back to indexPaul Rosolie: Amazon Jungle, Uncontacted Tribes, Anacondas, and Ayahuasca | Lex Fridman Podcast #369
Chapters
0:0 Introduction
2:33 Amazon rainforest
13:47 Discovery of the Amazon
18:24 Werner Herzog
24:30 Jane Goodall
38:19 Anacondas
62:8 Eaten Alive
74:32 Joe Rogan
82:51 Surviving in the Amazon
110:3 Uncontacted tribes in the Amazon
119:58 Surrounded by black caiman crocodiles
137:35 Graham Hancock and ancient civilizations
143:6 Aliens
173:8 Climate change
178:19 Jordan Peterson
195:41 Hunting
202:57 Ayahuasca
211:24 Meaning of life
00:00:00.000 |
It was just like one of those moments where we saw it at the same time and we're standing by the tail and the snake was so big that, I mean, this must have been a 25 foot Anaconda dead asleep with a, with a, probably a 16 foot Anaconda, like sprawled across her and they're laying in the starlight and we're floating on top of a lake standing there in the middle of the Amazon. 00:00:24.240 |
And JJ, just, I just, I could feel the blood drain out of his face. 00:00:28.760 |
And as like a, however old I was, you know, maybe 20 years old, I just said, if I, if we could somehow show people, this will be on the front cover of national geographic and we can protect all the jungle that we want. 00:00:47.920 |
So I jumped on the snake and the only measurement I have of this animal is that when I wrapped my arms around it, I couldn't touch my fingers. 00:00:54.320 |
And so I was, you know, my, my, my feet were dragging and to her credit, this Anaconda did not turn around and eat me because her head was, you know, this big. 00:01:01.840 |
And, and she went and she reached the edge of the, the, the grass Island and she starts plunging into the dark. 00:01:09.000 |
And so I'm watching the stars vibrate as this Anaconda is going. 00:01:12.760 |
And I had to make the choice of either going headfirst down into the black, which no thank you, or stopping and just keeping my hand on this thing as it raced by me. 00:01:24.120 |
And I just felt the scales and the muscle and the power go by and then eventually tapered down to the tail until it slipped away into the darkness. 00:01:36.080 |
The following is a conversation with Paul Rosley, a conservationist, explorer, author, filmmaker, and real life Tarzan. 00:01:43.680 |
Since for much of the past 17 years, Paul has lived deep in the Amazon rainforest, protecting endangered species and trees from poachers, loggers, and foreign nations funding them. 00:01:54.880 |
He is the founder of Jungle Keepers, which today protects over 50,000 acres of threatened habitat. 00:02:03.440 |
And Paul is one of the most incredible human beings I've ever met. 00:02:07.560 |
I hope to travel with him in the Amazon jungle one day, because in his eyes, I saw a truth that can only be discovered directly by spending time among the immensity and power of nature at its purest. 00:02:24.400 |
To support it, please check out our sponsors in the description. 00:02:33.120 |
In 2006, at 18 years old, you fled New York and traveled to the Amazon. 00:02:37.800 |
This started a journey that I think lasts to this day. 00:02:43.360 |
What in your heart pulled you towards the Amazon jungle? 00:02:46.480 |
From the time I was, you know, three years old, I'd say, you know, it was dinosaurs, wildlife documentaries, Steve Irwin, you name it. 00:02:55.720 |
And like when my parents said, you know, nature versus nurture, they nurtured my nature. 00:03:04.880 |
I wanted to go explore where the little, little creek led. 00:03:09.080 |
And so I was a kid that hated school, did not get along with school. 00:03:13.120 |
I was dyslexic and didn't know it, undiagnosed. 00:03:15.480 |
I didn't read until I was like 10 years old, like way behind. 00:03:22.640 |
Like I remember one time in first grade, they had you doing those, you know, those multiplication sheets. 00:03:28.760 |
And so I actually got so upset that I couldn't do it, that I ran out, the classroom ran out the door and went to the nearest woods. 00:03:36.960 |
And so for me, like once I got to the point where I was like, high school isn't working out, I had incredibly supportive parents that were like, look, just get out, take your GED, get out of high school after 10th grade. 00:03:47.800 |
You got to go to college, but like start doing something you love. 00:03:51.760 |
And so I saved up and bought a ticket to the Amazon and met some indigenous guys. 00:03:56.920 |
And the second I walked in that forest, it was like, it's like the first scene in Jurassic Park when they see the dinosaurs and they go, oh, this is it. 00:04:04.520 |
I walked in there and just, I looked at those giant trees. 00:04:08.320 |
And I just went, oh, it was like the movie just started. 00:04:11.720 |
You know, that was when, that was when like I came online. 00:04:14.280 |
Can you put into words, what is it about that place that felt like home? 00:04:20.520 |
What aspect of nature, the streams, the water, the forest, the jungle, the animals, what drew you? 00:04:31.840 |
I mean, for any forest, I mean, whether it's upstate New York or India or Borneo, but the Amazon, it's all of that turned up to this level where everything is superlatively diverse. 00:04:43.800 |
You know, you have more plants and animals than anywhere else on earth, not just now, but in the entire fossil record. 00:04:51.320 |
There's just that's terrestrially that's, that's where it is. 00:04:53.720 |
That's the greatest library of life that has ever existed. 00:04:58.800 |
You're so overwhelmed with color and diversity and beauty and this overwhelming sense of natural majesty of these, you know, thousand year old trees. 00:05:07.120 |
And half the life is up in the canopy of those trees. 00:05:11.280 |
There's stuff without names walking around on those branches. 00:05:16.520 |
And so going there, it was like, you know, the guys I met just opened the door and they were like, you know, how far do you want to go down the rabbit hole? 00:05:23.080 |
How, how, how much of this do you want to see? 00:05:27.000 |
Uh, you list a bunch of heroes that you have. 00:05:30.880 |
And, uh, you said that when you're unsure about a decision, you ask yourself, uh, WWSD, what would Steve do? 00:05:42.680 |
He's a human being that like everything we saw from Steve Irwin was positive. 00:05:49.000 |
If he was getting bitten by a reticulated Python, he was smiling. 00:05:52.400 |
If he was, you know, getting destroyed in the news for feeding a crocodile with his son too close, he was trying to explain to people why it's okay. 00:06:03.080 |
Everything was about, you know, wildlife and protecting. 00:06:06.200 |
And to me, a person like that, that where you only see positive things, that's, that's a role model. 00:06:12.680 |
And it's just like an endless curiosity and hunger to explore this, this world of nature. 00:06:17.440 |
And an insatiable madness for, for, for wildlife. 00:06:22.000 |
I got, uh, if it's okay, uh, read to you a few of your own words. 00:06:26.720 |
You open the book, mother of God with a passage that I think beautifully paints a scene. 00:06:34.640 |
Before he died, Santiago Duran told me a secret. 00:06:37.600 |
It was late at night in a palm thatched hut on the bank of the Tampa Potter river, deep in the Southwestern corner of the Amazon basin. 00:06:46.200 |
Besides a mud oven, two wild boar heads sizzling, sizzled in a cradle of embers. 00:06:53.120 |
They're protruding tusks curling in static agony as they cooked. 00:07:01.120 |
Secropia wood and cinched flesh filled the air. 00:07:04.520 |
Woven basket containing monkey skulls hung from the rafters where stars speak through the gaps in the thatching. 00:07:11.960 |
A pair of chickens huddled in the corner conversing softly. 00:07:15.720 |
We sat facing each other on sturdy benches across a table hewn from a single cross section of some massive tree now nearly consumed by termites. 00:07:27.440 |
The song of a million insects and frogs filled the night. 00:07:31.280 |
Santiago's cigarette trembled in the aged fingers as he leaned close over the candle light to describe a place hidden in the jungle. 00:07:39.560 |
That line, the songs of a million insects and frogs filled the night for some reason hit me. 00:07:45.640 |
Um, what's it like sitting there conversing among so many living creatures all around you? 00:07:52.160 |
Every night in the jungle, you live in constant awareness of that out there in the darkness are literally millions of heartbeats around you. 00:08:02.000 |
And so like we exist in this, in this, you know, domesticated paved world most of the time. 00:08:10.040 |
But when you go out there past the roads and the, and the telephone poles and the hospitals and you make it out into earth, just wild earth. 00:08:19.040 |
And there's no, there's no, there's not, it's not like this is a national park. 00:08:21.840 |
There's no rescue helicopter waiting to come get you. 00:08:23.760 |
You are out there and you're surrounded at night by, I mean, there are snakes and jaguars and frogs and insects and all this stuff just crawling through the swamps and through the trees and through the branches. 00:08:35.640 |
And we put on headlamps and go out into the night and just absolutely fall to our knees with wonder of the things that we see. 00:08:43.680 |
And most of it doesn't make sounds like the insects do. 00:08:48.720 |
You have some of the night birds making sounds, but a lot of it, everything has evolved to be silent, invisible. 00:08:54.560 |
I mean, everything there is in the, on the list. 00:08:58.080 |
Like, like I, there's another line in mother of God where I said, like, you know, like life is just like a temporary moment of stasis and like the churning recycling death march. 00:09:06.600 |
Like it's it's been called the greatest natural battlefield on earth. 00:09:11.280 |
I mean, if any, in any square acre, there's more stuff eating other things than anywhere else. 00:09:16.400 |
And, and you go through a swamp in the Amazon and there's like this tarantulas floating on the water, there's frogs in the trees. 00:09:23.360 |
There's, there's, there's tadpoles hanging from leaves waiting to drop into the water. 00:09:31.920 |
You're sitting, you literally are surrounded by so many things that your brain can't process it. 00:09:44.080 |
Some of the creatures are waiting and some of them are being a bit more proactive about it. 00:09:48.640 |
What do you make of that churning death march? 00:09:54.560 |
That the amount of murder that's happening all around you at all scales? 00:09:58.720 |
You know, we, we dramatize wars and the millions of people that were lost in World War II. 00:10:04.160 |
Some of them tortured, some of them dying with a gun in hand, some of them civilians, but it's 00:10:14.400 |
What about the billions and billions and billions of organisms that are just being murdered all 00:10:20.400 |
Does that, do you, does that change your view of nature, of life here? 00:10:29.040 |
Like when you see like a, you know, a wildebeest taken down by lions and, and eaten from behind 00:10:34.480 |
while it's alive and it makes you question God, you know, you go, how could, how could, 00:10:41.840 |
In the Amazon, I find personally that these natural processes make up almost a religion, 00:10:50.400 |
that it reminds you how temporary we are, that, you know, the, the, the bot flies that 00:10:56.960 |
are trying to get into your skin and the mosquitoes that are trying to suck your blood and the, 00:11:00.800 |
you know, when, that when you sweat, you see, you see the, you literally can like hold out 00:11:05.840 |
your arm and watch the condensation come off of your skin and rise up into the canopy and 00:11:10.240 |
join the clouds and rain back down in the afternoon. 00:11:12.720 |
And, and then you drink the river and start it all over again. 00:11:17.280 |
So the Amazon reminds me that, that there's a lot that we don't understand. 00:11:23.440 |
And so when it comes to that overwhelming and collective murder, as Werner Herzog put 00:11:31.840 |
It's part of the freak show of the Amazonian night. 00:11:35.360 |
I see you, I, you, in certain moments able to feel one with a mosquito that's trying 00:11:48.080 |
What I mean is like, you're part of the machine there, right? 00:11:52.960 |
So like we have bullet ants and like, you know, you get, you get nailed by a bullet ant and 00:11:59.520 |
I'm going back to bed and I'm taking a pile of Tylenol. 00:12:02.160 |
And, you know, do you think in that sense, when you're out there, are you a part of nature 00:12:11.360 |
I think that's, what's so refreshing about it is that out there you truly are. 00:12:14.560 |
And so whether we're bringing researchers or film crews or, or whether we're just out 00:12:19.760 |
there ourselves on an expedition, you truly are a part of nature. 00:12:24.480 |
And so one of the things that my team and I started doing when I became friends with 00:12:29.120 |
these guys, you know, this is a family of indigenous people from the community of 00:12:33.520 |
Inferno and they took me in and as we got close, they started saying, you know, you 00:12:39.200 |
can come with us on our like annual hunting trip. 00:12:42.400 |
And it's four guys in a boat and you don't want to get your clothes wet. 00:12:46.640 |
So we're all in like our boxers in a canoe with a motor going out past the places that 00:12:51.680 |
have names and you're out in the middle of the jungle. 00:12:54.640 |
And the thing is like, when your, when your motor breaks, you are so quickly reminded 00:13:00.800 |
of the inerrant truths, like the things that nobody can argue with. 00:13:08.720 |
And we live in such a human world where everything is debatable, religion and politics 00:13:14.560 |
And then you get down to this point where it's like, if we don't figure something out, 00:13:19.760 |
the river is going to rise and take the boat. 00:13:23.360 |
And ain't nobody going to like argue with that. 00:13:25.360 |
And it's like, to me, there's a beauty in that truth because then all of us are united 00:13:30.080 |
there in that, in that truth against like the natural facts around us. 00:13:33.200 |
And so to me, I, that's, that's, that's a state where I feel very, very at home. 00:13:38.640 |
And the Amazon is more efficient than most places on earth at swallowing you up. 00:13:45.040 |
So just to linger on that, because you, you've spoken about Francisco de Arellana. 00:13:53.200 |
He was this explorer in 1541 and 42 that sailed the length of the Amazon. 00:14:00.400 |
And there's just a few things I should probably read. 00:14:03.520 |
I should probably find a good book on him because the guy seems like a gangster. 00:14:09.520 |
So he sailed, he led the expedition that sailed all the way from one end to the other. 00:14:22.000 |
It's like, nobody's going to come and rescue you. 00:14:24.720 |
You have to, if your boat dies, you're going to have to rebuild it. 00:14:29.120 |
So they came down the Andes, entered in the headwaters of the Amazon, constructed some sort of 00:14:33.920 |
raft, boat, craft, something, and made it down the entire Amazon basin. 00:14:39.360 |
Of course, his stories are the ones that led to the Amazon being called the Amazon 00:14:45.200 |
He reported these large cities, places where the tribes lived on 00:14:48.880 |
farms of river turtles that they corralled and they lived off of that protein. 00:14:52.320 |
And then when they came out to the mouth of the Amazon, if I remember it correctly, that just 00:14:56.400 |
through navigation and the stars, they were able to calculate where the way was back to Spain 00:15:01.120 |
and make a boat seaworthy enough to bring them home. 00:15:08.240 |
Do people like that inspire you, your own journey? 00:15:10.720 |
Like what gives you kind of strength that in these harshes of times and harshes of conditions, 00:15:19.840 |
I mean, you look at the stories of people that are so... 00:15:22.640 |
These stories of people that have overcome incredible suffering like that, or like what 00:15:30.560 |
Your tent gets washed away, you go to sleep and the river rises 20 feet and washes away your tent 00:15:36.160 |
and you crawl out and all you have is a machete and a headlamp, literally no bag, no food, no 00:15:41.280 |
And you go, "Wow, the next six days before I reach back to a town is going to be just pure hell. 00:15:46.560 |
I'm going to be sleeping on the ground, covered in ants, destroyed by mosquitoes." 00:15:49.840 |
And then it becomes, "Am I in any capacity, any percentage as tough and resilient as the people 00:15:58.000 |
that I've read about that have made it through things far worse than this?" 00:16:03.200 |
What goes through your head when all you got is the headlamp and the machete? 00:16:09.040 |
Like I've gotten a chance to interact quite a lot with Elon Musk and he constantly puts out fires, 00:16:17.520 |
There's never a kind of whiny deliberation about issues. 00:16:29.120 |
Or do you also have a kind of self-motivating, almost egotistical, like, "I'm a bad motherfucker. 00:16:37.440 |
