Sixteenth Minute (of Fame) - 30-50 feral hogs
Episode Date: June 25, 2024Legit question for rural Americans - How do I kill the 30-50 feral hogs that run into my yard within 3-5 mins while my small kids play? This week, Jamie finds out from the 30-50 hogs asker himself -- ...Willie McNabb. Plus, we catch up with Professor John Tomacek about the VERY REAL issue of feral hogs, and Karl Kasarda of inRangeTV about how 30-50 feral hogs tied into a larger conversation about American gun laws. Follow Dion Green and the Fudge Foundation here: https://fudgefoundation.org/ Follow Willie McNabb: https://x.com/WillieMcNabb Follow John Tomacek: https://rwfm.tamu.edu/people/tomecek-john/ Follow inRangeTV: https://www.youtube.com/@InrangeTvSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
It's Black Business Month, and Black Tech Green Money is tapping in.
I'm Will Lucas spotlighting black founders, investors, and innovators, building the future, one idea at a time.
Let's talk legacy, tech, and generational wealth.
I had the skill and I had the talent.
I didn't have the opportunity.
Yeah.
We all know, right?
Genius is evenly distributed.
Opportunity is not.
To hear this and more on the power of Black Innovations.
and ownership, listen to Black Tech Green Money
from the Black Effect Podcast Network
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
How serious is youth vaping?
Irreversible lung damage serious.
One in ten kids vape serious,
which warrants a serious conversation
from a serious parental figure,
like yourself.
Not the seriously know-at-all sports dad
or the seriously smart podcaster.
It requires a serious conversation
that is best had by you.
No, seriously.
The best person to talk to your child about vaping is you.
To start the conversation, visit Talk Aboutvaping.org.
Brought to you by the American Lung Association and the Ad Council.
Tune in to All the Smoke Podcast, where Matt and Stacks sit down with former first lady, Michelle Obama.
Folks find it hard to hate up close.
And when you get to know people and you're sitting in their kitchen tables and they're talking like we're talking.
You know, you hear our story, how we grew up, how I grew up.
And you get a chance for people to unpack.
and get beyond race.
All the Smoke featuring Michelle Obama.
To hear this podcast and more,
open your free IHeart Radio app,
search all the smoke and listen now.
The U.S. Open is here and on my podcast,
Good Game with Sarah Spain.
I'm breaking down the players,
the predictions, the pressure,
and of course, the honey deuses,
the signature cocktail of the U.S. Open.
The U.S. Open has gotten to be
a very wonderfully experiential sporting event.
To hear this and more,
listen to Good Game with Sarah Spain
and I Heart Women's Sports Production
in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Brought to you by Novartis,
founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports Network.
Hey, I'm Kurt Brown-Oller.
And I am Scotty Landis,
and we host Bananas,
the podcast where we share
the weirdest, funniest,
real news stories from all around the world.
And sometimes from our guest personal lives, too.
Like when Whitney Cummings recently revealed
her origin story on the show.
There's no way I don't already have rabies.
This is probably just why my personality is like this.
I've been surviving rabies for the past 20 years.
New episodes of bananas drop every Tuesday in the exactly right network.
Listen to bananas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Call Zone Media
Nine years ago, someone very close to me died, and shortly after that, something very funny happened.
The person in question was old but not dying old, had been sick but was not dying sick.
Someone about to die wouldn't be a night owl with an encyclopedic knowledge about SNL and professional hockey.
They just wouldn't.
But then, one day, it was.
They died suddenly and terribly.
The sort of loss where I still find myself wanting to pick up the phone 10 years later and try to explain what a podcast is to them.
I really miss them.
And it was a huge shock at the time.
And everyone was still very in shock when the funeral happened.
It had been in this really hectic week, right?
Like, no one saw it coming or knew what sort of shape their affairs were in.
Half of us were still actively in denial.
I brought some loser I was dating to the wake.
Why did I invite him?
Why did I invite him?
It was a Catholic funeral and we were all instructed to either read something from the Bible or just say a few words.
I hope you haven't been through this, but I know that you very likely have.
So the night before I said my few words, I stayed up late drinking PBR and writing out a set,
and then I had to keep reminding myself, it's not a set. It's a eulogy. A eulogy is not stand-up
comedy unless you're really good at it. At the service the next morning, I sat next to someone
that I'm very close with. He had his notes for what he was going to say and was pretty quiet.
And before we were supposed to go up and speak, he leaned over to me and asked,
like, should we give our Twitter handles before we talk?
Like, do you think this is a good opportunity to get new followers on Twitter?
It was this really strange moment, you know,
because something so terrible had just happened,
and then this was said.
I tell this story to people, and they never laugh,
but it's the sort of thing that's like, it's almost funny,
but it's a little too weird to be an actual joke.
It's just completely absurd in this way that you can never get out of your brain,
And if you were asking, yes, I did read my Twitter handle.
Definitely don't do that at your grandma's funeral.
Ooh, I said who it was.
In that moment, if something just sad was said or something just funny was said,
I probably wouldn't remember this moment as well as I do.
It's just something in between.
In August 2019, many terrible things happened.
On the same day, in Dayton, Ohio, in El Paso, Texas,
There were mass shootings within hours of each other.
First, in El Paso, when a white nationalist entered a Walmart with a semi-automatic weapon and killed 23 people.
That same day, in an entertainment district in Dayton, a man used an AR pistol to kill nine people.
And even in a country where these types of shootings had become increasingly commonplace,
according to 2023 research from the Pew Research Center, and also anecdotally from being a person,
active shooter events in the United States have steadily increased since 2000, over 20 times over.
And so on this weekend, in August 2019, the whole world went into mourning for the victims of these senseless, horrible shootings.
And as the days lurched on online discourse on the many horrific questions that the shootings introduced began,
while journalists worked to report on them as clearly and faithfully as possible.
And in fact, it involves some of the main players in this show, the executive producer of this show, the great, wonderful Robert Evans, who has definitely never falsely accused me of murder, famously reported on the El Paso shooter, detailing his radicalization online on 8chan before he resolved to become a domestic terrorist, which was a part of a disturbing trend that continued from earlier that year.
most notoriously, the Christchurch mosque shooting in New Zealand, these murders, stoked by
white supremacy, had everything to do with the internet. The internet was where shooters became
radicalized and where they would often live stream their own atrocities. And so after two mass
shootings in the same weekend, a familiar question emerged. How do we stop this? What will we need to
change to fucking stop this. The days that followed, Rees stoked a debate that raged in real
life and online spaces with increasing frequency. And Democrats put pressure on then-Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the devil's pet turtle, to cancel the Senate summer recess to
reopen a discussion on gun control. He didn't. And so people were frustrated. Their leaders
weren't doing anything. And so many took to the internet as they had in the past.
and hoped that saying how they felt would accomplish something.
Many demanded action on gun control.
Many mourned the victims of these shootings.
And many started a familiar discourse around the weapons that were used to slaughter people.
And among these people were public figures weighing in, as they tend to do.
One was American singer-songwriter Jason Isbell.
On August 4th, 2019, he tweeted,
If you're on here arguing the definition of assault weapon today, you are part of the problem.
You know what an assault weapon is and you know you don't need one.
So as the world mourned and tried to figure out what they could do in a world where normal people are so often rendered powerless,
people began to yell at each other on the internet.
And then, to everyone's surprise, something kind of funny happened.
A Twitter user who I would describe as a random guy, a normal man, Willie McNabb.
responded to this tweet from Jason Isbell.
He says the following.
Legit question for rural Americans.
How do I kill the...
Stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop, stop.
Yes, that tweet.
Okay, Grant, you can finish.
Legit question for rural Americans.
How do I kill the 30 to 50 feral hogs that run into my yard within three to five minutes while my small kids play?
So in the absolute middle of this awful moment, people stopped and asked, wait, what the fuck did that guy just say?
30 to 50 feral hogs.
Your 16th minute starts now.
Welcome.
I'm not so bad when you turn up the lights, boy.
I'll be perfect all of the time.
So make me a start.
Let's take it too far.
One more minutes
Sixteen minute of fame
Sixteen minute of fame
Sixteen minute of face
One more minute of pain
I'm not so bad when you say I'm not so bad when you say I'm a mind
Okay, you sickos, I'll give you what you want.
And what you want is what many rural communities have been plagued by, which is 30 to 50 feral hogs.
It's feral hogs day on 16th minute, one of our most requested main characters, bar none.
And like every single one of the internet's main characters, all 30 to 50 feralogs day.
hogs come with a lot of personal baggage. So let's throw some feral bacon into the feral pan.
But before we do, just one quick note, in a rare showing of keeping my mouth shut for 40 minutes,
I'm not going to get into my detailed opinions on gun control at the very top of this
episode, although I'm sure you can guess what they are. I'm not a fan of guns. And that's not
the case for everyone I'm speaking with today. And each of them are going to explain why
that is. And with that, come with me, if you will, to August 2019. The first death from vaping,
as reported in Illinois, Jeffrey Epstein is found dead in his prison cell under very normal
circumstances. I'm performing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival with a show called Boss whom is
girl, in which I play a demented girl boss hell bent on killing an island full of DJs using
surveillance technologies. It got good reviews. And,
following two horrific massacres in the United States back to back,
a man from Arkansas named Willie McNabb asked how he could kill
the 30 to 50 feral hogs that run into his yard within three to five minutes
while his small kids play.
