How to Be a Better Human - Why you should try birding (w/ Christian Cooper)
Episode Date: October 2, 2023If you ask Christian Cooper, a science writer, editor, and the host of the show “Extraordinary Birder With Christian Cooper”, birding can teach us all kinds of lessons about life, self-acceptance,... and joy. In this episode, Christian shares what he deems as the seven pleasures of birding, why inclusion is especially important in life-affirming pursuits, and how anyone (city-dwellers and countryside-residents alike) can commune with nature to unlock the awe and wonder of the world around us. For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to How to Be a Better Human.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy.
I am very much a city boy.
For all of my life, I have lived in places where I am surrounded by humans
and where
if you say to me something wild is happening outside, I assume that's like a crime or a
flash mob on the subway or an improvised performance art piece that's blocking traffic.
Of course, though, just because I live in a city doesn't mean that there isn't actually wild nature
here too. But until my conversation with today's guest, Christian Cooper, that's not something that
I'd really ever paid attention to or been all that conscious of.
Christian is the host of the TV show Extraordinary Birder and the author of the book Better Living Through Birding.
He's also really well known as a comic book author who has written for places like Marvel and Star Trek. himself creatively in fictional worlds, I think that he's really a hero of the natural one,
especially that hidden natural world that's all around us every day, no matter where we live.
Here's a clip from Christian. I'm walking down Ninth Avenue in the middle of Midtown Manhattan.
There's traffic going by. There's a construction site. I'm talking to my friend. Other people are
passing by with their conversations, but that
click, click, click, click, click of the kestrel cuts right through all of it. And I'm like, oh,
there's a kestrel here. And my friend is like, what are you talking about? And I'm like,
and then my, my, I start scanning the rooftops and I'm like over there and there's a kestrel.
And he's like, wait, that's the most incredible superpower ever. Maybe it is, but you know,
we all can do it to a certain extent.
That's what you're going to do
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will vary. Get your binoculars out and start listening closely because today we are talking
all about birding with the incredible Christian Cooper. Hi, I'm Christian Cooper. I am the author of a memoir, Better Living Through Birding,
and I am the host and consulting producer of Extraordinary Birder on Disney Plus and Nat Geo Wild.
Well, let's start with the most basic question,
which is that if someone's listening and they're not already familiar, what is birding?
Sure, birding and, you know, the term that used to be more prevalent was bird watching,
but it is simply going forth to enjoy the wild birds that are around you, to watch them,
to listen to them, to appreciate them and find out what you can about them. That's all birding is.
Is there a reason why birding became the preferred term instead of birdwatching?
When you are birding, you're usually doing more than watching. You are listening. And in fact,
in Extraordinary Birder, the TV series I host, we go to Puerto Rico and there we meet a blind
birder. So he's definitely not birdwatching. He is using only his ears and using
the sounds to sort out what species are around him. And I myself, not to that level, but I am
what they would call an ear bird or someone who relies on their ears a lot to tell him what birds
are around and to know where to look and what to look for. So because it's not just looking,
that's why the term birders preferred these days.
You talk in your book about the seven pleasures of birding, and that's kind of a theme that runs
throughout the book. Well, first and foremost, unsurprisingly, is the beauty of the birds.
And if you don't know this, birds communicate the same way people do,
or rely on the same primary senses, sight and sound.
Unlike our pets, you know, dogs and cats, they're all about their noses, but birds are about their
eyes and their ears, just like we are. So we can appreciate the way they communicate in ways we can
never appreciate our pets. Beautiful songs, incredible colors, remarkable patterns. So
number one is the beauty of the birds. Second is the joy of being in
a natural setting, because you've got to go out into the wild or something that's kind of wild
in order to find the birds. So you get to appreciate being in these natural settings.
Let's say number three is the joy of scientific discovery. Let's say you're out birding and one
day you're walking through a field and all of a sudden a little bird flies up and lands on a branch and starts beating its bill against the branch.
And you're like, oh, gosh, is it cleaning its bill?
What's it doing?
Finally, you realize, no, you're too close to its nest.
And this bird is so angry it wants to be beating on your head, but you're too big.
So instead, it's beating on the branch.
It's redirected aggression.
Extremely relatable.
I mean, one of the most relatable things. It's redirected aggression. Extremely relatable.
I mean, one of the most relatable things that a bird could possibly do.
Completely.
So you've just learned something, though, some scientific thing through your own observations.
