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“Bear Grylls (born 7 June 1974), is an English television presenter and adventurer. He was born Edward Michael Grylls, but legally changed his name to his secondary school nickname: Bear.
Personal life
Born and raised in Bembridge on the Isle of Wight, in addition to spending significant time around London<6> and his family's home in Winterborne Zelston in Dorset,he is the son of the late Conservative party politician Sir Michael Grylls and Lady Grylls, the former Sarah Ford. His maternal grandmother was Patricia Ford, an Ulster Unionist Party MP, and his mother's stepfather was the Conservative minister Sir Nigel Fisher. Grylls is also a great-great-grandson of the Conservative politician George Lyttelton, 4th Baron Lyttelton. He has one sibling, an elder sister, Lara.
Grylls was educated at Ludgrove School, Eton College, briefly the University of the West of England (UWE) in Bristol in 1993/4, and Birkbeck, University of London, where he graduated with a degree, obtained part-time, in Hispanic studies in 2002. He learned sailing from skilled seaman William James.<citation needed> He is also a second dan black belt in Shotokan karate. He can speak English, Spanish, and French. Grylls is a Christian, and described his faith in an interview with Channel 4 as being his 'backbone'.<citation needed>
Grylls has been married since 2000, and he and his wife, the former Shara Cannings Knight, have two sons, Jesse and Marmaduke Mickey Percy.
Career
Military
After leaving school, Grylls considered joining the Indian Army<14> and spent a few months hiking in the Himalayan mountains of Sikkim and West Bengal. However, he eventually joined the Territorial Army, and served for three years tasked as a Specialist Combat Survival Instructor and Patrol Medic<15> with the SAS Special Forces unit, 21 SAS Regiment (Artists Rifles). His military service ended in 1997 due to a parachuting accident suffered the previous year during a training exercise in Kenya. His canopy ripped at 16,000 feet (4500 m), partially opening, causing him to fall and land on his parachute pack on his back, which broke three vertebrae, and left him struggling to feel his legs. Grylls later said of the accident, "I should have cut the main parachute and gone to the reserve but thought there was time to resolve the problem". Grylls spent the next 18 months in rehabilitation at Headley Court and, with his military service over, directed his efforts into trying to get well enough to fulfill his childhood dream of climbing Mount Everest.
Grylls has since been awarded the honorary rank of Lieutenant Commander in the UK's Royal Naval Reserve.
Civilian
Grylls sometimes works as a professional motivational speaker and trainer for City Speakers International. Grylls entered television work with an appearance in an advertisement for Sure deodorant, featuring his ascent of Mount Everest, compared with what really made him sweat (giving a motivational talk to an audience). Grylls has been a guest on many television programmes, including Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, The Oprah Winfrey Show, Conan O'Brien, Jay Leno, Attack of the Show, David Letterman, and Jimmy Kimmel.
Grylls has hosted and produced four television series of his own, two of which are Escape to the Legion and Man vs. Wild. The final two are the first and second series of Born Survivor: Bear Grylls.
Charities
Grylls has a close relationship with several charitable organisations; many of his expeditions and stunts have raised large sums of money for them. Grylls is an ambassador for The Prince's Trust, an organisation which provides training, financial, and practical support to under-privileged young people in Britain. He is also vice president for The JoLt Trust, a small charity that takes disabled, disadvantaged, abused or neglected young people on challenging month-long expeditions.
Global Angels, a UK charity which seeks to aid needing children around the world, were the beneficiaries of his 2007 attempt to take a powered paraglider higher than Mount Everest. Grylls's attempt to hold the highest ever dinner party at 25,000 feet was in aid of The Duke of Edinburgh's Award Scheme, and launched the 50th anniversary of the Awards. His attempt to circumnavigate Britain on jet skis raised money for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. Grylls' Everest climb was in aid of SSAFA Forces Help, a British-based charitable organisation set up to help former, and serving members of the British Armed Forces, and their families and dependents. His 2003 Arctic expedition detailed in the book Facing the Frozen Ocean was in aid of The Prince's Trust. His 2005 attempt to paramotor over the Angel Falls was in aid of the charity Hope and Homes for Children.
Television
Escape to the Legion
Grylls filmed a four-part documentary in 2005, called Escape to the Legion, which followed Grylls and 11 other UK recruits in the French Foreign Legion, as they endured the month-long basic desert training in the Sahara. The show was broadcast in the UK on Channel 4,<20> and in the USA on the Military Channel.
In 2008, it was repeated in the UK on the History Channel
Born Survivor/Man vs. Wild
Main article: Man vs. Wild
Grylls hosts a documentary series titled Born Survivor: Bear Grylls for the British Channel 4, known in the U.S. on Discovery Channel as Man vs. Wild. This series is titled Ultimate Survival for Discovery Channel in Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Locations around the globe that Bear visits during Man vs. Wild.
Red – Season 1, Blue – 2, Green - 3.
The series features Grylls being dropped into some of the most inhospitable places on earth, and showing viewers how to survive. The second series premiered in the US on 15 June 2007, the third in Nov 2007, and the fourth in May 2008. Grylls is currently filming the fourth series.
Some of his stunts include climbing sheer cliffs, wading rapids, and even wrapping his urine-soaked t-shirt around his head to help stave off the desert heat.
Grylls has eaten snake (one made him sick), worm, scorpion, porcupine, camel, rabbit, lizards, raw fish (with the comment "I love sushi!"), sheep's eyeballs, goat's testicles (a Berber delicacy), a tree frog, spider, raw yak liver, and grubs. In one episode he cooked sheep meat on a string in a geothermal vent.
