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Overheard at National Geographic

A Skeptic's Guide to Loving Bats

Overheard at National Geographic

National Geographic

Science, Society & Culture

4.5 • 10.1K Ratings

🗓️ 26 October 2021

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Blood-sucking villains. Spooky specters of the night. Our views of bats are often based more on fiction than fact. Enter National Geographic Explorer at Large Rodrigo Medellín, aka the Bat Man of Mexico. For decades he’s waged a charm offensive to show the world how much we need bats, from the clothes we wear to a sip of tequila at the end of a long day. Now, as the COVID-19 pandemic causes even more harmful bat myths, the world must once again realize that bats may not be the hero everyone wants—but they’re the hero we need. For more info on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard Want more?
 See how Rodrigo uses a multi-pronged approach—involving field research, conservation, and tequila—to help protect bats. In a Nat Geo short film, Rodrigo ventures into an ancient Mayan ruin to find two rare species of vampire bat. Curious about the connection between bats and COVID-19? Explore why it’s so tricky to trace the disease’s origins. Also explore: Learn more about bats: They can be found nearly everywhere on Earth and range in size from lighter than a penny to a six-foot wingspan. Why do bats get a bad rap? See how Spanish conquistadors and Dracula convinced us bats are more fright than friend. Bat myths have real-world consequences. In Mauritius, a government campaign culled tens of thousands of endangered fruit bats. For more bat info, follow Rodrigo on Instagram @batmanmedellin And for paid subscribers: Step inside Borneo’s limestone caves, some of the largest and wildest on Earth—and home to to millions of bats. If you like what you hear and want to support more content like this, please consider a National Geographic subscription. Go to natgeo.com/exploremore to subscribe today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This podcast is brought to you in part by Geico proud sponsor of National Geographic

0:05.4

Geico 15 minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance

0:11.2

Amy hey, how's it going?

0:13.2

It's going all right. How are you?

0:15.8

Huh, you know hanging in so how's the history magazine these days?

0:19.6

It's bloody Jacob very bloody.

0:23.2

Okay, tell me not too much more, but a little bit more

0:26.4

Vampires Jacob we're working on a story about vampires and the origins of the Dracula story

0:32.5

That sounds spooky. Okay. What have you found? Okay, so you know count Dracula, right? Yeah, it's Bram Stoker's novel

0:40.0

And we're looking into the you know the source material for it

0:43.0

So it turns out count Dracula is based in part on an actual guy

0:47.6

Huh, he's known as flagtepus or as his enemies call him flag the impaler. Oh, okay

0:54.0

So he rolled back in the 1400s and what is now Romania

0:58.1

And so he dies and his detractors write about how brutal the guy was and you know

1:03.2

They're not really lying like Vlad was pretty brutal like he was a ruthless enemy

1:07.6

He actually did impale a bunch of people on big pointy spikes to kill them. I mean not not somebody wanted to tangle with

1:14.8

Yeah, so years later Bram Stoker

1:17.9

He's researching a new novel. He's writing about a vampire

1:20.7

And so he's he goes to he goes to Romania and he's doing some research and comes across this name

1:27.2

Dracula which is a fabulous name for a vampire

1:31.2

It means son of the dragon and so he bases his count Dracula character in part on Vlad

1:38.6

So aside from a few details, you know Stoker makes up the rest, you know Vlad isn't nocturnal

...

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