Almost like trying to fake it till you make it kind of thing. 00:16:47.040 |
There may have been a little bit of that when I was like 14, 15 years old. 00:16:52.080 |
I'd have a hunting knife and my dog and I'd go out into the woods with the Catskills and 00:16:59.120 |
You get one match and you got to make shelter. 00:17:02.560 |
And then I'd bring a steak and make a fire and stuff. 00:17:05.760 |
And at that point, there may be was some ego. 00:17:07.600 |
But in the Amazon, you get stripped down so completely that you... 00:17:13.280 |
It's like that thing, like, watch the atheism leave everyone's body when they think they're 00:17:18.080 |
It's like when you find yourself staring up at the Amazon at night and you go, "There 00:17:24.160 |
I was once lost in a swamp where it took me days to get out of there. 00:17:28.160 |
And there was moments where I just said, "This is clearly it. 00:17:34.880 |
You start realizing what you believe in and praying that you'll be okay. 00:17:41.680 |
And then trying to summon whatever you know about how to survive. 00:17:47.040 |
And so it's actually, again, it's kind of a blissful state if you can walk that line 00:17:51.040 |
between adventure and tragedy and keep yourself right at that very, very fine line without 00:18:04.000 |
I love the people in my life and there's a lot of things I want to do. 00:18:08.480 |
But every time I've been certain that I'm going to die, I've been very, very calm. 00:18:16.400 |
And just sort of like, "Okay, well, if this is how the movie goes, then this is how it 00:18:25.840 |
Just to venture down this road of death and fear and so on, there's been a few madmen 00:18:38.560 |
What lessons do you draw from Grizzly Man or Into the Wild? 00:18:44.240 |
Were you ever afraid that you would be one of those stories? 00:18:49.200 |
I actually think that that's in Mother of God where I said I almost Into the Wilded 00:18:53.280 |
I went out there and really I got so lost and so destroyed that I said, "This is going 00:19:00.480 |
This is going to be the next story of some idiot kid from New York who went to the Amazon 00:19:03.600 |
thinking he was Percy Fawcett and then vanished." 00:19:06.560 |
Because if you do vanish out there, your body's going to be consumed in a matter of 00:19:12.400 |
If we see an animal dead on a trail, you got dung beetles and fly larva and vultures and 00:19:20.480 |
You get the black vultures, the yellow vultures, the king vulture, they all come in. 00:19:23.680 |
That thing is picked clean in a couple of days. 00:19:25.680 |
What would be the creature that eats most of you in that situation? 00:19:36.880 |
Like even as far as like you can't leave food out. 00:19:39.440 |
If you have a piece of chicken, you say, "Oh, I'll eat it in the morning." 00:19:50.800 |
It's both comical and genius and especially the way Herzog tells it. 00:19:55.520 |
First, do you like the way he told the story? 00:19:58.640 |
I love Herzog and I love his documentary, "The Burden of Dreams," which is in the Amazon, 00:20:05.760 |
And the sheer madness that you see this man undergoing of just trying to recreate hauling 00:20:16.160 |
And the extras that he hired to play the natives are the... 00:20:21.920 |
I think they're Machiganga tribesmen and they just look like all the guys that I hang out 00:20:27.200 |
with and it's like they're doing all this stuff in the jungle that... 00:20:31.120 |
Months and months and months and you can just see him deteriorating with madness because 00:20:36.640 |
You know how many times I've tied up a boat to the side of the river? 00:20:41.280 |
Through COVID, I pretty much just lived in the jungle for a while and there was nobody 00:20:45.600 |
there and there was no support and I tied up my boat and the rain is just hammering. 00:20:49.360 |
Like the universe is trying to rip the earth in half. 00:20:53.040 |
The rain is just going and the river is rising and I tied up the boat. 00:20:56.320 |
But then you go to sleep and you got to wake up every two hours to go check the boat. 00:21:02.800 |
And so all night, every two hours, I'd wake up barefoot in driving rain, like golf ball 00:21:07.760 |
raindrops and just go down and check the boat. 00:21:10.080 |
And then by morning I was like, I fell asleep, woke up, checked the boat and then I was like, 00:21:16.640 |
I was so like at the end of my rope every time bailing the boat out and stuff. 00:21:19.440 |
And then we got 15 minutes of heavy rain that filled the boat, sank it. 00:21:26.800 |
And it's like that type of thing where it's like, no matter how hard you try, the jungle 00:21:36.800 |
And so Herzog really threw himself into that in that film. 00:21:42.480 |
What do you think he meant by the line that you include in your book? 00:21:45.920 |
It's a land that God, if he exists, has created in anger. 00:22:00.240 |
So that's, so you didn't really appreciate the beauty of the murder. 00:22:05.360 |
I think he appreciated it, but to him, it was very dark. 00:22:09.280 |
I think he saw the darkness in it and that's there. 00:22:12.960 |
As soon as you do ayahuasca, that door opens and you see the darkness because that brings 00:22:16.880 |
you right into the jungle, like the heart of it. 00:22:18.960 |
But I think that for him, it is, I think that darkness is something that he embraces and 00:22:27.200 |
There's another film of his, and I don't know if this is accurate, but my memory has 00:22:30.720 |
it that there's a penguin and I think it's in Antarctica and the penguin's going in the 00:22:38.080 |
And I feel like he goes on this monologue about how like, he's just had enough. 00:22:41.920 |
This one penguin is just marching towards, you know. 00:22:46.820 |
Because I remember that clip from that documentary and what Werner says is that the penguin is 00:23:02.880 |
Like how do you know there's not a lot more going on? 00:23:11.520 |
Maybe his mate was over there and he had to go find her. 00:23:13.600 |
Or it's a lost mate and he, last time he saw her was going in that direction. 00:23:19.840 |
We assume animals are like the average of the bell curve. 00:23:24.640 |
Like every animal we interact with is just the average, but there's special ones. 00:23:32.320 |
And I had the same thought where I was like, I found it beautiful how he interpreted it. 00:23:37.040 |
What I took away from that was I found that Werner Herzog's monologue there was brilliantly 00:23:43.920 |
dark and also comedic, but maybe irrelevant biologically speaking towards penguins. 00:23:52.880 |
I find there's so many times where I'll find people be like, "Do you think that animals can 00:23:57.680 |
And you hear a bunch of people that have never left the pavement talking about like, "Wow, 00:24:04.480 |
And it's like, "Go ask Jane Goodall if animals can show compassion. 00:24:08.480 |
Go talk to anybody that works on a daily basis with animals." 00:24:12.400 |
And so to me, there's always a little bit of frustration in hearing people 00:24:18.320 |
pleasantly surprised that animals aren't just these automatons of just, what's the word, 00:24:30.640 |
First of all, what have you learned about life from Jane Goodall? 00:24:33.280 |
Because she spoke highly of your book and you list her as one of the mentors, 00:24:38.240 |
but what kind of wisdom about animals do you draw from her? 00:24:45.360 |
First of all, the work that she did at the time she did it was so incredible because 00:24:51.120 |
I mean, she was out there at a very young age doing that field work. 00:24:55.120 |
She was naming her subjects, which everyone said you shouldn't do. 00:25:00.880 |
She was assigning and everyone said, "You're anthropomorphizing these animals by saying 00:25:13.280 |
And she broke straight through all of those things and it paid off in dividends for her. 00:25:18.960 |
Do you see the animals as having all those human-like emotions of anger, of compassion, 00:25:26.400 |
of longing, of loneliness from what you've seen, especially with mammals, 00:25:35.600 |
On the scale of a cockroach to an elephant, it's like a lot of these things. 00:25:42.320 |
I'll have a praying mantis on my hand and just go, "What is going through your mind?" 00:25:46.240 |
Or you'll see a spider make a complex decision and go, "I'm gonna make my web there." 00:25:58.320 |
I was in the jungle not that long ago and I was walking and all of a sudden this dove 00:26:01.920 |
comes flying through the jungle right up to my face. 00:26:04.560 |
Lands on a branch right here, right next to me. 00:26:07.120 |
I look at the dove, dove looks at me and she's like, "Hey." 00:26:15.600 |
And then an ornate hawk eagle flies up 10 feet away, looks at both of us and just like 00:26:21.760 |
scowls and like sticks up its head feathers and then just like flies off. 00:26:28.160 |
And I was like, "Dude, you just used me to save your life." 00:26:33.600 |
Because there's Mike Tyson and there's Albert Einstein. 00:26:39.200 |
And sometimes I wonder when I look at different creatures, even insects, like, 00:26:45.120 |
Like, 'cause one or other kinds of personality, like, is this a New Yorker or is this a Midwesterner 00:26:52.640 |
or is this like a San Francisco barista of the insects? 00:26:56.560 |
Like, there's all kinds of personalities you never know. 00:27:00.720 |
Like if you run into a bear and it's very angry, it could be just the asshole New Yorker. 00:27:13.120 |
So speaking about communicating with a dove, you first met the crew in the Amazon. 00:27:20.800 |
You talk about JJ as somebody who can communicate with animals. 00:27:24.400 |
What do you think JJ is able to see and hear and feel that others don't, 00:27:32.240 |
When I say this is the most skilled jungle man I've ever seen, 00:27:37.680 |
and I know so many guys in the region, he has libraries of information in his cranium 00:27:48.160 |
I have seen him use medicinal plants to cure things that Western doctors couldn't cure. 00:27:54.960 |
I've seen him navigate in such a way that he's not using the stars. 00:28:02.880 |
Sometimes you'll watch a herd of elephants and they'll be like, "Yo, let's go. 00:28:06.080 |
And you'll see them sort of communicate, but there's no audible sound. 00:28:08.720 |
They'll just decide that they're going that when they all do it. 00:28:12.000 |
JJ has this way in the jungle of he'll stop and he'll go, "Wait." 00:28:18.400 |
And he goes, "There's a herd of peccary coming." 00:28:35.920 |
And the gift is that he can speak fluent English. 00:28:38.320 |
And so when I bring tourists and scientists or news reporters down there, he can communicate 00:28:45.600 |
He's actually good on camera because he doesn't care about cameras. 00:28:48.480 |
And for instance, we were walking up a stream a few months ago and I went, "Hey, look, Jaguar 00:29:01.600 |
And I was like, "The toes are deeper than the back?" 00:29:15.680 |
There's a big log of Jaguar shit sitting there. 00:29:21.280 |
And then there's another one that's less fresh. 00:29:35.440 |
The Jaguar has been coming multiple times to the river to drink as it's feasting on whatever it 00:29:40.480 |
And he's going, "It's within 30 feet of us right now." 00:29:46.240 |
He's like, "I just drew 19 conclusions from that." 00:29:52.960 |
Does that apply also to be able to communicate with the actual animals? 00:29:59.680 |
Read into their body movements directly, into their, whatever that dove was saying to you, 00:30:07.520 |
Or is that all just kind of taken in the complex structure of the crime scene, of the interactions 00:30:13.600 |
of the different animals, of the environment and so on? 00:30:15.840 |
What is that, that you're able to communicate with another creature, that he was able to 00:30:25.520 |
When he talks about animals, he'll talk about each species as if it's a person. 00:30:32.160 |
So he'll say, "Oh, the jaguar, she never likes to let you see her." 00:30:37.120 |
And so he'll come back from the jungle and he'll go, "Oh, I was watching monkeys and 00:30:39.920 |
this jaguar was also watching the monkeys, but I was being so quiet. 00:30:44.400 |
And then when she see me, she feels so embarrassed and she'd go. 00:30:47.280 |
And he'll tell you this story as if he had this interaction with his neighbor. 00:30:52.160 |
And he'll be like, "Oh, the puka konga, it never does that. 00:30:56.960 |
And so one time he caught a fish and I was such a big fish. 00:31:01.440 |
It was this big, beautiful pseudoplatystoma, this tiger catfish, this amazing old fish, 00:31:07.680 |
And I felt so bad watching this thing gasp on the sand. 00:31:15.280 |
And then I took my hand and I went, and I made like drag marks, so I could say, "Oh, 00:31:22.080 |
And so he walks up, he looks at it and he was like, "I hate you." 00:31:38.880 |
So stepping back to that way you open Mother of God. 00:31:44.000 |
Who was Santiago Duran and what secret did he tell you? 00:31:52.480 |
At some point when he was a teenager, he was working on the boats that before this little 00:31:57.920 |
gold mining city of Puerto Maldonado grew, the only way to get supplies in was to take 00:32:04.960 |
canoes up the Tambopata River up to the next state, which is Puno, and where mules would 00:32:10.560 |
come down from the mountains with supplies and then he'd pilot the boats down, but they 00:32:20.240 |
And I met him when he was in his 80s and he was still living out in the jungle by himself. 00:32:24.880 |
And he's seen an anaconda eat a taper, which is a cow-sized mammal in the Amazon. 00:32:34.640 |
He once killed an 11-foot electric eel, opened the back of the thing's neck, removed the 00:32:41.280 |
nerve that he says was the source of the electric. 00:32:43.760 |
Then he cut his forearm, placed that nerve into his forearm, wrapped it with a dead toad 00:32:49.520 |
and claimed that it would give him strength through the rest of his life and continued 00:32:54.240 |
to be a jungle badass until the day he quietly leaned back at a barbecue and ceased to be 00:33:03.280 |
But the secret that he told us was that if you want to find big anacondas, if you want 00:33:10.240 |
to see the Yakumama, he was like, you have to go to the Bawayo, the place of boas, the 00:33:16.640 |
place that we came to call the floating forest. 00:33:19.040 |
And so he sent us there and it became like this pilgrimage. 00:33:22.880 |
And in the Amazon, a lot of the creation myths are based around the anaconda coming down 00:33:27.760 |
from the heavens and carving the rivers across the jungle. 00:33:30.960 |
And if you look at the rivers, it looks like that. 00:33:32.720 |
It looks like the path of an anaconda crawling through the jungle. 00:33:38.400 |
And so from the reference to the tribes of women, the Amazons to the anaconda mother, 00:33:44.160 |
everything in the Amazon is very feminine based. 00:33:46.160 |
Even the trees, the largest trees in the jungle, the mother of the forest, the Madre de la 00:33:52.960 |
And it's just this monster tree, these beautiful ancient trees. 00:33:56.320 |
And that was the beginning of the transition that we made from me being like, I hate school. 00:34:06.320 |
You know, Jane Goodall got to do all this amazing stuff. 00:34:08.480 |
I'm just a kid stuck here to eventually becoming something that had to do with where my identity 00:34:16.160 |
became the jungle, where my life became the jungle. 00:34:18.320 |
The secret that he told us opened that door because when we started working with these 00:34:26.160 |
It started getting people to go, what are you doing? 00:34:31.680 |
And it started allowing me to have experiences that solidified and nailed down the fact that 00:34:44.320 |
- And gave you more and more motivation to go into these uncharted territory of the Yakumama. 00:34:52.000 |
Which, just to step back, what nations are we talking about here? 00:35:07.040 |
Brazil has 60% of the Amazon, which is unfortunate because anything that happens politically in 00:35:15.120 |
Peru has the Western Amazon and Ecuador has a little bit of the Western Amazon. 00:35:20.960 |
And the Western Amazon is where the Andes Mountains, the cloud forests, which is a mega 00:35:28.320 |
biodiverse biome, falls into the Western Amazon lowlands. 00:35:32.480 |
And so you have the meeting of these two incredible biomes, and that's what makes this superlative, 00:35:41.120 |
So yeah, we're in Peru in the Madre de Dios, which is the mother of God, which I always 00:35:46.720 |
thought was such a beautiful, the jungle is the source of all life. 00:35:51.200 |
And so we were with the Ese-Eja people, and they belong to a community that's called Inferno, 00:35:57.120 |
which was given by the missionaries who, when they tried to go bring these people to Jesus, 00:36:01.520 |
got so many arrows shot at them that they just called it hell. 00:36:04.000 |
And so Santiago Duran helped unite these tribes that were sort of scattered through the jungle 00:36:11.920 |
and get them status, government-recognized status as indigenous people. 00:36:17.040 |
He was sort of a legend for a lot of the stuff he'd done out barefoot with just like a rifle 00:36:22.560 |
