4 Netflix nature documentaries to add to your watch list

Enjoy the outdoors, even on a night in.

After a stressful day, watching something new on Netflix is a great way to unwind. However, Netflix’s seemingly endless offerings can make it difficult to decide on which series, movie, or documentary to watch. Even narrowing down the options by genre can leave you with more choices than your work-weary mind wants to handle. Thankfully, if you’re an outdoors-enthusiast seeking nature-related programming, there’s an easy way to choose what to watch next. This guide will give you the lowdown on the best Netflix nature documentaries available as of August 2022. Get ready to kick back and enjoy these four fascinating options.

[listicle id=815]

‘Man in the Arena’ is Tom Brady’s love letter to football and the teammates who shaped him

There’s not much new here, but it’s nice to re-live the journey through Brady’s eyes.

It is daunting to try to write about ESPN’s new 10-part Tom Brady docuseries “Man in the Arena,” because it takes its name from a quote that criticizes critics for daring to criticize from the sideline. Which means I’m suddenly quite aware of my own cold and timid soul and that I have dared neither victory nor defeat. So I already feel shame for even having anything to say.

However my editor asked me to review this, and I’ve got children to feed, so here goes:

You will probably love this sprawling documentary about Tom Brady — available on ESPN+ starting Nov. 16 — if you like Tom Brady, or the Patriots, or just want to re-live some football in a pleasant way.

Stream “Man in the Arena” on ESPN+ starting Nov. 16.

If you are hoping for a new incisive look at Tom Brady, or to hear him excavate deep thoughts from his soul, or to have Bill Belichick explain anything at all, or, broadly, to have any of the narrative surrounding the greatest champion the NFL has ever known change or evolve or deepen because you watched this, you may very well be let down.

I may not have spent myself in a worthy cause, nor strived valiantly, nor known great enthusiasms, but I did watch screeners for the first three episodes of “Man in the Arena,” and those are my thoughts.

Perhaps this should not be a surprise. The series is directed by Gotham Chopra, who, in addition to being one of our absolute finest chroniclers of sports stories, is a friend and business partner of Tom Brady’s (their company produced this series and Chopra is doing a companion podcast.)

Also, Tom Brady is still playing football, as you may have heard. He’s not years removed like Michael Jordan was for “The Last Dance”. These are Brady’s mid-life memoirs, presented a little bit like one of those videos you might have begged your parents to buy you if you were lucky enough to have your favorite team win a championship when you were a kid. Soaring music. Stirring montages. Rugged men explaining how they worked harder and therefore succeeded.

It’s not that there’s nothing new or sincere from Brady. He curses a lot. At one point her curses a lot because he’s imitating Belichick. There’s also very little suave Brady here. He comes off a lot more like a football dork who just really, really, really wanted to be good — and then had some luck (and yes, worked incredibly hard) to make it happen. This is how he sees himself. He’s in a place to show that side, now, at least. But he’s not really letting go fully. Remember that time Brady got ripped up drunk at the Bucs parade and went tossing the Lombardi Trophy across boats before retreating to the safety of Gronk’s embrace? This is not that Tom. That Tom was 14 beers deep. This one is four sips into his third Coors Light, and already regretting how he’s going to feel at practice tomorrow.

(AP)

But of course I’ve only seen the first three episodes (each around 50 minutes or so), which cover an epoch in Tom Brady’s life when he was just a football player, and not even a truly famous one at that. This is the rising action in Brady’s story; there are so many bad haircuts, and too many visors, but also the sudden emergence of a player whose sheer, exultant belief in himself … works.

“Man in the Arena” covers each of Brady’s 10 Super Bowl appearances, and he won his first three (XXXVI against the Rams, XXXVII against the Panthers and XXXIX against the Eagles.) So, these episodes explore Brady’s life before his actress ex-girlfriend revealed she was pregnant just as he began dating a supermodel, before the Patriots were caught spying, before Brady began working with a forceful, controversial trainer/guru type, long before we ever spent any of our lives pretending that the inflation level of a football is something we should be worried about and a decade-and-a-half before Brady would leave New England. The good stuff is up ahead, is what I’m saying, and I have hope that the remaining seven episodes will give us more to hold onto.

It is fun to re-live the early years through Brady’s eyes. Perhaps what’s most interesting here is that Brady makes it clear that he never saw himself as anything near the underdog he’s since been made out to be. He played QB at a college football powerhouse and figured he’d be drafted early-ish on Day 2 of the draft. His famous plummet left him largely undeterred; he still figured he’d be a pro football player anyway, and set about learning as much as he could.

You can tell it was important to Brady to tell his story with the help of those he admired most as the Patriots dynasty first congealed. So Willie McGinest is called upon to talk about changing the franchise’s losing culture through toughness. Drew Bledsoe is here to say how much he liked Tom, as a person, but that he didn’t see him as a threat and then to look forlornly into the camera as he recalls the events that led to him watching Brady win the Super Bowl before being exiled to Buffalo.

(AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Lawyer Milloy is the elder statesman and team leader who is unceremoniously cut by the ruthless Belichick, teaching Brady that pro sports really are a business (even though Brady had already forced the Patriots into a business decision on Bledsoe). Milloy is replaced by Rodney Harrison, who became the heart of the defense. Eventually Teddy Bruschi and Mike Vrabel come along to discuss how the leaders of the team pushed each other relentlessly, calling themselves “The Edgers” because, well, they always pushed to the edge.

While Belichick is given broad credit for shaping the team’s culture, he does not sit for an interview (we NEED that, some day, when he’s ready). Brady does discuss his meetings with Belichick and how they dissected defenses player-by-player, but there’s no new revelation about how they got so good, so fast. That’s sort of the overall feeling here, honestly: It’s lovely that Brady wanted to give credit to his friends, but these are people we’ve heard plenty from before and they have little reason, at this juncture, to go beyond what they’ve previously said.

Those who do well in the arena generally get to tell their story the way they want it to be told, and by ignoring the thoughts of anyone who watched carefully and saw differently, they sometimes end up avoiding what actually made the experience all the things they claim it was. This sort of rigid glory is integral to Brady’s version of his own story — he and the rest of the Patriots blocked out the noise, he says in slightly varying ways, over and over. Maybe I wish there was more noise, now that we’re looking back.

(Or, maybe, as someone who grew up outside Philadelphia, I am just absolutely harmed by the way Brady belabors the way the Eagles meandered around, unbothered, at the end of Super Bowl XXXIX and lost a winnable game.)

But again, if you love football — and you can tell from this that Tom Brady loves football — this will be fun. The Patriots are fascinating, even just in their own words. And I do think we’ll get something profound out of the series as Brady’s life (and the Patriots’ path) becomes more complicated; Chopra is too good to not deliver on that.

It’s just that if you want an unvarnished look at the Patriots dynasty and Tom Brady’s role in it, you’re probably looking for Seth Wickersham’s book “It’s Better to be Feared.” If what you want is an expertly varnished version, with a custom varnish created just for Brady by a true varnish artisan, “Man in the Arena” is it.

[mm-video type=playlist id=01f09m93q11d4tbgfy player_id=none image=https://ftw.usatoday.com/wp-content/plugins/mm-video/images/playlist-icon.png]

[listicle id=1238385]

The WNBA’s ‘144’ documentary on the league’s 2020 season looks absolutely incredible

The WNBA’s upcoming documentary looks incredible

There’s a WNBA Bubble documentary coming and it looks absolutely incredible.

The Wubble seemed like a wild experience last season and this documents it all. It takes a deep dive into the biggest moments both on and off of the court for the players who stayed at IMG Academy last year for the WNBA season.

Last season was jam-packed with huge moments and the biggest ones weren’t even about basketball. We could get behind-the-scenes looks at the WNBA walkout, the discussions behind supporting Raphael Warnock, the moment where A’ja Wilson won her first MVP and so much more.

The film is officially called “144” for the 144 players in the league. Here’s a look at the trailer and it looks incredible.

The most incredible part is that it was produced by the Sparks’ Chiney Ogwumike.

Yeah. This is going to be amazing.

Netflix is releasing a documentary about the last Blockbuster and everyone pointed out how mean that is

This is so mean…but we’re still going to watch it.

We’re getting a documentary soon about the last Blockbuster, according to Hypebeast, and that sounds pretty cool!

Blockbuster was a staple for so many folks’ childhoods in the 90’s. That was the spot every weekend — whether you were trying to get a new movie to watch or find a good video game or just wanted to hang. It was truly an era.

So it’ll be cool to hear about its rise and subsequent fall after the streaming era. But that’s the wild part about all of this — the streaming era is what ended Blockbuster.

That’s why it’s so wild that Netflix is putting this documentary together.

Yes, that’s right. The same Netflix that is one of the leaders that ushered in the streaming era that ended Blockbuster is releasing a documentary about the business that it ended. Again, THAT’S WILD.

People everywhere pointed this out and said it was so mean.

Watch our new sneaker unboxing show, Special Delivery

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8MK0HoBHqbY

Last Chance U review: A shift to California creates a raw and intense fifth season

Laney College is trying to defend a state title. One of its best players is homeless.

Greg Whiteley, the creator and producer/director of Last Chance U, worked to finish up the fifth and final season of the junior college football docuseries — set to be released on July 28th by Netflix — as the country grappled with pandemic and a long-overdue backlash against racism.

During that time he saw young, prominent athletes speaking out in ways they rarely have.

He was not surprised.

