Interesting article on wild animal doco presenters

kiwipo

Well-Known Member
Beware of the Gonzo Nature-TV Presenter
By Andrew Marshall – Time Magazine Sept 4 2011
Sept. 4 is the fifth anniversary of the death of Steve Irwin, the Australian wildlife presenter fatally speared by a stingray's barb while filming on the Great Barrier Reef. His death was a shock, but its manner surprised nobody. There was no dangerous animal Irwin wouldn't provoke and manhandle for TV.
Five years on, the pet-and-pester approach he pioneered has become the standard way for nature programs to produce cheap dramatic footage — reality TV with claws. Turn on any channel and you'll see Irwin lookalikes hassling animals. They declaim their love of nature, while unwittingly recording our dysfunctional relationship with it, teaching our children to both fear and subjugate creatures already pushed to the brink of extinction.
Irwin's boyhood inspiration was the British broadcaster and naturalist David Attenborough. Often whispering so as not to disturb his subjects, Attenborough reverentially reveals the wonders of the natural world and our place in it. He doesn't set out to demonstrate his mastery over animals.
Today's presenters are different. Animal Planet's slogan is "Surprisingly Human." It should be "Depressingly Human," since it chronicles our species' conflict with almost every other. A South African herpetologist called Donald Schultz, who fronts Wild Recon, is a self-styled adrenaline junkie on a pseudo-scientific mission. He collects snake venom and other animal fluids "that could yield life-altering scientific discoveries." In Sri Lanka, he draws blood from a tranquilized young rogue elephant "so that researchers can study his hormones." But what discoveries those unnamed researchers make — or what qualifies a snake expert to draw blood from the world's largest land mammal — is never explained. What we learn is this: animals are vicious, so humans are justified in using any means to subdue them. Schultz describes the drugged and terrified elephant as "five tons of aggression."
This message is driven home by more recent shows, such as Man-Eating Super Snake ("No one is safe in South Florida") and Nature's Deadliest ("Size doesn't matter to the world's most dangerous creatures"). I've given up on finding a show that teaches us how to live in harmony with animals. Instead, we invade their habitats and, when they defend themselves, we brand them violent.
This is the apparent strategy of Animal Planet's Into the Pride. A pride of lions known for "aggression toward people" must learn to grow accustomed to ecotourists at a Namibian reserve — or else. "If they don't calm down," we're told, "they will be destroyed." Calm down? They're wild animals. They're calm enough when you leave them alone. But try telling that to the show's frat-boy host, a Canadian animal trainer called Dave Salmoni. He approaches on an all-terrain vehicle and sets about acclimatizing the lions to humans — by repeatedly aggravating them. "Right now, they're problem cats," Salmoni explains, "because of their perception of what humans are." In this case, a whooping doofus on a quad bike.
Even National Geographic ("Inspiring people to care about the planet since 1888") can't leave animals be. An episode of its Monster Fish shows American biologist Zeb Hogan wrestling giant South American arapaima into a man-made pond where anglers pay to catch them. This is conservation?
All this poses a dilemma for parents. Where do children form an appreciation of nature? My father took me to zoos, which I loved. But today even the best zoos discomfit many parents, this one included. So children must turn to TV, where they find the bloody dramatized attacks of Discovery Channel's recent Shark Week, or a show like Swamp Brothers, in which Florida reptile trader Robbie Keszey restrains wild animals under the guise of (he says) teaching people to respect "their rights to this place we call earth." My son won't be watching him.
Is there a connection between TV's obsession with subjugating animals and our capacity to destroy them and their habitats? Possibly. We demonized sharks and were soon slaughtering millions for their fins every year. Through nature TV, we're now demonizing all wild creatures to make us feel better about precipitating their extinction. "People come first," says Schultz as he pursues that elephant, and for once he's right. On this planet, only rogue humans are allowed to roam free.
This article originally appeared in the August 22, 2011 issue of TIME Europe.
 
this thread should be in the tv part of the forum (where more people will read it), but this article pretty much reflects how I think a lot of Zoochatters perceive today's wildlife "documentaries". Steve Irwin certainly did start the ball rolling with the kind of inane drivel that masquerades as documentaries these days although he never reached the dizzying heights of stupidity of some of his followers. Amongst my most hated presenters are drama-queen Jeremy Wade and his ridiculous "River Monsters" show (he never ceases to drum on about how dangerous his fishing is, but its for science dontcha know) and wanna-be Boys Own character Austin Stevens of "Austin Stevens: Snakemaster' aka "Austin Stevens: Most Dangerous" with shirtless posing, bizarre "professional" photography techniques, slow-motion and bullet-time shots, and (I kid you not) even a dream sequence in one episode!

I can't even watch Animal Planet these days because almost everything on there is this sort of rubbish.
 
I'll re post it over there. I really miss the type of docos as made by the Joberts. Those type had no humans in the film whatsoever.
Even Big Cat Dairy had a bit too much Human/animal interaction for my liking.
Now it seems any idiot with a camera can go out and film himself interfering/harrasing/annoying animals and it makes good TV.
Ironically some 15 years ago a Southern African guide was well criticised and slammed for having super close encounters with wildlife, in recent times though the exploits he has been doing for a couple of decades now were the stars of a TV doco series on Animal Planet. He got the nick name Mad Mike many years before he ever got on TV.
 
Excellent and awesome thread started Kiwipo. I have noticed that Animal Planet has gone rapidly downhill since 2005 when I first got it. Steve Irwin died because the fans were getting him to do more and more dangerous stuff with wild animals.
Chlidonias you are right. I cannot watch Animal Planet any more either. It used to have conservation messages in its ads in 2005 but I do not see these any more, just stupid people wrestling animals and complete rubbish shows such as the Haunted about 'paranormal activity', pitbulls and parolees, Groomer has it, not to mention animal cruelty shows like animal cops this and that.
I haven't had the misfortune to see Jeremy Wade but it looks like rubbish. The less said about Discovery Channel the better. It had good shows about ten years ago (I only saw them in a listener TV guide).
I am concerned about this 'animals are vicious and we need to subdue them' making people commit acts of cruelty. I suggest we boycott sky TV? and encourage your friends to do the same and show the people who run sky we don't like their 'documentaries'.
 
Can anyone remember the wildlife films made some 20 years ago, many are still popular now. The films made by the Jouberts for example, Eternal Enemies about lion and hyena is a great example. No humans in the film atall, just all animals interacting with each other without any human interference.

Even the Disney wildlife films of the 60s, despite the fact they were often inaccurate and dramatised, were better than today's films showing humans wrestling with almost every type of animal under the sun.

If we were to have a vote on the worst of these programs I would pick the series on Hillbilly hand fishing, which shows a bunch of idiots led by inbred ******* letting giant catfish bite them so they can pull them out of the water.

This closely followed by the Snake guy who doesn't confine himself to snakes but grabs anything and everything.
 
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