I'm going to say it, this is one of the funniest things that's ever happened on the internet.
For me, like you get it, replying to a conversation,
denouncing people who are getting overly into semantics about,
assault weapons after two horrific mass shootings with a question about 30 to 50 feral hogs is weird it's confusing to most people it makes no sense i was one of those people willie mcnab what are you talking about
everything about the feral hogs tweet is so funny it's great american poetry now here are my top five funny things about the feral hogs tweet your mileage may vary and i actually do encourage you to
share it with me. Number one, starting a statement about feral hogs with the phrase
legit question. Number two, 3250. It's such a wide range. It feels like a census
takers question. Number three, the qualifier that the kids are small, which kind of goes
without saying, right, but it feels like it's sort of implying that 50 feral hogs would be
less threatening to larger children. Number five, the
tone of the question overall, the way that
Willie phrases this makes it sound
like this is something that was on the
tip of everyone's tongues
and he's the first person brave enough
to articulate what we were all
thinking. Number five, of
course, the imagery.
A father gunning down feral
hogs like a game of Halo
in your high school boyfriend's
basement. Game over.
The image of small
kids surrounded by
malevolent hogs. The
only line of defense being an assault rifle and between three and five minutes. Just say four minutes.
As sad and bizarre as the circumstances that prompted this reply tweet are, it is awesome. And it squarely
puts Mr. McNabb in the category of main character that was not intentional. Because again,
this was just a reply. It's like every person who replies to dunk on Elon Musk and raise
their own profile, was doing it with the expectation of becoming the most famous person on the
internet. On top of that, the reply tweet itself isn't really accusatory. It's just the weirdest
phrasing of a question that the person seems to genuinely be asking. And so interestingly,
the reason that Willie becomes internet famous doesn't seem to be the algorithm itself. It's
because of Jason Isbell. So let's go full forensic. Let's talk about how this
happened. Willie asks the question of our time, that of the perilous hog, at 12.01 p.m. Eastern
Standard Time on August 4th, 2019, which is the day of the Dayton, Ohio massacre and the day after the
El Paso, Texas massacre. After the reply, Jason Isbell quote tweets Willie McNabb, three minutes later at
12.4 p.m., responding with the following pithy statement. If you have dozens of hogs chasing your children,
around your yard. You have problems no weapon will fix. He then adds at 12.08 p.m.
I don't think William is serious, guys. And Willie McNabb is having none of it. He retorts
at 12.11 p.m. No, sir. I am. And now we as passive viewers know that Willie McNabb is ready to go
to the mat for this. And look, I know it sounds like I am like rehashing and pausing the Zapruder tape,
but it is significant. It is clear, 10 minutes in, that Willie McNabb is, for whatever
reason willing to go to the mat with a public figure on this topic. Shots had been fired, only this time
not from an assault rifle and not at a murderous pig. But, and I can confirm this as someone who
was observing this unfold in real time, very few people on Twitter seem to have any idea what
Willie is talking about. And so at first, instead of trying to understand what he's talking about,
they make fun of him. People went nuts on Twitter over this reply tweet. And it seemed like for many,
this was almost a breath of fresh air, a little bit of absurdity to joke about while processing
the horrors of the world. And we do get some pretty solid riffs on the treacherous hog, like these.
30 to 50 feral hogs sounds like my dating history.
Take me down to the paradise city where the hogs are feral in this 30 to 50.
My therapist, 30 to 50 feral hogs can't hurt you, they aren't real.
30 to 50 feral hogs in my yard, threatening my children.
And finally my favorite.
Take a long drag from my cigarette as I stare out of my foxhole.
Hollow eye at the tree line.
The distant sounds of oinking coming nearer and nearer as the sun sets.
The cold steel of my AR-15, the only thing that stands between those hogs and my kids behind me.
So this reply tweet spawned news articles, podcast episodes, a flash mini game where you're playing as Willie and your goal is to mow down as many hogs as quickly as possible in 8-bit.
This is as close to a seminal main character experience as you can get.
And as a first timer to the main character game, Willie McNabb makes what many would consider to be a rookie mistake.
He posts his way through it.
And while in most cases, I would discourage this behavior, all main characters, especially when it's from something weird or innocuous as opposed to actually offensive, are advised to acknowledge their main characterhood, then either fake their own death or start a rap career.
Posting through it almost never helps, because random Twitter users also have a vested interest in proving themselves to be the world's most normal.
person. And Willie McNabb is very much caught in the middle of it. So, who is this guy? At the time of
Farrell Hoggate, Willie's Twitter bio read, husband, father, Christian, libertarian, West Carolina
University alum, and fan of Pearl Jam and Red Sox. But critically, his profile also reveals that he lives
in rural Arkansas. Collectively, all of these things add up to, he is some guy who has decided to post
through it after Jason Isbell quote tweeted him.
But in this case,
Willie's posting through it is part of why this story is so interesting.
He was not going to back down.
No, sir, I am.
But the thing he was not backing down on wasn't gun control.
It was feral hogs.
Willie spars against other Twitter users
who connect his hog problem and gun advocacy
with his personal politics.
He tweets at 1224 p.m.
Fun the thing about these responses, I would challenge any of you to find on my timeline where I say I voted for Trump.
Do any of you people know what Arkansas's mascot is?
It's for a reason.
And a wall or fence over 10 acres of land with a swamp in the backside isn't feasible.
He writes again at 2.21 p.m.
I'm for the First Amendment.
For those that say I should eat my kids, not have children advocate, the state taking them away from me,
the ones who are driving by my home, taking aerial photos in my house,
Googling where I work, et cetera.
This is why I'm for the Second Amendment.
So at this point, Willie does bring it back to gun control.
Because he has become the main character, he needs a gun actually.
In 2019, he had fully lost me at this point.
But the story somehow continues.
The next day, Jason Isbell is still joking about the hogs on Twitter,
and Willie replies to him again.
He is determined to get through to Jason Isbell about these hogs.
He writes,
Even though people have threatened my kids, taking picks in my home, driven by my house, my job, and threatened me,
I'm still a fan of your music.
And I never said my situation was applicable to the entire country.
It's real.
Attached to this tweet is a video entitled, Wild Hogs are Fair Game to Hunt from the Air in Texas.
In Texas, they're going hog wild over a wild.
The feral animals are causing hundreds of millions of dollars of damage to crops across the state,
and to help deal with the problem, state lawmakers have approved the hunting of wild hogs and coyotes from hot air balloons.
People had already been allowed to shoot the animals from helicopters, but it was an expensive and ineffective way to deal with the problem.
Hot air balloons apparently much better.
So, in case you're five years late and have never been to the rural south,
A hog problem is real.
Then, now, and it might be getting actively worse.
Brace yourself for some unbelievable hog facts.
The current estimated population of feral hogs in the United States is 6 million.
That's one feral hog for every dollar in the budget of the movie The Room.
Adult feral hogs can weigh anywhere from 75 to 250 pounds.
That is anywhere from the size of a fifth grader to the size of a football player that is so large.
And for my money, if 30 to 50 feral fifth graders or NFL players are charging my small kids in three to five minutes, I'd be scared too.
Willie is also right that these hogs are mainly in the rural south.
Most of them live in Texas, but in Arkansas, where Willie lives, they're in all 75 counties, and there's about 200,000 of them.
which, for comparison, is close to one gigantic feral hog for every resident of Little Rock, Arkansas.
There are entire government agencies dedicated to protecting the general public from the wrath of the hogs.
So while there's plenty to unpack in this story, before we can talk to the feral hogs guy,
because, yes, I did talk to the feral hogs guy.
I went to maybe the authority in the U.S. on this.
John Tomasek is an associate professor at Texas A&M, and even more to the point, he's the chair of both the National Farrell Swine Task Force and the Texas Farrell Swine Task Force.
Okay, and now imagine I'm doing a pickup truck commercial.
This man knows big pigs.
I had to talk to him.
I'm John Tomacek.
I'm an associate professor working on wildlife damage, wildlife disease, and carnivore management at Texas A&M University.
When this came up, some friends of mine that are not.
in the space of working in wildlife. They're not in the space of living and working on the land.
They're urban folks. They saw this and sent it to me and I really appreciated it because they said,
John, this is going around, but everybody's making fun of it. It sounds ridiculous, but you're
an expert. What do you think? And I just shrugged and said, yeah, sure, 30 or 50 feral
hogs in a group is not uncommon. Makes perfect sense to me. And that really was kind of my moment of
going, oh, okay, what's the big deal? What is so absurd about this? And I remember, you know, it was a
conversation around like firearms and that kind of thing. And so friends of mine that are not gun owners,
they're not hunters, but they know I am. They said, you know, what, what's your thought on this?
