Modern Wisdom - #1052 - Paul Rosolie - Uncontacted Tribes, Jungle Warfare & Being Eaten Alive
Episode Date: January 29, 2026Paul Rosolie is a naturalist, author, and wildlife filmmaker. What is it actually like to live a real-life Indiana Jones adventure? From surviving the Amazon, encountering dangerous animals, and com...ing face-to-face with uncontacted tribes, what makes this place worth protecting, and what’s the smartest way to save the Amazon and everything it holds? Expect to learn what it’s like being stung be a stingray, why Paul tried to get eaten by an anaconda, the most afraid Paul has ever been in the jungle, the biggest mistakes people make when trying to move through the jungle, the strangest nights Paul has ever had out on the Amazon river, Paul’s story of encountering an un-contacted Amazonian tribe, why conservation tourism probably won’t scale and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get 15% off your first order of my favourite Non-Alcoholic Brew at https://athleticbrewing.com/modernwisdom Get a free sample or 30% off a one-month supply of Timeline at https://timeline.com/modernwisdom30 Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom New pricing since recording: Function is now just $365, plus get $25 off at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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People of Australia and New Zealand and Bali.
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See you there. How was getting stung by a stigmary?
That's it. It was wonderful. I loved every second of it because people pursue ice plunges and ayahuasca journeys and and people, people are constantly looking for the edge. And, and I found the edge, right? I thought I was tough. I thought I'd been through pain. I didn't know anything. I was, I was making deals with God. I was, I was in so much pain. And you don't think, you know, you think like, you chest cavity,
or your head.
You didn't think that your foot could throw you into agony.
I got, you know, so it stung me in the foot.
Tell me this.
Where were you?
So I'm in a stream in the Amazon rainforest, and I had my shoes on just because I'd
been hiking, and I reached this waterfall, and I said, I'm going to take my shoes off to enjoy
the waterfall and swim around.
And as I'm playing in the waterfall, I just, you instantly know it.
It's like you got shot in the foot.
And the stingray, I stepped on the stingray, and it stuck its bar, and it's, you know, it's the
size of a steak knife. It sticks its barb in through the skin and the thing is it wagged its tail
under the skin. So it flayed the skin off of the meat of the foot and then swam out. So just what does a
what does a stingray because it's flat? Yeah. And it's the just the tail. So if you stood on the
tail or has it been looking for you? No, no, no. It's flat, flat. The whole thing is flat. And then
if it gets scared, it stings to make you go away. They're not trying to attack you. They want to be left alone. I
stepped on him. It's my fault. I couldn't see him.
And then the tail came up.
Tail went straight up in the, the arch of your foot is sensitive.
And so, so steak knife to the arch of the foot injected a ton of venom as it flayed the skin off, pulls out.
And so I'm like, I'm like, look, this hurts, but the flesh wounds don't hurt that much.
And I'm like, that hurt, getting stabbed hurt. And so I'm over there, I'm about to film.
And I'm like, I'm in the Amazon rainforest and I just got hit by a stingray.
My friend comes up to me, he goes, we don't have time for this.
He's like, you're going to pass out soon.
And when you pass out, we can't carry you to the river.
And I said, how do you know I'm going to pass out?
He goes, it happens to everybody.
And sure enough, the next thing I know, I'm on a cart getting wheeled through the jungle.
I don't remember the boat ride at all.
And then they got me to the research station.
And I was in so much pain.
I was, you know, making every deal with the universe.
If you just make this stop, I promise I'll do it.
You know, just everything.
And they luckily, as with the local guys, so they were scraping the trees, gathering
medicinal barks that they baked in a pan.
They wrapped it in leaves and they baked it into a poultice.
And they put that on the wound, boiling hot poultice,
which actually weirdly enough felt good,
boiling hot, but the skin was already off.
They put that on and then they wrap it to your foot.
And they leave that there for a few hours.
And that sucks out the venom.
But for about four or five hours,
it was the worst, most blinding pain, like level 10.
The doctor goes, you know, what are you feeling at a two or an eight?
And it was like, this was a 10.
I can't imagine more pain than that.
It's like being just the venom.
It's like having an electrical wire shoved into your veins.
But the last guy I know that got stung by a stingray,
he went to a hospital and he had permanent nerve damage,
didn't walk for two months, had a systemic infection
because he went with the Western medicine way.
The local guys are like, dude, we know how to deal with this.
We have trees for that.
There's a sap for that.
They have it.
They know.
they've learned from their grandfathers and grandmothers.
My God.
You know that post-Malone song?
I got a guy for that.
I don't think I've ever heard a post-Malone song.
It's impressive that you managed to evade it.
That's actually also made of bark and herbs.
Oh, I thought you're going to say this is also made of post-Malone.
It probably is.
Bark and herbs.
He's got a song called I Got a Guy for that.
And the indigenous people of the Amazon have, I've got a tree for that.
That's their equivalent.
Yeah, and Apple used to have an ad campaign.
You know, if you need it, we have an app for that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
In Amazon, we go, we got a sap for that.
Very cool.
Yeah, yeah.
What's the reason for the pain extending for so long?
Is it the particular type of toxin is unusually, yeah, the venom is unusually important?
A massive amount of venom.
Right.
And the people that get stung by coastal saltwater stingrays, they're like, oh, yeah, you put something hot on it, it gets better.
That's not the way it works with these guys.
It's much, much worse.
The venom is much more intense.
And again, you're getting, I mean, just look at a steak.
Next time you're eating a steak and just imagine just stabbing yourself through the foot with that.
And while it's in there, it's gone like this.
And then it swam away.
It's an electrical steak knife filled with venom.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was great.
But again, the whole experience was so visceral.
The only part that I was truly upset about was, you know, as I'm laying there, was the anticipation.
we suffer more in an imagination than we do in life.
I was just going, how much of my year is this going to cut out?
Am I going to be off my feet for three months?
I was on my feet in two days.
So again, there's no point worrying about it.
Are you conscious of the finality, the finitude of life?
Is that something you think about a lot?
As someone that I think has come close to dying more than most people, very much so.
Very much so.
Yeah.
I I I've I'm not like I want to live very much because I want to be around my family and I want to experience things but scared of death now not even a little bit but conscious of time conscious of time
not worried of time in that how long am I going to be off my feet how much of my life am I going to maximize or potentially lose from this sort of a thing yes but only because I want to I need to be
saving the Amazon. I need to be running around. I need to be helping other people. I don't want to be off my
feet. What am I going to do? What am I going to do then? I'm useless off my feet, you know.
Surely ever being barefoot in the Amazon is dangerous. We are always barefoot in the Amazon.
I'm actually, it's the only reason I had shoes on was because I was doing an ad for Vivo
barefoot. And I was, I put them on to film because they're like a barefoot shoe company.
And I, and then I was like, all right, that's enough with shoes. I took them off.
I walk around bear, I learned from the natives, right?
And so when you go hunting with the native trackers,
if you were wearing boots in the jungle,
it makes so much more noise.
Clunk, clunk, clunk, the leaves, the report,
the amount of sticks that you break,
the slurp in the mud, it's just, you know,
if you go barefoot, now you're moving quiet,
and you can hit over vines and things you can pick out the rocks much easier.
You also have tactile balance control.
Your toes become balancers.
And so you're much better off barefoot.
The only problem is,
in the Amazon, you have thorns that are 10 inches, 12 inches long.
You have bullet ants, venomous snakes, stingrays.
And the list goes on and on.
Bullet ants or fire ants, the most painful venom that that gentleman who did,
see that guy that did the self-study on himself where he allowed all of these different
animals to bite him or inject him with venom, and he described the sense of it happening
like a sommelier wood, the notes of wine.
and he would talk about sort of dull, smoky textures
and sort of sharp, fiery electrical senses and stuff like that.
I'm pretty sure that bullet ants are the top.
Yeah, I mean, they're horrible.
And even now, I'd say they would end a day.
If you were me right now in this studio,
you know, if you was bulletin crawling up your leg and hit you good.
You know, you didn't brush it off quick if it got you good.
They sting you.
They hold on to you.
They grab you with their mandibles.
They have these chopping mandibles.
They grab you with the mandibles.
so they grab you with their face,
and then they drive that stinger home.
Oh, so they don't inject the venom through the mouth.
They have a stinger like a wasp.
And so they hold on to you and they think,
and if you smack them, that's not,
you can't kill them with your hand.
You need like a hammer or a shoe.
You can't kill them with your hand.
No, you slap a bullet ant like that.
They'll just sting you harder.
100%.
And it will hurt enough.
Your glands will swell up in your armpit and your groin.
in your neck, you'll get a fever.
Immune system's going crazy.
And the most creative thing
of that venom is that it makes you feel
like something's going wrong.
You go, something's not right,
something's going to happen.
It gives you this panicked feeling, you're fine.
I mean, I've always been fine.
I've been bitten by like 12 or 13 times,
but...
Sort of impending doom.
Yeah, it always gives you this really stress response
for you, like, oh man, I have a blood clot.
It's like, it makes you think,
that the venom is causing damage and you just but that's the point the point is to cause you
debilitating stress that you go away and that's the same thing with wasps i mean they come and they
just sting the shit out of you so that you leave their nest it's so ingenious isn't it's so ingenious
and i also love the wasp philosophy of i think it's a good philosophy to embody in our own lives as
well as we are peaceful here we are in our nest we're attending to our babies do not fuck with us
and if you do, we're going to chase you.
And it's kind of this like warrior peace thing
where it's like, you know, you see a wasp nest,
you go, I'm not going anywhere near that nest.
And if you do, if you by accident hit it with a machete,
they're going to chase you all the way to the river.
Like they're going to make sure they make their point.
What is the fuck, there's a ton of wasps coming after me?
Water, that's the solution?
Water, but then the, see, in the jungle,
you can't see 10 feet in front of you, right?
Because it's dense.
So when you're running from the wasps,
that's the most dangerous part
because as you're getting stung
you're making bad decisions
because you're running forward
and there's vines and there's spikes
and there's other bullet ants
and there's snakes
and so as you're running
you're in a high likelihood
of getting into more trouble.
It is kind of insane
that anybody is able to not be killed
in the Amazon.
It sounds like it's just filled
with things that could kill you
pretty easily.
It's not as bad as so far.
We've started talking about
all the worst things.
I started talking about stingrays and bullet ants,
but I mean, you could totally,
there's most of the time I'm there,
I'm walking barefoot through beautiful forests on trails that are quiet
with macaws above me and frog singing,
and it's not as bad.
It's really just those moments.
You go through six weeks of wonderful,
and then you step on a stingray.
The jungle is actually very, very serene.
It's very calm.
There's no honking car horns.
You're not going to get mugged.
You know, the most dangerous thing is falling trees.
Is it ever silent?
No.
And, I don't know, we'll rage against the machine song.
It is.
He says something about silence makes me sick.
And I always think of that when I have to come stay in a hotel room
because I fall asleep to the throbbing chorus of frogs at night.
And so I come and you get into a room and there's silence.
Nature is not silent.
At least the jungle is not silent.
It's loud.
In the morning, there's howler monkeys and macaws and birds
and everything's going crazy.
You hit 4 a.m.
The jungle explodes into song.
It's loud.
And at night you go in the swamps,
the frogs are all coming down from the canopy and mating.
I'd have to scream to talk to you right now.
No way.
Ra, it, right, right, right.
All that.
I'd be screaming at you.
Like, look at this one.
It's so loud.
No, it's incredible.
It's magical.
It's absolutely magic on Earth.
You know what it makes me think about
that humans have survived,
in pretty ancestral environments in very varied ecologies,
and how different the nervous system set point
of somebody who grew up in the jungle
versus somebody who grew up on the plains.
Because the planes, presumably would be much quieter.
You know, there's big, big chunks of space,
nothingness between animals,
and there might be some wind,
there might be the blowing of, you might be able to hear it,
You might be able to hear something, some birds over the far side.
But I spent a good bit of time in Zambia.
And that at night, apart from maybe the sounds of some buzzing of like a few insect and stuff,
it's pretty fucking quiet.
Interesting.
No, the jungle is almost this, its own super organism.
And it's like it has a consciousness.
And when you're inside of it, and you have to imagine a human, you know,
Let's just say for six feet and below, the jungle is 160 feet tall in places.
So you're not, it's a four-D environment.
You're underneath, it's like being at the bottom of the ocean,
but the ocean is made of tree branches and leaves and animals,
and you're under all of it.
So when you're walking on a trail,
there's most of what's around you, like a cathedral, is above you.
And so when you walk around at night, you have this little headlamp.
You're this tiny little orb of light walking below this,
throbbing, teeming, murdering mass of wildlife.
That's all around you that you can't see.
And there's frogs and snakes and nightbirds
and kinketchews and jaguars
and all of this stuff moving around you.
And so it's very, very loud.
Very loud.
And I think that to me is comfort.
You know, people, I don't know, to me,
to fall asleep to that,
people come to the jungle
and they're shocked by the fact that the sounds of the jungle
are calming.
You put your head down and you hear all of that and it just lulls you to sleep.
I mean, as a kid, it was the cicadas in the summer.
You know, the summer sound, that throb.
I love it.
Winter.
When it's quiet.
Didn't you try to get eaten by an acondah?
Some producers at Discovery Channel tried to get me to do that, yes.
And I did do it.
I did try to get eaten by an anaconda because they said that if I tried to get eaten by an anaconda,
it would get us such high ratings.
Because I said, look, we're going to do research on the biggest anacondas on Earth, right?
