The Joe Rogan Experience - #2203 - Eric Goode & Jeremy McBride
Episode Date: September 17, 2024Eric Goode and Jeremy McBride are Emmy-nominated filmmakers. Their latest production is the HBO docu-series "Chimp Crazy."Â www.hbo.com/chimp-crazy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoi...ces.com/adchoices
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The Joe Rogan Experience.
Trained by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Gentlemen, thank you for being here. Please introduce yourselves. Eric Good.
Jeremy McBride.
And you guys, did you guys both do Tiger King as well?
Yeah, I mean, I kind of came in towards a tail end.
I remember meeting you about this.
Keep it this close to your face.
Okay.
Yeah, so you can scoot your,
it moves and stuff.
Okay, yeah, I met Eric kind of towards a tail end
of filming Tiger King.
Yeah, that was kind of the first experience I had with you.
You guys like struck lightning with that because it came right at the pandemic where everyone's
locked at home and everyone was like, what the fuck is going on with these guys?
Yeah, captive cats and captive audience.
And just crazy people. And then your new show Chimp Crazy, is basically all in the same vein.
And it is so odd how nutty these animal people are, these people that have captive animals
at their home.
It's such a bizarre...
I would like to see a psychologist, a clinical psychologist do an examination of what type of personality
wants to have these enormous wild animals
captive in their homes.
Yeah, no, for sure.
It's incredible, and of course that's what interests us,
because I'm an animal guy,
but you have to have interesting people to tell a good story.
Well we are animals.
And we are animals.
That's the weird part about it. We're this bizarre animal that likes to keep animals in cages.
And some people think we should have been in the same genus as apes.
Yeah. You know, but of course there's something called religion and dominion.
And of course, you know, we're not animals.
We're not apes.
Well, we certainly are.
I mean, those people, they still believe in religion.
But, you know, the reality of observable science is also there.
So unfortunately, you know, we're just a weird animal. We're the
fucking weirdest ones. But the show Chimp Crazy, I just finished episode 3
last night and we got to number 4 and my daughter wanted to watch number 4. I'm
like, I don't think I could do it. I was so bummed out after episode 3. I was like,
oh my god. I mean, I want to give away anything for people who haven't
watched the series yet. I highly recommend I don't want to give away anything for people who haven't watched the series
yet.
I highly recommend it.
It's really fucking good.
But episode three, man, it's like, it's like there's something about, first of all, this
is one of the rare times where I'm fully with PETA.
When you're, you know, it's like when you side with PETA on things, it's like, you know,
like this is, this has got to be an egregious example of something absolutely horrific.
And you know, the one situation where the woman who was so drunk kept the chimp and
then attacked her daughter and the whole thing is like, at the end of the show, I was like,
oh my God, I don't know if I can keep doing this. Yeah.
No, it's interesting you mentioned PETA,
because I'm not fully aligned with PETA on a number of things.
But in this case, I am aligned with PETA.
But just to touch on PETA, I work with reptiles,
and I try to save turtles and tortoises, which actually are the most
endangered group of animals along with primates.
Turtles and tortoises, really?
If you think about the percentage that are on the brink of extinction, over half of primates
on the brink of extinction and over half of turtles and tortoises.
I have no idea.
But where I am not aligned with PETA is when you have to make a choice between eradicating a rat that's killing off
the last Galapagos tortoises,
or eradicate a mongoose that was introduced
that's killing off an iguana in the Caribbean.
I will make that choice.
PETA basically views it as the rat has rights
just as much as the tortoise.
And I'd like to have the tortoise around
for future generations. So I'm not always aligned with PETA but in this case yes.
Well they have a background with the Animal Liberation Organization which
essentially doesn't think that any animals should be captive and I do
understand their point but then you have Carl. How do you, how's Carl gonna not
have an owner? How's little Carl over there not gonna be fed? I mean do you
want French Bulldogs to go extinct? Because they will. They can't even breed.
If you did a poll and asked how many people at Pee-Nit keep dogs it said like
95%. Which is crazy. So it's a little hypocritical if they don't want people
to have pets. Well you know it's one of those things it's like 95% which is crazy. So it's a little hypocritical if they don't want people to have pets well, you know, it's one of those things it's like the
How it starts and how it's going, you know, like what it where did it start from?
you know it start and I see their look all dogs are a
Horrible misjustice that's been done to wolves
misjustice that's been done to wolves. Like we somehow or another we have become friends with wolves and turned them into these strange things but the reality of
life in 2024 is we have dogs you know and you know dogs need owners and they
they love you and they it's a great relationship like but it's in their
genetics right they've been thousands of years we right it's in their genetics, right? I mean, they've been domesticated thousands and thousands of years.
Right.
It's like saying that we should be going back to chimps.
We should live in the jungle.
We should live in trees, which is also crazy.
What is it, Erica?
Chimps are more like chimps than we are human?
Chimps are closer to us than they are gorillas because we are the subfamily of chimpanzees,
which are called hominems. And yes, chimpanzees are closer,
closely related to us more than any other ape.
Yeah. Yeah.
But it's, you know, back to what you said a minute ago
about making these movies,
I just want to touch on, you know, why we do this,
because a lot of people miss the point of Tiger King even.
Um...
There's a point?
Yeah, there's a point. I think I missed it.
Well, we were really trying to get Joe exotic elected president. That was the point.
No, but the point was that a lot of docs, man, are great and they are really informative,
but they preach to the converted, people that already know the issue, you know Like the Cove or and they're great right and you know
What we wanted to do is preach to people that don't know about the issues
So you had to cast you had to get a lot of eyeballs on it to make a difference, right?
Right. So that was sort of the goal of both Tiger King and Jim crazy
In the end, but I think you definitely did that
I mean I had a joke in one of my earlier comedy specials
about Texas and tigers, and I don't know the statistics,
but there's more tigers in captivity in Texas
than all the wild in the world, in private collections.
Yeah, wow.
They were just fuckin' the dogs.
Not in zoos, in people's yards.
There's these wacky people that have fuckin' tigers
in their backyards.
And there's a lot of, there's thousands of tigers
in Texas that are in people's yards.
Yeah, that statistic has been going around for a long time.
That may change, but yes, they used to say
there's more than 3,000 tigers in Texas
and there's less than 3,000 tigers in the wild.
Yeah, they think there's 5,000 in Texas.
Wow.
Yeah. Believe it. Well, you They think there's 5,000 in Texas. Wow.
Believe it.
Well, you know, there's also other animals
that are in Texas that are exotics,
like a scimitar oryx, which is very rare in the wild
and is endangered in the wild, but is so common in Texas
that you can hunt them.
And they have them on these enormous ranches,
30,000, 50,000 acres, and they have them on these enormous ranches You know 30,000 50,000 acres and they're wild but they live wild
I don't have a problem with that. Yeah, like if they could figure out a way to actually
ensure that tigers could be kept in a
60,000 acre preserve and you know you had adequate funding to where the the fences were completely
And you had adequate funding to where the fences were completely monitored every day to make sure that they don't get out and kill people.
You're talking about a different thing.
But what you're mostly getting is small enclosures of tortured animals who are fed cold meat.
And that is not what they want.
It's not what nature intended them.
They're the cleanup crew.
Everything that has a limp limp anything that's slow
They they keep populations down. They make sure there's not an overpopulation problem of undulates. That's what tigers do
That's that's what they do in the wild and so they're all of their instincts everything their essence of their being is all
Stifled by being captive, you know
We were talking about giraffes that they're the only animal that I don't have a problem with it
The zoo because they're so chill. They're so chill babies feed them when my daughters were young
We take them to the zoo and you could hold a piece of lettuce and the giraffe with his giant fucking head
that's like as big as this table would come over and
Gently take the lettuce with their tongue and we're so confident that
They have no aggression
towards people that we allow little babies to feed giraffes. Giraffes don't seem to have a problem
at the zoo. They seem to be totally relaxed with it. But there's a lot of animals where it's
nothing but torture. Yeah, no, for sure. And I think it's incredible that in the day that we live in, in 2024, that
in the consciousness of the culture, that we still keep certain animals in zoos that
really are miserable. Those are things like the whales and cetaceans and elephants are
not happy in zoos.
Monkeys.
And most primates are not happy in zoos.
And yes, and I think there are animals that lend themselves more, I like to say, to being
in captivity.
Yeah, like giraffes.
I think giraffes is the only example.
Or a giant tortoise, maybe?
Yeah, that's a good example.
Solitary animals.
Solitary animals, well, even just animals, they're just happy that there's no predators.
Sure.
And then they're relaxed.
Yeah.
But the last time I went to a zoo, my daughters were, they were younger, but not like babies,
and we were in Denver.
And I was there for a gig and we went to the zoo and oh man, to this day it haunts me.
There's this primate enclosure and this one monkey
was just screaming, just screaming like in agony,
like being tortured, just, ah!
Just holding onto the bars and screaming
because he was by himself and just this tiny little cage
and there was nowhere to go
and people were just staring at him all day
and he was just losing his fucking mind.
I'm like, I don't wanna do this anymore.
I can't, because I felt super hypocritical
because I've always had like an issue
because it's animal prison.
It's animal prison for animals that did nothing wrong.
You know, I was at the Singapore Zoo once,
which is a good zoo for zoos in Asia.
It's one of the best zoos, maybe the best zoo,
along with the Taipei Zoo.
But there was a polar bear at the Singapore Zoo.
This is like 95% humidity, 90 degrees,
and it was green,
because it was covered in a film of algae. So the polar bear was
literally a green. And you just say to yourself, like, there's just, you know, if you have
a zoo in Alaska, you can maybe have a polar bear, but Phoenix, Arizona, Singapore.
But even if you have a zoo in Alaska, polar bears are the one bear that doesn't need anything
but animals. So polar bears are extraordinarily predatory
and they have hunting instincts.
So all day they just want to roam and hunt.
And I was, when I used to, I drove limos for a while
and I had this gig once in New Hampshire
and I was on my way home and I stopped
just because I had to do this job
where I dropped somebody off, it was a few hours away. And on the way back I got lunch and I do this job or I dropped somebody off
It was a few hours away and on the way back
I got lunch and I saw this the zoo so let me just check this zoo out and I went to the zoo
There's this little shitty zoo in like somewhere
and I think it was in Massachusetts and
There was this polar bear in this tiny little enclosure just going in circles like he was fucking crazy just
going in circles tiny little enclosure and I was like what is that why is this
okay like what what what is this this is not a life this is terrible it's
terrible we um with this this current there's another project we've been
working on for equal time to Chimp Crazy, and you've
been spending more time than over 10 years, which loosely covers the exotic animal wildlife
trade, international wildlife trade.
Through that interest, we've had this incredible opportunity to explore all of these moral
truths about American zoos.
For us, one thing that was so deeply fascinating,
I think it's something like 242 accredited zoos
in this country.
750 million people visit zoos annually,
which is more than the five major sporting events combined.
Wow.
The way in which zoos function,
it's like the 80-20 rule, there's five or ten that contribute
the majority of the income that cover most of the zoos, and they run like entertainment
complexes like amusement parks.
And very little money goes back into conservation.
Now there's a lot of zoos that are doing great stuff, and I think the things that we're learning
about is the educational value of zoos for kids
is no longer as what they intended it to be.
I think there's great things that they do,
but there's nothing proven around,
zoos are educational facilities for animals.
Well, what really rocked zoos was the film Blackfish.
And they suddenly went, wait a minute,
the public doesn't like us?
And they started putting into effect all these kind of new programs for animal welfare, and
particularly for bears, like polar bears, like what you just mentioned.
And they have a new word, it's not so new anymore, called enrichment, which means that
you give a bear something to do, so it doesn't do what you were just saying.
You put their food in ice, so they have to work to get it out.
You put their food in a ball, have to work to get it out. You put their food in a ball.
You make them have to do things.
But that was the big shakeup for zoos
in terms of animal welfare.
And now, of course, it's still evolving.
And zoos are scared when they see Tiger King and even
Chimp Crazy.
But Joe's daughters' grandkids will still
see orcas at SeaWorld.
Do you think so?
Yeah.
Well, they live a long time.
They live a long time.
Maybe not granddaughters, but...
Okay, but I say it more... I have little boys.
I have a four-year-old and a one-year-old, and I think it's particularly interesting
to kind of go through this experience because they're obsessed with animals,
and you're kind of educating them on these kind of moral issues surrounding animals, the anthropomorphic
characters that are created to describe the feelings and where they should live and how they
should feel and kids relate with them in some form of a bridge to humanity, I believe. And we,
you know, you asked this fundamental question when you go to the zoo. Hey, where did all the animals come from?
No one really begs to think that well that he's where he's going right now is the sort of a big part of our
Next documentary which is about you know the illegal animal trade, but also zoos are complicit in that
For a very long time maybe still mm-hmm
I mean you're into that you get emotional on this and what's really cool about this kind of medium that we're in, you know, we have access
to all this information and all these people over large decades of work in conservation
and zoos and PETA and legislation laws. It's really, I just love the idea of synthesizing
this information to a point in today's context,
which is, yeah, when you go to a zoo,
no one seems to ask where the animals come from.
It is a very simple idea that many people miss
the point of when they go there.
Now, I'm not anti-zoo totally either,
and I have no real position or credibility
to also suggest that, but I do think I'm not anti zoo totally either, you know, and I have no real position or credibility to also suggest that but I do think
I'm interested in asking those questions of what we can do to make these institutions better
Yeah, I mean for sure they should be bigger
I mean there should be a size requirement
There should be you should have to have a certain amount of acres for each individual species
so that they don't like we're talking about the chimp enclosure at the LA Zoo they bite each other's fingers
off and they need space you know they need space and they need activities and
ideally what we should do is emulate their wild existence but then you have
this moral question of are we are we to let goats in into the tiger cage and just let
them sort it out? Because that's really what they want. What lions want to do is chase
down a wildebeest and eat it. And instead, what we do is we slide a tray underneath their
cage. And that's torture for them. It really is. It's torture for them to have an enclosed
space where it's small. It's torture for them to have an enclosed space where it's small.
It's torture for them to not be able to express
their natural instincts.
I mean, it's one thing if you're talking about
something like the thylacine, right?
Where they kept them in captivity
and the last known survivors and you had this thing
and like, wow, now we have video of this thing
and now it doesn't exist anymore.
So the zoos were like the last hope
to try to keep this thing from going extinct.
And it may not be extinct, there's a lot of them.
Yeah, seed banks.
Yeah, the Tasmanian tiger, yeah.
That was an eerie footage of the last ones.
Yeah, they think there might actually be
living specimens that are alive and there's.
Well in this state they're bringing them back.
I know, you know Forrest Galaant.
Yeah, I was just about to bring up Forrest.
I also have colleagues that have gone looking for thylacines in the highlands of New Guinea.
So far, yeah, people anecdotally say, yes, there might be a thylacine.
But it's unlikely, but there might be.
Well, they're very hard to find.
I mean, like, try finding a wolverine.
Wolverine populations are pretty healthy, but good luck finding one.
They're very, very, very difficult to to find unless you spend an enormous amount of time alone in the bush. Yeah, good point
Yeah, so and then you're dealing with thousands you're dealing with a very unpopulated area. That's extremely hostile to people
But there are anecdotal sightings and hopefully that thing does exist and I would love for forest to be the guy who finds it because he spent so much time looking for it. But other than a dying
species I can't see a good argument for keeping these things. It used to be that a zoo existed
before there was videos, right? So if you wanted to find out about a lion, you know,
the only way a child could see a lion
was to go to the zoo and go,
oh my God, that's a lion, look at that,
look at that lion, oh!
