The Ben and Ashley I Almost Famous Podcast - Shannon Elizabeth won’t say I DO again but has found love and happiness
Episode Date: May 16, 2026From acting in hit movies to saving animals! Shannon Elizabeth has found her passion in saving rhinos in South Africa, and it’s changed her life. Plus, the animal activist is telling Brian... Austin Green about her upcoming charity poker event! Email us at: IDOPOD@iheartradio.com or call us at 844-4-I Do Pod (844-443-6763)Follow I Do, Part 2 on Instagram and TikTokSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, everybody. Welcome back to another episode of I do Part 2, Brian Austin Green, and I am speaking with Shannon Elizabeth,
and we've had an amazing conversation so far.
So we want to get back into this.
Let's get into a little bit of what it is you do.
Because people hear you're an animal activist,
which a lot of people hear about other people.
You, again, you're talking to me from South Africa right now.
So you're really doing it.
Like you are in this.
You're going.
You're going strong.
So tell me a little bit about how this started and what it is you do now.
Okay. So after American Pie, it was my first time I was in a position to start giving back. And I knew animals was my mission on the planet to help animals. And my partner and I at the time, we went to all the animal rescues around town and decided we're going to do this ourselves. And so we started the charity Animal Avengers. And that was in 2001. After running it that way for over 10 years, I just knew.
I wanted to help more animals on a bigger scale.
I didn't know what that looked like yet.
And just went on this journey of discovery.
And eventually I was led to New York.
I went to an ivory and rhino horn crush and met a lot of conservationists there.
And so I started following all these conservation organizations online.
And one night I was getting ready to go out and something said to me, check Instagram.
So I checked Instagram.
I didn't know what I was looking for.
And I ran across this video of a ranger in the field.
And he's scanning with his phone what he sees in front of him.
And you see a trunk of an elephant off to the side.
And then you see kind of, you could just kind of make out the face and the body.
And you hear him say, this poor baby's been out here all night suffering.
And then she moved.
And that moment when she moved got me like nothing I had ever been through before.
I couldn't stop crying.
I didn't realize how much they were suffering.
I think I just assumed that a hunter or a poacher would just go out and kill the animal.
But no.
Like the poachers will sometimes disable them.
They might cut their Achilles tendon or cut their spinal cord so they can't run.
And then they take what they want.
And that's it.
And they leave them to bleed out and die.
And it was in that moment a strong.
switch was flipped in me and I said, this is what I have to do with the charity. The idea that
these animals could go extinct in our lifetime. I can't do nothing now that I know that.
How are people that place? That is, that that is mind-blowing that someone could be that heartless
and just that removed from just emotional connection with animals and the world around them.
Yeah, the problem is that it goes so much deeper than that.
So do you remember way back in the day, there were a bunch of school girls that were kidnapped in, I think, Kenya or Mozambique?
And there was a syndicate, Boko Haram, and there was Boko Haram, and there was Boko Haram, and there was Al-Shabaab.
Two really big syndicates.
One of those kidnapped the girls.
So these are just examples of two syndicates.
What these syndicates do is every illegal thing you can think of within the course of a month.
And they rotate it throughout the month.
So poaching happens during the full moon.
They call it a poacher's moon.
And when they kidnap these girls, they need lots of guns, lots of artillery.
Like they're terrorists.
So the easiest way for them to get the money to buy the guns is wildlife trafficking.
and it's killing animals for the parks.
Now, they might go to a local villager outside of the park and say,
we're giving you a panga, which is a big knife, we're giving you a gun.
And all you have to do is go into that park, get a rhino horn, and bring it out,
and we will give you $1,000, which is more they've seen their whole life.
That rhino horn's worth half a million dollars on the black market.
So they're getting a tiny little piece.
The syndicates are making massive money from this.
They're not risking anything.
And they've gotten very clever and they're very well organized and funded.
So they know how to go into an area and start blackmailing someone.
So it'd be like, oh, Brian, your little girl needs a surgery.
Oh, we heard about that.
That's horrible.
You don't have the money.
Here, we'll pay for it.
don't worry. We've got this. I'll pay for the surgery. She'll be okay. And then it goes from there.
