This Past Weekend - #613 - Forrest Galante
Episode Date: September 27, 2025Forrest Galante is a wildlife biologist, adventurer, and TV host known for his shows “Animals on Drugs” and “Extinct or Alive”, along with his multiple Shark Week specials. Forrest joins Theo... to talk about growing up a bush-kid under political turmoil in Zimbabwe, his multiple near-death experiences in the wild, and how to make an animal “de-extinct”. Forrest Galante: https://www.instagram.com/forrest.galante/ ------------------------------------------------ Tour Dates! https://theovon.com/tour New Merch: https://www.theovonstore.com ------------------------------------------------- Sponsored By: Celsius: Go to the Celsius Amazon store to check out all of their flavors. #CELSIUSBrandPartner #CELSIUSLiveFit https://amzn.to/3HbAtPJ Armra: Go to https://tryarmra.com/THEO or enter THEO to get 15% off your first order. Netsuite: Download the free CFO’s Guide to AI and Machine Learning at https://NetSuite.com/THEO. Valor Recovery: To learn more about Valor Recovery please visit them at https://valorrecoverycoaching.com/ or email them at admin@valorrecoverycoaching.com Perplexity AI: Ask anything at https://pplx.ai/theo and download their new web browser Comet at https://comet.perplexity.ai/ ------------------------------------------------- Music: “Shine” by Bishop Gunn Bishop Gunn - Shine ------------------------------------------------ Submit your funny videos, TikToks, questions and topics you'd like to hear on the podcast to: tpwproducer@gmail.com Hit the Hotline: 985-664-9503 Video Hotline for Theo Upload here: https://www.theovon.com/fan-upload Send mail to: This Past Weekend 1906 Glen Echo Rd PO Box #159359 Nashville, TN 37215 ------------------------------------------------ Find Theo: Website: https://theovon.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/theovon Facebook: https://facebook.com/theovon Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thispastweekend Twitter: https://twitter.com/theovon YouTube: https://youtube.com/theovon Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheoVonClips Shorts Channel: https://bit.ly/3ClUj8z ------------------------------------------------ Producer: Zach https://www.instagram.com/zachdpowers Producer: Trevyn https://www.instagram.com/trevyn.s/ Producer: Nick https://www.instagram.com/realnickdavis/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
During the Volvo Fall Experience event,
discover exceptional offers and thoughtful design
that leaves plenty of room for autumn adventures.
And see for yourself how Volvo's legendary safety
brings peace of mind to every crisp morning commute.
This September, lease a 2026 X-E-90 plug-in hybrid
from $599 bi-weekly at 3.99% during the Volvo Fall Experience event.
Conditions apply, visit your local Volvo retailer
or go to explorevolvo.com.
Today's guest is an outdoorsman.
He's a master of animalia, or animals, means animals.
He's known for his focus on animals close to extinction.
He's a host on Discovery.
He's been to some of the most insane parts of the world.
I'm grateful to get to know him and learn about his life.
Today's guest is Mr. Forrest Galante.
I've been sneaking
I'm going to stop for
Yeah, that's the best, dude.
Forrest Galante, thanks for coming in, man.
Yeah, dude.
Thanks for having me.
Glad we made it work.
Yeah, I really appreciate it.
I'm excited, dude, I'm excited to talk about Anamalia
and a little bit about your life
so our listeners know who you are.
Sure.
Yeah, I was complimenting those shoes,
do, those things are nice.
Dude, the Gowrocks.
Is this a company that's all about putting heavy,
weight on your back and training and, you know, I spend a lot of time in a backpack, so I'm a big
fan. Yeah, they look pretty springy, dude. I went with the boots. How do you like the cowboy? Is that
your go-to? Are you a cowboy boots guy? About two days a week now? Two days a week? Yeah. Trying to
quit, though. Yeah. Yeah, I'm none of these six milligrams. Yeah, that's a heavy dose of boot right
there. Dude, what if they do come out with boots? Like, what if Zinn or Alp comes out with a boot
that has, like, nicotine in the rim of it? So, like, soaked into your body through it.
into the feet, getting that little head buzz.
I'd buy them.
Dude, I would put them on if I had to do one of those field sobriety tests for sure.
There you go. There you go. Yeah, you're like, I'm good from the knees up.
Good to see today. You were, you grew up in, I mean, you were kind of born into
an amelia there in like on the edge of Africa in Zimbabwe. That's where you grew up.
Yeah, exactly right. So son of safari business owners, if I wasn't in school, we either lived on a farm,
or my family ran safaris, so I was out in the bush. So I've just been around wildlife my entire
childhood. Oh, wow, that's you right there. Yeah, look at them teeth right there.
Oh, yeah. I wouldn't want to get bit by that. No, yeah, I was part beaver growing up, yeah.
Take me into some of that, like what it's like growing up on, in like a safari land. Does it give you
a different appreciation of animals? Does it make you more fearful of animals? It's a good question.
I mean, I think anything you grow up with, you become used to, right? It's like, this is the norm when you're a kid.
expect that that's the norm. So I grew up, you know, I'd come home from school, kick my shoes off,
run out on the farm, try and catch snakes or be looking for jackals or all these, you know,
which is like a coyote, all these kind of things that sort of is parallel to if you grew up on a
farm here, right? If you're a farm kid here, you'd go out and, you know, you're from Louisiana.
Maybe you see a cotton mouth or coyote in the bush or whatever, right? Yeah, just tickle a chicken
or something. Tickle a chicken, you know? Yeah, that meant something else when I got to high school.
But, you know, I grew up thinking that was the norm and then I'd go out into the bush on
safari with my family, and it would be like, don't leave the tent after dark and stay here. And
there were rules, but as long as you didn't break the rules, you were pretty safe. And what I saw
throughout my childhood was like a decline in animals, you know, the same camps we'd go to where there
used to be huge herds of elephants. There's now two or three elephants or big wild spaces.
There's now farm fields. So I didn't really realize it as a kid, but as I got older, I was like,
I don't like, I don't want all that wild stuff to go away. And so I didn't really realize it when
I was young, but over time, even as a child, I was like, this is something that I would like
dedicate my life to, is making sure that all this wild stuff, spaces, animals, all that doesn't
go away.
So I'm guessing you're thinking then along the lines of like conservation, like that, did you come out of
your youth just feeling inspired towards that?
That's a very nice way to put it.
It starts by breaking a lot of rules, bending the laws a lot, and just being a, you know,
you know those kids, right?
You're the yoint kid on Instagram.
He's catching all the snakes and stuff.
you're one of those kids.
Got it.
You know what I mean?
And so in the U.S.
there's a lot of laws against,
you know,
don't harass this and don't do that.
In Zimbabwe,
there's fuck all for laws,
right?
So it's just kind of do whatever.
So I think that love
and that appreciation came from fiddling
with everything.
Catching it,
trapping it,
working with it.
But ultimately,
as you grow,
as you fall in love with something,
you want to protect it.
And that's conservation.
And so what was,
what was thinning the herds there?
People,
just mostly encroachment,
a little bit of poaching.
you know, ivory poaching and stuff, hunting elephants, but more like habitat encroachment, you know,
villages popping up, big trees getting cut down for farm field, goats and things getting moved in,
you know, stuff like that, like grazing and so pushing the animals out.
And was it affecting, like, were you guys on a bigger piece of like nature reserve or?
The safari camps were. They were all out in the bush, but it still, you know, you still would just
see a general impact, like a thinning of animals.
Okay.
Yeah.
So did your family continue the safari business in Zimbabwe, or how do you get from there sort of to here into the U.S.?
Yeah, so we tried to, but during the early 2000, Zimbabwe was under something called the land reform campaign, which was President Robert Mugabe at the time, who declared himself supreme leader for life.
He did this thing where...
Oh, like a boss, huh?
Like Birdman.
Yeah, he came in hard, yeah.
And he made it, this land reform made it so that it was very, very hard.
Like my family's six generations, Zimbabwe, but basically it was a race war.
And if you were white, you weren't supposed to, there was a land reform campaign passed
that meant that if you were black and you had heritage, you could come and take that land away.
No way.
Because, you know, of colonial settlement and things like that.
Obviously, I grew up long after any colonial settlement took place.
But, yeah, we had gunfights and we had, you know, neighbors murder.
and Punguis, which is indoctrination through torture into the political party, the Zanu-PF political
party. There was some crazy political turmoil.
Zimbabwe's land reform refers to a controversial program that began in 1980 and escalated in 2000,
redistributing farmland from white commercial farmers to black Zimbabweans.
So your family was...
We were farmers.
So you were farmers, and this happened as you guys were there.
So when I was a kid, I mean, it says here in 1980 is when it started, which it may have.
But when I was a kid, we never locked our...
doors. There was no, we didn't have barbed wire fences, nothing. It was a very safe, very peaceful
country. But in like 99, 2000, and then 2001 when we left, it got really bad, really quickly.
And it was sort of an attempt by Robert Mugabe to retain power for his party, the Zanupif political
party. Oh, I see. So his party would feel like maybe they were going to be pushed out. And so he's
like, I need to do something drastic right now in order to stay in. Exactly. And so I'm going to
return this colonialized land.
the people from whites to the black to the black people exactly got it yeah and so we're but you saw that like
in neighbors you saw people's lands being taken over stuff oh i saw a kid get shot in the head we saw
everything it was crazy yeah i mean there were gun fights there we had these war veterans settling on the
fence lines we were the smallest farm in the shamva district that was where i grew up and so we were
the last ones to get taken because we had the lowest political incentive or financial incentive right so
you look at the area where we live there were all these huge farms
right, million dollar a year plus tobacco farms and things.
We were a tiny little Ulster Maria, which is an exotic flower farm.
And so we were the last ones to get grabbed because why bother with us, right?
We'll get them at the end.
Exactly.
So we saw neighbors get murdered.
These Punguys, like I said, which is indoctrination through torture, crazy war chants,
shootouts, everything.
It was nuts for a little while.
And would these groups just kind of come like in just trucks, like, and sort of,
or would they come in, like, force?
Was it the government coming?
Was it just like citizens, black citizens?
It was pretty much just citizens, like unemployed citizens, basically.
And for the majority, it was kids with guns.
Wow.
You know, you're 14, 15 years old.
You grew up maybe on the streets of Harari.
And all of a sudden, you have this dictator like president going,
hey, those rich white guys over there, go get them.
Right.
You know, and they're like, okay, you know.
You know, they call it war veterans that survived the war.
There were no war veterans.
It was just kids with guns, like 14 to 20-year-old kids.
Wow.
And that's what, you know, shootouts and all this.
But all that being said, I don't want to paint a bad light on it.
It was incredible childhood.
There was just a couple rough years there, yeah.
Well, one thing that's fascinating about Africa, even like places that I've been there, is you see the racial, like the racial colonial.
You see that.
It's very evident in a lot of places.
You also see a lot of like black leadership that comes into power and gets very desperate.
And we'll try to own everything themselves as well.
It's a tribal mentality, right?
It's like, I come from this culture, whether it's Shauna, Zulu, whatever it happens to be.
And that tribe is like, the way that I've been a dominant tribe is I dominate another tribe, right?
And this is not a racial thing.
It's just, it's a cultural thing.
And they get leadership, whether that's being a president or being a minister or whatever it is.
And then how am I going to retain it?
I'm going to dominate another tribe.
It doesn't matter if they're white, black, Zulu, Shauna, whatever.
You know, it's just, I'm going to dominate.
And that's a crazy thing.
I'll tell you a crazy story. I don't think I've ever told anybody this publicly. I grew up on a farm of 200, 200 employees that worked on our farm, right? Like 200 people that pick flowers, blah, blah, blah. My best friends were all Black Chana kids, Zimbabween kids. And I remember one day going to school. I was 14, so I didn't really understand what was going on other than it was stuff was going bad. And my best friend who had been my best friends since we were like seven years old. We went to lunch that day, like a random Tuesday. And the prefects, which like the older, like the seniors, right? They come out and they're like, you two. You two.
come over here. Like, Forrest, go on that side. And I'm like, at school. At school. Like proper school,
you know, like button down, like, you know, very formal school. Like, Forrest, go over here.
And Malusi, go over here. Melucy was my friend. Melusie's black. And they're like, go on this side.
And I was like, why are we getting split up? And they're like, we're having a fight. Black versus white at school.
And my best friend who was felt as shocked as I would, he got like moved by the seniors to the other side of the rugby field to have a fist fight with us.
And I was just like, why are we doing this? You know, it was like so confused.
Because we didn't understand it. We were just little kids. But this racial tension got insane. And yeah, it just, it boiled over. And you've seen like Donald Trump, you know, just called out the South African president around it. But that's similar sort of thing is taking place in South Africa now. With the same type of energy, like let's take the land back from the white owners. Exactly. Well, I think it's the same thing. Sometimes when you look at Hamas in Gaza, it's like a lot of people believe that Hamas was elected because they felt
no other way to try and stop Israeli people from coming and just taking over their homes.
That's a lot of what I hear from friends on both sides of it.
That like they just, they needed to do something drastic, right?
So they elected the most drastic element that they could.
And I think that's a sign of desperation, right?
Regardless of the situation, it's like if you're desperate, you do something drastic.
It's a Hail Mary.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think some of that's even, it's human nature.
Totally.
I do it myself, right?
You're like, shit, what do I do?
Let's just send it, you know?
Oh, definitely.
When it's getting late at night and your wife left you or whatever,
and you just text some girl that you knew from a couple of years.
Still up?
Yeah, let's go.
Yeah, dude.
So I think that happens a lot.
You saw someone get shot?
Yeah, one of the neighbors, we were riding our motorbikes, and he got shot, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
I mean, so these groups, they come, and then would they kind of kick people out of their homes?
