This week you’ll see a lot of press like this:
Bear Grylls is back with a new one-hour special and the second season of MAN VS. WILD, airing Fridays at 9 PM (ET/PT) beginning November 9. Bear travels to the Himalayas for BEAR’S MISSION EVEREST, where this past spring he attempted to fulfill a dream to fly a powered paraglider higher than Everest …
They are expecting good ratings for Bear Grylls and Discovery Channel.
The controversy from last season — claims that some of his stunts were exaggerated or faked — will bring in more viewers.
Discovery Channel has promised to be completely transparent this season. (Film editors will not lead viewers to believe Bear is on a desert island when he is actually sleeping in a motel in Hawaii.)
Bear is the real thing. He climbed Everest at age-23. He’s a true survivalist. No question.
But his show is more about sensationalizing the outdoors. Not about informing the general public.
I can’t help cheering for the “other guy”. Survivorman — Les Stroud. I have a lot more respect for Les, a man who goes out for a week at a time, no cameraman or support crew.
My advice to hikers is to watch Survivorman instead.
To decide for yourself if Bear is a fraud, click PLAY or watch him on YouTube.
Looks to me Bear has a life jacket on under his shirt. But how many people have followed his example and tried to float down a river using only a pack as a raft? What happens when one of those people drowns?
How accountable are Grylls and Discovery Channel?
As for myself, I boycott Man vs. Wild. Getting TV ratings this way is too dangerous.






In October of 1999 best friends Alex Lowe and Conrad Anker were overcome by an avalanche in the Tibetan Himalaya. Conrad barely survived the avalanche and soon began to suffer form Survivor’s Guilt. In the months following the tragedy, Conrad and Alex’s widow, Jennifer tried to comfort each other and unexpectedly found love. Now their bond is tested as Alex’s three boys try to accept Conrad as a father.
Polish mountaineer Krzysztof Wielicki’s accomplishments place him among the world’s greatest mountaineers. In more than three decades of climbing, he has concentrated his efforts on difficult new routes and Himalayan winter climbs.