Remote Survival

Remote Survival is an American television reality competition series produced by Eyeworks USA Productions that premiered on the National Geographic Channel on January 11, 2015. The series is executive produced by DJ Nurre, and Vince DiPersio.[1]

Remote Survival
GenreReality competition
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes4
Production
Executive producersDJ Nurre
Vince Dipersio
Running time60 minutes
Production companyEyeworks USA
Release
Original networkNational Geographic Channel
Picture format
Original releaseJanuary 11, 2015 (2015-01-11) 
present
External links
Website

Series overview

Four episodes document the survivalists' experiences while being guided by the experts, Hodges and Coker. Two of the episodes take place in the coastal rainforest of Washington State, the other two are set in the desert regions of Southern Utah.

Cast

Guides

  • Cliff Hodges
  • Alex Coker

Survivors

Each episode features two new 'Remote Survivors', or contestants. One is guided by Cliff Hodges, the other by Alex Coker. Contestants must follow the experts' instruction to travel from a drop point to an extraction point of a period of several days (exact length unspecified) while performing various survival skills along the way. Contestants have the option to be evacuated at any time by using an emergency GPS transponder located on their shoulder strap.

Contestant Season:Episode Location Guide Result
Paul Archer 1:1 Deserts of Utah Cliff Hodges Evacuated - Did not finish
Andrew Milich Alex Coker Course Completed Successfully
Anthony Trucks 1:2 Pacific Northwest Cliff Hodges Course Completed Successfully
Sarah Tiefenthaler Alex Coker Course Completed Successfully
Jason Back 1:3 Deserts of Utah Cliff Hodges Course Completed Successfully
Colby Raines Alex Coker Evacuated - Did not finish
Matthew Farides 1:4 Pacific Northwest Cliff Hodges Course Completed Successfully
Michael Barden Alex Coker Course Completed Successfully

References

  1. "Remote Survival - Series Overview - NatGeo Channel". NatGeo. Retrieved 13 January 2015.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.