Though Whiteley is careful to say his work does not attempt to take an editorial stance, he has endeavored through fives seasons to give an unvarnished look at the life of the players he chronicles. Most are black and come from poverty and have been straining against the bonds of systemic racism their entire lives.

“We’re the messengers. We do our best to show these players’ lives as authentically as possible,” he said. “As we’ve done that, these themes have naturally emerged. We’ve been hearing and documenting these stories for the last five years.”

That’s certainly the case with the newest season, often with startling prescience. Last Chance U — the last to cover a football team, Netflix has declared — covers the 2019 season of Laney College, in Oakland. The city itself, and more precisely the unrelenting and unrepentant gentrification of it, is meant, Whitely said, to be a character in the drama. It, coupled with the unique rules of the California JUCO system, make for a season that feels heavier. There’s so much at stake.

California JUCO’s, unlike those in Mississippi and Kansas (where the first four seasons of Last Chance U were filmed), don’t grant scholarships to athletes. Or free housing. Or food. So while California produces an abundance of talented football players, the Laney team is not built around Division I “drop downs” looking for an easy landing spot to rehabilitate their reputations while waiting to become re-eligible at another Division I school. The players profiled most closely in this season, instead, grew up nearby and are more likely to actually be on their last — or only — chance.

So many of the athletes at East Mississippi Community College and Independence Community College were established players with a clear path back to the big-time — and they had it easy at school because of their status and the perk of being an athlete. But only one player profiled in season five, Rejzohn Wright, is a sure-thing Division I player. And he cannot coast: In order to fulfill the dream of owning her own home, his mother had to move about 70 miles away to Stockton, leaving him to spend hours each day commuting to school and practice.

The emotional heart of the story, a diminutive wide receiver who takes over at QB when three other players get hurt, sleeps in his car. A social worker at the university offers Dior Walker-Scott assistance finding a place to live near the school, but he demurs because he needs to stay near the fast food wing spot where he works a few hours a night. He’s estranged from his father, who he says was abusive when he was younger.

Another wide receiver, RJ Stern, lives in Berkeley, at a warm, book-filled house so beloved by generations of the same family filled with noted writers that it has been bestowed a name, Greyhaven. But nothing there is what it seems: Stern’s family has suffered through unfathomable scandal, and the ramifications of his grandfather’s crimes reverberate through his life still.

Days after finishing the screeners of the show, I’m still trying to process what these men have gone through. Perhaps that sounds daunting to a viewer, but the resiliency of the players offers hope, as does the faith of the coach in charge of the program.

“It’s our job to make difficult stories more accessible,” Whiteley said, “which sometimes means we’re embedding them in a show that is also entertaining.”

The season is entertaining, of course. The head coach, John Beam, is a charismatic force with an unkempt mustache who lapses into tough-guy football coach bravado far less than Jason Brown (Indy) or Buddy Stephens (EMCC). He’s been coaching football for 40 years, most of them in Oakland, and the admiration shown to him from players and others is earned. He’s not important simply because he’s in charge of the biggest show in a small town.

He’s fiercely competitive, of course, but is also coming off his first state championship season. It’s clear that he feels validated by the title, and allowed to be more reflective about the game and how it is supposed to help shape the young men who play it. Whiteley predicted that Brown and Stephens would develop the same sort of wisdom someday and I hope he’s right; Beam’s more clear-eyed approach, though, was a welcome antidote for Brown’s bombast built on exaggerations of personal achievements and exotic combinations of swear words and insults.

Beam brings an Oakland police officer, Fred Shavies, to talk to the team and begins by asking his players how many have been mistreated by police. Most hands go up.  Beam asks how Shavies, a black man, squares the mistreatment of black men by police with being the police. Shavies explains that policing in America began as a way to catch slaves. It’s an open, honest conversation and proof of how deeply Beam is committed to helping his players move through the world.

Earlier in the same episode, Shavies is shown responding to a shooting that leaves a pregnant woman dead. He is clearly distraught. As his car reaches the new, glistening parts of the city he says it all plainly: The gentrification has been heartening, because you can walk down these streets at night without worry. It has been tragic because the people who waited so long for that tranquility to come can no longer afford to live here.

The season wobbles like that, on and off the field. The team slips due to injury — the series consistently shows how brutal football is — but stays competitive until the end. Whiteley’s crew captures it in the stark, sparing style of the series. All of it is impeccably pieced together.

Whiteley, who also was the creative force behind the mega-hit Cheer, knows there are other stories to be told outside of football (and in fact he’s at work editing a series focused on JUCO basketball).  He says he felt some peace around the idea of Netflix declaring this the last season for football. “I could sense I started to tell similar stories,” he said.

But what is sports if not the same stories told over and over again with new characters? The personalities, as with anything, make it work.