And I said, you know, I never actually owned an AR platform rifle before I started working professionally
on feral hogs. And this is one of the scenarios in which it actually does make sense because of
the numbers of animals you're dealing with. And I think that's really the kind of the juxtaposition here is
when a person is engaging in sport hunting or meat hunting or whatever it is, you are focused on
the one animal and the search for that animal and the take of that animal. Whereas with feral
hogs, it's this deluge of invasive exotic animals that are destroying everything from clean air
and clean water to the food that we rely on for our tables to the health and well-being of our
wild animals and wild places. And it's just everything. And so it's at times kind of an overwhelming
sense of how will we ever get control over this problem. And so when the internet sensation kicked
up, to me it was an interesting moment to say, ah, you know, for those of us that are actively
engaged every day in this space, this makes perfect sense, but to the outside world, it seems a little
absurd. I took a different job, an academic job, and I was working with ranchers, landowners,
farmers, and just asking them, you know, what are the issues that are most important to you?
what are the issues that are facing you that you need help on?
And almost unanimously, everyone was talking about damage that was caused by wildlife to their
agricultural operation, whether they were farming, your fruits and vegetables that come to the
market, everybody wants to eat, right?
Or livestock production or whatever it was.
And it was the idea of they don't hate the animal, they hate the damage, and they don't
know how to fix it to balance the production with the animal.
So I got involved in that world of wildlife damage.
And then feral hogs kind of came as an interesting.
track to that because it's an exotic invasive animal that doesn't belong in the system that
makes the sustainability of native plants and animals as well as humans much more difficult.
And so over the years, I've done more and more work in feral hog simply because it's,
in my mind, it's one of the greater conservation challenges of our generation, simply because we
are fighting a human-created problem that we essentially engineered these animals to be as
effective at doing what they do and now fighting against this. Like I said earlier, deluge. So like I said,
long story, and I could go on for quite a while. But basically what brought me to the table was
kind of looking at how people that live on the land and take care of the land because it is their
livelihood as well are struggling to do so in the face of this exotic invasive species that
seems to have blown up in the last 20 or 30 years. So could you tell me a little bit about how did
feral hogs get here and what were people misunderstanding as they were
encountering the story and see the 30 to 50 number yeah so so what I love about this
and I really can't emphasize this enough for your listener base most of us that
work professionally with feral hogs whether it's as researchers or managers or what
have you when the 30 to 50 number was thrown out pretty much everyone like I said shrugged
and said yeah it seems reasonable feral hogs got here a few different ways ironically
so Christopher Columbus brought them on
his second voyage to the new world.
So first voyage, no, second voyage had pigs.
They're domestic pigs at that time.
And they were brought as a food source.
And it's important to remember in this period in history,
pigs were raised in what we call a free-ranging environment,
meaning you let them go forage, they do what they do.
And then once a year, you round them all up,
usually before the winter time, if you're in a cold climate.
And you slaughter pigs, you keep a few in the barn over the winter,
and then you feed them, right?
And then you make salt pork or sausages, whatever you're doing, to put away food for the winter.
And that's a pretty common European way of managing pigs.
So they're brought to the new world by Columbus.
And then subsequent Spanish conquistadores brought them with them.
Early explorers in Florida brought them.
And it's important to note that the first couple of expeditions brought those pigs and then future expeditions in their diaries commented,
they needn't have bothered bringing pigs because they were so abundant here already.
Oh, okay.
And they're not native to the new world.
So there are no classic swine native to the Western Hemisphere.
There are peckeries.
Like in Texas, we have havelina.
It's a collared peccary.
We just use the Spanish words typically because that's what we're used to here.
But peckeries are not pigs.
I can't emphasize that enough.
They kind of look like pigs.
That's just convergent evolution, making a thing look similar.
But they are not the same animal.
Those are the native species.
Correct.
They're native to southwestern U.S. and then farther south in Central America and South America.
And they do not have the problems that I'm about to describe.
So one of the things about pigs, it is mankind's oldest livestock animal as far as we know.
So they're bred from Eurasian wild boar, which are a wild animal still around in Europe.
But animal husbandry over thousands of years produced an animal that could breed at any time of the year because that's important to produce sustainable food.
And they would have more offspring in a litter, which makes sense when we're making sure they stay fed.
So they can have the ability to make sure those animals survive.
And more of those animals survive.
They're heavier when they wean from their mothers.
All of these things that in the wild wouldn't necessarily make sense.
But in a farmed context or a raised context makes sense because it's a relationship where humans are also taking care of that animal.
Right.
So we broke a natural reproductive cycle.
to create an animal that is the largest animal on the planet physically that can reproduce that quickly with that many offspring.
So I talked about the Spanish brought them, but then Anglo settlers in New England, you know, the British colonies brought them.
And in our part of the world, when Anglos started moving from what's now the Midwest to Texas when it was still a Spanish colony and then later part of Mexico, they brought pigs with them.
And what we have today is a history of over the years, those free-ranging pigs escaped or when the pork industry was in a bad spot, farmers might have just turned their pigs loose because they couldn't afford to feed them.
And in the context of, am I going to let those animals starve or am I going to let them go forage and live because they can, which one would you pick?
I know what I would pick.
And I get that, right?
I don't think any of it was malicious, but we live in a situation now where we have a tremendous number of these animals and they're,
ability to reproduce means that the population is growing all the time. So when we talk about managing
numbers, it's not enough just to remove one or two. We have to try to get the whole group. And now
here comes the 30 to 50. And I think it's important to recognize I'm not mad at the pigs. Nobody's
mad at the pigs. But I have an exotic invasive that's hurting the environment. And that is the thing that
I liked your city, mouse, country mouse analogy. For people that live on the land and work on
the land, they understand the issue because they see it every day or people that may be perennial
urbanites and that's their world and that's fine. They may not understand in the same way of
watching the land be ripped apart. And when the next rain comes, all the soil washes away because
of this animal. We're not mad at them per se, but they have to go. They're damaging the environment.
And that at the end of the day, we as humans rely on that environment to survive as well.
you're in New England in the northwest or northeast excuse me when you have black bears they're
they're much bigger than ours bears most animals in northern climates colder climates are larger
and warmer climates they're smaller even if they're the same species so our bears in texas though
300 pounds is not an unusual size for a bear i have pigs that are bigger than bears that is
yeah a crazy sentence to me and that's why i wanted to get to that point of like forgive all the
back info, but if you remember nothing else, remember that. And that is the resource issue.
But the way you're describing it, it sounds like it is also related to colonialism that goes
back hundreds of years. Like, this problem exists because of colonialism.
Which is an interesting tack. One thing that I often will bring up in these conversations,
and it's something that comes up a lot in conservation is most of the population lives in urban
centers. And that's very true. Been that way for a better part of 100 years, it's been that way.
And the issues that face folks in rural areas are often cast aside or maligned or that kind of
thing, which I think any time we delegitimize a problem that anybody's facing, that is a real
issue. This is an issue that affects everybody. If you don't think it affects you in your geography,
just wait, because it will. Thank you so much for speaking with me about this. I really,
really appreciate it.
Yeah, my pleasure.
Thank you so much to John Thomasick. Keep fighting the good fight.
And of course, the villain was colonialism all along.
In my estimation, almost everyone is a casualty in the story of the hogs,
especially the hogs themselves.
Of course, people and crops should be protected,
but the fact that we can draw a direct line from European colonialism
to shooting gigantic pigs from hot air balloons is,
you know, we need to keep moving, but you know.
we all know right genius is evenly distributed opportunity is not it's black business month
and black tech green money is tapping in i'm will luke's spotlighting black founders investors
and innovators building the future one idea at a time let's talk legacy tech and generational wealth
i don't think any person of any gender race ethnicity should alter who they are especially on an
intellectual level or a talent level to make someone else feel comfortable just because they are
the majority in this situation and they need employment. So for me, I'm always going to be honest
in saying that we need to be unapologetically ourselves. If that makes me a vocal CEO and
people consider that rocking the boat, so be it. To hear this and more on the power of black
innovation and ownership, listen to Black Tech Green Money from the Black Effect Podcast Network on
the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. If a baby is giggling in the
seat, they're probably happy. If a baby is crying in the back seat, they're probably hungry. But if a baby is
sleeping in the back seat, will you remember they're even there? When you're distracted, stressed,
or not usually the one who drives them, the chances of forgetting them in the back seat are much
higher. It can happen to anyone. Parked cars get hot fast and can be deadly. So get in the habit
of checking the back seat when you leave. The message from NHTSA and the ad council.
Puzzlers, let's start with a quick puzzle.
The answer is, Ken Jennings' appearance on The Puzzler with A.J. Jacobs.
The question is, what is the most entertaining listening experience in podcast land?
Jeopardy-truthers who say that you were given all the answers believe in...
I guess they would be Kenspiracy theorists.
That's right. Are there Jeopardy-truthers? Are there people who say that it was rigged?
Yeah, ever since I was first on, people are like, they gave you the answers, right?
And then there's the other ones which are like, they gave you the answers, and you still blew it.
Don't miss Jeopardy legend Ken Jennings on our special game show week of The Puzzler podcast.
The Puzzler is the best place to get your daily word puzzle fix.