I mean, was that sort of how it was happening?
and then how did you guys end up eventually leaving?
Yes, so basically they'd come, they'd surround the property or the farm,
but whites and Bob Wins, similar to like White South Africans or whatever,
they're pretty hard people, grow up farming culture, you know.
So they dig their heels in and say, bring it on,
and they'd ultimately end up being a shootout or something like that.
And so what happened to us, and I kind of speak for every farm,
but a lot of our friends, like a lot of their dads got murdered and all this other stuff.
But what happened to us is my mom was a single mother
with my sister and I on the farm at the time
and they came, they surrounded our farm
and they came and they said to my mom,
they're like, we'll give you 24 hours to leave
or we're going to kill you and take everything.
And so my mom, and I remember I was 14,
I ran upstairs and I grabbed my gun
and I grabbed a knife and I was like,
bring it on, and my mom hit me.
And she's like, go get in the car,
and she's like, go get in the car.
And I was like, yes, Mom.
You know, and so we left.
So nothing bad happened to us physically,
but it was just a very, like,
ripped from everything overnight kind of situation.
Wow. So Mama Galante had the sense, huh? Yeah, thank God, because I didn't. Still don't. Yeah.
What happened to your dad? He wasn't there? No, they split up when I was pretty young and he moved into town and remarried and all of that, and he just didn't want to have much to do with it.
And your mother ran a botanical farm out there? Yeah, yeah, yeah, ran the flower farm. Flowers and oranges.
Was it pretty beautiful out there with the flowers? So beautiful. So we had these big massassea trees. We lived on a copy, which is like a granite mountain with the house on top.
Masasa tree, it's called? Yeah, yeah, yeah. I want to see it. It's really, yeah.
Like your iconic African tree.
Yeah.
Dude, there's something so amazing about being in Africa.
Where'd you go when you went to Africa?
We've been to Kenya.
Mm-hmm.
To, oh, Mombasa.
Oh, Mombasa, yeah, on the coast there.
Mombasa.
Oh, I'll tell you, this is just a funny story.
It's different, but so we went to some bar there.
It was called Florida.
It was like, they give it like an American name
because they know that like Americans are going to come and get off of cruise ships and stuff.
And I was there.
I was on a thing called Semester at Sea.
It's like a floating university.
Oh, you went.
as a kid. Yeah. That's cool. Yeah. And so it was pretty impressive. I worked in the bookstore on the ship
and you got to, and that worked as my tuition. So I got to go on this crazy adventure. But we're there.
And one of my buddies, this little Jewish guy, he like got a beat, he got a blowjob from a local,
possibly a prostitute or just a like. Gray area. Yeah. Yeah. From a nice gray area woman,
cute girl. And he said that while he was taking his wiener out of his pants, that it cut
on his zipper and so now he's scared the whole time he's like we're in africa he's like
he's getting AIDS he's getting AIDS he's getting AIDS he's like asking people he's like
trying to nonchalantly ask people about AIDS at the bar and stuff so dude at Florida he was so
he was so neurotic he ended up ordering a glass of vodka and it was like three hours till
our ride was coming and he literally stood over in the distance and put his wiener just into a
class of vodka and held it in there
I like the resourcefulness, though.
I feel like that would work.
That might be the cure.
Shout out to my buddy Michael from South Florida, dude.
He was a, and he was an awesome guy.
But anyway, that was one place that we went.
Africa is a great place, man.
It's wild.
There's no political stability anywhere on the continent, in my opinion.
But it's just such a great continent.
There's so much wildlife.
There's so much freedom.
There's nothing you can't do there.
You know what I mean?
If you can dream it, you can do it.
Which isn't always a good thing,
because if you can dream of taking over people's houses,
you can do it.
But it's a crazy, cool place.
So you grow up in this wildlife.
I mean, everything about Africa, it's so per-
Like, even I remember being there
and, like, we would sleep at night
with the mosquito nets.
Like, nature was just right there.
Like, it was like, you know, so much so that, you know,
I mean, I grew up in Louisiana.
We have mosquitoes, but we didn't have the nets.
Like, you had to keep these things, you know.
I mean, if some of them were big,
you almost needed the Brooklyn nets
standing there to block them off.
You know what I'm saying?
Oh, yeah.
But just the fact that nature's right there, you can feel it breathing in the distance.
It always feels like there.
So you grew up in that, like, dedicated, like immersed in wildlife.
When did you kind of feel like you wanted to have it as a career?
Not until, I'll tell you a quick, funny story about mosquito nets.
Yeah.
So I grew up in this farmhouse, right?
Like all open windows, no air conditioning or anything like that.
Big open verandas and balconies and stuff.
And we were plowing a field when I was probably nine or ten years old, found a baby monkey.
in the field. A little vervet monkey.
Vervet monkey. Yeah. They call him vermin monkeys because they're like pest monkeys.
And I scooped him up. It was like, what's wrong here? That little guy right there.
Oh, yeah. And it's good. Blackface, too, first of all.
Yeah, yeah. He's got to do something about that.
Well, he may, he may just be lashing back at Drusky, who just did whiteface the other day.
Dude, I saw 200 billion views or something. It was funny, though. I don't know if it's bad or good, but it was funny.
I think it's great. Yeah. Dude, when he's driving around, he rolls down his window. He's like, you lost boy?
The guy's like, no, sir.
It was so bad.
And then he spits.
And the funny thing is, he has that big hat on to he has to like kind of move.
He moves his head out the window.
Dude, it's too much.
I literally saw it this morning.
I couldn't believe it.
But take me through your story.
I'm sorry, man.
No, you're good.
About mosquito nets.
Long story short, I rescue this baby monkey.
Turns out, and monkeys do this.
Her mother, his mother abandoned him because he had a heart murmur, like a bad heart condition.
So he got dumped in the field, right?
because they do that, then they can have another baby,
and they takes a long time to raise the baby, blah, blah, blah.
So I scoop up this little monkey named Chippy
and bottle feed him until his eyes open, the whole thing.
And he ends up growing up, and he's my bunk bedmate.
So he'd sleep on top of my mosquito net.
You know, there's like a round coil, and it comes down on a mosquito net.
He'd sleep up there.
And every morning, as I get out of bed,
he'd jump down off of that onto my shoulder.
We'd go down to breakfast, and then he'd scamper off into the trees.
And, like, you know, that's a good depiction of, like,
how I grew up wild-wise.
Like, I had a monkey sleeping in my mosquito net with me, you know?
Like, it was, it was an awesome, awesome childhood.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's just something about being there, especially when you're in a safari house.
Like, like, you know, you get out into the bush, and then sometimes you'll, you'll stay at kind of like a, it's kind of a hotel in a way.
Yeah, a lodge.
Yeah.
And some of them would be nice and some would be very bare bones.
But it was like, you know, you'd have the animal skin rugs and you'd have the nets and you'd just have a silence.
that was loud, but it was completely, it was like, God,
it was like the thickest silence that ever was made.
That's such a good way to put it.
It was so fascinating.
And your story reminds me of this guy, they had this guy, I want to say his name
was Marco.
Oh, I'm thinking of a guy, Dr. Wiggins.
There was a guy, Dr. Wiggins, maybe John Wiggum.
He raised his child with a monkey.
Oh, whoa.
That's cool.
Oh, this is it.
Sorry, Winthrop Kellogg.
Oh, boy.
Wentthrop Kellogg's experiment, commonly known as the ape and the child,
involved raising a baby chimpanzee named Goua,
alongside his own son, Donald, under identical conditions to study the effects of
environment versus hereditary on development.
That's crazy.
Yeah, in 1931, Kellogg and his wife bought Goula, then seven and a half months old,
into their Florida scroll up.
It's always Florida.
There's nowhere else.
Where else are you raising a monkey and an ape and a kid together?
Florida, dude.
It's got to be Florida.
It's not like this happening in London.
You know what I mean? It's always Florida.
It's our, that's our Africa.
Yeah, it's our Africa.
He ended their Florida home to grow up with Donald, their 10-month-old son.
Both children were given the same care and subjected to daily scientific observations.
Can we see a video of it?
There's no way this kid grew up normal.
Oh, no.
Look at the little shoes on them.
I know they put shoes on the chin.
Are you kidding me?
Do you ever just think I was born in the wrong era?
Like, if I was born in the 30s, I'd do this.
Oh, first.
I'd have nine kids and five chimps, no problem.
And I live in Florida.
Oh, it was a different time.
Look at them right here.
They're trying different stuff with them.
That's crazy.
Trying to put a hat on each of their head and then teach the monkey to keep it on its head.
And he just keeps pulling it off the kids' head.
Oh, man, that's nuts.
And they're just tickling both of them.
Yeah, if you guys get to watch on the YouTube, I mean, this is absolutely ridiculous.
I've never heard of this.
That's crazy.
some of the findings. Can you go back?
Oh, here we go.
Gua learned many human behaviors.
She dressed in clothes, walked upright.
Ooh, used a spoon. That's crazy.
Drank from a glass,
open doors, and imitated gestures of affection,
sometimes outperforming Donald in motor skills
and tasks.
The Kellogg's concluded that there are
definite limits to how much non-human species
can be humanized.
Towards the end, Donald began
imitating Guua's chimpanzee vocalizations,
raising concerns about
potential language delays for the human child. Wow. So the human also ended up becoming more
more like the chimpanzee. Why did they end it? Did they say why?
The chimp ate the kid's face. I mean, that's how these things always end.
It really is, dude. It's like there's no good coming to this. Look, it's the same reason
why we ended the pit bull circus that we were doing in our backyard. Yeah, right. Yeah. It ends
one way. Went through Kellogg concluded that while Goub behaved like a human child in many ways,
her physical and brain structure limited how human she could become, confirming the experiment's
demonstration of hereditary limits. After the experiment, Gould was returned to a primate center
and sadly died less than a year later. Donald's later life was marked by tragedy as well,
dying by suicide at 43. God. That's not good. In short, the experiment ended due to concerns
about Donald's language development. Gou is increasing strength and behavior, yep, and the practical
and ethical difficulties. I mean, it's just, there's a whole argument for nurture over nature,
but at the end of the day, chimpanzee is incredibly strong, they get violent. The best way I think
to describe it is when a chimpanzee sexually matures, it doesn't mentally mature past that of like a
toddler. So when a three-year-old throws a temper tantrum, it's like, be quiet, you know, and you
restrain them or whatever. When a full-grown chimpanzee throws a temper tantrum, it rips you to shreds.
And it might not hate you or anything else. It's just a temper tantrum, the same as a two or
three-year-old does, right? Oh, that's fascinating. Yeah. Yeah, I kind of interrupt you,
though. You were talking about we were going into... Oh, well, you know what you were saying?
Sorry, I don't want to interrupt you, but you were talking about that thick silence that you get in
Africa. When you and I were texting last week and you were like, dude, I'm overwhelmed at the
moment. To me, that is the most, like, ground, that silence that you're talking about,
that's what, like, brings me back, you know, because I'm on my phone all day, too. I'm sure you
are working and texting and emails and blah, blah. That feeling, though, that, you
you just described that thick silence at being out in the bush, you don't have to be in a tent
in the middle of nowhere, you can be in a lodge or whatever, but being a little bit disconnected from
modern civilization and more connect, more plugged into the bush and the wildlife, I think that's
the most grounding thing, man. Yeah. And I think Africa, I do believe it feels like makes like the
purest form of it. I can't explain it. I've tried to, yeah, I mean, you know, it just, I mean,
they say it's the birthplace of civilization, I'm sure, for a reason. Right now, I'm going to look you
straight there in your two eye holes right there. And I'm going to tell you, honestly, I've been
taken Armra colostrum. Our health has become the punchline. From seed oils to stress, from toxins to
pollutants, the modern world is screwing with our health at the cellular level. But here's the
thing. You don't have to settle for feeling like garbage 24-7. Armra Colostrum is nature's original
health hack, packed with over 400 bioactive nutrients that fortified gut integrity, strengthen
immunity, revitalize hair growth, fuel, stamina, elevate focus, and help you function like a human
again. Welcome back, buddy. We've worked out a special offer for our audience. Receive 15% off your first order.
Go to tryarmra.com slash Theo or enter Theo to get 15% off your first order.
that's t r y a r m r a dot com slash t h e o i put armor i put it right in my smoothie bam
daddy's doing good what does the future hold for business well if you ask nine experts you'll
get ten answers bull market bear market raccoon market inflation's up rachel rise fall
her, God, bury it in the yard. Can someone please invent a crystal ball? Until then, over 42,000
businesses have future-proofed their business with NetSuite by Oracle, the number one AI cloud ERP,
bringing accounting, financial management, inventory, and HR into one fluid platform. With real-time
insights and forecasting, you're peering into the future with actionable data.
and when you're closing the books in days, not weeks, you're spending less time looking backwards
and more time on what's next. If I needed something like this, I would get this.
Speaking of opportunity, download the CFO's guide to AI and machine learning at NetSuite.com
slash Theo. The guide is free to you at NetSuite.com slash T-H-E-O. NetSuite.com slash Theo.
So when did you know that it was kind of a career calling for you to work with animals and to work with nature so closely?
I don't know if there was an exact moment, but, you know, we came over to the States, we got kicked out of Zimbabwe, like I mentioned, came over here, went on welfare, bounced around.
I got in trouble a whole bunch. Like, I felt very confined coming to the U.S. because I'd grown up on a farm, 200 acres, barefoot, guns, motorbikes, freedom.