Seasons 1 and 2 of Last Chance U hinge on the battle between a mercurial, demanding coach and the academic advisor, Brittany Wagner, working to protect and nurture players in her own way. Seasons 3 and 4 are built around Brown’s outsized ambition and personality clashing with a town and school trying to recreate itself. Season 5, in the most fitting way possible, roars because it is about young men trying to barrel their way into a better place. They are battered by and attempt to push back against broken systems and absent or abusive parents and fast-food-joint wages that don’t pay enough to eat and skin color that makes it all different and harder for them. They suffer through mental illness because of misguided notions of manhood and toughness. They wrestle with 100 different inequalities they’re only beginning to understand.

All of which conspire to ensure they’re far away from where they hope to be.

And sometimes where they hope to be is just a bed, a standard, regular, common bed, because they’ve been sleeping in a car. Walker-Scott finds one, finally, near the end of the final episode. He tells Beam he wept when he first laid on it — first remembered what it was to stretch out all the way again — and in his eyes you can see that, even as the pandemic begins to restrict life in ways we never imagined, Walker-Scott feels fine. He feels like he’s given himself a chance.

[lawrence-related id=836261,808501,773029]

Reggie Miller didn’t want to participate in ‘The Last Dance’ because it was too painful

Jalen Rose said it was too painful to talk about.

The 1997-98 Indiana Pacers ended up playing a pretty crucial part in ESPN’s The Last Dance Michael Jordan documentary. They played the role of Eastern Conference foil to Jordan’s Bulls in episode 9.

The Pacers played them tough and pushed them to the brink in the conference finals. They played in a close, decisive game 7 to close out the series but the Bulls ultimately prevailed.

The most essential piece of that Pacers team was Reggie Miller and his shooting. Without him, the 1998 Pacers aren’t as good as they were and they don’t push the Bulls like they did. To tell the story of those Pacers and that team, you have to speak to Miller.

But the producers of The Last Dance almost didn’t. Not because they didn’t want him, but because Miller stood them up multiple times before he ultimately caved and participated in the documentary.

In the Jalen & Jacoby Finale recap, Jalen Rose talked about how Miller didn’t want to participate because it brought back too many painful memories.

“I was trying to initially get him to interview for this doc and he ain’t want to do it. It was too much pain.”

You can understand why Miller would want to skip this after watching the documentary. That Pacers team was loaded. Truth be told, they probably should’ve won the series. That was their best chance to go to the Finals and the Bulls snatched it right out of their hands. And now they want him to talk about it? Please.

I’ll tell you what — Miller is a better sport than me. Because, 22 years later, I’d still be too salty to bring it up again.

In honor of The Last Dance: Michigan State sports documentaries I’d love to see

These stories are ripe with interest for Michigan State football and basketball documentaries.

On Sunday night ESPN debuted the first two parts of The Last Dance, a ten-part documentary series on the Michael Jordan-era Chicago Bulls. It was a great two hours of television, with a ton of in-depth stories building the foundation of the story of what was the end of one of sports’ greatest dynasties.

That got me to thinking: What Michigan State sports documentaries would I want to see?

What may be the obvious answers for a MSU fan, aren’t the ones I thought of first. For example, I don’t particularly want to see a Flintstones documentary, or a documentary on the 2013 football team. There’s certainly interesting things there, but those stories have been pretty well documented. The best documentaries are revealing in nature and often have to do with some sort of scandal or trouble. Add in that conflict to something like a giant corporation or megs sports franchise and “viola” you’ve got a pretty interesting documentary. So the Flintstones are out. MSU football 2013-2015 is out. Magic Johnson’s career is mostly out, but there could be something interesting there digging into the status of college sports at the time and how the 1979 NCAA Tournament shifted basketball both on the court and off. But Magic vs. Bird is a pretty well-mined pit.

What follows is a list of MSU-related sports documentaries that I would absolutely love to see. They aren’t in any particular order, really, with the exception of the first one. You’ll see why.

Get ready to cry like a big dumb idiot baby at this Andy Murray documentary

The trailer for ‘Andy Murray: Resurfacing’ looks excellent.

Hope y’all are ready for cry time. Because guess what? It’s cry time.

Amazon released its first trailer for Andy Murray: Resurfacing, its new documentary that traces Murray’s comeback from an extremely painful hip injury that threatened to end his career.

Murray is about as introspective an athlete as we have right now, and just from this clip you can tell that the filmmakers got excellent access. It’s out November 29 on Amazon.

Is it going to be predictable, with Murray faltering due to injury, confronting the end of his career, and then working his way back to Wimbledon? Yes, almost certainly. Will there be tons of awful tennis puns? Considering its title, and the fact that they reference “break point” in the trailer, you better believe it.

Will I still cry like a big dumb idiot baby for the entire thing? Absolutely.

[lawrence-related id=847004,800474,800217]