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Legendary Disney animator Ollie Johnston dies at 95

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Among his many credits, Ollie Johnston drew The Jungle Book’s singing orangutan, King Louie. Voiced by Louis Prima, the iconic song “I Wanna Be Like You” is instantly recognizable. Forget about the fact that there are no orangutans in India. Nor do orangutans necessarily want ‘to be like you’. King Louie is still a cultural icon! Rest in Peace, Mr. Johnston. ~ Rich

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) — Ollie Johnston, the last of the “Nine Old Men” who animated “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs,” “Fantasia,” “Bambi” and other classic Walt Disney films, died Monday. He was 95.

Johnston died of natural causes at a long-term care facility in Sequim, Washington, Walt Disney Studios Vice President Howard Green said Tuesday.

“Ollie was part of an amazing generation of artists, one of the real pioneers of our art, one of the major participants in the blossoming of animation into the art form we know today,” Roy E. Disney, nephew of Walt Disney and director emeritus of the Walt Disney Co., said in a statement.

Walt Disney lightheartedly dubbed his team of crack animators his “Nine Old Men,” borrowing the phrase from President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s description of the U.S. Supreme Court’s members, who had angered the president by quashing many of his Depression-era New Deal programs.

Although most of Disney’s men were in their 20s at the time, the name stuck with them for the rest of their lives.

Perhaps the two most accomplished of the nine were Johnston and his close friend Frank Thomas, who died in 2004 at age 92. The pair, who met as art students at Stanford University in the 1930s, were hired by Disney for $17 a week at a time when he was expanding the studio to produce full-length feature films. Both worked on the first of those features, 1937’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.”

Johnston and Thomas and their families became neighbors in the Los Angeles suburb of Flintridge, and during their 45-minute drive to the Disney Studios each day, they would devise fresh ideas for work.

Johnston worked as an assistant animator on “Snow White” and became an animation supervisor on “Fantasia” and “Bambi” and animator on “Pinocchio.”

He was especially proud of his work on “Bambi” and its classic scenes, including one depicting the heartbreaking death of Bambi’s mother at the hands of a hunter. That scene has brought tears to the eyes of generations of young and old viewers.

“The mother’s death showed how convincing we could be at presenting really strong emotion,” he remarked in 1999.

Johnston’s other credits included “Cinderella,” “Alice in Wonderland,” “Peter Pan,” “Lady and the Tramp,” “Sleeping Beauty,” “101 Dalmatians,” “Mary Poppins,” “The Jungle Book,” “The Aristocats,” “Robin Hood” and “The Rescuers.”

“[People] know his work. They know his characters. They’ve seen him act without realizing it,” film historian Leonard Maltin said. “He was one of the pillars, one of the key contributors to the golden age of Disney animation.”

After Johnston and Thomas retired in 1978, they lectured at schools and film festivals in the United States and Europe. They also co-authored the books “Bambi: The Story and the Film,” “Too Funny for Words,” “The Disney Villains” and the epic “Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life.” They were the subjects of the 1995 documentary “Frank and Ollie,” produced by Thomas’ son Ted.

The pair’s guide to animation is considered “the bible” among animators, said John Lasseter, chief creative officer for Walt Disney and Pixar animation studios and Johnston’s longtime friend.

Oliver Martin Johnston Jr. was born October 31, 1912, in Palo Alto, California, where his father was a professor at Stanford. He once noted that he and Thomas “were bound to be thrown together” at the university, as they were two of only six students in its art department at the time. When not in class, they painted landscapes and sold them at a local speakeasy for meal money.

Johnston had planned on becoming a magazine illustrator but fell in love with animation.

“I wanted to paint pictures full of emotion that would make people want to read the stories,” he once said. “But I found that [in animation] was something that was full of life and movement and action, and it showed all those feelings.”

Johnston was honored with a Disney Legends Award in 1989, and in 2005, he was the first animator honored with the National Medal of Arts at a White House ceremony.

He was also a major train enthusiast. The backyard of his Flintridge home boasted a hand-built miniature railroad, and Johnston restored and ran a full-size antique locomotive at a former vacation home in Julian, California.

Johnston’s wife of 63 years, Marie Worthey, died in 2005. Johnston is survived by sons Ken and Rick and daughters-in-law Carolyn Johnston and Teya Priest Johnston. The Walt Disney Studios is planning a life celebration for Johnston. Funeral services will be private.