And the kids are, and it is educational for children.
But at what cost, and are there better resources now?
And I think video is a much better resource.
It's much better to see lions in the wild.
No, no, I mean of course, zoos
were originally created just, it was like good civic planning, you know, 150, 200
years ago. Like, you know, to have a park, a zoo, a library when you're building a
city. So they were really just built as, you know, a good city needs to have a zoo,
it's entertainment, and they weren't really designed to have anything to do with conservation
or anything to do with animal welfare.
But yeah, today, like you mentioned,
the oryx here in Texas, there are species
that have either gone what we call biologically extinct,
which means that one animal can't find another,
they're virtually extinct,
or they are extinct in the wild,
and zoos may offer some hope for those animals
where they can put them into
what's called assurance colonies
and try to maintain genetically diverse groups in a zoo
for the day that one day you can return it to the wild.
There may be a reason to have animals in captivity.
How much success has there been in returning animals to the wild. There may be a reason to have animals in captivity. How much success has there been in returning animals to the wild though?
Well, where we live in California...
But you just hit it with the Eastern box turtle in the jersey.
No, no, no. Back to...
Oh, rewilding?
The example he's talking about is like California condors. California condors or black-footed
ferrets or animals that... I mean, whatever mean, the whatever it's called, there's
an endemic horse that they've done some work with. But yeah, it's, you know, much less
than it should be putting animals back into the wild that when extinct or when it virtually
extinct, much less than it should be.
Yeah, it should. I mean, it should be a it should be a priority with certain animals specifically.
Yeah. You know. I'm trying to think of a really good success story of an animal that went back
into the wild and it was really successful. California condors, the problem is they've
reintroduced them into the Great Grand Canyon and Arizona. There was, when I was young in the 70s,
there was maybe 28 of them
left in the wild.
They brought them into captivity.
Today, there's probably hundreds in the wild,
but at a very expensive price tag.
Because what made them go extinct in that case
was the lead bullets that kill a deer.
The condor would eat the deer and then die from the lead.
So the condors, you know, that to use that example, there's just a lot of
management to keep them alive in the wild. There's some dispute about that.
About which about whether or not it's the lead from the bullets that was killing them.
I mean, that's what they say. But maybe.
Yeah, I was reading something recently about that.
That it just doesn't doesn't make sense.
It doesn't attribute to the you think about the number of animals that are
shot with a bullet that aren't recovered, it's so small.
Interesting, yeah. You know, that it doesn't make sense that it would be
enough to kill off these animals and there's probably some other factors that
we are not considering. I believe that because a condor in a day, not to go off the charts on a condo,
a condor in a day can travel 400 miles in the thermals
looking for a carcass.
Right.
And I would suspect that the fact that there's just
less carcasses out there might be part of it.
I think that's the argument.
I think the argument is there's less predators
and there's less prey.
Right? So you have a dec... That's the argument. I think the argument is there's less predators and there's less prey, right?
So you have a deep, you know, so like California for example, like the you have a
fairly small deer population
Because you have so many animals that kill deer, right?
So you have California has a lot of coyotes and California has a lot of mountain lines.
And there's a lot of people where I used to live in the hills that did not like coyotes.
I'm like, do you like rats? Okay, well if you don't like rats, you should like coyotes.
Yeah, don't leave your dog outside because your dog's gonna get, you know,
and my daughter's puppy got killed by a coyote and I've had chickens killed by coyotes.
But ranchers hate coyotes more than anything.
And they kill fawns.
They hate them.
Yeah, they kill baby cows, they kill baby everything.
That's just what they do and that's their job.
But there's an ecosystem and that's a part of the ecosystem.
And what's really unnatural is ranching.
Forever, forever, there was a bounty on coyotes
where if you brought in two ears, you got like a buck
and people would bring in a hundred sets of ears
and get a hundred dollars.
I mean, they were vilified.
When I grew up in California, the ranchers next to us,
which were sheep ranchers, cause sheep are dumb
and coyotes can get sheep easier than, you know, calves.
They would trap the coyote with those horrible traps.
They'd pour gasoline on them.
They'd light them on fire and let them run off burning.
I mean, they hate coyotes, which is really unfair.
Well, they're cool.
They're just not cool if they eat your cat.
But they're a fascinating animal.
I remember when I first saw them, I moved to California in 94 and I was staying at a,
do you know what the Oakwood Gardens are?
It's like those pre, they're pre-furnished apartments
that you just rent, like people that are sort of transient,
just moving in.
They allow you to like have a place
before you get a place.
And I was driving, so it was in Burbank,
and I was driving down the street
and I was like, who are these fucking dogs?? These dogs running around and then I drove over I had never seen a coyote before
Oh, I was like, that's a coyote. Oh my god
There's coyotes on the streets and that was pretty rare then but 30 years later it became insanely common
I would rarely go I lived in a fairly rural area
where I lived in California.
I lived about an hour outside the city
and I had a lot of acres and it was cool to live out there,
but you experience a lot of wildlife.
And I saw coyotes almost every day.
Almost every day.
Yeah, they look like a mangy, motley, skinny dog.
Yeah, but they're cool.
There's something cool about coyotes.
But the reality of coyotes, I don't know if you know why they're cool. There's something cool about coyotes, but the reality of coyotes,
I don't know if you know why they're so successful, but one of the reasons why is because they're the
only, so red wolves can interbreed with coyotes and that you get the coy wolf, but gray wolves do
not breed with coyotes. They just kill them. And so because the gray wolf, which lived
in California and lived all over the West Coast, was the predominant predator, the coyotes
had to develop a way of surviving. And the adaptation was when they call out, when they
yell out in the night and they're trying to do roll call and figure out how many guys
are around, when one is missing, the female
will have a change to a reproductive system where she will develop more pups, and then
they will expand their territory. So because they were persecuted by wolves, they expanded
their territory. So now when people came in and started killing off the wolves, which
they did successfully, but they were never able to kill off coyotes because of this trait.
So coyotes are now in every single city in the United States. This was not the case just 30 years ago. They're what we call, there's a word for that, it's called subsidized predators, and these are
animals that do better around man, and crows are one of those animals, raccoons are one of them, coyotes, and they're weirdly, can thrive and do better
around human activity than a lot of other animals.
And so coyotes are one of those.
Because of garbage.
Yeah, garbage and pets.
Because of garbage, because of water,
we bring in water in arid areas.
So they're a highly adaptable creature.
And just for the record, I do like coyotes
and I listen to them almost every night
having a tailgate party behind my house.
They're cool.
They're cool.
They make the eeriest noise together.
They caught something.
Yeah, but you know, I'm sure you've seen that video
from Woodland Hills where this man was unloading his car
and a coyote came and snatched his toddler.
Like right in front of him.
It's hard.
They're fucking predators, right?
And you have to be careful.
Little things and little people and animals will get eaten by them and that is what they
do.
Like dingoes in Australia do that.
Right, right, right.
Dingo ain't my body.
There's no doubt that we live in complex ecosystems and we do not like the idea of
them.
We've developed these bizarre establishments called cities.
And in these cities, we have removed ourselves from nature.
And if you go to the mountains of Colorado, people are well aware of mountain lions.
They're well aware of bears.
They have to lock their garbage up.
They have a neighborhood email list where they talk about like bears broken in this guy's car
and everybody's on the look.
But they understand they're living in this system.
They're living in this ecosystem.
Most people in the United States that live in urban areas
have no idea that they're in an ecosystem
because we've essentially done some very bizarre stuff
and isolated ourselves from nature,
which is one of the reasons why we have this strange idea
that we are not animals and that we are not a part of nature.
You know, it's just weird.
We're fucking weird.
We're weird in our justifications.
We're weird in what we allow ourselves to do.
Yeah, that's back to the chimpanzees.
That was one of the things that I just couldn't ever,
I couldn't ever connect with this woman, Tanya,
that kept this chimp and tried to explain to her
that we are chimps, effectively.
And she just took the page out of,
you know, Genesis, where she just said, you know, I'm not, you know, we're not animals.
This is an animal. I can own it like property. Anyway, that was just one of the things she just
never really fully understood. Well, to be kind, she's not bright. You know, she's not a bright woman,
not a well-read woman, you know, unfortunately.
And this seems to be part of the theme of all these folks,
which is weird, you know?
And then you got the one guy in Tiger King
that's essentially running like a little sex cult, right?
That guy.
Doc Antle.
Yeah, and then you've got the Tiger King himself.
Joe. You got Joe
Exotic who is also kind of running a strange little sex cult but you know he's
just got all this personality and he's so interesting and fascinating and if he
wasn't in jail it's really unfortunate you know because if he wasn't in jail he
would he'd be a very popular person.
He hasn't even seen the show which is amazing.
Can you imagine if he wasn't?
Well he's trying to get Donald Trump to exonerate him and pardon him.
I mean he was constantly after I had talked about Tiger King.
I get messages from that guy.
I don't know how he's giving me messages.
I'm assuming it's someone who works for him. But I get messages from that guy. I don't know how he's giving me messages. I'm assuming it's someone who works for him
Yeah, but I get messages all the time. Like you've got to help get him out put him on your podcast
Do this do that like well, he also has communication in jail. He gets a somehow he's able to get a phone
He's doing video calls. Well, you know
There was a moment there was a moment when we're filming
But there was a moment when we were filming this kind of like second installment of Tiger King where we covered this pardon, the presidential pardon.
There's a real shot where Joe was actually on a list supposedly that Trump was going
to like a kind of...
Hilarious.
It's hilarious.
So I don't remember exactly what the specifics of his accusation.
So was he caught trying to hire someone to whack that lady? Yeah. So he was. Twice. Yeah.
And that lady, is there any truth to this idea that she whacked her husband?
husband? Carol Baskin. There's a lot of circumstantial, I wouldn't say maybe evidence, but there's sort of who else? It's not clean. Who else? And it was either, it feels as if it was her
or members of her family and they were the only ones to gain. And so, yeah. And what a great way to dispose of a body.
Uh huh.
I mean, I don't know how she disposed of the body.
It's nice to...
Well, you have meat grinders on premises and you have enormous predators on premises and
you feed them a tiger.
Don't you think the only thing I would say, Eric, is the circumstances surrounding the
change in the will.
I mean, who alters it to account for disappearance?
Upon my disappearance, yeah.
It's a very, very strange thing.
No one says that, yeah.
And isn't there like a disparity in the handwriting as well?
Yeah, we did handwriting experts.
We did the entire thing to prove otherwise.
It's also just when she talks about it.
You know, back to Joe, Joe Exotic, you know, I was on the phone with him a lot up until he was convicted
from prison.
And he just was convinced he was going to be exonerated and not convicted.
And they offered him, the feds offered him a deal, which was something like six or seven
years.
You can plea or you can go
to court.
He'd probably be out by now.
Yeah.
I was just going to say he'd be out now. And so he was so convinced that he was going to
win, which is so delusional. But yeah, poor Joe would be out right now had he made that
deal.
By the way, how crazy is that? That you could plot to kill somebody and let you out in four
years? Like I know you've been locked up with a bunch of murderers and thieves, but I'm
sure you're a better person now.
Yeah, yeah. Well, it's plot and then intent, you know, paying someone to go do something.
Right, right. There's quite a few steps involved.
But yes, Joe's now pro-Trump again. He was pro-Biden when Trump didn't exist.
Buzzy, because he was trying to get Biden to pardon him.
They wouldn't touch that with a 10-foot pole, but Trump might, especially this time around,
just for fun.
Well, let's hope Tanya doesn't go to prison.
I don't wish that on Tanya.
I haven't seen episode four, so I don't know.
But when you guys were filming, again, spoiler alert,
please, if you're watching the series, stop right now,
scoot ahead by a few minutes,
when they found that Tonka was in the basement.
And when I saw their film, when you guys are filming it,
I was like, Jesus Christ, this lady is so crazy,
she's showing everybody.
I know.
She's, she has,
I know.
With all due respect, she just does not seem
like a smart person.
And she's almost like, if you gave her an IQ test, and then gave a chimp an IQ test,
it'd be a toss-up.
You know?
I mean, I think that's part of the problem.
I don't think this lady understands the consequences of what she's doing, just like she doesn't
understand how crazy her eyelashes look.
All of it is just, there's some fuses that are missing,
some wires that aren't connected.
And then because of the fact that at one point in time,
at least, it was illegal for her to do what she was doing
and they become accustomed to being able to have,
and then their identity revolves around
they're the person that has all the monkeys
and all the chimpanzees. It was just fucking weird.
Well, it's still legal.
It is still?
It's still legal.
I thought they changed it.
No, there's no federal law preventing ownership of chimpanzees.
Jesus Christ, you can own a fucking chimp still?
Correct.
There's 20 or so states legally you can do it.
Oh my God.
I thought...
Missouri's one of them.
Oh my God.
But, you know, background, we spent about four years
making this documentary series.
First of all, how'd you start?
How do you find out about these people?
Yeah, go ahead.
How do you get, after Tiger King,
how do you get anybody to talk to on camera?
I've known a lot of animal people, Joe,
but I did not know about monkey moms.
And along the course of making Tiger King, I started know about monkey moms and along the course of you know making Tiger King
I started filming some monkey moms
And I mean like as you see in Chimp Crazy, you just can't make them up. And so after Tiger King
I just thought you know, let's scratch the surface. Let's check into these monkey moms again
Yeah, and so, you know, it's these women
that dress up their monkeys like dolls,
like Joan Bonet Ramsey, like a little pageant doll,
and they want them to be kids.
And they seem to have the same pathology
over and over and over.
There's a lot of monkey moms out there
that we did not film, and they have annually
something called a monkey ball,
where they all come together with their monkeys.
Anyway, we discovered them in the course
of making Tiger King and...
Yeah, well, my grandmother had a monkey.
Yeah, we hear the story a lot.
Yeah, we hear the story a lot.
But she kept in the attic.
Really?
Yeah, monkey's name was Chee Chee
and Chee Chee used to eat gum.
Like, give Chee Chee a piece of gum,
Chee Chee would unwrap the gum
and put the gum in his mouth or her mouth.
I don't remember, it was a boy or a girl.
Do you know what kind of monkey?
I do not.
I was very small.
I was very young at the time
and I remember she had to get rid of it
because it bit my cousin.
Yeah, well that's what happens.
Yeah. Yeah.
But Chi Chi couldn't be around anybody
other than my grandmother.
My grandmother was very eccentric.
Yeah, and they're territorial
and they're protective of their owner.
So, when I was young, in the 70s, 60s, 70s, 80s,
you could buy a monkey in virtually any pet store
across the United States.
And thank God people realize, like your grandmother,
they're not good pets.
You can buy them in the newspaper.
Yeah, and they're not good pets.
I think my grandmother, after her kids were grown, she just decided she wanted a kid forever.
You know, if I had a guess.
Wow.
Yeah, if I had a guess.
Yeah, yeah.
That's our kind of consensus on a lot of it.
Yeah, also a kid that doesn't talk back.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a great book you'd love.
It's by this guy who had a store in New York, Henry Treflick.
It's called They Don't Talk Back.
And it's these kind of chronicles of his experiences, you know, through the last, you know, it was
a basic 40s, 40s.
This was a big animal, exotic animal dealership that existed up until the 70s in New York
City, but they had everything, chimps, gorillas, elephants, and they sold stuff to the private
sector and zoos.
