
{
    "video": {
        "cuepoints": "", 
        "description": "<p>Eight legs and sticky webs might seem like an advantage in this fight. But will it be enough to keep this spider from becoming a meal for the wasp's ravenous young?</p>", 
        "is_us_only": "false", 
        "title": "World's Deadliest: Hairy Spider vs. Wasp", 
        "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/animals/bugs-animals/spiders-and-scorpions/deadliest-spider-vs-wasp/", 
        "country_code_deny_list": [], 
        "allowUserEmbed": "True", 
        "related": {
            "link": [
                {
                    "url": "http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/bugs/wasp/", 
                    "name": "Wasp Animal Profile"
                }
            ]
        }, 
        "credit": "National Geographic", 
        "smil": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/data/xml/deadliest-spider-vs-wasp.smil", 
        "country_code_allow_list": [], 
        "HTML5src": "/video/player/media-mp4/deadliest-spider-vs-wasp/mp4/variant-playlist.m3u8", 
        "still": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/exposure/core_media/ngphoto/image/63511_0_616x346.jpg", 
        "transcript": "<p>This wasp will do anything to feed her young.</p><p>Including taking on the baboon spider.</p><p>These spiders aren't small\u2014they can grow to the size of small birds.</p><p>And they can take care of themselves.</p><p>Eight hairy legs, a pair of sharp fangs, and a sticky shield make up the big arachnid's arsenal.</p><p>But the wasp is undeterred.</p><p>She has weapons of her own\u2014speed, flight and a deadly sting.</p><p>This spider is 3.5 ounces of pure eight-legged protein.</p><p>Protein the wasp needs to feed her young.</p><p>She invades the spider's burrow, charging right through its protective shield.</p><p>The spider has no choice but to retreat.</p><p>But he doesn't get far.</p><p>In seconds, the wasp paralyzes him, the venom from her sting putting him into a permanent coma.</p><p>It's a big feast...but it isn't for her.</p><p>The spider just became an incubator.</p><p>The mother wasp will lay a single egg in the spider's abdomen.</p><p>When it hatches, her larva will eat its immobilized host alive.</p><p>Big spiders nourish the female wasp larvae...small spiders sustain the males.</p><p>After a week of gorging on arachnid meat, the larva will pupate until the next summer...to become the next generation of spider hunters.</p>", 
        "id": "deadliest-spider-vs-wasp"
    }
}