We're going to do something no one's ever done before.
But sitting at a desk in Hollywood, they were like, that's not good enough.
They're like, we want to go bigger.
How about we make you a space suit and we feed you to an anaconda when you have a breathing tube, so you'll be fine.
And snakes regurgitate all the time.
And so at the time, I knew the snake wasn't going to eat me.
And so in the room, you know, you shake hands and you go, sure.
And then they produced, they told me the show would be called Expedition Amazon.
And again, I'm 24, right?
And they're telling you, you can go to the Amazon.
You have millions of dollar budget.
You can take all your best friends and expert scientists and start research that's never been done before.
The only thing that you got to do is pay the piper by doing this one thing.
And so at that age, at that time, I went, how else do we tell the world that we have to save this river?
Because it was just starting to crystallize in my head that if, if, if, if,
If me and JJ, my local friend, if we didn't start to save this river, that nobody was going to do it.
And so I said, this seems like the opportunity.
This was my first experience.
I was young.
I had not learned yet.
I was not yet a Jedi.
I shook the hands and they said, don't worry, kid, we're going to take care of you.
Okay.
They called it Expedition Amazon.
And while we were in the jungle, they had, you know, they were like, we need danger beats.
We need you to be scared.
I said, scared of what?
And they were like, we need you to be chased by piranhas.
And I was like, I'm in, we swim in the water every day.
We shower in the river.
We're just playing in the river, back flipping into the river.
Yeah.
Anyway, at the end, right before I was supposed to go on the Today Show or the Good Morning
show or whatever, it's called the Matt Lauer show.
They called me, they showed me the show.
And they said, we're changing it to Eaton Alive.
Eaton alive.
I said, but I didn't actually get eaten alive.
And they said, but we're going to tell everybody you did so they watched the show.
I said, you can't do that to me.
So they did me hard.
And I had to exile to India.
The hatred was so bad.
I'd be in the street and people would be like,
yo, fuck you, man.
Why?
Talk shows?
Because the Pita was mad because they thought I risked the life of a snake.
The American public was mad because they thought that they were going to see a guy
get eaten by Anaconda.
Everybody was somehow outraged.
Like the late night shows.
Kimmel was like, oh, for your next stunt, you should go have sex with a hippo.
Oh, like, it destroyed my career professionally.
No way.
Destroyed it.
So every scientist that I work with, every legitimate conservationist,
I mean, someone actually said, you're not welcome in Brazil.
I was supposed to do work on a giant Antieter project.
And so I took, and this is where, you know, you hear people say, you know, what's the Winston Churchill,
go from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm?
This was a big one, right?
I'm in my mid-20s, and I went from thinking I'm going to have this.
opportunity where it's like we're going to me and my team we're going to get to have the chance to
save the rainforest and carry on that steve irwin legacy of being on discovery channel and then it goes to
everybody hated it it was a complete disaster you got lied to you got cheated and in fact you should
probably get out of here and so for years that set us back years because then we weren't taken
seriously and then if we wanted grants to protect the rainforest if we wanted to work with other
organizations everyone would just go use that on anaconda guy i mean to this
day, I think my Wikipedia still says, Paul Rosley is an American who was the host of
eaten alive. It's like, it just, it's like you get branded with it. It's like, that's the guy
that got eaten by the Anaconda. And it won't, it wouldn't leave for a long time. And so that was a very,
very informed. I mean, at the time, it was true. You can only see the tragedy of it at the time.
Right. At the time, you know, six months after that, I was just devastated. I didn't know what
happened. It's like a car crash. You'll wait, wait, hold on. We, we, we,
We caught the world record Anaconda.
We started research that no one's ever done before.
We put together an amazing film that they chopped up and they ruined,
but the backlash and then the professional backlash.
But then it's funny because now all these years later,
that was what, 2014, so more than 10 years later,
that was one of the best things that ever happened to me.
Because now I know how to, I can spot that false handshake
a thousand miles away now.
You know, when we, when we do deals, we know,
we learn through those experiences.
You know, the successes are easy.
It's those failures that teach you.
And then you become confident because you've survived.
If you can survive, though, that thing of, you know,
it doesn't kill you, makes you stronger.
Yeah, unless it maims you.
But, you know, because that does happen,
whether it's mentally or physically.
But if you, if you survive enough of those hits,
the confidence you have going into the hunt then,
you know exactly what it's going to do.
And so, you know, I think of it from an animal perspective.
You know, you think of a lion going after a gazelle.
I've seen a cheetah going after a gazelle.
And I've watched cheetah cubs learn, you know, the mother will maim the gazelle
and let the cheetah cubs sort of finish it off.
So they learn.
And you see them get poked as they're learning by those horns.
They'll come on from the back and they'll get poked.
It's like, yeah, go down for that windpipe on the other side.
They learn.
And some lions, you know, some cheetahs, some predators don't learn.
They'll get that straight through the eye.
And that's the end of it for them.
They'll get that infection.
And so that professionally, the discovery thing was great because it was a huge train wreck,
destroyed everything I had going on.
And so I had to just exile it to go live with elephants.
I had to go spend more time in the jungle.
And so I couldn't do, if I had gotten a TV career at that point,
it would have been terrible.
I wasn't ready.
It would have been the work.
thing that's a perfect example of life not giving you what you want and instead giving you what
you need it was it was i was being moved i was gone i want to go this way and god went no this is where
you're going to go and i'm going to spank you for it like it was great and i got all these experiences
that i never would have had otherwise i went and lived with the herd of semi wild elephants i went
out on solos in the amazon rainforest by myself it led to long period of isolated reflection and
years of then i said okay well forget forget trying to you know at that time in early 20s you know
you want to you have that that young man's sort of need to prove yourself and to go i'm i'm the guy
and so then when you get you get knocked on your ass and then you go okay i'm just going to do the work
and so we just started doing the work we said okay what are we really trying to do here
trying to save the forest how do we do that and there was a day where we
saw smoke on the horizon.
Me and JJ, who was this local
conservationist who grew up in the Amazon,
didn't have shoes until he was
13 years old, has been working
his whole life to protect the forest.
And we saw smoke on the horizon, and we have
300,000 acres of jungle behind us, and we see
the destruction coming.
And I was like, there's got to be somebody we can call.
There's got to be something. This can't be legal.
We're watching these millennium trees go down.
It's like Avatar. We're just watching this destruction.
And I said, there must be someone who can stop this.
And he looked up river, he looked downriver, and he goes,
do you see anybody else?
I said, no.
But I said, but then how can, how on earth can we have anything to do with stopping this?
And so we had to start from beyond zero.
How do you, how do you stop people from cutting down trees in the Amazon rainforests?
How do you, how do you start an organization?
How do we find rangers?
Who can be rangers?
And so we had to answer all these questions.
So it was just years of just being in the jungle answering these questions.
If we want to protect those monkeys and those birds and those millennium trees
and the ecosystem that creates climactic stability on our planet,
how do we do this?
Or are we supposed to just watch this get destroyed?
Are we part of the last generation that's going to have functioning ecosystems on this planet?
And we're doomed to watch the ecological apocalypse.
And that was the question.
And that is that quote that said,
know, the search for meaning is only valid if you're willing to take action on what you find.
And it's like, when I was a kid, I grew up with the extreme environmental stress.
They tell you the world is ending.
They tell you we've lost 50% of the wildlife on our planet.
The elephants are going extinct.
We're going to lose guerrillas in our lifetime.
And I couldn't deal with that.
I couldn't sleep.
And so I left.
I dropped out of high school two years early.
I got a plane ticket to the Amazon.
I was like, I have to go out and see it for myself.
That was how this started.
That was how all this started.
My mom, my parents made the huge mistake of they read me, Jane Goodall.
So it's a perfect storm of, so I'm severely dyslexic, right?
So I don't, I can't read well.
I couldn't read until I was probably 11.
But my parents, incredible, they would finish their day as parents and then read us.
They read me and my sister, Sherlock Holmes, Lord of the Rings, Jane Goodall story.
is James Harriet.
And so I got my heroes complex, hero's journey from Lord of the Rings, got the need for adventure and wildlife from Jane Goodall, got the love of animals from James Harriet and all this stuff.
And then sometime around teenager years, you know, when you're getting detention, detention, detention, detention, why didn't you do better?
Why didn't you do homework?
Because I don't want to do any more homework.
And I'm going, why did Teddy Roosevelt and Jane, they got to lead adventurous lives and I'm stuck in a desk asking permission to go to the bathroom?
And I was like, why do they get to do it?
And I don't.
And so I literally just, again, amazing parents, I said, I hate this so much.
I was so depressed.
I was so frustrated.
And my parents just said, why don't you just leave?
Get your GED.
Leave high school.
We want you to go to college.
So you have to go to college.
But in between semesters, you can go wherever you want.
I bought a ticket to the Amazon, went down, met JJ.
And it was like, it's like the first scene in giraffe.
When you saw the jungle for the first time,
it's like the first scene in Jurassic Park.
They arrive and they're like,
okay, this is going to be cool.
They said there's some stuff here.
It's like the first time they see the dinosaurs.
The first time I saw a millennium tree,
160 feet tall,
leaf cutter ants carrying leaves down from the canopy
into their thing and macaws going across the sky.
I was like, that was like the start of the movie in my life.
That's like the color came on.
I was just, I went, this is where I belong.
I was like, this is incredible,
just limitless things to learn.
limitless wilderness to explore.
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That's why I said we should do the...
One time you got to come down and we've got to hang the three-hams.
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I'm going to come and see you.
Let me get Australia, New Zealand and Bali out of the way,
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What is it what is it that drove you from those early days? Because talking about conservation as a
young man in his teens, most young people,
aren't that selfless.
They're looking to be driven by
the need for status and recognition
people that they admire
accumulating wealth or chasing goals
or doing whatever.
What were the contributing motivations to this?
That's a great question.
I've always loved animals.
When I was a child, I would go,
and specifically wild, people get this confused.
Domesticated animals is a different thing.
cats, dogs, cows, chickens.
We've made those.
Those aren't wild animals.
There's something beautiful to me.
Wild animals on Earth have formed our ecosystems.
There are wild brothers and sisters.
You know, we grew up in the ecosystems that they created,
and people think that animals live in the forest,
and the animals make the forest.
They carry the seeds.
They pollinate the flowers.
The trees grow because the animals move them.
And so I was, even from the time, I was this big.
I was, I said to my parents,
take me to the streams.
I wanted to find frogs.
I wanted to find snakes.
I liked places where there was,
I always liked big trees.
I liked the parts of the forest
where there were poplar trees
and big old oaks.
So I was born in Brooklyn
and then for a while we were in North Jersey
and so I always had access to these like
lower New York forests
and it was just beautiful trees.
But my motivation was not selfless.
Everybody confuses that.
My need to save the rainforest is extremely selfish.
I like it.
I think that there should be,
a continuing world.
And when I look at the fact that, you know,
the Amazon formed in the Eocene,
33 to 55 million years ago,
and so this cycle of speciation
and these trees growing has been happening
for millions and millions of years,
and for us to break that cycle
to the point that it no longer works,
you're destroying part of the system on Earth
that makes life possible.
A fifth of our planet's oxygen comes from the Amazon.
A fifth of the fresh water on our planet
is contained in that system.
And that system produces the moisture
that rains back down on the Amazon.
So if you cut too much of it,
you destroy the Amazon rainforest.
And for that reason,
we've lost 20% of the Amazon.
We're the first generation in history
that has a planetary crisis on our hands
that we can stop.
So we're the ones.
All of history has taken place.
We're the first ones where we're looking at 20%
of the Amazon is cut.
If we go past that threshold,
there's a tipping point
that we don't come back.
from. They've cut too much of the Amazon. It dries out. It's no longer the Amazon rainforest.
So then the tropical sun bakes it. Human degradation destroys it. And then you're looking at post-apocalyptic
nightmare. So it becomes a feedback loop? A snowball feedback loop. Okay. Can you just dig into it? Can you just
dig into that a little bit more? Sure. So every day the Amazon rainforest trees produce,
lift up off the, out of the ground and into the air, 20 trillion liters of water. It's, there's a larger
invisible mist river above the Amazon rainforest
than is on the ground in the Amazon River.
Held in the trees?
Floating through the sky.
The trees each morning, and so I've seen this
from the branches of the tallest trees.
And when the sun comes up in the east,
you could just see it for a few minutes.
It illuminates the mist river
that's flowing over the Amazon.
And so there's this invisible,
particulate mist river that's larger
than the largest river on earth
flowing through the sky.
There's more water in the air.
than there is on the ground.
In the river.
Holy shit.
In the Amazon.
That's the largest river on Earth.
And at the same time, it's also being, it's also being fertilized with compounds from the Sahara Desert.
So the Amazon and Africa are exchanging nutrients.
And so when people say that the earth is connected, like you don't realize the degree to which it is.
And one of the things, the locals down there that we've done is, you know, you have this thing we do.
It's kind of like a physical form of prayer.
It's a bit of a natural sacrament.
You cup your hands and you drink from a clear stream.
You hold your arm in the sunlight and you watch the vapor be lifted off your skin.
The sun will lift the sweat right off your skin.
And you can see it joining the vapors coming off the leaves.
You watch it become thunder clouds in the afternoons and then it rains down and then you drink it again.
You're part of the cycle.
It's flowing through you.
The river in the sky are flowing through you.
And so that 20 trillion liters of water that's coming off the Amazon rainforest,
which is bigger than the continental United States.
