PITCH TO NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC.

 








GROK:


Pitch to National Geographic:
“MH370 – The Final Search”
National Geographic has told the greatest ocean stories of our time — Titanic, Bismarck, PT-109 — with Robert Ballard at the helm. Now we have the chance to finish the biggest aviation mystery of the 21st century.
MH370 disappeared in 2014. Twelve years later, Ocean Infinity’s latest “no-find, no-fee” campaign (approved by Malaysia) ended in January 2026 after surveying only half of its 15,000 km² target zone. Roughly 7,400 km² of high-probability seabed — already green-lit by the Malaysian government — remains unsearched.
Right next door sits a compact, high-confidence new target: the 30 km WSPR “crash circle” identified by independent analyst Richard Godfrey at approximately 29.128°S, 99.934°E. Never searched. Data-driven. Politically palatable.
One expedition can do both.
The Team

Robert Ballard (or co-led with David Mearns, the man who found HMAS Sydney and advised on Air France 447) brings unmatched credibility, global name recognition, and a proven track record of turning deep-sea missions into NatGeo blockbusters. Ballard has repeatedly said he is “still game” to hunt for MH370. Pair him with today’s most advanced AUV fleet and the result is irresistible.
The Model That Pays for Itself

A live, 24/7 documentary expedition — exactly like the Titanic specials that made history for NatGeo. Real-time ROV feeds, expert commentary, family interviews, drone shots, and daily updates. Multi-part series. Streaming specials. Sponsorships from tech partners who want to be seen advancing ocean exploration. Even without a find, the “we finished what governments wouldn’t” narrative sells. With a find, it becomes a global media event.
Why Malaysia Will Say Yes

The government has already approved searches in this exact corridor under low-risk “no-find, no-fee” terms. Sustained pressure from Voice370 families, fresh data, and a high-profile, camera-ready team makes this proposal impossible to ignore — especially when it costs Kuala Lumpur nothing upfront.
This is not another long-shot sweep of the Indian Ocean.

It is a surgically precise, two-zone campaign that completes an officially approved search area and tests the most promising new lead in years — all captured live for NatGeo’s global audience.
We already have the blueprint.

We already have the stars.

We already have the unfinished map.
The only question left is: are we ready to bring the world along for the final chapter?
Let’s make MH370 the next NatGeo ocean legend.
Ready to discuss.


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