That's remarkable.
Another one is the joy of hunting without the bloodshed.
You've got to go out stalking these birds, hoping to find them, hoping to surprise them so that they don't fly away before you can get a good look. And then instead of shooting them, you get to just
drink them into your eyes and ears. So there's that. Then there's the joy of puzzle solving,
for those of you who love puzzles. Because when you're out in the field and you're trying to
identify a bird and you're like,
oh my goodness, how do I tell one bird from another?
And then so then you have to pay attention to the field marks. And you're like, all right, well, this bird has wing bars.
It has a big bill, long tail.
And you just start piecing it all together.
And if you're lucky, you get the right pieces and you're able to figure out what bird you're looking at.
And I remember once I saw a bran-colored flycatcher.
I had never seen one before.
It was burning in Buenos Aires in South America.
And I spent close to an hour just studying this bird, staking it out, waiting for it to come back, waiting for good light so I could get the good field marks.
And when I finally figured out what it was, it was such a sense of triumph that I had solved the puzzle and figured out what this bird was.
So that's one of the other pleasures of birding.
Number six, the joy of collecting.
You know, people collect stamps, rich people collect cars, you know, people collect all
kinds of things.
But the way you collect with birding is through your lists.
And boy, do birders keep lists.
I have a list of birds
I've seen only from my roof. I know people who have kept a list of birds they have seen
only through their bathroom window. So, you know, people keep lists of birds they've seen in the
state, birds they've seen in the county. You know, you can keep your life list, which is all the
birds you've seen in your whole life. And then finally, and this is
sort of when you've been birding for a little while, this becomes kind of the big one. It's
what I call the unicorn effect. Because after you've been birding for a while, you become
familiar with what's out there through, you know, looking through the guidebook or seeing TV shows
or whatever. And you're like, oh my God, that bird is incredible.
I would love to see that someday.
And you read about it and you see it.
Let's say it's the resplendent quetzal,
a Central American bird that just blows your mind.
And then one day you're walking through
the mountains of Central America
and flap, flap, flap, flap, flap, flap, flap, flap, flap.
And it lands on a branch.
And there it is for real in real life.
It's as if a unicorn stepped out of the forest right in front of you.
So that's what I call the unicorn effect.
And that's one of the big pleasures of birding.
So that's the seven pleasures of birding.
I was also really struck by in your book how you talk about how there are these big players in these rare birds that
are so incredible, but also you do a lot of work with students and trying to introduce people to
birding for the first time. And you have this great section where a kid in one of your groups
sees a grackle for the first time. And a grackle is an extremely common bird that often people
kind of hate. They think it's like almost like a pest type bird.
And it's very common. So, you know, and one of the things we birders are guilty of,
and I think people in general are guilty of is, you know, something that's common,
you tend to devalue. And then, you know, it's the rare ones that you really want.
This child is like blown away and says like, that's the most beautiful bird. And it makes
you see the grackle through your own, through his eyes and see it in a different way.
That's one of the great things about taking students out, young people, kids out. They
don't even have to be kids. They can be people who are just birding for the first time, is you
get to sort of be birding for the first time again yourself by seeing their reactions and
kind of, as you said, looking through their eyes.
One of my favorite things to do is to show someone who has never seen one before,
one of my favorite birds, the Black Bernian warbler.
And then I just kind of do a little countdown until they see it.
And then it comes and they're like, oh, my God.
And I'm like, yes, that's the correct reaction because it is so beautiful.
It's this little tiny bird, smaller than a sparrow,
very active, black and white mostly, except the males in their finest spring plumage have this day glow, fiery orange throat that just sings and glows. And it's just, it's just, it's gorgeous.
So yeah, you get to see things through the eyes of new birders and be a new bird of yourself again
for a little while.
You write so beautifully about that bird in particular, the Blackburnian.
You write about what it sounds like.
Is there any chance you could give us a little taste of what it sounds like?
I'll give you two versions.
One version was sort of a mnemonic that a friend of mine came up with.
The most important thing to know about a
Blackburnian is that it has one of the most high-pitched songs that any North American bird
utters. In fact, you know, if you started to learn the higher range end of your hearing,
you may not even be able to hear the notes of the Blackburnian, especially the last note, which slides incredibly high and
gets incredibly urgent.
We always say the last note sounds like the bird is being strangled.
So mnemonic for it is, come a, come a, come a, come a to me.
