'Crocodile Hunter' exploited animals, critic says
Feminist author Greer says 'It’s no surprise that he came to grief.’
(Why must they ALWAYS throw in the word feminist. This isn't about gender, but throwing in feminist makes it look more like she is a freak-- which she is, don't get me wrong. But I'm a feminist and my views on documentaries about animals have nothing to do with gender.)
SYDNEY, Australia - Feminist academic Germaine Greer said on Wednesday she hoped the death of Australian “Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin would mark the end of what she called exploitative nature documentaries, a discordant note amid floods of tributes.
Irwin died in a freak diving accident off
Echoing comments she made this week in
“It’s no surprise that he came to grief,” Greer told Nine Network television.
(Yes, it isn't particularly surprising, however, caging lions and dragging them around the midwest is entirely different than the amazing education about conservation- especially of the most dangerous and frightening of creatures- that Irwin undertook. Those kinds of creatures have a great appeal to young men, and I think that interesting more men in conservation is imperative.)
In 2003 she criticized J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy for attracting “spaced-out hippies, environmentalists, free-market libertarians, social conservatives, pacifists, new-age theosophists, sexists and racists the world over.”
(Oh please.)Irwin’s death has prompted outpourings of grief and sympathy from around the world, dominating local newspapers and clogging Internet news sites.
His “Crocodile Hunter” documentaries for U.S.-based television company Discovery Channel’s Animal Planet were seen by tens of millions of viewers around the world. He became famous for flirting with death as he wrestled crocodiles, swam with sharks and handled some of the world’s deadliest snakes and spiders.
Greer said she found the Irwin phenomenon "embarrassing," although she understood the sadness at his death.
“I’m not saying that’s not sad, I’m saying what might be over now is this kind of exploitation of animals,” Greer said.
(Not like eating them. Or keeping them prisoners in your house and making them wear little sweaters. Or riding them. Or milking them or stealing their eggs. Or wearing various bits of them.)
“I am sick and tired of programs that tell me that the world is full of wicked, nasty, powerful, deadly creatures. Why does
(The world is full of powerful and deadly creatures. Sorry about that. I wouldn't go so far as to say a shark is wicked or particularly nasty... as it is an animal. Furthermore, every animal in Australia can kill you. Poisonous everything. People in England sent their prisoners there. I'm just saying. I still want to go there. I'm just not going to rub myself in honey and go lay in the lawn.)
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