This Week in News: Alex Honnold Will Free Solo a Skyscraper and the Low-Tech Tool You Need in Your Kit from Outside magazine Maddy Dapcevich

This Week in News: Alex Honnold Will Free Solo a Skyscraper and the Low-Tech Tool You Need in Your Kit

We interrupt this eventful October to deliver an unexpected news story that appears to have been created in a laboratory specifically for Outside readers. Alex Honnold announced plans to live-stream his next free solo feat, and a small, low-tech piece of gear rescued a hiker. Outside has you covered in this edition of our weekly news roundup.

Honnold will climb Taipei 101 in 2026 (Photo: Netflix)

Alex Honnold Will Free Solo a Skyscraper in 2026 for a Live Netflix Special

Alex Honnold—yes, Mr. Free Solo himself—will star in a two-hour live TV show on Netflix in 2026, during which he will scale the tallest skyscraper in Taiwan (gulp) without any safety ropes.

In the release, Brandon Riegg, the vice president of nonfiction series and sports at Netflix, called the whole thing an “adrenaline-inducing spectacle that you can’t look away from.”

Jane Goodall is credited with pioneering primate research
Jane Goodall is credited with pioneering primate research (Photo: HYECTOR RETAMAL/Staff)

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Remembering an Icon: The Outside Community Reacts to Jane Goodall’s Death

English zoologist and primatologist Jane Goodall has died at the age of 91. Challenging the boundaries of societal and emotional animal capabilities, Goodall is credited with changing our perception of how chimpanzees love, live, and interact with one another in the wild.

Goodall died on October 1 in California of natural causes, wrote the Jane Goodall Institute. Her death marks the culmination of a lifetime of activism.

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Whistles are cheap, light and nearly foolproof
Whistles are cheap, light, and nearly foolproof (Photo: Chaffee County Search and Rescue North)

This Small, Low-Tech Piece of Equipment Might Be Your Kit’s Most Important

A hiker lost on one of Colorado’s 14ers, La Plata (14,336 feet), was rescued by first responders on September 20. The hiker’s saving grace? Not a high-tech satellite messenger or locator beacon, but a simple emergency whistle.

While advanced safety technology like personal locator beacons, satellite messenger devices, and smartphones equipped with off-grid SOS functionality are often seen as the most crucial components of a hiker’s emergency kit, this scenario highlights the fact that there are many ways to call for help, and a combination of low-tech and high-tech tools makes for the most reliable safety kit.

Why are whistles so effective? Click below to find out.

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The post This Week in News: Alex Honnold Will Free Solo a Skyscraper and the Low-Tech Tool You Need in Your Kit appeared first on Outside Online.

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