in their film "my village, my lobster," filmmakers josh wolff and brad allgood capture the e untold story of lobster tails. >> "my village, my lobster" is a one-hour documentary about indigenonous miskito lobsbster diversrs along nicaragua's miskito coast, who risk their lives diving for the region's most lucrative resource, the caribbean spiny lobster. commercial lobster diving in nicaragua and honduras is one of the most dangerous jobs in the w world. they dive to depths that are unsafe, they do not follow safe d diving practices, and the gear that they use does not allow them to--to dive safely. >> commercial fishining for caribibbean spiny lobststeri a multimillion-dollllar industr. half of the lobster caught in central america, worth about $28 million annnnually, comes from fishermenen in one couountry--nicacaragua. >> along nicaragagua'ss caribbean coastst, lobster divig is ththe largesest industry, so there's a financicial incentive for them to dive for lobster. right now, lobster divers are making somewhere between $2.50 to $3.50 per pound of lobster tail that they catch. and ther