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  • British explorer Bear Grylls is best known to TV audiences for Discovery's Man vs. Wild

  • known as Born Survivor: Bear Grylls in the UK.

  • The magic of TV makes Grylls look like the ultimate survivor, but the truth isn't quite

  • so clear-cut.

  • From his genuine scrapes with death to embarrassing leaks about his so-called survival shows,

  • this is the untold truth of Bear Grylls.

  • School bullies

  • Anyone who's seen his shows might be surprised to learn that Grylls was bullied in school.

  • The guy seems pretty tough now, but he wasn't always like that.

  • In response to the bullying he received at school, young Grylls decided to take up karate

  • along with a few of his friends.

  • Three years later he got his black belt and went to train in Japan as the youngest member

  • of the Karate Union of Great Britain.

  • Grylls described the experience in his book Mud, Sweat and Tears:

  • "Each night we slept on the floor in small wooden Japanese huts, and by day we learned

  • how to fightreal and hard.

  • The training was more exacting and demanding than anything I had previously encountered."

  • Military man

  • After leaving school, Grylls spent several months hiking the Indian Himalayas.

  • He told The Hindustan Times:

  • "I spent quite some time in India before I joined the army.

  • I went out there climbing, and up in West Bengal and all around Darjeeling.

  • We were in Calcutta for a while and then we were with the Indian Army as well."

  • Grylls even flirted with the idea of joining the Indian Army himself at the time, but ultimately

  • decided to enroll in the military at home in Great Britain.

  • Grylls joined the United Kingdom Special Forces Reserve in 1994 and served with 21 Regiment

  • Special Air Service, or SAS, for three years, receiving training in everything from desert

  • and winter warfare to evasive driving, climbing, and explosives.

  • Freefall

  • Grylls might have only been an SAS reserve, but that doesn't mean he got to skip out on

  • any of the dangerous stuff.

  • Grylls' second deployment to Africa ended in a terrible accident that almost claimed

  • his life.

  • He told The Guardian:

  • "In Africa, my parachute ripped at 17,000 [feet].

  • I blacked out, and on landing broke my back.

  • I spent the next 18 months in braces and plaster.

  • I was lucky to survive, let alone walk again."

  • A friend of Grylls who was with him at the time told The Guardian:

  • "I look back and think of him in the body brace after that horrific parachute fall,

  • and it's incredible that he survived it.

  • Then to look at what he has achieved since then, I'd never have thought it possible."

  • Top of the world

  • Breaking three vertebrae after a 17,000 foot fall would be enough to put most people off

  • heights for good, but Grylls didn't let it stop him.

  • Grylls lived his childhood dream to climb Everest when he scaled earth's highest mountain

  • in 1998, less than two years after his near-fatal Africa fall.

  • Everest is obviously no walk in the park, and Grylls almost met his end for a second

  • time when some loose ice left him hanging on for dear life.

  • "We were in the first stage of the Everest ascent when the ground gave way, leaving me

  • swinging on the end of this rope, clutching at these black and glassy walls."

  • Dinner party

  • In 2005, Grylls and fellow explorer Lieutenant Commander Alan Veal staged one of the weirdest

  • stunts of Grylls' career.

  • They broke the record for the world's highest dinner party when they flew a hot air balloon

  • to a height of 24,262 feet and climbed down to a dinner table suspended below the balloon,

  • braving temperatures of minus 50 degrees Celsius.

  • After enjoying a three-course meal together, the daredevil duo dedicated the venture to

  • Her Royal Majesty Queen Elizabeth and skydived back down to ground with full bellies.

  • Controversies

  • Grylls was the subject of controversy in 2008 when U.S. survival consultant Mark Wienert

  • started talking to the British media about his time working on Grylls' show Man vs. Wild,

  • claiming that the star was a fraud.

  • Wienert revealed that during one episode he personally assembled a Polynesian-style bamboo

  • raft off-camera only for Grylls to add the finishing touches and take the credit.

  • And after shooting on the episode concluded, Wienert claims the ex-military man left for

  • a motel.

  • And that wasn't the only time the show allegedly faked Grylls' whereabouts, according to the whistleblower.

  • Grylls apparently spent a few nights in a luxurious lodge during the filming of the

  • Sierra Nevada mountains episode.

  • Grylls responded to the claims by saying, "If people felt misled on how the first series

  • was represented, I'm really sorry for that...we film these things over six days and, after

  • filming the night stuff, we're back with a crew in a base camp lodge."

  • Adventure Dad

  • When your dad eats bugs and gets peed on for

  • a living, you're bound to have an interesting childhood.

  • That's definitely true for Bear Grylls' kids.

  • When they aren't staying on the houseboat they have moored on the banks of London's

  • River Thames, Grylls and his family live on a remote island off the coast of Wales.

  • In 2013, Grylls found himself in hot water with the local council after erecting a huge

  • metal slide that ended with a drop off a cliff face into the sea below.

  • Grylls defended his decision by saying:

  • "The slide is not for the paying public and therefore the health and safety is not for

  • other people.

  • It's for me and the kids and friends to use when we are there.

  • It has an element of danger to it, you do hit the water pretty hard.

  • But do you know what?

  • There are a lot more dangerous things around."

  • He came under criticism again in 2015 when he purposely stranded his 11-year-old son

  • on a rocky outcrop off the island to serve as a training aid for the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.

  • Survivor Games

  • Bear Grylls is hugely popular in the U.S. and his native U.K., but he also has a massive

  • following in an unlikely place: China.

  • Grylls' 2012 bestseller Mud, Sweat and Tears was voted the most influential book in China

  • the year it was released.

  • And in 2016, Grylls invited several Chinese celebrities to join him in the wild, including

  • former NBA star Yao Ming, Olympic swimmer Fu Yuanhui, and Robin Li, one of China's richest

  • tech moguls.

  • The show aired under the name Survivor Games and featured a premise similar to Mission

  • Survive, a UK series in which Grylls takes eight celebrities on a two week hike through

  • unforgiving terrain and eliminates them one by one.

  • Despite the country's love for Grylls, however, the Chinese version didn't go over well.

  • Viewers complained that the show was "tasteless" and "disgusting" after Grylls forced the contestants

  • to drink their own urine.

  • Disgusting?

  • Oh yeah.

  • But tasteless?

  • We'll have to trust Grylls on that.

  • "God there's no getting away from it."

  • "Pftttt!"

  • "That really is pretty horrible it's like warm.

  • And it's salty."

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British explorer Bear Grylls is best known to TV audiences for Discovery's Man vs. Wild

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