He had 19 children, and the last one, I think the 20th child that he adopted was a refugee 00:36:32.560 |
from the Shining Path that floated down the river, and he just took him in. 00:36:35.600 |
And this is just a guy that was a, everything he did, like when he died, the whole region 00:36:44.240 |
So just the fact that I know him gives me street credit. 00:36:46.480 |
Like the fact that I knew him, I can go like, "Oh, I knew Santiago," and people are like, "No." 00:36:51.840 |
So you had to get integrated to the culture, to the place, in every single way, which is 00:37:00.240 |
Yeah, it could have been tough, but I took to it. 00:37:04.400 |
The jungle, they were very, JJ's teaching me about medicines, and we were doing bird 00:37:09.600 |
surveys and taking data on macaw populations. 00:37:12.880 |
And JJ was just like, "You really wanna," he goes, "You gotta sleep." 00:37:17.120 |
And I was like, "I only have a few weeks here. 00:37:20.960 |
So we'd be out every night looking for all the wildlife we could. 00:37:30.640 |
And I said, "Well, I've always worked with snakes." 00:37:32.080 |
I said, "I'll teach you how to handle snakes." 00:37:35.680 |
And when I left after my first time back in 2006, I said, "How can I help?" 00:37:42.800 |
And they were like, "Look, we're out here trying to protect this little island of forest 00:37:52.160 |
And the more people that you can bring, the more knowledge and the more awareness that 00:37:58.640 |
And so really at that age, at 18 years old, I sort of started dabbling with the idea of 00:38:05.120 |
that I could be part of helping these people to protect this place that I loved. 00:38:09.920 |
And of course, at that time, that idea seemed like too large of a dream or too large of 00:38:15.440 |
a challenge so that I could actually impact it. 00:38:18.640 |
- So what was the journey of looking for these giant snakes, of looking for anacondas? 00:38:34.320 |
So you have reticulated pythons in Southeast Asia, they're actually longer. 00:38:42.880 |
And unlike a lot of other species, so an anaconda starts off, a little two-foot anaconda, 00:38:47.920 |
just a little thicker than your finger, a little baby. 00:38:50.240 |
And they're food for cane toads, herons, crocodiles, you name it. 00:38:56.960 |
But as they grow, they're eating the fish, they're eating the crocs, and then they grow 00:39:02.000 |
a little more and they're eating things like capybara and they're eating larger prey. 00:39:05.920 |
And then at the end of their life, a female anaconda, you're talking about a 25, 30-foot, 00:39:11.040 |
300, 400-pound snake with a head bigger than a football. 00:39:16.560 |
And these things, that means that they impact the entire ecosystem, which is very unique. 00:39:21.520 |
- So it moves up the food chain to become basically-- 00:39:28.640 |
- That's how interesting, it's just eating your way up the food chain. 00:39:31.440 |
- Eating your way up the food chain, if you can survive. 00:39:33.600 |
And they're constantly at war with everything else. 00:39:36.400 |
So I showed up in the Amazon, I was like, "So where are the anacondas at?" 00:39:40.720 |
And they were like, "Oh, no, no, no, it's not like that." 00:39:42.240 |
They're like, "You have to find these things. 00:39:45.680 |
"They're subterranean, they're living in the special swamps. 00:39:50.240 |
And so we went to the floating forest after we'd come back from an expedition. 00:39:57.920 |
And now it's become like this classic photo of me and JJ with this anaconda over our shoulders. 00:40:02.240 |
And we were like, "We 12 days out in the jungle on a hunting trip." 00:40:08.000 |
And Santiago looked at us and he was like, "That's the smallest anacondita I've ever seen." 00:40:22.800 |
And so we went to this place and we reached there at night. 00:40:28.800 |
And his brother took one look at it and was like, "I'm out." 00:40:36.640 |
It's both these two idiots pushing each other farther and farther. 00:40:39.600 |
And I put a foot on the ground and it all shook. 00:40:47.520 |
And what we realized is that it's a lake with floating grass on top of it. 00:40:52.800 |
- And there's islands of grass floating on this lake, very life of Pi. 00:40:56.560 |
And the tops of trees are coming out of the surface of the water. 00:41:00.480 |
And so we start walking across this and JJ's going, "These are big anacondas." 00:41:06.080 |
And I'm going, "JJ, that's a two foot wide, smooth path snaking through the grass. 00:41:18.080 |
And he's like, "We're walking and we're walking." 00:41:20.480 |
And then it's like, maybe it's like 1 a.m. or something. 00:41:22.960 |
And it was just like one of those moments where we saw it at the same time. 00:41:30.960 |
And the snake was so big that, I mean, this must've been a 25 foot anaconda dead asleep 00:41:39.680 |
with probably a 16 foot anaconda sprawled across her. 00:41:44.240 |
And they're laying in the starlight and we're floating on top of a lake, 00:41:49.120 |
And JJ just, I could feel the blood drain out of his face. 00:41:53.440 |
And as I go, however old I was, maybe 20 years old, I just said, 00:42:02.640 |
"we'll be on the front cover of National Geographic 00:42:05.680 |
"and we can protect all the jungle that we want." 00:42:14.320 |
And the only measurement I have of this animal is that 00:42:16.400 |
when I wrapped my arms around it, I couldn't touch my fingers. 00:42:22.480 |
And to her credit, this anaconda did not turn around and eat me 00:42:26.640 |
And she went and she reached the edge of the grass island 00:42:33.840 |
And so I'm watching the stars vibrate as this anaconda is going. 00:42:37.600 |
And I had to make the choice of either going headfirst 00:42:43.760 |
or stopping and just keeping my hand on this thing 00:42:48.960 |
And I just felt the scales and the muscle and the power go by. 00:42:58.080 |
And then I turned around and went, "JJ, what the fuck? 00:43:02.160 |
And he was just like completely white circuits blown. 00:43:05.120 |
And I had to go then like, kind of like take care of him. 00:43:16.560 |
- Clearly the parameters of reality that we thought were possible 00:43:19.920 |
are just a tiny fraction of what's out there. 00:43:25.360 |
We were like, "Okay, we're rubbing up against things 00:43:28.000 |
"that are bigger than we thought were ever possible." 00:43:29.760 |
And so we were like, "Okay, now we need to concentrate on this." 00:43:40.320 |
I mean, our cook's father-in-law was eaten by an anaconda, 00:43:52.480 |
I mean, come on, every now and then somebody gets stung by a bee and dies. 00:43:57.200 |
But you gotta have a really big anaconda, really hungry. 00:44:00.720 |
And like anybody that works in the wild, I mean, just, you know, 00:44:04.880 |
if you walk up to a crocodile, even a giant Nile crocodile, 00:44:08.480 |
you walk up to them, most of the time they're gonna run into the water. 00:44:11.920 |
They hunt in their way, on their terms, sneaky. 00:44:15.840 |
And so with an anaconda, it's like, yeah, if you're, I mean, the guy who got eaten, 00:44:19.920 |
like if you're drunk and you go to the edge of the water 00:44:22.720 |
and you go for a midnight swim by yourself in an Amazonian lake, 00:44:27.440 |
- But if you jump on an anaconda and try to hold on, then you're safe. 00:44:34.480 |
I mean, I think at this point, we've, you know, the research we've done, 00:44:38.160 |
I think I've handled or caught, you know, over 80 anacondas in the field. 00:44:46.640 |
They're like, just leave me alone, let me go. 00:44:53.520 |
I mean, no snake, no, I actually like, I kind of like, 00:44:56.240 |
the only time I get particular with like, you know, the words is like, 00:44:59.440 |
people go, that's an aggressive, black mambas are aggressive. 00:45:04.240 |
A rattlesnake is gonna rattle to say, hey, back up. 00:45:07.040 |
A cobra is gonna stand up and show you its hood. 00:45:09.520 |
And people go, oh, look, he's being aggressive. 00:45:18.480 |
'Cause if there was a cobra in the corner of this room right now, 00:45:20.480 |
he would crawl under the curtain and we'd never see him again. 00:45:22.720 |
- Yeah, it's like Genghis Khan, before conquering the villages, 00:45:32.800 |
- If you want to be proud and fight for your country, then-- 00:45:42.400 |
So how do you catch, actually, let's step back 00:45:46.160 |
because there is, in part, you are a bit of a snake whisperer. 00:46:00.080 |
Or what have you learned from the language you speak 00:46:05.760 |
- I don't know, it's an animal that has many times in my life, 00:46:12.800 |
I started catching snakes when I was very young. 00:46:16.720 |
I'd watch Steve Irwin and go out and catch a garter snake 00:46:25.360 |
before I'm allowed to handle a venomous snake, 00:46:31.920 |
and some guy, like some big hero, he tells us, 00:46:36.960 |
And he picks up a stick and he goes to assault 00:46:39.680 |
this poor copperhead that's sitting on the trail. 00:46:41.680 |
And so at 16 years old, I had to go and shoulder 00:46:46.240 |
And I got the thing by the tail and used a stick 00:46:59.840 |
for five years at this point, in and out, periodically. 00:47:03.440 |
And snakes are always getting into people's kitchens. 00:47:07.120 |
One time we had a king cobra get into someone's kitchen, 00:47:11.200 |
an 11-foot snake, like a monster, like a god of a snake. 00:47:26.240 |
we caught it with one of the local snake catchers 00:47:30.080 |
"You know, I wonder why it was in the kitchen." 00:47:36.560 |
"King cobra, Ophiophagus hannah, they eat snakes." 00:47:42.240 |
And so we got a bottle of water and we got footage of this. 00:47:46.800 |
"Don't make me kill you, don't make me kill you. 00:47:48.480 |
"You're scaring me right now, I don't wanna kill you." 00:47:50.320 |
We took the bottle of water and we poured it on her nose 00:48:00.800 |
and then said, "Thank you so much," and crawled off. 00:48:04.480 |
And it's like, to me, the fact that people are scared 00:48:07.840 |
of snakes, they have symbolic hatred of snakes. 00:48:10.640 |
Someone's evil and sneaky, we call them a snake. 00:48:13.920 |
And to me, it's like, when I take volunteers or researchers 00:48:18.400 |
or students out into the jungle and we find an emerald tree boa 00:48:27.360 |
like you can't really catch a bird and show it to people. 00:48:29.840 |
You're gonna scare the bird, its feathers are gonna come out, 00:48:40.800 |
and then put it back on its branch and then it'll go. 00:48:47.680 |
And so to me, snakes have always been this incredible link 00:48:50.560 |
to teach people about wildlife, about nature. 00:48:57.600 |
that the fear is not justified, is not grounded, 00:49:04.400 |
Of course, there's always New Yorker snakes, right? 00:49:06.400 |
There's always gonna be an asshole snake here and there. 00:49:28.720 |
'Cause one of the first ones we caught that I would say, 00:49:30.800 |
maybe like a 16 footer, which is no joke of a snake, 00:49:35.200 |
We're on the canoe and this is the early days. 00:49:43.120 |
but this is back when we were barefoot and shirtless 00:49:52.560 |
"You come from the top, we're gonna come from the bottom." 00:49:56.880 |
I came in, the snake is all curled up, dead asleep. 00:50:03.520 |
And all of a sudden I see the tongue, zoom, zoom. 00:50:08.720 |
And they're paying attention to not crashing the boat, 00:50:15.280 |
So I run ahead, grab this snake, get her by the head. 00:50:26.720 |
like grabbing this thing with his giant head. 00:50:37.840 |
it's like if you've ever done a cliff dive or something, 00:50:39.920 |
it's that moment where you go, "Do it, do it." 00:50:48.320 |
- Because you can't just gently flirt with it. 00:50:53.600 |
It's like, if you hesitate, it's more dangerous. 00:51:05.040 |
And you feel this squeeze that can crush the bones 00:51:08.880 |
And the next coil comes very quickly over my neck. 00:51:14.480 |
If I wanted to let go of the snake, I couldn't. 00:51:19.920 |
And I tried to yell for JJ and all that came out was, 00:51:25.920 |
So I attacked, as far as the snake knows, I attacked. 00:51:46.960 |
Now we know, I've gotten more head catches than anybody. 00:52:04.080 |
that there's a similarly large risk for the tail guy 00:52:26.000 |
they're eating the fish, they're eating the birds, 00:52:34.000 |
that's coming off the gold mining in the region. 00:52:39.120 |
of how is mercury moving through this ecosystem. 00:52:44.640 |
hundreds of thousands of acres to artisanal gold mining 00:52:54.080 |
And the sand particles have bits of gold in it, 00:53:11.120 |
And so the people in the region are having birth defects 00:53:14.160 |
from the amount of mercury that's in the water. 00:53:18.880 |
when we were doing most of our anaconda research, 00:53:24.720 |
which is what most of the literature would tell you 00:53:39.440 |
to study how mercury is moving through the ecosystem. 00:53:44.240 |
can we use these animals not only as ambassadors 00:53:47.200 |
for wildlife because everybody wants to see the anacondas, 00:53:54.080 |
this very, very little understood apex predator? 00:54:04.400 |
The gold mining that's happening down there is, 00:54:28.720 |
He wanted to see the areas that we're protecting. 00:54:30.320 |
And then he goes, "I wanna see the gold mining areas." 00:54:48.080 |
way out past the machine gun guarded limit of the Pampas, 00:54:58.640 |
in what used to be the headwaters of the Amazon rainforest. 00:55:02.400 |
And it's like, there is a massive global scale 00:55:31.280 |
And we tried to get in there to film years ago. 00:55:35.040 |
And there's just a lot of guys with machine guns 00:56:07.040 |
And he goes, "I wouldn't keep posting to Instagram 00:56:10.480 |
And I was like, "Okay, thanks for the warning." 00:56:13.040 |
And then in June, somebody pulled up beside me 00:56:16.640 |
on a motorcycle and I got a more stern warning. 00:56:19.120 |
- Do they pay attention to the flow of information? 00:56:21.520 |
'Cause they don't want the world to find out. 00:56:24.560 |
- Oh, the last thing they want is to be shut down. 00:56:44.000 |
converting them into conservationists has all been like, 00:56:46.320 |
I mean, I've seen the Peruvian Navy come down 00:56:55.120 |
- So it's possible to convert them into conservationists? 00:57:06.160 |
We went upriver, up the Malinowski River several years ago, 00:57:11.840 |
and everyone was like, "You are going to die. 00:57:16.240 |
And the reason we were able to do it with relative safety 00:57:21.520 |
was that the gold miner that we were going with 00:57:23.840 |
was the brother-in-law of one of my closest friends 00:57:32.000 |
And they said, "Look, you can go, just keep a low profile." 00:57:35.840 |
and we spent a week there and dead animals everywhere, 00:57:40.720 |
I mean, the things that we saw were so horrible. 00:57:43.440 |
And we're living with these gold miners that are, 00:57:59.040 |
I mean, unbelievable negligence of just sanity. 00:58:16.560 |
You know, they have a floating thing in the river 00:58:22.080 |
And they stopped and they strapped a bunch of explosives 00:58:32.160 |
And then they just went, a bunch of guys in fatigues. 00:58:34.000 |
And they just kind of like looked at us like, "Peace." 00:58:35.760 |
And I sat there with this gold miner and I went, "Now what?" 00:58:38.960 |
And he went, "Well, now I got to go get a new motor." 00:58:41.600 |
And I went, "Why don't you just do something else?" 00:58:48.240 |
And I sat there with my phone and I was like, 00:58:50.720 |
"These are pretty tourists and we feed them food 00:59:02.560 |
I said, "We show people, we bring students to the jungle." 00:59:04.880 |
He goes, "So you're saying if I build you a lodge, 00:59:09.760 |
And I came back a year later and he sat there 00:59:19.200 |
- So you give them another channel of survival. 00:59:24.720 |
And that's what we've been doing through Jungle Keepers 00:59:31.440 |
"You make $15 a day destroying the ancient trees 00:59:34.800 |
"What if we paid you $35 a day to have a uniform 00:59:43.760 |
"and you just protect it and use all of the jungle knowledge 00:59:46.720 |
"you've gained as a logger to protect this place?" 00:59:48.960 |
- Who are the loggers trying to destroy the Amazon? 00:59:55.360 |
Is that as a threat to the Amazon rainforest? 00:59:59.760 |
- A lot of them are really close friends of mine. 01:00:11.600 |
especially the Amazon is a very challenging environment. 01:00:13.920 |
So you have these people who, they have a chainsaw, 01:00:21.440 |
they grew up in the jungle, they know how to do it. 01:00:23.680 |
And so for them, it's a way to like, they also love it. 01:00:37.520 |
And if you wanna talk about like carbon sequestration 01:00:41.280 |
in the rainforest, the ancient hardwoods hold like 60% 01:00:58.400 |
and then they bring it back to town and they sell it. 01:01:11.680 |
And if you talk to, you know, a lot of like the PhDs 01:01:15.040 |
that I worked with down there were, you know, 01:01:20.000 |
And then I'd be with JJ and JJ would sit down 01:01:25.680 |
And like, we'd all be chilling and throwing them back 01:01:28.800 |