And then I came to Central California, or I'll actually start in Oakland, California, which
is the poll went into government housing, you know. And long story short, I felt very like
trapped, I guess. Got in trouble a bunch. My mom moved us out of Oakland before I got in really
bad trouble. Went to a little town in Central California called Cayucas. And it was great,
like a surfer town, 2,000 people. And I used to go diving and fishing all the time because that felt
like the wildest place to be, like kind of connected me sort of a little bit back to Africa. And I
I think, long story short, I met a girl, I went to college, blah, blah, blah.
But at some point, wildlife, I'm one-track mind.
It's the only thing, wildlife and rugby are the only two things I've ever really, really cared about.
So I was, like, so passionate about it.
And then I was like, well, I'm not going to be a safari guide in Cayucas, California.
So I'll go to school to be a biologist.
And that was sort of the next best thing is like I'll become a scientific animal guy instead of a physical animal guy.
And then ended up coming back to being a physical animal guy.
Yeah.
Yeah. Well, I'm glad you did, man. You have a new show that definitely, like, sparked me up. It's animals on drugs.
That's right. We're texting when I was in Columbia. That's right. Yeah. Yeah, it's on HBO Max as of, like, yesterday, I think.
Oh, yeah, dude. I was just like, dude, send me a gift from Columbia so I can snort it, mother.
But take me through this show, Animals on Drugs. Because, you know, they had like the cocaine bear.
Uh-huh. Cocaine bear, the movie. Cocaine bear. And then they have, I was trying to.
I think of some, oh, Crancoons would be good.
Crocoons.
How did I not think of that as a title?
Come on, Cranes.
What is, bro, what's in my show?
That's a no-brainer.
What's that in your recycling bin?
Yeah.
You see a little bit of smoke coming up from the recycling bin?
Yeah, the bin's vibrating.
Yeah.
Crancoons.
He's like, smiling.
Crack-coons.
So, yeah, I was thinking of Crancoons.
I'm trying to think of what else.
Oh, that's actually a movie.
I didn't even know that.
That's hilarious.
Craccoon is a movie or lying?
2024 official trailer, Craccoon.
Oh, my God.
I mean, look, so for that show, we capitalized on this, this hilarious thing that we're talking about.
But the show's legit.
It's the reality is animals are getting into like human substances across the world, right?
Whether that's bears breaking in to get on booze and getting hit by trains and stuff because they're licking up booze off train tracks.
Just the whole story I can tell you.
The cocaine hippos in Colombia, like Pablo Escobar brought hippos over.
They escape.
Now there's 200 of them.
They're going crazy because hippos are not native there.
In Florida, we found an alligator that actually tested positive for having meth in its system
because it was living in the cesspool behind a meth house.
So that's what the show is about.
It's about it's really at its core.
It's a show about human wildlife conflict.
But you don't get people to watch a show called Human Wildlife Conflict,
but you do get them to watch a show called Meth Gator.
So that was kind of what it was.
Oh, yeah.
Or ketamice?
That's what I was thinking.
Ketomice.
There we go.
Man, we need like four.
You're like the chat GPT of drug animals over here.
You're like, oh, you see a mice go in a hole.
What about a Khole?
A Khole.
He's just a hole.
He's surrounded by cheese, but he can't even swallow.
No, well, take me through some of that.
So take me through the Escobar one.
Is that when I was texting you in Columbia?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, what was that trip like down there?
Sure.
So, I mean, I had this idea to do that show a long time ago.
And really, originally, I just wanted to go work on the hippo problem in Columbia.
So for context, Pablo Escobar brought hippos to his personal zoo,
called Hacienda Napolis in the 90s.
Because he just wanted nice,
he just wanted big animals?
Yeah, he built this insane place down there.
And so he brought in giraffes and elephants
and lions and all this stuff.
When he died in 99, 93,
when he died in 93,
the Colombian government came in and they're,
you know, they had a shootout, he died, whatever.
Then they came in there like,
we'll take the lions, we'll take the giraffes,
we'll take whatever.
Oh, we can't do anything about these hippos.
Like hippos are gnarly.
People think of hippos like Fantasia,
happy, whatever.
Hippos are gnarly animals.
And so the hippos, they let out.
They're angry?
Super hungry.
No angry, I said?
No, they are.
They're just very territorial, very defensive.
I think on my Instagram, there's clips of them charging me at the fence and stuff.
But anyway, these hippos got out four of them.
Now there's over 200.
There's no predators, because it's Columbia, not Africa.
There's no lions to eat them.
There's no crocodiles to eat them.
There's unlimited food.
And they're killing people and injuring people.
And so, but some of them have all.
also ingested cocaine. Well, there was a rumor that Pablo Escobar used to feed them
coca leaves to make them more aggressive to kill his enemies, which is a really cool
legend, whether it's true or not, I have no idea. But anyway, the Colombian government and I
have been, so, you know, I work on these kind of large-scale animal projects. So I started speaking
with the Colombian government about this when there was like 100 hippos, like four, five, six years
ago. And they're like, please help, we're underfunded, we're understaffed, we need whatever
help we can get to help mitigate this problem. So people, Columbia, don't want to kill the hippos.
They like them. They've created a tourist, like a tourism industry around them. There's like kind of
cute. The whole town there, um, where Hacianapolis is, I'm blanking on the name of it now. It's like
hippo theme. There's like hippo statues everywhere. They've created like a thing around them.
But so they're dangerous, but also it's part of the culture now? Yeah, exactly. So it's a weird thing
where it's like, okay, there's this huge invasive species that's super dangerous, but the average
people love them. Like the people from Medellin will take weekend trips to go see.
them. And they don't want to kill them, but they don't want them to get worse because they'll hurt
people. So what do you do? So we went down there and worked with the Colombian government with
Cornare, which is the organization down there. And we came up with this sort of threefold
approach, which doesn't kill them. So it's castrating them, chemically castrating them,
sterilizing them and relocating them. So I went down there with trank rifles and chemicals and
vets and all these things and caught and snipped nuts off of hippos.
So chemically castrating. So take me on that. Are you finding them in the wild?
Yeah. Yeah. So we build Bomas, which are like giant, like, funnel traps, basically. And then we bait them in with giant bags of carrots and beats and things like that.
Boma, it's called? Yeah. There might be one on my Instagram. You might be able to find it. Do you all sneak up on them?
Yeah. Yeah. So you sneak up on them, you find, yeah, that's like a Boma, that second picture there.
So a Boma trap, it's kind of like a kennel.
Exactly. Yeah, exactly. And you put a lot of good snacks in there?
You put all the goodies in there and you make a trip wire so that when they go in, the door closes. And then they go nuts, you know, and they start banging again.
against the fence and blah, blah, blah.
So we're catching these hippos.
It was super fun.
And the little ones, you can chemically castrate
with a chemical called gonacon,
meaning basically you shoot them with this dart,
and the chemical goes in,
and it stops them from ever sexually maturing.
So they grow up, but they don't,
if you go to that one on the far right there,
down, oh, there's me doing surgery in the middle of the night.
Yeah.
Is this a castration surgery or not?
Yeah, castration surgery.
So this is a surge right here.
So you guys have a hippo here that's been sedated?
Yep.
So this was a large female.
She had four offspring,
with her. We chemically castrated all the four offspring with the gonachon, that chemical.
Okay. So gonacon, you inject it. So now, are those asleep as well? No. So them you can do
awake, but the gonacon only works if you're pre-sexual mature. Once you hit adolescence,
it's too late. It just, the effects would just wear off. So that's me darting them right there.
Okay. I kind of saw it for a split second. Okay. So you, so you can dart them with the gonacon and it
doesn't hurt them? No, it's just like, it's just like getting a shot. And then they can't have children.
They can never have children. They grow up. And do they care or they're okay with it?
I don't think they know.
Yeah, to be honest.
I think they still get all the fun.
Okay, okay.
And then, but then the adults, that doesn't work on.
So we have to go into the bush and catch the adults and then actually perform surgery on them, which is what that video was, which is much harder to do.
What do you have here?
Pause it for me?
So that's the mouth of a hippo held open with a piece of, like, metal pipe between the tusks.
Oh, my gosh.
And then a breathing tube going into its diaphragm.
Can you smell their breath while they're breathing?
Oh, yeah.
Is it pretty intense or is it?
okay. And they mostly eat, well, they primarily eat vegetation, so it's not too bad, but it's
kind of like horse breath. Like being at a salar bar or something? Yeah, you know, you got some stuff
in their teeth. It's hot. Like you get your head up in there and it's like, with this big
hot, sticky breath coming out. Wow, that's crazy. And so you have their mouth pride open,
they're asleep. Yep. And so what do you do then in order to, because you have to castrate them
a different way? Yeah. So the males are easy. You just grab the nuts, lop, lop,
moth sew it up, right? It takes a few minutes from when they go to sleep. And you reach in through
their mouth to do it? No, you just go down downstairs. Why are y'all doing this then? That's just to
keep them breathing and alive. So see, there's a pipe in the bottom, bottom right there, bottom left.
That's a breathing tube. So that's just keeping them breathing. But this is a female. So females are way
harder. You have to make an incision that's like this long. Reach in there. Feel for the gonads.
Snip them, quarterize them, pull them out, and then close her back up. And if you don't close her up
perfectly, one stitch breaks, water floods in there getting infection and die. So it's got,
it's like a 12 hour process per animal. Really? Yeah, it's a big, and you have to do it at night
because it's so hot. If you do it during the day, they overheat in the sun because it's Columbia.
So like, you catch them, keep them as calm as you can until like 9 p.m. Then you start putting
them to sleep and work all night and release them at like four or five in the morning. Wow. And so
how many people does it take to really pull this off, honestly? Honestly, we probably had a team at 30. Yeah. It's a big to do.
Is it exciting?
So exciting.
I mean, I get goosebumps talking about it because it's just like, it's high adrenaline.
The hippo is trying to kill you.
You're racing the clock before the sun comes up.
You can't over-anithetize the hippo because then it dies.
And if we kill one, the freaking Colombians are going to kill us.
You know what I mean?
Not really, but they'll be so upset.
My career is over.
Yes.
If I kill a hippo giving certain, my career is over, right?
I'm canceled across everything.
So it's like, it's like, all this action and adrenaline.
It doesn't sound exciting because you're spending 12 hours like with your elbows deep in a hippo,
but it's really exciting.
Yeah.
I think it certainly seems high energy, especially since there's other people there
and you guys are all locked in with this one mission.
Oh, yeah.
It seems like that game, remember that game operation you played as a kid?
Yeah.
It seems like that, but like the highest level.
That's right.
Yeah, exactly right.
It's fun, man.
It's cool.
Wow, dude, that's incredible.
So that was the experience of going down there and those animals, the drug relationship
was that Escobar brought them over.
And so that's why they're there.
And so that gets you into that whole universe of hippos and
Columbia. Exactly. It's not that the hippos are doing lines, you know. It's just that they got brought
here through the drug trade. And it's like a vessel to tell that story. Yeah. Yeah. And that's
that's cable, right? I'm on Discovery. That's how you do it on Discovery. Oh, it's exciting. Yeah.
And it's, you know, it's cool. It's cool, man. Nobody else is doing that stuff on TV, you know,
like get to catch hippos and show the world how you cut their nuts off and like this whole like backstory on
Pablo Escobar. And I mean, it's like, it's like a rodeo. Yeah. It's cool. Yeah. I like it's
fascinating to me. And do you get to keep any of the animals nuts or not?
Dude, I wanted to, but in order to travel with animal parts, you have to have CITES permits,
which is this international conservation thing. Oh, yeah. I wanted a jar of hippo nuts on
my shelf so bad, so bad, but I left them all in Columbia. Oh, yeah. Dude, you can't even fly out
Hawaii with an avocado. Nope. No, it's like, yeah. Same thing. Yeah. So imagine trying to explain,
especially in Columbia, you know, I got them like wrapped up in a little bit of paper towel. It's tucked under my
dirty underwear. They're like, what's that? It's like, yeah, that's going to be hard to explain.
But hey, I think they'll be glad that it's not okay. They'll be like, oh, dude, yeah, he said there's
a couple kilos of fucking, of hippon nuts. It's bam, bam, but a different kind, yeah.
Dude, I remember we went on a, um, I remember in South Africa, we had, we met, I was there
performing one time. It was some really great. I bet you're huge in South Africa.
Dude, we actually did really good there. I haven't been there forever. I need to go back.
Because that's being very familiar with that culture.
Your style of comedy is so on brand for that South Africa, like, audience, I think.
But sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt you.
No, I need to go.
And it's, I think it's been my favorite country that I've ever been to.
Let's go, man.
I'll take you around.
I'll show you the bush side of it.
Dude.
Let's go.
You do a show, and then we'll go out into the bush, catch some animals, work with some creatures.
It'd be rad.
That would be really cool.
Yeah, man.
Do one of my goals I was even going to say I was thinking about this yesterday is I want to get more
involved with nature, like fishing, hunting, just learning how to be able to survive myself
out in the woods every the next two years. It's such a grounding thing, Theo. I'm telling,
I don't want to be all ethereal, but it makes you so connected to the planet. It's such a good
feeling when you feel self-sufficient out in nature. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I want that. I think it would
just allow me a different level of peace, you know, and a different level of like, I don't have to be
so attached to like these more worldly things because I know. I know.
that I would be okay, you know, like a level of like, um, confidence.
You, you get confidence. You get such natural confidence and you, the outside, I don't know
if you're like this, but, you know, I'm also not to your degree, but I'm in the public light as
well. I read these like negative comments on YouTube or whatever and I like get in my own head and
I'm like, fuck, that sucks. Like, why do these people not like this or whatever? You got in nature,
there's no time for that. Yeah. You know, you're there. You're working on the fish you're trying to
catch or the bird you're trying to hunt or the animal you're trying to save. And that's what you're
You're not checking your phone. You're not looking at tweets or YouTube comments. You're just there.