But yeah. I mean, you could walk into a Woolworth and buy monkeys.
They still to this day catch people with large animals in their apartments in New York City.
Wasn't there one real recently where a guy had a large reptile?
Venomous snakes, yeah.
Was it snakes?
The venomous snake bite, Eric?
Some guy, well that one guy I think it was in Harlem who had a tiger in his house.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And there's a crazy image of the cops going up the fire escape and the tigers in the window.
Yeah.
And you see the tiger bearing its fangs in the window.
That glass is that fucking thin, man!
That is so crazy!
This thing is trapped in this like regular apartment with regular glass.
Like at any moment, the only thing keeping that thing out is it doesn't know that it
could just smash that and get on that fire escape and just go run through the streets.
Yeah, yeah, crazy, crazy.
Yeah, it's crazy.
But the bizarre thing is that there's humans that want those.
They want those. They want those. I mean...
Yeah. I mean the tiger thing is more of like kind of a macho thing, I think.
What about Carol then? She's a woman.
Yeah, she's kind of an anomal... you know, it's funny...
She liked the lesser known cat, right?
I interviewed Tippi Hendren, you know, in the course of doing all of this,
and her, you know, Xanadu, it's called Shambala with all of her cats, you know, in the course of doing all of this and her, you know, Xanadu, it's called Shambala
with all of her cats, you know,
and I know you've talked about this,
about Melanie Griffith growing up with lions.
And that crazy movie Roar.
Yeah, oh, and that movie Roar.
The bed photograph is fantastic.
Oh my God, that movie Roar, but yeah,
when I interviewed Tippi Hendren,
literally on her property in California,
she lives with all these tigers and lions.
She built a museum for herself.
So she's got her own museum, the Tippi Hedren Museum,
where I interviewed her.
But yeah, there are some women, Tippi Hedren, Carol Baskin.
But generally speaking, I think it's more men, yeah.
Well, I guarantee if you go through
the Texas private collections, there's a bunch of good old boys. Yeah. You know. Believe that?
Probably. Yeah. You know. You've got canned ranches in Texas. There's a lot of those.
Yeah. There's a lot of canned ranches which is very odd and some of
them are fairly small like a couple hundred acres and they keep animals
there. Yeah. It's in my mind, what that is is agriculture.
OK, it's just you're doing a different form
of deer agriculture.
You're not really hunting.
You know, hunting to me is you go into the wild,
you go into the woods, and you experience real nature.
And it's fascinating.
It's enthralling. It's also soalling. There's something about, it's also so lonely.
There's something about being in those mountains just puts you in check. None of that exists
in the Cairn Ranch.
Well, yeah, Cairn Ranch, you can go shoot, like in South Africa, a lion. And the lion
was raised in a kind of domestic situation.
And recently released.
Yeah, so it just sits there. There's You know, there's no sport in it.
Hunting in the United States, you know, for elk or deer, you know, there's a lot of things
people don't know about hunting, which is, you know, one just obviously, the obvious
statistic is that more wild lands are protected because of hunting.
So yeah, you're killing a deer, but you're protecting all the other stuff.
Well, the amount of money, because of the Pittman-Robertson Act, the amount of money
that gets, I think it's 10% of all sales of outdoor activities gets donated towards wildlife
preservation.
And this is the reason why we can have these enormous national forests where you have wildlife
biologists establish what the healthy numbers of these animals are
and how many people can go hunt them.
And they also know, because you have to, when you, say if you shoot a deer,
you have to register that you shot the deer, that you have a tag,
they make sure that your tag is right, you got the right species, you got the right sex, the whole deal.
And so they have a very accurate number of how many animals in there
And they spend a lot of money doing this and these wildlife biologists do an absolutely incredible job
There's more white-tailed deer in this country right now than there were when Columbus landed
Part of that is because of agriculture. That's where it gets weird. So
agriculture particularly I have a good buddy of mine who is
He's an archer, a professional
archer and he lives in Iowa.
I always get those confused.
In Iowa, it's all farmlands, right?
And they have enormous deer and they set these ranches up.
He has a place that's like 600 acres.
There's no fences, the animals come and go.
But they establish these food plots and they put these things in to make it a good place for deer to be so they can hunt them
Yeah, so it's this weird sort of
Plan community sort of ethical bastardization of the wild right? It's like dealing with the reality of what you have you have untold
thousands and thousands of monocrop agriculture acres. So
thousands and thousands of acres of Monsanto corn. And they're all, these deer thrive there
because when they chop down the corn, they don't chop it all down. And you know, these deer,
they go there after fresh feedings, they go there, you see them eating corn and they eat grass,
there's grass everywhere. There's plenty and plenty of food and a very low number of predators like Iowa does not have a lot of they
don't have wolves they don't have a lot of animals that would sort of balance
out the population of these animals and so you have insane amounts of car
accidents like when I was in I went to visit my buddy there and just driving
from the airport to his house we saw like 50 fucking deer and if you're going there around November, which is the rut the men lose their mind
So the the male deer there they're horny as hell
They're crazy and the female are breeding the female are running from the males and I run it right into traffic
And the males are running after them. They're running right into traffic. It's kind of nuts
It's kind of it's a really nutty situation because it only exists because there's no predators. So if, like California
has this bizarre model and what California would like, I mean California is I think the
only state that doesn't have a fish and game department. They have fish and wildlife and
so they treat it very differently.
Instead of treating it as a renewable resource
where people can go and get their own food
and hunt animals in the wild,
they treat it like we should have
the animals take care of themselves.
And so that's why it's illegal to kill a mountain lion
in California and they have a large number of mountain lions.
Probably underreported.
I have mountain lions on my property all the time. They're dangerous. They Probably underreported. I have mountain lions on my property all the time.
They're dangerous.
They're underreported.
And they are a predator and they will kill people.
And they have killed people.
It's not often, but if you're on a bike, the problem with being on a bike is you're moving
a little too quick and their instincts take over.
They think you're trying to run from them and they can't even help themselves.
It's like a kitten with a ball of yarn and their instincts clip in
and they just go chasing after it.
But I've seen mount lines in the wild
and it is a sobering, sobering moment
when you stare into the eyes of one of those things.
You're like, whoa.
What are you supposed to do?
Well, you can't do much, man.
Make a lot of noise.
You're not supposed to run.
You don't run.
If you have a weapon,
you should really
have that weapon ready because they will jump you.
Every now and then they jump people.
There's a crazy video.
Yeah, well, I believe two people were killed last year
in the Pacific Northwest.
Of all the big cats, I think jaguars kill the least people.
Which is crazy.
For some reason.
But they also live in the least populated areas.
For the most part, yeah. At Mount Lyons, yeah, of course they will kill someone, but, you know,
typically they're not looking for people. Right, they're not looking for people.
It's not like a tiger that, you know, has all its prey, you know, get trapped by, you know,
the local people in India. They have to go out and try to find prey, and it's people oftentimes.
And jaguars have to, at this point in time, have realized that people have bows and arrows
and spears, and every now and then if you go after a person, you can get jumped.
So they probably have figured, like grizzly bears behave very differently in places where
grizzly bears are hunted.
So in the lower 48, it's illegal to hunt grizzly bears.
So if they see you,
you know, if you run into them in the wrong, they're not going to run away. They might
run towards you. Especially if you surprise them, it's very dangerous. And that's why,
and they will treat you as food if they're really hungry.
You know, you know, in the course of making Tiger King, I would interview people about
tigers and how, you know, what it's like keeping a hundred tigers and people would always say to me
I'd rather have a hundred tigers than one chimp and
peak and that's because
Chimps, you know and everyone thinks oh tiger so dangerous
But chimps can figure shit out and one of the chronic problems keeping chimps
Is that they can figure out how to escape and so you can never use a combination lock because they'll sit there all day and figure it
out. Oh my god. And you gotta use oftentimes like three layers of locks.
Yeah. And I'm just bringing it back to chimps because you know people think oh
it's a chimp it's so cute it's in the circus. Trust me it's a lot easier to
have a tiger act than a chimp act. Oh I I can imagine. And also, when I was watching this lady's enclosure,
I was looking at the steel that's drilled into wood.
And I'm like, I could get out of that.
I could get out of the 100%.
The way that thing is bolted into the woods, all you have
to do is kick that door enough.
You kick that door hard enough, and that wood will give out.
It's the wood that you're, it looks like you're
encased in steel bars. But the steel bars are connected by wood.
Wood's easy for a chimp to break. They're so much fucking stronger than us. If that
thing knew that it could just grab those bars and slam and slam. It would have worked on that all day.
100% it would have got through. You would have had to figure out a way way way
better cage, especially the one that she put in her home. You know I'll tell you a really weird story that I just never would have thought through. You would have had to figure out a way, way, way better cage, especially the one that she put in her home.
You know, I'll tell you a really weird story
that I just never would have thought in a million years
about a chimp.
I was interviewing a guy in Kenya that had a chimpanzee,
and the keeper was this blonde woman,
and all the chimp I ever saw was this blonde woman.
So he started, the guy gave the chimp Playboy,
and then it graduated to porn.
And the chimp, because he'd never seen other chimps,
it was raised in isolation, started thinking it was human
and started sexually identifying with this woman
that was keeping it, and started becoming sort of addicted
to pornography.
So just to give you a weird segue.
Whoa. But how crazy and you know like these
chimps they'll have a favorite show like I remember a group of them in South Africa all
they watched was Avatar. But anyway just to back to sort of how how ironic weird it is
to keep a chimpanzee you don't have a tiger getting addicted to human pornography. Right.
Right. Watching Avatar all day long. long so anyway too intelligent they're just way
too intelligent especially as they get five six and seven years old they get
really fucking dangerous that lady in Connecticut I had heard that she was she
slept in the bed with that the chimpanzee that's where I was going one
of the things we did not cover which I always wanted to know more about,
is what really is going on in that bed with that woman?
I mean, I don't wanna talk about it in too much detail here.
But you have to ask yourself,
you have to ask yourself, like how weird does it get?
Right, I mean, how weird does it get?
Wasn't she giving it Xanax and wine?
Get that alone. Oh
You haven't seen that by she was giving it Viagra I'm joking. Oh, I think but
You're gonna get sued
Not sure but but speaking of that though, I we were you saw the second episode we obviously
They're very active yeah I heard
that a chimp can fuck 50 times a day yeah in the world I saw like yeah so
maybe they don't need Viagra well primates are very promiscuous and
chimpanzees in particular if you notice that chimpanzees have the largest balls
of any primate and there's a reason for that. The more promiscuous the
female chimpanzees are, the more sexually active the males become and the bigger their
testicles are.
So it's like a direct correlation between the size of the male's testicles, and they
think that exists with human beings as well, but it's more problematic to examine.
Oh, so that's my problem.
Yeah, if you're around a bunch of ladies that are a bunch of sluts, you might get fired
up.
No wonder I never got married.
I think that with chimpanzees, you're dealing with these incredibly complex social structures.
I'm sure you guys have seen Chimp Nation, which is fantastic.
It's so good. It's so good because it is a rare documentary that had
this established element in that these scientists had been embedded in this group of chimpanzees for
20 years. And so these scientists had very specific rules. You don't look them in the eye.
You don't get any closer than 20 yards. they come towards you it's when you just move away
Don't ever have food There's like a bunch of rules and as long as you have those rules they behave completely normally and they just you don't you're just a
Thing you're like a tree or a bird or something. They're not interested in which is really interesting
Yeah, amazing because they got incredible footage of the social interactions
They got a detailed analysis of how they establish dominance and who's in control.
And we used to think it's always the biggest,
strongest chip, but no, it's not.
It's ones that form unions and bonds and communities.
Very interesting, it's so much like us.
I think also it's just so amazing about that film is,
and I give them an incredible ton of credit,
most people that go out to do a documentary
don't have the capacity to film that many days.
Like they covered that.
I don't know, it was like hundreds of days or something.
Years.
And years, and I think they really invested the time
and they deserve the credit
because they put in that amount of time.
I mean, for us to do even Trimp Crazy, Trim Crazy, we filmed how many days?
It's probably close to 250 days.
I mean, most people can't do that.
Right, right, right.
So, I mean, it's incredible.
Resource suck.
Like, how much did it cost?
That's where I'm going.
Yeah, my God.
But in order to make a documentary this way,
you have to catch it while it's happening, you know, contemporaneously. So you have to be there. But in order to make a documentary this way,
you have to catch it while it's happening contemporaneously.
So you have to be there.
If you snooze, you lose.
If you're not there, you're not gonna make Chimp crazy.
Right, right.
Or Chimp, what's it called, Chimp Nation.
Yeah, Chimp Empire.
Empire.
Empire, yeah.
Well see, Chimp.
There's two, right?
Chimp Empire, right?
That's Chimp Empire.
Is Chimp Nation another one?
Or Chimp Empire we're talking about.
Yeah this is the next one.
Yeah, Chimp Empire.
Yeah.
The way that, see the thing about the difference
between your show is you need someone who's compelling
and so you have to find someone and like,
and what's her name again?
Tanya.
Tanya.
Crazy Tanya, you know and Joe Exotic.
You like, you need someone who's like the figurehead,
like with the photo that you guys have on the promo
of her laying down in the chimp behind her, it's perfect.
It's perfect.
I mean, you need that nutty person to compel you
because there's part of all of us that recognizes
that that thought would come into our minds,
but then rational thought would go into play like you can't do this
They're dangerous. They're big they get older. You can't control them. What happens to them?
It's not fair for them to be any and then you go. I don't want to chimp, but if you're
Dull-minded if you got a 9-volt brain and you look at this like I am gonna take they're more important to me than my own babies
Like when she says stuff like that,
you're like, oh, well, you shouldn't even have a dog.
Like, you definitely shouldn't be allowed to vote.
No, but it's interesting you say
you have to find those characters,
but you also have to find a story.
And I mean, you can talk about this,
is how wide a net we cast.
Cause after Tiger King,
it wasn't like we just jumped into this chimp mom world.
We were filming, you know, Mark the Shark and, you know, women.
Yeah, we were interested in the animal-human relationship in a variety of forms.
I think we, and you see in episode one, one of the first things we shot years before we even met Tanya
was this woman, this part of the circus family, Pam Roser,
watching 2001 Space Odyssey with her chimpanzee, Chance.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, talk about sobering experience.
I'm, you know, me and Carl distanced
with Chance the chimpanzee, 15 years old,
pounding a, basically a modified trailer home,
the floor echoing.
The loudness was, of that sound on the floor was so loud
I had to take my headset off.
Yeah, it was a lot scarier, and you were there,
it was a lot scarier to film chimps than tigers.
The crew didn't have a problem going into a tiger enclosure
because the thing about tigers is,
as long as they're about under the age four even though it looks like a full-grown tiger they
you know they haven't gone through puberty yet they haven't gotten the
tiger you know mentality of killing you but a chimp anyway the chimp filming was
a much more difficult. Well they're also like human characters and wiry and
you don't know what's gonna happen. They're on these kind of leashes.
Well, it's also how they evolved.
I mean, that's what kept them alive.
You watch Chimp Nations, like those sort of instincts
is what keeps them alive.
Oh, sure, very murderous.
Well, we didn't really know how murderous they were
until Attenborough.
When David Attenborough did that series,
I think it was in the 90s,
when he captured the chimps eating monkeys.
And this is one of the things that,
when I had the guy from Chimp Nation on,
I discussed it with him, he's like,
how often do they eat monkeys?
