Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts

Monday, 21 September 2015

Chimpanzees get excited by TV shows featuring humans dressed up as apes


By admin
Sep 21, 2015 

Fumihiro Kano of Kyoto University, Japan, said in a press release: “We were giving juice while showing the videos to them, but some of them even forgot to drink juice and stared at the movies!”

Kano created two short films. The first film feature an aggressive person in an ape suit, who comes out from one of two identical doors. In the second film, a human actor grabs one of two objects and attacks the ape-like character with it.

An eye tracker showed that the mammals anticipated the events in the movie, even after watching it only once.

They directed their view towards the door on the second viewing of the film, where they knew the human in an ape suit would appear.

When they re-watched the second film, they looked towards the object that would be used as a weapon, even if it was placed in a different place.

This means that they stored knowledge of the films into their long-term memory, much like humans do, and can use that information to anticipate events.

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Seattleite stars as skeptic on Sasquatch series

A two-hour special, "Finding Bigfoot: Birth of a Legend," airs Oct. 30 on Animal Planet. In this outing, a team of Sasquatch hunters, which includes Seattle's Ranae Holland, traipses through a California redwood forest to visit the site where the Patterson-Gimlin footage of a supposed Bigfoot was filmed 50 years ago.

By Rob Owen
Special to The Seattle Times

There's something comfortably predictable about Animal Planet's "Finding Bigfoot." Each week, a team of Sasquatch aficionados research reports of Bigfoot sightings and spend a night in the woods searching for the hairy creature. And each week they come away without proof of Bigfoot's existence; yet they remain undaunted, ready to go back out again.

It's not an unfamiliar television format, one popularized most recently by other paranormal cable series like Syfy's "Ghost Hunters" franchise and A&E's recently concluded "Paranormal State."

The first season of "Finding Bigfoot" aired during the summer, drawing an average 1.2 million viewers, making it one of Animal Planet's top series. A second season is in the works for early next year, and a two-hour special, "Finding Bigfoot: Birth of a Legend," airs tonight at 9.

In this outing, the team, which includes Seattle's Ranae Holland, traipses through a California redwood forest to visit the site where the Patterson-Gimlin footage of a supposed Bigfoot was filmed 50 years ago.

The "Finding Bigfoot" team is made up of three true believers and one skeptic. Holland, a research field biologist/ecologist with a degree in aquatic ecology from the University of Washington, is the skeptic.

When she's not out searching for Bigfoot, Holland makes her home on Lake Union. For now her place is sublet while she's on the hunt.

"I have not been home very much," she said earlier this month during a break from production in southwest Virginia for a season-two episode. Production wraps in early December.

"Then I get to come home. Some of my friends are chefs, so I'm looking forward to getting some fantastic Seattle food. Then I can recharge my batteries."

A South Dakota native, Holland, 41, worked as a field-biologist contractor before "Finding Bigfoot," often spending time collecting research samples in the wilderness.

Connection with father

Her interest in Bigfoot dates back to watching "In Search of ... " and 1970s-era Bigfoot movies with her father. Although she's a fan of the mystery of Bigfoot, she does not believe the creatures exist.

"I can't wrap my head around that there's a bipedal primate running around the woods of North America. ... There's not enough proof to say I believe," she said.

"But I'm fascinated by the idea of the phenomenon and intrigued by the reports. ... I'm curious by nature and I'm a problem solver. So I say, 'Here's the mystery, let's figure it out one way or another.' "

Holland said her role on "Finding Bigfoot" is to make sure the show's true believers "are not pulling stuff out of nowhere." She wants them to apply scientific methodology to their expeditions.

After Holland's father died in 2003 and she found herself in the woods, she went online to find reports of Bigfoot sightings. That's how she established an email and phone relationship with Matt Moneymaker, founder of the Bigfoot Field Research Organization and one of the stars of "Finding Bigfoot." He gave her access to the group's database of Bigfoot sightings.

"I love to find out Bigfoot stories wherever I'm doing field work," Holland said. But she had no aspirations to appear on TV before "Finding Bigfoot" and initially rejected invitations.

After seeking advice from respected science community colleagues, she gave in.

"They were like, 'Why not?' And I said, 'But if you Google my name, "Bigfoot" will come up.' And they said, 'You know in your heart you're a skeptic, and anyone who knows you knows how you feel and that you love Bigfoot stories,' " she recalled.

"And being on the show has not affected me professionally at all."

Voicing viewers' doubts

"Finding Bigfoot" executive producer Keith Hoffman said Holland's skepticism is a key ingredient in the series.

"She represents the viewer a lot of times," he said. "Viewers want to see people who don't just totally believe."

"Finding Bigfoot" does not take itself too seriously; hence the inclusion of a badly computer-animated Bigfoot in some re-created scenes. And the show's cast has a sense of humor. In tonight's episode, Holland is encouraged to let loose with a Bigfoot call.

"It wasn't so much a call as it was a yodel," she says afterward. "I am a quarter Norwegian, after all."

In the show's first season, one episode was filmed in Washington's North Cascades; the team visited a site on Silver Star Mountain where a photo was taken of what's purportedly a Bigfoot.

There are no plans to return to the state in season two, but Holland is hopeful another Washington episode could be on tap if the series is extended to a third season.

"I hope we'll get back there," she said. "That is a hot spot for [reports of Bigfoot] activity."

In the meantime, Holland said she's having fun tramping woods all over the country with the "Finding Bigfoot" crew. She especially enjoys when the show invites locals to town-hall meetings to discuss their own Bigfoot encounters.

"Doing this Bigfoot show at times makes me feel close to my dad," she said. "Seeing 10-year-olds come to the town halls with their fathers really brings my relationship with my father full circle."

