Leonardo DiCaprio and Adrian Grenier head for Planet Green with Tommy Lee and Ludacris!

votes
I Like It I Don't Like It

Discovery Networks is hoping to parlay the "green" living movement into greenbacks with Planet Green, a new cable network due June 4.

 

 

 

And the channel is using celebrities -- including rapper Ludacris, rocker Tommy Lee and "Entourage "star Adrian Grenier -- to soft-pedal its mission and win over casual "armchair environmentalists."

 

 

 

 

The target audience: college students, baby boomers and new parents who have demonstrated an interest in improving the planet by changing their ways of living.

 

 

 

 

"It used to be that green was granola and left," says Discovery Networks CEO David Zaslav. But with interest in environmentalism broadening beyond the hard-core planet-in-peril preachers, Discovery is eyeing a mainstream audience for its brand of advocacy.

 

 

 

 


 

"We're not going to be "The ice is melting,' " he says; the audience already gets that message. "We want to engage people in a fun way and in the spirit of what we can all do together."

 

 

 

Although other cable channels offer programming blocks, this is the first fully "green" channel. And in a rare move for a start-up, Planet Green plans a nearly all-original lineup of 14 personality-driven series this summer, three of which will air five days a week.

 

 

 

 

"The voices from Hollywood will help audiences find the network faster," says channel chief Eileen O'Neill. She says other experts will add a dose of credibility.

 

 

 

 

 

That means such shows as "Battleground Earth," which pits Ludacris against Tommy Lee -- neither of whom is known for his green thumb -- in a series of challenges such as solar-powered racing and bamboo home-building.

 

 

 

 

"That sounds a little out of my element as far as hard labor is concerned," says Ludacris, who says his main environmental contribution so far has been keeping lights turned off and "putting my computer on sleep." But, he says, "I'm willing to do what I need to do to educate America. There's little things I know about, but I feel like there are other things I can learn."

 

 

 

 

And Grenier, whose "Entourage "HBO alter-ego is a party-hearty movie star, will produce and appear in "The Green Life," which aims "to inspire on an emotional level" his own brand of environmentalism, including refurbishing a Spanish-style home with an ozonated pool and recycled shower water.

 

 

 

 

"We're attempting to avoid the more boring parts of what this show could be," he says. "We're not a bricks-and-mortar type show. The main focus is how to be creative when you're trying to do things you want to do anyway."

 

 

 

 

Told that Lee already has dubbed him "Luda the Polluta," Ludacris (aka Chris Bridges) came up with his own nickname for his soon-to-be nemesis (the show begins filming April 16): "Toxic Tommy."

 

 

 

 

"I was definitely not down to do another reality show, because we have too many of those, and they're stupid," Lee says. "But we're doing something for our kids. (Environmentalism) is a serious sort of subject, but you got to make it fun or you freak people out."

 

 

 

 

 

Planet Green replaces Discovery Home, an unsuccessful spinoff channel, and will be available in 50 million of the nation's 110 million TV homes June 4. It's part of the company's retooling that also has transformed Discovery Times into Investigation Discovery, and next year turns Discovery Health into the Oprah Winfrey Network.

 

 

 

 

In 10-year-old Discovery Home, "they've got a network on their hands that clearly is not working," says SNL Kagan analyst Derek Baine. "If they don't do something to get the image up and deliver viewers, they are in danger of having operators drop the channel (or) move it to a higher (digital) tier."

 

 

 

 

 

Other Planet Green shows run a wide gamut, from home improvement to cooking to celebrities:

 

 

"Greensburg" produced by Leonardo DiCaprio, which chronicles the rebuilding and "greening" of a Kansas town (that's really its name) leveled by a tornado last May.

 

 

"Emeril Green," an organic foods show starring Emeril Lagasse and shot in a Whole Foods Market.

 

 

 

"Renovation Nation," a green-focused home-refurbishing show hosted by Steve Thomas ("This Old House").

 

 

"Supper Club," a dining discussion with chefs and celebrities. Tom Bergeron ("Dancing With the Stars") hosts.

 

 

 

"Wasted," a contest adapted from a New Zealand format that offers cash to homeowners who cut out their "eco-horrors."

 

 

 

"Hollywood Green," celebrity infotainment series, produced by "Access Hollywood", with an eco-friendly twist.

lainiek 594 lainiek Published 4/6/08   Message Add to Friends
 

Add Your Comment

Your email address (will not be published, but is required):

Your comment:

No links or abusive language please!

Add Comment

Comments (2)

 
Join! Got something to say? Express yourself as part of the web's hottest new pop-culture community.
People are talking…
Get in on the Action

Chat Now…