The Guardian (USA)

BBC's Seven Worlds, One Planet shines spotlight on climate crisis

- Ben Quinn

A new BBC natural history series narrated by Sir David Attenborou­gh airing later this month will have a conservati­onist message about the impact of the climate crisis at its heart.

Seven Worlds, One Planet will show “where humankind is negatively and positively impacting the health of the planet”, the corporatio­n said on Monday as Attenborou­gh launched the new series at a premiere in London.

The programme also marks a departure from predecesso­rs in its expansive use of new drone filming techniques for a series that will capture new species and animal behaviours. Sequences include grave-robbing hamsters in Austria and polar bears using a never-before-seen hunting strategy to catch beluga whales in North America’s Hudson Bay.

Attenborou­gh – who attended the screening of the first episode at a Leicester Square cinema as activists from Extinction Rebellion began a planned two-week shutdown of parts of the city – said the programme “celebrates biodiversi­ty and the variety of life on our planet whilst also shining a spotlight on its challenges”.

“I’m thrilled that we’re about to share this incredible series with the world, which has been four years in the making by more than 1,500 dedicated people, on every continent,” the 93-year-old said.

The series, which will debut on Sunday 27 October on BBC One, will feature footage of animal habitats from each continent across seven episodes, starting with Antarctica.

Seven Worlds, One Planet has been purchased by broadcaste­rs in China, the US, Australia and across all of Latin America. The BBC aims for it to emulate the tally of Planet Earth II and Blue Planet II, both of which were sold to more than 235 territorie­s across the world.

Those involved are hoping that its conservati­onist message will resonate in a way that Blue Planet II’s story about the impact of plastic waste on the world’s oceans was credited with influencin­g public attitudes.

The screening was followed by a live satellite link-up with Mumbai’s Royal Opera House in India and South Africa’s Cradle of Humankind heritage site, which allowed 400 schoolchil­dren to watch the first episode.

The programme, which marks the first time the BBC’s Natural History Unit has explored every continent in a single series, is accompanie­d by the music of Hans Zimmer, who previously collaborat­ed with the unit on Planet Earth II and Blue Planet II.

The BBC director general, Tony Hall, who introduced the screening, said the series “embodies the qualities that have become synonymous with the work of our Natural History Unit in Bristol”.

“The team there are true pioneers – they have an insatiable curiosity to discover new things. And that sense of adventure is why we’ve already committed to a pipeline of natural history landmarks.

“Since Planet Earth II we’ve been doing one a year, and we’ll continue to do that running up to 2023.

“We’ve never had that scale of ambition before and no other broadcaste­r in the world comes close to that kind of commitment to the natural world.”

 ??  ?? Sir David Attenborou­gh at the world premiere of Seven Worlds, One Planet. Photograph: David Parry/PA
Sir David Attenborou­gh at the world premiere of Seven Worlds, One Planet. Photograph: David Parry/PA

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