Yeah, yeah. There's not like some little like a bear cub in the distance on his phone.
This loser's trying to hunt me. He don't know. Yeah. You're like, I'm trying really hard.
Now, that would be cool, actually, if animals were like, look at these bitches trying to hunt us and they came.
You're like sitting in the blind. He's behind you taking a photo. He's like, look at this loser.
That would actually be awesome, dude. But no, I do. I just, yeah, I think I'm missing.
out on a piece of existence.
Yeah.
And I can kind of start to feel that.
I didn't realize it for a long time,
but I can start to feel it more and more.
I like that.
But that would be great, dude.
I'd love to put a show up over there
and then we go do something cool.
Let me know, man.
I'm going to be in Zimbabwe at the end of October
doing a big animal rescue.
I don't know what your schedule's like.
I'm sure that's pretty soon.
But, you know, let me know.
What I could try to put a show up,
because I wanted to go to London anyway
to interview this.
There's a professor who specializes in
genocides.
Okay, that's deep.
Yeah.
Yeah, and it's kind of just interesting, you know,
so I just wanted to learn about why that happens over time.
Sure.
And because you would think that after a while in existence,
we would get past that, you know?
Yeah, right.
The modern brain is like,
we kind of wipe out a group of people.
Yeah.
Apparently not.
Yeah.
Yeah, like every article's always like,
you can never do this again.
And then it's like, hey, but we can do.
We're working on it.
Yeah.
But then it's like, you know, in the end you come back to some sort of survival.
And sometimes survival is a sickness, I think, in people too in a way, you know.
What do you mean?
Like, how is it a sickness in people?
Well, just the fact that you would, you would, throughout history, there's been genocides and the people have annihilated other cultures.
I mean, it used to be of like a badge of honor in a way.
Like, look what I did.
Right.
like conquering and stuff like that.
And that's kind of who's to say that that's right or wrong.
I'm judging it through my perspective today.
But at the time, it was probably the most regal thing, you know?
But doesn't it go back to, and this is not my area of expertise, I'm not anthropologists,
but we're homo sapiens, right?
Didn't homo sapiens wipe out like the two other hominids?
You know what I mean?
I don't know if you can fact check that.
But I think there was homo sapiens, homo flerentius and homo something else,
and Homo sapiens were like,
nah, we got to get rid of these other guys.
You know, and that's like what we stemmed from,
if I'm not, you know, yeah, what is it with Neanderthals?
And I don't know.
Let me see what it says.
Oh, we were just talking about this the other day.
The Dinovans were out competed by Homo sapiens,
but proof of a direct wipeout is absent.
Oh, okay, there you go.
Instead, limited resources and climate changes played significant roles.
But who knows?
I'm sure people got super tribal back then.
One person could have had fire, and they're like, we got to kill these people off where they come and get it.
They're going to take our fire.
Right.
We cannot let them take our fire.
Yeah.
Totally.
Yeah.
But there you go.
I'm wrong.
So I didn't know that.
But I thought there was that competition at play.
At least you were wrong.
I don't even have a shot at that information.
That's all right.
At least you're firing off.
You've had some, thanks so much for coming, dude.
This is awesome.
Of course, bro.
He's so much fun.
Yeah, it's great.
I want to get you out there or at least see you go.
out there into nature and get connected with it.
I would love to.
I think the South Africa thing is the thing.
Let's do it, dude.
I think it's big, and I love South Africa,
and I would love to go over there for a show
and just get to have a new experience there.
And then just thinking what type of thing
what I wanted to do.
I did get to swim with sharks there once,
which was pretty cool.
Clansby of, like, Seal Island.
Yeah, that's cool.
Yeah, that's rad.
Yeah, that's a good experience.
Bro, it was super scary.
It almost felt it was just unbelievable.
We laid out there in that sun,
dude, I got the craziest sunburn.
Got crisp, yeah.
I mean, like, colors of, like, fluid were just...
Like purples and, yeah.
I know what you're talking about, man.
What lagoon has been launched by the sun on my face?
Because we went out with, like, some dude,
who I think he was just a mechanic
who had, like, a couple hours on his lunch break.
Yeah, he's like, yeah, we'll make it work.
That's South Africa for you.
Yeah, dude.
He's like, I got a boat.
Yeah, we'll figure it out.
Yeah.
Dude, I mean, there was no...
We're just late.
I mean, in the boiling heat.
Yeah.
But we got in those cages in the round circular cage, and we got in, and some sharks came.
One of them got stuck between two cages in the boat.
Oh, cool.
That's rad, dude.
It was Harry.
I got to reach through and touch one over mine on the head.
I can see you getting fired up on it.
That's the best thing about, like, an adult reconnecting with nature.
Not to say you're totally disconnected, but you get this kid-like enthusiasm and sense of wonder
that's been gone since you were like seven years old looking at earthworms.
You remember when your kid, you flip over a log, you're like, whoa, dad, look at this.
earthworm, you know, that goes away
because you become an adult, and then you get back
into it, and you're like, oh, that never really went
away. I just, like, went a different direction.
Ah. Yeah. I don't know.
Sorry. What were you saying?
No, dude, no, that's such an important
thing to say. That never went away. I just went
a different direction. Yeah. Because, yeah, sometimes
I think I even romanticize it, like, so much of, like,
childhood stuff is gone, but
it's, but there's ways that it's still there.
It's just like, yeah, you win a different
direction, and that's okay. Yeah.
But you can always go right back. That's the best thing.
That's what I think, yeah.
Soon we'll get you cutting off hippo nuts.
Dude.
Oh, the thing I was going to tell you was we went on a safari one day this,
there was like some diamond miner, right?
Like some very rich guy, like some guy who was just fucking being rich or whatever.
Like I tapped him on the shoulder.
I was like, what are you doing?
And he's like being rich.
Ugh.
He was like he couldn't even fucking, you know.
You don't even know.
Dude, I saw him yawn once and he had $40.
Right after he yawned, he had $40.
It just fell out.
out of his mouth. He's like, oh, that's where I put that. He had just that kind of well. But he took
us to, he had his own animal sanctuary somewhere. Oh, interesting. And they took us there,
and we got to just go see a lot of endangered species, like the Big Five. Oh, sick, man. And a lot of
endangered species, we just got to go look at them. And then, six weeks later, in my inbox,
in my email, I get an email from him. He goes, oh, that's it. That's it. Oh, that's brutal. Oh, the
rhino yeah and this i cannot believe you just found this and uh and this and he sent me this picture
and he goes the rhinos that we that you guys went and saw to uh a few weeks ago poachers came in the night
and cut their horns off it's so brutal man it's it's an ongoing war over there for the rhino ivory thing
yeah it's brutal but things like this are important you posting it you know to an audience that's
not tuning in for animals that goes holy shit that's bad that that's really cool it's really important
that people realize that. It's shock because you hear about it. Yeah. But then I was like, oh my God,
the ones that we were looking at that we were so like enthralled by. Yep. And they were,
their whole body is left there in this one piece of them. Cut their face off. That's crazy. Yeah.
Yeah, that's a bummer, man. Good for you for sharing it, though. I really think that's great.
Well, yeah, if you hadn't been here, I don't even think I would have thought about it, man.
Is pornography causing a problem in your life? Do you find yourself watching porno for longer periods of time?
having trouble stopping? Is porn affecting your relationship or dating life? Well, you're certainly
not alone. Watching pornography has become so commonplace today and oftentimes men use porn to numb the
pain of loneliness, boredom, anxiety, and depression. Shame and stigma prevent men from talking
about these issues and getting help for them. I want to introduce you to my friend Steve. Steve is the
founder of Valor Recovery, a program to help men overcome porn abuse and sexual compulsivity.
Steve is a long-term sexual recovery member and has personally overcame the emotional and
spiritual despair of abusing pornography and has dedicated his life to empowering men to do the same.
Steve is an amazing person and he is a close friend of mine.
I mean that.
Valor Recovery helps men to develop the tools necessary to have a healthier sex life.
Their coaches are in long-term recovery and will be your partner, mentor, and spiritual guide to transcend these problematic behaviors.
To learn more about Valor Recovery, please visit them at www.
www.vallor recoverycoaching.com or email them at admin at valerrecoverycoaching.com.
Thank you.
what are some close encounters that you've had with animals out there man that uh that almost sometimes
you're like oh you know that gets that childhood engine like you know just really revs it into the red
area i'm not an adrenaline junkie or at least i like to pretend i'm not right but i get that rush
when something like that happens with it literally the hippo thing i had a hippo charge me out of
the water there that was crazy and everybody scrambled um i had an instance where a season
one of the craziest ones, I never forget,
the one that always comes to top of my mind.
We were in Australia,
and we were interviewing people
in this Aboriginal village,
like way up north in far north Queensland.
And as we're talking to people,
I hear people scream and shouting,
ah, and I look over,
and there's this guy holding a cinder block
over his head like this,
and he's about to throw it.
And I'm like, wait, wait, wait,
and I run over,
and there's a coastal taipan,
which is one of the most venomous snakes
in the world, big brown snake.
And he's about to smash it with this rock.
And I'm like, wait, wait, wait,
I'll catch it, move it for you.
This thing right here.
And it's a big one. It was like five, five, six feet long. And, and so the guy, this Aboriginal guy is about to smash it. I'm like, wait, wait. Like, I'll catch it and move it for it. And he's like, okay, whatever. And the snake disappears under the house, right? There's like a house on like, kind of like Louisiana where they elevate the houses a little bit, you know, down south there.
Satan's right under him. Yeah, exactly. And so there's, you know, they're up on like cinder blocks or posts or whatever.
Dude, that makes me so scared a snake under the house. So the snake disappears under the house. And the guy's like kind of mad at me. He's like, what the fuck, man? I could have killed.
the snake, now it's in the neighborhood, you know, blah, blah, and I'm like, let me handle it.
Like, I'll take care of it. I'm sorry. And it all happened really quick. So I grab my flashlight
and I grab my snake, and I go looking for the snake. And my camera guys are filming. We're filming
filming a show of Extincter Alive, which show I did on Animal Planet a while ago.
Yeah, yeah. And, um, and my camera guys are filming. I look from one side of the house.
Not yet, but I'm looking, I'm like, crouch down looking. And I see the snake in like the far back
corner. And I'm like, oh, he's right there by the stairs. Come with me. Like, we'll go get him.
So I grab my light and I jog around the side of the house and I stick my head through the like slats in the stairs.
They're like this far apart, right?
So I can just kind of wiggle my head and shoulders in.
And I know the snake's over here because I've just seen him from the other side of under the house.
I'm like he's right over here.
So I like wiggling, I turn my light on, my headlamp, whatever it was.
And I turned to the side and I'm like, fuck, where's that snake?
I can't see him.
And all of a sudden I just feel like this on the back of my neck.
The snake has gone around to the other side.
And he's moving around.
These snakes are fast.
And he's literally licks the side of my neck.
you know a snake stick their tongue out like that?
And then he starts crawling over my neck
and I just freeze.
And like, you see the hair on my arms right now.
Like, it rattled me.
Because one bite, I was like 14 hours from a hospital
from one of the most venomous snakes in the world,
a relatively aggressive snake.
And I just freeze.
I just stop moving.
One bite, everybody knows the rules.
That's right.
That's right.
Thanks, Dave.
And, yeah, so I just, I freeze while this snake
fully slithers up over my neck
and then comes and coils up like three feet from my head
over here. And then I like slowly back out. We ended up catching him 10, 50 minutes later,
moving it, blah, blah, blah. But that moment where the snake like licked my neck right behind my
ear there. And then I started to feel like the underside of his mouth go on my neck. I was like,
that's it. Like, I can't move. I can't do anything. I'm dead. Like, it's going to realize it's
sitting on top of a warm human and that it's been chasing him and just go gunk. And that's it.
I'm finished. I was the most rattled I think I've ever been coming out of that. Yeah. I was just so
like on edge while that snake was crawling over me.
As you're saying, I can feel my glands almost like,
just like, oh, tighten up, yeah.
Yeah. Dude, it was a horrible, horrible feeling.
And that, that's my fault.
Because you know what it is, and it's so,
the fact that it's something so subtle,
it's almost like a Dracula of just being right there.
And the hardest part was my stomach dropped
and your instinct just like pull out, you know,
like panic immediately, get away.
And if I had done that, if I had even jolted,
I think it would have just been, you know,
And so I just had to try, like, it felt like 10 minutes,
and it was probably 10 seconds that it went over my neck for.
But I was just sitting there like, please, please, please, please.
And then it went over.
It was crazy, man.
It was a terrible, terrible feeling.
And it was very, like, novel, naive of me to go in and just stick my head in
and be like, I'll be your hero, I'll help.
It was stupid, you know?
It was just stupid.
And I learned from that experience, so that I've done it again a dozen times.
But, like, I try not to be that stupid anymore, you know.
Yeah, it's funny how sometimes ego
And even knowledge can become a little bit of ego
Mm-hmm
Like enough knowledge makes you think confident
You know, confidence can just teeter over the edge of
Of wisdom in a way
Totally
You know, the fulcrum of that is so fine-tuned
That yes, it's like, it's almost like
When you're like, I know what I'm doing
And then immediately you get checked by just by existence
Well, confidence is complacency
Right?
So you're like, I got that.
step aside. That means I'm complacent. If I even have that attitude going into it, it means I'm not
fully focused, right? And that time and time again, every narrow miss I've ever had, which
is not that many, but there's been a few, is because I've been, first of all, I've put myself
in that scenario. It's not the animal's fault, right? This wasn't the snake's fault that I
stuck my head under the house. But it's always because I'm overly confident to the point of
being complacent. Like, yeah, I can stick my head in here. I'll find the snake. You know,
it's stupid. Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Like, let me show, like, it's not even like, let me show off.
