
{
    "video": {
        "cuepoints": "", 
        "description": "<p>It's one of nature's weirdest journeys. A newborn kangaroo\u2014barely bigger than a jelly bean\u2014must crawl from one of its mother's two uteri and climb up her body to reach the safety of her pouch!</p>", 
        "is_us_only": "false", 
        "title": "World's Weirdest: Kangaroo Birth", 
        "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/animals/mammals-animals/kangaroos-koalas-more/weirdest-kangaroo/", 
        "country_code_deny_list": [], 
        "allowUserEmbed": "True", 
        "related": {
            "link": [
                {
                    "url": "http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/gray-kangaroo/", 
                    "name": "Gray Kangaroo Profile"
                }
            ]
        }, 
        "credit": "National Geographic", 
        "smil": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/data/xml/weirdest-kangaroo.smil", 
        "country_code_allow_list": [], 
        "HTML5src": "/video/player/media-mp4/weirdest-kangaroo/mp4/variant-playlist.m3u8", 
        "still": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/exposure/core_media/ngphoto/image/59866_0_616x346.jpg", 
        "transcript": "<p>Gray kangaroos like to keep their young close by.\u00a0 Very close.</p><p>A baby roo will call its mother's pouch home for almost a year.</p><p>But how it gets there in the first place, is a strange and harrowing journey.</p><p>At one month old, the baby roo, barely more than the size of a jellybean, emerges from one of its mother's two uteri.</p><p>Once it's outside her body, it grips her fur, and though it still hasn't developed eyes, it instinctively relies on its forelegs to crawl up towards her pouch.</p><p>It takes a few minutes for the tiny roo to reach the pouch.</p><p>That's it, there.</p><p>Within minutes, it reaches her pouch and latches on to its mother's teat.</p><p>That's enough travel to suit the young roo for a long while.</p><p>Over the next few months it grows inside the pouch.</p><p>Even once it ventures outside, it's still not ready for cross-country trekking.</p><p>For nine more months, this joey will rely on its mother's pouch for shelter, transportation and protection...if it senses danger.</p><p>Even after it leaves the pouch, it stays by its mother's side, nursing for an additional one to six months.</p><p>The pouch, though, is now off limits-its mother will already be carrying her next baby.</p><p>From now on, the joey will have to travel on its own two feet.</p><p>But kangaroos aren't the weirdest mothers in Australia.</p>", 
        "id": "weirdest-kangaroo"
    }
}