He's like, we couldn't even show it all.
It would just be like,
the whole show would be chimps eating monkeys,
because that's what they wanna do,
they wanna eat monkeys.
That's their primary source of protein. They like fruit. Fruit's great, but they also like monkeys.
They call it those monkeys. Yeah, and they eat, you know, I'm a reptile guy and in the range of
those chimps in the wild, there's a tortoise and this tortoise, it's like our box turtles,
but it's much bigger, but it's called a hingeback tortoise and it literally closes up like a rock.
Like you can't see it any flesh. The chimps will grab that tortoise and they'll just bang it against the tree and just crack it
Up and like a cantaloupe. Wow, and they they're just saying that because yes, they're really
Hardcore when it comes to the way they predate on other animals and they're about as strong as a 500 pound man
on other animals. And they're about as strong as a 500 pound man.
That's about right, yeah.
It's so insane for us.
We had a chimp on the set of News Radio,
like 96 or something like that.
There was a baby chimp, it was a baby in a diaper.
And this chimp climbed on my back
and whacked me a couple times in the back, just playing.
Was just having fun.
And I remember, first of all the feeling
of holding it is like it was made out of steel wires. It wasn't made out like a baby. You
know, you pick up a baby, babies are like soft little, you pick up a three year old,
they'll soft little things and you'll hold onto them and they're weak. These things were
strong as fuck, like in a bizarre way. We like to look at something that's close to our size and think, oh, I could probably
overpower that.
You know, oh, I know how to fight.
I'll fight that fucking chimp off.
No, you have zero chance.
It's a different thing.
Everything about it is different.
The muscle structure is completely different.
The tendon structure is completely different.
And the amount of force it can generate the arm leverage is yes
Pretty incredible, but they also want to fuck with you. They also want to
Talk about like with a bear kill the lion or with a you know, the bear killed the tiger I
Think chimpanzees, you know and you're into obviously fighting and you know, I think they are the most
to obviously fighting and I think they are the most diabolical fighters, because I don't know what a chimp
would do to a grizzly, but a chimp goes after your
genitals, your fingers, your face.
They know how to fuck you up like nothing else.
Yeah, they know how to debilitate you and take away
what makes you a human.
Yeah, and they also have zero remorse.
So they're like a human in that they can think,
but they have zero empathy, and they also have zero remorse. So they're like a human in that they can think, but they have zero empathy and
They're fucking dangerous
I'm writing this, you know, what was so fascinating you think knowing all this about chimps later and remember this Eric
We were talking about well
There must be like reported human deaths in the United States with chimp attacks and we couldn't find any it's only maims
It's only it's only little I mean there are globally but
We love them in Africa little kids get snatched and stuff kids get eaten kids get yeah
But in the u.s. There has been no really human death caused by chimpanzee now
What was fascinating and you haven't watched this yet?
But in episode 4 we kind of go it comes like from delusion to reality and it's heavy
we filmed our first chimpanzee funeral and
delusion to reality and it's heavy. We filmed our first chimpanzee funeral and what we didn't show, which I remember being, I just remember this now, everyone
that would come up to say their piece would share a story where they were
attacked by that animal. Oh god. It was so, so the kind of juxtaposition of
this celebration of life and these attacks in this context of a situation
they shouldn't have forbidden, it was kind of remarkable.
And animal attacks in general across the board in roadside zoos and private sector are completely
under-reported because people don't want their animals taken away.
So if a tiger attacks someone and they have a huge laceration, they'll go to the hospital
saying it was a chainsaw
You know because the second they say it was my tiger or my champ, right?
You know they run the risk of losing that animal. You also have the problem with
less than extraordinary people being
addicted to extraordinary circumstances
So if you have a boring ass fucking life in some middle of nowhere town, but you also have a lion
Life's pretty interesting, you know, I mean and that's Joe exotic right well Joe's I think is pretty smart
Odd for sure but intelligent but in Tanya's case like what would that lady be like if she didn't have
In Tanya's case, what would that lady be like if she didn't have chimps?
It is the focal point of her life
to the point where she neglected
her own biological children.
Yeah, it gives her an identity.
Yeah, in a weird way, in a weird way,
in a very compelling way.
And when people live boring ass lives,
things like that seem like something that,
that's who I am, that's me.
Because it's extraordinary experiences from persons that you know it's like I come
from which oh influence it's I think we like experiences first of all there's a
part of evolution where human beings part of our lust for innovation and for
constant improvement of our environment and circumstances is we like extraordinary experiences. I think it's what made people successful. I think the more daring and the
more addicted you were to extraordinary experiences, the more likely you were to find new hunting
grounds, the more likely you were to conquer neighboring tribes, the more likely you were
to survive an attack. I think human beings like extraordinary experiences.
We like comfort, but not as much as we like
extraordinary experiences.
But having some of these animals is like chick bait.
You know, it's like a little pooch gets you a lot of cooch,
like a guy that's walking a dog.
Joe had tigers to get boys.
Which is so wild, they were, he got straight guys.
I mean, that guy had some fucking game.
Exactly.
Yeah, I guess I see your point.
You know.
Come on, if you have a chimp, a baby chimp,
you're walking around Austin, Texas.
Sure.
People come up to you and go,
oh Joe, I love your little chimp.
That's interesting.
I wanna go out with you.
What a weird way to try to attract,
well they always say that about puppies.
Like, guys bring a puppy to the park. I'm more interested with Carl now, you know? What a weird way to try to attract like they always say that about puppies like
I'm more interested with Carl now
See Carl interact with Marshall because Marshall's like I don't want to hurt you I don't want nothing to do is to stop biting me. What are you doing? Yeah, you can see it
Yeah, but we got two different kinds of things.
You know, like one of them is like a little bulldog,
it's a little psychopath,
and the other one is a golden retriever,
he's like a love sponge.
Like all he wants to do is be your friend.
Yeah.
He wants to be your friend, and unless you're a squirrel.
And that's really interesting.
You watch his reaction to squirrels,
like his intensity when it comes to like squirrels and birds.
He is so- It's a movement, right?
It's the movement?
Is that what you're trying to...
It's just instincts.
It just fires up that part in their DNA
that knows that that's what they do.
But the bizarre thing with retrievers is it's not to eat it.
It's to bring it to you.
It's always to bring it to you.
Like one time I got home and I let the dog out,
I opened up the back door and I just had to take a leak
So I took a leak and then as I flushed washed my hands open the door
He's standing there with a squirrel in his mouth. Okay, you got a squirrel that quick
Happy yeah, and I was like dude, what did you do?
What did I do? I'm like, what did you do man? And so I got rid of squirrel but
Whenever he sees one it's just nobody had to teach him that he's locked in like that's what he wants to do
He wants to go get squirrels and he wants to bring them back to you
It's it's it's a weird thing because it's like you you understand predatory instincts like cats have them
They're the worst cats are they have killed so many fucking birds. It's something like a billion,
it's multiple billions of mammals and birds
are killed every year by outside cats.
The first thing that kills songbirds, birds,
is glass windows, skyscrapers, glass windows.
Second is domestic cats, and they are killing machines,
and they really do take a toll on wild birds.
I went, because I'm getting ready for this podcast,
I went down a dirty road last night, a wormhole of cats, predatory cats.
And there's these compilations of cats just jacking pigeons, jacking squirrels, jacking
everything, everything they can get their hands on.
Now, cats are bad unless they're indoors, domestic cats.
In Hawaii, cats are the reason why so many species in Hawaii went extinct.
Yep, yep.
They're just-
In Australia.
Australia.
They brought them in in Australia to deal with certain animals and then they got out
of control and now in Australia they hunt them.
Dodo birds went extinct because of domestic cats that were introduced into Mauritius 200,
300 years ago, whenever Dodo birds went extinct.
But no, they're killing machines.
They're machines.
Sorry to interrupt you on that.
No, no, no worries.
But so like their predatory instincts are more reasonable.
Like I understand that they're cats and that's what cats do.
But the weird thing about a retriever
is he's not doing it to eat it.
He's doing it to bring it to me.
I didn't even have to teach him to bring a ball back.
He learned within the first two or three throws, if I throw the ball, he brings it back to
me.
It's brought into them.
Whereas every other dog that I've had, I had to teach him.
And you throw the ball, you're like, come on, bring it back.
Come on, bring it back.
And you bring it back, give him a treat.
And they understand.
You praise them.
They, and then eventually they understand commands
and they have this like pathway that you've carved
into their system of chasing the ball, bringing it back.
We're gonna have fun, chase the ball, bring it back.
Marshall, it was in there.
It was already in there.
Which is crazy.
Which is so much of what we found so interesting
about the justification for this love that
a lot of the subjects we've covered had for these chimpanzees was that they love me.
They do these things with me.
I've trained them to believe that they have feelings for me and I have feelings for them.
We have this understanding and I feel what we've realized is this kind of imbalance of
this mutuality of caregiving that I think exists with a lot of our subjects that we cover,
but also some of the chimpanzees. It's very incredibly selfish around the symmetry of needs.
But it's so disturbing, you know, you have a beautiful lab, a dog, that Tanya says constantly how much she loves this chimp,
Tonka, but the chimp is incarcerated in this cage.
It's like, Tonka, if you really love this chimp
and Tonka loves you back, why the cage?
You don't have a cage for your dog.
And it just seems so obvious, like,
Tonka, this chimp does not love you the way you love Ed.
Well, I think it does, but it also doesn't have a choice.
Right?
So if Tanya lived in the jungle, if she had a shack in the jungle,
and the chimp lived in the jungle wild and free,
how much would the chimp visit her?
First of all, it wouldn't be eating chicken nuggets
and drinking Coca-Cola, which is weird, too,
that she's feeding this thing.
And she said it has congestive heart failure.
Spoiler alert again.
It's still good, you still gotta watch it, folks.
But if you give a person that, they fucking get sick.
Like nothing you're doing to that chimp is natural.
The cage is not natural, the food's not natural.
Nothing's natural.
You know, one of the saddest things for me
was when she was showing it Instagram reels
and just scrolling through reels
and the chimps just staring at the screen.
That was the weirdest one.
That's really disturbing.
That was for whatever, but meanwhile I do that.
I know that, but that's a lot of the sentiment
we see from people is a reaction to that.
We are basically doing that ourselves.
Oh yeah, yeah, we're doing it to ourselves.
You're not looking at your son.
You can make a choice. Yeah, sure put this down
Real world and have fun with human beings and have a good time with my friends
You can make those choices. The chimp doesn't have a choice
It's essentially a prisoner for no reason and it likes the guard and that chimp, you know
Tonka was looking at its kids. Yeah, that footage, you know, whether it and talk to do it or not
But an Instagram was looking at a bunch of things,
but just staring at the screens.
But I don't think it probably understood
that those were his kids, but it probably did remember
what it was like to have babies, you know?
And to be outside.
Yeah.
Sitting there in that cage in the basement
looking at these chimps,
washing a Mercedes that's outside.
You know, we both still talk to Tonya almost daily
or communicate with Tanya.
Oh my God.
And it's the most bizarre communication
because, you know, we don't, everyone thinks I lied
to Tanya about this film.
She would have talked to me anyway, I'm convinced of that.
And when I did come into the picture,
she didn't skip a beat and she was like, oh, it's you.
Let's keep filming for another year and a half.
But she continues to talk with us and we continue to tell her, Tanya, you know, maybe this is
an opportunity for you to rethink and reinvent yourself, you know? Like, it's, anyway, it's
really interesting.
Well, it doesn't seem like she has a lot of self-reflection with all due respect.
I know.
Which, you know...
It's hard not to be compassionate
with a lot of these people, to be honest.
Right.
It's really hard, because I do...
They're humans.
They're humans.
Well, especially Tanya,
because she led us into her life
in such an intimate way that, you know,
it was, you know, she was really generous that way.
So it isn't black and white. There's a lot of gray.
I understand
an audience reaction though and you can have those kind of conflicting views on
it but being part of making it as you know we're partially complicit to it too
as well. I mean in a way of of sharing that story in a way. Well you know there's
the age-old term with great power comes great responsibility. It is a great responsibility to hold a large chimpanzee in your house.
That is a great power.
It is an enormous responsibility.
And she should not have the option to have that responsibility.
She's not capable of managing that situation.
I don't think anybody's capable of it.
I think the same way, I just think dolphins were lucky that they're nice
That's what I think we're lucky that they're nice because they shouldn't they should be killing us every little raven, too
Yeah, they're not just that but in phantricide. You know the reason why female dolphins are so promiscuous
No, well male dolphins when they find a female if the female has babies
She will not breed for I think it's a long period of time,
I think it's around six years.
Oh wow. See if that's true.
Wow.
But, so what a male will do will kill the babies.
The males will kill the babies to force her into estrus,
so she will start breeding again.
So what the females do to counteract that
is to have sex with as many male dolphins as they can.
So they have sex with all the male dolphins,
they're not monogamous in any way, stretch, or form. They just go and fuck as many guys as they can. So those
guys will protect their babies because they don't know if that's their baby or not because
they know they've had sex with her. But if they have not had sex with her and then she
has babies, they will kill that baby.
Are any animals monogamous? Because they used to think so.
Yeah, penguins. Penguins are. But they only do it for like a year. They're monogamous
for like a year. But they also look exactly the same, which is a trap.
They used to think macaws, parrots were monogamous, and swans, and then they started doing the
genetics and they realized they cheat like hell.
Yeah, I'm sure they do. It doesn't seem to serve any purpose evolutionarily for them
to be monogamous. It seems contrary to the idea
of natural selection. You should be wanting to, if you have potent genes, you should want to spread
those genes as much as possible. So that means we shouldn't be monogamous. Well, human beings,
we've fallen into this weird thing where we're more than an animal in that we are an animal,
but we're an animal that expresses our thoughts and feelings to each other, and we are evolving.
We are clearly different in that we are animals,
but we can manipulate our environment like no animal that's ever existed.
We can travel to any place in the world, which no animal could ever do on its own.
We can do all kinds of things that other animals can't do, but more importantly we communicate.
Yeah. We communicate stories. Yes, and we empathize with each other and we
recognize things in other people even heinous people even people you don't
like like whether it's Joe Exotic or Tanya you recognize like I see she's not
I get it you know she's just a person who's all fucked up even that crazy
drunk lady who had the one that attacked her daughter like what happened to her?
You know like what was her child like? You know, it couldn't have been good.
And she's the one person out there who's still alive who I really don't want to hear from.
Yeah.
Because I really wonder right now, what is she thinking?
Well, the calmness while her daughter was being attacked on the phone,
the calmness of that phone call was just shocking.
Suspicious.
I think, you know, when that lady from the liquor store
was talking about how much that lady drinks,
like, who knows what she's even responsible for anymore?
Like, she's gotta be out of her fucking mind all the time
if she's drinking that much booze.
I think she wanted out with the chimp.
I think she was as caged, as depressed as the chimp,
possibly in that house after 15 years living
with this chimp that she thought was her son
and then later was dressing the chimp up
with the same clothing as her deceased husband.
I think she wanted out and somehow she figured it out.
Well, the life choices is really remarkable.
They're also basically in cages.
The humans taking care of the chimpanzee.
Right, right, right.
You really think about it.
The same goes for Sandy, Sandy Harrold.
What was so great about revisiting that story
in Connecticut, we basically,
we were set to come out with this show in March this year.
And we were basically wrapped in November and we were going through finishing.