Listen on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Pretty Private with Ebeney, the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free.
I'm Ebeney, and every Tuesday I'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge your perceptions and give you new insight on the people around you.
On Pretty Private, we'll explore the untold experiences of women of color who faced it all, childhood trauma, addiction, abuse, incarceration, grief, mental health.
struggles, and more, and found the shrimp to make it to the other side.
My dad was shot and killed in his house.
Yes, he was a drug dealer.
Yes, he was a confidential informant, but he wasn't shot on a street corner.
He wasn't shot in the middle of a drug deal.
He was shot in his house unarmed.
Pretty Private isn't just a podcast.
It's your personal guide for turning storylines into lifelines.
Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect Podcast Network,
Tune in on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Sometimes it's hard to remember, but...
Going through something like that is a traumatic experience, but it's also not the end of their life.
That was my dad, reminding me and so many others who need to hear it, that our trauma is not our shame to carry,
and that we have big, bold, and beautiful lives to live after what happened to us.
I'm your host and co-president of this organization, Dr. Leah Tretate.
On my new podcast, The Unwanted Sorority, we weighed through transformation to peel back healing and reveal what it actually looks like, and sounds like in real time.
Each week, I sit down with people who live through harm, carried silence, and are now reshaping the systems that failed us.
We're going to talk about the adultification of black girls, mothering as resistance, and the tools we use for healing.
The Unwanted Sorority is a safe space, not a quiet space, so let's walk in.
We're moving towards liberation together.
Listen to The Unwanted Sorority, new episodes every Thursday on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The wildest thing to me about the Willie McNabb saga is, while the subject felt completely out of left field, given that Jason Isbell was referencing a larger cultural conversation around mass shootings, what he was saying wasn't absurd.
And while Farrell Hogg discourse continued for truly weeks after this first reply, I think the key to why people misunderstood it is contained in the very beginning.
Legit question for rural Americans.
Most of the people I quoted earlier are like me.
They live in cities, they work in some vaguely entertainment or media job, and they like to make little jokes on the computer.
I would hazard a guess that if a Twitter user lived in the rural South or ever had, the comment about Farrell Hogg
might still sound weird, but it wouldn't have struck them as the complete topic change that it was
made out to be by most people. That's because, and on Twitter especially, the internet doesn't
make the same space or consideration for people who live in rural areas. It reminds me of my
conversation with Meredith Broussard last week when we were talking about the black TikTok strike
of who is considered to be neutral. They're white, they're young, they're a man, and they live
in a city. Pew research indicates that only about 13% of Twitter's user base lives in a rural area.
So Willie was quite literally surrounded by users who just had no idea what he was talking about.
This was picked up on at the time as well. There's an episode of Reply All about it that I remember
vividly.
2019 is also the year that Twitter introduced the algorithmically driven topics feature that showed
users' stories that were trending, meaning that even people who didn't follow Jake,
in Isbell found out about the feral hogs debate.
Isbell's skepticism about Willie was further credited by the fact that both of these men are
Southerners.
Isbell is from Alabama, and there's no shortage of feral hogs in Alabama.
So like main characters were wont to do at this point, the mainstream media swept this
story up, explainer pieces were written breaking down the absurdity, and most of them ended
with a flourish.
Sort of a, and in case you didn't know, the hogs are real.
Not only had Willie McNabb achieved main character status, he'd managed to start a conversation
about a very rural problem on an app where rural people were not very present.
As the days wore on, Jason Isbell got a huge bump in social media engagement from bringing the
hogs to the masses.
The tweet was on August 4th, and by August 6th, the internet was so swept up in the hogs that
Isbell was featured and interviewed in the LA Times on August 7th.
He said, there are hundreds, if not thousands of people making hog jokes this week without
knowing why. I saw quite a few feral hog jokes for taking my mind off all the sadness in the
world tweets yesterday. The sadness was the whole reason for the hog talk in the first place.
This is like a TV show on an RFD network, Hog Talk.
Isbell gets a bump from this, but he was already a celebrity.
Willie was left to his own devices to figure out how to handle the sudden, massive wave of
attention he was receiving. The people who have lived in rural areas,
applying to him, mainly say some version of, hey, man, try an electric fence worked great for me,
but the vast majority of people are making fun of him. And meanwhile, Jason Isbell is holding his
ground in saying that the concern Willie brought up in the weirdest way possible is a nothing
burger. Here's another quote from the same LA Times interview. I've seen a damn hog in my time,
and yes, they're scary, but I'd much rather face a few dozen wild hogs than a freaked out dad with
an AR-15. Yeah, point taken. But it never quite feels.
to me like Isbell and McNabb are having the same conversation.
Isbell is railing against Americans' access to assault weapons.
There was a ban on assault weapons from 1994 to 2004 that lapsed and has yet to unlapsed,
with mass shootings continuing throughout in the meantime.
And while Willie is inarguably a defender of the Second Amendment, it does seem like he
mainly wants to talk about hogs.
All this happened almost five years ago, and Willie has never shied away from the infamy.
fact, he's taken up the cause of raising feral hog awareness, regularly retweeting reports about
hog attacks and attempts to curb them. At the time I'm writing this, there is a tusked hog emoji
next to his name on Twitter, and his bio reads,
Internet folk hero, husband and dad. Hog emoji, American flag emoji.
I reached out to him on Twitter to see how this bizarre incident, this one reply, has shaped
the last half decade of his life. Here's our talk.
My name's Willie McNabb. I guess infamous from the tweet. I tweeted out five years ago to Jason Iswell. I live in South Arkansas. I'm a business owner. Originally from North Carolina. I graduated from Western Carolina University. I moved here soon thereafter. My father had started a company here, and so I've been here ever since. So I'm a proud resident of Arkansas.
off. My first question, because I feel self-conscious about it, is, is it annoying that people are still asking you about a reply to eat from five years ago?
You know, it's, I wouldn't say annoying, no. I think that initially, you know, it's a little overwhelming, the initial response that I received. And I was, I remember the first few days of it that I was very cognizant of, okay, a lot of,
of people are paying attention. And this is a public forum. And even someone at that time, I didn't
have 100 followers. It was a very small platform or what I thought was. And so I was just, you know,
expressing an opinion or a thought or something that I'd heard. And so I came to realize pretty
quick that this was a global forum and a platform. And it only took one person like Jason to be
able to amplify that and see it. And I don't think he did it in a, I don't think he was trying to
get me in any way. I think he was just replying to somebody he probably thought it was a troll
at the time. Frankly, he probably did that. So, you know, after five years of it, there's not a day
that goes by that I don't get some interaction or somebody saying something about it.
So, no, I don't look at it as negative.
Actually, it's, but on the other hand, I mean, I can't reply to every feral hog thing that I see.
Of course not.
Yeah, it's a lot.
Okay.
Well, now that I've cleared the air in that sense, tell me a little bit more about yourself.
I grew up in Western North Carolina.
It is a very rural upbringing.
And by the time I was 10, 12 years old, I could handle a firearm.
It wasn't unusual for us to hunt for squirrel or rabbits or, my goodness, deer or grouse or quail or dove.
And I have touched on this before, but, you know, we were not a family of many means, you know, was a rural Appalachius.
So we ate what we hunted and grew a guard.
and a very rural upbringing, but it was a way of life for people like myself, especially
this was in the 70s and early 80s, you know, when I was a kid. And so there was nothing unusual
about it, you know, at that time there was still, my goodness, I had a couple of friends that I grew up
with that didn't even have indoor plumbing. I mean, this was a, it's probably hard for people
to even believe or grasp that it was real.
But we didn't, the great equalizer was that all of us were like that.
All my friends, all the families that I knew, everybody grew up that way.
So, you know, I hunted some when I first came here.
I'm not an avid outdoorsman like I was.
After having my own family, my kids were never, they weren't into hunting and fishing like
I was as a kid.
They're more into basketball and volleyball and sports and video games.
culturally, it's changed a lot, especially even in the South from what it was when I was a kid.
Yeah, it was a very simple upbringing, but I did travel some as a kid.
My father was a business agent for a labor union for 20 years.
And so I spent a lot of time.
Home base was always the Carolinas, but I would spend a year in Arizona, or I would be in Mexico
or Texas or the Gulf Coast or Salt Lake City.
And we just traveled around a lot with mining.
And he was working a lot of work with mining companies and refineries and chemical plants and things like that.
So he worked on specialty equipment in these mines and refineries and chemical plants.
Actually, it was specific to environmental control.
So he traveled a lot and we traveled a lot with him.
And so I would be exposed to a lot of different parts of the United States.
cultures, and then I would go back to home base in Carolina, and then we would travel again.
And then when I got to about junior high, for stability reasons, my mother and him agreed,
but it's not good for the kids.
I have two brothers, an older brother and a younger brother, and we just didn't travel anymore.
We stayed, we finished school in North Carolina, and then went on to college and found our way
out here at Arkansas.
Awesome.
And what sort of business do you run now, if you're okay, saying?
No, I don't mind saying it as a construction company slash manufacturing company.
We do some work in the chemical industry and refinery and mining industries.