Source: http://www.cnn.com/2008/SHOWBIZ/Movies/04/15/obit.johnston.ap/index.html

Coming Soon: Zhang Ziyi ‘A Conservation Story’

Monday, April 7th, 2008

Check out this video sneak preview featuring Chinese superstar Zhang Ziyi as she visits beautiful Kuta Kinabulu in Malaysian Borneo (Sabah) and falls in love with some a pair of baby orangutans.

A special message from Lone and the orangutans at Nyaru Menteng

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Please note: Fio is fine! She just wasn’t around during the filming. Kesi, Lomon and Grendon were the first 3 orangutans in the international adoption program, so they still get top billing!

We will get footage of Fio asap. ~ Rich

Un vídeo de Nonja, la orangután más vieja del mundo, quien murió en diciembre al Zoo de Miami

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Nota– este artículo salia originalmente en los finales de diciembre de 2007

Fuente: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m45fM2za2l8&feature=email

Una orangután de 55 años -que se presume era la más vieja del mundo- murió este fin de semana en Miami, Estados Unidos, indicó el portavoz del Zoológico Metropolitano donde vivía.

Su nombre era Nonja, una hembra de la selva de la isla de Sumatra, Indonesia, que nació en junio de 1952.

Nonja fue encontrada muerta la mañana del sábado, según declaró el portavoz Ron Magill a la agencia de noticias Reuters.

“Todo el mundo está muy triste, especialmente al tratarse de un animal como el orangután, en el que uno puede ver reflejado mucho de sí mismo”, declaró Magill a los medios.

El domingo se le realizó una autopsia que reveló la existencia de una hemorragia cerebral que la hizo desvanecer y vomitar. Nonja se atragantó con su propio vómito y murió.

“Gran dama”

De acuerdo a Magill, otro orangután de Sumatra había vivido 57 años, aunque la hembra de Miami era hasta ahora la más vieja de su especie en el mundo, tanto en cautiverio como en libertad.

El funcionario del zoológico dijo que la mayoría de estos primates mueren al promediar los 40 años.
Nonja llegó a Miami desde Holanda en 1983 y su nombre significa “muchacha” en holandés, relató Magill.

“Ella era una gran dama y creo que lo sabía”, señaló.

Además, informó que Nonja crió a cinco hijos y que, a pesar de su muerte, estaba en buen estado de salud.

Orang Hutan

La especie es considerada en peligro crítico de extinción y podría dejar de existir en estado salvaje en menos de 10 años, de acuerdo a la Sociedad de Orangutanes de Sumatra y a la Unión Mundial para la Conservación.

De acuerdo con la Sociedad de Orangutanes, esta especie se considera muy amenazada debido a la caza furtiva y a la pérdida de hábitat.
Según este grupo, en 2003 se contabilizaron 7.300 ejemplares que habitan la isla indonesia.

Los orangutanes de Sumatra se caracterizan por tener el pelo de un color marrón claro y una larga barba que los diferencia de sus vecinos de la isla de Borneo, también en Indonesia.

Los nativos de las islas de Indonesia y Malasia llaman a este primate Orang Hutan, que significa “hombre de los bosques”. El orangután comparte con el hombre el 96,5% del ADN.

Según los científicos, los orangutanes son extremadamente inteligentes y cariñosos. Emplean herramientas que crean ellos mismos sirviéndose de la naturaleza y tienen una gran memoria. Son capaces, por ejemplo, de crear mapas mentales de su casa dentro del bosque para poder encontrar fácilmente árboles frutales en distintas épocas del año.

Fuente: El País

Tamara the Orangutan on 60 Minutes (Australia)

Monday, March 31st, 2008

This story is truly profound. Tamara the orangutan, formerly of Perth Zoo in Australia, was released into the wild over a year ago– and now her ex-keepers are going out to see how she’s doing!

The segment also features some brief interviews with the man responsible for enforcing Indonesia’s anti-deforestation laws.
Watch him smile and laugh hysterically as he admits to doing absolutely nothing to stop the palm oil companies from destroying the forest…. This is so disturbing. If anyone out here can get us in touch with Michael Moore, please contact us immediately.

View the entire segment here:
http://sixtyminutes.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=418129

Watch the Audio Picture Gallery for this story

Reporter: Liam Bartlett
Producer: Howard Sacre

The mud, the leeches, the heat and humidity, in the end it was all worth it. And how! Just a glimpse of them was magic enough. But to actually hold an orang-utan - one of the rarest creatures on earth - well, that defies description. It was all part of a remarkable rescue mission into the Sumatran jungle, where the orang-utans and their cousins, the gibbons, are on the brink of disaster. Entire forests there are being slashed and burnt, to provide us with a product we can’t get enough of - palm oil. But thanks to a team from the Perth Zoo, at last there’s hope. They could yet be saved from extinction.

