Playlist: Matt Frassica's Portfolio
Featured
Whales of New York
From Matt Frassica | Part of the The Briny series | 17:47
Whales are coming back to their old feeding grounds - the busiest shipping channel on the East Coast.
- Playing
- Whales of New York
- From
- Matt Frassica
Hundreds of years of hunting decimated whale populations around the world. More than 50 years since global whaling restrictions were put in place, the North Atlantic right whale is still on the verge of extinction. Other species have begun to bounce back – notably humpback whales, which have returned to the waters around New York City. But now they face a new danger: swimming in the East Coast’s busiest shipping lanes. Eric Jay Dolin’s “Leviathan: The History of Whaling in America” Results from the New York Bight buoy Music “Vulcanizing Society” by Barnacled “Denzel Sprak” by Blue Dot Sessions “Emmit Sprak” by Blue Dot Sessions
Links
The One Who Came Back
From Matt Frassica | Part of the The Briny series | 13:20
Howard Blackburn should have been a statistic. Instead, he became a hero.
- Playing
- The One Who Came Back
- From
- Matt Frassica
Every year, hundreds of Gloucester fishermen went to sea and never returned. Howard Blackburn should have been one of them. His story of survival against the odds made him a local hero, but he didn’t stop there. He went on to perform one of the great feats of seafaring - and then he did it again.
Music
“Emmit Sprak” by Blue Dot Sessions
“In My Head” by Podington Bear
“Sad Cyclops” by Podington Bear
Links
Something Fishy, part 1
From Matt Frassica | Part of the The Briny series | 12:46
Why regulations designed to protect the ocean are making it harder to fish sustainably.
- Playing
- Something Fishy, part 1
- From
- Matt Frassica
Tim Rider loves to fish, and he does it well: the fish he catches bring top dollar at high-end restaurants in Maine, Vermont, and New Hampshire for their quality. But even though his operation is a model of ecological stewardship, regulations designed to help rebuild depleted fish stocks in New England are making it hard for small-scale fishermen like Tim to make a living.