Curious bears trigger a media frenzy. It all starts when Jean Louis, the host of the kids' show Our Furry Planet,  pokes a sleeping bear. The bear rears up, startled. Jean Louis flees,  and the bear's not far behind. He and a pal perch atop the Our Furry Planet truck gleefully, with arms in the air as if riding a roller coaster.  Across the bottom of every double-page spread, updates appear in a blue  ribbon, just like on the TV news channels. Except here, the updates are  dire while the bears are clearly no threat. As people run screaming  through the streets, the bears calmly take in the sights. When two  terrified kids abandon their toy vehicles, the bears happily jump on.  (Mom's so excited to be on television she doesn't notice a thing.) In  hats and human clothes, the bears go unnoticed at a department store.  (Hysterically, the mail bear's outfit resembles Paddington's, while the  female's dress looks an awful lot like the Berenstains' Mother Bear's.)  Outside, the bears make a beeline for an ice cream truck, inadvertently  interfering with robbers making a getaway. In an instant, the bears go  from fugitives to media darlings. Biedrzycki delivers a genuine message  with a light touch. His Adobe Photoshop illustrations are bold and  playful, appropriately reminiscent of vintage Hanna-Barbera and a good  match for the slapstick story. 
Fun and topical. 
-Kirkus Reviews
Chaos reigns in this mock televised caper, when a children's nature show called Our Furry Planet is interrupted by a bulletin about two bears on the loose. The brown,  cartoonish bears ramble along upright, try out binoculars acquired from  the frightened Furry Planet host, and appear oblivious to the panic they cause as they dance in the streets and visit a photo booth. Biedrzycki (Me and My Dragon),  whose illustrations call to mind Dan Santat's work in the Oh No! books,  composes the landscape-oriented pages as a wide-screen, high-definition  news broadcast, complete with man-on-the-scene interviews--a clueless  mother is too busy with her phone to notice the bears; a diner cook  explains his refusal to serve the "barefoot" bears--a scrolling blue  ticker with updates from a "Skycam 3" helicopter, and multiple security  videos. Two burglars and their cat take advantage of the fray, as seen  on video at a "Paddington's" department store, until the bears  accidentally foil the crooks and are deemed heroes. Bear wordplay, puns,  and children's book references abound in this romp, which comically  exploits our cultures of distraction and surveillance.
-Publishers Weekly