Rob Owen: RobOwenTV@gmail.com

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/television/2016615960_bigfoot30.html?prmid=head_main

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

Discovery special reexamines Bigfoot

By Bill Harris ,QMI Agency
First posted: Monday, May 9, 2011 4:06:36 EDT PM

Bigfoot was a big deal back in the day. Kids naturally grow more skeptical about everything with each passing month, but Bigfoot represented the final frontier.

Santa Claus was a nice dream, but merely a dream. Real or imagined, the Easter Bunny was kind of creepy. And there were serious doubts about the specific intentions of the Tooth Fairy, too.

Bigfoot? Now there's something into which an eight-year-old boy can sink his imagination.

One wouldn't think that anyone in 2011 would be fascinated by Bigfoot, what with all those technological distractions turning us into emotionally dead but quick-to-anger freaks.

Thus, the biggest surprise of the new two-hour Canadian-made special Bigfoot: The Definitive Guide - which debuts Sunday, May 15 on Discovery -- is that there are scientists and amateurs out there who remain dedicated to proving or disproving the existence of Bigfoot.

This, of course, is fuelled by the fact that there still are plenty of supposed sightings of Bigfoot, the ape-like creature of legend that lives in dense tree cover or at high altitudes. In 2009, there were 250 unexplained sightings in North America alone, and some claim the number would be far higher if fear of ridicule didn't factor into the human equation.

Bigfoot: The Definitive Guide claims to be the first project to look at Bigfoot from a global perspective, weeding out the obvious frauds and comparing descriptions and legends of supposedly linked creatures such as the North American Sasquatch, the Himalayan Yeti, the Florida Skunk Ape and the Sumatran Orang Pendek.

Five experts from different scientific disciplines go over the material, including that same old famous footage, shot by a man named Roger Patterson in 1967, that has intrigued both Bigfoot fanatics and conspiracy theorists for decades.

It's kind of amusing watching the five experts interact in Bigfoot: The Definitive Guide, because two of them clearly are prone to belief, one is on the fence, and two barely can keep a straight face at times.

Regardless of your thoughts on the possible existence of Bigfoot, the five experts agree on one very interesting point: Even today, in our world of out-of-control urban sprawl, it still is fairly easy for certain species of animals to evade human detection.

And not just little animals, either. Certainly while our day-to-day lives can be very crowded, did you ever ponder that when you're in an airplane flying over virtually any part of North America, the continent still looks pretty empty?

Nonetheless, our mere usage of the term "evade human detection" leads to one of the main discussion points in Bigfoot: The Definitive Guide.

It is suggested that if Bigfoot exists, is it possible we've been getting it wrong as we seek out some sort of ape-like creature, when Bigfoot may in fact be closer to a wild, hairy, near-human?

We know, we know. Many of you are rolling your eyes right now. Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy, Bigfoot, they're all the same.

But hey, since vampires turned sexy, we have to be afraid of something, right?

bill.harris@sunmedia.ca

http://www.torontosun.com/2011/05/09/discovery-special-reexamines-bigfoot

Tuesday, 20 July 2010

Ashes of Coronation Street cat up for auction

http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE66I39X20100720
(Reuters) - The ashes of the cat which appeared in the opening credits of British soap opera Coronation Street for 11 years will be auctioned on Thursday.

Frisky's remains will be auctioned at between 100 and 150 pounds, according to Dominic Winter auctioneers.

Coronation Street is Britain's longest running soap opera and is set in the suburbs of Manchester.

The auction listing said Frisky beat off 5,000 other cats in 1990 to win an appearance in the opening credits, crouched on Coronation Street character Jack Duckworth's pigeon loft.

Frisky died in 2000 aged 14, but continued to appear in the opening credits until 2001 and earned thousands of pounds for charity from personal appearances over its lifetime.

The remains, sealed in a wooden casket, will be auctioned with a cremation certificate, publicity shots with Coronation Street actors and a signed photograph of television newsreader Martyn Lewis holding the cat.

(Reporting by Nina Chestney; Editing by Paul Casciato)

Friday, 16 July 2010

Corrie cat ashes up for auction

Thursday, July 15 2010, 14:25 BST
By Ryan Love

The cremated remains of a cat who featured in Coronation Street's title sequence for over ten years are being put up for auction.

Frisky the cat, who died in 2000 aged 14, could be seen crouching on the roof of Jack Duckworth's pigeon loft in the ITV soap's titles, the listing on Dominic Winter Auctioneers states.

"Frisky was not only a much-loved family pet, but also captured the heart of the nation and made thousands of pounds for charities," former owner John Rimington told the Wilt and Gloucestershire Standard.

"We were very proud to be his owners and we are keen to keep his memory alive".

Frisky was chosen by the soap from a selection of 5,000 cats and was seen on-screen until 2001.

The auction listing adds: "Frisky got to meet the actors on the show and until his death in 2000 at the age of 14 he earned thousands of pounds for charities by making personal appearances".

Chris Albury, from the Dominic Winter Auctioneers, said that it is the quirkiest item they have had up for auction this year.

"Frisky was synonymous with one of the nation’s favourite soaps," he said. "At this stage we're not expecting an auction room dogfight but this lot will add some light relief into the day's proceedings."

The ashes are contained in a sealed wooden casket with small brass plaque, along with a group of nine colour publicity postcards.

The lot, which is expected to sell for up to £150, goes under auction on July 22.

http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/soaps/s3/coronation-street/news/a244443/corrie-cat-ashes-up-for-auction.html

Friday, 30 April 2010

Wildlife TV 'ignores animal rights'

30 April 2010

Wildlife documentaries deny animals their "right to privacy", an academic has claimed.

Producers of nature shows ignore privacy ethics when considering the mechanics of filming, argues Brett Mills, of the University of East Anglia.

BBC show Nature's Great Events - narrated by Sir David Attenborough - was scrutinised in his research.

Dr Mills said: "Human notions of privacy which rest on ideas of location or activity are ignored in terms of animals. It doesn't matter what an animal does, or where it does it, it will be deemed fair game for the documentary."

