Tomorrow is Earth Day, but this year's celebration will be a little different from Earth Days past as coronavirus social distancing measures make outdoor gatherings impossible.

Luckily, several networks are premiering documentaries in the U.S. Wednesday that you can watch from the safety of your couch. Here are three new films to watch on Earth Day's 50th anniversary to keep yourself entertained and informed about the planet, the challenges it faces and how you can help.

Film: The Story of Plastic Network: Discovery

Time: 2 p.m. EST/ PST

The Story of Plastic looks at plastic over the entire course of its life cycle, from production to disposal, focusing on its impacts on the environment and human health. It also interviews people who are working to solve the plastic pollution crisis, like Capt. Charlie Moore, discoverer of the North Pacific Garbage Patch, and Yvette Arellano, who advocates for frontline communities impacted by petrochemical plants on the U.S. Gulf Coast. The film was an official selection of Mill Valley Film Festival and 2019 DOC NYC. It is presented by The Story of Stuff Project and directed by Deia Schlosberg. Wednesday's screening on Discovery marks its television premiere. "The issues highlighted in THE STORY OF PLASTIC illuminate how the decisions made locally can affect us globally," discovery and factual chief brand officer Nancy Daniels said in a press release emailed to EcoWatch. "We are eager to highlight the solutions laid out in the film that will help make our world a cleaner and healthier place to live."

Film: Climate Change - The Facts Network: PBS

Time: 8 p.m. EST/ 7 p.m. Central; also streaming from Wednesday on PBS.org and the PBS Video App

Climate Change - The Facts is an hour-long documentary special hosted by renowned nature broadcaster David Attenborough. It looks at what will happen if the earth warms by 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and what can be done to reduce greenhouse gas emissions this decade. A BBC Studios and IWC Media production for PBS, it features interviews with scientists like former director of NASA Goddard Institute for Science Studies James Hansen and activists like Greta Thunberg. It examines the consequences of the climate crisis from sea level rise to wildfires like the one that devastated Paradise, California. "In the 20 years since I first started talking about the impact of climate change on our world, conditions have changed far faster than I ever imagined," Attenborough says in the film, according to a press release emailed to EcoWatch. "It may sound frightening, but the scientific evidence is that if we have not taken dramatic action within the next decade, we could face irreversible damage to the natural world and the collapse of our societies. We're running out of time, but there is still hope."

Film: She Walks With Apes Network: BBC America

Time: 9 p.m.EST / 8 p.m. Central