It's tremendous.
So globally, it's this huge force.
And so in the last century, because of chainsaws, deforestation, expanding countries, agriculture,
we've lost 20% of the Amazon rainforest,
this system that is the heart of our planet.
And so the scientists are warning now that if we lose more, we could cross a threshold
where that mist river, that 20 trillion tons of water, liters of water gets broken.
So if that's not coming up off the ground because there's not enough trees to produce it,
then the rain stops.
And if the rain stops, the forest dries.
And if the forest dries, then it burns.
And then we lose the Amazon rainforest forest.
And that's a reality, it's a realistic possibility.
right now. Is the reason
that there is a tipping point here
because there's a critical mass
that's needed in order for rain clouds
to form. I'm trying to work out
if you cut 50% of it, why wouldn't you
just have 50% of the water
that would go up and you would have
50% of the trees
that would need watering?
So surely it would be self-limiting, but
it seems like there's a tipping point here.
No, what we've seen in
practice, in reality is that
there is this tipping point. Even with the
20% we're starting to see the droughts get worse.
And another huge misconception people have is they say wildfires and the Amazon are out of control.
There are no wildfires.
There's no fires in the Amazon.
You're going to.
Super hard to start a fire in the Amazon.
You actually can't start a fire in the Amazon.
You could napalm that forest.
I mean, there's been times where we're trying to start a fire when we're camping.
You know, you start a fire, you try and start an authentic fire, no chance.
All the sticks are wet.
You try and find some Tinder.
You hack into a stick.
Even the center of the stick is wet.
So then you get the gasoline, you pour it all over your fire.
You like that, the gasoline burns and the sticks are wet.
So then you just eat, you know, you have like a ramen noodle pack.
You dip it in the river until it's a little moist and cold, and then you just eat it.
And you just sprinkle this stuff on top.
It's great.
Or you just eat the fish.
A lot of times we have fish that we can't cook.
So you just eat the fish out of the river like it's a Snickers.
But, I mean, that Amazon tipping point, the extinction of species, I just,
truly believe that this is the defining issue of our time. I think that we were born in the most
important time in history. Civilizations rise and fall. Nature has always been a constant that we have
existed within. And for the first time in the story of our species as a global society, we have to
contend with the fact that we have to decide what the future of Earth is going to look like. Because if
we destroy the Amazon, pass the point that it can be repaired, then we're cursing all future
generations with those actions.
Who owns the Amazon?
Who owns most of the Amazon?
60% of the Amazon is contained within the territory of Brazil.
The next largest country is Peru, which is where I work.
And that has the headwaters of the Amazon.
The headwaters is the most important part because you have the edge of the Andes Mountains,
and then you have the lowland tropical Amazon.
And the Andes cloud forests are considered a mega biodeverse biome.
That ecosystem is considered mega biodeversyome.
tons of plants and animals.
The lowland Amazon is also megabiodiverse.
And so at the confluence of those two, where I work,
it's also higher up, if you think of the Amazon rainforest,
the main river is a tree.
And then all the millions of tributaries are the branches.
Where I work is on the tip, tip, tip, tip, tip, tip, tip, tip, top of the branches.
High tributary.
And that's why it's the wildest place on earth,
because people haven't been able to access it.
There's been no access to this place for until now.
And so it's still this forest that's been growing since the dawn of time untouched.
And so you think some of these trees were saplings when they were painting the roof of the Sistine Chapel.
Some of these trees were already giants when World War I was happening.
When World War II was happening, they were towering 130 foot, you know.
And you're talking about 160 foot trees.
me and you could walk around on the branches of these trees. Some of the branches that I've,
some of the branches that come off the trees that I climb are as big as this room. With Bermeliads growing
with, you know, the size of a Volkswagen bug, like, you know, there's species in the canopy of
the rainforest that have never been seen. There's, because many of the species, 50% of the life
in a rainforest occurs in the canopy. We think about that. 50% of the life, 50% of the life,
in the most biodiverse place on Earth,
occurs in the canopy,
which is 160 feet off the ground.
So it's one of the least explored things on the planet.
Even if a scientist can climb one tree,
you've got to know the ropes.
You got to get up there.
You've got to survive the bees and the wasps
and the height and the gravity and everything else it's going to have.
I guess you couldn't even send drones
because they're just going to clink, clink, clink, clink, and then fall down.
Yeah, and animals hate drones.
It just looks like a predator.
It's like a giant wasp.
They, birds are terrified of them.
Elephants hate drones.
Oh my God.
Spooks them.
Really scares.
Well, they're scared of bees.
Elephants don't like bees.
Right?
Such like David and Goliath relationship.
It's proper Tom and Jerry thing.
They have sensed this is, we're now, we're moving out of the Amazon for a second.
But, but yes, in my experience, they're very, they have sensitive skin.
They don't like, even though they can, they can move through thorns and they actually
in one sense, they have very thick skin.
They don't like bee stings.
And there's something about the buzzing of bees.
They actually are using bees in parts of Kenya on the borderlands of farms.
They put bee boxes on the edges of farms to keep the elephants because the elephants are like, look, we're just not going to go to that.
They're the border collies of the elephant world, the sheepdogs of the elephant world.
The elephants just hate them.
That's funny.
It's making me think about a wonderful analogy that you made about the ocean.
And it's almost like the rainforest is the inverted ocean.
We talk about, well, how little of the ocean floor has ever been, yeah, where you're talking about the canopy.
Isn't that cool?
So, so sake.
Okay, so canopy, 50% of the life of the life and a rainforest is in the canopy.
And so a lot of the species that are born up there never touched the ground.
Are you, what are the, what is the bulk of those species made up of?
What are the sorts of animals that are in the canopy?
I mean, you have spider monkeys, howler monkeys, saki monkey.
These capuchins, macaws, harpy eagles.
I mean, there's hundreds of species of different birds.
I think there's 50-something species of ant birds.
There's all the toucans and arisarees and unbelievable amounts of birds, butterflies,
dragonflies, millions and millions.
Just unbelievable amounts of wildlife, undiscovered medicines, orchids, bromeliads, cactuses,
reptiles, amphibians, birds, mammals, it's just teeming.
And so you think of, again, back to this sapling that started a thousand years.
I think what the world looked like a thousand years ago, and that sapling today is this millennium
tree with these giant branches as thick as this room.
And how many, if you time-lapse that over a thousand years, how many species, how many millions
of species have lived on and in and around?
That one tree.
One tree.
And there's 400 billion trees in the Amazon.
How many grains of sand are there on earth?
You know, it's like, this place defies.
And then when you see all this magic and you, you know, you know, you.
know, the sky and the river are flowing through you and everything's interconnected and there's
this energy exchange and you suddenly understand the sunlight hits the leaves, goes into the trees,
the animals eat the leaves and then they hunt each other and everything makes sense and keeps rolling
and it all produces oxygen and makes our lives possible because of them, we're here, without them,
we couldn't be here. And then you see the bulldozers and the chainsaws and the black smoke and
they're literally erasing all of the beautiful color, all of that avatar riotous grandeur, the carcophony
is silenced.
In order to get rid of 20% of 400 billion trees, that's a big operation.
Yeah, but we've taken a century to do it.
Right.
But still.
But it's accelerating now.
I mean, you know, that's a high-velocity operation to be able to get that to happen.
I must be a really, really big industry.
Well, I mean, you have to think, you know, Brazil's formation, the deforestation that's occurred in Peru, the various sorts.
of it, there's illegal gold mining where they have to cut the forest, burn the forest,
and then suck the land up through hoses to get the sediment because the gold is not in nuggets.
It's in the sand.
So they have to completely destroy the earth.
Get tiny shards of precious metal.
Tiny, minuscule, almost microscopic pieces of, and you can see this scar from space across the Amazon.
You can see the Amazon.
It looks like it, it looks like it caught mange.
You see human roads moving across the southern Amazon.
And so, I mean, to summarize it for the people that don't know,
it's, I've been working with the locals for 20 years to find an answer to this.
Because either we say we're going to have ecological collapse.
We just give up on it because life on Earth used to come standard with fish in the oceans,
air, oxygen in the air, and water that you could drink.
And now we're ruining those systems.
And so we're the last generation that's going to have a chance to save the Amazon rainforest.
And what we've done over the last 20 years is we found a way to do that.
We started asking our enemies, the loggers and the gold miners, if they'd like to join our team.
The people that were cutting down the rainforest, we would go have a beer with them.
The people that we thought were our mortal enemies that were causing all of the death and destruction and flames and silence.
J.J. were just going, let's go see how they are.
We'd go and sit down and have a beer with them and go, how you doing?
They go, good, how you doing?
They go, will we move down here from another part of the Amazon?
There's no trees there?
So we came here because you guys still have really old trees.
We go, cool, how much you make a day?
I go, $15 a day.
They go, you like that work?
And they go, no, the trees falling is dangerous.
We get bitten by bullet ants and stung by things and it's hard and there's no food.
And $15 a day really isn't worth it once you subtract the gasoline it takes to get all the way five days away from town.
I go, okay.
go, you guys want to be jungle keepers?
We'll pay you three times that.
You get a really cool t-shirt.
You get medical benefits, a steady paycheck, and a community, and we'll take care of the boat.
And instead of your chainsaw, you have to carry binoculars.
It's a lot lighter than a chainsaw.
And now you protect the forest instead of destroy it.
And they go, where do I sign?
And that's it.
And so we've been doing that.
We've been converting loggers and gold miners into conservation rangers,
giving the local people opportunities that they didn't have,
because what we discovered is that the reason they're destroying the rainforest is because they don't
have anything else they can do.
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slash modern wisdom 30. How much of this is bottom up, them doing it on their own to then
try and make a profit to sell and how much of this is top-down, a company going in,
in recruiting locals in order to do an operation on behalf of a bigger organization?
50-50.
Right.
So the second one is going to be much harder.
The second one is going to be much harder.
Because if you go and take away worker number three and make him work for you, then guy from
the street becomes worker number three.
Yes.
And they'll continue to recruit.
But the good thing with that side is that you can put pressure on those companies, right?
You can come and lobby restrict.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's accessible.
Where we are, we're so remote.
it used to take two days to get to the research station
that I started working at,
deep in the jungle.
So when you meet these people,
it's the bottom up guys.
It's people that just have a chainsaw
and they're driving their little tiny motor
through the Amazon rainforest.
They know where to sell this sediment
or sell the tree or sell whatever it is
that they're going back with.
Yeah, I mean, JJ grew up.
His father, his brothers,
they would go out for three weeks at a time.
They'd go 10 days up river.
They'd find mahogany trees.
They'd fell them.
Then they would spend time in the jungle
milling them
boards. Then they would pile the boards in the river on balsa wood that floats. And then they would
float it down the river. They'd put their motor on the wood and use the wood and they would just
do to do to do to do and they would pilot that down through the Amazon and it would get stuck in
places. They've got to get in the water and pry it out. Brutal work. And then when they finally
get to town, they get paid practically nothing for that wood. And then when that wood hits the
international market, a mahogany tree goes for a million dollars. And so the people on these poor
people on the ground. They have no, and if you go, what would you do if you weren't logging?
And they're like, fish, you know, hand to mouth, live out of nature. And so it's not, there's not a lot
of opportunities. And so by giving them the opportunities to protect their forest, to attend classes,
to become park rangers, to become boat drivers, chefs, guides, we're just changing the narrative
in this place. And so now we've protected 130,000 acres of the Amazon rainforest, which is like,
I believe it's nine times the size of Manhattan Island.
It's more than half the size of Singapore.
And the Peruvian government has taken notice.
And they've said, if you guys can protect 300,000 acres,
we'll sign it over into a national park.
So we're almost halfway.
Wow.
We're almost 20 years in.
20 years ago, I left home because I wanted to see for myself
if it really was an emergency in the Amazon rainforest like I had heard.
I wanted to see for myself if what I had heard was true.
And when I got down there, I found something more magical than I could ever have imagined.
And 20 years later, we have an organization and we have a global movement.
And there's people all over the world that contribute monthly that make it possible for us to pay these rangers and protect this land and keep it safe from the loggers.
And we found a way to change the narrative of conservation.
Where can people go if they want to help donate money?
Well, we have junglekeepers.org.
And it's the most direct way to save the rainforest.
And so I have people tell me that, you know, traditionally with organizations, they say, you know, I made a donation to an organization to protect nature, but I don't know where it went. And so the thing that we started doing was just showing people. This is where your money went. Land acquisition, Ranger Pay, a little bit of admin. That's it. And if you look at most of these NGOs, what we started realizing was that expensive C-suite private-
show. Playing their CEOs, $500,000 a year and the next 10 people, $500,000 a year. And if you look at the breakdown, their pie chart,
90% of their donations going towards advertising.
You take the top 10 environmental organizations you could name.
90% of their donations go towards advertising to further their brand.
The money that we get, I think 85% goes to land acquisition and ranger pay.
Direct action.
And so some people will come to us.
Somebody reached out to me on Instagram not that long ago.
And he goes, I just made a donation to blank.
huge organization that we all know.
And he goes, I have no idea where my money went.
And it's really driving me crazy.
He goes, I saw you on a podcast.
And he goes, I really want to help.
He goes, what are you working on right now?
And I said, well, we're actually in a state of emergency right now.
There's a road coming in.
The narco traffickers are attacking us.
I said, there's like, you know, the sector on the northern boundary of the park.
And he goes, well, how big is it?
I said, several thousand acres.
I said, but it's like $250,000.
