Kalahari Desert - The Kalahari Desert in Popular Culture

The Kalahari Desert in Popular Culture

  • Sands of the Kalahari, 1965 film
  • KALAHARI - Magnificent Desert, coffee-table book by Erwin Niemand and Nicoleen Niemand, spending 2 years photographing this magnificent desert.
  • A Far Off Place, film, starring Reese Witherspoon and Ethan Randall, based on the books A Story Like the Wind and A Far Off Place by Laurens Van Der Post
  • The Gods Must Be Crazy, film
  • Lost in the Desert, film
  • The Lion King, film
  • Animals are Beautiful People, film released in 1974
  • Meerkat Manor, television series documenting the Kalahari Meerkat Project
  • Survivorman, survival television series
  • Top Gear, British television series, featuring an episode following a desert challenge in which Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond, and James May attempt to drive three old cars across Botswana, including the Kalahari Desert
  • The Power of the Sword, novel by Wilbur Smith
  • Lions of the Kalahari, song by Sam Roberts
  • The Lost World of The Kalahari, novel by Laurens van der Post
  • Mario Kart 64, a video game for the Nintendo 64 features a racetrack called Kalimari Desert
  • Lead the Meerkats, a video game available on Nintendo WiiWare
  • Kalahari Resorts, indoor waterpark (largest in America) in Sandusky, OH and Wisconsin Dells, WI
  • The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, fiction novel series about a ladies' detective agency in Botswana. Mentions the Kalahari Desert frequently throughout the series.
  • Tornado and the Kalahari Horse Whisperer, film released in 2009
  • Skeleton Coast, novel by Clive Cussler with Jack DuBrul copyright 2006

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Famous quotes containing the words desert, popular and/or culture:

    It’s alive and waiting for you. Ready to kill you if you go too far. The sun will get you, or the cold at night. A thousand ways the desert can kill.
    Harry Essex (b. 1910)

    The poet will prevail to be popular in spite of his faults, and in spite of his beauties too. He will hit the nail on the head, and we shall not know the shape of his hammer. He makes us free of his hearth and heart, which is greater than to offer one the freedom of a city.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    One of the oddest features of western Christianized culture is its ready acceptance of the myth of the stable family and the happy marriage. We have been taught to accept the myth not as an heroic ideal, something good, brave, and nearly impossible to fulfil, but as the very fibre of normal life. Given most families and most marriages, the belief seems admirable but foolhardy.
    Jonathan Raban (b. 1942)