Dr Mills, who published his study in Continuum: Journal Of Media And Cultural Studies, said: "Perhaps there is an argument for some species, in some circumstances, not to be filmed. At the moment it seems that such arguments are never put forward.

"It might at first seem odd to claim that animals might have a right to privacy. Privacy, as it is commonly understood, is a culturally human concept.

"The key idea is to think about animals in terms of the public/private distinction. We can never really know if animals are giving consent, but they often do engage in forms of behaviour which suggest they'd rather not encounter humans, and we might want to think about equating this with a desire for privacy.

"When confronted with such 'secretive' behaviour, the response of the wildlife documentary is to read it as a challenge to be overcome with the technologies of television. The question constantly posed by wildlife documentaries is how animals should be filmed: they never ask whether animals should be filmed at all."

A BBC spokeswoman defended the corporation's approach to wildlife filming. She said: "We are constantly developing filming technology which gives wildlife film-makers the ability to film animal behaviour with minimal disruption to the animal.

"Film-makers work very closely with scientists whose work studying the complexity of animal lives is vital for wildlife conservation."

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20100430/tuk-wildlife-tv-ignores-animal-rights-6323e80.html

Tuesday, 6 April 2010

Wildwood hosts Countryfile

RIGHT: John Craven and Peter Smith. Photo: Wildwood.
Countryfile have been filming (Tuesday 30th March 2010) at Wildwood, Kent's award winning woodland discovery park for a programme to be aired on Sunday 11th April 2010.

The programme being filmed was dealing with the disappearing species of the UK, and will feature a Wildwood hedgehog and pine marten.

John Craven came to the park especially to do the filming and Wildwood has featured a number of times on Countryfile.

Hugh Warwick who has written a book recently "A Prickly Affair - My life with Hedgehogs" was interviewed with a hedgehog, Tony Mitchell-Jones of Natural England was filmed with the pine martens all to illustrate the fact that many species are in danger of disappearing.

RIGHT: John Craven and hedgehog. Photo: Wildwood.
"Wildwood is a great resource for this type of filming" commented Peter Smith Chief Executive of Wildwood Trust "There are animals here that would take a film crew a long time to get good shots of and it gives us the opportunity to let people know about the work we do"

A huge range of British animals can be seen at the Wildwood Discovery Park , for more information visit the website at www.wildwoodtrust.org/ or telephone 01227 712111.

Wildwood is an ideal day out for all the family where you can come 'nose to nose' with British Wildlife. Wildwood offers its members and visitors a truly inspirational way to learn about the natural history of Britain by actually seeing the wildlife that once lived here, like the wolf, beaver, red squirrel, wild boar and many more.

Wildwood is situated close to Canterbury , just off the A291 between Herne Bay and Canterbury. For more information visit our website at www.wildwoodtrust.org or telephone 01227 712111.

Hedgehog Facts

The Hedgehog - Erinaceus europaeus

Recognition: Unmistakeable, the only spiny British mammal. Head/body length: 150-300mm, depending on age, tail about 10-20mm. Weight: Up to 2kg, heaviest in autumn.

General Ecology: The hedgehog is common in parks, gardens and farmland throughout mainland Britain and Ireland. It has also been introduced to many islands including Orkney, Shetland, Isle of Man and some of the Channel Islands. Hedgehogs prefer woodland edges, hedgerows and suburban habitats where there is plenty of food for them. Intensively farmed arable land is probably a poor habitat, as are moorlands and dense conifer forests. They eat beetles, worms, caterpillars, slugs and almost anything they can catch, though little plant material. They will take eggs and chicks of ground-nesting birds though rarely in large numbers and far fewer than foxes or crows.

Females have litters of 4-5 young (sometimes more), between April and September. Males do not assist in rearing them. Young born late often die, being too small to survive hibernation. They need to weigh at least 450g (1lb.) or they are not fat enough to last the winter. Hibernation usually begins about November and ends around Easter, but is much affected by the weather. Hedgehogs normally wake up several times over winter and often build a new nest. In the spring they commonly spend a few days active then enter hibernation again during a cold snap. The winter nest ("hibernaculum") is made of leaves, tucked under a bush or log pile or garden shed, anywhere that offers support and protection.

Hedgehogs travel about 1-2km each night, males more than females. They return to the same daytime nest for a few days then use another, perhaps returning to an old nest at a later date. Hedgehogs live for up to 10 years, but this is exceptional; over half die before their first birthday and average life expectancy is about 2-3 years. Hedgehogs carry several diseases, but none that are dangerous to humans. They carry a specific flea, which they sometimes pass to dogs, but do not carry the usual cat and dog fleas, which bite humans.

Conservation: Hedgehogs are partially protected under the Wildlife & Countryside Act and may not be trapped without a licence from Natural England, the Countryside Council for Wales or Scottish Natural Heritage.

The biggest threat to hedgehogs is probably habitat loss, with the change from pastoral farming to arable crops, over the last 30 years. The use of chemicals in gardens and for intensive farming kills the creatures hedgehogs need for food and may also poison them directly. Many are also killed on the roads. Hedgehogs may become locally scarce or even disappear, but nationwide extinction is unlikely. Nevertheless, hedgehogs appear to be in decline. The total population is unknown.

Hedgehogs survive well in gardens, particularly assisted by food put out for them. This should be encouraged because modern tidy gardens may not otherwise provide sufficient food. Gardens are also hazardous. Strimmers (cutters with a rotating strip of cord) cut back rank vegetation in the very places hedgehogs lie up during the day, causing serious wounds to the sleeping animals. Hedgehogs hibernate under garden bonfire heaps. These should always be turned over before being burnt. Hedgehogs swim well but easily drown in smooth-sided garden ponds, being unable to escape from them. Ponds (and swimming pools) should have a piece of chicken wire dangling into the water to help the animals climb out. Garden netting is also dangerous unless staked down tightly to avoid hedgehogs becoming entangled.

