The “Green Planet” program, co-produced by the BBC with PBS and European stations, is to allow immersion in “an immersive world invisible to the naked eye”. As the creators announce, on the screens we will see unusual plant behavior, emotional stories and surprising characters. Thanks to the “Green Planet” we are to enter the realm of flora as deep as possible.
“Green Planet”. David Attenborough invites you to a new nature adventure
The first episode, which will be shown on January 9, by the BBC, will take us straight into the rain forest. We will look at rapidly growing trees or flowers that … imitate dead animals. There are five parts to the “Green Planet”. Sir David Attenborough, who will be the guide of the plant expedition, is naturally indispensable here. “Welcome to a world where life can last thousands of years. Where there is ingenuity unlike anything you’ve ever seen before,” says the indispensable narrator.
The “Green Planet” premiere was attended by the participants of the COP26 climate summit, which took place at the turn of October and November in Glasgow. – It is good that the program debuted at COP26 and I am glad that I could be there to see it with the audience. Over the years, plant life has been largely ignored when we talked about climate change. As viewers will find out after watching our series, the green ecosystem is the heart of all life on Earth, which is why it is so important that we face biodiversity and the climate crisis together, commented Attenborough.
– This program is a project born of Sir David’s great passion, twenty-six years after the BBC’s “Private Life of Plants”. For nearly seven decades, Attenborough has not only provided us with the facts, but also emotionally engages audiences around the world and inspires us to act and protect the natural world, ’emphasizes Charlotte Moore, BBC’s head of content.
It is worth noting that the “Green Planet” show at COP26 started with an animation showing the heartbeat on an electrocardiogram. The curve turned into a stalk which gradually died away. When viewers left the cinema hall, they had to confront an installation made of living plants. Before the screening began, it was plentiful and bustling with life; After the screening was over, the audience saw decaying and drying plants with the message: “Let us not let petrified forests be our future”.
Source: Gazeta

Tristin is an accomplished author and journalist, known for his in-depth and engaging writing on sports. He currently works as a writer at 247 News Agency, where he has established himself as a respected voice in the sports industry.