There's a part of you that gets so comfortable that it almost just shows off because it's...
Well, can I show you something?
Yeah.
Do you mind, sorry to ask you to do this?
Do you mind pulling up the last YouTube video I just posted on my YouTube channel?
I don't want to dog leg us too long, but I'll show you where the snake almost got me recently.
And again, it's a result of...
Sorry, it's the one with that silly crocodile thing.
Yeah, right near the end, maybe the last two or three minutes there.
Yeah, right here.
So look, so I'm holding the...
snake. This is a fertilant. It's the deadliest snake
in the Americas. Responsible
for more deaths than any other snake in the Americas. Now, where did you
find this at, brother? Costa Rica.
Ooh. Yeah. And so I'm holding the snake. And this is the
deadliest snake in South America? In the Americas,
total. Across all Canada, United
States, South America, Central America. It's a big snake, too.
Huge one. Biggest one I've ever seen. And for
no reason at all, because it's a stupid YouTube
video, he's peeing on me. I'm like, I'm going
to pin it and hold it behind the head.
Now watch here. I'm holding it and I'm
showing off, like we just talked about,
telling the camera all about, you know, this is
this deadly snake and don't this many people a year die from it and you got to be careful because
of how they hide blah blah blah blah and I start to loosen my grip here see how I'm looking to
the side and I'm jabbering to the camera so my grip's starting to loosen now watch what the snake
does when he feels my grip loosened uh coming in the next few seconds I don't want to bore you but
you can almost see him he's eyeing he's side eye on me right now and this is complacency because
I'm busy presenting to a camera like an idiot talking about how deadly the snake is and I'm adjusting my
grip. I'm not not paying attention. Here it comes any second here. Look at that. So he starts to open his
mouth. Oh, see how close that is? That was me. The boots are up. Dude, I'm ready for the
coffin. Look at that. Look at that. Oh, that is so close to my hand with that fang. Those fangs are
two and a half inches long. So he was maybe a quarter of an inch from getting me and that would
have been my hand gone. Play that one more time. Play that strike. There's that slow mo strike just a few
seconds back here. Look at this. Boom. And what
method did he use to be able to make himself have the
tort to do that? But it's, so if I had been holding the snake
perfectly, he couldn't have done that. Right. But I'd been holding him for two or
three minutes, talking to the camera, showing off because it's stupid YouTube. Right.
And I had loosened my grip and slowly slipped down so much so
that he had leverage in his neck. So that was the problem. It's not, it's my fault. His ground game.
His ground game was better. His ground game was strong.
He would have whoop me.
Yeah, and it was close, man.
If I hadn't dropped him right there,
I'm talking another half second,
and that would have been just one nick,
one fang into the hand,
that's definitely the finger gone,
maybe my hand, you know?
When a sneak bite happens,
what is, like,
and especially when it's one that's as venomous
as this when you're saying?
Yeah, highly venomous.
How quickly can someone really lose
like an appendage or something from that
or potentially die?
Like, how real is that?
But it all depends, right?
It's like saying what happens
if I get stung by a bee?
Well, are you allergic to a bee?
bee, how much venom did the bee put in you?
Got it.
If you and I get stung by a bee, we're going to react completely differently, right?
My hand might swell up like a balloon.
You might have a tiny little mosquito bite itch.
So every human body responds differently to venom, and then there are multiple types of
venom, and then there are cocktails of venom.
So there's cytotoxic, hemotoxic, and neurotoxic, like brain, location, organ failure,
different.
And then there's cocktails.
So some snakes have a cocktail of, like, location venom and organ venom.
and some have respiratory venom
and so it's just crazy.
That's why anti-venom is such a difficult thing
because there's so many different kinds of snakes,
so many different cocktails of venom,
people all react differently to it.
An allergy to venom means you're going to die almost no matter what.
Like it's just, it's a crazy, like, variable of things.
Yeah.
Wow.
But in that case, I would have been in big trouble, yeah.
God, dude, that makes...
So don't do that.
When we go back to the cool animal stuff, don't do that stuff.
Okay.
Are there moments where you feel like some animals
are of God and some animals are of Satan. Do you ever feel like that?
Hippos are of Satan. Really?
They're such angry freaking animals. And there's a few animals like that. Like cassowaries,
if you know what they are, big velociraptor-looking birds. It's a few animals that just,
you know, I'm not very religious, so I'm using that term as jokingly. But there are some
animals that just have terrible attitude. Scroll down real quick. Check out that one where he's
kicking, I saw it a second ago. He's kicking the guy's bored. Like, look at that. You know,
These things just come at you.
They've got these talons, this head.
Hippos are the same.
If a hippo sees you, it's going to charge.
A Cape Buffalo, like in Africa, they call them the black death.
Because when they smell you or see you, they don't think about running.
They just think about charging.
And it's just some animals just have this attitude.
And I don't think it's an ethereal thing.
I think it's that hippos and Cape Buffalo and castorries,
they've grown up with tons of predators.
Historically, they've been hunted.
so they're defensive instead of their fight or flight is just a fight response.
Got it.
Do you know what I mean?
Like that's the way to explain.
Yeah.
And that is just scary to work with those animals because at any given time, they're going to turn on you versus run away from you.
Yeah.
Have you encountered, like, I'm sure whenever you get out into these worlds of animalia and some of these worlds where you probably don't even speak the language, have you encountered people that are as as dangerous as the animals?
Way worse.
People are always, every close.
We've ever, I mean, you know, not including those snake things or whatever, but every time that I've really felt threatened, which isn't like an instant spur of the moment. When you feel threatened from an animal, it's like, okay, it nearly bit me, that's over. When you feel threatened on a whole, it's because humans are so unpredictable. A good example is you're working in a country that has political unrest, and they know that you've got money because you've got cameras or whatever. And now the government's got to get you. The mafia is going to get you. They've sent, you know, we had this instance in my
where the government wanted to get us for having a drone and we had to flee and like those are the
scariest things is the human element and of all the place I've ever been and I know this is an anomaly but of all
the place I've ever been Papua New Guinea the last time I went to pop I've only been once but the time
I went to Papua New Guinea in 14 days I saw two people get hacked by machetes I was only there for two
weeks I mean that's how like violent that society is and it's a very tribal culture and things one was
in the capital of Port Moresby the other was actually near to this place and a place is
The real picture here?
Yeah, real picture.
And what's the place called?
I'm sorry, I stepped on you.
This was near to Toofi, an area called Toofi, yeah.
So how do you know when you're meeting?
I mean, this is a tribe, right?
And they were lovely.
A little bit scary at first, but it was the town people that were the problems, that were high on beetlenut and been drinking and fighting and those kind of things.
But this was a tribe.
You see the guy on the left of me that has the shark mask on?
So this was a tribe that had a very special, that's shark jaws on his face.
Wow.
It looks like Otis Nixon a little bit.
A good athlete, too.
Yeah, Otis was great.
Yeah.
So this drive had a special relationship with shark fishing.
So we went to seek them out to try and find these sharks.
And we went and got in this burial cave where they kept human skulls, the whole thing.
But then they took us to the village and we sat with this guy.
The craziest part is these guys' names are like John Thomas and Thomas Johnson and because the missionaries have all been through there.
Like Collier Anthony.
Yes, it's insane, dude.
They all have these, these like British...
Dear William.
Yeah, it's so...
You like, meet this guy and he's like,
looks all intimidating and stuff,
and then he introduces himself as like Paul Johnson.
And you're like, okay, yeah.
Yeah, his name is Philip Banks.
Yeah, it's so strange.
Fresh Prince of Bel-A.
You're like, that's a crazy name.
Yeah, Philip Banks, there he goes.
Yeah, what a happy-looking dude, though.
Oh, he was, man.
He definitely was a happy.
was a great character. We passed away a few years back.
Oh, shame.
Yeah.
I, um, wow, dude.
Yeah, so that would just be the scariest thing.
Like, have you ever, have you, have you gotten into a situation where you had to pay to get out of it?
Yeah, many.
I try not to, like, advertise that because it's truly bribes.
It really is.
Like, there's no other way to put it.
And it's so funny, dude, I've never shared this.
When you get back from a shoot, right?
Usually my, my expeditions are funded by, like, Discovery Channel or Animal Plan or something.
And then you submit, like, a cost or,
an expense report. And they're like, what's this $4,000 for? And you're like, groceries.
Yeah. You know, because you like handed somebody a stack of $4,000 cash to not, you know,
take your car tires or something. And you're like, yeah, I just got to lie about that,
you know, like there's, you can't write bribe money on the invoice. Yeah.
Well, it just goes to show that at every level of existence, right, whether it's like,
first world, third world, 50th world, there's this, there's a checks and balance.
It's system of capitalism so often.
For sure.
And that doesn't even change.
You can be in the shittiest place in the world.
You pull up, you park your car.
There's a guy that's going to walk up,
and he's like, for $4, I'll make sure your car is there when you get back.
And it's just that's the cost of doing business.
And if you don't pay the $4, you better believe your windows are getting smashed, you know?
And it's funny because you talk to these guys and these offices at the networks or whatever,
and they don't get what you just said.
And you're like, no, no, I had to do that.
Otherwise, there would be no, like, they would have smashed the windows, taking all the cameras, you know? And it's like, oh, why did you have to bribe them? It's like, how do you not understand this? Like, it's commerce, you know? Like, this is how the world works outside of L.A. That's perfect, man.
You mentioned a little bit ago, one of your shows, Extinct or Alive. Or Alive.
Yeah. What was one of your most surprising discoveries while shooting Extinct or Alive?
Yeah, the tortoise in that cover of image from season two. That was probably the biggest one. It was crazy. We went to this island in the Galapagos that basically nobody goes to called Fernandina. That species of tortoise hadn't been seen in 114 years. And only one specimen in history had ever been recorded 114 years prior by the California Academy of Sciences. So to date, that animal that I'm holding in that picture, which has been doctored for the like trailer poster thing,
is the rarest animal in the world.
There's only one known individual of that species,
and that's her right there.
Damn, and it's a woman, huh?
It's a girl.
Yeah, her name's Fern.
Some, yeah, women, they're survivors.
Yeah, yeah.
Dude, chicks are, like, we're talking about survival and stuff.
Girls are so much better at it than guys.
It's not even close.
Is that in the animal kingdom as well?
Oh, I mean, I was talking about humans,
but yeah, probably in the animal kingdom too.
I mean, like, I feel like females, girls, women, whatever,
they have more to fight for because they have kids to protect, you know, whereas a male,
I'll just make more kids. You know what I mean? Like, I'm not investing all of my body
energy into raising this one young. Like, I'll just go find another mate. Yeah. I'm talking on
like a very base evolutionary level. Like, it's just like, I'm going to spread my seed.
Whereas I, it's incredible how like tenacious and hearty female animals, women, everything are. It's
crazy. Oh, dude, I think, and also men have that, uh, they have testosterone in them that like,
you know, it's that I'm going to put my hand in the fire.
Exactly.
So right there, you're going to lose 30% of dudes right there
because they're trying to taste a fucking car that's going by.
That's, you know.
Stick my tongue out, yeah.
Let me look right here.
In the animal kingdom, are females generally better at survival than males?
We look at it on perplexity.
That's what we like to use.
Females in the animal kingdom are generally better at survival than males
in a large scale study of 101 wild mammal species.
these females lived an average of 18% longer than males
and more than 60% of those species.
For most mammals, including species like elephants, lions, and seals,
females surpass males in longevity.
The difference in lifespan between the sexes
is often more pronounced in the animal kingdom than in humans
where women live about 7.8% longer than men.
We're expendable.
Yeah.
Like think if there's one guy and 100 girls,
you're repopulating the planet.
If there's 100 guys and one woman,
You're not. You know what I mean? Like, we are expendable. Males across all species, for the most part, are expendable.
Fuck.
Sorry, bro.
No, I just, I felt something was, I knew something was off.
Yeah, yeah, that's it. Yeah. Damn it. Should have been a check.
I know. I just got to, I got to wander around with a, uh, I'm going to get some new knee pads.
I'm going to have to get some protective armor.
I got to get some new knee pad.
I got to get some protective armor, dude. That's for sure.
the idea that you're going to find like extinct species is such like it's a cool sport right because it's like it's um chasing this uh atlantis in a way kind of it's the most ultimate hunting form of hunting you're looking for the rarest thing in the world so much so that the whole world thinks it doesn't exist anymore yeah yeah i'm thinking about just thinking about extinction and stuff it's like where's that last day where people were just standing there with the clipboards and they're just waiting for the last like
one of a species to die off
and then they're like extinct. There it goes.
Yeah. Yeah.
Like, yeah, what classifies something
as extinct? That's a great question. And that's
part of the premise of like why we made
that original show, Extincter Alive, is like
it's some, for the most part, and I'm
oversimplifying, but it's some stuffy
dude, British dude in a smoking jacket
going, no, yes, I believe
this is gone, you know? And then
he like checks a box. And the problem
with that is from a conservation model, the
second you check that extinction box,
that's it. There's no funding. There's no
effort, it's gone. Extinct doesn't mean hiding or around the corner or there's a few left.
Extinct means give up and move on.
We're out 86, the dodo bird.
That's it. Yeah. And so I think it's super arrogant for humans to come in and go,
that's extinct. I mean, not to, I don't want to belittle extinction. It's a very severe
thing. But oftentimes, we give up too quickly. We go, it's extinct. It's not here.