Related info:

Australian Orangutan Project website:
www.orangutan.org.au
Contact: Leif Cocks
President, Australian Orangutan Project
Curator Exotics, Perth Zoo
Phone 1300 RED APE

Silvery Gibbon Project website:
www.silvery.org.au
Contact: Clare Campbell
President, Silvery Gibbon Project
Supervisor of Primates, Perth Zoo
Phone 0438 992325 or 08 94740444

Perth Zoo website:
www.perthzoo.wa.gov.au
Phone: 08 94740444

Full transcript:

LIAM BARTLETT: It’s my first encounter with magnificent Sumatran orang-utans and what a welcome! What’s going on? What’s going on?

LEIF COCKS: Liam, maybe you remind him of his mother.

LIAM BARTLETT: Clare Campbell and Leif Cocks from Perth Zoo are in Indonesia on a special mission - to save the world’s most endangered species. It is pretty special, though, we’re in the last of the lowland forests in Indonesia with one of the last orang-utans on the planet. It’s incredible when you think about it.

LEIF COCKS: It’s frightening, really, that’s what it is.

CLARE CAMPBELL: The orang-utan is such a charismatic species, if we can’t get people to protect the orang-utan and as a result protect the habitat, then we may as well just wipe everything out. We have to focus on little areas like this, excuse me, What’s in there!

LEIF COCKS: That’s too good television. This is a family show.

LIAM BARTLETT: Definitely a male, Clare. We found this last refuge of the orang-utan, a remote national park, at the end of a long-disused logging road. It’s a terrifying ride. With breakdowns and broken bridges it took us 10 hours to travel just 30 kilometres.

LEIF COCKS: It’s going to be a bit of a hard walk.

LIAM BARTLETT: Clare and Leif are key players in a daring experiment - establishing a new population of orang-utans to halt their rapid slide into extinction.

LIAM BARTLETT: Hey, look at that. That’s amazing isn’t it.

CLARE CAMPBELL: Hey, beautiful girl. This forest has been set aside as a sanctuary. Some were pets, confiscated from backyard cages, others were bred in zoos and set free. The plan now is that they breed in the wild.

CLARE CAMPBELL: By putting the best selection of orangs that we can out in this habitat that’s protected, our ultimate goal is that they’ll reproduce soon.

LIAM BARTLETT: Many babies very quickly?

CLARE CAMPBELL: We hope so.

LIAM BARTLETT: The word orang-utan literally means “person of the forest” but their forests are vanishing. It is estimated a thousand of them die each year in a mad scramble to clear land, and there are only 7,000 left. Do you ever stop and think we are going to run out of time?

CLARE CAMPBELL: That’s always in the back of our mind but, I guess, we have to be a little more positive about it. Otherwise you just give up. To us there has to be a sense of hope. That that’s not going to be the case. I guess that’s why we just keep trying. He just undid my pants! You are cheeky!

LIAM BARTLETT: Orang-utans spend almost every minute of their lives up in the forest canopy, these trees provide a whopping 99% of the food they need to survive. Trouble is, the forest is getting harder and harder to find, and it’s not surprising when you take a look at this! This slash-and-burn is happening at a record rate right across the country. Even in national parks.

LIAM BARTLETT: They’ve got the chainsaw out in full force today, this sort of destruction must make your stomach turn, does it?

CLARE CAMPBELL: Yeah, we should be standing in the middle of the jungle full of wildlife and instead we are listening to chainsaws.

LIAM BARTLETT: 20 years ago Indonesia gave a green light to the palm oil industry to plunder its forests. The nation had 10% of the world’s remaining tropical forests, but these sprawling palm plantations are now chewing them up at a phenomenal rate. One estimate says an area the size of a football field is cleared every two seconds.

EMMY HAFILD: These are big, big people, big money, yeah. The richest of the richest in this country.

LIAM BARTLETT: Emmy Hafild investigates the palm oil industry for Greenpeace. Why is your government letting it happen?

EMMY HAFILD: I don’t, I don’t know how to answer that question. I think this driven by the profit and the powerful palm oil industry lobby, yeah.