We don't have it right now.
He goes, I got you.
This guy, Michael.
He just, he reached out.
He goes, it'll be in your account tomorrow.
He wired us $250,000.
He spoke to me for a half hour.
We'd never met each other.
We took the money, went to the landowner.
We said, landowner, do you want this road to come through your rainforest and they're
going to completely cut it down?
Old guy, he goes, no.
He goes, I don't want this.
He goes, but they're going to hurt me if I don't do it.
We bought it and we got the cops to come in and we completely protected over 5,000 acres
of rainforest like that.
How much are you fighting against crime when I think South America, sometimes there's going to
some organized crime floating around in there.
You're talking about the dangers of the urchin or the worries of the bullet ant or the jaguar,
but what about the modern human concern?
That's the scary thing.
That's the scary part.
The loggers and the gold miners, the local people in Peru, the local people in Peru are incredibly kind.
The people of the Madre de Dios of Peru,
are rural people.
I rock up in a raft or in my boat,
and they'll let me camp at their house.
You know, it's like these people live in thatched huts.
They eat monkeys and turtles.
They're wonderful rural people.
We also have narco traffickers coming in now.
And they are not local.
They are not from there.
They heard that there are extremely wild parts of the Amazon
where the police can't get to.
Deep, deep, deep, deep jungle.
And so what they do is they launch expeditions
deep into the jungle,
I figured no one's going to come out here.
But what are they doing?
Why would you want to be...
Growing cocaine.
The what?
Growing cocaine.
Growing cocaine.
So it's like farms.
Yeah.
But again, it's the artisanal guys.
It's not the big crime bosses.
It's like a couple of brothers that got together and went, hey man, you know what we should do?
We should go grow some cocaine.
It's the equivalent of being a weed farmer in California like 30 years ago.
Yes.
But doing it with cocaine in the Amazon.
Yes.
And the difference is like the weed farmers, I feel like, you know, I don't feel like.
like they'll shoot you. There's something about the cocaine
grower culture. So this is even
though they're more small time, more
grassroots, they're still
kinetically
protected. Yeah. And so when it comes
to the uncontacted tribes, when it comes to us,
they've made it very clear.
If we get the chance, we'll kill you. They say it.
The cops actually intercepted
one of the people that they arrested.
They said
that gringo and JJ,
they said to anyone
on our network if you see them take them out talking about you yeah oh yeah how does that make you
feel very unsafe i mean it's very stressful trying to do anything because it used to be that we'd drive
around with our boat i would just have machete no shoes we should be driving on my boat through the
amazon and now you have to be very careful um and then you know even passing through a city you can't
sit down i can no longer sit down in a cafe and have a coffee you know you just think someone's
going to come up behind you you can't that's how much of a hit list you're on
on now. Oh yeah. No, I travel with a
huge security team when I'm there now.
The security team is not to
protect you from the animals of the Amazon
or even necessarily
the uncontacted tribes
or... None of those things are going to try
and shoot me in the head. It's just the narcos.
And so, yeah,
I have a circle of
armed men around me at all times, outward
facing because of the...
You're like the president.
You're like... Yes, a very...
No.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not at all.
But no, I hate it.
And so the good thing is that the Peruvian police have been working on this narco problem.
And really just they just came in.
And so they're starting to just move them out.
There was a small group of them and they're starting to move them out.
So we're hoping that that calms down.
Because, again, it's when people hear, oh, you're 50% of the way to making this national park, that's incredible.
Then they hear narco traffickers.
And it's not even like they're the ones in the Amazon rainforest.
And they go, you're going to fail.
Nobody can beat the narcos.
and they stopped donating.
It's a bit of a bus cow.
They stopped helping us.
And which I think isn't like,
I mean, cowardice on a level
I can't even imagine it.
It's like it's not like I'm asking you to come fight.
I'm just saying, just help us.
And they're like, no, it's a lost cause.
It's like, no, we're fighting.
We're not giving up.
Why should you give up?
What is,
is there a time in your mind that sticks out
as the most fear
that you felt the most afraid
that you've ever been?
I wonder whether it's come from threats from humans
or threats from jungle or threats from something else.
The most afraid I've ever been,
I mean, I can give you the most afraid I've ever been
from an animal.
I can give you the action version,
but the most afraid I've ever been
was when I was young and starting out and didn't know,
I was dreaming so badly that we'd be at this point one day.
I saw it 20 years ago.
I wanted to do this.
And at that time,
You know, if you wanted to, if you wanted to protect species and save rainforest, you had to be a conservation biologist.
And I didn't have the grades for that.
I hadn't even finished high school.
Did you go back to college in the end?
I did.
Okay.
You kept the promise to your parents?
Yes, but.
By the skin of your teeth.
By the skin of my teeth.
I would show up late to a semester because I was raising an anteater.
You know, my great.
Didn't I hear that you needy died because of raising an anteater?
Well, I got a really bad staff infection.
I got a MRSA infection across my whole body.
my whole face was rotting off, but I kept, I have this really bad habit of trying to walk it off.
You know, horrific things.
I almost chopped with the tendon that connects your kneecap.
I chopped most of that tendon and I was like, I'll walk it off.
You know, the stingray went, I'll walk it off.
And so I got this horrific infection.
I kept going, at some point it must, at some point it's got to get better, right?
No, an antibiotic resistant staff infection will eventually kill you.
And so I was taking care of-
From an anteater?
Absolutely not.
from a hospital.
I had dengue fever
and I'd gone to the hospital
to like get a shot.
So what's this good to do with the ante?
It just happened
while you were looking after an anteater.
Well, because the only reason
I didn't go home and get help
was because I had this baby anteater
that needed me.
So I kept letting the infection
get worse weeks and weeks and weeks.
My body was just to eat.
She needed me.
You know who else was a massive fan of antietas?
Salvador Dali.
Yes, that picture of him going out of the subway.
Do you know why he said
that he loved walking an anteater
through the streets of Paris?
No, I do not.
He said because antieters
never in fashion.
You just loved the idea of,
I'm researching him for my next live show,
the number of stories
that he's got,
more of them being,
yeah, he walked an anteater
through the streets of Paris
because he said,
they're never in fashion.
He also sued a man for dreaming about him
and said, because the subconscious
belongs to me.
Oh, boy.
So cool.
So sick.
Anyway, so you've got
the worst mercer of your life.
You need, that was,
and that you were young.
Yeah, I was 19 at the time,
and I remember, like,
writing a journal entry to my parents,
and being like, goodbye, thank you for everything.
Sweet life.
Yeah, like I really was saying, I really was sad.
I also said, even if I live, I couldn't imagine I'd ever have a normal face, so I really
thought it was the end.
So I've lived through my own death many, many times in many different ways, whether it's
being chased by an elephant or laying on the side of the, that time I had to wait three
days just for a boat to come by.
That's how remote in the jungle I was, and there was no one else.
So when I finally realized I was in trouble, I said, I got to get a boat.
Well, there was no boats.
So you lay by the side of the river.
and you have all these postules of infection boiling out of your skin.
And so the flies are feasting on you.
And I lay in that state for several days before I,
the only boat coming down river was a poaching boat,
stacked with the carcasses of animals.
So more flies, dying spider monkeys, crocodiles, macaws,
all things destined for the illegal pet trade.
And I laid on that boat for two days on the way back to town.
Finally got to the remote,
the first town with a telephone and called my,
mother and I said you got to get me out of here she got me a plane ticket and the next day
i got on a plane everybody moved away from me at the airport it was like it was like fish moving
away from a shark people would look at me and they'd hide their children i mean i was leaking out of my
face yellow and green pus i had my hood up like a freak and i i i i somehow they let me on the plane
and i arrived at jfk you know the the port authority cop looks down he goes okay paul rosely he goes yeah
where were you traveling he goes holy shit
dude. He goes, what happened to your face? And I was like, that's, that's why I'm home. I need to go to a
doctor. And he just stamped it. He goes, go, go, go. He was like, please go. And I went to the hospital and spent
like four or five days on full IV antibiotics to kill the infection and bring me back. And the doctor said,
if you'd waited just a little long, a few more days, they said, we wouldn't have been able to
bring you back. The infection would have been so, so established. But, you know, in those early days,
my reasons for doing these things were
were I wanted so badly to be
to follow in the footsteps of someone like Jane Goodall
or some of the conservation heroes
like Alan Rabinowitz, people who have made national parks
and I wanted to save these things
but I also just selfishly wanted to have adventures.
I felt so, I felt so meaningless as a kid
feeling like, oh, so I'm going to finish this
and I'm going to get a good job.
And I was like, but there has to be like,
I want like the stories.
Adventure.
I want to go out on an adventure.
I want to find some stuff.
And so the Amazon was that.
The Amazon was just horizon to horizon of jungle.
And they said, there's these some contacted tribes out there.
And there's animals you've never heard of.
And there's all these rivers that no one's explored.
And so I said, this is where I can live out my life here,
even if I can never hold down a normal job.
And if I can't be a conservation biologist,
at least I could just go on amazing adventures.
And so that's how it started.
but that was the scariest part to me was that longing of knowing what I really wanted
and thinking I would never, ever have it.
Knowing that I wanted to be an author one day, you know,
and writing these little chapters, you know, it's in my journal,
and thinking no one's ever going to read this, no one's ever going to, you know.
And I even had people, you even have people in your life that say,
I even had someone, you know, tell me, say, you're crazy,
to publish a book, you know how hard it is to publish a book.
They're not going to, that's never going to work.
And you have people, you notice the people who encourage,
and who disparage you.
My friends, my housemate George, calls them sofa friends and treadmill friends.
Some people, after you've spent time with them, you need to go and lie down on the sofa.
And some people after you've spent time with them, you want to go and run on a treadmill.
Yeah.
And his goal is to spend as much time around treadmill friends as possible and little time around
sofa friends as possible.
To get rid of the sofa friends.
Yeah.
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Yes, you need to.
Jungle keep of what it takes to change the world.
And so this is the whole story.
This is from the frustrated kid to, and it's crazy because I wish I had a time machine now to go back
because 18 years old, getting on the plane for the first time, leaving for the Amazon,
never in a million years would I imagine that we would have, you know, caught the biggest
Anaconda and met the uncontacted tribes.
And now that we're actually protecting 130,000 acres of rainforest and on the
cusp of making history by saving a whole river.
And you've got one of the heroes that inspired you, writing a blub, on behalf of the forests
that I love, thank you Paul for writing this book, Jane Goddall.
Dude, that's so amazing.
I'm so proud of you.
I'm so proud of you.
Jane, Jane, Jane, also Jane taught me something very incredible, which is the grace of attention,
someone who's as luminary and famous and busy as she.
she was. I came up to her to talk when I was in my early 20s with chapters about the anteater
that I was taking care of. I lived in the rainforest with my aunt eater and I took care of her
and we did this and we did that and I waited in line with hundreds of people after a Jane Goodall
talk in New York City and I handed her a manila envelope. You know, you have two seconds with her.
Hello, you're so inspiring. She goes, yes, everybody says the same thing. And she takes a picture
with you and then you move on and I just said, I've been living in the Amazon rainforest.
and I'd have a story I think you'd love.
And I had included a message in there,
and I said, my dream is to become an author.
And it would mean the world to me
because you're one of my heroes,
if you would endorse my book.
And she incredibly actually read the material I gave her.
This random kid, out of hundreds and hundreds and thousands of people,
she would travel 300 days a year.
She actually read it and had her team get back to me
and said, as soon as you find a publisher,
tell them you have Jane Goddall's words.
That's fucking goat.
Dude, she waved her magical, very powerful wand in my direction and gave me a career.
And by giving me a career, handed me the Excalibur sword to go and actually start jungle keepers and protect an entire river.
And so what she did was she empowered other, she wanted to save nature, she empowered other people to do it.
It's interesting that of all of the things that you've done, of all of the terrifying situations that you've been in not fulfilling your dream.
by far is the thing that gave you the most terror absolutely i mean that's a state of agony
that's a state of you know that that young retracted as well right it's like drawn out over time it's
the bar being in your foot for decades yeah it's the state you live in and it's the it's the existential
question of am i going to have these ambitions and never see them to fruition which what which
you know there's that there's that line many are called if you are chosen this the other thing am i going to
invest 20 years in this and then fail.
And there was a part in the book and there's a part in my life where, you know, after the
discovery thing and after I'd gone, I've been going on expeditions with my local friends
in the Amazon for years.
And so I already was the guy in the Amazon, but I had tried.
I'd written the first book.
I'd done the Discovery Channel thing and failed.
I'd gone and lived with the elephants.
I'd even started jungle keepers, but it wasn't working yet.
There was something missing.
And it was like, kept trying, it kept trying, year after year, after year.
And there was a point where my dad, we pulled over somewhere in the car, and my dad went,
hey, before you get out, he said, I just want you to know, we love you no matter what.
And I went, you know, you just keep doing this jungle thing.
Did he think that you were doing it to try and prove your worst to your parents?
No, what he meant was, even if none of this works out, it's okay.
He was like, you know, what you're doing, you're not making any money doing.
this you just keep going to the jungle and getting new injuries and and and and you know we see you try and
and real hard and he was like it's okay he sounds like a good man he's a he's the he's the best man my parents
are angels on earth they were they were they were the best parents and they're just very good people but
the horror of that moment was him saying you know it's okay if you just if this is all there is and
i just i went no and so you know the the the
Because I went, it's happening.
You know, I go, you're 32 years old, and I go,
I've been doing this since I was 18.