It's like, oh, well, you owe us now. You've got to do what we say now. So you've got information
on where the anti-poaching team is going tonight. So we're going to go the other way. You're going
to tell us where they're going and we're going to poach in the other direction. Oh, if you don't,
we're going to kill your family. We're going to torture them. We're going to torture your wife in
front of you, and it goes on. That, you know, you don't want to kill the animal, but now you're
faced with this. They own you at that point. They own you. So it could go one of many ways,
but that's, that's one of the ways it can go. And it's these people that are actually going out and
doing the killing, most of the time they don't want to kill. They just want to feed their family.
They just want to survive. They just want to live. And at that point, they've been threatened that if they
don't do it, that terrible things will happen to them. So,
that's why in conservation, one of the biggest things you can do to protect animals is uplift the people around the parks, is to work with them and give them real ways of making money, making a living generation after generation, not just like here's a job for today, but teaching skills and developing skills that they can always fall back on.
And when you get a community on your side and they can make money because of the work they're doing with you, your organization, your sanctuary, whatever it may be, then they want to protect you and they want to protect the animals because that's their livelihood.
And so that is not a Band-Aid. That's a real answer.
A lot of, there's a lot of Band-Aids going on why people work on the real answers in the background, but it's hard.
And it's, I mean, this is happening at every park all over the,
the world. They're quite often outside the parks is where there's a lot of poverty. And so you have to
like work with those communities. It's really important. Renno mishap? That's embarrassing. You know,
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Is there anything to the idea that because you're from Harvard,
you only got in because your parents made a huge donation.
The yard herds, right?
That's the name.
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They're open to change.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
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How did this even happen for you?
Like how did you end up where you are doing what you're doing?
I mean, you moved.
Again, you're in South Africa.
Like normally when people think South Africa, they think like you're just walking down
the street and you're like, oh, lion, what's up, man?
Like, you know, you're riding an elephant to work.
Like, people have those.
My fiance is from Australia.
So it's the same thing.
I tell people like, oh, Australia is beautiful.
And they're like, oh, but there's deadly snakes and spiders.
It's like not in cities.
Like if I go on the outback, you know, if I'm out there like at the Australia Zoo with the Irwins, I'm going to see some of that stuff.
But otherwise, I'm in a city.
How did you happen to just travel there first doing something else and then that that caught your attention?
Or did you travel there specifically for animal activism and then you decide to stay?
It's mainly the second one.
I did travel here once first, actually for poker.
I was out here for a poker tournament.
I love that.
That poker is what brought you to South Africa and then you ended up staying for the activism.
It was actually two things.
It was poker and I was shooting a documentary for, I think it was Save the Children or Feed the Children.
It was one of these organizations.
And it was with, oh gosh, it was a lot of people you would know, actually.
I can see the faces.
It's okay.
We're old, so I know the buffering.
Sometimes, like as you're trying to recall names.
Yeah.
Totally.
Yeah.
So it was with a bunch of people.
And so it was a trip where I got to do that.
And then I did a big poker tournament here in South Africa.
So the filming was in Kenya.
So that was my first time to be in Africa.
But that was like 2006 or 2008.
And then I didn't think anything of it after that.
So I didn't know about the poaching.
I didn't know about any of that then.
So when I saw that video of the elephant,
online and that switch was flipped in me.
I said, I kind of evaluated my life and the people in my life at that point.
And there were a lot of people around me from South Africa.
Some people were in South Africa and some were South Africans that were in New York with me.
Like I just realized the universe was saying South Africa.
I'm like, finally one day I was like, okay, I hear you.
Something's in South Africa for me.
Got it.
So I put together a fundraiser.
to raise funds to come out here to help a few organizations as a way to just start exploring,
like, what could I do to help? And I got the names of some organizations through friends I knew and
trusted and came out and said, okay, well, what do you need? I'm going to buy you supplies. And I did
like an Amazon fundraiser as well, where people bought supplies for vets and, like, camera traps for in the field.
And so I came with a bag full of supplies.
And then I had $10,000 for three different charities where I could buy something for them that would help them in the field.
And that was kind of where I started.
And that was, I think, 2015.
So I did that trip and went back to New York.
And there was this moment where everybody was standing at the crosswalk and everyone's like on their phone like this.
and the crosswalk goes and everyone's walking as fast as they can,
but their faces down in their phone.
And I'm just watching this.
And it just kind of hit me that like everyone's racing, like dealing with a problem.
But I'm like, I don't feel like these are real problems.
