick off was July 23 at 8pm ET/PT on Discovery, with the content also available to stream on Max (Warner Bros. Discovery’s rebranding of HBO Max).
As we said before, fan-favorite actor, superhero, and conservationist Jason Momoa will host the 35th Shark Week, guiding viewers through an all-you-can-eat of shark-centric shows and documentaries.
In the U.S, Shark Week began on 8 p.m. ET/PT on Sunday (July 23) with the debut show, Belly of the Beast: Feeding Frenzy.
If you want to watch Discovery and don't have access to cable, you have a couple of options: SlingTV (Blue), YouTube TV, Hulu with Live TV and DirecTV Stream all offer Discovery Channel.
Otherwise, you can watch most of the new Shark Week content on Max (formerly HBO Max), the company’s main streaming platform since the following the Warner Media-Discovery merger.
Strangely, there is no official word on whether Shark Week 2023 will end up on Discovery+, which is still live as a separate service to Max. You can watch all of last year's Shark Week content on there though.
Discovery+: Sign up to Discovery+ for a <a href="https://auth.discoveryplus.com/product" data-link-merchant="auth.discoveryplus.com"" target="_blank" rel="nofollow">7-day free trial
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Get access to all the amazing Shark Week 2022 content for free. Once the trial ends, you'll be automatically reverted the plan you choose when signing up.
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For those who still prefer cable and satellite, the good old Discovery Channel should have you covered, but in that case, you need to follow the schedule of air times (see below) to the letter.
If you're stuck abroad during Shark Week and can't access one of the above streaming options in your current location, we have a solution for you in the form of VPNs, which allow you to access geo-restricted content by bouncing your connection to a server based in that country. This means that you can access all of your US-based streaming services no matter where you are in the world. There are many VPN services out there, but our favorite is ExpressVPN.
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Sign up to ExpressVPN and access content from anywhere in the world. The yearly subscription offers the best value, but you can also get a one-month plan for $12.95.
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Shark Week 2022 is a week-long extravaganza of original content about, you guessed it, sharks. Big sharks, little sharks, mating sharks, migrating sharks — but mostly it’s about sharks eating things. Let’s be honest, watching shark eat things is never not cool. They’re incredibly well-designed killing machines that make violence look graceful. They’re so well-designed, in fact, that they’ve changed very little since they first evolved. They’re were here before the dinosaurs and they’ve long outlasted them, and much of Shark Week is about watching them eat things and watching people be scared or fascinated by them eating things.
Shark Week was originally created to spread awareness about conservation efforts and correct misconceptions about sharks in a post-Jaws world. Over time, however, it grew in popularity and became a recurring hit for Discovery. As a result, more entertainment-oriented and sometimes fictional programming took over the event.
By the 2010s, criticism of its most dramatic programs, many of which ironically hurt the reputation of sharks, led to professionals in the science blogger community as well as scientists calling for a boycott of the network. As accusations of junk science and fake stories piled up, Discovery vowed in 2015 to remove this type of programming from future Shark Week lineups. While dubious shows like “Megalodon: The Monster Shark Lives” are rarer nowadays, you can tell from the spicy titles that even the most scientifically accurate programs are designed to attract as many eyes as possible. Still, we think it’s all good fun as long as you do your homework afterwards reading sites such as Live Science.
Shark Week also offers more than just shows. There’s now a podcast – captained by marine biologist Luke Tipple – to listen to, plus Discovery is highlighting plenty of educational shark-centric articles, facts, and videos to get people interested in these animals beyond this marketing-ploy-turned-cultural-phenomenon.
Since its inception, Shark Week has clearly earned a place in cultural vernacular. From mentions on 30 Rock to references in movies, Shark Week has arguably done more to raise sharks’ profile than anything since the first Jaws movie. The phenomenon isn’t limited to the U.S. either, as millions of viewers from all over the world tune in each year.
While the total 20-hour run time announced by Discovery for Shark Week 2023 falls a little below other years’ gargantuan programming menus, there’s plenty of exciting and informative television to watch every day of the event. We suggest carefully studying the full schedule – straight from Discovery – that we shared above, but we’ve picked out some potential standouts you should keep an eye on.
If everything goes to plan, their findings could help find the biggest great white in South African history.
Catch “Belly of the Beast” at 8pm ET/PT on Sunday, July 23.
Tune in to “Jaws vs. The Meg” at 9pm ET/PT on Sunday, July 23.
Wildlife biologist Forrest Galante will explore stunning underwater environments rarely seen by humans in order to study these extraordinary creatures.
Check out our interview with Forrest Galante where we talked about capturing footage of Pyjama sharks filmed mating in the wild for the first time while filming the show.
Catch “Alien Sharks: Strange New Worlds” at 10pm ET/PT on Monday, July 24.
Believe it or not, rumors of cocaine-fueled sharks have spread for decades, so shark expert Tom Hird traveled to the Florida Keys to (try to) learn the truth.
We spoke to the show's marine biologist Tom "The Blowfish" Hird about the show about how the pollution of our oceans is affecting the sharks that live there.
“Cocaine Sharks” airs at 10pm ET/PT on Wednesday, July 26.
Watch “Tropic Jaws” at 8pm ET/PT on Friday, July 28.
“Dawn of the Monster Mako” airs at 8pm ET/PT on Saturday, July 29.