Or now it's sort of been reclassified as like lost to science. But for a long time,
it was just like, up, it's extinct. Science hasn't seen it in 20 years, 30 years, 100 years.
used to be 30 years was the benchmark. And it's just sort of an arrogant thing to come in and say like, you know, oh, I went to Borneo for 10 days. I promise you it's not there. It's like, shut up, dude. You know what I mean? What the fuck are you talking about? Yeah, it's not a clue, you idiot. Yeah, exactly. And I'm oversimplifying it. But I think that's what ended up happening a lot is all this information, you know, there's millions and millions of species of animal out there, tons and thousands of scientists and things. And they're like, oh, that one's gone, move on, you know. And what I like to do is be like, well,
hold on, let's give the little guy a second shot here, you know? And I think why we were successful,
why we found eight animals that were previously lost to science, was because we didn't give up
after 10 days. Like some of those expeditions were two months long. You know, living in tents,
filming every day, like setting camera traps, going out, baiting stuff. You know, they were hard work.
I love the work, but they were hard work. And then it's like, oh, there it is. We found it,
you know, and the first time was like utterly shocking. But then we did it seven more times. And it was
like, oh, wow, there is a pattern here. And I don't want to say it's just like our show and the
work I did, but between that and some of the conservation organizations and stuff, there was a
little bit of a mentality shift of, oh, wait a minute, it's not extinct. It's like a lost species.
It's been lost to Western scientists studying it or finding it. So now we'll put in campaigns to
find lost animals as opposed to just decide they're extinct and move on. And that sort of changed
things a bit. It's kind of like cold case files of animals. Yeah, totally. It's like go back in,
you know, check the records. Yeah.
Yeah, it's like, I don't think we had a, let's see if we have a better DNA sample now.
Yeah, exactly. And the technologies come so far.
Dude, this sounds just like cold case files, dude. It is, it is, man. It's the same thing. It's
forensics. It's animal forensics. Yeah. Wow. It's cool.
Are there animals out there who are, that are almost extinct, like, do you believe?
Are we get, like, does extinction happen every week on the planet and we just don't realize it? How common is it?
Three thousand species per year.
Nuh. You're lying. You're lying. That's the estimated number. Yeah.
And a lot of things, a lot crazy, right?
The fucking what?
Bro, a lot of things are going extinct
before we've even described what they are.
Like in the Amazon where there's all this clear cutting and stuff.
Yeah.
There are little species of, and I'm not saying they're,
I'm not talking about a buffalo.
You know, I'm talking about a bug this big
or a little orchid or something.
But before we've even described what it is
or looked into the medicinal properties of it
or tried to conserve it, it's gone
because we wipe out that chunk of habitat.
There you go.
The estimated number of species that go extinct
every year ranges from about 2,000, over 100,000,
depending on which scientific estimates
and total species counts are used.
Yeah, we, we, I know this is the chat GPT answer
or whatever perplexity answer,
but we dug into this pretty heavily
across a bunch of organizations,
and we estimate it was close to about 3,000.
Now, most of that, as in like 2,500, are plants,
but the other 5 to 700 or so are animals
that are going extinct every year.
But to think that we're losing plants,
which are, I mean, unbelievable,
Just the things that they're, the medicine and stuff that they're finding implants, the possibilities.
And it's, it's, again, going back to the technology standpoint, the more that we advance
our technology, the more we use that technology to realize that old ancient ways of medicine
and herbal medicine and stuff actually is really effective. Look at the SUPS game now, right?
Like you go on, it's like supplements.
Oh, yeah.
Every supplement's like, oh, this is, I'm making all this up, but like berberine, which is a derivative
of an almond shell or whatever.
you know and it's like beetroot beat root you're like that's medicine you know we it's so crazy
because i think medicine swung so far away in the pendulum where it's like it has to be fully
synthetic and it's like oh wait half this shit isn't working giving you terrible side effects well
look over here beetroot actually is a great detoxifier why don't we just do that you know it's like it's
like the pendulum swung too far and now it's swung back a little bit where it's like yeah all these
all these natural things actually help us and when you're losing 1500 species or so of those a
year. I'm not saying any of them are going to cure cancer, but they might. You know, who knows?
Like, we haven't tested it. Yeah, it's fascinating. It's crazy to think that that's where we are.
And how much of that is just evolution? And how much of that is man-made, do you think? Or man
like involved that species become extinct? It's a little bit of both. And I think one of the
one of the things that we see a lot is people are like, oh, it's all humans' fault.
That's why everything's going, extinction's been around forever, you know?
Like, extinction's not, like, we're not going to get rid of extinction, and we shouldn't,
but what we shouldn't do is accelerate it.
And that's the problem.
Yeah.
You know?
Extinction been around, dude.
I've been getting rid of these hose forever, you feel me?
That's it.
That's it, dude.
I'm just joking, hose.
Sorry, hose.
I'm very respectful.
Yeah, but it's, it's interesting because I think man-made extinction.
So they say that we're in the sixth great mass extinction event right now.
So there's been five others throughout history.
Like when the dinosaurs went extinct, when the earth froze over, the grape freezing or whatever it's called.
I'm not an anthropologist, pamatologist.
I don't really understand that as well.
But they say right now we're in the sixth great mass extinction event.
And that is directly caused by human beings.
So my thing is like we shouldn't end extinction.
We shouldn't stop extinction.
We just shouldn't be like racing towards it as much as we can.
you're killing like, you know, a million, eight million sharks a year or whatever it is we're
fishing and cutting down a thousand acres of rainfall. I'm making all these numbers up. A thousand
acres of rainforest a day. We're like racing towards extinction. We're like, how fast can we
get rid of these things, you know? And that's the problem. Like, that's where we need to just
reassess. I'm all for human growth and development and everything else. We need it. Like,
we need to make the planet sustainable, but we got to do it in a way that's also fair to all
the species. You know what I mean? So that we don't collapse. Kind of on this topic, I have a
question about extinction like um and they're the the the idea that i know those companies now that are
bringing back or attempting to bring back extinct species right that's been something that i know
you're kind of close to yeah the extinction yeah extinction um but first i was wondering do you
think that after a lot of your time being in nature and spending time around nature and animals
do you feel like humans are supposed to be here or do you feel like do you feel like we are
Additive or a deterrent?
Where it's really interesting question
What we should be as humans is docents of this planet
We're the smartest creature on this planet bar none
Docent, what does it mean?
The guardian of the planet.
We should be the ones cultivating this garden
That is planet Earth and taking care of it
Instead, and I don't know when this happened or how this happened
And this may be a weird take on it
It almost feels like we're like a like an ant colony
like a parasite on the planet where we're just like over expanding and just sort of taking over
this whole thing. And I don't think we intend to do that. And I don't think there's a single human being
on this planet that's like we should wipe out everything we should take over. But everybody like
running on their hamster wheel of survival and needing to eat and needing clean water and
needing new shoes and blah, blah, it ends up being this sort of almost like parasitic thing on the
planet. And instead what I think we need, and this is such a weird answer, but is this sort of
mentality shift of like, okay, there's a lot of us. There's 8 billion people here or 10 billion,
whatever we're up to now. How do we take care of the planet so the planet takes care of us
instead of how do we industrialize as much as possible and take from the planet? And I don't
think people want to take from the planet. I don't think generally they do. It's just I believe
we should be here. We're supposed to be here. But I think we've lost sight of the fact that as
the most, what's the Peter Parker quote with great power comes great responsibility? We
have that power, we need to be responsible for that planet. Yeah. Yeah, I almost wish there was like
a breathalyzer for people that were in power. Interesting. So you could just see if they're
fucking like, like, are just blow in here, make sure you give a fuck about. You good? You good? You're
blow. Yeah. Have you water your plants at home today? Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're good to drive this
planet or not? Yeah. Yeah, dude. Hey, I'm going to need you to pull this planet over to the side of
the road for a second. Yeah, let's take it, let's take a quick look at you. Yeah.
Dude, that's hilarious, bro.
Thank you, bro.
That's so funny.
But, yeah, I don't understand why, if we can tell if somebody's drunk,
we can't tell if they have a moral compass when it comes to trying to be ethical or, you know,
trying to, I guess trying to care about things outside of themselves, you know.
But maybe that's coming.
I think it's coming.
And I also don't think, like, I hate the idea of me sitting here and going, Theo,
don't use a plastic bag at the gross.
store come on man and like guilt tripping you i use plastic bags at the grocery store yeah yeah
yeah but you know what i mean it's like that what's the bigger offset it's like okay you know like
fine we shouldn't be using as many plastic bags but also like let's just choose make smaller choices
that add up that don't impact us you know what i mean it's like don't be preachy just care a little bit
yeah it's it's not that hard you know what i mean yeah and i think also that i think some you know
we're all at such
the whims and responsibilities
of so many bigger corporations
not to put it on to them
because we all play a part
in our own governance as humans
and just governing ourselves
but the fact that
you know that we live in
societies that have dirty water
just the things we're like
what are we doing
right like we could be doing
so much better than this
I think so many of these things
are becoming cool and mainstream though
I just saw a thing from Mr. Beast
a couple days ago
where he got like, I don't know, the number, like a million people clean water.
That's as mainstream as it gets, man.
He's the biggest YouTuber on the planet, and YouTube's the biggest medium on the planet.
Like, I think that's awesome.
Yeah.
You know, like if you're making clean water for people that don't have clean water mainstream,
how cool is that?
Hell yeah, dude, yeah.
I've been hearing about this initiative for a while.
Let me see.
Mr. Beast launched his team water campaign in August 2025 to provide two million people with clean water.
Heck yeah.
That's so cool.
Like, how much cooler is that than, like,
like, you know, like, watch me drive my Lambo or whatever, you know?
It's like, this is mainstream now.
Bro, 100% especially the fact that everything is becoming privatized,
the fact that the government of Michigan couldn't do this for their people.
Right.
But here, he, you know.
Right.
And individuals doing it as opposed to a nation or a government.
That's badass.
And I think I really, I mean, I'm always an optimist, but I think the world is going to, like,
follow suit.
Like, I feel like people, when people like Mr. Beast are leading the charge,
everybody else can be like, yeah, this is just.
rat. This is awesome. Well, it's funny that somebody who had to come along to take care of,
like, healthy environment had beast in their name, you know? It's kind of badass. It is pretty cool. It's
pretty cool. Yeah. Especially for a vanilla white guy like Jimmy. Yeah. The campaign's core promise is
that every dollar donated provides one year of clean water for someone in need. That's awesome.
It's so cool. Yeah. Yeah. And I think, you know, like, not that I'm anywhere near a Mr. Beast
level, but like this is what I hope to do one day is to make wildlife conservation and
science mainstream and cool.
Yeah.
You know, it's like, if it's cool, people will do it.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
I agree, man.
I think, I think you're right.
I think having the attitude that that's where we're headed, that let's take some of this
stuff out of the government's hands, let's put it into people's hands because a lot of
government has gotten so corrupted and can be so corrupted.
Even going back to like what you're talking about in different countries and where you grew
up and how, like, the influence of government can get so, it can get so desperate.
Definitely.
Whereas hopefully the heart of an individual human and individual humans overall can hopefully remain, can remain more hopeful and uncompromised. You would hope.
No organization, government body, NGO is going to have the passion and the drive of an individual.
Obviously, Mr. Beast thing is clean water for people.
Right.
Nobody, I don't care if you're the government in the United States, you don't have that same passion that that individual has.
what I mean and that's where impact comes from it comes from that that passion it's so true and you
start to realize that sometimes too like you're like oh shit I see how somebody cared yeah and they
just kept caring and they just kept doing it yeah they just kept hammering it until we all cared
and it started to figure things out yeah it's rad um I want to talk about the de-extinction right
sure so take me into some of that world there was a company there's a company colossal
colossal biosciences colossal biosciences who recently they were in the
with recreating the dire wolf.
That's right. Yeah.
Was it actually recreated?
Yeah, so there's some interesting stuff here.
So I, you know, our buddy Joe, Rogan, I connected him with Ben Lamb, the CEO of Colossil,
and they went and spoke about it.
And I'm a, I'm a conservation advisor to Colossil.
So I can't tell you much about genetics because I don't know much about it, but I know a lot
about conservation.
So I help say, here's where we should put the Dyer Wolf if we release them, that kind of thing.
You know, the conservation side of it.
Not going to release Dyerwolves, by the way.
But that's the role that I fill there.
So I'm luckily on the inside of this de-extinction thing.
The Dyerwolf's interesting.
There's a woman named Beth Shapiro who's in charge of it,
and she can explain the genetics wholeheartedly.
What my understanding of is it or isn't it a Dyerwolf,
which is your main question,
is Colossal found through,
they did more genetic sampling than anyone else has ever done.
And they found that the Dyer Wolf was actually closely related to a Grey Wolf,
which is what they built their Dyerwolf.
wolf after or they bought they built it from rather versus the people who got upset and said this
isn't a dire wolf is because they thought the dire wolves were originally more closely related to
jackals which is a different kind of canad um so my understanding which is very limited because i'm not a
geneticist is that they did make basically a giant white gray wolf which is what a dire wolf was
according to the most very genetic sampling that's ever taken place not an expert but i think
the thing to think about is not the minutia, at least for me, of, is it a Darywolf? Isn't it? What
genes does it have? It's like saying, are you a human and am I a human? Well, but Theo's got long
brown hair and forest has short brown hair. This guy has a beard and that guy's a goatee. It's
like, well, they're not the same. It's like, right, but we walk the same, we talk the same,
we eat the same. You know, we fill the same ecological niche. And I think that's the point
of what the science is. Okay. Putting Dodo's back in Mauritius is going to help the forest.
Putting thylacine back in Tasmania is going to help with the overabundance of all these macropods, which are like marsupials.
