Explorer S9 New York (Press Launch)

Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman Congo Virunga

News: National Geographic Explorer selects Justin Hall as one of its new correspondence for prized global series.

Runningman Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer
Representing Explorer! International Press Launch New York

National Geographic Explorer has earned more than 400 Awards. including 85 Emmy Awards, 13 Cable Ace Awards, the Peabody Award and  2 Academy Awards:  Its a big big deal… here’s their latest promo: No Pressure Then!!! It’s been a little hush until recently but… Continue reading “Explorer S9 New York (Press Launch)”

BBC Map Men / No Data

Justin HAll Explorer Elsewhere Project

Adventure Series: Cutting Edge Technology applied in the context of investigative expeditions mapping the lesser-known parts of the world

Having pitched a fair few projects to the teams at BBC Natural History department and BBC Earth of Bristol we finally had a green light on an idea that took advantage of high tech tools and lateral thinking here’s the promo followed by one of my pitches that set things in motion.

 NO DATA: Travels to the edge of the known world… and beyond!’’

In such a hi-tech world, it is easy to imagine that we know all there is to know… that every valley, mountain, jungle, ocean and desert have been mapped to the nearest millimetre… And yet for all our efforts and activities: supercomputers and scanning satellites, there are still areas of Earth, so remote, so isolated that we know nothing about them at all… They appear on maps as grey patches defined only by the words ‘NO DATA’

My original (Pitch 2011) of the idea os laid out in full below… 

Continue reading “BBC Map Men / No Data”

Duke of Edinburgh Awards (Guest Presenter)

EXPLORE JUSTIN HALL RUNNINGMAN HRH DOF awards

Buckingham Palace: Guest Presenter DoE Awards 2018 & 19

A great honour to be invited to hand out this year’s DoE  Gold Awards. Presented with the challenge this is what I had to say to the young and intrepid characters on the day: 

A brief Quote (complete speech below… It’s a good one!!!):

‘Where others doubt, don’t be afraid to lead by example. Know that courage is your currency; bravery determination and vision are the things you have that money cannot buy. My advice as you look to the future is simple; let your passions drive all that you do and others will surely follow. If they don’t, you will have lived a life you loved and that is a reward in and of itself.’…. Continue reading “Duke of Edinburgh Awards (Guest Presenter)”

Hong Kong

USTIN HALL PRESENTER INTERACTIVE EXPLORER 07950104136 (80)

The illicit trade of Rhino horn and the farming of Tigers for their body parts often make headlines. However, Its not just the emotive species that make big bucks… a multitude of species are being pushed to the brink of extinction…

justin hall explorer HK jj
Photo JJ Kelly

Nat Geo Correspondent Justin Hall Investigates the illicit trade of an obscure but highly lucrative endangered species called the Totoaba (also known as the vaquita; the world smallest and critically endangered dolphin) Continue reading “Hong Kong”

Lost City (Colombia)

Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman discovers lost city Colombia

The Secrets of The Map Stone: Developed & Produced by Justin Hall

Explorer Justin Hall Runningman

Travelling deep into the heart of Colombia’s jungle-clad coastal mountains, this extraordinary multi-part BBC special reveals a truly remarkable story of daring exploration, lost cities, tomb raiders, bandits, ancient tribes, cryptic maps and golden treasure… A real-world Indiana Jones adventure grounded by science and in close collaboration with UNESCO, the Global Heritage Fund and the Colombian Institute of Anthropology & Indigenous Peoples. With unique access and a host of incredible details. Here is the promo and detailed Pitch doc just for fun… it’s an epic truly epic adventure.

Working at first with BBC EARTH (Mark Wild) then the teams at  NAT GEO (Hamish Mc Keown and finally the fantastic Keo FIlms who edited the following promo

Heres the detailed pitch doc….

Continue reading “Lost City (Colombia)”

Jet Pack

Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman jet pack rider

A leap of Faith: Getting High In Colorado!

Exploring future tech and long-held dreams Justin takes to the sky….well almost!

And so, I find myself dressed like Evil Knievel, strapped into a ticking time bomb, courtesy of the kind folk at Nat Geo Explorer and the lion-hearted adrenaline junkies at Apollo Jetpacks. My flying, or not flying in this case, is not my take away from this extraordinary experience, and not why I share… it got me thinking… Continue reading “Jet Pack”

Web Based Expeditions, Adventure Film Making & Coded Production

Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman Tech

Background: Back In 2000, I led a team through the Amazon jungle and ancestral territories of seven tribal groups, pioneering one of the first interactive (coded) online expeditions.