He has also rubbed snow on his body to dry off after jumping into an icy lake, squeezed both elephant dung and partially digested food from the stomach of a dead camel into his mouth for water, ripped raw chunks of meat off a dead zebra with his teeth, and drunk his own urine. Intermittently, Grylls also regales the viewer with tales of other adventurers stranded and/or killed in the wilderness.
Criticism
Following allegations that the show deceived viewers into believing that he was really stranded in the wild when he wasn't, Channel 4 temporarily suspended the show. Discovery aired re-edited episodes, designed to remove elements that were considered too planned, with a fresh voiceover, and has continued to broadcast the programme.
An adviser to the Man vs. Wild/Born Survivor series had claimed that Grylls had been staying at a California motel while filming. A crossing of a deep crevass was shown to be just yards from a busy highway. Similarly, it was alleged that Grylls had stayed at a crew base-camp in the Costa Rican jungle, while giving viewers the impression that he was alone. These allegations were confirmed by Channel 4, who argued that it wasn't a documentary, but a 'how-to' guide to survival, implying that 'faked' or re-shot scenes were acceptable in that context.
Books
Grylls' first book, titled Facing Up, went into the UK top 10 best-seller list, and was launched in the USA entitled The Kid Who Climbed Everest. Its subject is his expedition, at 23 years old, to climb to the summit of Mount Everest. The book details the climb, from his first reconnaissance climb on which he fell in a crevasse and was knocked unconscious, regaining consciousness to find himself swinging on the end of a rope, to the grueling ascent that took him over ninety days of extreme weather, sleep deprivation and almost running out of oxygen inside the death zone.
Grylls' second book Facing the Frozen Ocean was shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award 2004, it describes how, with a team of five men, he completed the first unassisted crossing of the frozen North Atlantic, Arctic Ocean in a rigid inflatable boat (RIB). He was awarded an Honorary commission in the Royal Navy, as a Lieutenant-Commander for this feat.
A book was also written to accompany the series Born Survivor: Bear Grylls. It was published under the same title as the television series, featuring survival skills learned from some of the world's most hostile places. This book reached the Sunday Times Top 10 best-seller list.
In April 2008, Grylls published an accompanying book to the Man vs. Wild Discovery television show. The book is filled with survival tips from the TV show.
Feats and Record attempts
Grylls has been involved in several solo, and team based feats, and attempts for charity or record breaking.
By land
Ama Dablam
Grylls first entered the record books in 1997 by being the youngest Briton to summit Ama Dablam in the Himalayas with his good friend Colm Keaveney<citation needed> , a peak famously described by Sir Edmund Hillary as "unclimbable".
Everest
Then in 1998, Grylls achieved a Guinness World Record as the youngest Briton, at 23, to summit Mount Everest. However, James Allen, an Australian/British climber who ascended Everest in 1995 with an Australian team, but who has dual citizenship, beat him to the summit at age 22. Since then, British climber Rhys Jones reached the summit on his 20th birthday in May 2006.
In an interview with David Letterman (June 2007), Letterman calls him "the youngest Briton to summit Everest" and Bear corrects him by saying another man, Michael Matthews, did it the following year but died on the way down, and, regardless of his death, it has become this man's record.
By sea
Circumnavigation of the UK
In 2000, Grylls, with his friend Neil Laughton, was among the first team to circumnavigate the UK on a personal watercraft or jet ski, to raise money for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI).
Crossing the North Atlantic
Three years later, he led a team of five British men on the first unassisted crossing of the north Atlantic Arctic Ocean, in an open rigid inflatable boat. The team battled giant waves, icebergs and storms.
By air
Paramotoring over Angel Falls
In 2005, Grylls led the first team ever to attempt to paramotor over the remote jungle plateau of the Angel Falls in Venezuela. The team was attempting to reach the highest, most remote high tepuis, made famous by Conan Doyle's Lost World.
Dinner party at altitude
In 2005, alongside balloonist and mountaineer David Hempleman-Adams and Lieutenant Commander Alan Veal, leader of the Royal Navy Freefall Parachute Display Team, Bear Grylls created a world record for the highest ever open-air formal dinner party, which they did under a hot air balloon at 25,000 feet, dressed in full Mess dress and oxygen masks. To train for the event, Bear made over 200 parachute jumps. This was in aid of the The Duke of Edinburgh's Award and The Prince's Trust
Paramotoring over the Himalayas
In 2007, Grylls claimed to have broken a new world record by flying a paramotor over the Himalayas, higher than Mount Everest (original claim, "over Mount Everest",<4> and after being challenged, "above Everest" on his website
His report of the flight described coping with temperatures of −60°C and dangerously low oxygen levels to reach 29,500 feet, almost 10,000 feet higher than the previous record of 20,019 feet.
The expedition raised over $2 million for children's charities worldwide including Global Angels. Grylls described the expedition, filmed for Discovery Channel worldwide as well as Channel 4 in the UK, as "the hairiest, most frightening thing" he had ever done.<32>
While Grylls initially claimed that the flight was over Everest itself, the permit was only to fly to the south of Everest, and he didn't approach Everest itself out of risk of violating Chinese airspace.
The pair took off from 14,500 feet, 8 miles south of the mountain. Grylls says he got within two miles of the famous peak during his ascent. From there, the mission website reports him “riding the wind into the record books”.
“There are various formalities and rules. You need a proper flight recorder trace, an FAI license, you’ve got to take off from flat ground – you can’t just take off from the side of a hill. You need to have a flight observer. If you don’t, it’s not a record” he added, “It’s the responsibility of anybody who does anything ground-breaking to prove what they have done.” He said that even if the instrument displays froze mid-flight, as Grylls wrote afterwards, it doesn’t mean they stopped recording. “It may well be they’ve got a trace.”.