The documentary, "BlackFish," was directed and written by Gabriela Cowperthwaite and produced by Manny Oteyza. The film was released in the U.S. on January 19th 2013 at the Sundance Film Festival. For this documentary, they filmed at Sea World, San Diego, CA and Puget Sound, Washington. BlackFish was released on CNN on November 2nd, 2013. The documentary is also on Netflix. A majority of the documentary is interviews by ex-Orca trainers at SeaWorld, people who worked at sea world, and even people who captured baby Orca’s in the 70’s. It was an Interactive documentary starting from the various incidents and or accidents that happened to trainers or people who got hurt by these Killer Whales. In 2014 it won the Satellite Award for Best Documentary Film, this award is given by the International Press Academy. The documentary BlackFish went through the process of the most deadly Killer Whale Tillikum and how it got to the water park SeaWorld. This Killer whale Tillikum was taken away from its mother and ocean at age 2, and at the time was 13 feet, which was far larger than any other Killer Whale at that age. Everyone at the park knew this whale was a special talent. When help captive in numerous parks there would be two dominant female orcas that would attack him viciously. On top of that he would perform eight times a day, seven days a week. All this stress caused him to get stomach ulcers. The trainers really cared about this whale, it was always eager to perform, and had a great time performing. However, the real reason Tillikum was so famous was because of the killing of Sea World Trainer Dawn Branchea (Kuo, 2013). The documentary focused on 4 of the ex trainers that worked at the marine parks for the interviews. These trainers were John Hargrove, Samantha Berg, Mark Simmons, and Kim Ashdown. All of them said that information about previous so-called “accidents” or incidents caused by the whales to trainers was hid from them