5 • 911 Ratings
🗓️ 25 September 2024
⏱️ 35 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
"And the thing that really makes me sad is that we humanize them when they're little, by putting them in diapers and feeding them bottles and dressing them in clothes. And then we demonize them when they grow up and act like the wild animal that they are, because people think if they neuter them, if they get their teeth removed - not my chimp, my chimp is not going to act like that." - Angela Scott
Last week we released an episode with Brittany Peet, PETA's general counsel for captive animal law enforcement, who is featured in the HBO docuseries, Chimp Crazy. If you haven't seen it, please see it. It's made by Eric Goode, the guy who made Tiger King, and it is equally shocking. It also shines a light on the need to pass the Captive Primate Safety Act and there are many high hopes that that act could get passed this year because of Chimp Crazy.
Chimp Crazy focuses on chimpanzee owners, private owners that buy cute baby chimps, dress them up and treat them like human children until they are 5 or 6 years old, when the chimps become large, and very strong wild animals. This part usually ends badly. Well, it always ends badly for the chimps but quite often it does for the humans too.
This conversation is with Angela Scott, the whistleblower in Chimp Crazy, and for this entire case.
A little background: Angela volunteered at a place called Chimp Party for a woman named Connie Casey. Connie and her husband Mike bred and sold chimpanzees and other primates for decades.
PETA got involved because of the horrific conditions these chimps were living in. Angela was the whistleblower who worked with PETA. But before the case could fully go through, Connie gave her chimps to a woman named Tonya Haddix. And the chimps were in Tanya’s care when they were rescued, all except for one, a chimp named Tonka. Tanya tried to keep Tonka for herself and she hid him from PETA for months in a cage in her basement.
All of the chimps, including Tonka, were eventually saved because of Angela’s willingness to go back to Connies and film what she saw. Angela’s stories of what these chimps went through are astonishing and I am so grateful to her for sharing them with us.
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0:00.0 | Species, |
0:08.0 | species, unite, |
0:10.0 | unite. |
0:12.0 | And the thing that really makes me sad is that we humanize them when they're little by putting them in diapers and feeding them bottles and dressing them in clothes and then we demonize them when they grow up and act like the wild |
0:25.2 | animal that they are because people think if they neuter them if they get their |
0:29.6 | teeth removed not my chimp's not going to act like that. |
0:33.6 | Hi, I'm going Novigrats. This is Species Unite. We have a favor to ask. If you like today's |
0:48.9 | episode and you have a spare minute, could you please rate and review Species Unite on Apple |
0:55.1 | Podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts? It really helps people to find the shell. Last week we released an episode with Brittany Pete. |
1:12.0 | She's Pita's general counsel for captive animal law enforcement |
1:16.2 | and she is featured in the HBO docuaries, |
1:18.8 | Chimk Crazy. |
1:20.2 | If you haven't seen Chimimp Crazy, please see it. |
1:23.7 | It's made by Eric Good, the guy who made Tiger King, |
1:26.7 | and it's equally shocking. |
1:28.7 | It also shines a light on the need |
1:31.3 | to pass the Captive Primate Safety Act. |
1:34.0 | And there are many high hopes that this act could get passed this year because of Chimp Crazy. |
1:40.0 | Chimp Crazy focuses on chimpanzee owners, private owners that buy cute baby chimps, |
1:45.0 | dress them up and treat them like small human children |
1:48.0 | until they're five or six years old |
1:50.0 | when the chimps become large and very strong wild animals. This part |
... |
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