And, and, you know, the, so you slowly you learn that
relentlessness is the greatest skill you can learn.
Because there are so many opportunities to give up.
I have a slightly contrarian opinion on consistency and relentlessness.
For a very long time, I always said that my superpower is consistency.
I've slightly changed my opinion on that recently.
I think it's stubbornness.
I think that stubbornness is functionally the same,
but much more accessible to a lot of people.
Consistency sounds super sexy.
There's a really famous visualization
by my friend Jack Butcher from Visualized Value,
and it's a graph that explains my life and your life
and a lot of other people's lives as well.
Yes, that's my life.
How'd you know that, man?
For the people that are listening, it's a bar chart and it's very, very long and it's completely flat.
And there's a little arrow pointing to a point where it's completely flat saying this is pointless.
And then the bar chart starts to lift off in a exponential curve.
That is the first 17 years of my adult life and the last three.
That's exactly what happened.
You felt like you had that as well?
I think for at least the
At least a good bit of what I was trying to do
What I've been trying to do with this show
And it comes in waves
It's interesting with the way that sort of
Momentum occurs on the internet
For a very long time
I think it took
400, 500 episodes
For us to get to 100,000 subscribers
Yeah
I'd like you know
Four or five hours of
I was booking every guest research
every guest, sitting down with every guest, doing the edits for every single audio episode,
doing the ad reads for pennies because I wanted to keep on going and I wanted to do this thing.
And I didn't care because I just kind of liked it.
So it was less mission driven.
My outcome was not to get to a stage where it was.
It was simply sort of the doing of the thing.
But if you were to look at the trend on a graph, there is a, this is pointless.
Yeah, exactly.
And as you start to zoom out a little bit, everything looks puny in comparison.
you realize that for every conversation that you have now,
the impact can be greater and the opportunities and so on and so forth.
And, yeah, the stubbornness to stick something out
when it seems like it isn't working.
But the thing that you've got, the confluence of what you were interested in,
what you were inspired by, what environment gave you the opportunity to do,
the people that were around you, chance meetings with heroes and opportunities,
all the rest of the stuff, JJ, even just the fact that you found a guy that has stuck with you,
for the, but so long.
Yeah.
That is sort of the genesis of obsession.
I've been thinking a lot, I wrote this week, a really,
I think it's an interesting article about the relationship between discipline,
motivation, and obsession.
So the relationship is to do with friction.
Discipline is friction accepted.
You accept that there is an amount of friction that's going to be bestowed on you,
and you're going to use effort and habits and willpower and patterns in order to move through it.
motivation is friction removed and there is no longer the friction you want to do the thing so discipline
I will make myself do the thing motivation I want to do the thing obsession I can't not do the thing
so obsession is friction inverted yes and it pulls you into it and it causes you to stay awake at night time
and it ruins your relationships and it destroys your sleep and it causes you to forget your health
and it does all of these things.
But the problem is
discipline is relatively easy to engineer.
Motivation is tough but can be engineered
and obsession is impossible to engineer.
You cannot engineer obsession.
And this is why the whole
thesis of the argument is
if you have an obsession that's worth something,
allow it to climb inside of you
and stare out through your eyes
because most people, for most of their lives,
don't have an obsession that's worth anything at all.
And it's destructive
or pointless or just simply is not going to move them in the direction that they want to.
What they're obsessed with is politics or the toxic X or porn or gambling or some sort of,
you know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
The obsession is just not moving them in direction that they want to go to.
And if you're one of the people that's being gifted with this, and the coolest thing.
And it is a gift, yeah.
The coolest thing is that when you look at most people as they age through life, people who are a serial,
obsessives. They have this period of obsession that's maybe a few years or half a decade or multiple
decades. And then what you see after that cools and hardens is something that looks more like
identity. So you look at someone that, Dorian Yates, bodybuilding guy who now continues to go to
the gym. The gym is no longer his obsession. But his, what looks like discipline from the outside is
just the echo of an old obsession. So it's what happens. Discipline is often why.
happens when it cools into identity.
He's the guy that goes to the gym.
He's just the guy that goes to the gym.
I'm the guy that records the podcast.
The guy that wants to sit down or he's looking for people.
Wouldn't it be cool to talk to?
Wouldn't that be a good idea?
It's like, it's just what I do.
And that's, if you deny yourself what you did, yes, you're still obsessed, which is great.
But much of what you're doing now is you're just the guy that goes to the Amazon.
I'm just the jungle guy now.
You're just the jungle guy.
Except, yes.
And now, but all, it's so funny.
how many of those things are just the hero's journey.
So you've been through it, I've been through it,
the ruining of the health, the constant obsession,
the graph going nowhere until it goes somewhere.
I mean, you have to have the experience
and in a way have those stories and have that knowledge
and have those failures so that you're able to play the game
at an expert level.
You have to put in your 10,000 hours to the point
that you know what you're doing.
And so yeah, it's now, the thing though here
is that even if I wanted to get off the train now, I can't.
Because now we're responsible for protecting millions and millions of heartbeats.
Now those ant eaters and those monkeys and all those ancient trees would be blackened to earth if we stopped.
And coming and talking to yourself and writing a book like this,
and now we're spreading this message to so many millions of people and we've created a way for them to.
Because so many people care about the Amazon rainforests.
People, I get messages from fans.
I get messages, classically, I tell this story, a mother message.
I mean, she said, you know, I work two jobs.
She's like, I can't donate a lot.
She goes, we give $5 a month to jungle keepers, but I tell my kids they're part of saving
the Amazon rainforest.
And that means so much to me.
And so whether it's a billionaire giving a few hundred thousand dollars or a million
dollars, or it's a mother giving $5 a month, and the fact that people have the opportunity
to change the narrative of destruction and actually make the world a better place, that is,
to me, that's such a crucial thing that in these, you know, in these fallen times where
Everyone seems so disassociated, the modern nothingness wave that everyone seems to be feeling.
The antithesis of that, or the antidotes of that, is radical action, is that there are people out there who are making things better, helping people, finding water for people that don't have it, fixing ecosystems and improving technology and the way the world works.
And it's like, we've never lived at a more exciting time.
What drinking water, what is this state of drinking water in the Amazon? Can you drink the Amazon water?
I wouldn't drink from the main channels is a lot of sediment.
And also most, again, even in the Amazon rainforest that a lot of us imagine to be very, very wild, there's boats and some gasoline and like rivers, anywhere humans go gets polluted.
But the river that we are on, the river that I work on is so remote and so pristine that we drink straight out of the river.
You can bend down to a waterfall and drink.
And that's a rare thing on earth these days.
You know, I don't know in the U.S. how many waterways they would recommend that you drink.
I've been in national parks and I've had the rangers tell me, you know, whatever you do, don't drink out of the streams.
And I'm like, we're in the Rockies.
Yeah.
You know, like what's polluting?
I would have imagined that there would be maybe some dangerous parasites.
Well, there are.
There's Giardia.
Okay.
I think a lot of, a lot of it is, you know, you, at some point you just start, you go,
I'm going to, I'm going to fully embody, I'm going to play this game on full, you know,
we're going to walk barefoot, we're going to go on that adventure.
When you get to the scary part and there's a waterfall, you go, you know, let's just go over
the waterfall.
Sometime along the way, you know, they say, play the game like you can't lose, and it's like,
I think I apply that to just about everything in life.
You just go, it's going to work.
And if it doesn't work, you die.
But that's okay.
I mean, do you think of a Comanchee warrior going out on horseback with their bow and arrow?
They might die or they might win.
How did we get so soft that everyone's worried about their little 401k and what their feelings and their journey?
Go try.
I think they would have been scared to.
I think the Comanches would have been scared before they left home.
They've got wife.
They've got kids.
the mission calls, yeah, they
go and they do the thing. When it's time to,
when it's time to go, you go. But the problem
is that there is much more time to consider going
and much less time that's spent going now.
Yes, and I think that, I think that
the edge of, of,
anticipation and action is interesting.
Action's the antidote to anxiety. It always is.
And unfortunately, there is way less action.
There's less opportunity and there's more time to consider.
And that means that you vacillate and ruminate
and talk yourself out
of doing what it was that you were going to do.
Yeah, and I mean, and that goes, you know,
The warrior analogy of that.
And then there's also the execution of whether it's starting that business
or it's pursuing that relationship or it's moving to that country or whatever it is.
Yeah, you might.
It might not work out, but that's okay.
I've been playing with ChatGBTGPT.
Backgrounds for my phone.
And currently the one...
Yes.
Do it anyway.
Do it anyway.
Do it anyway.
Do it scared, do it as high as...
Do it scared, yeah.
Do it scared, do it hard, do it uncertain.
Right? Do it uncertain.
That's a big one for a lot of people.
Do it anyway.
Okay, so that was the existential fear.
What about the kinetic fear?
Sure.
I would say the two times I've been the most scared.
I'll give you two.
One, because of this existential fear of not having adventures
and not having a meaningful life,
I said, I want to go out.
like the great explorers did, but better.
I want no porters, no guides, no nothing.
I learned for a few years.
I trained in the Amazon, and then I went out on solo expeditions.
And so I took a boat three days deep into the jungle with some poachers,
then they left me on a beach, and then I walked another few days into the jungle along the river.
Totally on your own.
Totally on my own.
Camping at night, under the stars.
Backpack, I had a raft with paddles, so if things got bad,
I could get to the main river channel, fishing and eating.
and that was the first time.
I was told that this tributary was so remote
that there was nobody on it.
I wouldn't see a human.
It was just wild nature.
And sure enough, the animals,
it was like the Galapagos,
the animals were so unfamiliar with humans
that jaguars would walk out on the beach
and the animals just don't care.
They don't know what you are.
They don't care.
Jaguar doesn't care.
Tapirs and Capi Barra and Cayman
and just incredible amounts of life.
And I was,
These are the experience that is that I wanted to absorb
because I wanted to see what raw nature looked like
before humans touched it.
So this was an incredibly important thing for me
and I was out there enjoying this and then I went up this one tributary
I pushed a little bit too far
and it just happened to be where the uncontacted tribes,
nomadic tribes, a small band.
They had a campfire on the side of the beach
and these are naked people
who are pre-stone age.
They don't have stones.
They've been living out there for thousands of years
They've missed the Sistine Chapel in the World Wars
And everything else that's ever happened
And they don't even know the name of the country they live in
They've never seen a spoon
And now they're looking at me
You're on the water
I'm on the side of the river
And they're on the other side of the river
And they see them see me
And they're holding bows and arrows
And they're naked and they have face paint
And they're staring at me
And I'm staring at them
And I know that
Any help is about
three weeks away by foot
and I just ran for my life
and I ran for my life through the jungle
for about as long as I could
and then I opened up my pack raft
I inflated this raft
it's a pretty durable raft
and then I started paddling
for the next few days I didn't stop
because even if I stopped
I would go to sleep
or put up my tent
fall asleep and the first dream you have
is that you hear the voices that they're coming
because these people are
pretty famous for
they have seven foot arrows.
And they don't, they don't have modern,
much like the Comanchees,
they're a warrior clan,
so they don't,
it's okay if they kill you,
they don't care, you know,
so they think your shirt is cool,
they'll,
they'll shoot you in the leg,
because they don't want to ruin the shirt.
You know, and so to them,
it's a whole different,
and also they've been,
they've been,
as a society traumatized
by the things that happened in the past,
like the rubber boom,
where outsiders came to the Amazon
and the Industrial Revolution
and made slaves,
and basically had this massive genocide,
making people go out and tap the rubber trees
that only existed in the Amazon.
And so these tribes have learned,
the outside world is trying to kill us.
So they're very happy to shoot first.
That was fear on a level.
That was like the fear equivalent of the stingray thing.
The idea of being hunted in the deep wilderness.
It wasn't a paradise expedition through the rainforest anymore.
All of a sudden I was like, wait, I have a mother.
Like I have people that are going to be broken,
hearted at when I disappear or that I just into the wilded myself.
Like this is stupid.
And then I was, you know, days of running scared and packrafting all night.
Although I'll tell you this, when you're packrafting at night with a flashlight in the Amazon
and you're sort of going down river with the crocodiles and the anaconda, it's incredible.
It's an incredible ride.
What's the difference in the Amazon between day and night, apart from?
the fact that it's light,
apart from the fact that it's light and dark.
How does it feel?
Does it feel different?
It's a different reality.
It's a totally different world.
It's the daytime in the Amazon, again, dawn,
every moment is different.
Dawn is this,
it's every dawn is like the world is being created again.
When you're in the mountains or the desert or the jungle,
when you somehow living outdoors,
you end up seeing the sunrise.
And I think that that's something that we lose with modern society
where you end up experiencing the sunrise and seeing when the light is coming directly into your eyes
and the dawn chorus and then dusk you hear it switch over to the night course nighttime in the amazon is wild
i mean the amazon has been called the greatest natural battlefield on earth because everything is eating
everything else everything in that vast ocean of forest and branches and jaguars and everything will be
digest it at some point. So in this churning energy transfer, life is a momentary stasis in the
entropic march of recycling. It's just being, it's just an eating machine. And it's just, it's just
marching and marching for thousands of years. And so when you're there, you start to feel it. You go,
you know, you get one mosquito bite, two mosquito bites. Some wasps land on you. They start eating
your skin. It's like they, the jungle wants to eat you. It's like, give me your,
give me your carbon.
Give me your energy.
You're decomposing while you're still alive.
They want you to.
They want to start you.
The wastes will land.