Communicating Discovery

Entitled RUNNINGMAN and made for the Discovery Channel the objectives where simple but inspiring: Explore the forces affecting remote tribal and indigenous peoples of the Amazon, Continue reading “Web Based Expeditions, Adventure Film Making & Coded Production”

Video Archive

Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman On assignment

Justin Hall FRGS: Explorer, Correspondent & Filmmaker

Archive & Visual Intros:  The beginning of the following list showcases a few in-front of camera projects, the latter section hosts my endeavours behind it!: producing, directing, shooting and editing a variety of broadcasts and charity focused projects, these along with a few commercial branded pieces thrown in, offering scope & variety to the skillsets I have developed across these years … read on Continue reading “Video Archive”

Recent Q & A

Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman speaker

Justin Hall Is The Running Man

Run and gun filmmaker Justin Hall talks to The Yak about his mission … let’s just say it … to save the world. (Interview with YAK Magazine 

justin Hall NAt Geo Explorer Runningman Portrait

OK, Justin Hall … describe yourself in three words.

Let’s go with optimistic, principled and unconventional. If given a fourth, I’d add fallible…USTIN HALL PRESENTER INTERACTIVE EXPLORER 07950104136 (80)

We’ve seen you on the TV, haven’t we? But you’re not a traditional kind of journo, are you…

I often get called quirky. In the simplest sense, I run on instinct rather than rule books and follow my heart when confronted with a challenge. As a storyteller, it’s my nature to try and inspire the best in contributors and garner the most out of each encounter. In my experience, often the easiest way to achieve this is by going back to basics; whether meeting with a government official or hanging with gangsters, kicking back with gun-toting pirates or talking with tribal chiefs. We are all fundamentally just people and a smile and good intention goes a long way to breaking the ice in tough company.

Explorer Justin Hall National Geographic Explorer, Runningman Bolivia salar
Salt Flats Bolivia

How many countries have you visited in the last, let’s say, two years?

Being part of the Nat Geo Explorer team has been amazing. As correspondents, we feed in stories to the New York office with only the most dramatic and telling making the grade. It’s fast-paced, and you get used to being thrown in at the deep end … but I guess that’s part of the skillset. So, these last years I have been busy dodging land mines in Laos, saving bears in Armenia and searching for lost cities in the jungles of Colombia. I’ve hung out with gorillas in the mist in the DRC and swapped stories with child warriors in the Congo … I’ve drifted across bubbling volcanic lakes in Rwanda, visited Jane Goodall’s chimpanzees in Tanzania while in search of the origins of spirituality. For one of my favourite NG stories entitled ‘Cocaine of the Sea’ I went undercover in the markets of Hong Kong. It was a hair-raising experience. Following the money led us to the Sea of Cortez in Mexico, were aboard the Sea Shepherd I joined the team as they hunted poachers with mil-spec drones and night vision. It’s been a trip; an intense learning curve and I feel profoundly fortunate to have been a part of it.

What’s the most dangerous experience you’ve ever had?

The earlier thrill-seeking version of me took a lot of unmeasured risks. I’ve been shot at by marauding Thai gangsters, held up with a Glock for a slice of pizza in New York; I’ve had a knife pulled on me in the Arab sector of the old city of Jerusalem, befriended factions of the Chinese Triads, the mobsters of London, the Mafia of Moscow, Thailand and New York; witnessed stabbings, shootings, riots and catastrophes; infiltrated a forgery ring in Cairo; narrowly avoided being blown up by terrorists in Israel, Sri Lanka and again in Guatemala. I’ve been attacked by rabid mountain dogs in the foothills of the Himalayas; chased by a rhino in India’s forest of Thacadi; and thrown down a waterfall by howler monkeys on the coast of Costa Rica. I’ve survived a near-death experience in a jungle river cave close to warring guerrillas on the border of Belize, done barrel rolls in a rusting Soviet jetfighter as we punched through the clouds. I’ve ridden with rebels in Libya and pirates in Somalia. In the Amazon, in an early effort to get closer to nature, I strapped myself to the wing of a biplane and buzzed the jungle canopy. I’ve even suited up in a James Bond jet-pack and headed to the launch pad … but for all these things, many of them thrill-seeking, by far the most tangible fear I have felt in life was recently in the company of the child warriors of the Congo’s Mia Mia. These are kids born of the darkest kind of trauma, banded together around the gun, living a feral existence on the border of the now-famous Virunga National Park. With nothing to lose, the cocktail of adolescents, alcohol and AK47’s proved highly volatile. There is a clip-on Nat Geo’s Explorer website for any that wish to see.

Explorer Justin Hall National Geographic Explorer, Runningman congo Mia Mia warriors
Mia Mia Child Warriors

Where does this lust for adventure come from?