And then the opportunity through not vilifying these people 01:01:40.080 |
You know, and then of course out in the wild, 01:01:45.600 |
And then that creates a certain type of kinship. 01:02:01.360 |
they're about to cut and gone, "Ah, this is a shame. 01:02:18.160 |
There's some drama and controversy around that. 01:02:20.400 |
Can you explain that whole saga with Discovery, 01:02:25.520 |
Maybe outside of even the drama, the initial thing, 01:02:34.480 |
to actually do of being eaten by an anaconda. 01:02:37.520 |
Is that actually possible to survive something like that? 01:02:41.920 |
while you're wearing the suit that they made, maybe. 01:02:43.920 |
But that was, in hindsight, that was the result of, 01:02:56.480 |
You start developing a relationship with these animals 01:03:05.600 |
Every year, places that are crucial to my soul, 01:03:18.720 |
And you look to your right and you look to your left 01:03:21.520 |
and there is no one 'cause it's the middle of the Amazon. 01:03:24.240 |
And the rainforests have been being destroyed 01:03:28.560 |
And so we started trying to do something about it. 01:03:33.440 |
And so I started putting a little bit more emphasis 01:03:40.080 |
And so I started trying to see what was gonna work. 01:03:43.680 |
You just start firing shots in the dark and seeing, 01:03:45.920 |
and JJ's going, you have to help us do something. 01:03:50.080 |
And so from 18 years old, now I'm 23 years old. 01:03:54.080 |
And all of a sudden, this place isn't foreign to me anymore. 01:04:01.440 |
of all the different ways you can bring attention 01:04:03.360 |
to this place that you care about that's being destroyed. 01:04:05.600 |
- Yeah, you're standing next to a boulder of progress, 01:04:08.960 |
of destruction, and it's about to roll onto the forest 01:04:12.960 |
and just destroy it and snuff out all that life. 01:04:17.680 |
And so you go, is there any way that I could put myself 01:04:23.760 |
And you're talking about the global economic reality. 01:04:33.040 |
- So what's the most dramatic possible thing I could do? 01:04:40.160 |
as a 23-year-old dude, and you're sitting there 01:04:50.320 |
And you go, I could show you the biggest anacondas 01:04:52.160 |
in the world, and we could talk about mercury 01:04:53.760 |
and bioaccumulation, and we could show people 01:05:07.920 |
And someone at some point in one of those meetings said, 01:05:22.400 |
the only way that's feasible is if you like make a suit 01:05:24.480 |
with a breathing apparatus and let the snake eat you, 01:05:52.240 |
And I got a chance to hang out with him for the day. 01:06:04.080 |
- But it was interesting because he's probably way better 01:06:07.760 |
at that conversation that you had with the guy in LA, 01:06:14.240 |
because he's made, he's revolutionizing entertainment. 01:06:20.400 |
which he's trying to figure out how to help the world 01:06:26.320 |
I'll send him a message to see what his thoughts, 01:06:41.680 |
- Yeah, well, how do you get people to watch something 01:06:48.880 |
with the swollen stomachs, nobody wants to see it. 01:06:54.960 |
And I'm going, I could give data all day long. 01:07:03.040 |
without spending too much time on a massive misstep was, 01:07:08.240 |
They paid me at the time more money than I had made before, 01:07:13.040 |
'cause nobody pays you to be a conservationist. 01:07:27.680 |
I mean, they used, somehow they changed our voices. 01:07:34.720 |
There was one point where we had caught a 19 foot snake 01:07:51.280 |
And then the producer goes, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's great. 01:07:53.600 |
Listen, if that was to bite you, what would happen? 01:07:56.400 |
And I was like, oh, well, if it bit you, you'd bleed out 01:08:05.360 |
until the night before I went on Matt Lauer's show. 01:08:11.040 |
And they had called it Expedition on the call sheet. 01:08:14.080 |
They'd called it Expedition EA, Expedition Amazon. 01:08:16.960 |
All of a sudden they changed it to Eaten Alive. 01:08:22.560 |
that it actually happened, not that we're attempting it. 01:08:28.000 |
you better, you're going on live TV tomorrow. 01:08:30.000 |
They said, you let us know what level of control 01:08:34.240 |
And so I had to go out and smile for the cameras 01:08:37.200 |
and endorse something that was a train wreck. 01:08:40.960 |
And the scientific community was like, you're an idiot. 01:08:51.840 |
you were trying to hurt a snake, which I would never do. 01:08:54.880 |
And then the American public was like, you know, 01:08:56.640 |
you said you were gonna get eaten by a snake and you didn't. 01:09:00.480 |
I basically had to exile myself to India for like six months. 01:09:14.960 |
being completely kind of flipped upside down. 01:09:20.400 |
with the local people, learning from the wildlife. 01:09:22.800 |
It's such a devout and important thing to me. 01:09:29.520 |
And then not just a joke, it got turned into that 01:09:39.840 |
Jimmy Kimmel told me to have sex with a hippo 01:09:48.560 |
And when you hear these like motivational speakers 01:10:01.680 |
And I was like, I'm gonna go away for a while. 01:10:10.880 |
what a room full of people that you don't know 01:10:13.040 |
who could look you in the eye and shake your hand 01:10:21.120 |
towards discovery, towards the people involved, 01:10:30.480 |
You know, they literally put out a documentary 01:10:38.240 |
No, I said that, I'm not even touching that one. 01:10:46.800 |
a bunch of scientists who are like oceanographers 01:10:48.880 |
and they like showed them ancient footage of, 01:10:50.800 |
you know, mariners saying that seals were mermaids. 01:11:02.480 |
You know, there's that parable about the frog 01:11:06.640 |
who gives the scorpion a ride across the water. 01:11:09.280 |
And then at the end, he says, I'll give you a ride. 01:11:20.720 |
But now that you've become much more well-known 01:11:37.760 |
- I think that most of the success that we've had now 01:11:45.360 |
and the levels that we've reached are so far. 01:11:53.440 |
And now the massive ecological reserve we have 01:11:56.560 |
and the team of rangers and the converted loggers. 01:11:58.720 |
And all of that is because of the ability to communicate 01:12:08.240 |
if somebody came and gave a sort of like Bourdainian pass 01:12:15.120 |
You can smoke, you can do whatever you wanna do. 01:12:21.040 |
But now I know how those contracts need to be. 01:12:23.680 |
I need to have right to refusal and they can't change them. 01:12:28.560 |
like the way I think like Mr. Beast does stuff 01:12:31.200 |
where it's like, you get a crew guys and some seed money 01:12:36.000 |
I mean, a committee never helped real art be better. 01:12:39.520 |
It has to come from the source of inspiration. 01:12:44.240 |
So I think, you know, you get JJ and a crew of people 01:12:46.880 |
or the guys in Africa that I'm working with right now 01:12:52.320 |
I mean, look, that's why Joe Rogan is important right now. 01:13:01.760 |
this ridiculous system of polishing it and dumbing it down. 01:13:06.800 |
- Yeah, that's why Joe has been an inspiration. 01:13:13.440 |
All you need is one or two other people and that's it. 01:13:29.600 |
as opposed to a boss that's a creative director. 01:13:33.440 |
Somebody told me actually, I was visiting LA. 01:13:39.120 |
They were saying that now for all intimate scenes 01:13:42.480 |
in Hollywood movies, there's an intimacy director. 01:13:50.720 |
on film, so it's not real, but there's still intimacy, 01:14:08.160 |
I understand there's creepy people and so on. 01:14:13.040 |
- It's usually, I think, comes from the director 01:14:19.920 |
So the intimacy director is more for the director 01:14:23.200 |
pushing things, you know, there's Werner Herzog. 01:14:28.160 |
Let's make sure that we don't have anything happen here 01:14:32.080 |
But no, I think that authenticity is the greatest currency. 01:14:37.200 |
And I think that in order for me to tell the stories 01:14:46.800 |
- So in 2019, the Amazon Fire started popping off 01:14:53.600 |
and we had just gone to film, like a month earlier, 01:14:59.680 |
And they'd been following me as if I was on a solo, 01:15:18.320 |
But for a second, I was out there in the flames, 01:15:29.520 |
I was red-eyed, I was crying and I was going, 01:15:41.920 |
And I don't know what made me pull out my phone 01:15:45.920 |
I say, forget the documentation, this is real life. 01:15:48.560 |
We got stuff to do and I'm doing, I'm not documenting. 01:15:51.680 |
And then a month later, I'm home and I'm in New York. 01:15:54.160 |
And all of a sudden I see these articles like, 01:16:01.760 |
And I threw it up on Instagram, like eight o'clock at night. 01:16:05.680 |
And I'd never, like I'd never cursed on Instagram. 01:16:13.600 |
and I put it on top of the refrigerator and I went to bed. 01:16:19.520 |
and it was ringing off the hook and it was like the news. 01:16:24.240 |
that posted that viral video about the Amazon? 01:16:28.080 |
- And that was the start, that's where it broke. 01:16:30.880 |
And that's where we went from barefoot in the Amazon 01:16:34.080 |
to all of a sudden, I was a talking head for three weeks 01:16:40.000 |
And all of a sudden I was like the spokesperson 01:16:43.440 |
and he was like, go, go, go, go, go, like get us that support. 01:16:47.120 |
And it was just, so communicating with people 01:16:53.840 |
And whether it's rhino poaching and elephant poaching 01:16:56.560 |
or the Amazon being destroyed, it's like, to me, 01:16:58.800 |
it's like being able to take people into that 01:17:08.560 |
People should definitely follow your Instagram. 01:17:12.640 |
- Well, the end of that story actually kind of involves him 01:17:15.440 |
because yeah, 'cause I went to all these news outlets 01:17:19.440 |
and I was living in green rooms and traveling around 01:17:21.520 |
and I was all strung out and I hadn't seen anybody 01:17:26.240 |
And I finally got home and I went to like a family party 01:17:32.240 |
And then I left and my cousin Michael calls me 01:17:34.400 |
and he's screaming and I'm going, what, what, what, what? 01:17:42.480 |
And it was like, that's when it really took off. 01:17:48.400 |
is that a Canadian entrepreneur who started Lightspeed 01:17:54.240 |
reached out and several months later after COVID, 01:18:04.320 |
I had no money, no savings, no job, no nothing. 01:18:06.800 |
And after that great publicity thing, nothing happened. 01:18:09.920 |
The waves came and everything got real exciting. 01:18:12.960 |
Everybody reached out and they said, we care so much. 01:18:18.720 |
but if we don't have our arrows in the quiver, 01:18:21.920 |
And I actually, I made a phone call to my friend Mohsen 01:18:25.280 |
right at the start of COVID and I was going through a divorce 01:18:28.000 |
and I was broke and I said, I'm gonna get a job. 01:18:41.120 |
And then this guy Dax De Silva called me on the phone 01:18:43.760 |
and said, listen, I'm in, what do we gotta do? 01:18:48.640 |
and a few other people trying to hold this boulder back 01:18:54.480 |
and just puts his arm out and just goes, I'm gonna help. 01:18:57.520 |
And he gave us the funding to start actually developing 01:19:00.080 |
a ranger program, to start actually bringing loggers 01:19:04.480 |
to be supporting smaller conservation things. 01:19:06.720 |
And now we're protecting 50,000 acres of rainforest. 01:19:10.000 |
We're protecting entire streams and ecosystems that I love. 01:19:16.480 |
So yeah, the communication of these things is crucial. 01:19:23.920 |
that social media has played such a big role in it. 01:19:33.120 |
you should do his podcast, but also just be friends with him. 01:19:41.600 |
but he's one with nature and I'm much more with the, 01:19:45.520 |
I'm one, while I do appreciate and love nature, 01:19:54.800 |
So in that meme type of way, we're very different. 01:20:03.520 |
because it definitely really helped push us over that limit 01:20:06.720 |
where if enough people see it, you get someone like Dax 01:20:10.560 |
who says, I can help and I have the resources to help. 01:20:17.120 |
Back to the jungle, you had a bunch of interactions 01:20:24.880 |
- Man, dude, jags aren't the, I'll tell you this, 01:20:29.920 |
jags are not the danger, the falling trees are the danger. 01:20:37.360 |
But jags, I've, so JJ started and Santiago, his dad, 01:20:47.760 |
I'd have a hammock, a headlamp, three days worth of food, 01:20:54.720 |
And so like one of the stories that happened early on 01:20:58.720 |
was I was out there and it was raining and I was lost 01:21:01.120 |
and this is how we test your jungle knowledge. 01:21:06.960 |
Have you listened to the things that we taught you? 01:21:08.880 |
And there was one night that I was in a hammock 01:21:12.400 |
and a jaguar came up and I was asleep when it happened 01:21:18.000 |
and she was, and I could hear her smelling me. 01:21:22.480 |
And then my first instinct was to turn on my headlamp 01:21:25.760 |
and just the sound of my arm moving against the material 01:21:34.000 |
I could feel her breath and I just laid there in the dark. 01:21:38.320 |
And that's one of those moments where you go, 01:21:44.720 |
I felt like I understood the intentions of the cat. 01:21:53.360 |
and I didn't know if I was ever gonna get out of that jungle 01:21:58.720 |
'cause it was an experience like the giant anaconda 01:22:04.480 |
that it's so almost cinematically outside the realm 01:22:13.600 |
'cause the previous day I was lost, tired, confused, 01:22:21.600 |
you've been waiting for this your whole life, go get it. 01:22:24.480 |
And I like woke up and I was like, I am gonna navigate, 01:22:26.720 |
even though I've been in this swamp for three days, 01:22:29.760 |
And like, she just like breathed fire into me 01:22:32.240 |
where it was like, it was like, if that's possible, 01:22:34.960 |
if I could be six inches away from a jaguar's face, 01:22:47.200 |
- That was a sign that you know what you're doing. 01:22:51.760 |
- How do you survive on a solo hike through the jungle? 01:22:58.880 |
So you said you had a hammock, you had some food. 01:23:00.880 |
What kind of food, by the way, are we talking about? 01:23:06.000 |
'Cause you can't, so you can't really start a fire 01:23:08.880 |
Like I'm a good, I mean, I camp all over the place. 01:23:16.640 |
In fact, a lot of survival manuals will tell you, 01:23:25.360 |
But you can still get like hyperthermia from, 01:23:28.960 |
if you get wet and you lay out in the jungle, 01:23:34.240 |
I even, in the beginning, I used to bring like ramen noodles, 01:23:44.560 |
which forced me to become a very good fisherman. 01:23:46.640 |
And now of course, JJ knows that he can like, 01:23:49.600 |
they can cut certain roots and they bash it up 01:23:52.800 |
and the fish just float to the top and they take with them. 01:23:56.160 |
So like, he's got like, he's got all the cheat codes. 01:23:58.720 |
- Whereas like, I'm sitting there with a hook 01:24:03.280 |
And I go, bait, in the most competitive ecosystem on earth, 01:24:17.840 |
- Puts that on the hook, catches a six inch fish, 01:24:23.280 |
- And in 15 minutes, he's got a four foot giant catfish 01:24:26.960 |
that could feed a family of 16 and he's happy. 01:24:31.200 |
I'm gonna try to like stick a beetle on a fishing hook. 01:24:34.720 |
- Do you have just a line and a hook or is there a rod too? 01:24:38.400 |
And then you just chop a rod and tie it to the, 01:24:43.280 |
- So are you still able to start a fire or no? 01:24:46.080 |
- I like for the food that I bring to not be fire dependent. 01:24:50.160 |
- And so if I have some nuts, I can shove in a few, 01:24:57.040 |
and there'll be something there in the morning. 01:25:02.160 |
But a lot of times what I'll do is I'll bring a flask 01:25:08.080 |
And so you have a tuna can and you put the diesel. 01:25:12.720 |
Everything I do, you know, I'm sure there's gonna be 01:25:16.400 |
And it's like, yeah, this is what we do down there. 01:25:18.880 |
It's a tuna can, you pour a little bit of diesel in it. 01:25:22.080 |
It burns slow, you light it and you put your sticks, 01:25:25.360 |
And eventually that will burn through the moisture. 01:25:27.200 |
And finally you'll get a very reluctant little fire, 01:25:30.320 |
enough to burn, you know, to make yourself like a cup of tea 01:25:32.720 |
or to pour that into the noodles, something, something. 01:25:48.000 |
So yeah, I don't know if you saw the picture in my book 01:25:53.760 |
- So yeah, there's a picture with your like entire face 01:25:59.760 |
consumed with yellow spots is basically, I guess that's MRSA. 01:26:09.840 |
And yeah, and how crazy are you for letting that infection 01:26:21.200 |
I was 19 years old and I was taking care of a giant anteater 01:26:24.000 |
that was orphaned and this is like my dream animal. 01:26:26.480 |
- And she was mine and my job was to teach her the jungle. 01:26:29.440 |
And so when I started like noticing that I had an infection 01:26:32.960 |
and that I was, I had, I think I had dengue at the time too. 01:26:35.760 |
