窪蹋勛圖厙

bear grylls
(Photo: Art Streiber)
bear grylls
Bear Grylls poses in an artificial fall setting. (Art Streiber)

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Gone With the Wind

Last spring, Bear Grylls walked away from one of the sweetest gigs in the adventure world. Was it career suicide? Or a savvy move by a born survivor?

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ONE! TWO! THREE! And with that, Bear Grylls, Saddleback Church pastor , and one unlucky volunteer from the congregation all toss back a handful of worms and maggots. The crowd of some 5,000 inside this Orange County megachurch groans and cheers, followed by an awful moment filled with the miked-up sounds of chewing and swallowing. Then Warrenevangelical icon, best-selling author, and the minister who delivered the invocation at President Obamas inaugurationdigs into the squirming glass bowl for seconds. The place erupts. 楚楚楚兜兜兜!

Welcome to Bear Grylls, live on stage.

Its early May, and Grylls, 38, star of , is six days into a PR blitz to promote the U.S. release of his autobiography (and 11th book), Todays performance, a version of an act he debuted in 2011, follows a simple formula: Grylls makes a dramatic entrance bylook up there!rappelling down from the ceiling. He plays some Man vs. Wild clips. He chats with a cohost about his life of adventure. He gets audience members to eat bugs. Its hardly as thrilling as watching him brave natures cruelest punishments on TV, but for Grylls fans its crack. In the past year, hes sold out 17 shows in the U.K., Australia, and Norway. Here at Saddlebackwhere, at the invitation of Warren, hes performing free of chargechurchgoers vigorously applaud every Man vs. Wild video. They hush in reverence when he discusses his faith. (You dont meet too many atheists in the Death Zone on Everest.) They guffaw at his punch lines. (I thought, Typical, its the best-hung goat in the hemisphere!)

Indeed, last spring it seemed that everything was going right for Bear Grylls. Mud, Sweat and Tears had already become a bestseller in Australia and the U.K. His signature collection of survival products for Gerber, including the $62 Ultimate Knife, which has sold a million units since 2010, was adding 12 new tools. His with British brand Craghoppers was also expanding. Hed recently become the face of a Dockers ad campaign and had starred in a high-profile TV commercial for Degree deodorant. (Sweat is like tasty gravy to a hungry wolf, Grylls deadpans.) In the days surrounding the Saddleback appearance, he taught Al Roker how to light a fire, gave stranded-mom survival tips to Rachael Ray, and shot arrows for Jay Leno.

There was just one thing missing: Bear Grylls no longer had a TV show.

Let's get lashed! says Grylls as we roll north through L.A. traffic toward his hotel in Beverly Hills. Its about half an hour since he took his bows at Saddleback, and were sitting in the backseat of a red Kia SUV driven by Delbert Shoopman, who manages social media and licensing for Bear Grylls Ventures USA, the company Grylls launched this year to nurture his growing commercial empire. Riding shotgun is publicist Heather Krug, who Grylls will soon name CEO. The two of them chuckle and roll their eyes at their boss. They know we will not be getting drunk; the man is a Boy Scout, figuratively and literally. (He was appointed the U.K.s chief scout in 2009.) He just likes to say that hes going to get lashed.

Everyone can read behind the headlines that Discovery was pissed, Grylls says of the highly-publicized breakup. They're not used to someone calling it a day.

He also likes to say how much he loves just about everything.

On being best known for drinking his own pee: I love 勳喧!

On his oft repeated motto If you risk nothing, you gain nothing: I love 喧堯硃喧!

On the parallels between survival and everyday life challenges: I love 喧堯硃喧!

On his new Gerber line: Its all that Batman kind of product space that I love!

Grylls expresses these loves, plus probably a dozen more, during the hour-plus were stuck in traffic. This is the same unfettered exuberance that fuels everything he does. When he first started filming Man vs. Wild in 2006, Grylls thought hed have to contain himself. Then, during a flight between shoots, he watched an episode of The Crocodile Hunter. I learned one critical lesson from Steve Irwin, he says of the late host, which is that people love 梗紳喧堯喝莽勳硃莽鳥.