Like these are first world problems.
But there's people dealing with real struggles out there and real issues.
And I had seen like a different side of the world when I came to Africa.
and I just felt like I wanted to be closer to the issues.
I wanted to come out here.
It was the only way I was going to learn
and try to understand what I could do
to make a difference and help.
And I just decided in that moment.
It's amazing when the universe puts you in that perspective
where you see things in a different way
and you go, you know what?
There is nothing for me to serve here.
So I need to figure out where I am more useful
than I am right now in this space and you and you dedicate yourself to that. That's,
that's amazing. And I think people find that at different ages and different like times in their life.
Yeah. And I think as long as you find that, because I do feel like we all have a mission here.
We're all here for a purpose. And some people, their purpose is literally to have a family.
That is a purpose, you know, to populate the world, to bring other people and that will have their
mission and their purpose, but everyone has a reason for being here. And I think I always knew at a
young age that animals were my purpose, helping give a voice to animals that didn't have that voice.
And I just, I didn't know what that looked like. I didn't know how I was going to help animals.
That was just something that over time, I mean, I still question it all the time. Am I doing enough?
Am I doing what I'm meant to be doing? Am I on the right path? Or should I be listening to something else?
Was there something in particular that started that for you? Were you in a situation where you were like, God, I can, like, I really care about this animal and then it sort of broadened your mind to things. Was there, if you're looking back, because I strongly believe in like catalysts, like these moments that happen where it, like a switch flips. Like you said, you were standing on the street corner and you saw people walking with their phones. Was there something for you that was an absolute catalyst of like.
Like it's animals.
This is what I'm here for.
I know it more than anything.
I do remember driving down the street with my dad in Texas as a little girl.
And there would be, say, a dead armadillo in the middle of the road.
And I would scream bloody murder.
He'd slam on the brakes.
What?
What?
I'm like, there was a dead animal in the road.
Like, I would freak out just as a little girl.
And he's like, oh, I thought I was going to hit a person.
I'm like, as long as you don't hit an animal.
Like I was just all about don't get the animal.
And it was just something that I think I was just born with.
We had a dog and when the dog was no longer with us,
my parents did not let me get another animal.
And that's when I was like,
well, I'm going to have tons of animals than when I grow up because I can.
And you're not letting me have another animal.
And it was all about the animals for me.
It was just something I think I was born with that just over time developed
almost in a
way that it's like
you don't even have control over it.
It just happens, you know?
It just happens.
A dog comes to you and now that dog is yours.
It just happens.
They find you.
For sure.
Was there someone in your life that,
like you modeled that behavior?
Was there an aunt or somebody that was
very similar in the same way that you sort of watched
and you thought, oh, that's really interesting?
No.
Just completely your own.
That's amazing.
I can't think of anyone in my,
life that was an animal person like me. Isn't it weird how that how that happens? So I have five kids,
which is shocking for a lot of people to hear. But I always say like it's really interesting that
people get so caught up in this thing of like, oh, I want to, I want to like raise a young
version of myself or a little version of me or a mini me or and kids are people and they are
absolutely unique and they're themselves no matter what you do and you can either support that
or you can fuck that up early on.
You know?
Yeah, totally.
To me, I always have a sense of like, oh, my job as a parent is to make sure that morally
they're good people.
I don't care what they do.
Like your career, your passions, your thing or yours, just be a good person while you're
doing it.
But it's so interesting that you just had this individual innate draw and, you.
need for this in your life. And you found a passion with that. That's so incredible to hear.
I think I wish that more people listened to that instinct and followed that because there's so many
people that are just kind of in these sort of dead end jobs and these things where they're just
their jobs. Like it's not really a, it's not really a life or a career. It's not a passion. And so
my dad always said to me, if you do something that you love doing, you'll never work a day in your
life and it's true. When you find some, I love what I do. And when I get to work doing any of those
things, I love it. And getting up early sometimes sucks. You get up at 4.30 in the morning,
you're like, oh, this is, you know, just, I wish I had one more hour. So the two things can be true
at the same time. You know, it's, I don't feel like emotions are mutually exclusive. You can have two
things. You can be proud of your friend and then you can also be envious of your friend at the same time
and wish you had an opportunity.
You can be jealous of them.
Like both things can live simultaneously.
Well, look, the good thing is that it's never too late to follow your passion.
