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Is sharks in Jamaica resort pool video real? Viral clip explored as misinformation spreads online amid Hurricane Melissa
A viral TikTok video claiming to show sharks swimming in a Jamaica resort pool during Hurricane Melissa has been debunked as AI-generated misinformation amid the deadly Category 5 storm.
Already today we’ve been monitoring significant amounts of fake AI-generated storm videos spreading to millions of viewers online, tracked the ‘Hurricane Hunter’ aircraft flying directly into the eye of the hurricane and shown you how rare it is to see a storm of this magnitude.
To read Monster sharks have returned to the Jersey Shore. Is it a nightmare or a new golden age?, click here. Sharks are the perfect villain. Mysterious. Ferocious. A threat far more real than a masked bogeyman that just won’t die.
John-Michael Powell is the writer-director of Violent Ends, a revenge thriller out now about star-crossed lovers set against the backdrop The post Swimming with Sharks: My First Day Filming Violent Ends appeared first on MovieMaker Magazine.
Christopher Murray, a long-distance swimmer from the U.K., recalled how he fought off a shark while attempting to swim the Catalina Channel on Sept. 30.
The U.S. is the leading country in the world for the number of shark attack incidents. But certain states see more encounters than anywhere else in the country. Find out which states have the most shark attacks annually.
A swimmer off the coast of Los Angeles recently survived a shark attack, according to SFGate. A 50-year-old man was participating in a swimming competition eight miles off the coast of Catalina Island when the shark approached. The British swimmer, Chris Murray, had been training for six months to complete this swim.
A man swimming off the coast of Catalina Island early Tuesday morning was bitten by a shark. Swimmer Chris Murray, who was visiting from the United Kingdom, was attempting to swim the 20 miles between Catalina Island and the Los Angeles County coast when the shark bit him.
A glowing orange nurse shark was discovered in the Caribbean in 2024. With two genetic conditions, this shark is the first of its kind.
Sharks from species once thought harmless kill and eat snorkeler in feeding frenzy - Attack could be due to sharks’ previously unreported ‘begging’ behaviour, scientists say