Alaska Drone
Gorgeous footage of Alaska’s Inside Passage, including the Mendenhall Glacier and the cities of Juneau and Ketchikan. Also, shots of Anchorage, the state’s largest city.

Wild Beauty, Deep Roots


Carved out by glaciers and dotted with tree-covered islands, this is a world of untamed beauty. Here, bald eagles soar, humpback whales breach the icy waters and brown bears roam through rich ecosystems.
Southeast Alaska is the ancestral homeland of the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian peoples whose rich traditions - seen in totem poles, oral histories and fishing practices - shape the region's identity.
Discover an invitation to moments of awe and connection to something bigger than yourself.
Gorgeous footage of Alaska’s Inside Passage, including the Mendenhall Glacier and the cities of Juneau and Ketchikan. Also, shots of Anchorage, the state’s largest city.
Southeast Alaska is home to three distinct Native tribal groups: Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian. With deeply meaningful cultural traditions, all three tribes have imbued Ketchikan, and the greater region of southeast Alaska, with a profound legacy. This Emmy Award-winning film chronicles the traditions, arts—including totem poles—and languages of these people that have survived through the centuries.
This Tlingit artist is one of the most renowned totem pole carvers in the US. In this short documentary, hear what it means to him to create some of Alaska’s most iconic artistic structures.
This group from the native Sugpiat and Alutiiq tribes, who live on the Kenai Peninsula and Kodiak Island of Alaska perform at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian (Washington, DC).
Join hosts Jack and Colton in Alaska's smallest national park to explore 40 glaciers, mountain forests filled with bears, moose and mountain goats, and pristine fjords home to fin and orca whales, sea lions, puffins and more.
Signed into law on December 2, 1980, the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act is considered one of the most significant land conservation measures in US history. The act protected over 100 million acres of land throughout Alaska—including Glacier, Denail, Katmai, Kenai and Wrangell-St Elias national parks, as well as Tongass National Forest. In this podcast, learn more about the parks and how the legislation has shaped the National Park Service system.
Geologist Jay Chapman offers an insightful review—with a few fun, well-timed interjections—of the operative geological forces in Glacier Bay National Park.
This short film explores how it’s possible that a rainforest exists this close to the top of the Earth. Float magically through the understory, taking a scenic tour through the ancient old growth forest, where 200-foot trees live over 800 years.



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