I went back to town, probably picked up MRSA in the hospital 01:26:39.920 |
where I got tested, came back into the jungle 01:26:48.720 |
And then it got to the point where my vision went black 01:26:52.480 |
And I don't know why, but at the time I had shaved that day. 01:27:00.320 |
I couldn't open my eyes because the pus had come out 01:27:03.280 |
of my eyes and out of my, the pores in my face, 01:27:06.080 |
all those little micro cuts and the pillow was stuck 01:27:08.000 |
to my face and I was stuck up river with no help 01:27:12.320 |
And also when you, when you see that picture, 01:27:14.240 |
you can imagine that I assumed that my life was over 01:27:19.840 |
And I also didn't assume that, or at the very least, 01:27:22.080 |
I figured I'd be disfigured the rest of my life. 01:27:23.840 |
I didn't think there was any getting better from that. 01:27:25.600 |
And so I remember sitting by the side of the river, 01:27:29.840 |
but it was the rainy season and there aren't going 01:27:31.520 |
to be any boats because the river is psychotic. 01:27:33.680 |
And so it was a long time before I got back to town 01:27:40.080 |
but it became like, I was like, I realized I was dying. 01:27:42.160 |
And then I finally got a boat with some loggers, 01:27:46.720 |
a death boat, just loaded with, these guys were, 01:27:50.400 |
had gone into the jungle and shot everything they could 01:27:52.960 |
and taken all the babies and they were going to go sell them. 01:27:55.040 |
And so it was like baby monkeys and toucans and birds 01:27:58.240 |
and cages and pieces of crocodiles and Anaconda skins. 01:28:03.120 |
And it was just like, I was just laying there 01:28:06.800 |
with all the flies on my face and got back to the hotel, 01:28:10.560 |
called my mother, said, please book me a flight out 01:28:15.680 |
And then I sat on the plane and somebody sat next to me 01:28:23.520 |
at this point I was having trouble staying conscious, 01:28:28.240 |
like trying to see what was sitting next to her. 01:28:36.000 |
the cop, he like takes my passport and he goes, 01:28:39.280 |
"Yeah," he goes, "So what were you doing in Peru?" 01:28:41.600 |
And he like holds up the passport, looks at the passport, 01:28:48.400 |
I'm trying to get home to go to the hospital. 01:28:50.240 |
He goes, he stamps it, he goes, "Go, go, go, go, 01:28:54.800 |
And then they put me in the room in the hospital 01:28:57.280 |
with like the hazmat suits and they didn't know what it was. 01:29:01.680 |
with like four different things running through my veins. 01:29:03.680 |
And the doctors were like, don't let it go that close. 01:29:07.520 |
They're like, you went real close on that one. 01:29:10.720 |
people should check out the book just to see the picture. 01:29:27.600 |
- Plus there's this creature who you've become a parent of. 01:29:34.820 |
- Boy, that's a dark place to be as a 19 year old. 01:29:39.200 |
I mean, most people will never be in a place like that. 01:29:42.240 |
Like where did you find strength in that place? 01:29:46.000 |
- I don't know, I just remember writing like a goodbye letter 01:29:48.800 |
to my parents 'cause I said, if I die out here. 01:29:56.480 |
And I was writing, if you find me out here, I'm sorry. 01:30:05.440 |
There was no strength, it was just like move forward. 01:30:07.600 |
And at some point it was like, if you'll take me down river, 01:30:15.760 |
Well, how did the infection start by the way? 01:30:22.160 |
I mean, we always have some sort of little shit. 01:30:33.120 |
you can use Sangre de Drago and it'll cure it right away. 01:30:39.680 |
You put that on there, not only will it kill the fly, 01:30:43.760 |
Now, if you have a worse infection, you can go to Oje, 01:30:46.160 |
which is Ficus Incipita and you can use that. 01:30:48.640 |
And that will completely heal, that will murder. 01:30:50.960 |
It's like crocodile blood, it will murder infections. 01:30:57.760 |
running through these trees and they know all about them. 01:31:01.520 |
So now at this point, that's no longer an issue 01:31:11.200 |
So these are open wounds and then there's creatures 01:31:22.960 |
likes to make its home inside the flesh of mammals. 01:31:27.440 |
And so the flies attach their eggs to mosquitoes. 01:31:32.000 |
The mosquitoes go and seek out warm-blooded animals. 01:31:34.880 |
The eggs, microscopic eggs fall into your skin 01:31:48.240 |
but when they get to about as thick as that pen, 01:31:50.800 |
it starts to hurt 'cause you got a hole in you 01:31:52.960 |
and they have a little breathing tube that comes up 01:31:56.160 |
and then they eat and they come back up to breathe 01:32:20.080 |
So like a lot of times what we'll do down there 01:32:22.160 |
is someone will take a massive drag of a cigarette 01:32:26.080 |
and then they'll spit the, they'll power like exhale 01:32:31.680 |
which also shows you how much tar you get out of a cigarette 01:32:34.240 |
and then with a knife, you put that right over the hole 01:32:36.720 |
and then you slap some Vaseline or something on top of that 01:32:41.520 |
And eventually over the course of a few hours, 01:32:50.480 |
and you gotta squeeze from the, it's a whole ceremony 01:33:03.360 |
he'll just squeeze until this thing comes out. 01:33:09.840 |
- Yeah, you don't wanna bathe for a day or two after 01:33:11.920 |
until that closes 'cause otherwise you're gonna have like 01:33:13.600 |
water sloshing around in like a little pocket of yours, 01:33:18.000 |
- And that water might have other organisms in it. 01:33:23.040 |
I mean, the jungle water's clean, we drink it like, 01:33:31.840 |
the whole jungle's constantly purifying everything. 01:33:34.240 |
- People might be thinking about that with the jungle, 01:33:37.280 |
there's insects probably all over you all the time. 01:33:41.440 |
Like I've been to Finland, Lapland in the summer 01:33:46.560 |
and the mosquitoes are horrendous, like devastating. 01:33:52.480 |
if you're sitting in a hammock reading a book out, 01:33:55.920 |
you know, our research stations don't have walls or anything, 01:33:58.400 |
you're good for about one mosquito every half hour, 01:34:07.440 |
- Tell me a little more about the little baby anteater, 01:34:11.360 |
- Who you've rescued and had to sadly leave behind. 01:34:15.920 |
- Yeah, I just was always fascinated with giant anteaters, 01:34:18.480 |
or this, you know, German shepherd sized thing 01:34:21.600 |
with Wolverine claws and these giant Popeye forearms, 01:34:33.440 |
And so they actually have this incredibly intimate 01:34:47.440 |
And so he went and he was like, "Hey, my friend, 01:34:53.200 |
And so I spent like weeks and weeks and weeks 01:35:03.040 |
And their tongue is like 11 inches long at that age. 01:35:07.680 |
she'd fired up my nose and it would come out my mouth. 01:35:26.000 |
So if this animal didn't have the physical touch, 01:35:36.720 |
She'd start literally having a traumatic response 01:35:45.360 |
'Cause again, on the scale of a cockroach to an elephant, 01:35:57.520 |
to explore the jungle from the perspective of an animal. 01:36:11.120 |
Another time was living with a herd of elephants 01:36:13.120 |
where I had to walk with them through the forest 01:36:15.440 |
and see how they interacted completely natural. 01:36:25.440 |
And you realize just like a person's public persona 01:36:31.680 |
than when you're on the couch with them on a Tuesday night. 01:36:33.760 |
And with wild animals, it's very much like that. 01:36:42.560 |
yeah, but what's it like when it's in the den 01:37:03.760 |
- What do people not understand about elephants 01:37:07.520 |
that's beautiful to you, that's interesting to you? 01:37:23.440 |
so there's this question that keeps coming up of, 01:37:25.760 |
are we smart enough to know how smart animals are? 01:37:28.480 |
Can we interpret the intelligence that we're seeing? 01:37:31.760 |
And I've lived with a semi-wild herd of elephants 01:37:37.600 |
And some of the things that I saw like changed 01:37:44.240 |
'Cause you watch a matriarch of an elephant herd 01:37:48.160 |
walk up to someone that none of us knew was pregnant 01:37:57.440 |
that they know that there's something in there. 01:38:04.640 |
and the elephants didn't want the stream water 01:38:06.480 |
they didn't want the lake water, they didn't want puddles. 01:38:10.320 |
We had like a stone well, like a traditional. 01:38:19.440 |
But they wanted that nice, cold, clean water. 01:38:21.760 |
And so it was like caring for elephants that were wild 01:38:25.680 |
that were sometimes getting shot at by farmers 01:38:28.560 |
'cause if they went to try and rob some bananas. 01:38:30.960 |
So these are sort of like delinquent elephants 01:38:38.320 |
And I made really good friends with this one elephant 01:38:48.240 |
It's hard to write the book I'm writing right now 01:38:51.200 |
He grew up around people because he was a tuskless male. 01:38:59.120 |
And he couldn't hang out with the males, the bulls 01:39:04.080 |
So Dharma would be like wandering around the forest 01:39:08.960 |
And so like there was one night there was a tiger calling 01:39:35.600 |
I'm like, "No, I'm not gonna get out of bed." 01:39:36.880 |
I was like, "Dharma, you're a grown ass elephant." 01:39:40.880 |
And he's like, "I need bananas to feel better." 01:39:51.200 |
And I go and I'm like, "Please, please, please, please, 01:39:53.280 |
please Dharma, give me a," I'm rubbing his face. 01:39:55.920 |
He's like, "All right, well then, then hit me." 01:40:07.120 |
And so a lot of my job was taking him out into the forest 01:40:13.200 |
I have this beautiful, one time I set up the tripod 01:40:18.400 |
And he would come and he would just like play with my hair. 01:40:21.760 |
And he just, he wanted someone to interact with 01:40:42.320 |
They probably know exactly who that was, that bone. 01:40:48.480 |
and communicate in ways that we cannot really figure out. 01:40:54.400 |
elephant intelligence, you'll hear about scientists 01:41:01.920 |
And you're like, "Bro, this is all human stuff." 01:41:05.360 |
Can you go walking with them for three weeks in the wild 01:41:14.240 |
especially recently with the work that's been going, 01:41:18.720 |
I've just become so fascinated with elephants. 01:41:23.680 |
And the African elephant population right now 01:41:29.680 |
is down at 2% of what it was a few hundred years ago. 01:41:35.120 |
there's some elephants that are being born tuskless 01:41:37.840 |
because poaching has taken down the great tuskers 01:41:43.600 |
to the point where now it's actually beneficial 01:41:48.320 |
But that's like we've created deformed elephants. 01:41:50.800 |
And so like now I'm very concerned with issues of elephants. 01:41:56.400 |
- And tusks are fundamental to the interaction 01:41:59.200 |
- Absolutely, I mean, with males compete with each other, 01:42:09.600 |
and they'll like grab a bunch of other stuff. 01:42:17.840 |
He got down on his knees and stuck his tusk into the ground 01:42:23.280 |
He like Archimedes to this root out of the ground 01:42:28.000 |
And then when he left, I went and I tasted the root 01:42:31.600 |
And I was like, "I have no idea what this is." 01:42:37.920 |
- It's certainly involved in who has mating rights. 01:42:48.000 |
that have tusks down to the ground, like huge. 01:42:56.080 |
'cause we're at a point where we might lose those. 01:43:29.120 |
- But I bet you there's a component to the tusk 01:43:31.600 |
where the ladies go, "Goddamn, that's a nice tusk." 01:43:41.440 |
is symmetry and the absence of yellow spots on your face 01:43:48.880 |
And so I think to us, beauty is sexually appealing traits 01:43:58.400 |
everybody in the world would swipe left on that. 01:44:01.940 |
- At least sexually desirable objects in the universe. 01:44:09.360 |
and something I think and work quite a bit on 01:44:14.880 |
is what the philosophical question that comes up is, 01:45:01.520 |
it's like they also engineer their environment. 01:45:10.000 |
because there's twisted branches and excavated Earth, 01:45:45.280 |
And it's like, I celebrate a lot of what makes us human. 01:45:48.400 |
And it's almost like reality is this crazy video game. 01:45:52.960 |
And it's like, if we could just figure out the right keys, 01:45:55.680 |
we can pretty much do anything we can think of. 01:46:01.040 |
I mean, you know, I'm the biggest animal lover in the world, 01:46:09.200 |
- Yeah, the ability to puzzle solve, create tools. 01:46:36.400 |
- You know, a Sultan, an Egyptian King, George Washington, 01:46:48.640 |
but I was looking out the window at the clouds and going, 01:46:58.560 |
and you go, this is, the world is like this today. 01:47:02.560 |
And then you get in a plane and you fly above the clouds 01:47:11.200 |
and they come back and they tell you the pale blue dot, 01:47:20.480 |
and be in India and, you know, 20, 22 hours is shocking. 01:47:33.200 |
- There's somebody I forgot who told me this idea 01:47:40.000 |
Earth's atmosphere that allows you to look up 01:47:57.840 |
Like first looking at your local environment. 01:48:12.960 |
that kind of humility combined with the ability to dream 01:48:17.440 |
about exploring, maybe it just inspires the exploration. 01:48:26.080 |
the extra upgraded, super cool version of flying, 01:48:32.720 |
I mean, there's going to be, hopefully it's possible, 01:48:37.600 |
this century, a child born, no, not this century, 01:48:42.640 |
maybe this century, a child born on another planet 01:48:57.040 |
There's another place where life is way easier. 01:49:14.720 |
- Oh man, I wouldn't even leave, given like right now, 01:49:17.920 |
like if somebody said like, oh, you could like, 01:49:19.360 |
you could go to the moon, I'd be like, no, I'm good. 01:49:25.520 |
- Yeah, but you're still, there's a longing to explore 01:49:29.120 |
- There's a longing to explore, but I really think I'm such a, 01:49:33.200 |
like my longing to explore is like rivers, streams, oceans, 01:49:37.840 |
jungles, like to me, yeah, I would watch the hell out 01:49:42.000 |
of the live stream of Elon touching down on Mars. 01:49:47.920 |
It's amazing that I get to be around to see this. 01:49:54.080 |
- Yeah, but it's good that the human spirit pushes us 01:50:01.120 |
Just out there questions, what's the most dangerous animal 01:50:12.800 |
- Like dangerous in terms of you walking around, 01:50:21.120 |
It's nothing, there's no, if I'm out in the Amazon, 01:50:25.440 |
You know, and in India, you might have an old leopard 01:50:30.480 |
or a tiger that's missing a tooth that decides your prey, 01:50:33.280 |
or you might have an angry elephant that's in must 01:50:45.760 |
One of my friends, a brilliant scientist friend of mine, 01:50:51.520 |
but that's like a dieseled house cat just having a fit. 01:50:54.240 |
You know, it wasn't the worst thing in the world. 01:50:56.480 |
- It's just the assholes of the animal kingdom. 01:51:12.800 |
It's such a fascinating part of life here on Earth 01:51:16.400 |
that there's tribes that don't have much or any contact 01:51:35.120 |
and that we have iPhones and airplanes and all this stuff, 01:51:37.920 |
and these people are living naked in the forest 01:51:54.160 |
They just happen to be living out in the jungle, 01:51:58.560 |
do we try and contact them and bring them in? 01:52:03.200 |
who they say that it was the trauma of the rubber boom 01:52:08.960 |
and made them terrified of the outside world. 01:52:11.200 |
And so that's also what made them so hyper-violent. 01:52:15.360 |
I mean, there's one of the guys we work with on our team, 01:52:32.880 |
ahead to go start cooking breakfast on the beach 01:52:35.040 |
so they could put the little kitchenette thing down 01:52:44.160 |
They go ahead, reach the beach, they get out. 01:52:46.320 |
He starts cutting some cane to start making a fire. 01:52:52.080 |
They just start screaming, they start shooting arrows. 01:52:54.240 |
The man instantly gets an arrow through the leg, 01:53:42.960 |
in August, this was not internationally known, 01:53:47.280 |
some loggers went up and tried to steal a few trees 01:53:54.320 |
of what the loggers looked like after a few days 01:53:56.240 |
because the tribes porcupined them with arrows. 01:53:59.200 |
with just arrows sticking out of their bodies. 01:54:04.000 |
and looked and there was just these white body, 01:54:10.880 |
And it was like, you don't mess with these tribes. 01:54:17.360 |
that they construct around who these outsiders are. 01:54:27.200 |
- Well, you gotta go back to the rubber boom. 01:54:31.920 |
and at the start of the industrial revolution, 01:54:35.120 |
was to mine it from the trees that were out in the forest. 01:54:40.240 |
'cause you can't make a rubber plantation in the jungle. 01:54:45.680 |
when it's a monoculture, it gets this leaf blight 01:54:50.480 |
And so what they did was they sent these people down 01:54:57.520 |
It's one of the worst periods in human suffering 01:55:02.320 |
One missionary said they were killing the locals 01:55:11.840 |
and this would go to fuel the industrial revolution 01:55:17.520 |
