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DawnWatch Animal News year end round-up -- 2007


 
It's Christmas morning. Before I shut down my computer until January 3,
2008, I will enjoy fulfilling what has become a DawnWatch tradition --
a scan of the media stories of the year. Because I feel so blessed to
do this work, Christmas morning seems the most perfect time to sum up a
year of it.

For dogs, 2007 was the year of "fake fur” coats made from real dog
fur, of the Menu pet food crisis, of celebrity pet store blunders, and
the year of Michael Vick.

In February the Humane Society released a report telling us it had
tested garments being sold at popular outlets and had found many garments
labeled faux but containing real fur. Also, fur labeled as raccoon was
sometimes from wild dog, or domestic dog, including a German
shepherd-collie mix. The story got widespread media play, even in People magazine.
While animal advocates may dislike the suggestion that dog fur coats
are more repugnant than others, the dog angle got the media. The
widespread coverage reminded the public that all fur coats were once live
sentient animals.

On March 16, Menu Foods announced a recall of 91 pet food products sold
under some of the country's best known brands. Early coverage reported
10-15 cats and dogs dying after eating canned and pouched foods.
Sadly, that number was widely repeated by the media even when it became
clear that it only included the cats and dogs who died in Menu's test lab
-- not the true number of animals, which is estimated to be in the
thousands. A superb piece published on the San Francisco Gate website, by
Christie Keith, told us "Nearly one month passed from the date Menu got
its first report of a death to the date it issued the recall. During
that time, no veterinarians were warned to be on the lookout for unusual
numbers of kidney failure in their patients. No pet owners were warned
to watch their pets for its symptoms. And thousands and thousands of pet
owners kept buying those foods and giving them to their dogs and
cats.” We have since learned, from the Toronto Globe and Mail, that the
chief financial officer of Menu Foods Income Fund sold nearly half his
units in the pet food maker less than three weeks before the massive
recall. He called the timing a “horrible coincidence.”


This year the media occasionally featured Britney Spears and Paris
Hilton
. Falling into that focus were their purchases of puppies from a Bel
Air pet store. For years, with limited success, animal folks have been
trying to get the media to cover the horror of the puppy mills that
supply pet stores. The Britney and Paris hook did the trick. The story
gained momentum throughout the year, with Entertainment Tonight, in
October, airing a puppy mill segment recorded for PETA by Charlize Theron
some years ago. On the Saturday before Christmas, the biggest puppy buying
day of the year, actorvist Carole Davis led others such as Law and
Order’s Richard Belzer and comedian Carol Leifer, in a protest outside
the usually celebrity stocked pet store, and closed it down for the day.
The protest got some great media, and you can watch the fun original
video covering the event at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IyZdkCi-JzQ


In 2007, the hideous practice of dog fighting finally got massive media
attention when Michael Vick was arrested for it. There were reports
that he was involved in many dog deaths including the electrocution of a
dog after she lost a fight.  After failing polygraph tests while
denying he killed dogs, Vick finally admitted to hanging a dog and eventually
owned up to another dog killing. He was sentenced, in December, to
twenty-three months in prison. The dogs taken live from his property have
been retired to the Best Friends sanctuary. For a short time there was
so much media ,Vick seemed to be the new Britney.


The scandal inspired a storyline on the hit drama series CSI, detailing
the cruelties of  dog fighting. It aired December 13 under the title
“Lying Down With Dogs.”

That brings us to the remarkable coverage this year of animal issues on
mainstream television, in hit drama and comedy series:

In January, on the popular show “Veronica Mars,” Veronica was hired
to investigate the disappearance of a monkey stolen from the campus
lab. We learn that while the animal rights kids were suspected, the
monkey, Oscar, was actually taken by a science student who couldn’t bear
the thought of the monkey being euthanized, which was Oscar’s fate at
the lab. Thus millions of American teenagers learned the fates of
monkeys who die in laboratories for trivial purposes. Of course, Veronica
decided not to turn in the science student for his act of compassion.

Also in January, ABC’s Boston Legal took a look at animal testing.
Bethany defended Matthew, accused of harassing a woman named Bella who
owned a cosmetic company that tested its products on animals. Matthew’s
organization had been protesting outside the business and saying it
kills and tortures animals. When Bethany cross examined Bella, she said:
“The truth is, you do kill and torture animals, do you not?...Your
company uses rabbits….You lock them in stocks so that just their heads
stick out. You clip their eyelids open and poor chemicals into their
eyes while they are left there for two weeks to experience ulceration,
bleeding, and massive iris deterioration. Do you not subject these
animals to excruciating pain?...Sometimes the rabbits break their own necks
trying to escape.”