LIAM BARTLETT: The man heading that palm oil lobby, Mr.. Derom Bangun, says the burning of forests happens all over the world.

DEROM BANGUN: Just like when you have fires last year, where, in Spain, in United States, sometimes near Sydney, when I was in Sydney.

LIAM BARTLETT: Palm seeds are pressed for their oil. It’s used in a massive variety of foods, toiletries and cosmetics even bio-fuels. The world’s biggest food companies can’t get enough of it. This liquid gold rush has made Indonesia the world’s leading exporter. But with money literally growing on trees, the industry is out of control. So there are still a lot of palm oil industry people out there doing the wrong thing?

DEROM BANGUN: Yes.

LIAM BARTLETT: So, what are you going to do to stop them?

DEROM BANGUN: Well, the government should enforce the law, that’s law that they will not cut the trees, will not cut the forests.

LIAM BARTLETT: If you knew a company was doing the wrong thing, would you report them?

DEROM BANGUN: Yes.

LIAM BARTLETT: Have you ever reported a palm oil company?

DEROM BANGUN: No.

LIAM BARTLETT: Not one?

DEROM BANGUN: Not one. LIAM BARTLETT: In all the forests that’s been chopped down?

DEROM BANGUN: We are not supposed to go there and find… look. It is not our job.

LIAM BARTLETT: Back in the jungle, Clare and Leif are on the hunt for one ape in particular - an orang-utan named Temara. Will she recognise you when she sees you, Leif?

LEIF COCKS: Oh yes, orang-utans remember you forever.

LIAM BARTLETT: There’s a very special connection. Temara was born at Perth Zoo and they reared her for 15 years. More than a year ago they opened the gate of a quarantine cage and released her into the Sumatran forest.

CLARE CAMPBELL: Good girl!

LEIF COCKS: The first time in her life she was unsure, that her keepers were actually letting her out rather than spending their time trying to keep her in. You be careful, girl.

LIAM BARTLETT: Since then, Temara’s been roaming free. But thanks to the park rangers we know we’re closing in.

CLARE CAMPBELL: Hello gorgeous girl!

LIAM BARTLETT: Finally we spot her - 50 metres up, wondering what all the fuss is about.

CLARE CAMPBELL: Temara, hello!

LIAM BARTLETT: She looks like the queen of Sheba, up there, doesn’t she.

CLARE CAMPBELL: She thinks she is.

LIAM BARTLETT: Orang-utans spend almost all their lives alone, but with those familiar faces and the voices from her captive past, Temara seemed to want a reunion as much as Clare and Leif did.

LEIF COCKS: I think she’s looking really good. That she’s getting enough food and variety of food to keep that sort of condition on her.

CLARE CAMPBELL: You’re a good girl.

LIAM BARTLETT: Does she look exactly the same as when you saw her 15 months ago in the zoo?

CLARE CAMPBELL: I think she looks better. Well, she looks better just because of where she is. It’s where she belongs. But she certainly looks healthy, it’s great.

LIAM BARTLETT: The signs are good that Temara’s adapting well. Having even one more orang-utan in the wild means a lot when numbers are so critical. But they’re not the only apes being wiped out by the destruction of Indonesia’s forests. This is the silvery gibbon. No-one knows for sure but there may be just 400 left.

CLARE CAMPBELL: How can you not love gibbons? I just love them, I want to help them. And they need lots of help. I sometimes think of these guys as the forgotten apes, they don’t get anywhere near as much attention as their larger cousins but their situation is just as bad so if anything, they need more help.

LIAM BARTLETT: Is it just size?

CLARE CAMPBELL: Probably, I guess the larger mammals always appeal to most people.

LIAM BARTLETT: Is he mooning us there? Or am I…?

CLARE CAMPBELL: (Laughs) He’s mooning you.

LIAM BARTLETT: Terrific. Slowly but surely, gibbons are being rescued from the illegal pet trade and brought to this refuge near Jakarta.

CLARE CAMPBELL: Oh my God, he’s so beautiful.

LIAM BARTLETT: It’s vital to keep every last one alive, so Perth Zoo has sent their vet Karen Payne to check the new arrivals.

KAREN PAYNE: He had a heart rate of about 140, but he’s settled down a bit.

LIAM BARTLETT: But the really important stuff is going on outside in cages built in the national park, encouraging gibbons to breed. Do they make the connection easily? Are they boyfriend/girlfriend quickly?