Pine Marten Facts

The Pine Marten - Martes martes

RIGHT: Pine Marten. Photo: James Killick.
Recognition: Dark brown fur; yellow/white throat patch; long fluffy tail; about the size of a small cat. Head/body length: males 51-54cm; females 46-54cm; Tail length: males 26-27cm; females 18-24cm. Weight: males 1.5-2.2kg; females 0.9-1.5kg.

General Ecology: Pine martens are found in the Scottish Highlands and Grampian, with isolated populations in southern Scotland. In England and North Wales pine martens seem to be on the verge of extinction although there may still be isolated individuals present in Northumberland and North Yorkshire. Pine martens are widespread and relatively common in Ireland, where they have recovered well from presecution.

Although they occur in a wide range of habitats, pine martens prefer well-wooded areas with plenty of cover. Marten dens are commonly found in hollow trees or the fallen root masses of Scots pines, an association that probably earned pine martens their name; cairns and cliffs covered with scrub are frequently used as alternative den sites.

Martens have a very varied diet, which changes with the seasonal availability of different foods. Small rodents are a very important food, but birds, beetles, carrion, eggs and fungi are also eaten. In autumn, berries are a staple part of the diet. Martens mostly hunt on the ground, although they are superb climbers and can climb with great agility.

Martens have territories that vary in size according to habitat and food availability. For males these are about 10-25 square kilometres and for females about 5-15 square kilometres. Martens mark their territories with faeces (known as scats) deposited in places where they are conspicuous to other martens; they are frequently left along forestry trails.

Young martens are born blind and hairless, in litters of 1-5, in early spring and stay with their mothers for about six weeks. Their eyes open at the end of May and by mid-June they begin to emerge from their den. Male martens play no direct part in rearing the young. Pine martens have lived up to 17 years in captivity, but in the wild most probably die before they are eight years old.

Conservation: Martens and their dens are fully protected by the Wildlife and Countryside Act (1981); martens must not be trapped, sold or disturbed except under licence from Scottish Natural Heritage, the Countryside Council for Wales or Natural England. Despite this legal protection, poisoned baits and traps, often set for hooded crows and foxes, still probably account for many marten deaths each year. Others are also shot at hen houses, and some are killed when mistaken for mink.

Until the 19th Century, pine martens were found throughout much of mainland Britain, the Isle of Wight and some of the Scottish islands. Habitat fragmentation, persecution by gamekeepers and martens being killed for their fur, drastically reduced this distribution. By 1926, the main pine marten population in Britain was restricted to a small area of north-west Scotland, with small numbers in N Wales and the Lake District. Martens have now increased their range in Scotland, and now occur throughout the Highlands, N of the Central Belt. A small population introduced to Galloway in the 1980s also seems to be spreading. slowly. It is not known whether their populations in England and Wales are expanding, or even if they still exist. The pine marten remains one of the rarest native mammals in Great Britain, with a total population of around 3-4,000, but Ireland probably also has as many.

Prime habitats for pine martens seem to be well wooded areas, with high densities of voles that are their principal prey. Female pine martens with young are extremely sensitive to human disturbance, which can cause a female to move her young from a den or even eat them. Foxes also seem to be a threat to young martens, and dens or scree have the advantage of being safe from them.

Increased forestry and enlightened estate management are likely to help pine martens recolonise their former haunts in the future. In areas where pine martens currently occur, practical management methods may also assist survival. Important measures that can be taken are planting connections between suitable habitats to prevent further fragmentation; creation and maintenance of cover particularly along streams, to provide travel routes and shelter and management of habitats for voles and other food items.

Reintroductions of martens to England have been suggested but a greater understanding of martens is needed before these should be attempted. More detailed studies of the distribution and numbers of the populations in northern England and Wales and the reasons for their apparent recent decline are required.

Sunday, 14 March 2010

TV zoologist hosts pet fashion show

By Louise Continelli
NEWS STAFF REPORTER
March 14, 2010

You may have seen him on TV with David Letterman, Jay Leno or Regis Philbin.

On Saturday, famed TV zoologist Jarod Miller, a 1996 graduate of Eden High School, held court in Buffalo Niagara Convention Center at the Buffalo Home & Garden Show’s first-ever pet fashion show.

Miller — former star of Animal Planet’s “Pet Finder”—was the celebrity draw to this unique event, which featured an interesting array of cleverly coiffed and costumed pets that made the crowd howl.

In first place was a black pug named Abby, outfitted as a spider dog of sorts, who won her owner, Christina Kubisty of Buffalo, a pair of tickets to the 2011 Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show at Madison Square Garden next February.

But there were other stars. Affable Devon, a Scottish terrier owned by Tammy Ahrens, set a St. Patrick’s Day mood with his Kelly-green sunglasses and matching accessories. Devon was a favorite of the kids in the audience.

Miller, who has consorted with sharks and was even charged by a cheetah in Africa — did not shy away from the pets’ cuteness.

At age 25, he became the youngest accredited zoo director in the United States and served as executive director of the Binghamton Zoo. He holds a zoology degree from Oswego State College.

Now 31, Miller trumpets quite a resume and has his own nationally syndicated TV series, “Animal Exploration with Jarod Miller.” The show airs locally at 7 a. m. Saturdays on Fox.

Asked how he wrangled the coolest job in the world, Miller conceded he is “lucky.”

“I started out learning everything I could about animals, worked hard in school, and took every opportunity to travel and be around wildlife,” he recalled.

“The key to achieving any goal, and realizing your dreams, is to stay focused, be willing to break a sweat, and surround yourself with good friends and mentors.”

For a second-grade assignment, he said, he was asked to write down his favorite animal and produced a three-page list of almost 200 species. “I began reading prettyyoung— all about science,” Miller added.

