Coleman Domingo Skydive Stunt With Bear Grylls Hits 10,000 Feet
coleman domingo goes from red carpet promotion to a helicopter door in the season finale of Bear Grylls Is Running Wild. Tonight’s episode sends him and Bear Grylls over the Irish Sea for a skydive at 10,000 feet, with Domingo saying he had never jumped before.
“No, no, I’ve never jumped before,” he says in the helicopter. Grylls answers, “What could go wrong?” and Domingo fires back, “Man, let’s not go there.”
10,000 Feet Over the Irish Sea
At 10,000 feet, the pair prepare to jump after climbing in a helicopter above the Irish Sea. Domingo keeps the exchange light but tense, telling Grylls, “We’re high enough!” when he points out they are only halfway up, then adding, “Yes, I’m gonna love it.”
The descent turns into the payoff. Domingo is cheering and screaming on the way down, and he is all smiles as the parachute opens. That sequence gives the finale a cleaner hook than a standard celebrity sit-down: the audience gets a real stunt, not a promo reel.
Bear Grylls and Film Timing
Grylls said in an interview that stars go into the wild with him because “they want the experience of what the wild can give you.” He pointed to earlier episodes with Matthew McConaughey in Norway and MGK off the grid, and Domingo now joins that guest list with a jump that fits the show’s physical format.
The timing also lines up with Domingo’s new film, Disclosure Day, which is directed by Steven Spielberg and stars Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor, Colin Firth, and Wyatt Russell. Domingo said of the film, “I can tell you with my entire heart that it is one of the most hopeful films that anyone can see right now,” adding, “Essentially, it’s about Steven’s heart and his belief of what we could be if we invite the unknown in.”
Domingo’s Next Audience
The finale turns a publicity stop into a live-action test of image and nerve, and that is the point: viewers get a version of Domingo that promo interviews do not deliver. For anyone tracking Disclosure Day, the episode is the sharper attention grab, because it lands him in a 10,000-foot stunt one night before the film push continues.