And we suddenly got access to the entire Travis story.
We work with this guy who wrote this incredible article, a New York Magazine article named
Dan Lee.
It's one of the best written articles about Travis.
It's called Travis the Menace.
He has no attribution of sources.
You don't know who is talking.
So it's the kind of foundational piece for the Travis story.
We tracked him down.
He says, I have everyone that was part of that story and they have archive.
Do you want to do it?
And so we basically said, you know, is this going to make our story better?
Meaning that we're gonna have to extend
for at least four or five months to do this right
and postpone our entire delivery schedule.
And once we got into it, it was so worth it
because we got this total intimate view
of what it was like to be in Sandy's world.
We had this archive, the video that you see
has never been seen before.
This portrait of a family,
this kind of very complicated,
complex family life that's been inhabited by Travis, which was a descendant of Connie
Casey's place in Missouri. If you think about that, where our starting point was for this
whole project was always around, how do we understand where captive primates came from
in America? Connie Casey was this place, this kind of, you know, breeding ground for all of these animals that were kind of cycled through
Hollywood. And what I found very interesting is this kind of this
lineage that led to Travis. Travis was sold to Sandy and then you see that
so incestuous so incestuous that they're all connected. You'll see a little bit
in episode four. There it is. Travis the Menace. And it's a remarkable story. This is Sandy who bought Travis
from Connie. Connie, you know, it was this Suzie was the mother. By the way, how much does that
photograph freak you out? Yeah. When you see that chimp holding that baby at any
minute and just decide to pull that baby's head off.
And when chimps smile, it's actually a sign of aggression.
It's not like us.
We smile because we're happy.
That's not a happy chimp doing that.
So he's trained to smile.
He's not necessarily aggressive right here.
He's trained to show his teeth because it's cute.
Right. It's more of a grimace. He's trained to show his teeth because it's cute.
Right.
It's more of a grimace.
It's more of a happy smile, I guess, if you want to call it that.
So it was fascinating to us to get access to this story.
We go into it and-
He's drinking soda from McDonald's.
That's disturbing.
Yeah, he got too big.
Well, you're giving him the standard American diet.
But look at the canines compared to ours.
Look at us. Oh, yeah, they're daggers
Oh, well the bite force everything. I mean everything about them
Yeah, we are so watered down by the evolutionary process and I was real aware of that when I was touching that two-year-old
Chimp with diapers like real aware. Yeah, it's a different thing and
When you're taking this thing and you're, you know, it's a time bomb.
You have like four years where you can control it, maybe five, right?
And then they say after five, it's just like you're basically rolling the dice anytime
someone comes over your house.
Yeah, exactly.
That's basically it.
Just so crazy.
But he was, you know, this, this classic story was this kind of gothic fairy tale in Stanford,
Connecticut, which was so unusual because it's a suburb of Manhattan.
You know, everyone thought this was in the South or wherever it was happening in Stanford,
Connecticut.
And Sandy had this kind of void in her life.
She buys Travis and raises her part of the family.
And you see the story, the same arc as every other chimps story in a family setting, they
get too mature and they have to, you know, the thing that I thought you'd appreciate in terms of our kind of this idea that we
show in this story really well I think is this this chimp is happy and connected
to the community because he's free. He's socializing, he's a town celebrity, he's
at work with Sandy in the tow shop, you know, answering phones, you
know, filling out paperwork. The mascot of the tow shop, Desire Me Motors. Right. Yeah,
he's airbrushed everywhere on trucks. And he lives a cool life. He lives a cool life.
And then one day. Everyone gets to see the chimp, right? And then until one day he gets
too aggressive. And he, this incredible story, which we don't cover in the doc, but he's
in this intersection, very busy intersection in in Connecticut a little boy throws a can of coke over to
the car with the chimp the chimp gets out you know stops traffic you know and
it's covered in the news and it's a joke everyone's like oh my god it's planted
at the age. The chimp is trying to get a hold of the kid. The chimp is trying to like he's
irritated why why would you bother the chimpanzee he threw a can of coke at him he
runs out of the car trying to figure out what's going on.
Meanwhile, Sandy gets an ice cream cone,
brings it back in the car, and everything's cool.
Two hours later.
Two hours later, right?
So the state of Connecticut says, no way.
You can't have this chimp anymore out in public.
You gotta put him in home.
So this chimp is out in space for the majority of his life
and then built a confinement for the majority of his life.
And so fast forward,
and I'll spare you kind of the other stuff that we learned,
but what everyone kind of talks about
in revisiting media at the time is he,
it was annexed, it was the wine glasses, he was drunk,
it was Elmo, maybe the relationship went wrong.
But he grabbed car keys, He wanted to go for a ride
He could drive a car. He wanted to get the fuck out of there
Yeah, that's what happened right and and the person who he runs into first Sharla represents confinement. He was a nanny
So what do you think's gonna happen? It was also reported. He was fucking or he left already
He was like cruising around and he was in the graveyard fucking with the guy who was digging graves
That's what we heard insanely bored just like like a person that's stuck in a cage and chips when
they're bored and you always see it they rock and so you see if you're watching
that section of Chimp Crazy Travis is just sitting there rocking which is like
a tech you know right big cats do a figure eight over and over and over.
Chimps do this rocking.
And when you see that, you know that's a really desperately
depressed chimp.
But we love this love.
But we're interested in this tension
because we think we can control things.
I mean, that's why, if you've seen the movie,
this great footage with this chimp, Gordy,
which he covers and is a through line in the show.
It's inspired based on this whole idea
of spectacle and humans that can control things.
Nope, and that scene with Gordy, the chimp,
is probably one of the most beautiful displays,
you know, cinematically that I've seen of,
it's horrible, it's very tragic, but.
The one person that
has the 15 year old chimp in their house how have they been able to avoid all
that she's careful I mean she she's 77 years old Pam Rose there when she was
seven years old she was asked what she wants to do with her life in this circus
animal family and she says I want to train chimps I want to do something hard I want to do something
difficult the rest of her family train horses and elephants and that was
culturally but that's a really good question how is it that Pam okay you're
thinking about more different different measures but like I'm thinking about
attacks yeah that's what I'm thinking so really good question because I always
wondered about Pam was there how come she's the one person that has sort of been immune to it or has she?
I think she's got some, you know, can I look, I think she's lucky.
I think it's the best way. I don't know what happens behind the scenes, to be honest.
I think, you know, to be fair, I think, I don't know,
but I do know that when I watched her interaction, you know,
there's a real like understanding and it's, and she has a leash on them. I mean, well, she also they are neutered. Should they these chimp's castrated?
Yeah, I'm sure they're sure they are they do you know, they remove their canines
Oftentimes they do have to alter them to build a continue to work with them
They're modified
I mean, I should say there's there's a lot of dark parts of our story that we didn't go into.
Like, one of the things we learned was that so many of the monkeys that are being sold,
you know, by Tanya and others are coming across the border from Mexico, just, you know, along
with probably drugs.
And more recently, in recent time, we've seen a lot of central
American and Mexican species coming into the US. So there's a pipeline, you know, I'm sort of saying well what we what we look what so
Yes, it is. We didn't realize also how dark this was coming out of it because we were so close to it and the reaction By people it's very heavy
So I'm we're all desensitized from from seeing this
There's some really interesting stuff that happens in 4jo.
I hope you finish it, including another attack,
but this time with a person that we all know.
And...
Oh, you're teasing me.
I'm teasing you a little bit, I'm sorry.
It's pretty good, Joe.
I'll probably wanna watch it.
Okay, it's good.
It's pretty good. It's heavy. it. Okay, it's pretty good.
A part of her body gets bitten off.
Oh, come on, man.
I'm not kidding.
Similar to Trump.
Yeah, now you're giving away way too much.
You fucked it up.
I'm gonna look at her here the whole show now.
So is that lady with the 15-year-old champ,
is that the only one that you know of
that keeps a full grown adult
and has it just wander around with everybody?
We've learned more.
Well wait, wait, wait.
It's also castrated.
To be clear, Pam doesn't live in,
the chimp doesn't live in our house.
It's in there sometimes?
Yeah, sometimes.
And how much of castrating it changes its behavior?
I think significantly.
Because Buck in Oregon was castrated and then it, you know.
The Connecticut chimpanzee, was that castrated?
Probably, but Buck was castrated
and started wearing a shock collar.
In order to manage a chimp,
as you say, after four or five years old,
they typically alter them,
remove their canines, castrate them, shock collars.
It's so crazy, like fixing a dog is so commonplace.
People don't even think twice,
oh, is your dog neutered?
Oh, you're a good pet owner, you know,
that way your dog's not gonna have unwanted puppies.
But fixing a chimpanzee, like what are you doing?
Like, what did you do to him?
It's like fixing your-
But also, by the way, think about
where the medical care they get at,
you know, the guy who's a horse vet
is the guy working at a chimpanzee.
If you're lucky.
If you're lucky.
If you're lucky, yeah.
So if you think about the care, it's really horrible.
But I was going to add to what you were saying, Eric.
One thing that we learned through the process about kind of what is this about, mainly,
you know, we're talking about this very niche subject matter of captive chimpanzees in America, which we learned there really only is about 1,300 remaining
in captivity, which includes those who are already in sanctuaries in the US.
About half of that 1,300. And big zoos. And big zoos. Big zoos have about 250 of them
still. So in terms of the kind of roadside zoo, private home environment,
it's between, you know, less than 100 chimpanzees that remain in captivity.
So, to answer your question, there might be more, but it's hard to die to a chimp.
But globally, there's still many chimps in Thailand and all over the world that are,
you know, so in the US, at least there's less and less in this.
There's less and less.
The primates in general, in terms in terms of you know monkeys as pets
It's you know, it's reported somewhere on 15,000 people in America have primates as pen chimpanzees as a as pets 15,000
15,000 according to the American welfare animal welfare Institute
So that's what we're finding but you know through that
We had to zoom out and I think that what we've learned, what I've learned personally about organizations that are that
are doing something to protect wild lands and protect wild populations of chimpanzees,
there's a lot of great ones out there. So we've been supporting a program that's doing
12 project sites in Africa, $10 million, 10,000 chimpanzees. And that's what we're hopeful
for. I mean, Africa is basically gonna be China one day.
What do you do though with animals
that have been kept in captivity their whole life?
You can't really introduce them to the wild, can you?
It depends on the species.
Certainly not, I mean chimpanzees.
Certainly not after the castrated.
Not chimpanzees.
They've done all these projects.
No, the chimpanzees definitely not.
I don't know if you like any of these other movies
that were done about these scientific
experiments people have in their homes in the 70s and 80s, bringing chimps and reintroducing
them into the wild.
It doesn't work.
It ends horribly.
Well, there's a place in Africa, there's sort of an island in a, you know, there's a,
it's like a freshwater river where they have released chimps, but, you know, chimps that
are just placed in Africa. But yeah yeah to release them actually back into a
population a wild chimps hasn't been done successfully for sure not with
chimps have they done it with cats hmm that's a good you know there's that
famous you know image of Putin releasing a tiger in Russia that was captive they
have done it with cats.
Actually, I work with an organization that's been releasing jaguars back in the northern
Argentina where jaguars have now disappeared.
But the jaguar program is very, they do it very carefully and they put the jaguar in
this enormous enclosures and let them capture wild prey before they release them.
Takes a lot of time.
Well, I mean, we were talking about house cats earlier.
Oh, house cats.
No, no, no, no, I wasn't saying this.
I just meant cats and jaguars.
But I was saying that house cats,
which are really completely domesticated,
you come to pet them,
if you let them loose, they survive fine.
It's feral cats.
They all have instincts to kill and eat things.
So I would imagine cats would probably be one of the easiest ones to reintroduce to the wild.
But then you have things that are accustomed like bears. One of the problems with people that live
in rural communities is when bears start attacking your dumpsters and your garbage cans, they know
food is there and you can't get rid of them. They will come back to that no matter what. You can't scare them off. You scare them off, you're only scaring
them for an hour, they'll be back. They know there's food there.
Where we live in California, we have bears, black bears, not grizzly bears, and we have mountain
lions. And almost every night you'll see on our streets when there's a certain night of the week
when the garbage comes out, all the garbage cans are tipped over because of the bears.
Mm-hmm.
And you're right. You're right. Once they learn that, then they have a pattern
and they go after those dumpsters.
Well, you know, California used to have big brown bears.
California's state flag is a grizzly bear.
Which is crazy.
And we work with an organization
that's trying to bring them back to California.
Settle down, folks.
Settle down.
Look at which guilt's keeping alive where they are.
Don't get nutty.
All these people that want to re-entry these animals, like, okay, it's just, you have to
understand you're playing God.
You're throwing.
And there's a reason it went extinct, because the last grizzly bear in California was shot
about 100 years ago, and it's because they eat people.
LeVeque, California is named after the last guy who died from a grizzly bear attack.
Yeah.
I think his name is Steven LeVvesque. And he got fucked up. They were big, you know, big brown bears and we killed
them all because they were killing people. And I'm not saying you should kill them all.
I'm not saying what we did was good. But once you've established an ecosystem that if you
make the con... I believe I like humans more than I like other animals. This is my thought
I believe that we're more important to each other than animals are to us doesn't mean that I don't care about animals
But if you start bringing in things that are gonna eat people, I'm like, hey
This is not good for us. It's not good for us. We don't have to reintroduce them to places
You know, I think a better solution would
be let's make sure that wherever they live, naturally, their populations are fine. I think
that's probably the better solution. There's been some success of reintroducing wolves
into Montana, the Yellowstone reintroduction in the 1990s.
Yeah, we know those guys.
Really interesting. They did have an overpopulation problem of ungulates because bears can only
eat so many of them and wolves are much more clever and they act together.
It's kind of balanced things out for now.
We work with Turner endangered species, Ted Turner, and we work very closely with this
guy Mike Phillips in Montana who's been probably the key guy to bring back gray wolves into
this part of the western part of the United States.
But yeah, it's been without, I mean,
I know, because we do this, that even gray wolves,
there's a lot of controversy from ranchers.
Imagine bringing back big grizzlies,
brown bears to California.
Yeah, it's gonna be a problem.
But people that live in urban areas
don't understand what that problem is.
Like this is the what that problem is. Like
this is the problem that Vancouver has. So British Columbia outlawed brown bear hunting.
You can hunt black bears because people eat black bears and you can eat brown bears as
well but most people don't. And they, so they have in their mind hunting grizzly bears is
in line with what they want to call trophy hunting, which is gross. You're just killing
an animal so you can stuff it
It's gross. We all agree. It's gross, but the reality of grizzly bears in rural areas
I have a good friend who lives in northern BC. He lives in like a very rural area. He's like they're fucking dangerous
He had a shoot one that was trying to break into his cabin from three feet away
He shot a large grizzly bear trying to get into his cabin and eat him from three feet away. He shot a large grizzly bear trying to get into his cabin
and eat him from three feet away. He said they're really bold now because they haven't
hunted them for a few years. So if you're running into a four or five-year-old male,
they don't know what it's like to be hunted. No one has any feelings of being nervous around
human beings.
And you remember the movie The Grizzly Man, right?
Yes.
Timothy Treadwell.
That's fascinating.
He was lunch.
That's my favorite unintentional comedy.
Yeah.
Because Werner Herzog, I think,
made that movie funny on purpose.
Of course.
That's like our source of inspiration.
It's a good movie.
But I will never forget watching it in New York City.
I was watching it at a theater.