His childhood hero was the late Marlin Perkins, the snowy-haired TV zoologist famed for Mutual of Omaha’s “Wild Kingdom.”

Miller, who launched Wild Encounters, his own wildlife production and education company, in 1996, has journeyed to more than 13 countries, with a focus on South and Central America and equatorial Africa. Wild Encounters gives kids across the nation an opportunity to learn about our planet’s animal habitats.

Today is the final day for the Home & Garden Show, which is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

http://www.buffalonews.com/2010/03/14/987279/tv-zoologist-hosts-pet-fashion.html

Saturday, 13 March 2010

Peaceful co-existence

RIGHT: Host Dave Salmoni will take viewers on a daring mission to learn if man and beast can co-exist in Into the Lion’s Den. The two-hour special premieres on Sat, March 20 at 9pm on TrueVisions D21.
Published: 12/03/2010 at 12:00 AM

Zoologist and big cat trainer Dave Salmoni is on a mission to prove that humans can live in harmony with wild lions.

This month, Animal Planet goes into the lion's den with Dave as he spends three months deep within the no-go zone of a pride of wild lions in South Africa - armed with only a stick and a miniature camera.

Will his daring mission help remove the barrier between man and beast, or will he fall prey to these magnificent predators? The two-hour special Into the Lion's Den premieres Sat, March 20 at 9pm and repeats the following day at 3am and 4pm, and Sat, March 27 at 1pm on Animal Planet.

Dave believes that with people encroaching on the natural habitats of wild animals, conflicts are inevitable and that there needs to be a change in how humans interact with other species.

To better understand how we can harmoniously co-exist, Dave intends to carry out a radical and dangerous experiment - living with lions in the wild.

As a big cat trainer, Dave knows that every sound and movement a cat makes tells him how it is going to behave.

So, to prepare for his mission, Dave undergoes rigorous training with big cats such as jaguars, tigers, and lions in captivity, immersing himself in their behavioural patterns and honing his communication skills with these animals.

With this knowledge and zoological expertise, Dave heads to the Thornybush Private Game Reserve in South Africa to carry out his experiment.

Every precaution is taken for his safety, with a team of paramedics and rangers watching him from afar prepared for every possible emergency situation.

http://www.bangkokpost.com/entertainment/movie/34351/peaceful-co-existence

Thursday, 11 March 2010

Giant beetle was shot down by Victorian insect collector

RIGHT: Goliath beetles belong to the scarab family and are one of the largest insects on Earth, growing up to 4.5 inches long and weighing as much as 3.5 ounces. Photo: PA
A beetle the size of a bird was shot out of sky by a Victorian insect collector, museum experts discovered.

Published: 2:46AM GMT
11 Mar 2010

The Goliath beetle, from Africa, is housed at London's Natural History Museum.

Staff at the museum became puzzled by small circular holes in the giant bug's tough carapace.

But it was only when cameras started rolling for a BBC documentary on the museum that the mystery was solved.

Forensic scientist Heather Bonney confirmed the beetle had been shot.

Her investigation identified entry and exit wounds, and X-rays revealed a shotgun pellet still inside the the body.

The positioning of the wounds showed the beetle was in flight when it was bagged, but the pellets hit the creature's back and not its underside.

Experts think it must have been performing one of the high aerobatic displays that make Goliath beetles notoriously difficult to catch.

Beetle curator Max Barclay said: ''Our collections are full of mysteries and every year scientists are discovering more about them and using them as evidence to help understand the world around us.

''The number of new discoveries just waiting to be made in these collections is astronomical, and every one of the museum's 70 million specimens has a story to tell.''

Goliath beetles belong to the scarab family and are one of the largest insects on Earth, growing up to 4.5 inches long and weighing as much as 3.5 ounces.

The Natural History Museum specimen is 3.9 inches long and described as being about the size of ''a large sparrow or small blackbird''.

The first episode of the six part documentary Museum of Life will be shown on BBC2 on Thursday, March 18.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/wildlife/7418926/Giant-beetle-was-shot-down-by-Victorian-insect-collector.html

Wednesday, 10 February 2010

Broadcaster fined over killing a rat on TV show

Tue Feb 9, 2010

SYDNEY/LONDON (Reuters) - British broadcaster ITV pleaded guilty to animal cruelty and was fined by an Australian court on Monday after a rat was killed and eaten on the reality TV show "I'm a Celebrity ... Get Me Out of Here."

Italian chef Gino D'Acampo and British actor Stuart Manning were originally charged with animal cruelty last December after an RSPCA complaint over an episode filmed in Australia that involved killing and cooking a rat.

But Sky News reported on Monday that ITV admitted its production staff had given the go-ahead to a request to kill the rat and the broadcaster pleaded guilty to the charge.

The court was told that the rat took a minute-and-a-half to die after being stabbed with a knife which the magistrate said caused unnecessary pain to the animal.

ITV was fined A$3,000 ($2,600) and ordered to pay A$2,500 in costs.

RSPCA Chief Inspector David O'Shannessy said all animals are protected under the Cruelty to Animals Act in the state of New South Wales.

"An animal was inflicted with unnecessary pain and distress. Had the circumstances been different and the rat killed outright we wouldn't be talking about it here today," he told Sky News.

A spokesman for ITV said the broadcaster had apologized for the mistake which led to the incident.

"The production was unaware that killing a rat could be an offence, criminal or otherwise, in New South Wales, and accepts that further enquiries should have been made," a spokesman said.

"This was an oversight and we have since thoroughly reviewed our procedures and are putting in place a comprehensive training program to ensure that this does not happen in future series."

"I'm A Celebrity ... Get Me Out Of Here" pits contestants against each other in a knock-out contest which involves a series of scary and stomach-churning tasks in a remote setting.

D'Acampo was the winner of the latest series.