It's what my father did, but the largest portion of our work is in the health care sector for radiation shielding for like, I think, in practical terms, in CTs or PET scans or cancer treatment or anything like that.
We build specialty shielding systems, door systems, wall systems, etc.
Wow.
Me and my younger brother hold a United States patent for some operators for some of these doors.
And yeah, so we've been successful.
Wow.
That's incredible.
Prior to, however you think of it, Farrell Hogsgate, what was your relationship to the Internet like?
When did you start using it?
How did you get into Twitter?
Sure.
In 1995, when my father started this company, I remember getting an HTML for idiots and writing code to put up our first website.
So that was my first introduction to it, and I was always adamant to try to every two to three years to redo our website and try to advertise in that way because it's a niche industry and we do work domestically as well as internationally.
But from the social media aspect, I've never had Facebook.
I don't have Facebook today.
My platform, I do have a private Instagram account.
It's just pictures of my kids.
No, that's essentially it.
But as far as me engaging with other people, Twitter or X now is the platform I've always used.
And I enjoy it.
And it is a, you know, it's like the Wild West on there now.
It's not what it was.
but any ideas or things that I advocate for, I'm usually post on there.
But I am cognizant that I don't wait off into debates that I don't have any understanding of.
And there's so many of these cultural issues that I just try to stay out of.
I think by nature, I don't look for conflict and I don't look for division and I don't like those type of things.
And so I intentionally do not, I don't take positions on the platform because if I say I'm for this, I lose half the audience.
And if I say I'm for something else, I lose the other half of my audience.
You understand what I mean?
And I'm trying to get people to communicate with each other and talk to each other.
And the difficulty in all of these issues are in the nuances of them.
You know, if these were easy, if these were easy issues to fix, they would have been fixed by now.
And so I really like the engagement part in getting people to get outside their comfort zone and try to understand somebody else's perspective and then try to look at those nuances and get resolution to them.
So I do not, I'm not a big advocate for conflict, but I do like debate.
I like people to actually sit and have conversations and try to figure out these problems.
I think that's the only way we get through them.
Depending on the conversation, I think this is an interesting example of it, where I certainly learned a lot from just delving deeper into 30 to 50 feral hogs.
So you're careful about the kinds of conversations you start on Twitter.
Why was this specific tweet something that you thought I have to reply?
Well, it's, look, it's a tough, it's a tough issue. And I think Jason was coming from a very intellectually honest place. And for me, when I believe that people are not being surrogates necessarily for a cause, but they're being intellectually honest, like they believe these things need to, from their perspective, these things need to change. And there needs to be, there's legitimate ways we can do it.
because of the personal experience that I had on this issue.
And it was, you know, I've told the story a lot of times, but it was very real.
It happened and my kids were very small at the time.
And once it happened to me and I started reaching out to people trying to understand the wise
and realizing how complex it was, but on a very local, small level for an individual
that's protecting his house or his kids my ability to have the firearm to go out and
no easier way of saying is shooting these pigs to get them out of my yard it seemed like it always
it has always seemed to me that it was a fair question it was a fair debate to have and I think
it's the disconnect between urban and rural areas in the country that someone living in an urban
the atmosphere, they simply can't comprehend it. They don't know. And living in a rural area,
you know, I've got 10 acres or whatever it is, but I've got a two acre yard. And the yard itself is
huge. You know, I'm not going to put a gate up or a fence up for my kids to play in the yard.
I don't have neighbors. I mean, I can look in any direction and I don't see any houses.
And so my kids are just being kids playing in the yard. And so, but also the hogs feel like
they've got a right to come in the yard too. You know what I mean?
And so it's a long answer to a short question, but I just felt there was a legitimacy to it.
I mean, there is.
This is a two and a half billion dollars worth of damage annually to the country.
Arkansas has over $40 million worth of damage to crops here.
And I remember it was three months after, it was about three months after the tweet, Arkansas got almost three and a half million.
in federal funding.
Strictly to repair hog damage?
Well, yeah, there was
the Arkansas Farrell Hog
Eradication Task Force had been
established. Whoa, what a title.
It's something, it's a mouthful.
Yeah. And so that funding
came in. Now, I can't
specifically say that it was because of the
tweet, but I've got to believe
that, you know, all things point to
the attention that was on
that issue at that time.
And the funding came in. And there's been
additional funding since. I think Senator Bozeman has been able to get some additional funding,
but it's just a, it's a huge issue. There's no easy answers to it. But I do believe the tweet
probably led to some of that funding coming in. So that's a positive to it. I certainly didn't
know what a huge issue this was really until I saw your tweet and then saw all the memes about
the tweet and then read the explainers about the tweet. And you know, sort of that classic internet cycle.
But I wanted to go back because, again, I'm coming into this conversation in a pretty naive way.
I'm not going to shy away from that.
When you were talking with your community, what were the potential solutions to take care of it?
Was it just the gun?
Was it?
Were there other options?
Yeah, walk me through that.
You know, I mentioned earlier, I grew up in North Carolina, and I hunted a lot with deer and pheasants or grouse, etc.
But hawk hunting was not really a big thing there when I was growing up.
And so when I moved here, I lived in town for six or seven years.
And then I moved out of town and got a bigger home, more land and more conducive to the way I grew up.
And I'd been out there several years, four, five, six years.
And my kids were small.
And, you know, it's Arkansas.
You hear about Hokes the whole time you hear it's the mascot for the university.
So you hear about hogs and you hear about people killing them, but I'd never actually hunted
hogs.
I'd never really been around them.
And so when my kids were small was my introduction, all of these pigs and hogs all over my yard.
And so I, you know, I shot three of them and then they came back a few more times.
And when I started speaking to my neighbors, that was their answer, was that, you know, you've just
got to get a gun and a lot of them had the ARs, the AKs or whatever type of assault style
weapons they had. And they were using them to eradicate hogs or get them off their lands. And
timber industry is really big here in South Arkansas. So large tracts of land, as well as soy
and, you know, crops, you know, it'll destroy the crops and it'll destroy the timber land,
especially when they go in and they'll have a clear cut and they'll put seedlings out. So there's
There's real problems with it.
And these are not large corporate farming.
This is small farming.
You know, they're individuals and family farms.
And so their answer was to go out and to just shoot these hogs.
You know, I know that in Texas, they're looking at, there's like a strict nine or something like that.
They're poisoning the hogs and those type of methods.
That was never, no one ever mentioned anything to me like that.
It was always just, you know, you get a gun, you go out, you shoot them.
That's what you do. I don't want to get sidetracked here, but I remember a specific argument that people would say is that, you know, every day Willie's out there fighting hogs in his yard, and there's just packs of them running over his yard. And that's not really the way it works. You know, they would show up and I wouldn't see them for months, and then they would come back or not be a year or two, and they would come back. And there was a lot of environmental factors that could drive them up. There could be, it could be a rainy season that would drive them out of the bottoms. You know, this is kind of swamp land. I've never heard of any
other solutions other than just shooting.
Jason Isbell, it seems like the undercurrent of what he's saying is in relation to recent mass
shootings that took place.
You bring up, well, here is a use for a rifle that is, you know, to protect my children.
And then the tweet takes off.
So the two of you are having a ridiculously complicated conversation.
When the tweet takes off, what is the initial reaction as you're,
remember. How do you choose who to talk to and who to kind of be like, eh?
I was very careful in what I said. Once I realized the magnitude of it, and I had, I remember,
it was on a Sunday that I tweeted that. By Tuesday, I came into the office and I had calls from
Sky News and Fox CNN, all these major media publications that were soliciting some type of response
from me. And quite frankly, my major in college was communications. So I did a little studying
and journalists. And I've always had such a admiration for what you guys do. But I felt that
there was, there was an agenda from a lot of them. And I didn't want to be part of that. If I was
going to speak to the media, I wanted people that I felt would give me a fair, a fair shake in what
I was trying to say, because they didn't understand the situation. And I wasn't interested in a
corporate media. I like independent media. I think that you guys come from an intellectually
honest place and you're just trying to get the story out. So I was intent.
in that. And I'll give you, I give you a little something to me that I haven't told anybody else. I've referenced it a couple times in tweets subsequently. You know, I, in those first few days, I was, I was really worried because I was worried. I was worried about, I was worried about my family safety because people were taking Google Earth pictures of my home and saying, you can put a fence right here, you can put a gate right here. They were
driving by my house and taking pictures of my driveway.
They called health and human services and said I should have my kids taken away from me.
I mean, just some of the craziest stuff.
And I remember my profile picture at the time on my Twitter feed was me and my daughter.
We had been on vacation in San Francisco.
My family had.
And it was just an innocent picture, but somebody had sent me some lengths that they were taking my daughter's picture and mine
and selling cups and T-shirts on everything.
and all these places.
Oh, my God.
I had to hire an attorney.
I mean, I spent $10,000 in legal fees.
What?
Yeah, break that down for me.
Sure, I don't mind.
So they had the tweet with a picture of me and my daughter, and they were selling it on these platforms,
and I said, I had to hire an attorney.
I had one that was writing cease and desist letters.