Today, Grylls is especially enthusiastic about all the incredible offers coming in now that Ive got free from Discovery. (More on that in a bit.) He tells me hes in discussions with a number of networks and that hes confident hell be filming again soon. He wont share specifics, but he isnt looking for a Man vs. Wild II.

The whole of Man vs. Wild has been me in that same zone, because were showing what to do when your life really is on the line, Grylls says as we crawl north along the 405. Its like if my kids were in trouble, Id instantly go into a very serious place. Id push you to the sidehe slams his open palm into my chestand Id be in that zone. But life isnt like that. Were not always in danger. And when Im not in danger, I love messing around. When they say Cut! Im like, Ah, I really need to break wind. I cant break wind on the show, because people will get upset.

bear grylls
Grylls endured all sorts of punishment for this photo shoot. (Art Streiber)

What Grylls has in mind is something more like the two specials he produced for the U.K.s Channel 4 last winter. , they had him taking cheeky talk-show host Jonathan Ross and comedian Miranda Hart on short, relatively mild adventures that placed the two massively popular British TV personalities in comically uncomfortable outdoor situations.

I sold it as This is me taking them on a boys adventure, says Grylls. We totally had fun. I am breaking wind on those shows. Were making fondue. Weve got tents and all the supplies. Were making fires without having to rub sticks!

Both specials got huge ratings. Grylls credits their success in part to the fact that Wild Weekends was nothing like Man vs. Wild, but he says he never could have pulled them off if he hadnt already established his credibility.

Those shows were so popular because viewers had seen me bust my balls for seven seasons of Man vs. Wild, he says. So when they see me with a box of chocolate and a hunk of cheese in an ice cave, they understand. I want the new programming I do to be in that zone.

Did Discovery fire Bear Grylls? Er, well, sort of. Maybe. In May, Grylls told me that the dispute began when the network brought him a couple of ideas for new programming. They werent right, so I said no, he told me. The disagreement got tense, but Grylls held his ground. That pretty much matches what Discovery sources told the Hollywood Reporter in March, saying it terminated all current productions with him because he was unwilling to participate in new projects.

What neither side mentioned is that Man vs. Wilds ratings had recently taken a dive. According to Nielsen, the last season averaged 792,000 viewers per episode, down from 1.3 million in season six and one million in season five. Last fall it came in 15th place among Discoverys key series, four slots behind the husband-and-wife survival show Man, Woman, Wild. Chances are, Discovery was pushing Grylls to consider spin-offs that were cheaper to produce. And the network was undoubtedly miffed when Grylls, still a defining personality for the network, balked at its suggestions. Everyone can read behind the headlines that Discovery was pissed, he told me. Theyre not used to someone calling it a day. (Discovery declined to comment.)

Movking his Man vs. Wild character doesn't present a conflict for Grylls: There is a parody moment. I don't mind that.

Grylls is certain to get another show. Somebody will pick him up, says Rob Moynihan, L.A. correspondent for TV Guide. It could be hes more of a host and not out in the wild, but hes definitely a talent that people want to land. He might even cook up something new with Discovery, a possibility he mentions several times. No one in entertainment matches his blend of charisma, fan base, and adventure showmanship. At a pre-Olympics gala at Londons Royal Albert Hall in May, where he was introduced as an ambassador to the Games, Grylls rappelled in from the roof, nearly landing on Prince Williams head. In June, he carried the Olympic torch across the River Tyneon a zip line.

Grylls also has a knack for simple entertainment. During guest appearances on talk shows, his go-to gimmick is to start a fire using a flint, his Ultimate Knife, and cotton balls. Hohum. But then he stamps it out with his bare hand, wowing the audience. He likes showing how to filter water withcue the icksthe sock off his foot. In April, when he was invited to throw out the first pitch at a Dodgers game, he set the ball aflame with fire paste. Video clips of the stunt bounced around the Web.