(Reporting by Belinda Goldsmith and Mike Collett-White; Editing by Steve Addison)

http://in.reuters.com/article/oddlyEnoughNews/idINTRE61727820100209?rpc=401&feedType=RSS&feedName=oddlyEnoughNews&rpc=401

Friday, 8 January 2010

'Scary' internet plot to disrupt live TV ghost-hunter show sparks security alert

By Daily Mail Reporter
8 January 2010

A bizarre plot to disrupt a live TV ghost show and even attack its presenter has been uncovered.
Bloggers on a so-called 'urban exploration' website were caught discussing plans to wreck tomorrow's opening edition of 'Most Haunted'.

The show is being broadcast every evening for the next seven days from a deserted RAF base in Norfolk.

The episode - called The Silent Town - is expected to focus on ghosts and spirits said to haunt RAF West Raynham, which lost 86 planes during bombing raids and attacks on Nazis.

Fronted by ex-Blue Peter presenter Yvette Fielding, the show on Living TV is watched by more than half a million viewers.

But after Most Haunted announced its new location for the January show, bloggers on an urban exploration site quickly hatched a plan to turn the tables on the programme.

Urban explorers sneak into disused buildings - from manor houses to military bases and closed down mental institutions - and take photos of the site before posting the pictures online and describing the site.

But in a new twist, a group of the explorers - who are well-acquainted with the layout of RAF West Raynham - said they wanted use their knowledge of the site to 'scare the s***' out of the presenters live on TV.

One called dangerous dave even offered a pint of beer to anyone who smacks Yvette Fielding.

He said on the blog: 'If someone does a hit on that dippy cow in Most Haunted (Yvette Fielding) there's a pint in it.'

Another said: 'Right - lets go f*** with them and don our white sheets.'

One member, calling himself ukmayhem, asked the blog: 'Is it illegal to disrupt live filming?'

Another added: 'I'd be right up for messing with their show, its such bulls***. We are currently working on a plan.'

A reply on the same thread stated: 'We really should arrange to sneak in and scare the s*** out of them - what's the best options for spooking the spook-hunters?'

One blogger branded the Most Haunted team 'w******', adding: 'I am gutted that Most Haunted are going to ruin the place.'

In 2006 filming on Most Haunted was cancelled after three members of the crew were 'slashed by an unseen force' on their backs an legs as they investigated underground vaults in Edinburgh on Halloween.

And former presenter Derek Acorah was regularly 'possessed' by phantoms and even 'pulled down a mineshaft' by a spirit during a live episode in West Yorkshire in 2005.

RAF Raynham has two runways, four hangars and a watch tower which was used to direct bombing missions to Germany.

Until 1994 the base was used as a summer training camp for soldiers, but in the past 16 years it has fallen into a state of total disrepair and was sold by the Ministry of Defence in 2005 to a private housing contractor.

The 160-acre site, however, remains a deserted wasteland with remnants of it's past history strewn all over the base.

The interactive live show, presented by Yvette Fielding on location and by Paul Ross in the studio, uses demonologists and historians to explain to viewers what is going on.

Viewers can also access four webcams and report ghostly happenings to the studio online.

A spokesman for Living TV said today that they were aware of the plans and that security was now 'tight'.

She added: 'Disruption to the live show will be almost impossible.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1241584/Plot-attack-presenters-Most-Haunted-busted-pranksters-caught-discussing-plans-online.html#ixzz0c1kTJAPS
(Submitted by Dave McMann)

Tuesday, 17 November 2009

Reality show pandas to fans

By South East Asia correspondent Karen Percy for AM

Posted Tue Nov 17, 2009

Seinfeld was the long-running American TV show about nothing, and television producers in Thailand seem to have a cult-hit on their hands with something quite similar.

This black and white reality show features three four-legged stars who really do very little but that doesn't seem to matter.

Lin Ping is barely six months old. As you would expect, her mother is watching her every move.

And so too are tens of thousands of Thai television fans who are glued to the Panda Channel and its 24-hour coverage of their favourite little girl.

Young fans are mesmerised. When one little boy's mother suggests changing the channel she is given a firm 'no'.

"No, I want to watch," he says. "The panda will wake up soon."

The channel was started by the cable and communications firm, True Corporation, at the beginning of this month.

True Corporation's Rungfa Kiatipoj says they have been taken by surprise by the popularity of the network, which features Lin Ping, her mother, Lin Hui, and her dad, Shung Shung.

"Right now Lin Ping and her mother stay together," he said.

[It's a] very wonderful thing, like a human being, between baby and mother. They live together, they feed together.

"It seems like human beings for me because I keep looking and I said, 'wow [I am] so surprised and right now' [it] is very popular among kids, mother, family, especially like grandmother. I don't know why."

Following the action

A couple of cameras have been set up in the zoo enclosure at the Chiang Mai zoo in Thailand's north.

The cameras are controlled by a small team at the zoo.

They follow the action. This is, of course, when Lin Ping and family are not sleeping. Pandas sleep a lot.

The signal is relayed to Bangkok where it is sent out via cable, satellite and the internet.

Mr Rungfa says viewers get to follow the young panda as she grows.

"Everything is so cute. It is like a human being that they grow up day by day and you know even a baby that keeps sleep, sleep, sleep," he said.

"[The] panda baby also [does] the same thing," he said.

Every day the network plays a 30-minute highlights package where the mother and daughter are seen rolling over and scratching themselves, occasionally play wrestling.

In quiet times the camera switches to see what dad is up to.

The idea for the panda channel was spawned by another hugely successful reality channel, Academy Fantasia, Thailand's answer to Big Brother and American Idol, which is on 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

True Corporation discovered that some viewers would stay up to watch the wanna-be music stars - even as they slept.

Now, beyond the world of rock and roll, Mr Rungfa says the company has another hit on its hands.