They'll start pulling pieces off you.
They can eat.
Like, if you leave a piece of meat out, they'll tear it apart.
Flying piranhas.
They're like flying piranhas.
And the worst thing is that the bullet ants sometimes grow wings.
I saw a bullet ant with wings the other day.
But no, so running from the tribes was the most scary thing.
The other most terrifying thing happened, actually, not in the Amazon.
on in India, I set out to see a wild tiger.
Now, you can go, in the turn of the century, in 1900, there was 100,000 tigers on
earth.
When I was growing up, there were 3,000 tigers on Earth.
So tigers are almost completely extinct.
We almost lost the greatest predator that we have on our planet.
And then the Tiger King came along.
Well, the people cut, there's more tigers in captivity than the wild.
And what people don't realize is people go, well, at least there's tigers in captivity.
But they don't realize, though, it's a one-way door.
Unless a tiger has its mother to teach it how to hunt, you can never take a tiger that's
born in a zoo or in captivity and release it.
It's never been done.
Never.
Wow.
You can do it with a rhino.
You can do it with a deer because they'll go eat grass.
A tiger has to learn how to stalk, how to hunt, what things to hunt.
It's functionally useless.
It's functionally useless.
So the fact that we there's 6,000 tigers in captivity across the world, useless.
I think that might just be just in the U.S.
They're good to stay in captivity and breed for captivity.
They're good to entertain people, you know, educate kids at zoos in the best possible.
Interesting.
It's like a genetic dead end for that type of animal.
It is.
Yeah, this irreversible dog.
Okay, so you ought you to go and see one actually wild.
I wanted, I had a dream of seeing a tiger.
I said there's only 3,000 tigers left on earth.
This is the greatest predator that we have,
this giant striped thing that, you know,
they're shoulders, so much bigger than you think.
You think of them as kind of like a Great Dane.
It's like, no, it's like a horse.
They're gigantic.
I mean, their paws or dinner plates.
And it was just, you know, when I finally,
years and years of walking through forests
and hoping and hoping and when that moment came,
that I was standing on my own two feet in the forest alone.
Again, just as I had always imagined it, you work towards these things, and then all of a sudden it happens, and there's a tiger standing there, and this giant thing just looking.
And the tiger did the thing that scared me the most, which was that I was not acknowledged.
You know, if you take a step, a raven will react, you know, a deer will stomp a hoof.
Tiger didn't care that I was there.
Tiger looked straight through me.
Tiger didn't once, but he got a contact,
that was irrelevant to Her Majesty,
and just kept walking.
Would that not have been less scary than going?
No, it was so, that almost would make sense, right?
Because you would look at you and go, oh, I'm scared too,
or I'm taking notice of you.
This was, uh, you're a sandwich, I don't want to eat today.
Yeah, you're irrelevant, you're blade of grass.
And it was like the power in that statement was,
was wild, that sort of disdain.
And now I've used that in the human world, too,
if you really want to mess with somebody,
someone you really are trying to insult,
you shake their hand and look right through them.
Just...
Move straight on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
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functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. What's the most unpredictable or dangerous animal
in the Amazon? Unpredictable or dangerous animal in the Amazon. The thing is the animals in the Amazon
is they're all sweethearts. I mean, my jaguars, um, they sound like tree tigers. Jaguas sound like tree tigers.
They are, the jags, okay, so the jags are they, they call them the pit bulls of the big cats.
They have the strongest bite of the big cats. They're 250 pounds. They're thick. They're muscles.
Leopards are very lean and live. Slinky. Yeah, they're way more about jumping up into the trees,
get away from the lions.
A jaguar is heavy.
They think nothing of jumping onto a cane man and biting its skull.
They have this crushing bite force.
And so you look at, you know, that thick face of a jaguar, they can just crush everything.
But whenever you see, whenever I've seen a jaguar in the Amazon, it's always, it's peaceful.
It's always this kind of beautiful.
You can't be that peaceful if it was that hungry.
You look like a nice meal.
Yeah, but they're never, their mothers, again, with the big cats, their mothers teach them,
see that deer, you can eat that deer.
Don't go after porcupines.
The baby camins are safe.
The mother would have taught the baby what to eat.
And again, they're thinking about jumping on the back and biting the neck,
or they're thinking about coming underneath and closing the windpipe.
They've been taught to go after horizontal prey.
Now, suddenly this vertical thing that smells like deodorant and conditioner and all this
weird stuff that they've never smelled before, this is quite large vertical animals walking
around then.
They're usually curious.
They come and they do the bob.
They look at you from side to side.
And then they're gone.
And even that, most of the time, you won't see them.
Most of the time, a big 250-pound yellow jaguar,
I have literally been in one's presence and not been able to see it
because the pattern disruption of their spots somehow blends them into the forest,
the dappled light in the forest.
And you're just looking around and you go,
you have this moment of realization.
Or one time I was checking a camera trap and I was,
I was down on my knees, you know, just arranging this camera trap.
And I heard, whoosh, woo, loud footprints, footsteps.
And I turned around with my finger up to tell whoever it was.
I thought maybe it was one of my friend to be like, you'll walk quieter in the jungle.
I'm out here being quiet.
You could be, there's a jag.
Just walked by.
Look to me.
Kept walking.
Never even broke stride.
It was just like, hey, tongue out, big teeth out.
And I was like, as close to him as I am to you.
He walked right by me.
Didn't care.
Didn't care at all.
Wow.
So is it rare that humans get attacked by Jags?
In our region of the Amazon, no one's ever been attacked by a Jaguar.
There was one old old, this was 20 years ago, one old jag, you know, their teeth go.
With big cats, usually the first thing is their teeth.
And one old jag attacked like an old farmer.
He did attacked an old man, and his wife defended him with a shovel.
and they ended up shooting the jaguar.
But it was such a feeble old jaguar
that it said,
the only thing I can go after is a human.
And there's that classic story of,
I think, Jim Corbett was the guy
that eventually got it,
but there was a tiger that was in North India
and was killing hundreds of people.
This one tiger, she's praying on hundreds of people,
and, you know, a tiger has to eat,
you know, about a deer a week to live.
And so this tiger started eating about a person a week.
And so she went through her first hundred people,
and they brought in hunters
to try and get this tiger,
and she was smart.
So she moved over into a different village.
And then she, another few years went by.
Like Ysama bin Laden of tigers.
I mean, she just, she was just hungry.
Yeah.
But for some reason, she figured out people.
I could just run into it.
They said one woman was working in the field and this tiger came, grabbed her by the waist, right?
And just ran off with her.
Like a stick.
Like a, like a dog running off with a squirrel.
That's how big and powerful they are.
And so another hundred people got eaten over here.
And then, and then finally they burned the far.
down. They just surrounded the forest and burned it down. And she managed to escape again. So they hired
expert hunters. They got hundreds of elephants. They surrounded the forest with elephant-back hunters.
And they had this hunter Jim Corbett. And they burned and they had drummers on the elephants.
Fence it in. They flushed her into a ravine. And finally, they finally got to see this tiger.
And he shot her. And they realized the reason this tiger had been eating people was because when she was just a
sub-adult, barely above being a cub, she had been shot and had taken out her canine teeth.
And so she hadn't been able to hunt deer and wild boar. And so she had to eat people.
Poor tiger had been shot, and so she was just trying to survive. But that made her the most legendary
and prolific man-eating tiger, I think, in history.
The full circle of this situation from Genesis back to the ground. Wow.
I remember watching some David Adamer documentary, one of the newer ones,
and the final episode was how wildlife are starting to interact with human civilization,
metropolises, and is it maybe India where some big cats have learned to hunt orphans
that the kids who are orphans on the street have learned to become nocturnal?
Yeah.
Because if they sleep in the day and stay awake at night, they're less likely.
But there was a bunch of cats that were going down into the city.
No.
Because there's, you know, these little meals on short stubby wheels.
They can't really run that fast.
The orphans can never run that fast.
Poor orphans.
So I've spent significant time in India while I was tiger hunting.
In Mumbai, there's beautiful photos of the leopards that have begun living in the city of Mumbai.
And what's really cool is people's security cameras on their house.
I haven't heard about the orphans, but I've heard about the dogs.
They love dogs.
There's literally videos of the dog curled up asleep on the porch outside someone's front door,
and the leopard coming up, completely quiet, and just biting this dog on the neck.
And they can, you know, again, they have that bite for us.
That's it.
Your mind now?
you're shut off.
They just break the spine.
And for them, domesticated animals are easy.
The difference between a wild animal and a domesticated animal is unbelievable.
Like so, for example, handling an anaconda that somebody has in a terrarium that has been raised in a terrarium,
anaconda has never done anything athletic in its life.
It's never hunted in its life.
They're soft.
They feel soft.
If you, you know, you go to those guys that have like the boa constrictors,
and you hold them, they're soft.
You find the same snake in the wild.
It's like holding a giant steel cable.
It's a different thing.
It's a totally different thing.
And, yeah, it's very fascinating.
Even the same thing goes for the chickens.
We've noticed that if we bring a chicken from,
you know, they say you are what you eat,
well, you are what you do.
And it's on a very physical level.
The chickens that we bring from the town, same chickens,
yeah.
The chickens that come from,
from an enclosed area.
When you process a chicken and get it ready for dinner,
the meat is soft and there's fat on the bones.
And it's easy to,
when you get the farm chicken that's been running around its whole life
and hunting bugs and running away from jungle cats,
they're lean and they're cord-like,
and their meat is not as good to eat
because it's more gamey and tight.
And it's like you literally, it's the same animal.
They could have been born in the same clutch,
but they...
You are what you do?
You are what you do.
What's your sense of spirituality in the jungle?
Something more transcendent than mission, which is still on the physical, but a connection
to something even greater?
Well, I think that humans have been given this planet where all of these miracles are happening.
And first of all, if you think a single one of us knows the answers, you're, you know, no one does.
No one's ever come back.
I think the jungle to me is where I feel God the most,
where you feel this incredible proliferation of life.
And life is the antithesis to the majority of the universe,
which is black nothingness.
And we're on this glowing example of beautiful life,
where there's this concert of biological organisms
that create a living biosphere that allows us to be doing this.
And so to me, the jungle is church.
to me the mountains
the ocean
but specifically the jungle
because it's the
apex of life
there's nowhere
there's been nowhere
it's the greatest proliferation
of terrestrial biodiversity
on earth
not just now but in the entire fossil record
really yes there's never been
more life on earth in one place
than the western Amazon
and then we have to remember that
no matter how much we want to think about aliens
and Mars and everything else
this little blue planet is the only place where we know for a fact that life exists.
And I feel like we've gotten into an age where people are very quick to go, you know,
oh, but soon we're going to go to Mars.
Okay, sure.
You know, and the aliens, okay.
Santa Claus is going to come at Christmas as well.
But what I'm saying, if you want to talk about whether or not we're able to breathe,
whether or not we're able to eat, whether or not our children have an impoverished world,
there's a great Jane Goodall quote where she said, you know, we're, she said,
she said, we're stealing, stealing, stealing from our children,
and it's shocking.
And it's the idea that we borrow the earth
from the children of the future, that we're the stewards,
we're the ones passing this on,
and we can pass on a destroyed reality
or one that's healthy.
And so in this particular case of do we want a world
that doesn't have elephants in it?
Do we want a world where there are still
healthy ocean fisheries?
that is filled with millions and millions of fish
where life and biodiversity is thriving, we do.
Nobody should want the,
I mean, we're in a period of extinction.
They're calling it the sixth extinction.
And so this is a human,
this is an anthropogenic extinction,
because we're taking up too much land,
we're destroying ecosystems too rapidly
for wildlife to adapt and keep up for things to regenerate.
And so becoming aware of that is crucial.
So that's why what Jungle Keepers is doing,
by saving this river, what I hope is that it can become a blueprint on how other people,
so we can save rivers in Africa, and we can save rivers in New Guinea and India and other places,
because everyone's fighting the same fight right now. They're going, okay, human civilization is moving
up, population is moving up. These poor people in these rural areas are realizing that in order
to get the gasoline to provide for their families with the boat, even if they just want to do
some basic farming, they need money. If they need money, they need to go get timber or gold or
wildlife products. So how do we get them out of poverty so that they can start becoming stewards
of protecting the natural environments that they're a part of?
You got to align the incentives. Yes. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I think, you know,
one of the saddest things is going to be if there isn't sufficient intervention to protect
tipping points being reached with stuff like this, what you end up with is a world in future
where there's significantly fewer people.
I think population's going to peak
at about 2090,
2100, something like that.
We might just kiss the bottom of 10 billion people,
is just about.
And then it is going to be a very precipitous drop.
It's going to be lower.
I would guess that in 200 years,
it'll be significantly lower than it is now.
South Korea, 96% fewer people in 100 years' time.
For every 100 Koreans,
there's four great-grandchildren.
Interesting.
Because demography is destiny.
You know how many,
one-year-olds there are and you know how many two-year-olds there are on you can't make any more.
And population is increasing while birth rates are going down because people are living longer.
And the saddest thing would be if this brief swell, this brief fat bit in population
caused damage that this thin bit and whatever continues the rest of time then inherits.
William McCaskill, who was the youngest tenured philosophy professor,
in history, I think. It's a Scottish guy, the youngest maybe that was alive right now,
he wrote a book called What We O the Future. He's got this philosophy around long-termism.
I think you'd really like it. It's a pretty accessible read. And it is what it sounds like,
that we kind of have a duty to unborn humans. And it is this ethical inheritance.