As a kid, my mum gave me a book called Runaway Ralph! Ralph was a mouse who lived under the stairs and, like most mice, dreamed of cheese and not much else. Life changes for Ralph when he finds a toy motorbike and heads off into the unknown. For sure, Ralph’s spirit of adventure and longing to go elsewhere, see more, be more, has played a part. I guess, as a result, I set off early in life; armed with a smile, good intention and not much else, I spent much of my teens and early twenties jumping from place to place, hunting experience. At 15, I spent a year in India, trekked across the desert on a camel train, explored Sri Lanka and Nepal. From hauling sacks of coconuts on the docks of Israel’s Taba port,  to running clubs and restaurants in New York … I sucked up life, acted on instinct and moved forward. A real turning point came when I hit 30 and was living in Los Angeles. At a dinner party, fortune had me bump into a character called Jean-Pierre Detulluex, a safari suit-wearing kind of guy who held court around the table and told stories of remote tribes and his efforts to save the rainforest. It was a genuine eureka moment … so I harassed him to give me a job. Which he did, and through him, I developed a passion for ethnography, learnt the process of film making and started to plan my own style of journeys.Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman icon bw

 

 

 

 

What’s Runningman all about? You wear the wooden image around your neck. 

It’s a talisman of sorts that has hung around my neck for the past 25 years. I’ve been through hell and high water with this little carved wooden character … in Zambia, while rafting on the Zambezi, he was torn from my neck as our boat overturned in the rapids. Amazingly he survived a solo swim downriver past angry hippos only to be found later on the shoreline as we made camp! Always facing towards my heart. In the simplest sense, it is a constant reminder that we should take active steps in the direction our hearts would have us go. I named my first production company after this ethos. So, he has led me as much as I have carried him. One thing’s for certain, we are a team.

Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman communicating discovery

 

 

 

You’re a Fellow of the UK’s Royal Geographical Society, which has such alumni as Charles Darwin and David Livingstone. How did that come about and what does it mean to you?

I’ve been a Fellow for almost 20 years now. Wonderfully, I was nominated for my earlier works with Amazonian tribes. Simply put, the RGS is an extraordinary organization that for the last 180 years has been a driving force of global exploration, nurturing intrepid spirit by supporting those brave, bold or foolish enough to risk their lives and push the boundaries in an effort to communicate a better understanding of the world around us. To be recognized as a part of this endeavour is, without doubt, my proudest achievement. To me, the challenge of exploration in the 21st Century is an urgent one … it’s no longer about planting flags or egocentric feats of endurance. It’s about exploring the issues of a world well known, about examining the relationship between Man and Nature, cultures and commerce, land and its governance, about the science of change and the quest for solutions.

justin hall Explorer Interactive expeditions 2000 runningman

Your Nat Geo bio says you specialize in hi-tech digital storytelling technologies. Explain, please!

I’ve always loved tech and in a sense been ahead of the curve, looking for ways to use new tools to tell stories. Back in 2000, exploring this idea, I led a three-month expedition through the tribal territories of eight amazon forest communities. It was my first major expedition and although the objectives where quite simple – i.e. review the forces affecting habitat, resource, nature and people – the idea of using the web to communicate each step of the journey in real-time was somewhat pioneering. Arming myself with almost 500 kilos of hi-tech kit including military laptops, solar panels and satellite communicators, we set about offering the remote tribes of the interior a digital platform from which to voice their hopes and fears. Via satellite, we relayed their stories directly from the source, initiating discussions between like-minded groups and NGOs, subtly introducing the idea of digitally mapping the narrative, law and land rights claims of the indigenous and tribal communities we met. The results were encouraging. With the web still in its infancy, 1.4 million people joined us online. Collectively, school kids, scholars and a new breed of armchair traveller spent thousands of hours viewing our work and, in some cases, getting involved.

expedition Suriname Coremtyn Justin Hall Nat Geo Explorer Runningman
Pushing Forward

There are exploited and under siege peoples and species all over the planet, with increasing population pressures that don’t look like helping with any of the issues we see in the environment or communities. Doesn’t it all just get you down?