And it was during that time that these gangs of foreigners 01:55:24.480 |
would go into the jungle to enslave the natives 01:55:26.720 |
that these uncontacted tribes went back into the jungle 01:55:55.760 |
'cause they're nomadic and they live out there. 01:56:04.720 |
So they sent a canoe across the river with bananas. 01:56:14.960 |
And he sees the arrow coming right at his head. 01:56:31.600 |
And so he always keeps it real short on that side. 01:56:44.880 |
- They have a point and protecting them is a default of, 01:56:49.680 |
now that we're protecting all this ecosystems 01:56:53.120 |
it's like we all sort of live with this knowledge 01:56:54.960 |
that they're the hermanos, the brothers are out there 01:56:59.840 |
And so we just have to be respectful of like, 01:57:23.680 |
and I went past the point where they were like names there. 01:57:37.200 |
I was like, "No, I have a backpack and I have like food 01:57:39.200 |
"and I'm gonna like take videos and I have a tripod." 01:57:43.040 |
And they looked at me like they were like, "Goodbye." 01:57:57.840 |
They're like, "Oh, you're born alone and you die alone." 01:58:01.120 |
You're born into a room full of people usually. 01:58:02.800 |
At the very least, your mother's there for everybody. 01:58:10.240 |
if you're a normal person, every single day of your life. 01:58:13.120 |
You've seen dozens, if not hundreds of people. 01:58:15.040 |
And all of a sudden you realize what a social creature we are 01:58:26.400 |
Like longing for contact, like are you lonely? 01:58:29.280 |
- Longing for contact, the distortion of reality 01:58:53.280 |
And then there came this panic of what if it's gone? 01:59:07.040 |
and interpret reality kind of requires other people. 01:59:12.160 |
You need that contact to actually just perceive the world, 01:59:17.200 |
So you start basically hallucinating in a certain kind of way. 01:59:27.520 |
if you hear Capuchins sounding not quite monkeys, 01:59:34.080 |
it's the tribe and they're coming to get you. 01:59:40.560 |
they showed me videos where we saw them on the beach 01:59:46.000 |
They're using it as code so that we don't understand them, 01:59:52.560 |
And so every night you go to sleep and then you go, 02:00:00.000 |
And then like one night I messed up and I left a fish. 02:00:07.120 |
You're putting out like marathon levels of energy every day. 02:00:23.840 |
and I just could tell there was something there. 02:00:26.560 |
You know, and then like, you almost don't want to look. 02:00:28.320 |
It's like when you're a kid at the basement door 02:00:30.800 |
It's like, I like unzipped the tent and I like open it up. 02:00:34.880 |
And there's like 27 black caiman outside of my tent 02:00:46.800 |
I kind of like had to like scooch the tent back 02:00:49.280 |
and like move back and let them have their fish. 02:00:51.680 |
And there was a host of crocodiles outside of my tent. 02:01:03.280 |
They were all there and their eyes glow in the night. 02:01:10.160 |
If you shine a headlamp at a jaguar or a frog 02:01:15.920 |
- These are croc, there's a whole lot of them. 02:01:19.120 |
- I thought, can we go back to the part of the conversation 02:01:28.400 |
- Is there some way of you interacting with them 02:01:37.680 |
- 'Cause there's a story of you grabbing a croc by the tail. 02:01:58.960 |
- I wouldn't say world expert, but I've done a lot of it. 02:02:01.760 |
I also have, you see how there's kind of a ball there? 02:02:04.960 |
- That's where a crocodile tooth went in that side 02:02:09.600 |
And the watch I was wearing at the time saved me 02:02:18.640 |
you put your hand on the table and I just went, bah! 02:02:27.440 |
So usually when we catch little caiman in the streams 02:02:29.680 |
and we measure them to monitor the populations, 02:02:34.000 |
and then I tuck the tail under my arm and I hold it. 02:02:36.640 |
And you're talking about a little four foot croc, nothing. 02:02:43.680 |
and I caught like a six foot spectacle caiman. 02:02:48.720 |
And her head was big and I had her by the neck 02:02:50.800 |
and I realized I couldn't get her tail under my arm 02:02:55.200 |
And it was like probably croc number 375 that I'd caught 02:03:08.320 |
and I went, "Okay, gonna go back to being safe." 02:03:12.640 |
what, is it one of the bigger predators in the Amazon? 02:03:23.440 |
I believe they were critically endangered for a while 02:03:25.840 |
because for a while the fashion industry loved their skin. 02:03:40.400 |
how many millions and millions of years on earth before us. 02:03:46.240 |
but that's the grim reality of tiger conservation. 02:03:48.640 |
It's, there was a hundred thousand tigers in 1900. 02:03:57.040 |
All you have to do is not bulldoze their forest 02:04:00.560 |
and allow there to be some deer and tigers will be fine. 02:04:10.160 |
I'm like, guys, please stop killing the things 02:04:15.440 |
The Amazon regulates our global climate, produces medicine, 02:04:21.520 |
Rainforests only cover 3% of the planet's landmass. 02:04:30.480 |
they'll figure out how to have sex and multiply, 02:04:39.520 |
they went from 130,000 down to, I think, about 8,000 02:04:45.280 |
And then when we banned whaling, since that time, 02:04:48.080 |
where I think we're back up to over 100,000 humpback whales, 02:04:53.840 |
- Okay, so you're on the solo with Crocs looking at you. 02:05:07.760 |
- I mean, I mostly, I don't understand how you're still alive. 02:05:13.200 |
- When you come, we're gonna, I'm gonna show you. 02:05:21.600 |
If there's any place, I mean, sort of a grim joke, 02:05:26.800 |
but if there's any way to die, that's a good one, 02:05:45.040 |
it seems like you're a part of this machine that is nature, 02:05:53.120 |
We all die, and we're all part of this big thing 02:05:57.680 |
that humans do have the capability to also construct narratives 02:06:02.240 |
and stories and myths and tell them to each other 02:06:16.240 |
Anyway, so you were with the crocs and the fish. 02:06:35.520 |
- Yeah, just like if you're camping in the Northeast, 02:06:49.360 |
And the ocean has almost taken me down for that a few times. 02:07:05.520 |
You know, again, for me, this is like a pilgrimage. 02:07:23.280 |
Because you're leaving every type of security, 02:08:00.080 |
like to the point where the river was so shallow 02:08:11.520 |
And then all of a sudden I saw smoke around the next bend. 02:08:38.880 |
I'm that kid though, when you see like a wet paint sign, 02:08:47.760 |
and I see a few naked people on the beach and they see me. 02:09:03.840 |
the intention of pose, they're looking at me. 02:09:08.080 |
And that moment lasted for a long moment where I said, 02:09:20.480 |
I mean, every other story in the region that we've heard, 02:09:32.400 |
And I just, I turned and I ran for like three hours 02:09:36.240 |
and I got in the river and I swam for a while 02:09:39.680 |
I mean, everything, I just, you know, all systems go. 02:09:45.360 |
And my get out plan, the thing after I crossed the mountains 02:10:03.120 |
and I went for the rest of that day into the night. 02:10:08.160 |
and I was just floating in a raft down the Amazon 02:10:12.480 |
And I was like, okay, I'm gonna pop this raft. 02:10:18.880 |
I hadn't had food in hours and hours and hours. 02:10:26.560 |
that I hear voices, they're right outside the tent. 02:10:30.000 |
I just, you know, sleeping was worse than being awake. 02:10:36.800 |
'cause one of those, one of the same black caiman 02:10:39.040 |
that had come for the fish as I'm going down river, 02:10:50.880 |
And it was funny 'cause I wasn't scared of him. 02:10:54.000 |
And yeah, it took me like a week to get back to town. 02:10:58.080 |
And again, the things you learn in these moments, 02:11:08.240 |
when you are faced with pretty much certainty 02:11:14.080 |
that you're not gonna get those things again, 02:11:15.920 |
whether it's from MRSA or uncontacted tribes or, 02:11:19.360 |
I find that it brings you this new joy for life where you-- 02:11:27.920 |
- Yeah, you go, "My God, this is all a miracle." 02:11:31.120 |
- It's sad because they're human just like you. 02:11:38.560 |
Like if you were forced to interact for a week together 02:11:43.440 |
where they can't, they're not allowed to kill you. 02:11:50.320 |
how fundamentally different are they, do you think? 02:11:54.160 |
I think they're like any other Amazonian natives. 02:11:56.560 |
They're tall, they seem to have tall genetics. 02:11:59.840 |
And there's places, again, there's what is known 02:12:08.720 |
I don't know whether it was like a bad rainstorm or something 02:12:16.640 |
or he learned whatever dialect they speak in that village. 02:12:27.040 |
They're just people, they have their own culture. 02:12:28.480 |
They know about medicines that we don't know about. 02:12:34.160 |
They can hit a spider monkey out of 160 foot tree 02:12:53.920 |
And sometimes we'll be sitting at the research station at night 02:12:59.040 |
and we'll be just drinking and like looking out 02:13:02.960 |
We'll go, you realize if they were out there right now 02:13:07.280 |
is that when it's dark out there, they can't see. 02:13:28.480 |
that believe that they are actually the guardians 02:13:35.840 |
a secret population of previously extinct megafauna. 02:13:40.480 |
it's like you go into the crypto world so quick. 02:13:52.960 |
Like you said, there's so much of life in the Amazon 02:14:00.560 |
and I could show you something that, you know, 02:14:03.200 |
You pick up a bug and you go, that doesn't look right. 02:14:11.520 |
- And then you send it to the greatest expert 02:14:23.120 |
And then 50% of the life is up in the canopy. 02:14:28.400 |
like rock climbing, like what Alex Honnold does. 02:14:52.240 |
Like you can go run around if that's what you wanna do. 02:15:02.880 |
- And then you start seeing lizards and snakes and birds 02:15:08.720 |
And so how many scientists have actually gotten 02:15:18.000 |
you like get into like a taxonomical discussion 02:15:32.320 |
So it's supposed to be the most painful bite in the world. 02:15:40.160 |
- Okay, so the first time that we ever did bullet ants, 02:15:52.160 |
You like pick up this bullet ant and they're big. 02:15:54.960 |
He goes, we're gonna put our forearms together 02:16:01.120 |
and clamp our forearms together and just rub. 02:16:09.360 |
And it hurts every bit as much as they say it hurts. 02:16:13.600 |
And then I was like hitting my arm against the table 02:16:24.400 |
And then it travels up and it goes into your like lymph nodes 02:16:30.000 |
And I think the brilliant thing about the venom of a bullet ant 02:16:36.000 |
is that it makes you feel like this feeling of alarm. 02:16:53.920 |
and then you're tired and then you get a little blurry vision 02:17:05.440 |
But then there's places in the Amazon where they, 02:17:07.920 |
you know, stick their hand in a glove with like 70 of them. 02:17:11.040 |
- And I think Steve-O did that, which I just don't understand 02:17:14.240 |
how you could do that without going into complete 02:17:16.000 |
anaphylactic shock and dying 'cause one really sucks. 02:17:19.600 |
- Well, just like we said, with animals and with humans, 02:17:25.200 |
- Steve-O's definitely a special, unique kind of- 02:17:49.520 |
- This is something that you've talked about a little bit. 02:17:52.480 |
Graham Hancock has written about ancient civilizations 02:18:00.880 |
or the mainstream thinking about the civilizations 02:18:11.520 |
that there've been advanced ancient civilizations 02:18:17.040 |
What are all the possibilities of what's in the Amazon 02:18:26.160 |
the reports were that there was great civilizations 02:18:31.680 |
when people got to actually check up on this stuff, 02:18:34.960 |
And so was that because of disease that we wiped out 02:18:37.280 |
all these civilizations and these communities of people 02:18:44.800 |
This is a guy that navigated by the stars back to Spain 02:18:48.560 |
Like, or did he, or was he trying to just, I don't know. 02:18:56.640 |
of complex civilizations in the Amazon, 100%. 02:19:01.200 |
The thing that I reacted to was that I've heard videos. 02:19:07.680 |
I've seen moments in podcasts where the narrative becomes 02:19:12.400 |
not there's more ancient civilization information 02:19:21.200 |
And this is what Graham Hancock is talking about 02:19:37.600 |
there's actually articles that are titled this, 02:19:40.960 |
that the Amazon is a man-made garden, which is not true. 02:19:47.520 |
So the actual, which I think is a really different idea, 02:19:54.640 |
everything we've been talking about, all the species, 02:19:56.640 |
all the forestry and the different, just life, life, 02:20:14.160 |
So we can't, there's no ridiculous in science. 02:20:20.560 |
But the complexity of life is very difficult to engineer. 02:20:24.400 |
The more you study about biological systems and so on, 02:20:28.400 |
it's very difficult to create the kind of things 02:20:37.920 |
the world has gone through a pandemic recently. 02:20:40.880 |
And everybody said, of course, it's natural origins. 02:20:47.280 |
And nevertheless, it seems more and more likely 02:20:51.520 |
than this particular case, it was of an artificial origin, 02:20:58.880 |
- At least modern technological, genetic engineering. 02:21:05.920 |
- You can't be that nice and that good looking. 02:21:12.320 |
But so that bothers you because it allows you to think that 02:21:21.520 |
Then just this is just to me, that's a slippery slope. 02:21:23.760 |
Like I totally, it's just, it's so quick from, 02:21:27.120 |
I'm a fan of expeditions to find ecological ruins 02:21:31.200 |
and to learn more about the ancient civilizations to, 02:21:34.320 |
which I don't think is what he's putting out, 02:21:40.240 |
where they're going, was the Amazon man-made? 02:21:45.680 |
you're gonna get a Brazilian president to go, 02:21:49.760 |
So we might as well continue to engineer it and manage it. 02:21:56.480 |
and interactions and such a giant web of life there that, 02:22:02.640 |
is clearly one of the most authentically natural things. 02:22:09.120 |
And again, are there things that we've engineered? 02:22:13.280 |
sometimes they have banana plants that they've stolen 02:22:18.960 |
We made banana plants, that's engineered by us. 02:22:24.960 |
- Agricultural engineering and stuff like that. 02:22:33.440 |
I've just heard people dismiss the conservation, 02:22:37.600 |
the protection of the Amazon based on the fact that like, 02:22:40.160 |
oh, well, if people made it and it's such a giant leap 02:22:46.560 |
is there slash and burn that the ancient civilizations did? 02:22:53.200 |
Are there areas that were affected by people? 02:22:55.920 |
I just get worried when we start talking about 02:23:02.880 |
And I personally think that's completely separate 02:23:06.240 |
from wondering about what the ancient civilization 02:23:14.880 |
how long does it take before all signs of humans 02:23:35.280 |
'cause a hundred thousand is complete destruction. 02:23:38.960 |
- But then it could be in just a few hundred years. 02:23:53.440 |
They're gonna find the dolphins and the fish and so on. 02:24:03.360 |
that have been left unattended for a few decades 02:24:07.200 |
and like how quickly the plants push up through the street 02:24:22.560 |
the airplanes, all that, all the technologies, 02:24:33.520 |
If you just leave it there, sitting on the runway, 02:24:38.560 |
- How long does it take for that thing to disappear? 02:24:44.320 |
where it's unidentifiable, it might be different. 02:24:50.960 |
is as you've brilliantly put, the Amazon churns. 02:24:56.480 |
- And the fact that I wonder throughout its history, 02:25:13.680 |
different kinds of geometry, different kinds of tools. 02:25:22.320 |
it was covered in jungle, you could hardly see it. 02:25:26.880 |
much like what the Egyptians did with the pyramids, 02:25:29.200 |
a lot of it, we don't really understand how they did it. 02:25:31.200 |
If you come to the jungle, you gotta go to Machu Picchu 02:25:41.680 |
you know, like I've never been to see the Taj Mahal 02:25:48.560 |
either they were communicating with the gods there 02:25:55.120 |
that anybody they brought, they were gonna impress. 02:26:02.000 |
that when you look up at that mountain, you go, whoa, 02:26:17.840 |
but there's all kinds of stuff in the Amazon. 02:26:21.120 |
There are places where they say there's pyramids 02:26:24.640 |
beneath the canopy that we just don't know about. 02:26:30.560 |
- If you had billions of dollars, trillions of dollars, 02:26:47.440 |
so we don't have an ecological crisis on our hands. 02:27:04.640 |
I mean, I've flown over the Amazon and Assessna 02:27:11.520 |
You know, weird lakes or shapes in the jungle 02:27:19.280 |
- So even at that level, you can see weirdness. 02:27:21.360 |
You can see different signs of possible awesomeness. 02:27:42.160 |
So everybody goes to the same few study sites 02:27:55.200 |
and then you fly for 40 minutes over unbroken green, 02:27:58.800 |
just wild before you reach another tributary. 02:28:01.120 |
