DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home Entertainment

‘Jaws’ turns 50. It changed pop culture and our perception of sharks

June 21, 2025
in Entertainment, News
‘Jaws’ turns 50. It changed pop culture and our perception of sharks
492
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Who wants to feel like prey?

When “Jaws” premiered to an invigorated public in June 1975, most of the research on sharks focused on preventing shark attacks, Skomal said.

“We knew it was big, it could swim fast and we knew it bit people,” he said. “So those aspects of the film are fairly accurate, just exaggerated.”

White sharks like the toothy menace of “Jaws” already had a reputation for violence by the time the film premiered, Skomal said: There had been recorded attacks on fishermen and scuba divers in Australia and surfers in California.

But sharks didn’t evolve to feed on humans, Skomal said: They’ve existed for at least 400 million years — they predate dinosaurs by several hundred million. Sharks only encountered people in their waters in the last few thousand years, since we started exploring by sea.

Though there’s some disagreement, most shark researchers believe shark attacks are a case of mistaken identity: A shark may confuse a person for prey. They typically take a bite, realize their mistake and move on, Skomal said.

Not so in “Jaws.” The film’s shark dispatches his victims with purpose, munching on some body parts while leaving a head or arm as a warning to any who dare swim in his waters.

“That’s one of the reasons the film is so powerful,” Martin said. “None of us want to look like food.”

How sharks went from ‘garbage eaters’ to ‘man-eaters’

In the decades before “Jaws,” white sharks weren’t considered to be among the ocean’s most fearsome predators.

In the early 20th century, many sharks were thought of as “garbage eaters,” Martin said: Coastal cities dumped their garbage in the ocean, and clever sharks learned to anticipate the barges’ arrival. Sharks, city dwellers thought, were “not very beautiful, not very commercially important,” Martin said. “An animal that’s in an in-between space — sort of a pest, sort of dangerous.”

After some misbegotten attempts to fish sharks commercially, humans started to invade the waters where sharks hung out, and sharks graduated from pest to predator. With the popularization of maritime activities like scuba diving and surfing in the mid-20th century, people were spending more time underwater, which meant they were more likely to bump into a shark, Martin said.

“There were so many more humans in there,” said Gavin Naylor, director of the Florida Program for Shark Research at the Florida Museum of Natural History. “It was just a matter of time before people got nobbled.”

Previously, shark tales were mostly traded between fishermen who encountered them on the high seas. Now, with more people exploring “shark-infested waters,” run-ins with sharks were getting picked up by local newspapers. A particularly scary documentary, 1971’s “Blue Water, White Death,” which featured a tense confrontation with aggressive white sharks, also helped shape our view of sharks as creatures to be feared, Skomal said — but “Jaws” cemented it.

The glee with which Amity Island’s fishermen hunt would-be killer sharks wasn’t totally fictional, either. Shark fishing tourneys already existed in the US prior to the success of “Jaws,” but the film brought new publicity to the competitions and the sport of hunting “trophy sharks,” Martin said.

“The killing of these animals became sanctioned, approved of, as a result of the film,” Martin said.

Peter Benchley, who wrote the 1974 novel upon which the film was based, expressed some regret that some audiences viewed sharks as man-eating monsters because of “Jaws,” a work of pure, pulpy fiction.

“’Jaws,’ the movie particularly, sparked a spurt of macho madness,” he told southwest Florida’s News-Press in 2005. “People were running around saying, ‘Hey, let’s slaughter sharks.’”

Benchley later spent many years steeped in shark advocacy.

Sharks are just plain cool

Most contemporary audiences left “Jaws” cheering for Chief Brody after he successfully exploded the monstrous shark (and overcame his fear of the open ocean, to boot!). But even scaredy cats couldn’t deny that big old shark was fascinating.

“They are charismatic,” Martin said. “They command our attention through their size, the way their bodies are shaped, their morphology, their behavior. But the big part of it is their ability to turn us into food. We don’t like to be reminded of it, but we are food in an ecosystem.”

Our morbid fascination with white sharks’ ability to kill us drove the success of “Jaws” and, eventually, decades of “Shark Week,” Discovery’s annual TV marathon that always features programs about fatal run-ins with sharks. (Discovery and CNN share a parent company.)

“We’re drawn to things that could potentially hurt us,” Skomal said. “And sharks have that unique history of being an animal, to this day, that can still harm us. The probability is extremely rare, but it’s an animal that’s shrouded in the ocean environment. We’re land animals.”

In the intervening years between the advent of shark fishing tournaments and our present, when dozens of nonprofits exist solely to serve shark conservation efforts, researchers have gotten to know the creatures beyond their enormous teeth.

“The negative perception of sharks at the time — which was tapped into and exacerbated by ‘Jaws’ — I think has definitely changed into fascination, respect, a desire to conserve, a desire to interact with and protect,” Skomal said.

Now that we better understand their role in our underwater ecosystems — at the top of the food chain, they maintain balance by keeping the species below them in check — we can better appreciate white sharks (while maintaining a healthy dose of caution in waters they occupy), Martin said.

Appreciation for sharks is especially important since several sharks species’ populations have been on the decline, largely due to overfishing — sharks are often accidentally caught and killed.

So it’s perfectly wonderful to love sharks and want to protect them, said Naylor — just don’t get too comfortable around them.

“Sharks are becoming the new cuddly whales,” he said. “They’re not. They are predaceous fishes that are efficient. They don’t target people, but in certain conditions when water is murky, they make mistakes.”

Need reminding of the potential dangers sharks can pose? Just watch “Jaws.”

The post ‘Jaws’ turns 50. It changed pop culture and our perception of sharks appeared first on CNN.

Share197Tweet123Share
Donald Trump Moans He Won’t Get Nobel Peace Prize
News

Donald Trump Moans He Won’t Get Nobel Peace Prize

by Newsweek
June 21, 2025

President Donald Trump has renewed his long-standing grievance over not being awarded a Nobel Peace Prize. Posting on Truth Social ...

Read more
News

Former Pacers star Jalen Rose makes bold four-word prediction for Game 7 of NBA Finals

June 21, 2025
News

Big Apple or Apple Crisp? Extreme heat watch in effect for NYC as heat wave set to bring dangerous temps

June 21, 2025
News

Netanyahu biggest obstacle to regional peace, says Erdogan at OIC meeting

June 21, 2025
News

London has leaned into Jack the Ripper tourism. The locals don’t like it

June 21, 2025
How to Deal With Insults

How to Deal With Insults

June 21, 2025
Ukraine received at least 20 bodies of Russian soldiers in recent exchanges, Zelenskyy says

Ukraine received at least 20 bodies of Russian soldiers in recent exchanges, Zelenskyy says

June 21, 2025
Trump Changes Will Kick a Million People Off Obamacare

Trump Changes Will Kick a Million People Off Obamacare

June 21, 2025

Copyright © 2025.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2025.