Each note has a little bit of an accent to it at the beginning, which is where the comma, comma, comma is coming from.
I always think of it as sort of.
You got to think about last note is that the bird's being strangled and it just keeps going up in pitch.
Really urgent.
And something that you describe in the book is how the same way that we can immediately recognize a song by our favorite singer or, you know, something that is a cover of our favorite song.
We hear these things and it doesn't take very long to immediately recognize songs.
The more that you have gotten into birds, the more that you felt like you understood the calls.
You also understood the relationships between different bird calls.
So you talk about how one bird's call sounds like this and another bird's call sounds like that if that bird had a sore throat,
which made me laugh so much. Yeah. And I didn't come up with that. I think that goes all the way
back to Roger Torrey Peterson, one of the big names in North American birding going back to
like the 30s or 40s. And I think he's the one who coined the fact that the Scarlett
Tanager sounds like a robin with a sore throat. And it's a great hint because robins are everywhere.
So a lot of people are familiar with the song, kind of triplet flute-like phrases.
That's a robin. So if you hear
that's a robin. So if you hear Scarlet Tanager.
And it happened to me. I was walking through the woods. I didn't know the
Scarlet Tanager song. I'd seen one or two in my life or a couple.
It was going back many, many years. But I'm walking through the woods and I hear
and I'm like, that sounds like a robin with a sore throat.
And sure enough, it was a Scarlet Danager, even though I'd never heard one before.
I remember one time I was in the Catskills birding, walking through the woods,
and I heard what I thought was a hooded warbler. Hooded warbler, again, very small,
really boldly patterned. It's bright yellow, except for a black hood
that wraps over the top of the head
and under the bottom of the head,
but leaves that yellow blazing from the side of the face.
So it looks like it's wearing a hood.
And I'm like, oh my God, a hooded warbler here?
This is so far north.
It's gotta be the extreme northern edge
of the range of the hooded warbler.
But I can't see it.
It's tucked away in
this dense unreachable area past the path i'm like well maybe i can bring it in because the
hooded warbler has a clearly whistled song i'm like well i'm a human i can whistle i might be
able to fake it out so i go boom the hooded warbler came right out and it was a ride at the end and flew right at me and he's
like who the hell are you what are you doing here it was it was really funny it's remarkable yeah
you know your excitement and your enthusiasm for birding is so infectious and i know that that is
um that's both natural right like you just genuinely love it but it's also something that
you very consciously have have cultivated is trying to spread the word about birding, trying to get more people into birding.
And your book is even called, right, Better Living Through Birding.
So why do you think that birding is so important for better living?
I think a lot of us are very disconnected from nature these days, particularly if we live in cities. We like to think, oh, you know, in this man-made environment, we are somehow
detached, removed. You're not, but you can feel like that sometimes. And I think getting out
into a more natural type of environment can be incredibly calming, incredibly soothing.
You know, birding just gets you out there, engages you with the natural world,
and gets you outside of your own head.
And as your brain is forced to do this and be on high alert,
if you want to actually see the birds,
then you're outside of your own little head and your own little world.
And all those annoying problems that are festering
like, oh my God, I've got to pick up groceries today and it's so expensive. I don't know if I'll
be able to afford everything and my paycheck hasn't come through. So for a little while,
at least, whatever those woes are, they just fall away and instead you're interacting with the wild world and learning a little bit how we are a part
of that wild world. And that's, I think, incredibly healing.
We are going to have more from Christian in just a moment, but please
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And we are back. Christian, let's go all the way back to the beginning.
You have this amazing anecdote in your book about the first time that your dad took you on a bird walk and it was led by this professional birder and you actually managed to correct
something that he had gotten wrong. Can you tell us that story? Sure, sure. And first I have to add,
correct something that he had gotten wrong. Can you tell us that story?
Sure, sure. And first I have to add, he wasn't a professional birder. He actually ran a cardboard factory, but birding was his passion, his hobby. And he shared it with all
these other people by leading these walks for the South Shore Audubon Society. The guy's name was
Elliot Kuttner, and he was leading the walk. And he took a quick look at a bird far away um and you know
made a quick call as to what the bird was and then he said everybody come look in the scope
and take a look at the uh american woodcock and i went up and i looked and peered in the scope
and i went back to my dad and i was like, I don't think those are woodcock.
Because I had, you know, I'd taken a longer look and I have had sharper little kids eyes.