Even if somebody could survive going up that tributary, 02:28:08.400 |
and the ability to survive getting shot at by arrows, 02:28:21.040 |
But you're telling me that in that span of 70 miles 02:28:25.360 |
between tiny tributaries at the edge of the world, 02:28:33.040 |
but we don't know what populations of things are there. 02:28:38.560 |
And so there's so much undiscovered stuff in the Amazon 02:28:47.840 |
So how does money get converted towards exploration? 02:28:57.680 |
we found out about things that have to be explored, 02:29:02.800 |
well, how do we do this without getting shot? 02:29:22.240 |
And so like, yeah, that's something that we're working on. 02:29:26.640 |
And like one thing of course is like LIDAR and stuff, 02:29:28.640 |
but eventually, eventually at the end of everything, 02:29:34.400 |
As somebody who has to ask that very question 02:29:40.880 |
but you also don't want to disturb their environment. 02:29:44.480 |
If you were an intelligent alien civilization, 02:29:55.520 |
Can you put yourself in the mind of an alien civilization? 02:29:58.720 |
'Cause there seems to be some parallels here. 02:30:09.120 |
So if we were easily, we get threatened easily. 02:30:29.680 |
like that's the thing, I just want to ask questions. 02:30:31.360 |
- Yeah, but you don't know the same language. 02:30:37.600 |
I mean, picture if aliens landed in New York, 02:30:40.560 |
how long would it take for one of them to get shot? 02:30:47.680 |
- Everywhere else, look where we are right now. 02:30:55.440 |
makes me wonder what is the right way to interact 02:30:59.680 |
with intelligent life that's not like our own? 02:31:16.640 |
There's very technical, biological, chemical processes, 02:31:21.360 |
but also if there's any kind of intelligence, 02:31:23.680 |
how do you try to communicate with that intelligence? 02:31:25.600 |
- Yeah, so we're not talking about a cockroach, 02:31:32.320 |
How do you know the difference between a cockroach? 02:31:38.400 |
- Just like a race of philosopher cockroaches 02:31:57.600 |
- I think it's brain, it's the ratio, brain to body. 02:32:08.800 |
- But there also could be kinds of intelligence 02:32:13.680 |
Maybe cockroaches, they've survived the longest. 02:32:15.920 |
They're talking shit about us right now, dumb humans. 02:32:32.720 |
so he's always quoting Dostoevsky and Kurt Vonnegut. 02:32:40.800 |
and on the walls of the cave are the harmoniums. 02:32:46.320 |
and they feed off the vibrations of the cave, 02:32:48.960 |
They don't hurt each other, they just do that. 02:32:50.720 |
And so for like two years, these travelers are stuck, 02:32:55.360 |
and one of them starts playing music for the harmoniums. 02:33:06.720 |
And the one guy is like, all right, let's get out of here. 02:33:10.960 |
And the other guy's like, you know what, I'm staying. 02:33:12.960 |
He goes, I found a place where I can do good. 02:33:21.520 |
- Yeah, this whole ambition thing we got going on, 02:33:24.880 |
always trying to build a bigger boat, bigger thing, 02:33:41.920 |
It's 'cause once you get good enough at technology, 02:33:54.640 |
Like there's a lot coming out about the pilots 02:34:00.000 |
And again, like I kind of come in and out of this stuff. 02:34:18.400 |
- That's a bigger leap, but I believe our galaxy 02:34:24.800 |
hundreds of millions of planets with life on it, 02:34:44.080 |
and it's very difficult to contact each other. 02:34:51.360 |
that's able to actually send out enough signal 02:34:55.200 |
or radiate enough energy where we would notice, 02:35:12.080 |
once an alien civilization is just many orders of magnitude 02:35:22.800 |
is going to be very difficult for us humans to understand. 02:35:28.880 |
We want the message to be sent as like in English 02:35:33.120 |
versus I think consciousness itself, emotion, 02:35:49.360 |
could be words in the story that the aliens are telling us 02:35:53.120 |
or things that are just like a low dimensional projection 02:36:02.480 |
And it may be our striving to create technology 02:36:07.840 |
that's actually able to hear some of the message. 02:36:11.920 |
So I think bridging that barrier of communication 02:36:30.720 |
- So first of all, the imagining planets where there are 02:36:35.680 |
like just picturing like a, not a silent planet, 02:36:39.360 |
but just like a planet of alternate life forms. 02:36:42.960 |
You know, maybe it's not something that we can communicate 02:36:47.440 |
but just like a planet of like butterflies and centipedes 02:36:51.400 |
- Unfortunately, bacteria for billions of years, 02:36:54.240 |
it was bacteria, single cell prokaryotes and eukaryotes, 02:37:07.200 |
imagine that would just be such an interesting, 02:37:18.000 |
- It's, but they could also not be biologically based. 02:37:28.000 |
Like I think you caught me on that day today, 02:37:32.240 |
Sometimes I think we're all, this is all there is 02:37:39.600 |
the Fermi paradox, like why aren't they here? 02:37:45.680 |
that would not be explorers because we're explorers. 02:37:52.240 |
That the idea that, let's just say you found out right now 02:38:00.880 |
that the earth is the earth and the universe is the universe 02:38:04.320 |
and it's sort of like the backdrop of a video game 02:38:08.560 |
Would that be tremendously depressing to you? 02:38:21.280 |
It kind of terrifies me that we only got one match. 02:38:59.360 |
- Well, there's different ways to mess it up. 02:39:01.680 |
There's ways to mess it up to make life really difficult. 02:39:10.720 |
- With the further and further advancement of technology 02:39:15.760 |
it just feels like that's going to be exponentially growing. 02:39:20.800 |
- And that, it's, listen, I'm very optimistic, 02:39:28.160 |
but it's a heck of a Russian roulette we're playing. 02:39:31.840 |
- Okay, so I'm still curious about your intention though, 02:39:34.960 |
or like where your passion for this comes from. 02:39:41.280 |
but is it the need to have a backup plan for humans, 02:39:45.440 |
which is admirable for your intense love of humanity 02:39:48.880 |
and our consciousness and love and art and everything? 02:39:56.560 |
Because I just, the way you said that about like, 02:39:59.600 |
oh, you caught me on a positive day where I think it's, 02:40:01.840 |
there was something in there that made me think 02:40:09.040 |
I think I'm the kind of person that sees beauty 02:40:17.680 |
in everything, but to me, a universe full of diverse life 02:40:22.000 |
is more beautiful than one where it's just humans. 02:40:30.640 |
I mean, I'm not egotistical about the awesomeness of humans. 02:40:35.120 |
I like if humans are not the smartest in our galaxy 02:40:53.440 |
- Yes, I'm with you on that, that it's wildly exciting to, 02:40:58.000 |
like if we found, even if it was just a distant inkling 02:41:03.360 |
that we found out that there is a planet that has life, 02:41:07.280 |
but we know for a fact there's stuff going on there, 02:41:09.520 |
it would just change how we think about our entire reality. 02:41:13.440 |
- And it could be, to me, I guess the little inkling 02:41:17.920 |
of a thing that is depressing, if all there is is Earth 02:41:36.960 |
I would be interested to bring you to the jungle. 02:41:43.200 |
I'm wondering what your wilderness experience is, 02:41:45.760 |
'cause I feel like for me, I'm so Earth-centric 02:41:50.960 |
to the point where I'm like, we differ in that. 02:41:56.480 |
I feel wonder and I feel it's fun to talk about 02:42:10.480 |
But what if the challenge here is we've been put on Earth 02:42:14.560 |
as the most intellectually complex of these creatures 02:42:19.440 |
and we're being observed to see how we manage it. 02:42:32.160 |
I mean, they showed up and just sacked the Incas. 02:42:35.040 |
I mean, our history, I don't have to tell you, 02:42:48.480 |
'Cause it's like, we have all these other species 02:42:50.320 |
and we're struggling even here in this conversation 02:43:00.960 |
Just driving around, for me, living outside of the jungle, 02:43:18.960 |
that there are these islands covered in walruses 02:43:22.800 |
and that there's rainforests filled with birds 02:43:28.080 |
and that the salmon are contributing to our fresh water 02:43:35.200 |
and made possible by these ecological systems. 02:43:48.480 |
the alien civilizations you dream about are here on Earth. 02:43:59.200 |
I think that's actually the way I think most of the time. 02:44:06.720 |
genetically somehow, because when I go out in nature, 02:44:23.600 |
is our own mind, like the biology of these things firing. 02:44:36.160 |
These cells came together, they somehow function. 02:44:39.120 |
They delegate, they mostly operate in a local way, 02:44:42.560 |
but they, first of all, it's just like you said 02:44:46.480 |
with the anacondas, you start out as a tiny snake 02:44:49.680 |
When you're a tiny snake, you're prey for everything. 02:44:56.240 |
Just that whole process, starting with a single embryo, 02:45:00.400 |
single cells, human, and through the embryogenic process, 02:45:04.080 |
constructing this giant human that's able to have limbs, 02:45:16.560 |
Actually, I was being sort of poetic about aliens and so on. 02:45:22.480 |
I think I can spend 99.99% in terms of filling my mind 02:45:27.680 |
with awe and beauty just looking down here on Earth, 02:45:39.120 |
with looking out into space and that will travel there. 02:45:45.120 |
I mean, I have a little piece of meteorite at home 02:45:47.600 |
that I hold and it does amazing things to my mind 02:45:52.480 |
is from this Earth and I'm holding this thing 02:45:54.880 |
that's been places that we can't even think about 02:45:59.520 |
But when it comes to intelligence, I think it's like, 02:46:08.960 |
and it's interesting to me that we had the internet 02:46:12.480 |
and now with the emergence of AI and more and more, 02:46:15.920 |
I feel like we are starting to resemble an ant colony 02:46:21.600 |
and there's more and more interaction globally 02:46:24.800 |
In the next 10 years, we're gonna have to decide, 02:46:26.720 |
are we gonna let our ocean ecosystems just collapse? 02:46:31.600 |
and just let them log the shit out of it until it's gone? 02:46:50.320 |
that we wouldn't be here without, that we owe something to. 02:46:55.840 |
then the outward look becomes something else. 02:47:01.840 |
Then if aliens came up to us, that's when I'd feel good. 02:47:19.200 |
and they interviewed the elephants and they said, 02:47:25.760 |
And it's like, I mean, I've seen people break an elephant. 02:47:37.760 |
And so like, to me, it's just, I have trouble, 02:47:45.520 |
I have trouble looking out into normal life as a human 02:47:48.560 |
because I'm so concerned with trying to make sure 02:47:50.240 |
that they're okay, because not enough people are doing that. 02:47:52.800 |
- Well, the interesting thing about all the development 02:48:06.000 |
Like, I think people realize that online interaction 02:48:14.320 |
that that's a reality, that we need that human connection. 02:48:18.240 |
And I think there's going to be the swing back 02:48:23.600 |
might be able to live fulfilling lives online, 02:48:26.480 |
but us humans have to have a deep connection with Earth. 02:48:30.960 |
And like with each other, physical connection. 02:48:33.520 |
I think there's going to be a phase somewhere 02:48:40.000 |
And there'll be a digital world that we visit 02:49:08.240 |
keeps our lives fulfilling in a deep human way 02:49:12.240 |
that we're, for good and for bad, genetically designed. 02:49:26.800 |
that are like, you know, we got to live forever. 02:49:30.400 |
- I don't know, is it that bad that this is how it works? 02:49:52.160 |
I'm worried about the unintended negative consequences 02:49:56.560 |
of trying to escape the way things are on this earth. 02:50:01.760 |
- How many times in the past has new technology come out 02:50:04.400 |
that people have hailed as, you know, blasphemy, 02:50:06.880 |
or it's not gonna work, or it goes against nature, 02:50:09.280 |
and now, well, heart transplants are pretty cool. 02:50:15.360 |
about like television, and like, oh, it rots your brain. 02:50:20.720 |
have you sat in a room full of people being entertained 02:50:23.120 |
and all laughing and interacting and eating popcorn 02:50:28.160 |
And so I feel like with AI, we'll learn our way through it. 02:50:33.040 |
- There's like with the legged robots, especially, 02:51:02.560 |
that a human being loves about other human beings, 02:51:11.760 |
with no internet, in a time with no internet, 02:51:24.480 |
The same way we're just talking about aliens looking up, 02:51:26.960 |
it makes you wonder about other alien civilizations. 02:51:29.600 |
Now, the deep love is for dogs, for other humans, 02:51:41.760 |
the idea, and there's so much talk about the fact, 02:51:44.640 |
like at what point does an artificially intelligent robot 02:51:50.000 |
and it's like, I get very uncomfortable with that. 02:51:52.320 |
It makes me, I don't know how to handle the things 02:51:56.720 |
'cause I don't know enough about it probably, 02:51:58.240 |
but it's like, I don't know how to handle like-- 02:52:04.000 |
because it's really, everything is terrifying here 02:52:09.200 |
'cause it could be as simple as consciousness is easy to fake 02:52:13.680 |
so what if you live in a world 10 to 20 years from now 02:52:17.520 |
where your toaster, there's a bunch of robots in your room 02:52:26.880 |
and then you actually have a deeper connection 02:52:29.440 |
with any romantic human partner you've ever had. 02:52:58.320 |
Fake people that can-- - Things I've missed in the jungle. 02:53:01.760 |
- Things you, boy, do I have a lot to show you. 02:53:14.080 |
- What's the effect of climate change on the Amazon? 02:53:20.720 |
What is something that people should think about? 02:53:29.040 |
I think most people believe that climate change 02:53:36.400 |
but there is different perspectives on the degree of damage 02:53:42.640 |
that it's going to do over the next several decades 02:53:45.840 |
and what our response should be as a society. 02:53:49.840 |
And so it would be amazing to hear your perspective on it 02:53:54.080 |
in small slices of your experience or in large. 02:54:16.160 |
Where I deviate is that I am not a climate scientist. 02:54:23.520 |
And so I, just like everybody else, am listening. 02:54:46.960 |
I came off the plane right before coming here 02:54:52.880 |
But my ability or my interpretation of climate change, 02:54:58.160 |
I feel like is just as dumb as those people that go like, 02:55:30.800 |
that I've been places where the ocean fisheries 02:55:39.520 |
I've been to the places where the rainforest line 02:55:44.400 |
and it's getting smaller and smaller and smaller. 02:56:02.000 |
I've tried very hard in my life to pick one thing. 02:56:17.840 |
And like you said, the degree to which we affect it 02:56:37.120 |
I don't think, probably you can better than I can. 02:56:47.920 |
is that the climate is such a complex system. 02:56:52.800 |
There's so many variables that making conclusive statements 02:56:58.240 |
about what's going to happen with the quote unquote climate 02:57:01.200 |
in the next 10, 20, 50 years is a nearly impossible task. 02:57:17.920 |
saying we should spend humongous amounts of money 02:57:21.280 |
to change the trajectory of everything we're doing 02:57:23.520 |
in terms of energy, in terms of infrastructure and so on, 02:57:28.800 |
in terms of how we allocate money is not justified 02:57:33.680 |
And instead it's better exactly what you're saying, 02:57:44.720 |
What are the things attacking the Amazon this year, 02:58:02.880 |
and that's the way we solve all the different problems 02:58:10.720 |
in its worst case scenarios to be realized on this earth. 02:58:16.800 |
And I should also mention that one of the reasons 02:58:30.000 |
that Jordan Peterson absolutely must talk to you 02:58:43.440 |
And I thought, my goal is for you to talk to Rogan 02:58:47.520 |
and to Jordan Peterson for different reasons, 02:58:57.280 |
through which to look at the effects of climate change 02:59:04.160 |
that are threatening the diversity of species 02:59:18.240 |
I don't know if there's any comment you wanna make 02:59:24.960 |
about how much do we really understand about the climate? 02:59:27.200 |
- First of all, I'm such a Jordan Peterson fan, 02:59:30.800 |
and I think the guy is heroic for a number of reasons. 02:59:42.560 |
I feel like, and I might not even be accurate on this, 02:59:45.040 |
but I cringe a little bit when I feel like he dismisses 02:59:48.240 |
that there is an ecological emergency happening right now. 02:59:52.800 |
Now, I'm not talking about climate change specifically, 02:59:59.200 |
And he goes, "Well, what do you mean by the environment? 03:00:22.080 |
what the hell are these people talking about? 03:00:24.640 |
When you say, I personally have friends and students 03:00:31.680 |
that they've become vegan and they ride a bicycle. 03:00:38.160 |
And I mean, they're just becoming so, so terrified 03:00:49.040 |
