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This feature originally aired on CNN’s Inside Africa, profiling Steve Benjamin and his work beneath the surface of Cape Town’s wild coastline. Steve Benjamin is focused on capturing moments most people will never witness in person — not for spectacle, but for meaning. This film explores the deeper purpose behind his underwater photography. It is not about trophies or dramatic encounters. It is about interpretation. The ocean is invisible to most of society, yet it shapes climate, food systems, and life itself. If people cannot see what exists beneath the surface, they cannot value it. Using Nauticam underwater housings and equipment, Steve works in one of the most technically demanding environments on earth. Saltwater and electronics are natural enemies. Precision-engineered housings, vacuum systems, optically corrected domes, and external strobes allow him to safely enter wild, high-energy situations such as bait balls — spaces where experience, composure, and movement directly influence how animals react. The film breaks down several of his images — from intimate encounters with Cape fur seals to vibrant reef scenes featuring red roman — and examines why they matter. These photographs have appeared on scientific magazine covers and conservation campaigns, not simply as art, but as visual evidence of thriving ecosystems worth protecting. For Steve, underwater photography is a form of translation. Images shape perception. Perception shapes public expectation. And public expectation ultimately shapes policy. This is a look at the craft, discipline, and responsibility behind telling the ocean’s story — as featured on CNN’s Inside Africa.