Reducing survival skills to cheap parlor tricks might mock his Man vs. Wild character, but that doesnt present a conflict for Grylls. There is a parody moment, he concedes. I dont mind that. Ive always been able to laugh at myself.

Thats good for Grylls, but you wonder: Is laughter really what his fans want from him?

One of the things we loved about Man vs. Wild was turning up in all these countries and tearing up these immaculate executive helicopters, Grylls tells me. The car ride has ended, and were all sitting outside his hotel at a large table, along with Jamie Haith, cohost of his live shows. Ripping the doors off, blood on the white leather, animal carcasses, and then just leave in a flurry: Weve been to town!

Which brings us to another Grylls love: I love pranking around!

Several minutes after he tells me this, he pretends to fart on my digital recorder. (Its been a total privilege speaking to you, 窪蹋勛圖厙 鳥硃眶硃堝勳紳梗pffft!) On a recent flight across the U.S., Grylls spotted a passenger asleep in front of an episode of Man vs. Wild, so he got Shoopman to film him standing next to the guy, narrating: Look, hes watching! See how hes enjoying it?

In March, during the intermission of one of his live shows in Norway, Grylls got an idea for another gag. They had all the tutus and costumes backstage, Grylls says. And I said, Why dont I dress up in a pink tutu and a wig? So I come on in this absolutely monster wig and this gown, and I thought everyone would love it.

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Grylls at a live show in Sydney. (Don Arnold/Getty)

They didnt. You could have heard a pin drop, says Grylls, shaking his head. Afterward, he realized it was because the audience didnt know that side of him. They know just the hero, he says. And you dont want your hero to take the piss out of himself.

Therein lies Grylls big challenge. Its one thing to perform tricks and deliver punch lines on talk shows; its quite another to develop a series that gets the fans of hard-charging survivalist Bear Grylls to stick around for an hour of light entertainment.

And while Grylls is still hugely popular, hes not immune to failure. In 2010, he created a second series with Discovery, called Worst Case Scenario, that presented him with urban survival problems: trapped in a burning car, attacked by dogs, stuck inside a falling elevator. Produced around L.A., it lacked the authentic-feeling scenarios of Man vs. Wild and lasted just one season. You cant be serious if people know its not real, Grylls says. And, of course, it wasnt real.

Theres also the risk of overexposure. On top of the Gerber tools and Craghoppers apparel, hes launching a line of binoculars and GPS gadgets with Bushnell, as well as a stand-up paddleboard with SUP maker Coreban. He has already released a video game and two iPhone apps. Grylls himself can get a little overexcited about all of this. In May, he blogged about a totally wild Bear Grylls movie in development. Several weeks later, he announced to his Twitter followers, Bear Grylls Survival Academy Coming Soon!

Oh Bear, Krug responded when I emailed her about the academy. Nothing to report yet. Just an inkling of an idea.

Two days after the Saddleback performance, I join Grylls and his team at the Leno taping. The plan is for Grylls to do the usual sit-down schmooze about his new book, then pick up a bow and arrow and shoot at a spinning target with sections marked Nuts, Berries, and Maggots. Whatever Grylls hits, he has to eat.

Do you have control of that? a worried-looking producer asks him during rehearsal.

I have total control, Grylls replies with mock confidence.

Ten minutes later, hes anxiously pacing the greenroom, recalling his days as a paratrooper in the British special forces. Its like sitting with the lads on the tail of a C-130, he says. You just cant wait to get on the ground.

The taping goes flawlessly. Gabbing with Leno, Grylls delivers a pitch-perfect joke about passing gas in front of Queen Elizabeth during a Boy Scouts event. Picking up the bow and arrow, he hits the berries first (audience: B倏倏倏倏!), thenthwackdead center on maggots (audience: 唻楚楚插晨晨晨!). He downs a spoonful of live grubs(audience: E楚楚楚兜兜兜!)and its over.

窪蹋勛圖厙 the studio, he gives me a hearty hug goodbye, then turns to his posse and smiles. Lets get lashed!