CLARE CAMPBELL: No, they’re fussy little critters. They’re very much like humans they either like each other or they don’t.

LIAM BARTLETT: Well, they wouldn’t be happy with you if you chose them an ugly one.

CLARE CAMPBELL: No, exactly, and look at Geoffry, he’s so gorgeous, we had to try and pick a nice one for him.

LIAM BARTLETT: What would you give to see a baby?

CLARE CAMPBELL: I’d give anything to see a baby here - that’s going to be the ultimate. Oh, the ultimate would be to see a pair with a baby back out in the wild, that would be the best.

LIAM BARTLETT: Gibbons are now so rare it’s near impossible to spot them in the wild. In five years of coming here Clare has never seen one. But she agreed to take me on her latest search. After six hours in the jungle we heard a distinctive call. And there they were.

CLARE CAMPBELL: I just can’t believe how far they drop from one tree to another. There it goes!

LIAM BARTLETT: You’re really stoked at that aren’t you?

CLARE CAMPBELL: Yeah. Been waiting a long time for this.

LIAM BARTLETT: But time’s running seriously short. Indonesia is desperate to develop today, never mind what happens to the wildlife tomorrow. But no one loves these animals more than Clare and Leif and they’re in there for the fight.

CLARE CAMPBELL: All the hard work is for these guys, and to actually see some in the wild and know that they’re still there, it gives me a reason to keep going and some hope for the future for them.

Must see video: Birth of a baby orangutan

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

Please visit YouTube to view this video full size:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfVnFJDjUyQ

Australian Prime minister pledges $500,000 to help save orangutans

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

Exclusive By Sharri Markson
November 11, 2007

Australian Prime Minister John howard pledges $500,000 to hep save orangutans
PRIME Minister John Howard has made his most bizarre promise of the election campaign - pledging $500,000 to save endangered apes in Borneo and Sumatra.

This unusual undertaking resulted from a chance meeting between the PM and an 11-year-old boy inspired by a Steve Irwin show.

Daniel Clarke met Mr Howard in the the Wallabies rugby team’s dressing room after the Test against Wales in May and took the chance to bend his ear about orang-utans.

Last week Mr Howard and his wife, Janette, visited Daniel’s home to tell him he had $500,000 to donate to the cause.

No one was more shocked by the announcement than Daniel’s parents, Rodney, 40, and Penny, 45, who were given less than a day’s notice of the visit.

“It was an unusual request, but then they are unusual creatures, aren’t they?,” Mr Howard said as he sat on the Clarkes’ verandah.

This unusual undertaking resulted from a chance meeting between the PM and an 11-year-old boy inspired by a Steve Irwin show.

Daniel Clarke met Mr Howard in the the Wallabies rugby team’s dressing room after the Test against Wales in May and took the chance to bend his ear about orang-utans.

Daniel, who is wheelchair bound and suffers cerebral palsy, asked Mr Howard to help save his favourite animal. After all, he said, you are the Prime Minister.

Kneeling beside Daniel’s wheelchair, Mr Howard said he would think about it.

Extraordinarily, six months later Last week Mr Howard and his wife, Janette, visited Daniel’s home to tell him he had $500,000 to donate to the cause.

No one was more shocked by the announcement than Daniel’s parents, Rodney, 40, and Penny, 45, who were given less than a day’s notice of the visit.to scrub, tidy and landscape their family home.

Invited to the gathering, The Sunday Telegraph pointed out to Mr Howard that saving great apes in the middle of a tight campaign was, well, strange.

“It was an unusual request, but then they are unusual creatures, aren’t they?,” Mr Howard said as he sat on the Clarkes’ verandah.

“They are worth preserving and I think the idealism of children should be encouraged.

“I thought, ‘Gee if somebody is asking me to save the orang-utans in the Wallabies dressing room, he’s pretty resourceful’. I was really quite affected by it so I said to my staff we’ve got to do something about it.”

Daniel said he was happy with Mr Howard’s response.

“It was really nice of him to come to my home. He’s going to help me save the orang-utans,” he said.

Apart from orang-utans, Daniel and the Prime Minister found they have something else in common.

Two days before the Federal election on November 24, Daniel faces an important poll of his own, when he will pitch to become school captain of Terrey Hills Public School.

“He might give me some tips,” Mr Howard said.

The 40-minute visit was just one stop in Mr Howards jam-packed day of campaigning last Monday, but for the Clarke’s it was an ordeal.

