Home > Other Fun Stuff > Advocacy & Industry News

Outside TV, Ant Hill Films brings behind the scenes of UnReal MTB film to television

1 Comment
Support us! Bikerumor may earn a small commission from affiliate links in this article. Learn More

PRESS RELEASE: OUTSIDE TV, America’s preeminent active and adventure television network, in conjunction with Teton GravityResearch (TGR) and Anthill Films, announce the premiere of a new TV series titled, UnReal. The series is a behind the scenes look at the progressive mountain bike film UnReal, released in 2015. Each of the eight episodes will give viewers an in-depth look at the production of the film, the athletes involved and the next-level stunts accomplished.

UnReal airs Fridays at 9pm ET on Outside Television beginning this Friday, March 4th. The first episode will showcase some of the world’s best pro mountain bikers as they charge down a ridge alongside a herd of over 30 horses.

A handful of notable segments to be highlighted in the Outside TV series were recently shared in viral form across the internet. The first was Tom van Steenbergen’s front-flip, potentially breaking a world record. Second: the Dirt Blizzard segment, where Vancouver’s peat supplies went scarce to transform Whistler’s bike park into a real-life dream of loamy, freshly-fallen soil. And most memorable is Brandon Semenuk’s “One Shot” segment, which features four minutes of remarkably crisp, uncut footage on a private track, captured using a $750,000 gimbal-stabilized camera system, known as the GSS 520.[T2]

For viewing, check your local listings or visit TK OutsideTelevision.com. To view the UnReal trailer, visit Outside Television’s YouTube Channel, and to follow the journey, check out OUTSIDE TV’s website. Check the television preview below…

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
King County
King County
8 years ago

I wish my cable provider, Time Warner, had Outside TV, (and asked them to get it). I know there are ways to get the internet on televisions and all that, but I am not high-tech and am lazy. I will catch every bike episode online. Those clips were pretty good. I’d trade 90% of my other channels for Outside TV.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.

Subscribe Now

Sign up to receive BikeRumor content direct to your inbox.