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Animal Planet Is Being Sued for a Whole Bunch of Insane Things

Mother Jones

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A Kentucky farmer has accused Animal Planet of setting a fire, damming a creek, chopping down trees, and illegally trespassing and building structures on his property during the production of the reality TV show Call of the Wildman.

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Scandal is all too familiar for viewers of this once-popular show, which follows the supposedly real-life antics of a wily Kentucky wildlife rescuer nicknamed “Turtleman” and his buddies. First, Mother Jones uncovered evidence of repeated animal mistreatment, including drugging an endangered zebra and trapping a sick coyote and other animals for elaborately faked scenes. Then came revelations of state and federal animal welfare investigations, abrupt cancelations of broadcasts, and plummeting viewership—all the while Animal Planet representatives denied any wrongdoing.

Now, Turtleman, a.k.a. Ernie Brown Jr., along with his fellow cast members and producers, is facing a potential trial over allegations stemming from an episode filmed in the summer of 2014, called “Call in the Cavalry.” During the episode (part of which can be watched online), the so-called “Turtle Team” builds an elaborate tree house, using only materials that they find in the woods, and the “backwoods wisdom” for which the show is famous. “Everything we’re going to get is going to come from the backwoods,” Turtleman instructs his team—and the cast can be seen chain-sawing at least one tree, cutting shingles, and mixing cement.

But behind the scenes, J.D. Long, a 54-year-old resident of the rural hamlet of Liberty, Kentucky, says the show’s producers came onto his approximately 49-acre property after his sister, who lives there, explicitly told them they weren’t welcome. Long was furious when his sister told him that the team had built the tree house at least partly out of lumber he says they logged on his land. (One of Long’s lawyers, Andrew Trimble, says he saw multiple tree stumps at the site during a survey—consistent, he said, with claims in the broadcast that the tree house was built using local materials.) Long told local police that he commissioned a survey and found that three-quarters of the new tree house along with a recreational zip-line was built on his property, near the boundary line he shares with his neighbor, Rodney D. Finn.

The tree house in question, as featured in the episode “Call In The Cavalry.” Animal Planet

“They didn’t cut just any tree,” Long said. “Some of these trees they cut, they’re not replaceable. They only grow in certain places. They grow in deep, dark hollows.” Long, a landscaper and nurseryman by trade, says people tend to pay a top dollar for this type of wood, which is prized in log cabin design.

Along with trespassing and cutting down his trees, Long also alleges that people working for the show chipped away at the rock face of a waterfall Long says is also on his property to make the concrete (a scene that plays out in the actual broadcast), and then used that concrete to dam up one of his creeks.

Also Read “The Cruelest Show on Earth,” our yearlong investigation into elephant abuse at the Ringling Bros. circus.

But the most bizarre part of the incident, Long says, came in the middle of the night some months after filming had wrapped up—around November 20, 2014—when he woke to the sound of machinery. “My sister jumped out of bed, she was scared to death,” he said. “It made this whizzing that sounded like the whole neighborhood was going to blow up.” He called 911.

It turned out the whizzing was coming from a crane, Long said, which had arrived under the cover of darkness to tear down the tree house. Long says the remains of the tree house were then set on fire. “I mean, they could have set the whole mountain on fire, that’s what got me,” he said. “I was really aggravated.”

Sheriff’s Deputy Jamie Walters says he saw evidence of burned wood at the site of the tree house when he went to look, and found debris in the creek, according to a police report he filed about the incident. In the same police report, Long’s neighbor, Finn (whom he is also suing), admits to building the tree house that the production company had wanted for the episode. In court documents filed in his defense, Finn admits to being an “associate” of Turtleman, but denies the other allegations.

Finn did not respond to a voicemail left by Mother Jones, but in an interview with Deputy Walters last year, Finn said he had rented a crane and attempted to move the cabin after Long complained. Walters wrote: “He said when they tried to move the cabin it buckled in the center and came apart. Some of the cabin was salvaged but the remaining parts were burnt.”

According to Walters, Finn said he admitted that he “made a mistake when he constructed the cabin because he thought it was on his property.” Long refused to accept $1,000 from Finn as an apology.