Ethical inheritance. Yeah, yeah. My word's not his. No, those are those, that's a, that's
a good term because there's something called generational amnesia with with nature where you know
growing up in the forests of new york i would i would go these are you know it's a beautiful forest
but i grew up there was no bald eagles there's no wolves and it's the trees that i was growing up in
they were small i didn't know that you know within the last 50 years that forest had been cut
and those are oaks and maples that have been growing for a certain amount of time but it wasn't an
original forest. There's no old growth. There's no old growth left on the East Coast. And so
old growth forest was something I said, wait a second. So what I'm seeing is already an impoverished
version of reality where somebody else already shaved these mountains and this is just what grew back.
And so it's beautiful. The woods are beautiful, but they're not, they're not the original woods.
And there's, with nature, there's this authenticity that you can't replace a thousand-year-old tree.
Well, not to bring it back to fucking demographics,
but it's a really wonderful, much more long,
much more highly invested illustration
of exactly what you're seeing when it comes to birth rates.
And that's not to say that you need to have as many people as possible.
But what it means is that you can't create any more ones that have already.
You can't make any more 100-year-old trees.
Yeah.
You can only make zero-year-old trees and give them 100 years.
Yeah.
And yeah, this view of,
long-termism trying to zoom out and give yourself a little bit more perspective and think if you
knew if you knew what was coming is this how you would behave if you were going to stick about
especially given that people are living longer i would have assumed maybe given that people are
extending their lifespans that we would have more long-termism but it doesn't it doesn't
necessarily seem to be that way again i think it depends on i think it's getting better
I think it is getting better.
I think people are understanding that if we can,
again, I'm coming at this from the environment
and from the wildlife conservation.
I feel like I am the voice for animals, for the trees.
And what we want to do is make it through this period
of adolescence as a global society.
That's a good way to put it.
Where our technology is stabilizing,
our population is stabilizing.
So do we want to make it through those periods
without losing polar bears, right?
Without costing the lives of the other things
that we share our world with.
And I think...
Irreparable damage.
Irreparable damage.
Because, you know, if elephant populations dip and then come back,
because, you know, for a while there was a lot of habitat used and then they come back.
Well, okay, great.
But we don't want to wipe out elephants.
That would be tragic.
And the same goes for tigers.
Thank God, tigers have gone from 100,000 down to 3,000.
And I think now we're back up to about five or six thousand.
Countries like India and a bunch of other countries, Nepal, Bhutan are working to get their
tiger numbers up.
It matters to people that we learn to, that we find a way to live in symbiosis with them.
Have you seen what Ben Lam's doing at Colossal?
I heard about the colossal guys, yeah.
Yes.
So one of the things that might be interesting for you to look at,
he's trying to bring back the dodo bird.
The first one that he's trying to do is to bring back the Wally Mammoth.
I can see there's a face being made here.
Let me give you the...
For the people just listening, I'm making a face.
You're making a face.
Yeah.
Here's the reason that I think what he's doing with the dodo bird aligns with your worldview.
The reason that he wants to do the dodo bird is that the dodo bird was killed almost exclusively due to human expansion.
Yeah.
And what he wants to say is to basically use this entire project of the dodo bird.
Yeah.
Look at how much work and technology had to.
to go into undoing the encroachment of human civilization
on natural animal habitats.
Yeah.
This is what we had to do just to get one thing back.
And what is it, 50% of biodiversity in the last,
however long has been lost?
Since 1970, we've lost 50% of the wildlife on our planet.
Not in terms of species, but in terms of abundance.
Overall number, right?
Okay, so maybe not biodiversity.
But I understand that, you know,
people assuming that there's just a command Z like undo button on extinction probably isn't great.
But I think the way I spoke to Ben a long time ago and have kept in touch with him,
I don't think that that's what he's trying to do.
And the prospect of him saying, look at how fucking arduous and all the technology and all the rest of this stuff,
to bring back this thing that we destroyed, let's stop doing the fucking ecology thing that breaks down these habitats.
I think could be an interesting.
trusting marketing campaign. Yeah, I mean, the idea that they're trying to theoretically help
extinct animals, I suppose aligns with a conservation viewpoint, but until I see a woolly mammoth,
I don't care. We're trying to save the animals that are here, and I find it highly suspicious
the idea that, because every scientist that I've spoken to, and this is going to get me in
because everybody loves this idea.
No, everybody loves this idea.
And when this came out, I did an Instagram post about it.
And I said, even if you can clone grandma,
it's not the same person.
And the meatballs won't taste the same.
And she's not going to remember you.
And the fact that you can genetically engineer a gray wolf
to be white or whatever they did.
Or woolly mammoth from an Asian elephant, which is
Yeah, make a genetic freak of a
of an Asian elephant that has some hairy traits or whatever,
what you're doing is fundamentally misunderstanding what an animal is.
You're fundamentally disrespecting what a species is,
and you're fooling people into believing that you can resurrect dead species,
and you can't.
You're not going to get a dodo bird.
You're going to make something that you think is a dodo bird.
That looks like it.
Now, aside, I don't disagree, and I think that he would also say,
or most of the guys at Colossal would also say,
this woolly mammoth is the closest approximation
from us filling in some bits of gene code
with Asian elephant and all the rest of it.
That being said, I'll sort of stand the ground
for at least the first time he told me
about his idea of explaining to people this thesis,
we're going to have to jump through all of these hoops technologically
to make something that's the closest approximation we can
to something which was driven to extinction
by the expansion and the,
dismissal of the fragility of ecosystems.
Stop doing it.
Think about what you're doing now
that is causing that to happen.
Yes.
I think that's where we align.
I think that that's the intersection.
The intersection between your two things.
You mentioned uncontacted tribes.
You recently just found another one?
We were, so as of right now, we have
employed numerous
local indigenous people
as conservation rangers.
People that were maybe living in the Amazon,
they grew up eating monkeys and turtles.
And then as they grew up,
they said, well, I need to provide for a family.
And so they got a chainsaw
and they might go out and become loggers.
We've said, hey, instead of becoming loggers,
work for us.
So we're working with these communities
to figure out how they want their future to be
because they live five days from civilization
deep out in the jungle.
and they're now working with jungle keepers.
And so the donations that we get from people around the world
go to their salary and towards protecting land.
And so we were at one of these remote communities with our friends,
planning for the future, making ranger patrols, doing all this,
and we got news that one of the uncontacted tribes was approaching.
Now, for all of, you know, the time that I saw the uncontacted tribes
when I was on the solo, nobody believed to me.
Because I wasn't taking pictures.
I ran for my life.
All the pictures that you look at on the internet,
traditionally, historically,
it looks like pictures of Bigfoot.
Somehow they're always blurry,
they're always far away,
and there's a reason for that
because the people that are seeing these naked warriors
coming at them aren't sticking around
and take pictures,
and chances are they're longer.
Just wait there a second,
yeah, yeah, yeah, no, eyes just,
eyes over here for me?
Don't shoot yet.
Yeah.
I want to just get this picture.
You're out of focus.
Yeah.
And they're probably loggers, you know, because the only, it's not like you're getting photographers and PhD students out six days into the middle of nowhere.
They're at the, they're at the usual research station, Eco Lodge.
But we were off at the end, world's end.
And these people came out across the beach.
And we had this incredible moment where, you know, you see them with their bows and arrows and you see them stalking across the beach looking at us.
and there's maybe 30 something of us,
and there's over a hundred of them,
and they're moving through the forest,
and at different times,
there's different amounts of them that we can see,
but they came to the side of the river,
and we were at the other side of the river,
so it was sort of shirts versus skins,
and they were all naked, penises tied up,
rope around their waist,
and we're all standing there waiting.
What are they going to say?
They put up their hands, and they said,
Nomole, no mole's brother.
No moly, they said,
we are the brothers, nomoles, we are the nomoles.
Traditionally, they're called the masco piero,
which really means the wild Piero people.
Nomole seems to be what they call themselves.
But what's crazy is you're in this moment,
and we all say, oh, I wish I could see,
go back in time and see the world in the 1800s.
I wish I could go see the Comanche's riding across the plains 200 years ago.
But this is people from 1,000 years ago, at least,
walking out of the jungle because they've been in this natural time capsule.
Human beings from another age stand across the river from us.
And we're sitting here.
I mean, we have iPhones and airplanes and we had professional photographers with me.
Our friend Mosin and Stefan, who were also Jungle Keepers directors.
And so we're watching as this, you know, so need to be very clear on this.
They came out and contacted the local, the indigenous community we happened to be at.
We didn't make contact.
They came out and they started asking for things.
So they came out of the jungle, a thousand years late to the show.
And they said, we want bananas.
And they asked for plantains.
Someone's able to communicate in a language that's close enough.
There's enough of a overlap between the Yine language and the Mosh,
whatever the Mosh Kapiro speak, that they can communicate at a percentage.
So there's a good degree of miscommunication as well.
And, but one thing they were able to make very clear
is that they wanted gifts, they wanted food.
And so the anthropologists put bananas in a boat
and pushed it across and they fell on the boat.
And as this happened, we were shooting the world first ever
clear footage of the uncontacted tribes.
And since then, we've released that footage
and it's become controversial because people go,
should you be releasing this footage?
What if they want to be left alone?
Leave them alone.
it's like, listen, we are the only people on earth, jungle keepers, the local people and the
international experts on our team are the only people that are actually tactically fighting to
save these people's forests. And if you look at what's happened to indigenous cultures
through the centuries and how much has been wiped out, this is one chance, again, to get it
right. These people are living in isolation, and it seems like the one thing they
want to continue to do is live in isolation.
That was their second message.
We want bananas and stop cutting down our trees.
They didn't want to come close to us.
They didn't want to join us.
They didn't want anything.
I mean, they stole a machete.
This will be useful.
My friend was like, oh, how many machete?
He's like, put down the machete.
He's yelling across the river.
Go back and get it.
Yeah, yeah.
You should go get it.
Exactly what they, with he smiled.
He went, yeah, you come.
And then right as they were leaving, one guy walked out, looked at us.
Real proud.
Put one seven-foot arrow on his boat.
Not at anybody.
Just shot an arrow.
Be like, that's that.
They walked off into the jungle, but like proud.
And so the prevailing anthropological strategy on these guys is leave them alone.
They want to be left alone.
We leave them alone.
But now with jungle keepers in that 130,000 acres that we're protecting and the 300,000
that we're ultimately trying to protect, well, they exist in that territory.
A lot of that territory is land that even our rangers,
we can patrol the border of it,
but the interior of that, these people live somewhere in there.
And I don't think that generally people understand
how large of an area we're talking about,
but it's so vast you couldn't explore it.
You know, if I said walk from one side of our reserve
to the other side of the reserve through the jungle
where you can't see 10 feet in front of you,
it would take you years.
And by yourself, you'd never make it.
And so the fact that these people live in this tiny,
you know, the nomadic life under that ocean,
of canopy and the fact that they came out once i mean even the anthropologist who the local anthropologist
he said it had been 10 years since they had come out and he'd never seen this clan before was
first contact and so he was you know he was trying to tell them you know we are also no moly we are
also your brothers brothers he kept saying no mole he's the foreigner yeah they did they asked about
that they said you and they like they like pointed they go we want to see that guy and i think
I'm a little bit taller than most of the Peruvians that were there,
and I'm the only person that's a little bit built,
and he's got a beard, and they called me forward.
He goes, show them that you don't mean harm,
and I put up my hands.
I put up my hands, and they sang, no more lay back.
I just had this moment of sort of the most basic form of communication with these people.
What do they feel like?
It was beautiful, actually, because they were,
I think when they came out, it was very, well, terrifying.
seeing these people come out like Stone Age warriors with their and there's no way to communicate or reason with them and you have people around you with shotguns in case we get in case this is an ambush slaughter you know as a moment where you go is an arrow going to come through the air and go through my neck you know so we were we were very on edge the whole time and so right before they left when I was able to raise my hands and go and then they they sang back and it was sort of it was sort of easy and I said oh wow you know and and and also just there's something about
the uniqueness of a moment that it's 20 24 at that point and how many you know we're old men is this
still going to be the case that there are still uncontacted tribes or that will be a thing of the past
and it was just it felt like a like an aperture into history it felt like something historically
significant to communicate it's almost like you were communicating through a time machine
you're just waving and they waved back and then and then they took
the bananas and they took the machetes that they had gotten on their backs and they
hiked off and just vanished into the jungle.
And then it's the moment that they were no longer visible, we all were rubbing our eyes.
That really happened.
Check the tape.
Yeah, you check the tape.
You're like, they really, really did happen.
And, of course, there's an arrow sticking out of the sand on our side of the river.
So it happened.
Are the locals scared of them?
Terrified.
Okay.
Terrified because they will murder you without thinking about it.
Do you think the uncontacted tribes are aggressive or scared?
They're scared and defensive.
But that manifests itself in like a lot of people.
Like my friend was fishing with his father when he was a child.
And they surprised a group of uncontacted.
And the, the, the, the, Moshko shot the father in the stomach, just impulsively.
Seven foot arrow.
Guts fell out.
I mean, it's like a knife.
It's a big knife.
It's like a machete.
What's it made of?
Bamboo.
Single piece of bamboo.
Single piece of huge bamboo, but it's this big at the base, and then it comes down like this.
Is it got flights?
How does it fly?
Oh, because it's tapered.
Well, no, no, it's a big piece of bamboo.
That's the arrowhead.
Right.
Oh, okay.