It's never too late to reinvent yourself to do your next chapter.
You know, like having that job, it's great.
And it's a job and we need jobs to survive.
I mean, acting is my job.
But my mission on the planet is the animals.
Right.
And if I can find a way that my job,
supports my mission, then great, I'm winning. Then that's what I think it was given to me for
is that platform is there to support the real work that I need to do. For sure. And it's a,
it's a strange platform. I always say, so I started acting when I was nine. I love acting. I love
being on set doing it. But at the point when I turned 50, I was like, God, there's so much more
that I want to do than just be an actor.
So I really got into this,
into this place of wanting to connect with people and help people and sort of serve that way.
And it's all about the legacy that I leave behind.
And my legacy is I want to be kind to everyone that I meet.
I want to like positively affect people.
And I have this crazy platform.
I didn't ask for.
But, you know, 90210 was this weird.
fucking thing that we were on. It was like, oh my God, people actually give a shit what I say.
So cool. Let me like, let me affect some positive change with that. Let me use this thing to
accomplish what it is. I genuinely feel like I'm here to accomplish, which is I want to be,
I want to help people as often as I can. And sometimes that's just with little like light bulb
moments. Sometimes that's, you know, doing charitable work. There are all different ways that I can,
that I can serve and do that.
I love, I love animals.
I always have.
I've always had pets.
I've always had animals around me.
And I've had every kind of animal you can think of.
Snakes and dogs and goats and rabbits and like everything,
except for illegal ones,
except for ones that you shouldn't have in your house.
Good, good, good.
I like to hear that was waiting for the illegal wild animals
that are just,
that just feel caged up and you've got them because it's fun to have.
Exactly. Well, the thing, and the thing with conservation that I didn't know when I got into it is that the way to truly protect the animals is to work with and uplift the people. So, you know, it's kind of hand in hand. So as much as my passion and my reason is for the animals, it means I'm also working with the people and I'm uplifting and helping people. So I kind of get the best of both worlds there.
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That's embarrassing.
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Using FIG for Home Improvement Loan,
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Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guide,
not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Jim Gaffigan to Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest,
SNL's Mikey Day and headwriter, Streeter Seidel,
help an acapella band with their between songs banter.
There's the worst singer in the group.
The worst?
Yeah.
Me.
Is there anything to the idea that because you're from Harvard,
you only got in because your parents made a huge donation.
The yard birds, right?
That's the name.
The Harvard Yard, but they're open to change.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
Since you guys are middle aged.
One erection.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smygel and Friends on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Humor me. I need some jokes to make me seem funny.
The story I've told myself about love or relationships can then shake my behavior, and that can lead me to sabotage the possibility of connection.
This Mental Health Awareness Month, tune into the podcast deeply,
well with Debbie Brown and explore the journey of healing, self-discovery, and returning to yourself.
We explore higher consciousness, emotional well-being, and the practices that help you find
clarity, peace, and self-mastery in a world that can feel overwhelming. The world is becoming
lonelier. We're not becoming more social and connected. We're becoming more individualized,
but we actually meet people in connection. If you've been searching for a soft place to land while
doing the work to become whole.
This podcast is for you.
To hear more.
Listen to deeply well with Debbie Brown
from the Black Effect Podcast Network
on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Hey, I'm Deanna Maria Riva,
actress, mother, lover,
and a Gen X woman walking through life
one hot flash and hormonal crying jag at a time.
You ladies know what I mean.
I'll bet you a paramedipausal chin here you do.
So let's talk about it.
Join me on my new podcast.
How hard can it be with Deanna Maria Riva?
where I call on my Gen X squads from Ohio to Hollywood
as we navigate midlife's most fantastic BS.
All of a sudden, I'd had hanginess happening on my own.
I was like, what the hell is that?
I was married when I had her,
so I didn't even consider how empty that nest was going to be.
Mood swings, night sweats, fupas, sex drive.
Wait, what sex?
Dating at 45, how can it be getting naked at 50 with a new guy?
That one's kind of hard now.
That's like that.
Well, that's lighting.
They say we can't polish a turd, but we're sure going to try.
So let's get blunt with laughs, tears or tears of laughter,
and dive into it, unfiltered and unbothered and ask,
How Hard Can It Be?
I cannot believe I'm about to say this out loud in public.