The whole time, I was just saying,
like, oh my God, like, I just was being,
I was angry with this guy.
You know, the deck, he was like worried about his bandana
or his, you know, whatever he was worried about.
I was so pissed watching it, but it was a good movie.
But it's the same thing.
It's a less than extraordinary person
who gets attached and addicted to extraordinary experiences. Yeah, you're constantly around these
I mean he got some incredible footage that guy got some amazing footage. He did some fucking hard camping
Okay, that guy was out there roughing it for a long ass time in a tent
Surrounded by monsters living in the grizzly maze. He's a maniac. Yeah talking baby talk to the bears
He pulled it off pulled it off for a long time.
But you knew what was gonna happen.
If you watch that, eventually,
something's gonna decide to eat you.
And then that's exactly what happens.
It's like these chips with these women.
Simpler, but at least that guy's going to where they live.
Of course.
I don't have any problem with someone deciding to do that.
If you're that fucking crazy
And you want to throw yourself into the system and maybe live with them as for as long as it lasts
I mean and maybe it also was suicide by bear right cuz that guy seemed really depressed and didn't seem like he was having a good
Time yeah, but he had the bear eat his girlfriend too. I was well
I can't get a girlfriend after it ate him right it killed him. She was like him getting eating. Well, the bear ate his girlfriend after it ate him. Right.
It killed him. She was trying to defend him.
She was hitting it with a frying pan and...
Yeah, but she was like, you know, collateral damage.
I feel bad for the girlfriend.
I do too, but again, like, what kind of choices are we making in this life?
But think about, you asked a question about reintroduction or these attacks that occur.
There was a story we didn't include, it was just too tangential,
but there was a neighbor of the Missouri Primate Foundation, the Chimp Party place where all
the animals were bred. At a time in the 90s, she had 42 chimps living in the house in a
single property. One escapes, a 19-year-old boy recognizes his dog in the backyard
being attacked by a chimpanzee.
He grabs a gun, shoots the chimpanzee.
He gets charged with destruction of property.
Gets a felony.
Oh my God.
He went to prison.
Oh my God.
For six months.
Gets out.
He missed the birth of his daughter.
That's insane.
And his name is Jason Coates.
It's a really interesting story. Who
the fuck tried that? And then guess what? Here's what happened. Two years ago, I think,
he gets his record expunged finally at 40 years old. And now he can't get work. You
know, the guy's like a contractor and he couldn't get work. That's so crazy. Defending his property.
He shouldn't have been in that situation in the first place also defending his life
Yeah, like the reality if you understand chimpanzees the person who had that champion chimpanzees responsible
It's not this man who's defending his life
Yeah, you are so vulnerable to a chimpanzee if they decide to get after you
There's not a lot you can do you could survive for a little bit, but it's gonna tear you apart
That's just how it is.
And if that guy is not armed,
and he can't protect himself, then what do you have?
You have a person who gets torn apart by a chimpanzee.
The idea that you can't protect yourself
from someone's crazy fuckin' idea of harboring an animal,
an enormous animal that's insanely strong,
and hyper-aggressive, and intelligent, and uncontrollable.
Yeah, that was a tragic story.
Terrible.
It's really hard making these films because so many good stories fall on the cutting room floor and so many great subjects and that was one of them.
Well, you have to have some discretion in the process of casting subjects. I mean, it's a choice.
But I also think the idea is it was also kind of far away
from where we were going with these themes.
I think.
Well, it seems like you could do multiple series.
Oh my God, we could continue with this thing.
It's harder.
It's getting harder and harder to do.
But is it also harder to get people to be natural on camera
and to not be performative?
It's harder.
I mean, what is harder now, and it was hard
in the very beginning also, is that these people that keep,
I'm generalizing a little bit,
but for the most part they're very guarded
about letting you in because one,
they don't know if you're a spy for animal rights groups,
they don't know if you're the feds,
and they don't know if you're gonna steal their animals.
And so a lot of these people have very valuable animals,
and they're extremely guarded and paranoid
about letting you in.
Now, of course, it's even become harder,
because in our case, we've become known.
And so to continue this model of doing another story on,
I don't know, bears, yeah, people
are going to be suspicious.
But as far as being natural, I don't think that's so hard.
With Tanya and Joe, you know,
Joe's obviously a performer in a sense,
but we just film them.
And the more intimate you can make
that filming experience for them,
the more natural they become.
So we work with hardly anybody.
You know, with Tiger King, it was just me and a camera guy.
And then, and I drove back and forth
from Texas to Oklahoma constantly, Dallas to Oklahoma City.
It was just two of us filming.
And so the more intimate it is,
the less of an audience is watching
while you're filming, the better it is.
And also before Tiger King,
there's no way they could have known
how big that was gonna be.
Oh my God, I didn't know.
No, we didn't know, yeah.
No way they could have ever anticipated
some bizarre, obscure documentary
on people that are keeping pet cats.
Our insurance didn't even know.
But I started making a film about the sixth extinction.
Big Cats in America, yeah, okay, that's like low risk.
Yeah, but we didn't even know it was gonna be successful.
Well, like I said, you guys caught lightning in a bottle.
It was the perfect timing of people being locked in
during the pandemic.
You guys were kind of the early stars of the pandemic,
your show.
It was also a welcome escape from the craziness
that we were all experiencing.
We're experiencing everyone's wearing a mask,
you're keeping away from people,
and then you're, at least when you're home with your family,
you're like, oh my God, we're not these fucking idiots.
We're crazy, but we're not this crazy.
Like, this world is so much more insane
than this new insane world, that it became sort of
a little bit of a little
bit of a panacea for us.
Yeah.
I think I was telling Eric this, you know, it's so, we get asked this question a lot
about, you know, the state of, you know, non-scripted, unscripted shows, documentaries, and this
dramatization that you're seeing is a trend, people making very cinematic, real stories,
dramatic recreations.
And Eric and I, we're talking about it a lot
because so much of our content is so much more surreal
than anything we can even make up or recreate.
And that's what's so surreal about our process
and also just the stuff we capture.
It's stranger than fiction, as you said.
It's stranger than fiction,
and it also comes off as authentic.
And as someone who's worked in reality TV,
it's not reality, okay?
And especially the kind of reality shows
that you think of as reality shows,
they have all these scenarios set up.
They'll edit things to make them look
like different things happen,
because they just want you to keep them keep people tuned in for drama
So if you're you know, you're following a family around they create drama
They have scripted shit and it feels like it right the thing about Tiger King and the thing about Chimp Crazy is it feels very
Authentic it's crazy. God. I'm so glad you say that because I would fly into st
Louis drive down to the Ozarks to film Tanya,
and she'd be like three hours late for some reason.
And then she'd show up and she'd say,
oh, you know, I gotta go get my eyes done.
And then I would be like, Tanya, you were three hours late.
Can I at least film you getting your eyes done?
And not once were we setting her up or saying,
can you get your lip injections?
She just would say, no, I got four o'clock appointment with my lip injection, and we
just shadowed her.
So it was just her life.
Yeah.
So it is authentic.
Yeah.
100%.
We also have, Eric, we're also fortunate to have an incredibly talented team that can
help create these experiences in a way
on screen that make it authentic.
Well, it's also the editing process.
Editing, of course.
We had a great team.
A credible group of teams.
So as they're doing it, are they like marking down like key moments?
Do they have someone who's like a stenographer or someone who's like marking down so you
know like what to look for?
Or do you at the end of the day go, that thing where she went and got her lips done,
we have to have that in?
Maybe, I wish we had what you just said.
It would be very helpful, but we don't.
It's pretty organic.
It's pretty organic.
I think there's also, you follow the core story,
which was Tanya's story.
We kind of knew that we had it the minute
the missing chimpanzee happened,
or the supposed death occurred.
So that was the story, where is the chimp?
And through that story, we're able to kind of latch on
all these other things.
Now, what you don't know is we shot these other stories
out of sequence.
Travis came at the very end,
so we had to figure out a way to weave it into episode two
and weave it into episode four. We knew we really wanted that end to serve as thematic connection to
Tanya's story.
But I just have to make one big overriding point, which is that this is not a good recipe
for people making films like this, because it's not. Because we, you know, like there's
all these sort of formulaic styles of documentaries, like a biopic, a famous person,
or a take-down documentary, or a true crime.
What we do, and I think we've just been really lucky,
is we just start filming somebody never knowing,
of course, where this is gonna go, you know.
And that is not a good, smart way
to make probably documentaries,
because what if it goes nowhere?
Right.
You know, I'm just bringing that up because, you know.
And so in order to do Chimp Crazy after Tiger King,
we actually filmed so many different things
to get to Chimp people.
How do we spend less time on these things
than what we've kind of realized?
It's like exhausting.
It's worth it, though.
Well, it seems like there's no other way
to keep it authentic than to just shadow these people forever
and then splice it down to four hours.
Yeah, yeah.
Which is like you have 250 plus hours of footage.
250 days of footage.
Yeah, no, it's like about, it's about 1,300 hours roughly.
1,300 hours down to four.
Yeah.
Now that's just primary camera. It's like, you know summarizing the days I mean right multiple cameras most things happening in a day, right? We were very efficient, you know, it's an 8 to 12 hour day
we're capturing a lot of stuff in that day, so are you archiving and
You like at the end of the day so, you know, like what day this happened and what day that you're so you do make sure
There's a process
There's a field process to ingest that has kind of the notes that we have for the day what happened
What's interesting about the day and are you?
Trying to fill to form the narrative of how you're gonna have the whole documentary series play out as you're doing that
Or is it just that comes so much later? Yeah, like we have no idea where it's going probably
For the first year and
a half of filming. You know, in the case of Chimp Crazy, we didn't even discover Tanya
until a year and a half in. Year and a half in. What made it more complicated? Well, you
know, what's so interesting, Joe, and I want to come back to this about, you know, I saw
you get a little emotional with the Buck story because I, we spent, it was really, it was
really a hard one for us to tell, but an important one to make sure we got that
in, but the, we missed it. We missed it, we missed the cover, we were gonna go,
Eric and I were gonna go to Pendleton to cover what was happening with Buck,
because we knew there was a violation that occurred from the state of Oregon that basically said Tamra you
have to do these improvements otherwise we're taking the animal away from you
and that it happened we thought we would cover the response to that. Four days
later Buck was shot and we said to ourselves and I remember this so vividly
we can't we have to trust us like instincts like when we
Like are into something let's cover it film it send someone out and cover it if we need to
So we decided to film everything everything including our conversations and process like very meta
Which ended up becoming part of the story too as you'll see more in four where we have to like turn her in basically
so
The point with being is that the Buck story happened, we thought we'd
just send this guy, Dwayne, who we recruited to kind of join the team into Festus to cover this
confiscation, thinking nothing was going to happen. Day happens, take the animals out, one is missing.
And then the guy that we had sent there became friends with her and we just had to keep following following it. So this guy became essential to the story with
with no intended intended, you know, reasoning for that. So yeah, it's the making of became
more interesting than the actual subject matter in a way to us. And kind of weaving that together
came much much
later. It's not a good formula. I'm interested though you're also kind of
an outsider in this but what was your kind of response to the industry you know
formulaic kind of way of doing things? Well I mean doing what kind of things?
With reality TV programming or programming in general? Well I think they
with reality TV it was pretty. I could see how it started
it was people that were involved in scripted shows and
Then scripted shows somewhere around the early 2000s got decimated by reality shows. And so these people who are already
respected television producers
They made their way into reality television and then they realized some of these people are pretty fucking boring most of the time.
We don't have enough time to spend 250 days to film one episode of a show, right?
Which is what you guys had to do.
So instead what they do is they say, okay, today you're going to argue about what to
have for lunch.
And so Bob wants Mexican food, Sally wants Chinese food.
You have to figure it out, and you have to go around town
and figure out where to eat.
And you're eventually going to decide this.
And this is the place you're going to eat,
you're going to be happy.
And so the whole thing is the personal dynamics,
the relationships these people have to each other.
And then they create drama along the way.
Along the way, you're gonna run into your friend
from high school who's like perfectly made up,
you know, like well lit with a microphone on.
Whoa.
So it's like, it's bullshit.
It's bullshit.
It's not really reality, but it's also not really a drama.
It's real human beings that are doing nonsense.
And you feel it.
And then there's also like reality shows that are on specific subjects, and those are doing nonsense. And you feel it. And then there's also reality shows
that are on specific subjects,
and those are bullshit too.
And then you have dating shows,
which are super, super popular,
because who is he gonna pick?
Who is she gonna pick?
How is this gonna work?
We get excited about that.
Or fucking these garage shows,
where someone shows up at a storage unit.
Well, a lot of those shows, they fake it.
They load up the storage unit. Because, you know a lot of those shows they fake it They load up the storage
Yeah, so they can't be assured that this storage unit is gonna have some fucking pirates treasure in it, right?
So what do they do?
You ruin that for me?
Yeah, so they pretend that they got this at an auction like who knows what's in it?
Apparently the guy died in a mysterious way and there's people looking for him
We might really be onto something and then you you cut to commercial is that gold cut to
Commercial cut back from commercial is that gold but I even thought I don't watch any of those shows
I even thought some of these like, you know nature shows like Steve Irwin
You know, and I know you know Forrest Gulland
But I always kind of wonder like is he walking through the jungle and there he suddenly finds the snake
Is it it's got to be set up a lot of the time.
A lot of the time I'm sure it is.
Or the crocodile.
In some of those shows, but a lot of the ones,
like one of the more interesting things today is YouTube.
Right, because YouTube you have these small,
independent people, like there's this guy we had on
called Python Cowboy, and this guy goes out
into the Everglades every day and captures pythons and you know like this videos of him he got bit by one like
really fucked up his arms gushing blood he's holding on to their enormous there's
more pythons in the Everglades than anywhere on earth
Burmese pythons yeah Burmese pythons that used to be people's pets or used to be a part of a
reptile facility so we're doing our next doc series is about reptiles
and the smuggling of reptiles.
We have a whole section on that.
It's another thing I went down the rabbit hole last night.
Nile crocodiles.
I was going to the Nile crocodiles in the Everglades.
I can tell you a lot about Nile crocodiles.
Tell me about Nile crocodiles in the Everglades though.
Because what they were saying is they found a few
and the ones that they identified that they've captured that were definitely Nile crocodiles
Came from the same gene line. So they think they came from the same genetic source
But then there was another guy that I was watching this documentary last night or this YouTube video rather last night where he was saying that
There's like huge crocodiles that take out cattle on the west side of Florida. No
Yes, he was he was sketching me out.
He was like, 18 foot, 18 foot crops, killed cows.
There's like 23 or 24 species of crocodilians in the world.
That includes caimans, crocodiles, alligators,
gull rails.
And the only crocs that are really, really dangerous to man
are saltwater crocodiles, Nile crocodiles,
mugger crocodiles.
But the crocs in Florida
that are native, you know, American crocodiles, they are a brackish water croc. They're not
like Nile crocodiles that are in freshwater. So in Florida, you basically just have American
alligators and there's a very small population of American crocodiles that are still native,
but they're in sort of estuaries and brackish water.
They're smaller. They, which ones are smaller? American crocodiles that are still native, but they're in sort of estuaries and brackish water. They're smaller.
They, which ones are smaller?
American crocodiles.
Well, they're bigger than alligators.
Are they really?
Yeah, for sure.
What's the biggest American crocodile
they've ever found?
Oh, they can be big.
