The Citizen (Gauteng)

Out of this world

MARS: SECOND SEASON OF HYBRID ENTERTAINM­ENT

- Adriaan Roets

We’re in outer space, now what?

It was two years ago that the world got addicted to a new concept on the National Geographic Channel, Mars. The hybrid show tells a fictional story about the first Mars colonisers years from now, with the other half done in documentar­y format where experts talk about space travel and the future of humanity on Mars.

After two years, the continuati­on of the story is finally here – and it’s unmissable. The good news is, Mars will also be available to stream on Cell C’s Black.

The latest season picks up five years after the conclusion of the first. It’s now 2042 and IMSF has establishe­d a fully fledged colony, Olympus Town, but they cannot finance the Mars expedition alone.

Human greed and a new world of challenges on the Red Planet merge.

On the scripted front, the series is standard entertainm­ent – pregnancy, break ups, new romances, epidemics, breakdowns, power outages and creating a new world.

On the documentar­y front, present-day vignettes draw parallels to the future happenings on Mars by looking at some of the dire issues facing Earth’s last frontier – the Arctic.

This includes a spectrum of events that currently are compromisi­ng life on Earth like drilling, glacial melting, rising sea levels and indigenous health epidem- ics which surface when the permafrost melts.

Some returning big thinkers, as well as new guests are tasked with explaining the future without it being dire.

The speakers include Elon Musk (SpaceX CEO), Ellen Stofan (former Nasa chief), Michio Kaku (theoretica­l physicist and futurist), Casey Dreier (director of space policy at the Planetary Society), Antonia Juhasz (leading oil and energy expert) and Naomi Klein, the best-selling author of No Logo and an activist and award-winning journalist on climate change. Klein is tasked to discuss corporate greed and how Mars will look if capitalism gets involved – and how that society will mirror the current world with many of the same social issues ills. “The series underscore­s how human nature doesn’t change when we become Martians, but navigating how we harness our instincts, emotions and behaviours on Mars is uncharted territory,” says Justin Wilkes, co-creator and executive producer of Mars. Mars returns on Sunday on National Geographic on DStv and Cell C Black.

 ??  ?? LIFE OUT THERE. Paris Sabeti, biologist, geneticist and professor at Harvard University is one of the thinkers discussing humanity’s future on Mars.
LIFE OUT THERE. Paris Sabeti, biologist, geneticist and professor at Harvard University is one of the thinkers discussing humanity’s future on Mars.
 ??  ?? OUT OF THIS WORLD THINKER. Elon Musk, CEO, SpaceX.
OUT OF THIS WORLD THINKER. Elon Musk, CEO, SpaceX.
 ?? Pictures: National Geographic ?? IN THE MIDDLE. In Season two of Mars, the mission to colonise Mars becomes a battle between science and self-interest.
Pictures: National Geographic IN THE MIDDLE. In Season two of Mars, the mission to colonise Mars becomes a battle between science and self-interest.
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