This was all in the first couple weeks to quit selling the image or not.
And then I went to a copyright, trademark lawyer, said, okay.
let's try to copyright this phrase 30 to 50 feral hogs so people can't use it to make money off
of. And I learned pretty quick within a few weeks, okay, I can't control this. There's just no way.
I can't control this. I can't control any of this. And so I remember in the first few days,
somebody's like, you ought to make some merchandise. I'm like, I'm not making merchandise off
this. And then after three weeks, I'm like, okay, I spent 10 grand in legal fees here. I've got to
recoup some of it. And what a horrible idea that was, because the,
T-shirt or a bomb. They didn't do anything. And so I've got boxes full of T-shirts.
No way. Well, yeah, that I never sold. And it was strictly to try to help pay for my legal
expenses. So I spent 10,000 in legal fees. A house was being surveilled by people coming up and
taking pictures of my driveway. I was getting called in for child endangerment. I mean,
just the craziest things. Those first few weeks were, they were a little crazy. They were really
were. Just hearing the particulars of what it's like to not even just like mentally have to process that volume of attention, especially when most people who are replying don't know what you're talking about. And then to have to take those sorts of measures, that is wild. So how did your family and just your community in general react to you becoming feral hogs guy overnight? Because they certainly knew about the hogs. Well, locally, everybody here thought it was hilarious. They thought,
the whole thing was just ludicrous and hilarious because, you know, this is this is normal way of life for people here. You know, that I wasn't the only person dealing with hogs because I wasn't not even an avid outdoorsman and people are like, you, you're the feral hog guy. You don't even really hunt. Everybody else are these hunters. Definitely people more equipped to have this debate. You know, my, I remember my wife, she's like, I'm not talking to anybody. This is ridiculous. I'm not speaking to anybody about this. She thought the whole thing was.
was crazy. My kids, they got, I think they probably got a little popularity because their dad was the
Farrell Hall guy, so they thought it was hilarious, you know, but it was stressful. I mean,
the truth of it is, if I would have been 20 years younger, it would have, you know, I don't know
how anyone, I remember having that conversation with my attorney, I don't know how anyone 15 to 30
years of age could deal with that type of attention. You know, you see people having meltdowns
that are these public figures. My goodness, no wonder. I mean, this is just a very small thing that I
dealt with and the age I was. It was hard, especially the first few weeks of it. So, yeah, that was
difficult. As far as the positive, I think that there was a, at the root of it is a legitimate
problem. And I think the monies that have been allocated for that, that there's,
legitimacy to it. And I remember after I put out my statement, like a week into it, the
amount of, it's like people switched 180. I remember Jason was interacting with like Kevin Bacon or
something on a tweet. And they were laughing about it. And I thought, you know, this is kind of crazy.
Yeah.
This even has an opinion on something like this. Right. And I put, but when I put out that statement,
It's like public sentiment changed.
And quite frankly, Jason was, he could have been a lot harsher and a lot.
He was kind to me.
He was just, you know, I've never met him.
I've never spoke to him personally.
We have communicated over Twitter.
But he was genuinely kind to me.
He could have been a lot different type of person.
And I think that speaks to who he is and what he believes in and what he advocates for.
I'm still just as big a fan of his as I ever was.
Were you a fan of his beforehand?
Oh, a massive fan.
But, you know, it was weird.
I kind of backed into his music.
He had been around for a while.
I didn't really follow him when he was drive-by truckers.
Then he put out a couple of albums,
and Southeastern had already kind of blown up,
and he was coming out with something more than free is at the album.
Yeah, that's the one that I,
really started paying attention and then I went back and discovered southeastern. And I saw him on
that tour last fall with my daughter, which was a good experience. Yeah, I took her. Yeah, we got,
I got front row seats. We went down to Shreveport and saw him at the auditorium down there. And it was
a fantastic show. Did he know you were there? Yeah, he tweeted something about it. He tweeted
something about it. Yeah. And like I said, he's been nothing but kind of. And those first few days,
Once he realized that I was a sincere person and not some troll, he was, you know, he was very nice to me.
And I'm still a huge Jasonous man.
I guess my last question now is, has your relationship changed to the Internet since this incident?
I'm very careful to what I say.
If I'm advocating for something specifically, I'm, you know, there are a few causes that I openly advocate for.
I speak to. But I like listening. I spend a lot of time on Twitter. That's where I get a lot of my
news from. I listen to a lot of podcasts. I don't think there's any issue that it's any that's confronting
the American people right now, that if we would just step back, just the half step and listen to
each other, I really don't think we're that far apart on things. I think it's in the nuances of it.
It requires some long-form conversations, some true discussion of the issues.
I still believe that Twitter's the Wild West out there, but there's people there that will have honest intellectual conversations with you.
And I've made some friends on there.
You know, I'm probably more careful in what I say and just try to listen a little bit more.
And I think twice about it, I remember I told somebody a quote of, if you're going to take a real position on
something, you better believe in it because you never know. You never know how it may blow up.
And it's truly a public forum out there. So I don't know if that answers the question, but
it absolutely does. Yeah. This is a story about the different ways that Americans view guns.
It's a story about rural and urban online audiences trying to understand the same interaction.
And to me, it's ultimately, like, 30 to 50 is a very funny amount of specific for a range of hogs.
Where does 30 for 50 come from?
You know, I've spoken about that a couple times.
The numbers were literally just pulled out of the air.
You know, there was a lot of hogs.
I don't know how many there was.
You know, I'd said that to DJ.
It could have been 20 to 25.
You know, it was just a number.
It was a large number of hulk.
I was trying to convey, it was a large number of hogs, they were in my yard, I had to get them out of there fast.
There was literally no more thought put into it than that.
I've learned since, and I didn't know it then that, you know, a large pack of hogs is called a sounder.
And a sounder can be 30 hogs is a large sounder, a large group of hogs.
And, you know, when your kids are out in your yard playing and a bunch of them out is out there, you don't know how many.
You just know your whole yard's covered with fogs.
And so it's just a bunch.
You know, it's just a lot. I could have said there's a lot of homes.
Well, I feel like if you had just said a lot of hogs, we would not be sitting here.
And it was a pleasure talking to you. Thank you so much, Willie.
Thank you so much to Willie for his time and just for being such a kind person and a good sport about feral hogs over the years.
He was so, so kind to me. And I really, really appreciate it.
Hell yeah, Willie. You can still catch him on Twitter today.
And when we come back, I try to slide that final piece of the piggy puzzle into place.
We all know, right?
Genius is evenly distributed.
Opportunity is not.
It's Black Business Month and Black Tech Green Money is tapping in.
I'm Will Lucas spotlighting Black founders, investors and innovators, building the future, one idea at a time.
Let's talk legacy, tech, and generational wealth.
I don't think any person of any gender, race, ethnicity should alter who they are,
especially on an intellectual level or a talent level, to make someone else feel comfortable
just because they are the majority in this situation and they need employment.
So for me, I'm always going to be honest in saying that we need to be unapologetically ourselves.
If that makes me a vocal CEO and people consider that rocking the boat, so be it.
To hear this and more on the power of black innovation and ownership,
Listen to Black Tech Green Money from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
If a baby is giggling in the back seat, they're probably happy.
If a baby is crying in the back seat, they're probably hungry.
But if a baby is sleeping in the back seat, will you remember they're even there?
When you're distracted, stressed, or not usually the one who drives them, the chances of forgetting them in the back seat are much higher.
It can happen to anyone.
Parked cars get hot fast and can be deadly.
So get in the habit of checking the back seat when you leave.
The message from NHTSA and the ad council.
Hello, puzzlers.
Let's start with a quick puzzle.
The answer is Ken Jennings' appearance on The Puzzler with A.J. Jacobs.
The question is, what is the most entertaining listening experience in podcast land?
Jeopardy Truthers, who say that you were given all the answers,
believe in?
I guess they would be
conspiracy theorists.
That's right.
Are there Jeopardy Truthers?
Are there people who say
that it was rigged?
Yeah, ever since I was first on,
people are like,
they gave you the answers, right?
And then there's the other ones
which are like,
they gave you the answers,
and you still blew it.
Don't miss Jeopardy legend
Ken Jennings on our special
game show week of the Puzzler podcast.
The Puzzler is the best place
to get your daily word puzzle
fix listen on the iHeart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts welcome to pretty
private with ebony the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free i'm ebeney and every
tuesday i'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge your perceptions and give you
new insight on the people around you on pretty private we'll explore the untold
experiences of women of color who faced it all.
Childhood trauma, addiction, abuse, incarceration, grief, mental health struggles, and more,
and found the shrimp to make it to the other side.
My dad was shot and killed in his house.
Yes, he was a drug dealer.
Yes, he was a confidential informant, but he wasn't shot on a street corner.
He wasn't shot in the middle of a drug deal.
He was shot in his house, unarmed.
Pretty private isn't just a podcast.
It's your personal guide for turning storylines into lifelines.
Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect Podcast Network.
Tune in on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Sometimes it's hard to remember, but...
Going through something like that is a traumatic experience, but it's also not the end of their life.