Then there's a seven-foot shaft.
Uh-huh.
Then they have, they use vulture feathers for the feathers.
And they even twist them so that the arrow spins.
So when it hits you, it's a huge knife wound.
And so as a gut shot, it spilled his guts on.
So my friend had to watch his father's guts fall into the stream.
And they were surrounded by the tribe.
And the tribe was arguing.
Again, they understand, my friend understood enough of what they were saying,
that some of the tribes people were like, kill the kid, kill the kid.
And the other ones are going, why did you kill him in the first place?
You shouldn't have shot him.
Now they're going to come shoot us.
And like they were having a discussion, but it wasn't like the biggest deal in the world.
It was like, man, why did you, you know, drop the shopping bag?
Like, you shouldn't have done that.
And he got away from that situation and went back to town.
And then, of course, there was a response from the community
where they came out with guns and chased the uncontacted tribe
and were shooting at them.
And so there's this violent exchange as well.
And so then when they come for these semi-peaceful exchanges,
no one knows what's really going to happen.
It could end in violence at any moment.
And sure enough, the next day after we had gone back,
my friend George, who was one of the ones putting the bananas on the boat for them,
he was driving the boat and 200 of the tribe came out onto the river and started firing rain of arrow.
So everybody got down under the benches in the boat.
And because he was driving, he couldn't take cover.
And the arrow went in just above his scapula and poked out just by his belly button and went straight through his body.
So he got shot with the seven foot arrow and went straight through him.
and somehow he lived but you know if you could ask the tribe like what are you doing we just helped you
yesterday what do you think it'd say they'd probably say the motor spooked us or it seemed it's very hard
there's also another story where um this one man was very peacefully very calmly contacting them by
himself this was over in irmanu national park he was a local guy jungle man and he knew he would see
the footprints. So he would start leaving some bananas in the forest, and the tribe would come and
take the bananas unseen. Then he would go and leave some rope and some sugar cane, and the tribe would
come and take that, and he would never see them. And then after some time, he would wait, and the tribe
would come, and he would see them, acknowledge them. They would acknowledge him, take his gifts,
and they would leave. And then over time, he began to talk to them. This very, very, very slowly,
very slowly. And then over time, over years passed, and it became
that he was kind of friends with them.
He could mingle with them.
They would show up.
He would have some gifts.
They would give him some stuff.
They'd give him some meat.
He'd have some clothes for them.
And so he developed a relationship of hand gestures and a few exchanged words.
And then one day they found him face down with so many arrows in his back that they said he looked like a porcupine.
Zero explanation.
What's strange about it is that although it's the same species, the environment has sort of crafted
and time and inability to communicate and so on.
Yeah.
It's crafted such a net.
Like we're trying to,
it's like saying,
why did that horse bolt?
Yeah.
It's what is it,
what is it that caused that to happen?
Why, if you were to ask them,
why would they say that they had shot in that way?
And what's particularly sort of strange
is that you're saying this about an animal that is you.
Functionally, all of the,
if that person,
If that person who fired that arrow and hit your friend had been born in Brooklyn,
they would have had the exact same language that you do and ability to write
and all the rest of this stuff and would have been domesticated in the manner to which you have.
Trained the way we have and the skills and those communications.
I mean, even if you're in the middle of the most foreign country you can imagine and somebody points a gun at you and you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, I don't mean any harm.
Unarmed.
All good.
But they're, you know, unless they're just trying to murder people, they're going to go, oh, okay, you know, well, we'll get on the ground then. You know, it's like you can, you don't need to speak the same language. It's the most wild that humans can be. Yeah, these are the wildest people on Earth. And again, we don't know if that's necessarily good for them. You know, some people are like, they're free. You have to leave them that way. But if you talk to the anthropologists, they'll tell you to say, you know, the rates of infant mortality, the fact that they're all clearly starving. The intertribal.
warfare. God only knows what things they don't know, you know. I mean, I remember hearing that during the
gold rush, people were using lead to stop up. They would open cans of beans or something, and then they
would use lead to plug the hole, and how many thousands of people died of lead poisoning? Because they
didn't know. And I've read anthropological studies from, I think it was in New Guinea where they found a
tribe. And the tribe had misconceptions that almost every time anyone got sick or injured, it was because
of a spell that was cast by somebody else.
And so these people were like in the trees living scared.
Like their whole culture was based around fear on stuff that was made up.
And so, you know, there is a certain amount that education helps to humans to live well.
Yeah, I suppose the problem that you have there, the storytelling animal that we are, as Will Stores says,
if those stories don't get corrected by facts
and you're just, they're allowed to,
what it is basically like the most extreme echo chamber
that's never penetrated and allowed to persist
for many, many, many generations.
And then you end up with, yeah, people who live in trees
or this is where superstitions would have come from
or rain dances, you know, these,
Well, it's like this, no, but I mean, at least a rain dance, you're trying to call in the rain.
It's a positive ceremony. It's a cultural ceremony.
This is like the Salem witch trials forever.
Yeah, yep.
She's a witch. Burn her.
Yeah.
And then the whole society becomes based on that.
And no one steps in to correct it. It's like, yes, she was a witch and we should have burned her.
And actually, we should burn more. And actually the reason.
And you're a witch. And you're a witch. And you're a witch. I mean, my God. And then.
And there's like the word, it's like the joke they were making in Monty Python, but turned up to a thousand.
Yeah, yeah.
And so a lot of anthropologists will say, you know, what we want is for them to, their right is to remain isolated.
But in order to do that, we have to protect their forest.
Then once their forest is protected, which is what I'm working on with jungle keepers, if they want to start interfacing with their nearest neighbors, which are the indigenous people of the Amazon, if they want to, they can.
But that's their right.
Well, hang on.
It also is a responsibility of the indigenous people who keep on getting fucking shot.
Yeah, that's the thing.
Right, it's not a costless interaction.
No.
What you're asking of the indigenous people in order to educate the uncontacted tribes is to put themselves on the line.
Well, that's what they would say is incredibly accurate.
They would say, you know, we.
Fuck you, dude.
I don't want to do this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're telling me it's not only is it my obligation to live in the jungle and to help you protect it,
but also to potentially be cabbbed by the fucking local tribe.
Well, to be fair, these communities have.
not been there as long as the tribe has.
So if they've been there for 30 years,
the tribes been there for 300, you know, 3,000.
Feel free to fuck off.
And this tribe is very happy to do full on warfare,
whereas these are more, more domesticated people
that have been taught, it's bad to kill.
It's like, so they're like, well, we're not gonna just shoot them.
On site.
Yeah.
The same may not be true in the reverse.
It's not true in the reverse.
And so now they're living here and they're friends of ours
and they are part of the jungle keepers thing.
And they're going, okay, well, cool.
Now that we live here, I mean, they've said,
you know, can we have like a safe house?
Because they live in thatched huts.
There's no real protection.
They can't lock a door.
Yeah. Give us a steel box.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a big steel.
They're like, bring us a container.
It was a big steel box.
With a lock.
You know what the solution might be?
More t-shirts.
More jungle keeper t-shirt.
More t-shirts could be.
So a question I have is, of the work that you're doing,
you're trying to get to 300,000 acres protected.
And if that happens, the Peruvian government will,
denote it as a national park,
which would make it give it even more
protection, I have to
imagine. In order to
do what you think needs to be done
for the entirety of the Amazon,
how many Paul Rosales do they need?
Or how many jungle keeper operations
do they need to be?
Well, okay, so this is the thing,
is like the Peruvian government,
we do this as the blueprint.
We lead by example.
And so if we're successful
and we create the, you know,
We're at 130,000 acres protected right now.
In the next 18 months, we have to raise $20 million more.
It's only $20 million to protect the next, the rest of the national park.
We get the national park.
If we had $20 million tomorrow, national park tomorrow.
We have lawyers waiting.
The landowner's ready to sell.
We have the Peruvian government willing to do it, but they're like, we don't have the resources.
If we can establish this, that's part of an already, there's already a huge legacy of conservation.
There's Alto Pudus National Park, there's Manu National Park, there's a Tamopata Reserve.
What does the national park thing, how does that help calling it a national park?
Because then it's officially protected, because there's a lot of land in the Amazon that's sort of just land in the Amazon.
It's someone's land.
And so what happens is you inherited 20,000 acres from your father, who was a real jungle man,
but now you kind of live in the city and there's 20,000 acres on there, and you've got to pay taxes on it once a year.
And you never go there, and you don't want to, and it's dirty and dangerous.
and there's bullet ants and jaguars.
And then your friend comes in and goes,
yo, I'm getting into the logging business.
I was thinking, could I go on that land you got
and take down some of the ironwood trees
and clear some stuff for farming?
He goes, yeah, I don't care.
I don't care at all.
And they're like, cool, I'll throw you a few bucks.
And so then they go out there and they do that.
So if we go talk to you and we say,
actually, can we buy that land?
How much was he going to give you?
We'll give you double that.
Give us the land.
And so we've just been doing that.
We go into land acquisition.
And again, as an organization, what we do
is there's something called the 990
that you have to file with the IRS
when you're a 5-1c3,
so that when people donate,
you can see where the money goes.
Unlike every other organization on earth,
when people donate,
we protect the Amazon rainforest.
When people donate, we hire more rangers.
And so it's like, bang, bang, bang, bang.
And so all these people are coming out of the woodwork
as heroes.
It's large and small.
It's the masses as well as some huge donors
who have helped us along the way
with large chunks of land.
And so if we protect this, though, it shows a model where those indigenous communities can work as rangers.
And then you don't have the problem of narco-traff.
They don't become narco-traffickers.
And so then the proving government's happy.
The proving government is, well, they have, our citizens are taking care of in that region.
Well, this is great.
And we have clean water flowing out of that region that feeds this city and this city and this city and that's good.
And so it's a win, win, win, win, win, all of it.
round. So then you go, why don't we do that over here, too? How many times do you need to say,
why don't we do that over here? How many of it? Is it 3,000? Is it 200? It's thousands,
but so much of the Amazon already exists protected in indigenous territories. The best, the easiest
and best way to protect these natural areas is just hand it over to the people that have it. So the
area that's protected by the Yanomami Indians, the areas that are protected by the Machiganga.
There's different tribes all over the Amazon. If you look at a map, there's, yes, there's
national parks, but they're not as big as the tribal areas.
And so what we have to do, though, is unfortunately work with world leaders on a large-scale
level to make slowing deforestation a priority so that we get past this huge population boom
and this adolescence as a global society.
But you can't protect the whole thing from the start, but you have to start somewhere to
protect the whole thing.
And so, you know, a lot of people have said that to me, like, oh, you're great, you're going to protect 300,000 acres in the Amazon.
You'd have to replicate that a million times in order to be, yes, okay, well, great.
It's better to do something than to do nothing.
Yep, yep.
And we've risked our lives and spent 20 years, you know, in the mud and the blood and the, and the mosquitoes trying to do this.
And now we're getting this groundswell of people that want this to happen.
Are you going to be sad to have to move on to a new area that needs to be protected after spending so long becoming intimately familiar with this one?
No, because I don't think it's ever going to end.
I think that we're going to protect this and turn it into a national park.
And then comes the fun stuff.
You know, if we weren't fighting to protect, I don't want to do this job.
I would have so much more fun being like, man, why don't we go up that stream and find out.
We'll do a biological inventory of that stream.
You know, and so as directors of the National Park,
we can have education.
We can, you know, so what they did with Sequoia National Park,
which was very similar to this,
where John Muir took Teddy Roosevelt on a three-day camping trip.
I think that was for Yosemite.
And he was like, look, we have to protect this
because it's so beautiful.
And then they did.
And so today we still have the Yosemite Valley.
We still have Sequoia trees.
I mean, imagine missing out on the biggest trees on earth.
They could have been cut forever,
and we'd never get them back.
And so this is the same thing.
but, you know, once we save it,
oh, so what was saying, what they did with Sequoia was,
because then, again, people worry,
they say, well, if it's the wildest place on Earth,
how could you be bringing people there?
Imagine a football field.
I'm talking about, it's so big that we're talking about maybe
10 pieces of grass are the area that we access
to show people and the rest of its inaccessible wilderness.
And so we built the world's tallest treehouse
that I keep inviting you to.
And we do some little tourism using local guides,
which helps employ the local people
and keeps the rest of that giant football field,
the rest of the 300,000 acres wild.
But I think that once we cross the finish line,
if we make it and we're not assassinated by the narco-traffickers,
and if all these-
Or the animals or the insect or the pathogens,
or the anteaters, or the Mercer or the elements.
Yeah.
Or the, yeah.
If we make it, then no, I don't think there's an end.
I think that we study it,
We celebrate it.
And then I can consult on other areas and help other people to realize their dreams.
I mean, just like Goodall did for me, she, you know, she tipped her candle to mine and passed
on that light.
And I think that that's a, that was the lesson.
You know, you just got to keep that going.
And then we can make all the change we need to.
Dude, you fucking rule.
You absolutely rule.
Well, I very, very glad that the world has you.
I can't wait until you come to the Amazon, man.
I'm ready, dude.
I'm ready.
Give me a few months, maybe later on this year, I can come and ride.
I've been looking forward to speaking to you, and it's epic, dude.
I'm really, really excited to see what you do next.
Please keep yourself alive.
Yeah, please keep having these amazing conversations.
I love listening to him on the wild.
Yeah, even if I'm not there with you, I'll be there in your ears.
Yeah, be there in my ears, Chris.
Thank you, man.
Thank you.