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Before I let you go, because I know you have rhinos to say this.
Like, I'm the last fucking person.
need to be talking to. I want to ask you quickly before we go. And it's kind of, it's a thing for me,
it's a question that I, it's something I love talking about. And we've, we've touched on it a
little bit before. But what is, what do you want your legacy to be? Like, what, when people
look back on you, what is the thing that is the most important for you? The work that I'm doing
with my charity and hopefully the work I haven't done yet. I think that, you know, that's, you know,
there's a lot more to come. We're starting to try to work with the surrounding communities.
And there's an amazing, enormous community right next to where our sanctuary is. And we've just
started engaging with them. And there's a lot that I'm hoping to be able to do with them for them.
And I'm, I, yeah, we have lots of hopes and dreams there that we're working towards.
We have a fundraiser at the end of June in Las Vegas that I'm doing during the world.
Can you please invite me to that?
Like I would.
Would you come and play?
Will you be one of my celebrity like bounties in the tournament?
For sure.
I would be amazing.
All right.
Absolutely.
I will do it.
I will send it.
Thank you.
Do.
Do please.
We are just starting to like, we just put tickets on sale and I'm just starting to ask people to come and be like celebrity bounties and be a part of it.
And we've got some really cool things that are starting to swirl around it and some press that will come.
And I'm excited.
And so that's been my focus right now.
So once we do well with that, then we have like money to do the next chapter of like what we're doing out here with the sanctuary and the community and the programs.
And so, yeah, I mean, I think I know that I want my legacy to be about the work that I'm doing, the giving back.
and the things that I'm trying to leave behind on the planet to make it a better place for people
and animals and environment.
So the more I can do that, the more I can build that legacy to leave behind a better planet than
I had coming into, you know?
That's the hope.
That's amazing.
I love that.
Shannon, thank you so much for sitting with me today and sharing everything that's happening
for you right now could not happen to a better person. I'm just absolutely I'm so happy for you.
I'm so happy that we finally got to like meet and do this. I'll see you in June. Do not forget
to send you an invite and all the information that you can. I'd love to be there. Does Sharna play poker?
Shana doesn't play poker but I'll teach her. I'll learn. Teacher. Like it's going to be such a fun time. I would love to
have you both out there as my guest. Amazing. For sure. Her birthday is in June, so there's no better way
to celebrate a birthday than doing that. What day is it? The 21st. And then our three-year-old,
his birthday is the 28th. Well, that's the day of the event, the 28th, Sunday the 28th.
There you go. And that's his birthday. We'll bring him out to Vegas with us.
Yay. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Shannon. It's so nice to finally meet you.
Yes, it's nice to finally meet you, and I'll see you soon. Are you ready to redefine your chapter, too?
You need some advice on how to navigate it.
We are here to help.
So send us an email or leave us a voicemail.
All the info is in the show notes.
Follow us on socials.
I do part two.
An I Heart Radio podcast where falling in love is the main objective or maybe it's more important to fall in love with yourself.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Oden,
to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and headwriter, Streeter Seidel,
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Life is full of hurdles.
So how do you keep going?
On Hurtle with Emily Abadi, we're talking with the most inspiring women in sports and wellness.
from professional athletes, coaches, and Olympic champions about the challenges that shape them
and the mindset that keeps them moving forward.
At our level, at this scale, being able to fail in front of the entire world, like,
I can do anything.
I can do anything.
Listen to Hurtle with Emily Abadi on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
Why are we all so obsessed with romance?
On the Radio 831 podcast, join us.
Sanjana Basker.
and Tyler McCall, as we unpack all the trending tropes,
fuzzy adaptations, book talk drama, and celebrity love stories with hot takes and sharp guests.
Each episode digs into what these stories reveal about desire, fantasy, identity, and how we love now.
Listen to the Radio 831 podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Deanna Maria Riva, and on my new podcast, How Hard Can It Be?
I call on my Gen X squad from Ohio to Hollywood as we,
navigate midlife's most fantastic BS. Unfiltered conversations from night sweats to futas to
scheduling sex. Wait, what sex? Is it just me or does every woman my age want to look at
Pinterest instead of having sex sometimes? They say we can't polish a turn, but we're sure going to try.
So let's get blunt with laughs, tears, or tears of laughter. Listen to How Hard Can It Be with
Tiana Maria Riva on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