And that's what colossal is trying to do with the de-extinction, at least as I understand it.
And I think that they're kind of creating something as close as possible.
That's right.
Okay.
And by creating something as close as possible and putting them back into animal society, basically, it will help fulfill a space that could help nature.
be more robust. Exactly. That's a perfect way to put it. A good example is like,
imagine aliens came to Earth and they found a tribe in the middle of the jungle and the tribe
had jaundice. And they're like, oh, all humans are yellow. Right. Now the aliens think humans are
yellow. That's how humans are. That's how we look at, say, Tasmania. We go, oh, Tasmania is an island
nation that just has tons of roadkill and a bazillion macropods. Well, it actually shouldn't. It's
very unhealthy, just like our tribe with jaundice, right? Like, it's a very unhealthy population because
it's lost that little niche, that thing. And in this case, we're talking about a thylacine,
which is like a Tasmanian tiger. So if they bring that back or something very, very close and
similar, it looks like it, walks like it, talks like that, acts like that. And it's not like they're
just going to be like, all right, we brought them back, chuck them out there. You know, it's going to be
a slow thing. And that's the part that I like to help with. But if they're able to put that
back into the ecosystem, they're going to balance out that ecosystem. And that balance creates
health. Got it. Gets rid of diseases, gets rid of overpopulation, all the things.
that throw a system off balance,
which I think's cool, and that's why I love it.
Like, I love the idea that we can write humanity's wrongs.
Like, where we've to, the stuff with like dire wolves and mammoths are less for me,
but the stuff where they're like, here's where humans took an animal,
killed it till it was completely gone,
and here's where we can come in and go, we can fix it.
Then I'm like, let's go.
Let's go.
Do you know if we would ever be able to create,
like, you know, create the woolly mammoth, create a, uh, uh, um, dinosaurs, you know,
like, do you know that if that's possible?
What I know is that if you take something that has really healthy intact DNA and has a
close living relative, for instance, you take the mammoth, because mammoths only died out
10,000 years ago. And so there's lots of fresh DNA, frozen in ice and tusks. And, you know,
that guy, John Reeves up in Alaska, you know, that is. This guy's got this
crazy place where he gets all these tusks and mammoth chunks, stuff, he's even eating mammoth. Crazy dude.
He's super cool. Oh, really? Yeah, this guy. Um, uh, so he's constantly getting mammoth parts,
right? So there's really good DNA. Now you take, you take that and you take an Asian elephant,
an Indian elephant, and they're 99.6% related to a mammoth. Okay, so now you've got really good
DNA. You've got an animal that's 99.6% related. All you've got to do is combine those to get that
0.4% and you've made
a mammoth, essentially. Dude, and then you've made a
movie called mammoths. Mammoths.
Meth mammoth. Math, math, myth.
I don't know.
The mathmuths. That's hard
to say. And they all have lists.
Yeah, that's right. That's right.
Dude, being
on meth and having a list would be the
worst. Boy, that'd be hard to follow.
Wow, so that's what you're
saying. So it's like, we're going to get,
so you're getting as close as you can get.
Do you think we could get into, like, actually increasing the scale then over time?
I mean, do you think some of those things are possible?
I do.
Yeah, I think with technology, it will be.
And that's why I don't think a dinosaur is possible.
The dinosaurs died out millions of years ago.
That's too far off.
That DNA is just shattered.
You know, it's like the puzzle's too hard to put back to you.
You take an egg, you crack it.
It's like, oh, these cracks goes back together.
You smash it.
You're like, I can never get that egg back together.
You know, it's like that.
That's how I see it.
Yeah.
Now, how interesting would it be then, though, that if certain companies,
own the DNA or own this genetic mapping it's able to put these things back together,
then now animals would in some way become kind of privatized in a weird way?
I think it could. I really do. Like, you know, I don't know what, how that would work.
But imagine you're this crazy billionaire and you're like, all right, the technology is there.
I know it's going to cost $500 million to bring back a, I'm making this up, Titanaboa.
I don't know if you know what that is.
giant 50-foot-long anaconda.
Bring them.
Right?
So there's probably no such thing
as healthy Titanaboa DNA,
but what we could probably do,
I'm making all this up as we go,
with the technology,
is take a regular anaconda,
take out its growth restrictor
through genetic engineering,
and make it 50 feet.
And this guy's like,
I want the Titanaboa's
and I have 500 million.
Now he's just privatized
this mutant creature.
Probably Nicholas Cage would do it.
Yeah, you think?
Seems like a Nick Cage kind of thing.
to do. Yeah, I think it would just be cool. You know, you teach a Titanic Boa to just bring you
some, bring you in your date some almonds or something while you're watching Shane Gillis's
tires on Netflix or something. That'd be crazy, dude. That's just the weirdest image I just
painted in my head as you said that. Let me bring up the information on the Titanic Boa. Let me
just rattle it off so we know what it is. It's pretty, pretty, it's just watching Shane Gillis's
tires.
Titano boa is an extinct genus of
giant boad,
the family that includes all boas and anaconda's snake
that lived during the middle and late
Paleocene.
It was first discovered in the early 2000s
by a tropical research institute.
Is the largest snake ever
found at the time
Titanaboa could grow up to 42 feet long,
perhaps even,
to 47 feet long and weigh
around 1,600 to 2,500 pounds.
Wow.
Crazy, man. Like, imagine a snake that was eating full-grown horses. Yeah. You know what I mean? That is so crazy to think about. Yeah. But I don't know. Yeah. To your point, I think they could privatize these things. I certainly know that that's not what colossal's goal is. They're just trying to fix the ecosystem and get carbon credits and whatnot. But it's a crazy thought. It's a crazy thought. Nick Cage, don't do it. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah, dude, it would probably be like some of the richest people ever would be doing there.
Probably Nick Cage.
Sam Altman would probably have, you know, like a beautiful parakeet or something that's never, that makes a sound that only he can hear.
What would you have?
Oh, I'd have probably one of the most famous.
Probably, I would have a hamster or a gerbil.
Okay.
A giant one or just a standard?
Pretty big.
Pretty big.
I like that.
Like you ride it to town.
I mean, I would at least.
break it out to show the ladies at night.
Yeah, that's smart. Yeah, pick up gerbil.
Yeah, they're like, what is it?
Yeah.
They're trying to pick up Richard gear, or what are you doing over there?
They're like, oh, is that a French bull gerbil?
A French bull jerbal?
No, I just breeze funny.
Dude, that'd be so great.
If you had a French bull dribble, you would get all of the girls.
Yeah, yeah.
Nothing gets pushed like a French bull gerbil.
That's a fact.
Oh, it would be wet.
Watching a French bulljurble get out of the pool and then
shake itself off after? Yeah. The girls are just like, oh, Theo, I'm yours.
Braziers are just landing on it. It's like a rock concert.
Are there any species that you think should go extinct? I don't think, I mean,
there's invasive species that need to go locally extinct. Like, we shouldn't have Burmese
pythons in the Florida Everglades, right? I don't know if you know about that, the big snakes and
the Everglades. Yeah, they're a problem. Like, that's localized extinction that should happen.
But that's, again, because we've caused a problem.
There are other animals, and this is a very unpopular opinion,
they're trying to make themselves extinct.
Panda bears, if you, Theo, if you're at a zoo and you go to a mama panda bear
and you offer her an apple, she will hand you her baby for that apple.
True story.
You can literally find a video what I just said.
I mean, these things are trying to go extinct.
I don't want them to go extinct.
They're incredibly cool, but they are so dumb.
Like, look at this.
Give mama an apple, and you can just take her baby away.
I mean, that should not be.
You know what I mean?
Because they're just so, they're just addicted to the food.
They're food motivated.
They're bad parents.
They're sort of a creature that, and I, again, I don't want to see them go extinct.
I think they're super cool.
But they're sort of a creature that naturally was probably edging towards extinction before humans intervened.
Another good example is the Great Ock.
So this is a bird that once had colonies of millions of millions.
The Great Ock.
Great Ock.
It's like basically, so penguins are from Antarctica, the South.
This was kind of our version, the northern version of a penguin.
Yeah, northern penguin.
Let's go.
And they had these huge colonies of millions of birds,
but when down feathers became a thing,
we drove them to extinction.
Humans did.
But had we not done that, had humans not done that,
they probably were on their way towards extinction anyway,
because their numbers had shrunk and shrunk and shrunk and shrunk,
their colonies had shrunk and shrunk and shrunk and shrunk.
There was only 10 or 12 or whatever colonies of these birds left.
So they were like on the road to extinction anyway, and then humans came in and put the nail in the coffin.
Got it.
So naturalized extinction does happen, and it's a normal thing, but it's probably not good when industrial consumption, like I'm going to take every feather from every ock I can, comes in and speeds up that process.
And the reason I say it's not good is because nothing else can adapt.
All the animals that would eat great oak, that relied on great oak, all of a sudden they're gone overnight.
Whereas if they slowly die out over time, nature is such a complete system that something else comes in to take its place.
The animals find a new food source, a different bird comes in and starts nesting there.
You know what I mean?
Like it adapts.
Whereas if we just come in and drop the knife, it's like, oh, shit, like the whole thing's broken.
What's the greatest example of that where humans have come in and affected an ecosystem so much with kind of like leading to the extinction or loss of an animal?
that you believe has had the largest effect.
Probably a combination of things in Australia.
Like in Australia we came in, we brought cane toads,
which is a big frog from South America,
that we brought them in because we started farming sugar cane in Australia,
and then they got cane beetle, which is a parasite.
So they're like, hey, let's get cane toads in to eat the cane beetle.
Well, the problem is these giant-ass toads that you're seeing here,
they came in, they have these venom sacs.
See those big bulbous things behind its eyes?
That's full of venom.
Yeah. And nothing in Australia has ever been adapted to tolerate that venom. So they brought these cane toads in. Cain toads, everything would try and eat them. All the goannas and the snakes and stuff, and they'd be dropping dead. And so this single frog, this act of bringing in these frogs to help combat the cane beetle has probably had one of the greatest ecological disasters in history. And like the country of Australia is at something like a 70% reduction in animals because of these things.
Wow.
Yeah, it's crazy.
And that's a straight human fumble.
Like, we're going to put, we're going to bring, it wasn't a removal.
It was bringing something in, but it, same, same effect.
Who brought them there?
Sugar cane farmers.
I don't know who specifically.
Yeah.
God, that's wild, dude.
It's crazy.
We were doing a, we were doing some shows up in, I want to say it was Maine or New Hampshire
right along the coast.
Uh-huh.
And we went down, but it was by the docks because it was beautiful down there to see in the boat.
It was like a, kind of like about an hour before sunset.
And we had a show nearby, and we just stopped in this little town.
And some of the guys who they were bringing in lobster traps.
And they all, they had all these things on them called sea squirts.
Okay.
It was a plant.
See if you could bring it up.
It's like a sponge, right?
Yeah, it was like a thing that it got, it looked hollow.
It almost looked plastic.
Sea squirts, also known as acidians or tunicates, are marine filter feeders with a
a sack-like body covered by a tough cellulose-based tunic, yet they almost looked like it was a
candy or something. It was just full of like kind of water. They filter bacteria and plankton
from water drawn through their syphins and their larva possess a primitive backbone, making them
a part of the cortofalum. What does it say that they, how did they get to America? Are they
invasive? These guys were saying these were all invasive. They all came from Asia. Oh, really?
Oh, that's interesting.
Oh, yeah, they're invading Long Island Sound,
attaching the hulls of commercial recreational ships
being transported in their ballast water,
a process known as hull fouling.
They also could have been introduced via aquaculture shipment,
such as oyster seed or by hitchhiking or fishing equipment.
There's another huge example of that called a zebra muscle
or zebra muscle, which is in all the lakes across the U.S.,
and they get so bad, see how they grow on everything,
that like your boat engine and stuff gets filled with them.
And it's crazy, because all you have to do is run your live well, you know, to go bass fishing or whatever.
And the fry is microscopic.
So then you have one drop of water with a little bit of fry in it and you take your boat to another lake.
They're all over the lake.
What does fry mean?
Like the larval stage, the baby.
Wow.
Yeah.
God.
I know.
And that's man doing that probably most of the time.
And oftentimes, like the cane toad was an intentional.
This is completely unintentional.
Yeah.
And we've done that over and over, like taking wrap.
rats to New Zealand and Hawaii and blah, blah. And it's just humans doing what humans do,
you know, just traveling and learning. Crazy thing, you know, dingoes, we brought dingoes to
Australia. Humans brought dingoes to Australia 4,000 years ago. When Aboriginal people came across
from Indonesia, New Guinea into Australia, they brought dogs with them, and those dogs were dingoes.
They're like the OG invasive species. And they're like a national treasure in Australia,
but they've been there 4,000 years, but humans actually brought them there.
Yeah, they weren't even supposed to be.
Dude, that's the kind of shit that happens.
Dude, my step-grandmother, she brings her fucking cat over to Thanksgiving,
and everybody's fucking pissed.
That thing is a piece of shit.
Most cats are.
I hate cats, but, yeah, I feel you.
Peeing everywhere.
Yeah.
What is one of your biggest, like, sleeper creatures?
Like, a creature that we are all kind of sleeping on,
that people don't know how awesome it is,
or that just doesn't get the acclaim that it should, do you think?
You know what I think's a good one?
Soft-shell turtle.
A turtle with a soft shell.
Why? It's so crazy.
Very brave.
It's nuts.
These things evolved away from having a hard shell.
It's like a gay dude in the military kind of.
You know?
No, I don't.
Please explain.
I don't know how to explain.
I'm just guessing.
Fair enough.
Yeah, fair enough.
It's just brave.
