From multichannel:
Nat Geo Wild is hoping its "Big Cats" week-long programming stunt will deliver a loud ratings roar for the network.
Beginning Monday Dec. 6, the network will air seven consecutive nights of programming focusing on nature's fiercest felines as part of the wildlife network's first ever week-long programming stunt. "Big Cat Week," an extension of the National Geographic Society and Nat Geo Wild's long-term Big Cats Initiative to help save lions, tigers, cheetahs and other big cats around the world. The programming gambit will showcase both exclusive Nat Geo Wild shows, as well as content from sister network National Geographic Channel.
"For us at Wild, [Big Cats] represents the best that we can be - right now there are 20,000 lions left in the wild and about 3,000 cheetah," said Geoff Daniels, senior vice president of Nat Geo Wild and National Geographic Channel International.
"There are more tigers in captivity than there are in the wild ... in about 10 years if we do nothing at all to preserve their habitat and stop poaching, they could all be gone."
Along with the Big Cat week shows, Nat Geo Wild will also air a series of interstitials dubbed "Cause An Uproar" that highlights the plight of the world's large felines. The spots, which feature such celebrities as David Archuletta, Tamara Taylor, John Francis Daley and Casey Anderson, will run on Nat Geo Wild well beyond Big Cat week and into 2011, according to network officials.
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