Later in the year, in December, David Kelly and Boston Legal took on
meat and the environment.  In one episode, the head of an environmental
organization was distressed to see massive energy waste at the law
firm's offices. He sued, claiming that the firm had misrepresented itself as
green. Cross examining the head of the green group, the lawyer asked
if he eats meat, and explained, "I only ask because studies show eating
meat contributes more to greenhouse gases than driving a car. Denny
says you two often have rib-eye together. Is that true?" When the
defendant said he didn’t believe eating meat is worse for the environment
than driving a car, the lawyer responded, "It is. Contaminated runoff from
slaughterhouses is a major source of water pollution. Livestock itself
contributes 18% of greenhouse gases just from, pardon me, farting.
That's more than all the planes, trains and automobiles put together."


Boston Legal takes its storylines from current affairs. How wonderful
that this year both animal testing and the impact of meat diets on the
planet were current affairs deemed important and topical.


Even on comedy shows, serious animal issues were tackled. In April, on
The King of Queens, Doug found a live chicken for whom he developed
affection. He and the audience were treated by his neighbor to a film
about slaughterhouses. Doug went veggie. By the end of the episode he could
no longer withstand the onslaught of the fast food advertising
campaigns; he gorged on burgers. But the issue was portrayed in such a way
that Doug’s lack of will power, while funny, was also sad. In fact the
topic of animals and meat was handled with surprising sensitivity
throughout the episode.


The boys on HBO’s Entourage rescued a racehorse who was bound for
“the glue factory,” reminding viewers of the fate of the losers.


And even reality TV got into the act. On Fox’s "The Two Coreys,”
one Corey supported PETA and invited a PETA representative over to show
slaughterhouse footage to the other.


HBO, known for its superb documentaries, this year aired “I am an
Animal,” about Ingrid Newkirk, the founder of PETA. If you missed it,
you can get it “On Demand” or on Netflix. It is a fascinating
documentary, which includes animal cruelty information everybody should know
– and which, thanks to HBO, quite a few people now do know.

The Wall Street Journal covered Smithfield’s announcement that it
will phase out sow gestation crates. Those are individual cages in which
sows spend much of their lives. They are too small for the animals to
turn around or lie down in with legs outstretched. The phase-out will be
over ten or twenty years, so we continue to push for bans. This year
Oregon became the first state to pass a legislative ban on the crates. In
2008 we hope to make California the third state to do so by ballot
initiative. The initiative will include bans on restrictive cages for
calves raised for veal, and for laying hens.


Even Wolfgang Puck went welfare, announcing early this year that he
would no longer sell foie gras, and that he would introduce animal welfare
standards for the meat prepared in his food empire. He also vowed to
introduce more vegetarian dishes.


Last year there was much news about elephants; this year some of it
turned good. Los Angeles’s Ruby was retired to the PAWS sanctuary in
Northern California. And Maggie, the lone elephant in Africa for years,
has just joined her. The Alaskan zoo finally agreed to let Maggie go
after she collapsed in her barn twice in a week, unable to stand without
the help of local firefighters. We thought we were going to lose her but
she is now safe at the sanctuary.

While we continue to spread the word about the animal cruelty of
circuses, unfortunately the widely watched Bachelor took a group date to one
this year. But we see other signs of light. Last weekend, as Ringling
arrived in Florida, the Palm Beach Post published a searing indictment
by Florida radio host Duncan Strauss. You can read it at
http://tinyurl.com/ywpr44

The Bachelor also swam with dolphins. The UK Independent did a piece in
January focusing on the link between dolphin slaughter and the use of
live dolphins for human entertainment -- such as in swim with dolphins
programs. It told us that thousands of dolphins are chased and killed,
with a few of the best specimens being sold live to the highest
bidders, for tens of thousands of dollars each. Only a celebrity ensures
coverage in America, and this year, during Japan’s annual dolphin
slaughter in November, the dolphins got Hayden Panettiere, the young star of
Heroes. She accompanied Ric O’Barry to the Taiji killing beach. The
media went mad. Shows such as “E” and “The Insider” covered the
story. Even though they needed the celebrity hook, the coverage was not
fluff. The Insider included horrifying footage and pointed viewers to
http://www.savejapandolphins.org/ to get involved and try to help bring
the annual slaughter to an end.


Paul Watson and Sea Shepherd’s work for the whales was featured in a
lengthy New Yorker story, and in an interview on NPR’s Diane Rehm
Show with the author of Whale Warriors.