"They [are] so in love with this panda channel because this is the lovely pet that, you know, every time when you watch, it is like, [giving] you something," he said.

Panda TV even has an unlikely fan base among Thailand's legion of expatriates who have discovered there is such thing as quiet time in the bustle of Bangkok.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/11/17/2744806.htm

Thursday, 12 November 2009

Dimbleby knocked out - by a bullock

12 November 2009

Question Time host David Dimbleby is to miss the show for the first time in 15 years - after being put into hospital by a bullock.

The presenter, who recently officiated over BNP leader Nick Griffin's appearance on the show, was knocked unconscious on Wednesday when the animal reared as he loaded it on to a trailer.

Radio 4's Today programme presenter and Mastermind quizmaster John Humphrys will temporarily replace the 71-year-old on Thursday's edition of the show.

Dimbleby was knocked out only briefly but required stitches for a gash to his head. He was treated for concussion and was said to be "recovering well".

He remained in hospital on Thursday as a precaution because of the head injury but is expected to return home soon, the BBC confirmed.

He thanked medical staff for their care and said he looked forward to returning to the programme next week.

"I haven't missed a Question Time in over 15 years. Trust my wife's bullock to take me out. I'll be giving bullocks a wide berth in future," he said.

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20091112/tuk-dimbleby-knocked-out-by-a-bullock-6323e80.html

Saturday, 31 October 2009

Elephant kills TV expedition guide

30 October 2009

The expedition guide for a BBC children's programme tracing the footsteps of explorer David Livingstone in Africa was killed when he was charged by an elephant in Tanzania, the Corporation said.

Anton Turner, 38, was assisting with the filming of an episode of the CBBC series Serious Explorers, a spokeswoman said.

"We understand at this stage that he was charged by an elephant and was mortally injured," she added.

A doctor was travelling with the expedition and treated Mr Turner, a British citizen, at the scene, but it was understood he died shortly after the incident, the spokeswoman said.

She continued: "Three children were with the filming party at the time of the accident and are all safe. Their safety remains a priority, and all the children have been airlifted from the area. We are also consulting their parents and production of the programme has ceased.

"Four other children who were also in Tanzania in connection with the programme will also return home.

"Anton's relatives have been informed and the BBC is arranging for them to fly to Africa as soon as possible. We would like to extend our deepest sympathy to Anton's family and friends.

"Anton was an extremely experienced expedition safari and wildlife ranger and former Army officer who had worked with the BBC in the past.

"As is usual with a serious accident an immediate and thorough BBC investigation into the circumstances of this incident has already begun."

A Foreign Office spokeswoman said: "We can confirm the death of a British national in Tanzania... Next of kin are aware, and we are providing consular assistance."

http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20091030/tuk-elephant-kills-tv-expedition-guide-6323e80.html

Thursday, 22 October 2009

Giant seagull appears behind Nine newsreader Peter Hitchener

By Antonia Magee
Herald Sun
October 22, 2009 12:01am

IN A scene reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock's classic film The Birds, a giant seagull stole the show on the Channel Nine News in Melbourne last night.

The massively magnified bird walked across a real-time projection of the Melbourne cityscape behind newsreader Peter Hitchener's head while he was reading a story about a 27-year-old murder on the 6pm news.

Ever the professional, the news stalwart only mildly flinched on noticing the seagull but later told 3AW radio the studio cameramen hid behind their cameras to hide their laughter.

"I was reading away, and it was a serious story, and I suddenly thought, 'Oh my gosh that seagull's back again', because we had bit of a problem last night," Hitchener said.

"About 50 seconds to 6 o'clock this seagull arrived and started pecking at the camera and it had the beadiest huge eyes you've ever seen in your life."

In another case of the news becoming the news, earlier this week an ABC news presenter was forced to apologise to a Coalition senator and viewers after she was caught on air pulling a face and twirling a finger in the traditional manner of calling someone crazy.

ABC2's Virginia Trioli was shown making the gesture on ABC News Breakfast just moments after vision of Nationals Senator Barnaby Joyce talking about the Government's proposed Emissions Trading Scheme to tackle climate change was aired.

Trioli fronted the cameras and made an apology.

“Yesterday on the program I made an inappropriate gesture after we played a segment from my earlier interview with Senator Barnaby Joyce," Trioli said.

“I would like to take this opportunity to apologise to you – our viewers – for my lapse in judgement.

“I have also spoken to Senator Joyce, and he very graciously accepted my apology.”

http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/story/0,28383,26244142-10229,00.html

(Submitted by Peter Darben)

Wednesday, 21 October 2009

Eagles filmed hunting reindeer

Tuesday, 20 October 2009
By Matt Walker
Editor, Earth News

Golden eagles have been filmed hunting and attempting to kill reindeer calves.

One eagle was filmed swooping down and grabbing a calf, while another pulled out of an attack at the last minute.

A BBC natural history film crew gathered the extraordinary footage along a reindeer migration route in northern Finland.

It finally proves this eagle species does occasionally hunt reindeer, something suggested by forensic evidence and the local Sami people.

The crew filmed the behaviour while capturing footage of the reindeer migration for the BBC natural history series Life, though the images were shot at too far a distance to be included in the final cut of the high definition programme.

Television producer Dr Ted Oakes, cameraman Mr Barrie Britton and scientist Mr Harri Norberg set out to film the hunt along the northern edge of Finland.

For his PhD thesis Mr Norberg has spent the past few years studying how predators interact with the reindeer (Rangifer tarandus), which are known as caribou in North America.

Mr Norberg would tag calves, then search out those that had stopped moving to find out what had killed them.

By examining the bodies and the size and shape of claw, bite or talon marks, he ascertained that the majority of reindeer calves killed in the region had been attacked by eagles.

But he had never actually witnessed such an attack.

"It is also something that the Sami had always told people and complained about but people didn't believe them," said Dr Oakes.