Animal Planet and Sharp Entertainment—the New York-based production company that makes the show—did not respond to repeat attempts to seek an interview for this article. Neither did attorneys Rebecca Schafer and Emily Newman, from the Louisville legal firm representing the bulk of the defendants. Schafer and Newman filed documents asking the court to dismiss the case in May, and denied all the central allegations. The judge has yet to rule on that request.

In March, Long filed a suit against Animal Planet and its parent company Discovery Communications, along with the show’s production company, Sharp Entertainment, CORE Media Group (which owns Sharp), the cast of the show, and his neighbor Rodney D. Finn, who he says also trespassed and was involved in the construction and destruction of the tree house. Long has since been locked in the back-and-forth pre-trial exchange of documents between lawyers. No trial date has been set.

For his part, it seems like Turtleman might need all the financial help he can get from the production company he has worked for since 2011. “People think I have a million dollars,” he told The Post Standard, in March. “I got the famous part, but I haven’t got the rich part figured out yet. I’m the poorest famous guy around. I only made $50,000 last year, and that’s before taxes.”

Call of the Wildman is still under investigation by the US Department of Agriculture, which is looking into multiple claims of animal mistreatment raised by Mother Jones reporting last year:

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Animal Planet Is Being Sued for a Whole Bunch of Insane Things

Posted in alo, Anchor, Citizen, FF, GE, LAI, LG, ONA, Radius, Uncategorized, Venta | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Animal Planet Is Being Sued for a Whole Bunch of Insane Things

Pope Francis gets more people to care about climate change

Pope Francis gets more people to care about climate change

By on 12 Nov 2015commentsShare

In a complete slap in the face to millions of environmental activists all over the world, a bunch of people just decided to care about climate change because ONE dude told them to. Granted, that dude was Jorge Mario Bergolio, aka Big Man Bergolio, aka his holiness Pope Francis, the chillest Catholic this side of the pearly gates. Seventeen percent of Americans and 35 percent of Catholics have been influenced by the pope’s position on climate change, according to a new poll.

Glad to hear it, but it still stings the same way it stung back in elementary school, when nobody wanted to play on the monkey bars with you until that one cool kid decided that he wanted to play on the monkey bars, and then suddenly everyone was into it. Researchers call this The Francis Effect (the pope thing, not the monkey bars thing — unless that kid’s name was also Francis). This all started back in June, when the pope released his headlinegrabbing encyclical on the urgency of climate change, basically saying that we have a moral obligation to protect the Earth and those poorest among us from this impending catastrophe. And then in September, his holiness brought up climate change again when he came to the U.S. to meet with President Obama, Congress, and the U.N. General Assembly.

Curious about what all this climate change talk from on high was doing to public opinion, researchers at the George Mason University Center for Climate Change Communication and the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication asked a representative group of Americans about their thoughts on climate change, after having already surveyed the same group earlier this spring. And what they found was that The Francis Effect was, indeed, in full effect. Their complete results are available here, but below are some of their key findings:

“Of those Americans who say they’ve been influenced, half (50 percent) say the Pope’s position on global warming made them more concerned about global warming, while fewer than 1 in 10 (8 percent) say they became less concerned. Among Catholics, the proportions are 53 percent, and 8 percent, respectively.”
“More Americans overall (+6 points), and more Catholics (+13 points), became very or extremely sure that global warming is happening. There was no change, however, in the number of Americans who believe human activity is causing global warming.”
“More Americans overall and American Catholics think that people in developing countries (+15 and +17 points, respectively) and the world’s poor (+12 and +20 points, respectively) will be harmed by global warming a great deal or a moderate amount.”
“More Americans (+9 points), and more Catholics (+13 points), think global warming will harm people in the United States a great deal or a moderate amount.”
“More Americans (+8 points) and more Catholics (+11 points) have become worried about global warming.”

Th pope’s effortless ability to get people to care about something that so many of us have been trying to get people to care about for so long is great news, if not slightly infuriating. Because unlike the monkey bars of our youth, which were no more than a fictional life boat keeping us safe from the “hot lava” covering the playground floor, these monkey bars are an actual life boat keeping us safe from the world actually going up in flames. So keep fighting the good fight, Frankie. We’ll take all the help we can get.

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Pope Francis gets more people to care about climate change

Posted in Anchor, Everyone, FF, GE, LAI, ONA, Radius, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Pope Francis gets more people to care about climate change