It's just brave.
Yeah.
Never mind.
Thank you for your service.
Don't ask.
Don't shell.
Don't ask.
don't shell. I don't know. I think these things don't get enough credit. You see them on highways
in Florida and stuff. So they're really, the shell is soft? Soft. It's like feels like leather.
No. And it's just such a weird, like if you think about a turtle, you think about this,
this like living rock, it's flippers, its head, its feet, whatever. Then you got this guy.
Like, what the hell's this guy doing? He's got this leathery shell. They get like this big.
There's certain species they get. If you look up the raffidus, they get massive. Like I'm talking about
the size of a car.
A soft-shell turtle.
Talk about an animal that just doesn't get enough credit.
A turtle is just crazy, isn't it?
Yeah, they're insane.
They're weird.
Look at these guys.
Look at these penis-headed things.
It's nice to have like you're kind of to go home on your back or whatever, but it's just crazy.
Yeah, they're insane.
They're such weird, cool animals and don't get enough credit.
Hmm.
I think because they feel so, I wonder, are they nervous?
That's why they pop back in their shell?
Or are they...
Oh, it's cold out, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, their defensive mechanism is to go into their shell unless you're a soft shell.
Then it's being fast.
Yeah.
They've evolved to be faster instead of retreat.
Oh, that's a large one you showed right there?
Yeah, the raffidus.
Yeah.
And they get huge.
So this is an animal that there's currently believed to be three left, one male with a broken penis and two females.
So they got to fix that wiener on him
So yeah, it's pretty sad
So we went and did a show on these guys
It's crazy, it's a whole political turmoil, everything
So the male, there were two males and two females
And one of the males died
Because a kid dropped a brick on its head
From the enclosure in a zoo in China
In Shuzoo China, I believe
So now there's one male and two females
That's a knot
Then yeah, then the male
They tried to breed it or something
Broken Dick. Legit, broken dick, yeah
So now they've got two females in this lake in Dong Mo in Vietnam and one male in China.
I believe that's where the current numbers are.
And neither country is willing to give the other their turtles.
But it wouldn't really matter anyway because it's got a broken dick.
So the whole thing's kind of fucked.
Somebody.
So Trump needs to arrange a meeting between all these people, I think.
You know, I think he should sit down and be like, all right, how are we fixing this dick?
You know?
I know we got some other stuff going on, but how are we working on this?
Wow.
The most widely cited figure is two confirmed individuals, both male, one in Suzo Zoo, China, and one in Dong Mo Lake, Vietnam.
Dang.
I thought one of those males died, like I was talking about.
I'm not sure.
But, oh, yeah, last known female died.
It's, yeah, it's hard to track.
I think it's one male and two females that we know of.
The future of the species now depends on last ditch conservation and breeding efforts,
as well as the possibility of verifying additional individual turtles.
Wow.
So we went out to Dong Mo Lake, and we went out to Dongo Lake.
We ran EDNA and got samples and even filmed one of these animals.
And this is where, like, colossal biosciences, right?
Like, if they could get an X and a Y chromosome, a male and a female, they could make those turtles.
And that would be awesome.
That's where, like, that technology, to me, there's no ethical concern.
There's no moral concern.
It's like, hell yeah.
Like, we went and got these samples, male and female chromosomes, tissue, built new turtles, ground up, good to go.
Are they out there, are they searching for these things?
How are they doing it? How are they trying to get DNA or genetic material so that they can
create or recreate or reestablish species? Well, I don't think, oh, you mean how's colossal doing it?
Yeah, they're going all over the world. They're digging up stuff like that guy, John Reeves,
that place in Alaska. They're getting samples from. They've been on multiple digs in
Mauritius getting dodo samples. Yeah, they're collecting all that kind of stuff.
How much more animals existed at one time do you think? Like, what percentage are we down to right now?
that's a good question. Um, we have a lot of diversity in this era more so than like when
there were dinosaurs and stuff like that. That's, that's, I mean, fact check me on that. But yeah,
it's mammalian diversity is higher than when like reptiles were at their peak and, yeah,
there's a lot of metals. It's really good. Yeah. But, you know, we have eliminated a lot like we talked
about, but we're still, and I don't believe in this whole like we're fucked thing. Like, we're still
in a, the planet's incredible. Wildlife's resilient. Like, we're not down that much. Yes, we've
knocked huge populations down, meaning we've knocked down, you know, shark species to 10% of what
there were, or populations, we've knocked down certain mammal species to five or 10% of what they
were. That's all it takes to bring it back. You know what I mean? Like, you just back off a little
bit, they'll bounce right back. Right. There's a study that got put out a few years ago. I'd be
curious if anybody's done a study since, that said if you didn't, if we as human beings didn't fish
the ocean for seven years, it would be back to 99% fullness of what it's at now. That's it. Seven years is
all it would take allegedly. That's not very long. We can't do that because 99% of the world's
protein comes from the ocean or something like that. But that's all it takes for nature to
like fight its way back up, you know? Do you think there's a certain country or a certain part
of the world that they, you find that they have it right when it comes to nature and to
animalia? No. I think there's lots of places that are trying, you know? The Galapagos has
done a really good job of like really taking care of their islands.
You go through quarantine when you go there and blah, blah, blah.
And there are other places, like Palau, which is a tiny little island nation.
I think it is either the only or definitely the first country in the world that said no commercial fishing.
It's like, go out and kill your own fish all you like and eat them, but we're not doing any commercial fishing.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
You know, it's like, you want to go out and shoot a fish?
Go shoot a fish.
But, you know, you're not buying it from a purse sauner who's killing dolphins and wiping out coral reefs.
Like, that kind of thing's awesome.
But, you know, we wouldn't be having nobu in Tennessee if, uh, you know,
if that existed. So, you know, it's a trade-off.
Right. Yeah.
Yeah, and whoever fucking brought no boo to Tennessee's out of their fucking mind.
I don't know if there is one, but, yeah.
I think there is actually. I don't know.
Every time I see somebody going to something where it's like they're trying to put it in Nashville,
I'm like, what are you doing, you know?
Dude, Nashville's wild.
I got to walk around today.
It's fun.
It's cool, man. It's busy.
I'm going to go out this evening, check out Broadway, right?
Yeah, you have some other friends here or no?
I got a friend here. Yeah, he's going to meet me.
I mean, you're welcome to join, but we're go check it out.
I might try to come say, hey, I'll go get a snack with you or something.
Anything else you want to chat about for us?
I think this has been good first episode so far, do you think?
Dude, I think it's great, man.
I'm just like, if you're interested, I'm interested.
My thing is like, people love it.
I'm into it.
I want to go to South.
I want to do that South Africa thing.
Let's do it, man.
I'm happy.
And if, you know, October may be too soon.
Sure.
But I could always do it in the spring or something.
If you're planning on going, let me know.
And I'll try link with you.
and then we'll go do some really cool, like a safari thing for a few days.
But I'm talking not like, hey, let's go on safari.
I mean, like, hey, Theo, let's go catch giraffes and put radio collars on them.
No way.
Like something that people don't get to do that we'll do through the conservation groups that I work with.
Put that house rest brace on your neck.
Yeah, take that, boy.
Yeah.
He's just showing up to his, to his PO.
Dude, the ladies are like, that's a bad giraffe right there.
That's a bad giraffe right there.
Is there an animal that you wish could speak up for itself ever better?
Man, that's a good question.
An animal that could speak up for itself.
Yeah, you know what the Vakita is?
The Vakita?
Yeah, ever heard of that?
No, but I'd put some damn cheese on one of them, I feel like.
Sounds pretty good, doesn't it?
Yeah.
Well, it's Mexican, so that makes sense.
Oh, it does, yeah.
I'll take it with the verde sauce.
Yeah, no, that makes sense.
But these little guys, smallest porpoise in the world,
There's now estimate between 9 and 11 of them left on the planet.
Which is the worst to have 9-11 of them left sound fucking like bad luck.
That's a bad sign, yeah.
I wish these guys could speak up for themselves because they're just these crazy, cute little dolphins.
They're driving towards extinction.
There's not a lot that can be done based on how things are going.
They need a flipper up to somebody and just be like, help, and we'd be good.
Vakita.
Yeah.
Oh, they look like the quacas of the sea.
Yeah, nice.
Good pull.
Where their smile is kind of built on.
It's funny how some animals got,
I kind of put a smile on them
so you would just see that they're okay, you know?
I mean, you look at a quokka and you're like, right,
well, we're never letting that thing go anywhere.
It's too cute, you know?
If everything was cute, we'd be good.
Yeah.
Why are some animals only in one spot?
Because aren't the quokas only native to an island
off the coast of Australia?
Yeah, near to Perth, yeah.
I mean, that's crazy to think on a whole planet that they're that specific of a place.
I mean, that's wild, isn't it?
It's crazy.
Yeah, so they get there as something else, like as a small wallaby or whatever.
And then, like with a Quoka, for instance, they're like, oh, wait, having tails doesn't help us.
So year after year, shorter tails, shorter tails, shorter tails, hey, wait, having this big, goofy smile and these big fat cheeks, that's actually good because we store food.
I'm making the stuff up.
But, you know, and then they breed more and more and more.
and then before you know it, you've got its own species that's stuck here that's completely different from these guys
because their environment dictates that these characteristics make it useful for this place only.
Yeah. I don't know if that makes sense.
Yeah, it does. Well, I think it shows also why humans have adapted and become different ways,
because they needed to become fit for their territory.
Exactly. Yeah. You look at what is it, the Sudanese, South Sudanese, the tallest people in the world.
Like, why are those guys so tall? You know what I mean? And it's obviously genetic and cultural.
and everything else. But these guys are all over seven feet. Like, that's incredible that
only takes place in that one area. Why? Why did they need to be so tall? Do you know?
I don't know. I would like to know. Let's look it up right now and see if we can get a little
bit more information. I'd like to go there. Wouldn't you like to stand around with seven foot
tall people? It sounds so interesting. Yeah, until you freaking, you know, until you hit your head
on something and realize it, it's like, oh God. It wipes you across the face. Oh, boy, that's not what I
wanted. Then you and your buddy from Florida high school are sharing the same problem.
Yeah, it's like, like,
when you see that person
that's blindfolded
and the pinata hits
someone is swinging around.
Yeah.
Like, whoa.
Danglers get you.
Um, South Sudanese people,
particularly the niliotic groups
like the dinka and the new air
are among the tallest in the world,
largely due to a mix of genetics,
natural selection,
and nutritional factors.
Um,
the tall lean bodies of the South Sudanese nilotis help with
thermoregulation in a hot,
dry climate.
Yeah.
Longer limbs facilitate
heat dissipation supporting survival
and tropical conditions, a phenomenon
aligned with the Bergman's and Allen's
rules and biology. How crazy is
that? It's so damn hot
here that we're going to make you taller
so that you can off gas more
and stay cooler. And by the way,
you're all going to be seven feet tall. Like, that's so
cool. That's fascinating.
Isn't that wild? Well, yeah,
it's just fascinating how, I mean,
I mean, it's all just fascinating.
To exist is fascinating to me.
Yeah. And we're lucky,
we live on this planet, man. I mean, not that I know where else we'd live, but there's just so much
cool stuff here. Yeah. And I think that's one thing that's just nice to even get talked today, man.
It's just a reminder of that, you know, just a reminder of it. Yeah, I appreciate it. Thanks for
having me on, man. It's really cool. Oftentimes when I talk, do podcasts or whatever, I talk to guys
that, you know, we have similar interests. We talk a lot about, you know, I know, they know a lot of,
like even Joe, right? Like when I do Joe's show, he knows a lot about animals. Oh, yeah. He's an animal
nut. But to talk to you who, no offense, but maybe knows less or has less connection,
you see that, like I was saying earlier, that child sense of wonderment, be like, no way, you know,
like that's so cool that you can bring that back. Yeah, thanks, dude. Well, I just, yeah, I feel
lucky to get to talk to people. I feel lucky to get to learn. I mean, I feel like, you know, like,
even just to be inspired today that I want to go back to South Africa, you know, and that it would
be need to go do something there, you know. One of my friends said yesterday, I was talking to him,
I don't know if I was talking to him on the phone
Let me think about who it was really quick
Oh damn, I can't remember
But he goes
Man, you know what's crazy to think
He goes, if you think about your life
Think about how many summers you have left
Yeah, it's not that many
And you're like, whoa
Yeah, what?
We got 20, 30 summers left, you know?
It just starts to put the perspective of your life
You know, if even, you know, if you're 25
and say you have, you know, until you're 65, you can kind of do whatever you want.
You have 40 summers left, right?
That's a lot of summers, but that's not that.
But it's not that many summers, dude.
And if you think, like, I think of my, this past summer, like, I basically worked all summer.
I was on the road.
I barely had a time to hang out with my kids or go to the lake or do any of the summer things.
That's it.
I lost one of those.
I'm never getting that back.
That summer's gone.
It's going to be cold when I get home now, you know?
Like, that sucks.
It's cool.
Yeah.
But it's nice today to be.
be able to be reminded of that and just be reminded that nature's out there waiting for us
that there's a lot of things that are happening out there and that we're lucky to exist and be a
part of them man yeah boris galante thanks so much for coming in people can check out
animals and drugs animals on drugs animals on drugs right now and i challenge you guys in the
comment to this episode if you can think of any good names for um uh drug animal
crossovers we need them we need more crocoons yeah we need more crocoons yeah we need more
Raccoons. Thanks for us.
Now, I'm just floating on the breeze, and I feel I'm falling like these leaves.
I must be cornerstone.
Oh, but when I reach that ground, I'll share this piece of mind I found I can feel it in my bones.
But it's going to tell you.