Efforts to ban horse slaughter remained in the news through 2007. We
learned from a Houston Chronicle front page story that the closure of US
slaughterhouses has led to mass trucking of unwanted horses on long
journeys to Mexico for slaughter – in facilities where no humane laws
apply. The American Horse Slaughter Prevent Act, which would ban not only
US horse slaughter but also the transport of horses to slaughter
elsewhere, is now needed more that ever. At
https://community.hsus.org/campaign/FED_2007_horse_slaughter3 you can
send letters to your legislators urging their support.
Animal issues also got indirect but important coverage this year as
those who refuse to eat or wear animals hit the trendy mainstream. 2007
was the year of Vegan Chic. We saw Today Show coverage of Vegan
accessories, a piece in The Boston Globe on a professional image consultant
whose specialty is vegan fashion,  an article in Forbes magazine on a
high-end vegan shoe-designer,  and leading papers publishing articles such
as "Style goes vegan.”
The New York Times Dining Section featured vegan chef Isa Chandra
Moskowitz on its cover, in an article titled, "Strict Vegan Ethics, Frosted
With Hedonism." Newsweek broached marriages between vegans and
omnivores. And, astounding to many of us, this year Gourmet Magazine announced
that it would start running regular vegetarian features, and editor
Ruth Reichl wrote “how much more food there would be if we all ate
vegetables instead of feeding the plants to the animals and eating their
meat.” She also wrote, “It is becoming increasingly clear that we
ought to change our ways. We live in a society that consumes more meat than
any other group in history. There are currently more than three
billion domesticated cattle, sheep and goats in the world - and that number
does not include the 100 million pigs or the 9 billion chickens that we
consume every year in this country alone. Livestock grazing and feed
production now use 30 percent of the surface of the planet, and that
takes
a toll on the environment. Eating so much meat takes a toll on us as
well: Most health professionals agree that we would be better off if we
consumed less meat and more vegetables."
The same magazine, in June, covered chicken slaughter, sharing gruesome
details of standard practices. Gourmet!
Veganism’s move to the mainstream got a push from Skinny Bitch, a
vegan diet book that sold well from the start, but which hit the number
one spot on the New York Times best seller list after Victoria Beckham
was spotted with a copy. 850, 000 copies are now in print!
Vegan fighter Mac Danzig won Spike TV's "Ultimate Fighter"
championship.
And the New York Times Magazine section's "7th Annual Year in Ideas"
included “Vegansexuality,” the term for those who seek intimate
partners who share their compassionate lifestyle.
Perhaps vegetarianism saw its hottest mainstream spike when vegan
actress Alicia Silverstone promoted vegetarianism in an advertising campaign
– naked. If you missed the spot you can still see it at
http://www.peta.org/feat/alicia_psa/index.asp. And check out Jimmy
Kimmel
’s monologue from his September 20 show. It includes a spoof on the
ad that is well worth watching.  The monologue is on line at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYOVELcTnu4  and you can skip to 7:50 to
watch the Alicia segment.
This year, at Thanksgiving, there were so many articles on vegetarian
feasts that DawnWatch couldn’t possibly cover them all. I had to
“settle” for the New York Times Thanksgiving Day front page article on
turkey rescue!
Activists taking the animal protection message into faith based
communities made news with a lead article in The Los Angeles Times. The
article noted the work of Best Friends, and of the new "animals and religion"
program at HSUS, and of Bruce Friedrich from PETA. The Los Angeles
Times also covered PETA’s undercover investigation of a hen farm run by
a Trappist Monastery in South Carolina. We learned that the monks were
raising the hens under standard industry conditions, and learned the
cruelty of those conditions. Just before Christmas the monastery
announced that it will halt its egg farming business.
Also late this year, Foxnews.com published two groundbreaking pieces
about shocking cruelty at a pig slaughterhouse – just in time for the
Christmas ham season.
We wish Gretchen Wyler had been alive to see them – and all of this
years’ amazing coverage. In May we lost the Golden Age Broadway star
who founded the Genesis Awards, an award show as glamorous as she was,
which honors animal friendly media. We will miss her but know that her
legacy, the Genesis Awards, is stronger than ever. What a media
selection there will be to choose from this year!
I have been working on DawnWatch for eight years. Every year, as I look
back and see the immense increase in the amount and depth of coverage
of animal issues I get a little weepy. We are getting somewhere. I
thank all of you who care.  This year I particularly thank the many of you
who made my job easier and helped out everybody, by sending me media
tips and links when I could not find the time to dig them up. Many of you
know I have spent most of the year writing and putting together a
book. It is called “Thanking the Monkey: Rethinking the Way We Treat
Animals,” and will be published by Harper Collins in March. I so look
forward to readings and to meeting some of the thousands of wonderful
activists behind the email addresses I see on my screen.  Your care and
commitment is changing the world.

Wishing us all joyous holidays that renew our strength for the
compassionate campaigns of 2008,
Yours and the animals',
Karen Dawn

(DawnWatch is an animal advocacy media watch that looks at animal
issues in the media and facilitates one-click responses to the relevant
media outlets. You can learn more about it, and sign up for alerts at
http://www.DawnWatch.com. You may forward or reprint DawnWatch alerts
if you do so unedited -- leave DawnWatch in the title and include this
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