Poging GOUD - Vrij
'GAME OF THRONES BUT WITH WHISKERS'
Scottish Daily Express
|February 24, 2026
The hierarchical lives of Africa's lions and leopards come under the lens with the return of Big Cats 24/7 this week. JAMES RAMPTON examines the hit BBC show's majestic pride and ferocious appeal
-
IT’S BEEN dubbed “Game of Thrones with whiskers” — and it’s easy to see why. Back this week for a second series, Big Cats 24/7 plays like the best kind of soap opera, conveying the most gripping moments in the lives of several families of lions, cheetahs and leopards living in Botswana’s Okavango Delta.
Full of larger-than-life characters and cliffhangers, the BBC wildlife series reminds us that the natural world is endlessly and innately dramatic. In one typically gripping scene, lionesses climb a tree to scoff the warthog kill that a leopard has hidden up there — the leopard understandably backs away as a lioness is about three times a leopard’s weight.
“Nature and the cats tell their own stories,” says presenter and cinematographer Gordon Buchanan. “And our job is to capture that.”
‘And that means refusing to sanitise the precarious, often doomed existence of most animals in the bush. Viewers are reminded that nature is very much red in tooth and claw, and a grisly end is never far away.
Every creature in the Okavango Delta, except the apex predator that is the lion, spends its whole life just trying to stay alive and cheat death. In fact, only a quarter of cheetah cubs will make it to three months because the lion is their number one killer.
Picking up six months after the first series was shot, Big Cats 24/7 this time follows the new threat posed to the 40-strong Xudum lion pride, now thought to be the largest in the world. Deserted by their dominant males, Big Toe and Madumo, the pride’s females find themselves forced to battle intruders alone and mount a constant and desperate hunt for food.
They face greater peril when a new group of four aggressive males, known as the Rogue Boys, arrive and start causing serious trouble. It’s a fearful moment for the females, as typically a new male lion’s first act in taking a pride is to kill all the cubs sired by the previous alpha male to ensure only his DNA survives.
Dit verhaal komt uit de February 24, 2026-editie van Scottish Daily Express.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Scottish Daily Express
Scottish Daily Express
Terrier's on paw patrol
We have a two-year-old West Highland White Terrier that recently started licking her feet, making them red underneath.
2 mins
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
HARRY ADMITS TO CUP NERVES
Redknapp dreams of Jukebox Gold
1 mins
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
Police probe vile racist attacks on Gers stars
RANGERS have blasted the faceless trolls who targeted Emmanuel Fernandez and Djeidi Gassama with vile racist slurs on social media.
1 min
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
Queen left speechless by Pelicot rape ordeal
THE Queen said mass-rape survivor Gisèle Pelicot’s “shocking” story left her “speechless” as she hosted the courageous 73-year-old at Clarence House yesterday.
2 mins
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
'GAME OF THRONES BUT WITH WHISKERS'
The hierarchical lives of Africa's lions and leopards come under the lens with the return of Big Cats 24/7 this week. JAMES RAMPTON examines the hit BBC show's majestic pride and ferocious appeal
6 mins
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
MANNY PLANS A FIGHT TO THE FINISH
EMMANUEL FERNANDEZ insists Rangers will continue to “fight and fight and fight” to keep their Premiership title hopes alive following their 2-2 draw with 10-man Livingston on Sunday.
2 mins
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
It's high energy in this gym
ASTRONAUT Sophie Adenot shows being 260 miles above Earth doesn't mean you can miss the gym.
1 min
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
HARMONY IN OUR HANDS
McGREGOR insists players can unite fans as Celtic bid to rescue season
3 mins
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
Health board faces £1.3m bill for army base migrants
A SCOTS health board faces a bill of over £1.3million when migrants move into the Cameron Barracks facility in Inverness.
1 min
February 24, 2026
Scottish Daily Express
SHANKS WAS THE ANSWER
Boyd: Lack of true No.9 could cost Gers dearly
3 mins
February 24, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