I've seen American crocodiles,
because the American crocodile,
the one we have in South Florida,
is the same croc that you see in coastal Mexico,
goes down into Costa Rica.
You can see, I've looked over, I've seen a lot of American crocodiles in Mexico, Costa Rica. You can see, I've looked over,
I've seen a lot of American crocodiles
in Mexico, Costa Rica, they're big, they're long.
Longer than your alligator out there.
Not that much longer, but longer.
Longer.
So, Jamie, can you find out what's the largest
American crocodile?
I was under the impression that they were smaller species
than the alligators were.
And definitely smaller than the rest of the crocodile.
Check beyond that.
That's an alligator.
No, that's alligator.
Monster cattle eating alligator shot in Florida.
Look at the size of that thing.
Okay, but that's unusual.
15 feet.
Oh my goodness.
Wow.
Look at the size of that sucker.
But you said earlier, crocodile.
Right, American crocodile.
What's the largest American crocodile, Jamie?
And the largest American alligator, right? I think the largest American alligator was 20 feet long Wow
Really? Yeah, that's the longest one they've ever found
Wow, I love this fact check. Okay. Here we go 14 foot. Yeah, so they're small. Yeah. Wait
What's the largest American alligator that?
It's bigger definitely for sure. Yeah, because that one that we have out there is 14 feet long.
Damn. It's like when you catch a fish, right? You say it's this big. I think that's how I'm being with it.
Yeah, okay. 19 feet 2 inches. Oh, Joe, you're right. Yeah, all right. I'm wrong. I love this.
Well, so there's a bunch of different ones, right? And the Nile crocodiles are a different animal.
Nile crocodiles regularly get to 18 feet,
and there's some really interesting reports
from back in the day of much larger ones.
And so the question is, here's the thing
about alligators and crocodiles in particular.
They don't die of old age.
They just keep getting older and bigger.
And when you introduce human beings and guns into the equation
What are the people gonna shoot where they're gonna shoot the biggest ones, right?
So you have guns being introduced in the 1800s and now in 2024 you can't find the really big ones
Well, one of the reasons for that is a really big one would take hundreds of years to get that big
So an alligator like that big fucker that they had,
that the cattle eating 15 foot alligator,
that guy might be 90 years old.
So a crocodile that gets to 30 feet long,
which is, there was reports of ones that were longer
than a 38 foot boat that these guys were on.
This is a long time ago though.
And so there's all this speculation. Were these people just freaking out because it was big and they
exaggerated is this hyperbole like what is this? Well there's the other part of
the speculation is well for sure we know crocodiles used to be bigger there was
many many species of crocodiles that were fucking enormous dinosaur eating
crocodiles huge thing what is the biggest ancient
crocodile that was ever discovered fossilized I think it's like in the
neighborhood of 50 plus feet long I like this right now what we're doing and I
like that you were right and I was wrong I like that too
about gigantico well so my point is that like these things are they're so
different than us
that it's hard for us to even imagine,
okay, the biggest freshwater croc ever was 40 feet long.
Yeah, that's remarkable.
110 million years ago.
What about saltwater?
Wow.
Is that the largest crocodile period
or is it what they all, the big ones, freshwater?
Right.
What is the, is that the largest, biggest crocodile fossil ever found?
Okay, cross-over, largest sea-dwelling one, 30 feet long, interesting.
So the 40-foot long one was bigger.
Interesting.
So these ones that they, okay, super croc, massive fossilized croc discovered in the
Aguila, how do you say that? Aguilla,
Aguilla formation in Big Bend National Park, 40 to 50 feet long, jaws with six inch teeth.
Good Lord. Wow. Good Lord. Big Bend. Good Lord. Six inch teeth. How great. Just imagine.
Fucking six inch teeth and it's 40 feet long. Oh my god I mean, I think saltwater crocs and Nile crocs right eat more people right? Yes today. Well, I have a friend
Jim Shockey who's actually a professional hunter that was hired to go to Africa to shoot some of these man-eating
Crocodiles that were taking out these people in this village And the footage that he got of it is so disturbing
because everyone in the village is missing something.
Everyone in the village is either missing an arm
or missing a leg or has a bite taken out of them.
And while he was there, a woman got snatched up
when she was trying to do laundry.
So it's a very poor village and these people
are at the mercy of these monsters
that are actively hunting them.
So what they do is they, so if they want to do something like
have a place where they can retrieve water safely,
what they do is they put like giant poles
in the ground all around.
So they essentially like encase this area.
But the problem is crocodiles figure it out.
And then they go in there and then just settle in.
And they just wait for you. Cause they can walk around on land obviously. So they go out of the wall out and they go in there and then just settle in and they just wait for you because they can walk around
On land obviously so they go out of the wall and then they go all the fuckers. They only go in this little area
How do I get in that area and they're watching you underwater for hours without breathing?
You know, I work a lot in Madagascar and we have not crocodiles in Madagascar, but they're not as big as mainland
Nile Crocs, but I know that in Madagascar, it's when people go to wash their clothing
around the edge of these lakes that they get, you know.
And every-
That's their instincts, cause that's how they get deer,
like these little animal species.
Every year people die washing their clothing
in Madagascar from Nile Crocs.
Yeah, fuck that.
Yeah.
So the speculation is that there's breeding populations
of those Nile Crocs in the Everglades really yeah
Yeah, they they've why not why not of them see if you can find like what's the latest?
breeding crocodile breeding
Nile crocodiles in the Everglades they have a shoot-on-sight order for them. I mean it makes sense
I always wondered why there were not anacondas and in the making of this reptile
sense, I always wondered why there were not anacondas and in the making of this reptile documentary we're doing, the reason we've been told that there are
not anacondas in the Everglades is that they didn't import anacondas in the way
they did Burmese pythons. Burmese pythons, from what we understand, the python skin
people in Thailand and Malaysia, they would collect the eggs and breed, you
know, have the babies and send thousands of babies, baby Burmese pythons to the US. And that never
happened with anacondas. But you think about anacondas because they would live
in the Everglades. You're also, you're meeting the guy responsible for that
tomorrow. It's unclear if Nile crocodiles are breeding. It's unclear if they are
breeding in the wild in Florida, but here's some information about Nile
crocodiles and breeding in Florida. Nile croc, first they're breeding in the wild in Florida, but here's some information about Nile crocodiles and breeding in Florida.
First observed in Florida in the 60s.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
Leaves they've captured all the Nile crocodiles in the area.
Nile crocodiles become established before they could threaten native species.
Well, that's what pythons have done.
Yeah.
I mean, they might have to bring in the Nile crocs to kill the pythons.
But what's interesting about that, you know, in the 60s, alligators were endangered.
They have people for that now.
Yes.
Well, I lived in Florida in the 70s.
And when I lived in Florida, they were endangered.
They were on the endangered species list.
People used to feed on marshmallows.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
I lived in Gainesville, Florida.
We used to go, and then when I was there, some lady got her dog snatched, and then everybody
got kind of freaked out.
Everybody in the town was like whoa
They got way too comfortable with
Alligators as alligators when they get used to people they just lay around
So they would just sit on the banks and we would go to the fucking park like Lake Alice is where the lake is
We'd go to the park and hang out and alligators would just be hanging out there. I was a little kid
It was normal. It was normal to see alligators just sunning themselves.
And they were endangered back then.
And now they're not endangered at all.
Now they're everywhere.
And crocodile farming had a lot to do
with why they're not endangered.
Really?
From what I understand.
Yeah, because what took pressure off of crocs just globally,
not so much alligators, but crocs in general,
was when the farming happened,
it took pressure
off of hunting them, obviously, for skins, right?
And the farming of crocodiles has been a really, you know, it's controversial, but it's really
been a success story for wild crocodilians.
But why is that, how does it affect alligators?
Well they did, that's a good question.
I think it was crocodile farming, you should ask, but I know croc farming in general has protected crocodilians across the board. I guess they used to hunt
alligators also for skins, or am I wrong? Oh yeah, for sure, they still do. So maybe they still breed
them for skins and hunt them for skins, but now they have an overpopulation problem. So I was just
curious, like, how would crocodile farming make that happen? I don't think that, I think it's
probably just a natural reaction to the fact they weren't hunted anymore and then
they just blossomed and it just took a few decades and then you have enormous
populations of them. Yeah that may be true. I know croc farming has helped
crocodilians across the board. Sure. That's for sure. On storms patterns, right?
Shifting, isn't it also true? American alligators were on the endangered species
list like they were very rare in the 60s.
Now they're incredibly common.
Well, they were very rare because they were overhunted.
They were overhunted, exactly.
I mean, that's the problem.
When we were talking about deer, one of the things that was established through Teddy
Roosevelt and when they set up the national parks and wildlife services in this country,
they had market hunting before that,
and they had wiped out everything.
They used to be elk over 50 states.
They used to be everywhere.
Well, the eastern elk is extinct.
Yes, exactly.
And we have Rocky Mountain elk now
that have been transplanted into the east.
But the market hunting was a real problem.
We had decimated the populations of all these things.
They were just hunting deer and all these different animals
and selling them for food.
And oftentimes it's like bison,
they would just sell their tongues, which is really crazy
because bison meat is thought to be like
some of the best meat,
but they were pickling their tongues
and sending them back east.
You're now making me think about something
that I don't know the facts,
but the Migratory Bird Act is some,
you know, that we used to shoot birds all the time.
And obviously the most common bird,
or one of the most common birds was passenger pigeons.
Right, and it was, there were so many.
Fill the sky.
They would fill the sky, yeah.
And then I think the Migratory Bird Act
came into effect, anyway, but you're right,
around the Teddy Roosevelt period.
Yeah, because people killed off all the birds,
there were so many passenger pigeons,
they were fucking everywhere,
and we killed them off for food.
And for feathers in people's hats, apparently.
Crazy. Anyway.
Yeah, we're gross.
But, so what do you think, so you have,
you have Teddy Roosevelt National Park system.
I like that you call me on stuff.
In services, you have things like migratory board deck,
you have things like the ESA,
which, you know, had its own unintended consequences,
which we actually cover in our series about
stopping importation but propelling domestic interest through breeding and the demand that's
created through US zoo systems that you see.
So what happens next, I guess, is kind of the question.
It's really complex.
And the problem is people are very dug in on their sides.
You know, you have people that are very dug in with the animal liberation idea, they're
very dug in with PETA and veganism and dug in with anti-hunting and then there's people
that are ranchers and then there's people that are very dug in to animals or our property.
It's quite complicated and it's just one of those things about being a human being,
is there's nuance to most things that are important to all of us.
And the success of wildlife is important to all of us.
It's so true.
And one of the things we've tried to do a little bit is bring the animal rights groups
closer together with the conservation biologist groups so that they can kind of work together because you're right you know so polarized well
there's also the problem is like we were talking about with BC I didn't really
finish my thought but the reason why they outlawed bear hunting in BC is
because the high population centers are all urban so people don't have any
experience with grizzly bears trying to eat their dogs or grizzly bears killing
hikers or grizzly
They don't experience it if they did they'd be terrified
There is a giant predator and you have no chance if it catches you out in the wild
I don't think we should ever kill off all the grizzly bears
But they should control the populations and the way to control the populations
Ethically is you do it through hunting as much as this seems counterintuitive to people that love wildlife, the right way to do it is you
have informed well-schooled biologists that really do a great job of managing
the numbers that are in the area, and then you have people that spend enormous
amounts of money to hunt those things, and then that money goes into maintaining
the population and make sure that it's at a healthy balance.
If there's too many bears, genocide, infanticide in bears is common.
Almost all bears are cannibals.
They eat their own babies.
The whole thing is mad.
And if they don't have enough food or if the males come out of the, if they're hibernating and they come out before the female does with their cubs, they'll actively seek out those cubs for food
and
They will do less of that if there's less of them
and if there's more of a balance between predator and prey and
That's where it gets weird because as a person who loves nature
Who are we to say you should kill a certain amount of bears and a certain amount of wolves that seems fucked
Like we should just sort of like let it be what it is and enjoy it
But the problem is it leaks over into this strange
World that we've created and this is the reality if you want to be able to go to Starbucks
If you want to be able to go outside and have a cheeseburger in an outdoor patio,
you can't have fucking wolves everywhere, okay?
This is just reality, and we're accustomed
to this artificial enclosure
that we've created to keep human beings safe,
and we've lost our perspective
in what it means to be an animal in the world.
No, so I mean like calling elephants if you don't
Manage elephants they'll denude everything and then you they'll all die
Well, there's that but there's also they don't give a fuck who planted that food
If you're in a village and your whole family survival is dependent upon you getting these vegetables that you've planted and then
elephants come in and and eat all your vegetables you could very easily starve to death and
That's real too and people don't want to think about that because you think of elephants. Oh elephants are endangered
Yes, they are elephants are hunted for their ivory. Yes, they were but also elephants are
Africa is fucking huge. There's not the same amount of
Black bears in San Francisco as there are in you know rural, Wyoming
Right it's because that's the environment to live if you went to San Francisco like oh my god black bears are extinct
But you know go to New Jersey. They're everywhere right so it's it's not that the animal is
That you know you shouldn't have any of them
It's just like you there should be places where they exist and places where they don't exist and if
you want to maintain a city you're gonna have to do something about the
population of predators. You're gonna have to do something. It's just like how
far outside of your city does does human control radiate? Well then you have
ranchers right? Okay if you want to have a guy who grows cows so you can eat steak
you're gonna have to be able to protect this guy's crop or it's not going to be profitable
for him to do this.
You're going to have to be able to protect his animals.
I completely agree.
Keep animal-human conflict.
If you want to keep it at bay, keep wild animals in the wild.
I would question, and I think you're right, bringing or reintroducing grizzly bears into
areas where there are high densities of humans.
It's a recipe for trouble.
Well, it's also completely theoretical.
And right now it's theoretical,
although they did just recently reintroduce Grizzlies
back into Washington state.
I don't mean theoretical in the sense
that they haven't done it as far as
what the outcome's gonna be.
Like, you really don't know.
And especially if they get to a point
where they become bold and they're not threatened
by people at all anymore.
And that's what happens in certain parts of the country that's
what happens when they have too many of them in a specific area and then they
compete for resources and it can get weird out the outcome of Tiger King I
mean no one knows this but I'll tell you this I don't think anyone knows it
publicly but you know a few things happened. One thing, this federal law
called Big Cat Public Safety Act was passed largely because of Tiger King. But
the other thing we did just sort of privately is we donated a million
dollars to Tiger Conservation in India and one of the countries where
tigers are still doing quite well. And so we went to visit the program last September in India.
And you know, it's just, it was so interesting
because you were talking about bears attacking people.
In India, they do live with tigers
and they do have obviously a certain amount of people
that get killed every year.
But the key is to keep enough prey
within the area where these tigers are.
It's when the local people, I guess, out hunt
or compete with the prey that the tigers start going
into more human, basically start looking at humans
as something to eat.
But anyway, I just bring that up
because it was something that was a byproduct
of Tiger King that was something that we did just quietly
as the people that I did Tiger King with, including you. Don't need that money, not so quietly now.
Are you aware of the Sunderbans?
Yeah.
And the tiger attacks and the Sunderbans?
Absolutely.
The Sunderbans are fascinating
because hundreds of thousands of people
have been killed by tigers in the last several hundred years.
Yeah, but also brackish water
and they think that might contribute
to the aggression of the tigers.