Sure, I see smoke on the horizon but to me, it’s a call to action rather than a sign of impending doom. I’ve been lucky in doing what I do to have come alongside some extraordinary characters involved in projects set against the greatest of odds; whether dodging bullets to save lives or railing against injustice, standing alone in defence of nature or tinkering with cells to find a way … it turns out that having hope is by far the most important mindset. It is a defining quality that enables the best of us to push past the naysayers and fear of failure to prove by example. As history has so often proved, we are capable of much more than we might at times imagine … and that’s how I choose to see the future. The immediacy of our comms and the power that rests in each of our hands is hard to overstate. Striking but true, a standard iPhone runs well over 120,000,000 times faster than the computer that guided the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon! If brave men, women and clever scientists can aim for the stars and achieve the seemingly impossible with a fraction of the computational power we all have to hand, then I’m certain we can do more than take selfies and click flip and swipe our way through the day.justin hall Explorer Tribal Encounters Runningman

You’ve visited many remote tribes over the years. Are there universal traits that you notice about all people in their natural state?

I’m not one to paint idyllic pictures of tribal, indigenous or forest peoples being ‘at one with nature’ as, in reality, most suffer complex forces bearing down on them. However, as anyone who has wandered alone through a forest, looked out from a mountaintop or stared in silence at a sunset, will likely have felt, there is something undeniably powerful, humbling and potent about being close to nature. It seems the more reliant on it you are, the stronger these feelings become. When you scale down from complex megacities of millions to chiefdoms and tribal settlements of just a few hundred, you naturally find an intensified sense of community. Sure, they suffer the same soap opera of petty jealousies, varied attitudes and actions, but underpinning it all is a deepened sense of place and common purpose … having an intimate understanding that your existence is bound to and reliant on nature forges a reality that, for the most, we in cities dismiss as redundant. Namely, that we are all in it together, partners with nature, governed by it, reliant on it and should work collectively at all costs to ensure its continued wellbeing. Again, to me, this is something that is inherently obvious to those who live close to nature.

Explorer Justin Hall National Geographic Explorer, Runningman tribal

Your higher power has given you three wishes to change our future, what are they?

Ok, let’s start with an instantaneous global epiphany! A profound realization by people and governance that priority should be placed on funding science that addresses primary environmental issues … as a starting point climate, food, water, the defence and perpetuation of cultural and environmental diversity and threatened enclaves … broad stroke, of course, and it isn’t just science. Obviously, it’s attitude and individual action that need to change. However, I reason that applied minds can and have achieved the seemingly impossible before … given the urgency and implications, I’d first wave my wand at this one. Next up … universal education and healthcare! Given that nearly 70 million children of primary education age are not in school and nearly 800 million adults around the world remain illiterate, it seems obvious that young minds, all minds, need nurturing and would benefit immeasurably from the passage of lessons learnt and higher reasoning. Knowledge is power, for certain, but in the simplest sense, it also affords us a seat at the table, allows us to understand and actively participate in the decision-making process that governs our lives. This is never more apparent nor more important than for developing nations and its peoples who, once acknowledged, heard and allowed to speak on their own behalf, can exercise their right to self-determination re healthcare, redressing the balance and reducing suffering where possible … it’s a no brainer. Less worthy, and admittedly a bit selfish perhaps, my last wish would be to bring to life some of the expeditions and projects and meet the like-minded characters that will be needed to make them happen.

Congo (Battle For Virunga)

Explorer Justin Hall National Geographic Explorer, Runningman congo Mia Mia warriors

National Geographic Channels Explorer Series with Correspondent Justin Hall

Virunga is in a place others have called the heart of darkness. A Jurassic landscape of dense jungles and active volcanoes… The National Park is home to innumerable species but most importantly it’s home to the last of our world’s mountain gorillas … Sadly, it’s also home to 30 or so armed militia groups who fight for control of the area’s gold, timber and diamonds.

Essentially, It’s a war zone where gorillas and those that defend them are literally in the crosshairs…

Here are a few DIgital Extras / behind the scenes footage:

Battle for Virunga:  Digital Extras

Q&A Nat Geo Justin talks about his assignment: Plus lots more videos & images… Continue reading “Congo (Battle For Virunga)”

Mexico: Cocaine of the Sea

The trade of threatened species is big business: correspondent Justin Hall joins the crew of Sea Shepard to investigate the plight of the vaquita, the worlds most threaten dolphin species revealing alarming connections to organised crime…

Ted Danson (Studio Host) Contributions from Sylvia Earle

This two-part investigation spans the globe tracing trade routes and nefarious connects… Continue reading “Mexico: Cocaine of the Sea”

Laos (Mirror Man)

uxb phantom limb pain solution steve sumner

Sixty years on: Hiding in the ground, waiting to blow the limbs of any who find them, there is an estimate 80 million UXB (unexploded bombs) covering the landscape of Laos…

Exploring the deadly legacy of a secret US bombing campaign in the region,  I learn of one extraordinary man’s quest to heal the pain of those still suffering: full story…

Continue reading “Laos (Mirror Man)”