
{
    "video": {
        "cuepoints": "", 
        "description": "<p>When bringing down big game, never go it alone. Lionesses team up to hunt a lone zebra\u2014but cooperation disappears when the dinner bell rings.</p>", 
        "is_us_only": "false", 
        "title": "World's Deadliest: Lions vs. Zebra", 
        "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/animals/mammals-animals/cats/deadliest-lions-zebra/", 
        "country_code_deny_list": [], 
        "allowUserEmbed": "True", 
        "related": {
            "link": [
                {
                    "url": "http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/african-lion/", 
                    "name": "Lion Animal Profile"
                }
            ]
        }, 
        "credit": "National Geographic", 
        "smil": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/data/xml/deadliest-lions-zebra.smil", 
        "country_code_allow_list": [], 
        "HTML5src": "/video/player/media-mp4/deadliest-lions-zebra/mp4/variant-playlist.m3u8", 
        "still": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/exposure/core_media/ngphoto/image/58994_0_616x346.jpg", 
        "transcript": "<p>Lions have great vision. The brightest sunshine won't blind them. And in low light, they can see six times better than humans.</p><p>They can hear prey from a mile away.</p><p>And their sense of smell is so keen they can tell how recently the prey passed.</p><p>Lions will take on prey more than twice their size.</p><p>A full-grown zebra can weigh nearly half a ton. One kick from those hooves can break a lion's jaw.</p><p>Lions are sprinters, not marathoners.\u00a0 They can hit 35 miles an hour, but only for a few seconds.</p><p>So they team up, approaching their prey from different angles.</p><p>Zebras learn to keep their distance, but one zebra is about to violate the first rule of the safari: Always stay with the group.</p><p>The lion will go for the typical deathblow: Crushing the wind pipe, while the team keeps their prey from getting away.</p><p>Of all the world's cats, lions are the only social anima, especially at dinnertime.</p><p>After a kill is made, males always eat first, then the females.</p><p>What's left goes to the cubs.\u00a0 Often not enough.\u00a0 Most will not survive into adulthood.</p>", 
        "id": "deadliest-lions-zebra"
    }
}