They drink in salty water and they're just constantly irritated, but they seem to kill people for sport really
Yeah, there's this one story of this group of men that are in a boat and
They're rowing this boat in the water
And they're I don't know if they're rowing it
But they're they're trying to get away from this tiger this tiger jumps into the water swims up to the boat
Kills a guy drags him to shore jumps back in the water swims out to the boat, kills a guy, drags him to shore, jumps back in the water,
swims out to the boat again, kills another guy,
drags him to shore, and one guy gets away to safety.
One or two guys got away to safety.
And were they wearing masks behind their heads?
They weren't, but yeah, that's also what they do.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
When they walk around there and they do surveys
of the animals, but it's also insanely difficult
to find out where they are, too,
because the grass is so high, and, you know, they're just built to fuck things up that's what their job is and
if people live around them people are on the menu that's just what it is with
tiger it didn't make it into Tiger King but we filmed in southern Nepal a place
called Chitwan National Park where tigers are doing very well and they
actually have armed guys you know guards guards with machine guns to protect the Tigers
from poachers.
We filmed there, but it's pretty remote.
I don't remember how many people get killed,
but yeah, where there are Tigers,
people are gonna have problems
if there's high densities of people.
You know, it's all, there's a reason why human beings
don't, you're not supposed to live there.
You shouldn't be living where the tigers live.
They have to, they're stuck, they're fucked.
But boy, we should figure out a way to develop
some sort of an area there where they don't have
to live like that.
There's a lot of people.
I mean, it is amazing.
It's amazing.
Right, India has a billion people.
It's amazing that in India there's still tigers at all
because it's one of, or the second most populated country
in the world world or is it
yeah it feels like when you're in india there's people everywhere right like you think you're
going off on some rural road it's just there's people right but if you go into a place where
the jungle is like where the tigers live it's like really hard to live there like and then the people
that are living there are probably they have no options so they're the poorest yeah and so they're
living you know in sort of a traditional way, exposed.
And then they have to figure out how to protect themselves from these enormous stealthy cats
that are sneaking around everywhere they go.
Fuck.
And people-
But you see plenty of cows, which is amazing, by the way.
Which is so nuts.
Which is so, just roaming these kind of, you know, winding roads.
That is fascinating. I would really love to just roaming these kind of, you know, windy roads. That is fascinating.
I would really love to know what the origin of the sacred cow is.
I'd really love to know the origin of that.
That's one of the most fascinating things, that you have a place where people are starving and they choose not to eat cows.
Yeah.
Fascinating.
And they stop, just the traffic stopping, which is, you know, in these roads that have no lanes and they're all just kind of
wild But it's it's so crazy that they stick to this one thing like I was just watching this news report of this
Group of people that were not Hindu
I think they were of some other religion and they lived in India and they got arrested for killing cows
So they had cows in their yard. They were arrested for them and they bulldozed their homes. Oh wow
Yeah, see if you can find that. Well, they're also probably Muslim. I believe they were yeah
More people die from what in India in terms of wildlife. Is it snakes probably mosquitoes?
I mean, of course mosquitoes, but after that snakes or tigers, I don't know. It's good. I don't think it's tigers
I think the Sunda bands is the the area where they get jacked pretty regularly
but and also how many
Remember people are doing surveys on how many how many people are missing
You know when you're going into these like very remote areas
How many people know Indian authorities bulldogs bulldoze homes of 11 people after finding beef in fridges.
Oh incredible.
Slaughter of cows which Hindus worship as a deity is banned in most of India as is consumption
of their meat.
Isn't that fucking fascinating?
Well you cut down an oak tree in California you're...
Right, but they're not going to bulldoze your fucking house.
Isn't that nuts?
It depends on the kind of tree.
Isn't that nuts?
People found beef in their fridge and cows in their backyard.
Wait, so in India you can eat a hamburger? You cannot. Yeah, they don't really. I was just
saying I think you can get in like hotels and stuff, but you can't get it at like a. Oh wow,
they allow it in hotels? Yeah, you can get it. I mean, it's just in India. You can eat lamb.
You can eat sheep. You can eat other different animals.
You just can't eat cows.
Yeah.
Wow, I didn't even think of that when I was there.
A lot of people think it has its roots
in psychedelic mushrooms, that psilocybin grows on cow manure.
And that these people, which is just because one of the oldest,
I think it's called Choktal Hayuk.
It's like one of the oldest known civilizationsizations which was a cattle worshipping civilization and they had like these like why were people who are fucking starving to death?
Like barely getting by why were they like into worshiping cows? Hmm. Well, that's where you got all your mushrooms
It completely makes sense. It's almost the only thing that makes sense
it's almost the only thing that you could, especially if you have like ancient stories of soma and these different psychedelic compounds that the Hindus would
would eat and these different psychedelic notions or potions rather that were talked about where
we don't really know what the composition of them was, but we do know that psilocybin mushroom has a long history of use,
and it's really common to find them growing on cow manure.
Why would so poor people that don't have any food
not eat this one animal?
I don't know, but I've seen mushrooms in cow manure.
Very confusing information on the burger in India.
Chicken, chicken all you want, baby.
They definitely seem to have burgers,
but I don't know that they're making them with like ground beef that
right it could be like a lamb burger sure be it could be all kinds of stuff
so they call burger right when you get Indian food it's always lamb it's a bit
more Western now I mean if you're going like kind of more you know not to these
people yeah wasn't Western enough I mean I bulldozed their fucking house a
couple of months that's remarkable that's incredible I bet you they're also
Muslim though that's awesome yeah. Yeah, right, right.
It's like the Uyghurs get treated. Yeah, yeah, yeah, there's a lot of that, you know. Yeah, I'm sure there's some of that too.
Yeah, but it's um, it's just our relationship with animals is very bizarre and I think
most people have
really stunted
understanding of it. They're never really around wild animals.
It's a squirrel or a pigeon or something like that.
Like they don't see animals.
It's kind of perverse to a relationship with animals.
It is.
Well, cities, as much as I love them, they are perverse.
They're strange and they've done us
a lot of harm psychologically.
They've created people that are much more vulnerable
than they've ever been before.
They're soft and lazy and entitled
and everything comes easy to them
and I don't think that's normal for human beings either
and you can get food anywhere you want
and all the worst kinds of food
and you're in a prison of your own choosing.
You're going from one closed environment
to another closed environment,
riding around your car or the subway
or whatever you're doing, and we're completely disconnected
to what it meant to be a human being for hundreds of thousands of years.
It happened in a blink of an eye.
In a couple of hundred years, all of a sudden we're fucked.
We're trapped in this bizarre system.
In this system, occasionally we interact with animals. our understanding of it and what we think of it,
what we think it is is so different.
And we have anthropomorphization through like,
you know, Yogi Bear and all that kind of stuff.
And we're so weird with the way we interact with animals.
And we, every piece of it.
I was so lucky to grow up in nature
and I take it for granted.
Where'd you grow up? I grew up mostly in Northern California, but I was so lucky to grow up in nature and I take it for granted. Where'd you grow up?
I grew up mostly in northern California but I was like a feral kid. My mother always said,
Eric you were feral. We didn't plan anything. I would spend my days fishing and hiking in the
creeks. What part of northern California? In Sonoma area. Okay, that's beautiful up there.
But then I spent 40 something years in New York City But I never lost that what you're talking about and that interest and love of going out into nature
But I think you're right today people don't have the experience I had so many kids are from an urban
You know world and they can't connect we don't even know what it's like
But I mean I would imagine if you went to a city your average say like a New York City or Los Angeles
The average person there what percentage of them
spend any time at all alone in the woods?
Yeah.
Very few.
Yeah, we've lost our connection.
I think we had this conversation with Carl Eric recently,
which kind of put it really well for me.
So much of the conversations you have is,
oh, we're gonna go connect with nature.
We're going to Botswana for the summer and do tourism.
But what you really can do is put a bird feeder outside your window and connect sure that way and
you'll see lots of different birds and you must you must have grown up in
nature in some way or no not really no not really but why do you then have such
a like connection to it in a good way I like interesting things yeah you know
I'm it's it's really interesting the fact that so few people engage in it is also interesting
to me because I'm fascinated by whatever the pull of urban life is. Like what is the gravity
of urban life that's changed us into these soft, non-self-sufficient beings that is completely relying on some strange
system that's ultimately polluting the world and decimating of its resources.
Like what are we?
Like we're weird.
And time I spend in the woods, in the wilderness, just being out there, you just get a different
sense of what life actually is. You know, you just
you it's it's so extraordinary to see wild animals in the wild like wild deer and elk
and bears and see them existing. It's it's incredible. It's better than any movie. It's
it's like it gives you a vitamin that you didn't know you needed. You know, like the
feeling that you get when you go out in the sun, like maybe you've been indoors in the winter
and then there's a nice sunny day in the spring,
everybody's outside in the park like,
ah, give me my vitamins, right?
Doesn't it feel like that?
You're lying down, like give me my vitamins.
That's what it feels like, a nice sunny day
in like Central Park, right?
That is a, there's a vitamin that we get in the wilderness
that we are, we don't know we're lacking in
I think it's a part of being a person. I think I think it's a part of being
interconnected to every life form that exists
Where wherever we are and we don't think we are because we live in an apartment and we play Nintendo and we you know
We're locked into this thing that human beings have created
but we're missing something and it's not as
Extreme as Tonka being trapped in that lady's basement, but it's in the neighborhood. There's something about it. It's real similar
There's something about it. That's real weird where where
our our own
prison of our own choosing is
our own prison of our own choosing is not good for us.
And it's interesting, you know, most all of the characters in Tiger King and Champ Crazy
have never seen champs or tigers in the wild
or had any interest.
You know, they were just interested.
They didn't have the intellectual curiosity
that you would think they would have
to see them in the wild.
I'm not shocked.
I do have a question, though, really important.
The chimp with the McNuggets, chicken nuggets,
does he open up the sauce and dip?
Yes.
Did you show him dipping?
He peels.
Well, in that case, I think he just went like this.
But they are dexterous enough.
And they have eaten so much McDonald's
They do know how to do that. So they do dip the
It's in that shot. No that I've seen the the they actually peel it with their mouth
Yeah, they peel the wrapper off
Rappers, but they dig in with the nugget. I think they just
Are not dipping. I like that question. That's a good one. We were confused Yeah, I dip and get it in the honey mustard sauce? I think they just squeeze it in their mouth. Oh, not dipping, no. I like that question.
That's a good one.
We were confused.
Like, is he going to dip?
And then it cut away.
We don't know, is he fucking dipping?
I mean, the sauce toss moment was just so surreal.
Amazing.
You want your sauce?
Here's your sauce.
Yeah, it was so surreal.
Incredible.
They know too much.
Like, just the communication.
Get that piece of paper, and he gets the paper and brings it back.
They knew too much.
It's too creepy. It's too, it's, it's so weird. I mean, you guys did an amazing job of capturing
it and thank God you found that one nutty lady because she really glues it all together.
But everybody, everybody should watch it. It's, it's really good. And everybody should
watch it also because you have to know that that's a thing. Like you, you know, you don't know what people are really capable of until you watch like
a serial killer documentary and you go, oh, Jesus Christ, that's a thing?
Yeah.
So you don't know that people are keeping chimps in their house until you watch your
show and you go, oh, that's a thing?
But it wakes you up from human confinement to the symptom you just described of urbanization
and coastal bubbles.
It's kind of the, people are like,
oh my God, is this America?
Like, what are you, of course, like go outside,
45 minutes away from where you live.
Right, right, right.
I didn't know it was a thing,
and I've been involved with animal people my whole life.
So yeah, it's a thing, monkey moms.
Yeah, I mean, I'm not saying that,
I'm not saying that it's a common thing.
If you let people do it, they'll do it. Yeah, I mean, I'm not saying that it's a common thing, but there's some strange obsessions
in this world.
Yeah, if you give people free license to do it, it's one of the great things about being
an American.
You have so many freedoms.
There's so many things you can do.
But it's also like at a certain point in time, we got to wake up and go, hey, putting a dolphin
in a fucking swimming pool is evil.
And one day when AI can transcribe dolphin communication, we're gonna probably realize
they're as smart as us.
And that's where it gets really, really, really scary, is that we have been engaging in a
form of indentured slavery.
We've captured them, we've raised them from child, from the
time they're a baby they've been in captivity. The whole thing is completely
disgusting and yet it's a normal part of life and until blackfish most people
weren't even aware that it was a thing or what it actually was. When you see
orcas behave in the wild versus the way you see them trapped in those swimming
pools it's torturous.
Their skin's falling off and the whole thing.
But think about this.
A hundred years ago, you can go to the Bronx Zoo and see a boy in a cage, Atabanga.
Right, right, right.
A West African pigmy that they kept in a cage.
Right, what year was that?
Nineteen, eighteen?
Or twenties?
Is it twenties maybe? He shot his, what year was that? 1918. Is it 1920s? Is it 20s maybe?
He shot his, he ultimately shot his brains out.
Even people then knew that Atabanga, this, you know, you know, basically a indigenous
man from West Africa with these.
1912 or something like that.
Anyway, but he, even then people were disturbed to see a human being next to a gorilla in
the Bronx. And he was in a cage by himself?
I think he was in the ape house at the Bronx Zoo.
Well, first he was brought for the World's Fair on display.
Wow.
You know, to show, here he go.
There he is.
There you go.
They shaved his teeth down to be more like fangs.
Oh my god.
Like shark teeth.
1904, there it is.
So what year at the Bronx Zoo? 1904. So he died in 1904, there it is. So what year were you at the Bronx Zoo?
1904.
So he died in 1916, that's right.
Okay, so he was in an exhibit in 1904.
Turn of the century, yeah.
Jesus.
So that's our history.
1964, Bronx Zoo.
That this incredible, I love this image.
It was an exhibition, right?
World's Most Dangerous Animal. love this this image it was a it was a it was an exhibition right the the world's most dangerous animal and its reflection oh yeah it's a mirror with
bars and you walk into it and you see yourself wow but they were really cool
they were conscious of that in 1964 1964 well it was 20 years after we dropped a
fucking couple of nuclear bombs yeah this is a this is a but how cool is that image that is cool. That's yeah, you would never have that today
the most dangerous animal in the world is us which is
You know so true. Well. It certainly is numerically. Yeah, you know and also just the impact we have overall
We're sketchy group.
But we know more about us because of stuff like
what you guys have done.
So thank you very much.
It was really fun talking to you.
And did HBO fund this or did you guys bring it to HBO
after it was done?
We probably went midstream.
So if we kind of typically what we do
is we figure out if we have something.
We self- fund and develop something
Until we get to a point where we think it's ready. I mean tiger king
I almost finished it before I brought it to anybody
Oh, so I think now we have the ability to kind of control output in terms of control of what the ultimate product can be
It was a little bit harder that back then
But yeah, it's we kind of figure out if it's worth it or not, and then we take it out.
But Joe, thanks for having us.
My pleasure.
You guys nailed it, twice.
Chimp Crazy is really good.
Yeah, thank you.
Of course, Tiger King was awesome, too.
And what I said, I really mean.
I think you guys are doing something that's,
you're giving us a better understanding of humans
through this very strange lens
of watching these very bizarre people
and their psychological misfortunes.
Like whatever it is about them,
whatever unfortunate aspect of their mind,
the way they interface with the world,
allows them to do that.
It gives us a better understanding of ourselves.
I really think so.
So I appreciate you having us. My pleasure. Thank you guys. And please finish the show. I will I will I was just bummed out last night