And I just noticed that the head pattern was what is associated with the snipe and not with
woodcock. They're similar birds. They take these long bills to probe into the mud looking for food.
And so my dad's like, oh, go tell him. And I'm like, oh my God's like oh oh go tell him and i'm like oh my
god i can't go tell him i'm like excuse me sir i don't think those are woodcock he's like why do
you think they're not woodcock and i'm like oh because the head pattern has stripes like a bicycle
helmet instead of the the pattern on a woodcock and he takes another look and he looks at me and he goes, what's your name?
I'm like, Christian. He's like, well, Christian, you're right. Those are Snipes. Everybody,
this young man has just successfully identified the Wilson Snipe. Everybody come take a look.
And he had that booming voice, very, very ebullient personality. So that was how I met
Elliot. And then of course, after that,
he took one look at me and that, and he was like, okay, I'm taking this one. I'm going to mentor
him and make sure that passion for birds is nurtured. I think any of us who are birders,
we like to pass on that passion and that love to the next generation.
It's so appropriate that in English, right, one of the expressions we have
for doing that is to take someone under your wing. Yeah, exactly. It's so perfect. The other thing
that I think was a revelation for me in reading the book is I had not thought of birding as an
activity that would lead to such a depth of community. It seemed to me like it was more of
a solitary thing. And reading your book, it's so clear that that's not the case. Well, it can be. It can be either. And that's
one of the great things about birding. In my own birding in the course of a single day,
I'll do both. When I go birding during the spring migration in Central Park,
I go at the crack of dawn, mostly because I want to hear as much bird song as possible,
and you'll hear more the earlier you go.
One of the benefits is when I get there, there's almost nobody else around.
So for a while, I'm just birding with myself.
It's like me and nature.
And it's great.
It's wonderful.
And then later on, other birders start to come.
And I run into them.
And they're old friends.
And we see each other every spring. and we're chit-chatting.
Did you see this yesterday?
And oh, my God, I hope we get to see this today.
And it's a community.
So you get both.
You also talk in the book about how this is one of the parallels.
I almost want to say unexpected parallels between your identity as a birder and your identity as a gay man is the way in which
there are these communities that you can find and feel like you're immediately at home with.
Yeah, I would I was curious to hear you talk more about the connections that you found between,
you know, discovering yourself and your own sexuality and also like finding birds and the
natural world and how those two have intersected, since that's a really beautiful theme in the book. I guess in the book, the way I sort of enter into that whole subject is through
my spark bird, as we call it, was the red-winged blackbird. When we say spark bird in birding,
what we mean by that is the bird that got you started birding and sucked you down the rabbit
hole of birding. And for me, it was a red-winged blackbird.
But the thing is that blackbirds in America are completely different from what they mean by
blackbird in Europe. So there's a little bit of identity confusion there because a blackbird in
Europe is actually closely related to our robin and has nothing to do with what we call blackbirds
here. Meanwhile, you know, our robin is completely unrelated
to the bird they call the robin over in Europe.
And it gets super confusing.
And it's like, what's what?
Who's who?
And that's kind of, I think, the kind of the struggle
we all go through.
But particularly, I think us queer folks go through it
as we try to sort through our identities
and what fits and what doesn't. But, you know, everybody it as we try to sort through our identities and what fits and
what doesn't. But, you know, everybody as we're, you know, going through adolescence and finding
our feet as adults and who we are and what's important to us, we're all struggling with
different labels and identities that society wants us to take on. And, you know, some of them fit
and some of them, hell no, no way, that's not me. And it doesn't work. So we're all sorting
that out. And so there's that parallel between birding and the sorting of identities.
Something that is also interesting about birding to many people is that it is kind of outside of
commerce, right? That birding is free. You don't necessarily have to spend any money to do it.
And I think for a lot of people, there can be a really joyful thing in having something that
you care so deeply about and yet in no way ties to earning or spending money. And I wonder if
now that it is tied to earning money for you, if that's changed the way you
feel about it at all.
It hasn't yet, I'm happy to say.
In fact, one of the advantages of doing the show is that I am the stereotypical New Yorker.
I don't drive.
And there's a lot of great burning spots.
There was a point in my life where I thought about becoming an ornithologist, and I actually
decided, no, I don't want to do
that because I don't want my passion to become work. And now here I am and my passion has become
my work. But so far it's working out fine. I see my job doing Extraordinary Birder as,
and the title is not about me because I'm not an Extraordinary Birder. I have my skills,
because I'm not an extraordinary birder.
