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Justin Timberlake To Introduce ‘Summit On The Summit: Kilimanjaro’

Documentary airs Sunday at 9 p.m. on MTV. By Eric Ditzian Justin Timberlake Photo: Michael Buckner/ Getty Images Earlier this year, Jessica Biel, Emile Hirsch, Lupe Fiasco , Santigold and others banded together to climb to the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro to raise awareness about the global clean-water crisis. Now Justin Timberlake has pitched in to support the effort. The singer is set to provide a personal introduction to “Summit on the Summit: Kilimanjaro,” the 90-minute documentary about the celebrities’ climb that will air on MTV on March 14 at 9 p.m. ET/PT. Masterminded by Grammy-nominated musician Kenna, the team took a six-day, 50-mile trek to the peak of the tallest mountain in Africa. “It was a combination of the mental and the psychological aspects of the mountain, of the slow-but-steady pace that you had to go up it, and that sometimes made your brain just want to explode, because you just wanted to get there so badly,” Biel told MTV News Wednesday. “But then you’d get this rush of inspiration of ‘I’m not doing this for me. I’m doing this for something bigger than me, for people who don’t have a voice, for people that need water around the world,’ and then you’d power through.” In addition to raising awareness about the clean-water crisis, the “Summit on the Summit” raises funds for P&G’s Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program , United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and Water For People’s PlayPumps Technology . During the MTV broadcast, viewers will be able to text SEND to 90999 to donate $10 to the U.N. Foundation on behalf of “Summit on the Summit.” Each donation will send 1,000 liters of clean water to people in need. “MTV has a long history of educating its audience to raise awareness on issues that are important to them,” said Dave Sirulnick, Executive Vice President, News and Docs. “More than 1 billion people worldwide do not have access to safe, clean drinking water. By airing this documentary, MTV hopes to mobilize a new generation of young people who may not be aware of this global cause and take action to get involved in helping find solutions to the water crisis.” Don’t miss “Summit on the Summit: Kilimanjaro,” airing Sunday at 9 p.m. ET on MTV. Related Videos Check Out A Preview Of ‘Summit on the Summit: Kilimanjaro’ Related Artists Justin Timberlake Kenna

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Justin Timberlake To Introduce ‘Summit On The Summit: Kilimanjaro’

Jessica Biel, Kenna’s Treacherous Trek Featured In ‘Summit On The Summit’

MTV doc airing March 14 shows Emile Hirsch, Lupe Fiasco and others climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro for clean-water awareness. By Gil Kaufman Jessica Biel and company are shown the quality of drinking water used in parts of Africa Photo: MTV The dramatic journey to the summit of Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa, to raise awareness about the global clean-water crisis will be documented in an MTV special titled “Summit on the Summit: Kilimanjaro.” The 90-minute documentary, which will air at 9 p.m. ET on March 14, follows musicians Kenna, Santigold and Lupe Fiasco , actors Jessica Biel, Emile Hirsch and Isabel Lucas and a group of scientists and activists on their journey to the top of the highest peak in Africa as they learn about water issues and climb through snow, sleet, rain and treacherous terrain on their way to 19,340 feet. While the January climb was chronicled on SummitOnTheSummit.com through tweets, photos and video in real time, the documentary will provide never-before-seen footage and insight into the climb while spotlighting the urgency of water issues. “MTV has a long history of educating its audience to raise awareness on issues that are important to them,” Dave Sirulnick, MTV Multiplatform, News and Docs executive vice president, said in a statement. “More than 1 billion people worldwide do not have access to safe, clean drinking water. By airing this documentary, MTV hopes to mobilize a new generation of young people who may not be aware of this global cause to take action and get involved in helping find solutions to the water crisis.” Battling crippling altitude headaches, freezing temperatures, sore bodies and soaking wet clothes and boots, the group trekked their way up the mountain, pushing themselves and each other to make the summit. “When I was younger, my dad pointed out Kilimanjaro on a huge atlas. It stood in my mind as one of the wonders of the world,” said trip leader Kenna , who was determined to reach the summit on his second try. “This climb is dedicated to my father. As a child in Ethiopia, he lost his brother and lost his friends and family to water-borne diseases. A billion people in the world don’t have clean water. I had to do something about it. For me it’s personal. I could have been one of those kids. I needed to come up with something that would command attention. And the only thing I could think of that was that massive was climbing Kilimanjaro.” From a dramatic demonstration in a steamy Tanzanian village at the foot of the mountain, where the climbers watched first-hand as sludgy brown liquid was turned into drinkable water using the PUR water filtration system, to their bone-chilling final assault on the summit, the documentary traces the climbers’ dramatic path up the iconic mountain. In addition to raising awareness about water issues, the climb also raised funds for the Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), and Water for People’s PlayPumps Technology. “I know all of you want to be at the top of this mountain,” Kenna told the trekkers as they neared the summit and conditions got so treacherous that they were warned about their corneas possibly freezing. “But your safety comes first.” Reflecting on the journey, the Grammy-nominated musician said, “I think it’s honestly something more powerful than any of us could imagine.” Among the other participants on the climb are: Alexandra Cousteau (National Geographic Emerging Explorer and granddaughter of famed explorer and filmmaker Jacques-Yves Cousteau), Elizabeth Gore (executive director for Global Partnerships for the United Nations Foundation), Simon Isaacs (international development and water expert), award-winning photographers Michael Muller and Jimmy Chin, Kick Kennedy (environmental activist and granddaughter of Robert Kennedy), Bernise Ang (social entrepreneur and recipient of the YouthActionNet Award and Fellowship from the International Youth Foundation), Dr. Greg Allgood (director of the Children’s Safe Drinking Water Program at Procter & Gamble), mountaineering expert Melissa Arnot and renowned trainer Jason Walsh. Tune in to “Summit on the Summit: Kilimanjaro” on March 14 at 9 p.m. ET on MTV. Related Photos Summit On The Summit Crew Climbs Kilimanjaro Related Artists Kenna Lupe Fiasco Santigold

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Jessica Biel, Kenna’s Treacherous Trek Featured In ‘Summit On The Summit’

Kenna, Jessica Biel And Lupe Fiasco Gear Up For Kilimanjaro Climb

The trek, which also includes Emile Hirsch and Santigold, will be chronicled in a 90-minute documentary on MTV. By Gil Kaufman Lupe Fiasco Photo: MTV News By this time Thursday, rapper/philanthropist Kenna will be leading a group that includes actors Jessica Biel , Emile Hirsch and Isabel Lucas and musicians Lupe Fiasco and Santigold on the trip of a lifetime to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro.

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Kenna, Jessica Biel And Lupe Fiasco Gear Up For Kilimanjaro Climb

80’s Album Covers Recreated With Comic Book Heroes

Comic book artist Cliff Chiang recreates some classic 80's cover art using comic book superheroes. Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment

Bear Grylls Gives Himself An Enema

When you're on a raft in the Pacific and the only available drinking water contains bird droppings, this is what you do. **In case you're unfamiliar with the definition of “enema,” this is a gross video. (“Thanks” to Warming Glow .) Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment

US Coal Plants Dump Thousands of Gallons of Waste Into Drinking Water Supplies a Day

Why is anyone fighting to save these things again? A detailed report in the New York Times just revealed that hundreds of coal plants across the country are routinely dumping thousands of gallons of waste water into rivers and lakes–rivers and lakes that millions of people get their drinking water from. So here's why all that dumping is going on, in a nutshell–coal plants, as you well know, are extremely heavy polluters

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US Coal Plants Dump Thousands of Gallons of Waste Into Drinking Water Supplies a Day