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New nature titles for Apple TV

Born to be Wild follows six rare young animals while Endangered Planet profiles critically endangered species.  

Apple TV+ has announced two new six-part nature documentary commissions, Born to be Wild and Endangered Planet.

Born to be Wild follows six rare young animals for several years, as they are brought up in our world, but destined to return to theirs, to rewild their homelands and help save their species.

Endangered Planet follows a team of world-class filmmakers and scientists as they venture off the beaten path, capturing groundbreaking, often first-time footage of the planet’s most elusive species using cutting-edge technology, uncovering insights about how to help save and protect these critically endangered animals.

Screening dates are yet to be announced.

“Born to be Wild”
“Born to be Wild” follows six extraordinary animals for several years, as they are brought up in our world, but destined to return to theirs. Each episode of “Born to be Wild” features a different young, endangered animal as they rewild their homelands in an attempt to help save their species and change the face of our planet. Using the latest camera and tracking technology, the pioneering series follows the amazing journey of a Savanna elephant calf, two young cheetahs, a ring-tailed lemur pup, a moon bear cub, Iberian lynx kits and orphaned African penguins, from birth, or their first few months of life, through to release and beyond, into the wild.

The series is executive produced by Lucy van Beek (“Wild Tales from the Farm,” Stephen Hawking’s “The Search for a New Earth,” “Britain from Above”) for Tailfeather Productions, and for Offspring Films by IDA Award nominee Alex Williamson (“Earth At Night In Colour,” “Earthsounds,” “Big Cats”) and Isla Robertson (“Earth At Night In Colour,” “Last of the Giants,” “Animals At Play”). “Born to be Wild” is co-produced by Tailfeather Productions and Offspring Films for Apple TV+.

“Endangered Planet”
One of the most ambitious wildlife series ever filmed, “Endangered Planet” explores our planet’s fragile ecosystems, uncovering insights about how to help save and protect the most precious endangered species. All of the elusive animals captured on film in “Endangered Planet” have one thing in common – there are fewer than one thousand of them left in the wild.

Each episode of “Endangered Planet” follows a team of world-class filmmakers and scientists as they venture off the beaten path, capturing groundbreaking, often first-time footage of the planet’s most charismatic species using cutting-edge technology. The rare species profiled include the Gobi bear, Malayan tiger, Javan rhino, Caucasian leopard, Cross River gorilla and the North Atlantic right whale.

From Offspring Films, “Endangered Planet” is executive produced by Alex Williamson and Isla Robertson.

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