I have my skills,
but I've met the extraordinary birders.
They are phenomenal.
And one of the things that the title refers to is those phenomenal people,
whether they are ornithologists
or whether they're just amateur birders
who are doing incredible things,
saving the birds, helping the birds,
working with the birds.
And I love the fact,
and this is the best part of my job, working with the birds. And I love the fact, and this is the
best part of my job, is I get to bring their stories forward now. Because I'm lucky in that
my story now is out there through the book. One thing that I think is so special, and
I'll just use the word extraordinary about you is that you are both communicating the facts and the passion around the birds, but you're also not ignoring the context around the birds and around the natural world, right?
Like the fact that birds are migrating into different places as a result of climate change.
You're not going to ignore that.
I also think, for example, I grew
up in New York City. I've spent so much time in Central Park, which is kind of your home turf,
and so much of your book takes place finding birds in the ramble. But I never knew the story
of Seneca Village before, which is the community that was destroyed to make space for Central Park.
Can you talk about your decision to include those kind of historical and cultural
and political contexts when you are engaging with the natural world?
So context matters. It changes how we understand things. So that's why, you know, whether we are
talking about birds or whether we are talking about Central Park or whether we are talking about,
you know, race relations in America, context matters. So that's why I try to put it in the book,
in stories, whether it's about Central Park or whether it's about the birds and seeing the birds
in context. Let's go back to the Black Bernian warbler. And I'm seeing it in Central Park as
it is passing through, but it started off in Columbia where it spent the winter. And then
now it's heading up to say the Adirondacks where it's going to find some hemlocks to nest in. And it just connects New York to these other places across the globe organically. Literally, an organism is connecting New York to all these other places.
it expands your mind in so many ways. Central Park, Seneca Village, what happened? So they decided, somebody decided, hey, let's put a park in the middle of Manhattan as the city was
expanding so that it'll be sort of a backyard for everybody. Well, everybody back then didn't
necessarily mean everybody like we mean now. And in fact, where they wanted to put the park was this thriving
community, almost entirely African-American, some Irish, who were kind of the black, white people
of the day. And they were living together in this community called Seneca Village. They owned their
property. They had brick buildings. They were working people who had, you know,
China and stuff in their homes. But eminent domain came along and said, yeah, we're going to put a
park here and your communities have to go. Now, you know, were they paid fair value for their
property? Records from that time, who knows? Black people were not considered part of the community that
was desirable. And so pushing them aside was easy. And that's what they did. They took the property,
they cleared the land, and they built Central Park there. Now, I love Central Park. I think
it's wonderful. And I'm so glad we all have it. But one has to be mindful of who paid the price so that this park could be there now for all of us. And if you watch a nature documentary, for example, often you will never see a building.
You'll never see a person.
And yet that's not actually the context that animals live in.
Right.
And they live in a place where they are affected by our decisions, by our policy decisions,
by our political decisions, by the social and cultural things that are happening in
the human world affects animals too.
It affects the birds.
So that's why I think it's just interesting to talk about, right? The Seneca Village that came before Central Park. And now Central Park
is this incredible oasis for migrating birds that are traveling away. Where I live now in LA,
right? Chavez Ravine was a thriving community. Now it's Dodger Stadium. These places change,
and it changes the natural environment, which affects the animals as well. So we can't kind of pretend that they're separate.
Right.
A couple of notes about that, though.
First of all, there is no part of the globe now that has not been impacted by human activity.
Even places we have never set foot in are being impacted by climate change, global warming,
which is the result of human activity.
So even though,
you know, the Antarctic, there may be places that people have never gone, they're being affected by
human activity. So that's number one. There is no place that is pure nature anymore, if there ever
was. Number two, yeah, when we live in our cities, it is a very human-built environment. But you know
what? Humans are part of nature too. So our human-built environment
is actually sort of a special subset of nature, just as the termites that build incredible towers
in Africa and the ants that build incredible underground structures, the beavers that build
dams and create lakes that weren't there before. All of that is creatures
modifying and changing their environment. We just happen to be a species that does it
to the extreme. We have the ability to do it in ways that other creatures haven't dreamed of,
but we're still part of a natural world and we're remaking it in ways that suit us, but
that still makes it part of the natural world.
And why do I say that?
