Elephant in the Living Room
A shocking commentary on what you may now encounter on the streets and in the woods of America.
The UGA student group Speak Out For Species kicked off its Animal Voices Film Festival Monday night at the Miller Learning Center. The film "Elephant In Living Room" was the first of four movies which will be shown in February.
It will be followed by "A Fall From Freedom, on February 13th," "Forks Over Knives," on February 20th and "Madonna of The Mills," on February 27th.
"Elephant In Living Room" speaks to the growing problems caused by Americans and their infatuation with exotic animals. It follows Oakwood, Ohio, animal control officer Tim Harrison, who at one time kept and loved large cats, but abandoned them after a friend was attacked and killed.
It also chronicles the life of Terry Brumfield. who struggles to care for two lions, which eventually mate and produce three more. The two men become intertwined after Terry’s male lion escapes and is found attaching cars on the highway.
Harrison walks the movie goers through the sickening reality of the exotic pet trade, a trade which continues to sell animals which are not only dangerous, but that quickly outgrow the capabilities of those who buy them to care for them. Zoos and rescue agencies across the country are filled to capacity. Many owners release such pets when they can no longer control them or their fear becomes too strong.
There are more injuries here from African snakes and other animals than there are in Africa. Africans see these animals for what they are, somehow Americans see them as cuddly toys.
“In the '80's I would get five or six calls a year, but that number is now in the hundreds and growing out of control,” Harrison said.
There are now more tigers in captivity in Texas than in all of India. Studies show there are 7.3 million reptiles in American homes. Over 15,000 wild cats now live in America and could be in the home next door. These cats can and do kill.
Harrison visits an exotic swap meet in Pennsylvania and secretly tapes dozens of the most venomous snakes of the world as they are sold, as pets. Most being stored in cheap Tupperware with the lids being held on with tape. One of the most shocking pieces of video shows one man buying a 10 foot Python for his five-year-old son. The snake outweighs the child.
Harrison finds a Puff Adder, the most venomous snake in the world, and buys it to remove it from the market, donating it to a medical research facility. In another instance, he is called to a home in Ohio where two young boys have been playing with a snake found in the yard all afternoon. It turns out to be an African Viper, also one of the most deadly in the world.
Although poisonous snakes hold high risks, non-poisonous ones hold their own danger. It is estimated that over 300,000 Burmese Pythons are now living and thriving in the Florida Everglades, where a recent study shows that there has been a 99% decline in populations of the foxes, raccoons, opossums and other mammals on which these snake prey.
During the research, no evidence was found of any rabbits and squirrels, dead or alive. The Python has now become the top of the food chain in the swamp, above the formidable alligator.
Pythons can and do kill and have killed children as well as adults in recent years. Many call for regulations to be put into place. Others continue to argue against such restrictions, demanding the right to own and possibly die, because of the animals they love.
Kennesaw Taylor
7:28 am on Wednesday, February 8, 2012
I must admit that this movie kind of scared me. It's hard to imagine running into a 550 pound Lion on a city street or in the woods. Tim said that once someone had this kind of encounter they had nightmares for years. Many life long hunters quit hunting after having these animals come upon them in the woods. Even though they are armed, if they miss, the Lion probably won't. The worst of this, while many are responsible pet, if you can call them that, owners, many are ignorant and could not take care of or control the Pit Bulls they owned before buying such animals. In other words large cats are the newest status symbol pets and they outgrow their cuteness very quickly. In many cases they are simply set free, lions, tigers, alligators, deadly snakes and yes, bears.
Lili Hillman Hill
8:51 am on Wednesday, February 8, 2012
I moved here from Alberta, Canada and we had a huge problem with people trying to smuggle pet RATS into the province. While they are not large, they are prolific breeders and would completely destroy the grain production in the province. There are these crazy rat conventions in the neighboring provinces and they are constantly having to watch the borders to prevent the import of the rats. (Also, I lived next to a farm that raised wild boars... there were some that escaped and began breeding on their own in the wild, so now there are wild boar in random areas of central/northern Alberta. My uncle has personally seen cougars and hyenas pass through his farm-land too. Neither are expected native animals for the area. I really wish people would understand that wild animals are not meant to be pets, nor are animals supposed to be removed from their natural environment. Consequences are serious.
Rebecca McCarthy
10:57 am on Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Lili, that is outrageous! The US should emulate England, which has no rabies in the country because of their strict controls on bringing in animals of any kind. It's hard to take a family pet there, much less bring in an exotic. Georgia is in line for the snake situation, I fear. Thanks, Kennesaw, for getting scared enough for all of us.
Thomas Kirby
3:48 pm on Wednesday, February 8, 2012
The trade in exotic animals is worth a lot more than it takes to compensate us for the small problems that some people are going to have.
Rebecca McCarthy
6:40 pm on Wednesday, February 8, 2012
I'm sorry to disagree with you, but even the problem resulting from a single type of escaped and rapidly propagating exotic animal, the Burmese Python, is a huge one. Virtually all mammals in the Everglades have already been eaten by these snakes and they are now spreading out to other regions. They've reached northern Florida and experts say its only a matter of time before they arrive here in Georgia.
Kennesaw Taylor
5:15 pm on Sunday, February 12, 2012
When an escaped tiger eats a child you car about, you might also have second thoughts. When you sit on a toilet and a cane viper bites you in an inopportune place which causes you to die as you try to explain it to a doctor might give you reason for pause as well. I'm looking under my toilet seat more vigilantly since watching this.