That was my dad, reminding me and so many others who need to hear it, that our trauma is not our show.
to carry, and that we have big, bold, and beautiful lives to live after what happened to us.
I'm your host and co-president of this organization, Dr. Leah Tritate.
On my new podcast, The Unwanted Sorority, we weighed through transformation to peel back healing
and reveal what it actually looks like, and sounds like, in real time.
Each week, I sit down with people who live through harm, carried silence, and are now
reshaping the systems that failed us.
We're going to talk about the adultification of black girls, mothering as resistance,
and the tools we use for healing.
The unwanted sorority is a safe space, not a quiet space.
So let's walk in.
We're moving towards liberation together.
Listen to the unwanted sorority, new episodes every Thursday,
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome back to 16th Minute.
a kid, my mom would not let me even look at a Halo game and would constantly repeat that guns
are for squirting, not hurting. And today, we are talking about the legend of 30 to 50 feral
hogs that run into my yard within three to five minutes while my small kids play. I put a pin in it
at the top of the episode, but I want to get back into the reason that this conversation happened
in the first place, when two mass shootings happened in the space of the same day in the U.S.
It's something I haven't seen discussed as much in the scope of this story, that this moment of the internet coming together to make hog jokes was prompted by something really awful.
So before we get to our last interview today, here's the thing. I don't have an expert opinion on gun control. I only have my opinion. And it's that I hate guns and I struggle to hear out defenses of them, even in cases where that defense makes some sense. And that opinion is built on the way anyone built opinion.
It's informed by how I grew up, where I live now, and what my personal experiences are.
I grew up in a small city and not really around gun owners.
I live in a city now and don't know many gun owners now.
And my personal experience with a school shooting where there were thankfully no fatalities
and the anxiety that I have for a family that mainly consists of teachers
who have to conduct these terrifying, tedious, and necessary drills with their students,
more or less solidifies that opinion.
I was talking about this with my brother last night.
He is a friend who grew up in a rural area is queer and felt necessary to have a gun
because outside of things like the hogs, their perspective is that the people who pose an active threat to them in their community certainly have guns
and they want to be able to defend themselves in their community should anything happen.
And I know that hobbyists are an argument for guns.
That argument was kind of a non-starter for us as well.
A hobby is totally fine, but leave your gun.
the range. But a horse girl leaves her horse in the stable. A hobbyist shouldn't need a gun in
their house any more than a horse girl needs a horse in her bathroom. You don't want the wrong
person with a loaded gun or a temperamental horse within arm's reach. That's my opinion. And I'll admit,
it lacks nuance. I've never had a reason to own a gun. And outside of being just really
fucking juice after seeing atomic blonde, I hope I never have reason to. It's absurdly frustrating to me
how easy it is to acquire an AR weapon in most places in the United States,
and the consequences are what we saw in Dayton and San Antonio and many times since.
And so while this is pretty immovably how I feel,
talking to today's guests pulled me out of the bubble of my own experience a little bit.
With shootings like these, the gun isn't the only problem.
There's a massive need to make some movement on how people are radicalized to do things like this.
But I don't see how making it way more difficult for guns to fall into,
to these hands isn't a place to start. A lot of arguments I've heard for guns rarely acknowledge
or account for the people who are most likely to be harmed by them, disproportionately people
of color, specifically unarmed black Americans. And while all of this is true, do I have an answer
of how to defend oneself from the colonizer's hogs? No, I don't. I wanted to talk to someone
who felt more like Willie McNabb than about me on gun ownership, because it's a perspective that I
genuinely struggle with, especially with people who have politics that are very similar to mine.
And the perfect person to speak to was Carl Cassarda, whose YouTube channel InRange TV is described as
the channel where firearms, culture, history, and human rights meet. He's a friend of the producers
of this show, Sophie and Robert, and he was so kind to talk to me for this episode. Here's our talk.
So hi, I'm Carl Casarda, and I am the creator and producer of InRange TV, which is a ostensibly a firearms content
creation, YouTube channel, but really it's extended beyond that.
It's much more about we do a lot to do with firearms, but I also do a lot of content about
history, civil rights, essentially the intersectionality of how firearms have really shaped
society.
Well, thank you so much for being here to talk about the pressing issue of 30 to 50
feral hogs five years ago.
So Jason Iswell, yes, says if you're on here arguing the definition of assault weapon today,
you are part of the problem.
You know what an assault weapon is and you know you don't need one.
What's your take on that?
Well, the thing about that term, assault weapon is actually a politically charged term or essentially
like legislative attempts to restrict firearms rights.
Whether you agree or disagree, that term assault weapon is not actually something that's
ever used in any firearms realities.
Like there is the term assault rifle.
And oddly, of course, as all things seem to sadly, goes all the way back to.
Hitler, when he coined the gum the Sturmgavar, which was the storm rifle, which is where
assault rifle comes from.
So what that did is that codified a type of firearm, which was a intermediate cartridge,
meaning something that wasn't a full-size cartridge, but not a pistol cartridge, something
between the two, that had a box-fed magazine, meaning a detachable magazine, usually
have 30-round capacity that could fire a single shot or fully automatic.
And that is actual technically the firearms definition of what an assault rifle is.
But in the 90s and when we saw gun control on the rise, this term assault weapon was used by politicians and it was vague.
And they never could really define it because they were trying to say things like the shoulder thing that goes up.
I'm not kidding.
That's one politician said that.
A shroud.
Like they had all these ideas of what they were just trying to like codify this phrase.
assault weapon. But there is no such actual thing technically. And so, so it's a political term,
actually. Because I know the cultural moment that Jason Isbell's responding to here, but I can't tell
if he is responding to a specific person making a semantic argument or what? First of all, I want,
I hope the audience, at least some of the audience is familiar with my work and they'll know that
I'm not making light of any of these horrific events. This is a terrible thing. But we're not, we're not
Directly talking about it. We're talking about this phrase, assault weapon. And it came about, as far as I know, the real phraseology came about in the early 90s, which is what ultimately turned into the 1994 assault weapons bill, which was a restriction on the ownership of a large swath of firearms that were defined initially by name, but then they realized they couldn't define them by name because there was too many variants in like manufacturers. But then they tried to define them by features, like a pistol.
or a shroud or a flash hider or a bayonet lug i'm not kidding one of the defining characteristics of
an assault weapon legally speaking has frequently been a bayonet lug and so this is where it starts
to get a little absurd because we're not we don't hear about a lot of drive-by bayonettings right like
so it became almost aesthetic and not really functionally in practice and that's where the
challenges because and this is where you'll hear like the trope from gun
gun people like well an assault weapon is like a weapon is a weapon it's how you use it to
determine if it's an assault weapon and you know that's not totally incorrect but at the
same time when someone says assault weapon because of the politics behind it you know what
they mean right it's kind of like you know you can't define porn but you know when you see it
kind of thing that's what they were trying to do with the law and they could never really
pull it off because it's really it's on it's kind of amorphous and hard to hold on to it sounds so much
like they're talking about two very different things are they talking about two very different things
where is the disconnect happening here outside of this being a rural issue that a lot of city people
would not be aware exists wherever anyone's falls on the topic of firearms and firearms ownership
in this country is this is a really good moment to kind of like really distinctively show the very
different world that are existing in this space right so i know what his original post mean right i
so like he's using a political term of assault weapon but i also understand the context of why this person
saying this they're talking about a weapon that is probably 30 round capacity semi-automatic can
fire many rounds you know quickly or to be honest with you a lot of people that are not familiar
with firearms, just assume these things are fully automatic machine guns and they're not.
Like, there's such a broken conversation being had that neither side can really speak the same
language. And part of that is one side's defensive and doesn't want to lose the thing that's
important to them. In some ways, may be important only psychologically. And in some ways
may be important actually in reality. When you live in a rural life, because I do live a rural
existence for most of my existence, the truth is, in those spaces,
like where I'm at, whether or not you like police or not,
calling them is the chances are you're going to have a 30-minute to one-hour response time.
And so that's just how it works.
And so there is a reality there that in a world filled with items like this,
there is a chance that that item could very well be the thing that saves your life.
Like maybe you're not against 50 hogs, but it could be something else.
Maybe 30 hugs.
Or even five or whatever.
But the thing is that's interesting about this is that,
let's be realistic. When people say a assault weapon, they almost always now think of an AR-15.
Yes.
Right. And so here's the thing that's so interesting about this.
Yes, an AR-15 does hold 30 rounds or even 60 rounds. It can fire very quickly.
But you know what else it can do? It's actually very capable for someone who doesn't have the opportunity to train a lot or have like lots of upper body strength or isn't necessarily proficient to actually be capable to use.
So there's actually a weird sense of ableism in this sometimes because.
there are places I believe in spaces in this world where people do need, well, I do believe
in the right assault defense across the board. But there are places where that weapon may very
well be the right choice because the person who needs to use it really couldn't handle something
else. And so that's never talked about. And it's like it's kind of an interesting thing. But when you
live in the city, you of course are in a place where ostensibly with the push of a button on your
phone, hopefully, actual help is there to be had. Or you're amongst other people. Or there aren't
feral hogs roving the streets of like Times Square, I assume. And so this worldview, when you live in a
rural place, it's almost like they're on different, we're in the same country, but we're on different
planet. One of the interesting things about social media is that it's caused everyone, like we used to
have like our circles we existed in, like these people hung out over there and those people hung over there.