Because I live in the middle of Manhattan, downtown Manhattan, where it's, you know,
all paved streets and buildings.
And you know what happens when I go up to my roof?
I go up there and I look across the street and there's a red-tailed hawk perched on the
roof across the street.
And then I hear, click, click, click, click, click then I hear click, click, click, click, click,
click, click, click, click, click, because there's a pair of American kestrels, our smallest falcon,
who take exception to this big old red-tailed hawk being here. And they are taking turns,
dive bombing them. It's kind of like tag team wrestling, going at them one, then the other
goes at them, then the other goes at them. And then suddenly they stop and they're perched on this antenna across the
way. And I'm like, okay, I guess they're over it. Then I hear,
a peregrine falcon comes diving out of the sky and he starts strafing the
red-tailed hawk and the poor red tails. They're gone.
And the, and the cash tools now are like, Oh, there's a little bit too much for us we're gonna
sit on sidelines and watch this one and i'm like bring me the popcorn i'm getting to show up here
and this is all in the middle of supposedly humans only manhattan and nobody realizes it
nobody on the street is looking up and realizing this incredible warfare drama is going on in the skies above their heads. So, yeah, we can tell ourselves that we're separate from nature. It's a big old lie, but we can tell ourselves.
but you've traveled all over the world.
And there are people who listen to this podcast who live all over the place.
Are there some universal tips
that kind of no matter where you are in the world,
you can use to see more birds
or to be more aware of the birds around you?
Sure, you bird the same way
no matter where you are in the world,
which is you're on high alert with your eyes
for a particular kind of motion that will
draw your eye, for example, to a tree that rather than a leaf fluttering is actually a bird moving
from branch to branch or to a particular kind of silhouette that you've got to get really good at
picking out because if you spot it, then you may have spotted an owl sitting in a tree holding absolutely still.
And then also your ears, you're listening for sounds that knife through everything else.
Okay. And so say someone has been listening to this and they're completely sold. They love it.
They're really interested in this idea and they want to get started, but they've never been
birding before. This is going to be their very first time consciously birding. For the absolute beginner, what are the things that they should do?
You know, the main thing is, you know, you don't need special equipment, though. A pair of
binoculars helps tremendously, which can be a barrier to entry because they can be expensive.
They don't have to be expensive. If you can get your hands on some hand-me-downs or a cheap pair,
that's better than nothing.
But even if you don't have binoculars, just go out there and see what you can find.
If you're homebound and you can't get out of the house, you know what?
Go to your window.
See what you can find.
Your book is full of birding tips.
This is one that I had never heard before.
And I tried and made such a difference is when you're trying, if you do have binoculars and you're going to try and use them, keep your eye on the bird and then bring the binoculars to your eye. Don't put your eye on the binoculars and then
try and find the bird. I couldn't believe how big a difference that made. It's the first thing
Elliot Kuttner, my old birding mentor taught me. And it makes all the difference. It's the first,
whenever I lead a group out of beginners, it's the first thing we do.
I'm like, right, before we even look at birds,
see that sign down the block?
Look at it with your eyes,
bring the binoculars to your eyes.
Because if you bring your head down
and then try to find it with your binoculars,
you're not gonna find it.
It takes a little practice,
but once you master it, it makes a huge difference.
Christian Cooper, it has been an absolute pleasure talking to you.
Thank you so much for being on the show.
And I hope that everyone will check out Better Living Through Birding and watch Extraordinary
Birder.
They're both fantastic and I can't recommend them enough.
Thanks a lot, Chris.
That is it for today's episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you so much to today's guest, Christian Cooper.
You can watch him on Extraordinary Birder and you can read his book, Better Living Through Birding.
I am your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me, including my weekly newsletter and upcoming live shows at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is brought to you on the TED side by Daniela Balarezo, Chloe Shasha Brooks, and Joseph DeBrine, who are all currently nesting high in a tree in Brooklyn's
Prospect Park. Every episode of our show is professionally fact-checked. This episode was
fact-checked by Julia Dickerson and Mateus Salas, who interviewed several Blackburnian warblers to
confirm that what Christians said in their birdsong language was actually factually true.
On the PRX side, we've got a migratory flock of the greatest audio team in the natural world,
Morgan Flannery, Nor Gil, Patrick Grant, and Jocelyn Gonzalez.
And of course, thanks to you for listening to our show and making this all possible.
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We will be back next week with even more How to Be a Better Human.
Thanks again for listening.
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