Bear Grylls Fired

BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
65,771
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http://tv.yahoo.com/news/discovery-terminates-relationship-man-vs-wild-star-bear-160616521.html

Discovery Terminates Relationship With 'Man vs. Wild' Star Bear Grylls (Exclusive)

Discovery Channel has terminated its relationship with Bear Grylls, the British television personality and star of the network’s Man vs. Wild. The severing of the relationship, which began back in 2006 when Man vs. Wild launched on Discovery, comes after the network has allegedly been unable to get Grylls to participate in two unannounced projects he was contracted for, say sources. The sixth season of Man vs. Wild wrapped in August.

“Due to a continuing contractual dispute with Bear Grylls, Discovery has terminated all current productions with him,” a network spokesperson tells The Hollywood Reporter.

A representative for Grylls confirmed that the Man Vs. Wild star has parted ways with Discovery.

"Bear's goal has always been to make life-empowering shows for his many fans around the globe, and he has taken great risks to bring Discovery such award-winning programming over seven seasons," said Heather Krug in a statement to THR. "Unfortunately, Bear and Discovery have not been able to come to mutual agreement on new programming, and he disagrees with Discovery's decision to terminate current productions. Bear has loved the Man vs. Wild journey and looks forward to producing further cutting-edge content again soon for his loyal audience."

This is not the first time Discovery has had a disagreement with its talent. In 2010, the network sued Deadliest Catch Captains Jonathan and Andy Hillstrand for allegedly failing to complete work on the spinoff Hillstranded. The $3 million lawsuit prompted the Hillstrands and Captain Sig Hansen to quit, though a month later the dispute was settled, the suit was dropped and all three returned to work on the show.

Grylls, 37, has parlayed his fame as an extreme outdoorsman into an international media career. He’s written nearly a dozen books, many of them survival guides. His memoir Mud, Sweat and Tears – due to be published in the U.S. in May – already is a best-seller in England and Australia. He’s landed numerous endorsement deals including with Dockers and Degree deodorant. There's a Man vs. Wild video game, he has an iPhone app, and his clothing line is sold at REI and Walmart.

VIDEO: Jake Gyllenhaal Guests on 'Man Vs. Wild'

Grylls’ exploits on Man vs. Wild (which averaged 1.1 million viewers on Discovery last season) have earned him numerous celebrity admirers. Jake Gyllenhaal, Will Ferrell and Ben Stiller have tagged along on some of Grylls’ adventures. But the show, which also airs in the U.K. on Channel 4, was beset with early controversies when it was revealed that several of Grylls’ escapades of derring-do were enhanced or staged and that Grylls spent nights in motels while he was purportedly left alone to fend for himself on a deserted island.

In 2007, the show was briefly taken off the air in the U.K., and Discovery began airing it with a disclaimer allowing that Grylls was not in fact left alone to survive in the wild. In subsequent episodes, Grylls directly addresses the crew, and in the interest of transparency, each season featured a making-of episode.

But Grylls’ rugged public persona has increasingly belied his personal wealth. A former member of the British Army’s Special Air Service, Grylls lives with his family on a private island in Wales (where there is no electricity). He also has a home in Malibu and a house barge on the Thames. In a recent New York Times profile, Grylls says he only hired a publicist last year and maintains that he’s “still always the scruffiest person at any meeting.”

Grylls headlined an urban-disaster-preparedness show for Discovery called Worst Case Scenario, which bowed in 2010. He’s also done multiple specials for Discovery including 2007’s Bear’s Mission Everest, which had Grylls attempting to fly a powered paraglider higher than the famed mountain range.

The network had multiple additional projects in development with Grylls, though he was not part of Discovery’s upfront presentation to ad buyers in April in New York. Nevertheless he has been a marquee personality for the network domestically and internationally. In October, he addressed media buyers (via video message) at a Discovery Networks upfront presentation in South Africa.

ROFL! I always thought the show was stupid and faked...glad to see it gone.
 

BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
65,771
14,189
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Sounds like BoomerD is jealous that he isn't even half as cool as Bear :hmm:

That's in Schneidergal...I don't get paid big bucks to make fake "survival shows."
Dammit. (actually, I could make fake survival shows...just don't skimp on the 5-star hotel and restaurant at the end of the day...and don't even think about cutting my crew from 10 people to 5 to save a few bucks on production...:p
 

Red Storm

Lifer
Oct 2, 2005
14,233
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I don't care how fake it was, it was a fun show to watch unlike fellow faker Survivorman who spent all his time creating 'walking away' shots and complaining of foot fungus.
 

xBiffx

Diamond Member
Aug 22, 2011
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bear_grylls_16.jpg


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Damn I really loved that show. Oh well, got old episodes on Netflix still!
 

shortylickens

No Lifer
Jul 15, 2003
80,287
17,080
136
That's in Schneidergal...I don't get paid big bucks to make fake "survival shows."
Dammit. (actually, I could make fake survival shows...just don't skimp on the 5-star hotel and restaurant at the end of the day...and don't even think about cutting my crew from 10 people to 5 to save a few bucks on production...:p

Which is certainly cooler than getting paid small bucks to be "real".
Stop hating, you HATER!
 

FelixDeCat

Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
30,714
2,610
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He'll be back. And yes, I am jealous. He has looks, fame, money and most of all survival experience Ill probably never have. :)
 

CraigRT

Lifer
Jun 16, 2000
31,440
5
0
I definitely never watched this so I have no judgement at all. Half the stuff on Discovery sucks anymore.
 

Zedtom

Platinum Member
Nov 23, 2001
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He should just start a new show called "Undercover Inmate". They would throw him into some of the worst maximum security lockups in the country and see if he can survive a week without getting any help from his crew or the guards.

His military background would be a plus, his slender build and British accent would be a minus.
 

FelixDeCat

Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
30,714
2,610
126
He should just start a new show called "Undercover Inmate". They would throw him into some of the worst maximum security lockups in the country and see if he can survive a week without getting any help from his crew or the guards.

His military background would be a plus, his slender build and British accent would be a minus.

Unless someone has been in prison since 2001, everyone already knows who he is. And I would say that a slender build and British accent would make him popular at night. :biggrin:
 

Pocatello

Diamond Member
Oct 11, 1999
9,754
2
76
Of course it's fake, but I enjoy watching the show a lot. Most of the stunts done by the Bear in the show are dangerous and stupid.
 

amish

Diamond Member
Aug 20, 2004
4,295
6
81
I don't care how fake it was, it was a fun show to watch unlike fellow faker Survivorman who spent all his time creating 'walking away' shots and complaining of foot fungus.

les stroud was a fake? seriously?
 

M0oG0oGaiPan

Diamond Member
Dec 7, 2000
7,858
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digitalgamedeals.com
They need to do a show on backcountry snowboarding/skiing. Avalanches are no joke brah.
Even small avalanches are a serious danger to life, even with properly trained and equipped companions who avoid the avalanche. Between 55 and 65 percent of victims buried in the open are killed, and only 80 percent of the victims remaining on the surface survive.

Either that or they need to do another Motorcycle documentary like The Long Way Round.

Long Way Round (LWR) is a documentary television series, DVD set and book documenting the 19,000-mile (31,000 km) journey of Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman from London to New York on motorcycles. They travelled eastwards through Europe and Asia, flew to Alaska and continued by road from there to New York.

Trekking through the wilderness is kind of played out.
 
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randay

Lifer
May 30, 2006
11,018
216
106
It doesnt matter if you consider it "faked" or not. He still did all those things, which is all that matters really.
 

crownjules

Diamond Member
Jul 7, 2005
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He does do some gross stuff in the name of survival. Like when he eats the camel spider. I think he described biting into the abdomen as his "mouth filling with warm puss."
 

Zargon

Lifer
Nov 3, 2009
12,218
2
76
That's in Schneidergal...I don't get paid big bucks to make fake "survival shows."
Dammit. (actually, I could make fake survival shows...just don't skimp on the 5-star hotel and restaurant at the end of the day...and don't even think about cutting my crew from 10 people to 5 to save a few bucks on production...:p

the luxurys you get when you are an ex sas commando badass doing all this stuff with fused vertabrae
 

thegimp03

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2004
7,420
2
81
He does do some gross stuff in the name of survival. Like when he eats the camel spider. I think he described biting into the abdomen as his "mouth filling with warm puss."

That is nasty. At that point, I'd tell the camera crew to throw me a clif bar.