An entourage accompanied the Prime Minister’s arrival, including press secretaries, security, extra staff, drivers and an advance team.

It turned out the security weren’t needed. The only threat was a group of 15 primary school children who mobbed the PM, begging for autographs on the quiet suburban street.

Source: http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,22739207-5001021,00.html

Sky News Report: ‘Green Fuel’ Harming Rainforests

Friday, September 28th, 2007

Watch the complete video report for free on Sky News

By Mark Jordan In Borneo
Friday September 28, 2007

Rainforests being destroyedBuying biofuel for your car could be more devastating to the planet than traditional fossil fuels.

A Sky News investigation has revealed that filling up with bio diesel containing palm oil is helping to destroy some of the world’s most precious rainforests.

With forecourts across Europe and the United States now offering the so-called “green fuel”, demand for palm oil has boomed.

But the well-intentioned switch to biofuels in the West is destroying Borneo’s rainforests - one of the greenest places on Earth.
Environmentalists claim that an area of forest the size of Wales was cleared last year as Indonesia cashes in on the new “green gold” and plants miles of palm oil trees to meet surging demand.

The UN says the entire rainforest will be gone in 15 years, and the native wild orang-utan extinct in just 10.

Wild orang-utan facing extinctionNine hundred of the apes are now caged refugees. Others are found shot or macheted after being killed trying to eat the palm saplings that have replaced their homes.

It is not only the drive for palm oil that is destroying the jungle. China is the main buyer of illegal logs and minerals from here.

I found a zircon mine that had turned the forest into a desert. How on earth could the authorities not have noticed the moonscape left behind?

Groups trying to highlight the destruction are being threatened by the developers.

Lone Droscher, from the Borneo Orang-utan Survival Group, said: “If they cannot buy you off, they try to threaten you. This has happened to us a lot.”

Indonesia says it has banned the burning and cutting of jungle for palm oil - but our investigation found mile after mile of freshly cut and burned rainforest.

Ninety new biodiesel factories are under construction here - the developers encouraged by far-away countries “going green”.

The palm oil saplings here are planted. Those believing it to be a green fuel will never see the beauty of what it replaced.

Falling Out with Fall Out Boy

Sunday, September 9th, 2007

ApesploitationChicago-based emo-punk band Fall Out Boy (FOB) recently released a video for their single ‘Thnks fr the mmrs’ that features clothes-wearing chimpanzees and orangutans.

The endangered great apes are portrayed as directing the band’s music video, playing drums and doing the band’s make-up.

In August the band arrived at the Kerrang music awards in London with a macaque monkey. TV footage of the awards shows the monkey being paraded on band members’ shoulders in front of crowds of fans and in the scrum of journalists vying to interview the band.

It also transpires that FOB took a Capuchin monkey to the MTV awards last year.

Appalling as this is, what makes it even more surprising is that the band has been publicly supportive of animal rights campaigns so should know better!

ApesploitationFortunately these latest stunts have proved unpopular with some FOB fans who have criticised the bands use of primates on various internet forums. However, some fans have enjoyed seeing the primates and have even asked where they can buy one as a pet.

The Captive Animals’ Protection Society (CAPS) has worked for years to discourage people from keeping primates as pets as well as campaigning to end the use of animals in advertising and music videos and is appalled to see such a popular band, with a huge young fan base, using animals in this way.

CAPS is co-ordinating a campaign on behalf of the Ape Alliance, a network of international animal protection and primate conservation organizations, to encourage Fall Out Boy to stop using primates.

Orangutan Outreach supports CAPS efforts and asks everyone to please write to the band’s manager, encouraging the band not to support cruelty to animals in the name of entertainment and to have the video edited to take out the parts showing great apes being humiliated. Please be polite as disrespect will get us nowhere. Thanks…

Contact:
Doug Newman
Manager - Fall Out Boy
Crush Media Management
584 Broadway, Suite 1102, New York, NY 10012, USA
E-mail: doug@crushmm.com

To see a ‘remixed‘ version of ‘Thnks fr the mmrs’ on YouTube, which combines the band’s video with clips of how primates are sometimes abused for ‘entertainment’
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQXqmNCwAZ0

Orangutans Go Back To School, Chew Phone Books

Friday, September 7th, 2007

Orangutans at the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle got sack lunches, books and chalk to show zoo patrons a back to school theme. But they just chewed on the phone books.

Click to begin watching: Orangutans Go Back To School, Chew Phone Books

Source: Organic Broadcast Project

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