So to get documentary evidence of the behaviour, Dr Oakes and his colleagues used four-wheeled bikes and the advice of local Sami reindeer herdsmen to follow the reindeer along their migratory route.

Striking a new camp every few days or hours, the crew kept up with the animals as they moved out of the forest and into more northern, open and mountainous land.

The reindeer travelled there to avoid wolves and biting insects such as mosquitoes.

"When the reindeer get out in the open, that's when the eagles have a chance," said Dr Oakes.

The film crew captured a handful of successful and aborted attacks on camera.

"One of the things I witnessed was an eagle up a kilometre high and it put its wings up over its head and it fell in a bizarre way, vertically," Dr Oakes described.

"Then in the last 100 yards it went into a low powerful glide and hit the back of a calf."

"This is an extremely dangerous thing for an eagle to do, because the prey is much larger and heavier."

To kill a reindeer, the birds strike it in a specific region in its withers, driving their talons into the mammal's lungs.

"They are not killing anything instantly so they have to ride like a rodeo cowboy on the back of the calf," explained Dr Oakes.

"No wildlife filmmaker has ever filmed this before."

"Another one was when the eagle came down and landed near to the calf and was trying to make up its mind," he said.

"I think it had misjudged the approach to the calf and ended up on the ground. It was staring at the calf thinking whether it should have another go and the mother reindeer ran in and scared the eagle away."

More often than not the golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) appeared to attack white calves, rather than tan or brown ones, though the crew did not know why.

According to Mr Norberg, it is usually immature golden eagles that kill the calves.

However, he also believes the birds occasionally hunt adult reindeer.

Another larger species of eagle lives in the region, the white-tailed eagle, but this bird is less aggressive than the golden eagle, and will often be chased off a reindeer carcass by its smaller relative.

The Sami people that live in the area say they have seen white-tailed eagles also killing reindeer, but this behaviour has yet to be scientifically documented.

The BBC series Life is broadcast at 2100BST on BBC One each week from Monday 12th October.

See videos at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_8314000/8314558.stm

(Submitted by Chad Arment)

Friday, 4 September 2009

Giant Lizard Relieves Itself On Live TV

First Posted: 09- 3-09 05:23 PM


It's been said that kids and animals make for great TV.

A giant lizard proved this point Thursday morning during a messy appearance on "Good Day L.A."

While an animal wrangler introduces a snake to the cast of the morning show, a lizard relieves itself off camera. An amused and disgusted cast quickly weighs in.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/03/giant-lizard-relieves-its_n_276904.html

Thursday, 16 July 2009

Watch the birdie

By Jo Steele

It's a good thing this white-tailed fish eagle is not camera shy.

For she will be the star - and the force behind the lens - of a new project to give TV viewers a bird's eye view of the world.

Evie the eagle has been fitted with small cameras so BBC film-makers can capture what she sees and eats.

They hope to film her 2.4m (8ft) wingspan above the water and see how her giant talons hook fish.

'She flies with a camera on her back and we also mount a camera underneath her so we catch her getting prey,' said handler Georger Hedges. The falconer, from Ivybridge, Devon, also plans to take paraglider lessons so they can ride the thermals together.

'To see how she grips will be exciting to see but we also hope to find out exactly how far she can see and what speed she does,' he said.

Usually white-tailed fish eagles are quite aggressive but Evie was bred in captivity which made it possible to fit her with the cameras. The four-year-old became an internet hit last year when footage of her playing with a tennis ball was posted on YouTube.

By filning her in the wild, Mr Hedges said he hoped the public could see 'these magnificent birds' in full flight.

The species became extinct in Britain in the early 1900s but a few have been re-introduced in Scotland.

metro.co.uk, Thursday 16/07/09, p3

Saturday, 7 March 2009

History Channel in Garo Hills for ‘Monster Quest’

The first episode of the documentary film ‘Monster Quest’, produced by the History Channel was filmed in Garo Hills of Meghalaya recently. The film is aimed at documenting the most elusive animal – Mande Burung or the Bigfoot.

IN SEARCH for the most elusive creature on earth, popularly known as Mande Burung in Garo Hills, History Channel came down all the way from USA to film a documentary on the series ‘Monster Quest’. This is for the first time that History Channel has filmed such a story in India.

The writer-producer, Bill William Prouty, renowned Primatologist, Esteban Sarmiento led the team along with cameraperson Aaron Acktenberg and Eli Ljung. Sarmiento have spent years researching the Bigfoot of North America and studied apes and primates of Africa.

The team visited Chokpot, Silkigre, Siju, Rongsu and Rongrigittim villages and interviewed eyewitnesses and villagers, who had encountered the monster giant. They also visited Nokrek National Park, and other adjoining areas where the Mande Burung is believed to have sighted.

Sarmiento, the accompanying Primatologist, examined the eyewitness reports, collected evidences and animal movements from the deep dark forests of Garo Hills.

The camera crew was fully equipped with various types of cameras and electronic gadgets including solar powered motion activated cameras, GPRS based digital still camera, GPS - global positioning system, high definition professional broadcast cameras, animal scent baits, electronic animal baits, etc.

Eminent personalities from Garo Hills and experts on issues related to Garo Hills Dr Milton M. Sangma, Llewellyn R. Marak and others were interviewed. “We are happy with the scenic beauty of Garo Hills, and the hospitality and friendliness of the Garo people,” said the producer Bill William Prouty, satisfied with the shoot.

The Centaur Adventure Team accompanied the History Channel for the filming. Dipu Marak, a Mande Burung enthusiast said, “We have provide the channel with all the video tapes of the earlier sighting, photographs, bone samples, few strands of suspected hair sample and blood sample for DNA testing and identifications.”

http://www.merinews.com/catFull.jsp?articleID=15720349
Related Posts with Thumbnails

ShareThis