And sometimes they would talk at the local supermarket or whatever or the coffee shop,
but it was somewhat cursory interaction.
But social media has forced us all into one giant communal living space.
But without context, these worldviews really very foreign to each other.
That person living with those quite possibly 30 hogs in their yard can't fathom walking down New York City or New Orleans.
That's like it is a different planet.
And someone from one of those places can't fathom.
a bunch of wild creatures in the yard that actually could legitimately kill them.
Like,
those are very such different worlds.
I am very possibly asking you to solve the entire world for me right now.
But is there in this conversation that they're having,
is there a solution where Jason Isbell is asking essentially,
how can we get mass shootings to stop?
And Willie McNabb is asking,
how can I protect my children from the house?
Well, you're going to hear the opinion of a person that's a big proponent of,
of self-defense rights.
So you're going to get my bias.
Everyone's got to have a line somewhere, right?
So I don't know that you should,
I don't believe you should walk down to the street
and be able to buy an RPG.
Like, this is a problem, right?
Okay.
And maybe some people's line is an AR-15.
But the reality is anyone using any of these things
for the things they're doing
is to me the symptom of a much deeper cultural problem
that isn't being discussed.
Why is this happening?
And when it comes historically,
because you said you watched some of my history work.
The reality is from a firearms perspective,
this is a topic that's been really dwelling on me for a while.
Technologically speaking, we didn't have AR-15s in like 1880.
But the types of firearms that existed in 1880
were capable of doing almost the same sort of horrific things
you can do now with an AR-15.
It's not trying to be a cop-out,
but something happened somewhere
where these things which are prolific in this country
and always have been started taking this even,
darker turn. And that darker turn to me is where we should be focusing, is why is this happening?
And what is it we're doing in our society that's making everybody in all directions feeling,
I don't mean, it sounds so dark, but like America's feeling like a dark place. And there's
reasons, and I think it's across the spectrum, right? It's like almost anyone you talk to isn't happy
with how it is. And there's a reason, something's wrong. Something's deeply wrong. And you hear
of things like capitalism, which is true for sure, but the social ills that we are built in
and aren't addressing are manifesting in so many ways beyond and just isn't the right word
because you can't say just a mass shooting because these are lives. But that is one example
of many manifestations of, I'm going to go ahead and say a diseased society to be blunt.
You know, both people are essentially talking about being failed in various ways by their
government. The conversation doesn't quite connect. And I don't know, I mean, just based off of what
you were just saying, it feels very much like contributing to this disease, while also being a place
that I love, a place where I've found a lot of dear friends is the internet. And I'm not trying to
take us off topic, because I know we're talking about the wild hogs issue versus assault weapons,
but like hopefully you brought some context of where that phrase comes from. And the reality of the
cultural divide that exists in this country is diverse. And here we are all in one space using
American style English, but we're not speaking the same language. We just aren't. And how to get people to get on a
better page is a hard call. I don't know. But like what I do, in my opinion, what I do know or believe at
least is that the best answer ever is education. I'm not sure how to do that when the algorithm
just wants to make it a war. And that's what this is why. This is kind of like that, right? Because
this guy posts the thing and he's, his heart's on the right place. We should never have another mass shooting again.
And the other guy's like, well, what do I do about these things in my yard that are trying to kill my kids?
And they're both, they're not, neither one's wrong, right?
Thanks so much to Carl Caserta.
You can follow his work.
I would particularly recommend the historical stuff over on InRange TV, linked in the description of this episode.
I don't know.
Maybe there is a version of the world where most people could handle a weapon as dangerous and volatile as an AR-15.
But I don't think we're living in that world.
The issues that the Hog Tweet prompted, those of mass shootings and gun violence and that of a hostile and violent species hell-bent on killing children, are more similar than I realized. They're both invasive species. And outside of supporting people who are trying to prevent these horrors, I'm not the person that has the solution. I don't even have a driver's license. But what I do want to do here is include the voice of someone who is doing their level best to prevent further gun violence in the U.S. in a genuine way.
Because the loss that's caused by U.S. policies on guns is huge.
One story that really stuck with me in the researching for this episode is an ongoing effort
organized by a man named Dionne, the son of a victim from the Dayton mass shooting.
Since he lost his father, he is focused on helping people and communities affected by this
kind of violence and showing them a path to healing.
Here he is speaking on the local news last year after traveling to Maine following the mass
shooting in Lewiston that left 18 people dead.
The sad thing about it is there's going to be another shooting and they're going to disperse out.
And when they disperse out, the resources to leave with them as well.
So I need them to know that there are still people around that are willing to help.
Green knows their grief well.
He lost his father, Derek Fudge, in the 2019 Oregon District Mass shooting.
Green, taking his pain and creating an outlet for support.
He now leads the Fudge Foundation, a nonprofit in his father's name.
its mission is to help those dealing with traumatic events and advocate at the local and national level.
That Band-Aid comes off and that trauma surfaces.
So to have people there to be able to help and assist and let them know how to get through it
and just share opinions and things of how other survivors got through it is monumental to the next survivors
that are being able to process these things.
I think Dion's work is really amazing.
linked to it in the description, and I'm so sorry that the hogs episode got so sad. Jesus.
So what happened to these hogs? The hogs that we were told numbered between 30 and 50, but in
retrospect was probably less. Listener, I wish I had better news. The hogs are probably dead,
given the average life expectancy of a hog, or potentially them being shot from a balloon.
And when it comes to gun policy in the U.S., at the time I'm writing, assault weapons are
prohibited in only nine states. And while mass shootings are lower this year than the previous
few, the United States still has markedly more gun violence than in other developed nations.
And that's where we are, five years later. Gun laws are stagnant, the hogs are loose,
but at least Willie McNabb and Jason Isbell got to hang out at a concert one time. That's not
nothing. It's just almost nothing. And so, my sweet, probably dearly departed, 30 to 50 feral
hogs, your 16th minute ends now.
I'm seeing things. Mr. Zuckerman!
Mr. Zuckerman!
Something's happened to Lurvey.
Do you see what I see?
Some pig.
You don't suppose that spider.
Edith, we have received a sign.
We have a very unusual pig.
16th Minute is a production of Pool Zone Media and IHard Radio.
It is written, hosted, and produced by me, Jamie Loftus.
Our executive producers are Sophie Lichten and Robert Evans.
The Amazing Ian Johnson is our supervising producer and our editor.
Our theme song is by Sad 13.
And pet shoutouts to our dog producer Anderson, my cats flea and Casper, and my pet rock bird,
We'll outlive us all.
Bye.
Bye.
It's Black Business Month
and Black Tech Green Money is tapping in.
I'm Will Lucas spotlighting Black founders,
investors, and innovators,
building the future, one idea at a time.
Let's talk legacy, tech, and generational wealth.
I had the skill and I had the talent.
I didn't have the opportunity.
Yeah.
We all know, right?
Genius is evenly distributed.
Opportunity is not.
To hear.
if this and more on the power of black innovation and ownership.
Listen to Black Tech Green Money from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
If a baby is giggling in the back seat, they're probably happy.
If a baby is crying in the back seat, they're probably hungry.
But if a baby is sleeping in the back seat, will you remember they're even there?
When you're distracted, stressed, or not usually the one who drives them,
the chances of forgetting them in the back seat are much higher.
It can happen to anyone.
Parked cars get hot fast and can be deadly.
So get in the habit of checking the back seat when you leave.
The message from NHTSA and the Ad Council.
Tune in to All the Smoke Podcast, where Matt and Stacks sit down with former first lady, Michelle Obama.
Folks find it hard to hate up close.
And when you get to know people and you're sitting in their kitchen tables and they're talking like we're talking.
You know, you hear our story, how we grew up, how I grew up.
And you get a chance for people to unpack and get beyond race.
All the Smoke featuring Michelle Obama.
To hear this podcast and more, open your free IHeartRadio app.
Search All the Smoke and listen now.
The U.S. Open is here and on my podcast, Good Game with Sarah Spain.
I'm breaking down the players, the predictions, the pressure.
And of course, the honey deuses, the signature cocktail of the U.S. Open.
The U.S. Open has gotten to be a very wonderfully experiential sporting event.
To hear this and more, listen to Good Game with Say,
Sarah Spain and I Heart Women's Sports Production
in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Brought to you by Novartis, founding partner
of IHeart Women's Sports Network.
Hey, I'm Kurt Brown-Oller.
And I am Scotty Landis, and we host Bananas,
the podcast where we share
the weirdest, funniest,
real news stories from all around the world.
And sometimes from our guest's personal lives, too.
Like when Whitney Cummings recently revealed
her origin story on the show.
There's no way I don't already have rape.
This is probably just why my personality is like this.
I've been surviving rabies for the past 20 years.
New episodes of bananas drop every Tuesday in the exactly right network.
Listen to bananas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.