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Skyscraper Live

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Starring
  
Nik Wallenda

Original language(s)
  
English

Production company(s)
  
Peacock Productions

Network
  
Discovery Channel

Language
  
English

Country of origin
  
United States

Location(s)
  
Chicago, US

First episode date
  
2 November 2014

Genre
  
Television special


Executive producer(s)
  
Peackcok Productions: Gretchen Eisele Colleen Halpin Benjamin Ringe Knute Walker Discovery Communications: Howard Swartz Wallenda Inc.: Shelley Ross David Simone Winston Simone (Wallenda) Nik Wallenda

Presented by
  
Natalie Morales, Willie Geist, Jim Cantore

Cast
  
Natalie Morales, Willie Geist, Jim Cantore

Similar
  
Skywire Live, Siberian Cut, Today, Dolphins ‑ Spy in the Pod, Dude - You're Screwed

Profiles

Skyscraper Live with Nik Wallenda is a Discovery Channel special that aired on November 2, 2014. The special was billed as a highwire walk by Nik Wallenda across the city of Chicago in the United States. Specifically, he walked wires between three skyscrapers "all of which are taller than the Washington Monument." On one of the walks, he was blindfolded; on the other the wire was at a 19 degree incline.

Contents

The event was broadcast live on the Discovery Channel in the United States and in over 220 countries around the world. Viewing figures for the special ranked it as one of the most live watched broadcasts on American television since 2010. An official mobile game, SkyBalance by Nik Wallenda, was also developed by Tapinator, Inc. to coincide with the event. Critical reaction to the event was largely positive.

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The act and telecast

Even Wallenda's training and preparation for this event received substantial attention.

Skyscraper Live Skyscraper Live with Nik Wallenda Programs Discovery Channel

In the special, highwire artist Nik Wallenda walked along a tightrope between three buildings in Chicago, without a tether or net to catch him if he fell. After completing the first walk, he undertook a second attempt while blindfolded. Wallenda completed the first walk in seven minute, and did the blindfolded walk in a little over a minute. The telecast was on a ten-second delay in case something went wrong with Wallenda's walk.

Skyscraper Live Watch Videos Skyscraper Live Discovery Channel

Nik Wallenda is a seventh generation member of The Flying Wallendas, and this event was billed as an homage to his great-grandfather.

Broadcast and ratings

Skyscraper Live Skyscraper Live with Nik Wallenda Sun Nov 2 76c YouTube

Skyscraper Live was broadcast live in over 200 countries worldwide. It was a ratings success in the United States, ranking as Discovery's most watched live telecast of the year. However, its viewership was less than for their previous Nik Wallenda special, Skywire Live, which delivered Discovery's highest-ever rating for a live broadcast in 2013. The show generated a lot of interest on social media. According to the Nielsen rankings, Skyscraper Live with Nik Wallenda became Discovery Channel's highest rated live telecast of 2014. It had an average of 5.82 million total viewers and the blindfold section of the challenge was watched by 6.72 million people. The show, as a whole, registered an average of 2.17 among 25- to 54-year-olds. The television ratings site TVbytheNumbers confirmed that, excluding last year's Skywire Live, Skyscraper Live was Discovery Channel's most watched telecast since 2010. The telecast also featured a teaser for the then-upcoming Discovery Channel special Eaten Alive.

Critical reception

Skyscraper Live SKYSCRAPER LIVE only on Discovery Channel YouTube

The reaction from critics to Wallenda's latest dangerous televised act was largely positive. Melissa Locker of TIME magazine described the stunts as "thrilling" and that "[Wallenda]'s years of experience don't make his stunts any less harrowing to watch".

Variety's Brian Lowry was less than complimentary about the presenters, writing "Willie Geist and Natalie Morales... merely seemed to prove that they will say any inane thing put in front of them on a teleprompter - over and over again". He also wrote that "it's difficult not to lament the notion of major news divisions thrusting so much effort and energy into fabricating events that could be funneled into more conventional reporting". But he was impressed by the visual aspect of the event, as "the vertigo-inducing aerial shots remain pretty dazzling, although not as impressive this time as they were amid the natural beauty of the Grand Canyon."

The Guardian described the "overhyped" stunt as an anachronistic form of “urban disruption” and “urban terrorism” even as it harkened back to the daredevil feats and fatal plunge of Karl Wallenda—Nik's great-grandfather and inspiration.

References

Skyscraper Live Wikipedia