It's almost like a new religion about you're evil. 03:00:58.000 |
where like climate change and the right-left politics. 03:01:06.480 |
and listen to the climate thing go back and forth. 03:01:26.640 |
is that my career has taken place largely in the Amazon 03:01:34.320 |
But it's not even just these exotic places either. 03:01:37.280 |
It's people realizing that the salmon runs in Canada 03:01:45.680 |
And I strongly feel like the idea of jungle keepers, 03:01:57.440 |
and I try to tell this to these kids that message me 03:02:05.200 |
and elephants are in decline and tigers and this and that. 03:02:07.920 |
I'm like, guys, look, first of all, calm down, first of all. 03:02:11.120 |
Like go outside, go get laid, do something, have fun. 03:02:17.920 |
And it doesn't have to be with the environment. 03:02:24.320 |
Go help your elderly neighbor, whatever it is. 03:02:26.640 |
Practice with being effective at one thing at a time. 03:02:32.000 |
And so for me, like I said, from those early days 03:02:34.880 |
of sitting there with JJ on the side of a river and going, 03:02:38.720 |
My concern is that we've lost 70% of the wildlife 03:02:50.240 |
And so I have a very clear cut, very definable, 03:02:56.400 |
And it's a very, to me, it's a very like small ask. 03:03:04.160 |
Maybe let's keep some wild tigers for future generations. 03:03:07.440 |
And because tigers have their own inherent right to exist here. 03:03:18.980 |
You have me roll into a village in the Amazon 03:03:35.040 |
first of all, telling everyone to make their damn beds 03:03:41.440 |
You know, he's coming at it from a totally different thing 03:03:44.880 |
and saying, you know, are we just being alarmist here? 03:03:48.000 |
Are we, what, I mean, again, imagine if, you know, 03:03:55.600 |
and all the implications that that could have for progress. 03:03:57.920 |
So I think what he's doing is perfectly reasonable. 03:04:23.440 |
- Yeah, that's why I would love for the two of you to talk. 03:04:26.640 |
Just, I don't know, and hopefully I'm not out of line here, 03:04:33.120 |
that I think he forgets that there's other life out there. 03:04:43.200 |
- There's this whole machine of intelligence, 03:05:02.480 |
as distinct from that is missing at least some of the picture. 03:05:07.680 |
I do believe though, I would agree with him on that, 03:05:13.840 |
But I also, you know, he's in such an interesting place 03:05:23.520 |
who are like, you know, nature, nature, nature, 03:05:38.720 |
'cause I love hearing what he'll do with that. 03:05:50.800 |
It's one thing to be an evolutionary biologist 03:05:54.160 |
and kind of study it from a philosophical perspective, 03:05:57.840 |
and it's the other to really, I think, experience it 03:06:11.520 |
to realize that we're part of a computing machine 03:06:17.120 |
We're part of the thing that started bacteria 03:06:34.000 |
- But I feel like we keep scratching up against this thing 03:06:44.880 |
And I think it's so easy for people to forget 03:06:49.040 |
that we share this planet with so many other things. 03:06:56.640 |
that we're, in a way, we're almost like ecological orphans 03:07:07.360 |
'cause I don't know if everybody feels that way. 03:07:09.280 |
But for me, I mean, professionally as an expedition guide, 03:07:27.440 |
seeing a snake, being bitten by a mosquito, all that stuff, 03:07:36.560 |
and they'll talk about it the rest of their life. 03:07:39.680 |
then there's those of us who spend our lives doing that. 03:07:49.440 |
that we might travel together for a time at some point. 03:08:12.080 |
There's places when you walk in off the river 03:08:17.760 |
And again, now we do this, we have the boats, 03:08:23.600 |
And so it would be taking you to meet some of those loggers 03:08:39.520 |
my ideal trip for you would be to spend five days 03:08:58.000 |
And that means a few days at this research station, 03:09:00.000 |
maybe go up river three days and camp up here 03:09:02.800 |
just on the edge of where the uncontacteds are, 03:09:05.360 |
and then come back and then see the Jungle Keeper Station. 03:09:08.240 |
But along the way, seeing all the special sacred places, 03:09:16.240 |
It's like, this is one of the most beautiful things on earth 03:09:19.840 |
and I've had the incredible, almost unbelievable fortune 03:09:32.640 |
- To be able to witness what this earth has created, 03:09:42.560 |
The window you create on this part of the world 03:09:52.240 |
maybe it's like behind the scenes a little bit, 03:10:00.400 |
Like how do you, how hard is bringing equipment 03:10:07.840 |
You're an incredible filmmaker and photographer, 03:10:18.560 |
And if they don't get, I'm telling you, dude, 03:10:35.920 |
But the, we shoot on cannons and I don't know, 03:10:42.560 |
- Oh, really, so you can keep the equipment dry. 03:10:44.400 |
- I keep the equipment dry and I actually don't, 03:10:46.640 |
a lot of people put their shit in silica at night 03:10:48.640 |
and like keep it dry and then they take it out. 03:10:52.880 |
the temperature change creates moisture inside the camera. 03:10:58.160 |
I just keep my cameras in my backpack with a zipper. 03:11:02.160 |
So they're more or less exposed to the elements. 03:11:06.880 |
always has a little bit of equilibrium and that's it. 03:11:10.480 |
I mean, I shoot on some pretty fancy equipment sometimes 03:11:14.560 |
But I mean, the awesome thing though now is that 03:11:16.640 |
with a cell phone, I mean, I put my phone down 03:11:32.160 |
And that's where I deviate from the nature people 03:11:36.800 |
that are like, "We need to go back and live in cabins." 03:11:43.920 |
- It makes you reappreciate, but just by yourself, 03:11:48.400 |
And then you can also share it with the world. 03:11:50.000 |
- Well, that's the thing is sharing it with people. 03:11:51.600 |
There's nothing better than teaching a kid to catch a fish. 03:11:55.520 |
And in a way, Instagram has allowed us to do that 03:11:59.360 |
where it's like, I can have this crazy-ass moment 03:12:02.720 |
that is so unique and then put it up for people to see. 03:12:07.280 |
I mean, I remember one of the most recent things 03:12:10.720 |
that got people, you never know what's gonna get people excited. 03:12:13.040 |
I literally just like, there was like 3,000 butterflies 03:12:16.720 |
on the beach and they were all like black, red, and blue. 03:12:22.160 |
and then like jumped in the river and swam away. 03:12:26.960 |
They're like, "This is the most amazing thing." 03:12:30.240 |
And I was like, "Butterflies, they're everywhere. 03:12:32.960 |
"There's 4,000 species of butterfly in the Amazon." 03:12:46.240 |
and say, "I'm gonna, wait a minute, like pause. 03:12:52.560 |
'Cause like sometimes you might get used to the beauty, right? 03:12:59.040 |
like leaf cutter ants, they're just walking by. 03:13:03.680 |
It's like, well, I mean, just like when you're, you know, 03:13:09.600 |
and he starts like trashing the water bucket. 03:13:19.440 |
- But no, in the jungle, I don't, that's never a struggle 03:13:30.080 |
I've never seen that many of those butterflies, 03:13:34.720 |
And like this, oh yeah, I'm trying to get this one thing 03:13:38.080 |
that the butterflies do is in the dry season, 03:13:40.560 |
the salt deposits, you'll get like three or four, 03:13:43.680 |
maybe 5,000 butterflies all coming onto this one area 03:13:47.600 |
of sand 'cause there'll be like some leaching. 03:13:49.440 |
There'll be some salt deposit there or something. 03:13:51.680 |
And they'll all be wings flat against the ground 03:13:57.760 |
And if you go walk near them, they will vortex up. 03:14:10.400 |
And I want to, what I wanna do is get the shot 03:14:15.360 |
in slow-mo facing up and leave it there for an hour. 03:14:25.280 |
I'm like, these are the ways I think where I'm like, 03:14:27.200 |
how can I show people the absolute mind-blowing perfection? 03:14:34.160 |
I'm sure that somebody else could do it with a Red 03:14:36.640 |
and nail it, but it's like, that's what I have in the jungle 03:14:40.000 |
because I have to travel light and I, you know. 03:14:44.560 |
I have the same thing when I was traveling in Ukraine. 03:15:16.560 |
they all, you can see the metal through the paint. 03:15:22.080 |
because I'm constantly like, I'll like slide in 03:15:24.000 |
and like take a picture and like, they're banged up. 03:15:26.480 |
But these, they're good, they're good machines. 03:15:28.560 |
- I think they get tougher over time if you put them through. 03:15:30.640 |
It's like the immune system, it's like muscles. 03:15:35.040 |
If you gotta, you gotta make them suffer every day. 03:15:38.160 |
- Yeah, all right, what's your view on hunting? 03:15:49.680 |
- Poachers to me are the people that are going in 03:15:54.560 |
and annihilating wildlife for profit without any, 03:16:01.040 |
and machine gunning an elephant to take its tusks. 03:16:04.480 |
- The people that are sneaking into protected areas in Africa 03:16:08.560 |
and shooting rhinos so that they can cut off their horns 03:16:12.960 |
before the animal's even dead while its baby is beside it. 03:16:17.280 |
- So, and there's a difference between a poacher 03:16:26.560 |
I work with an organization called Vet Paw in Africa 03:16:29.200 |
and they use United States veterans who have come back, 03:16:32.400 |
post 9/11 veterans who have come back from the war 03:16:38.960 |
to protect the last black rhinos, white rhinos, elephants. 03:16:50.800 |
to protect zebras, wildebeests, all types of impala, giraffes, 03:16:55.680 |
several herds of elephants, white rhinos, black rhinos. 03:17:00.640 |
And what's interesting is it's a hunting preserve. 03:17:04.640 |
And so it's been very interesting and challenging 03:17:13.520 |
I went to a very high profile photographer recently 03:17:16.720 |
and I said, "You have to get over here and see this. 03:17:26.000 |
and they have, you can see a black rhino every day 03:17:30.320 |
And it's because of the work that Vet Paw does 03:17:36.080 |
But what people don't understand is that hunting 03:17:43.600 |
Those are special and they will never be hunted there. 03:17:47.600 |
But things like an impala, things like an anyala, 03:17:52.800 |
there aren't as many predators as there used to be. 03:17:58.080 |
unhunted, you know, without the wolf to chase the herd 03:18:03.760 |
to thin off the ones that are old and dying or sick, 03:18:08.240 |
that are old and dying and sick walking around suffering. 03:18:19.920 |
but they'll pay you $30,000 to hunt a buffalo. 03:18:22.320 |
And so these reserves responsibly and ethically on foot 03:18:39.520 |
And the difference is that a poacher is gonna, 03:18:46.560 |
Whereas a poacher is someone that will come in 03:19:01.280 |
I would love to make that happen if you allow me. 03:19:07.120 |
and I've been watching you since the beginning. 03:19:10.080 |
- I've been, I've talked to Joe quite a bit about it. 03:19:17.280 |
I really love the idea of eating the meat that I've hunted. 03:19:22.000 |
It's mostly what I eat is meat, not for dietary. 03:19:26.480 |
I don't have any weird constraints on my diet and so on. 03:20:00.560 |
that you're consuming versus removing that from the picture, 03:20:06.160 |
not thinking about that this came from the meat. 03:20:14.480 |
and I eat that animal basically for the whole year. 03:20:20.400 |
whether it's a fish or a deer or whatever else. 03:20:28.560 |
but there's a, I feel like I wanna use the word sacrament, 03:20:31.840 |
but it's like, there's a deeply profound ritual. 03:20:37.120 |
And honestly, if you teach a kid to grow a vegetable, 03:20:50.400 |
To me, yes, when you feel that fish tug on the line, 03:21:11.680 |
aside from the fact that I think it's one of the original, 03:21:13.680 |
we were so disconnected, like we should be hunting. 03:21:25.360 |
And it's like, that never used to be a problem. 03:21:27.360 |
You know, people like, well, should we be eating animals? 03:21:31.680 |
And it's like, what do you think we do here on earth? 03:21:40.720 |
Like, I don't know, like what, living where I've lived. 03:21:43.680 |
And I mean, from 18 to 35, I feel like I've grown up. 03:21:49.840 |
And I've, it just to me, like showing people these things, 03:21:53.920 |
I can see this miraculous wonder in their eyes 03:21:57.040 |
when they realize that they can reach out into the world 03:22:01.040 |
And so when I hear these like frantic people talking about, 03:22:17.120 |
The other thing that's sort of important about hunting 03:22:22.320 |
is that if people's livelihoods depend on salmon and elk 03:22:29.840 |
well, then they'll fight to protect it naturally 03:22:34.160 |
And it's, if everybody's going to Burger King 03:22:37.360 |
and everybody's getting chicken wrapped in plastic, 03:22:49.760 |
And then you just end up with a few hippies and signs 03:22:52.640 |
standing next to the river and it becomes silly. 03:23:18.400 |
- Fuck, it opens the heart of darkness right up. 03:23:21.520 |
I'm going to show you a picture of our shaman 03:23:30.240 |
Anybody that tells you, I've heard people be like, 03:23:43.520 |
They're like, "You can't do it outside the jungle." 03:23:48.640 |
I would love to have done or eaten whatever, mushrooms. 03:24:06.000 |
I was like, I'm going to journal a little bit. 03:24:07.440 |
But I quickly, quickly realized how out of my depth I was 03:24:13.680 |
and how unprepared I was for what was happening 03:24:15.680 |
'cause you sit in a circle with these native guys 03:24:18.160 |
and there's one, he's got the feathers and he's old 03:24:20.560 |
and he's got a face like the map of the world 03:24:26.000 |
and he calls you forward and you kneel before him 03:24:29.600 |
and you're going, "Is it too late to back up?" 03:24:35.040 |
and he blows smoke over the cup and he hands it to you. 03:24:45.520 |
So you're like, as soon as this goes down, I'm gone. 03:24:51.920 |
to either embarrass myself in front of everybody 03:24:54.000 |
or I'm going forward with this and then I went and sat. 03:24:59.040 |
And you're sitting in the dark and it's, again, 03:25:02.080 |
so we're on a platform with palm thatched roof 03:25:07.600 |
So all those tens of millions of frogs and insects are, 03:25:13.680 |
And I remember I tried to light a cigarette or something 03:25:22.960 |
and my experience, I mean, we've done mushrooms, 03:25:29.040 |
No, this was like somebody unzipped the universe. 03:25:33.600 |
I spent a lot of, without boring people with it, 03:25:37.040 |
I spent a lot of time in unconstructed dream space, 03:25:43.440 |
There was a long period where there was no physical shape, 03:25:49.120 |
And so it's like you get brought so deep down, 03:25:57.520 |
moving through places like that asteroid that I have. 03:26:05.920 |
your piece is something detached from the earth. 03:26:11.840 |
and had an interesting new appreciation for life. 03:26:17.360 |
I strongly suggest that people just do mushrooms 03:26:26.880 |
the shaman who did it was like the old school guy. 03:26:32.720 |
and he had forgotten and overboiled the brew. 03:26:34.800 |
And so we came back and it was like four in the morning 03:26:41.840 |
And so when I came back and I had like hands, 03:26:49.360 |
I was like, I'm gonna have to see my parents again. 03:26:56.240 |
I was a dimly conscious something floating in dark space 03:27:04.080 |
And so when I really did feel like being reborn, 03:27:09.520 |
But no, the way it moves you through the jungle, 03:27:18.240 |
and incredible discovery that happen along the way. 03:27:26.720 |
and you get to move through the forest in a way that 03:27:36.640 |
I didn't think that hallucinogenics could do this 03:27:40.320 |
Mushrooms, you're like, oh, I feel like I can feel music. 03:27:44.480 |
- You know, you guys wanna watch "March of the Penguins"? 03:27:52.800 |
I think it definitely, I almost feel like it showed me 03:28:01.120 |
And it was like, that it's all just cold, dark, nothing. 03:28:04.240 |
It like brought me to like the basement of the universe. 03:28:07.280 |
And I felt like the point of that was to come back 03:28:11.200 |
to this place where there's all this life and light and love 03:28:15.360 |
and all this amazing stuff that we experience 03:28:18.080 |
on a day-to-day basis and don't take for granted. 03:28:20.000 |
And so just like almost dying, this was like fully dying. 03:28:23.360 |
But the great part is, is that usually it's not that intense. 03:28:33.120 |
Most ayahuasca vines are like as thick as your arm. 03:28:37.680 |
It was like the oldest ayahuasca vine you can imagine. 03:28:46.720 |
And we were like holding each other, just like weeping, 03:28:49.920 |
And then we had to go looking for the shaman. 03:28:57.280 |
and he was laying in the stream naked, like ET, 03:28:59.360 |
at the end when he's like laying like in the... 03:29:07.360 |
So we really got like, somebody turned the dial 03:29:19.360 |
in sort of diving into those kinds of places. 03:29:27.440 |
It sounds kind of, to me personally, kind of exciting. 03:29:33.200 |
- Well, I think that you have a severely fearless aspect to you. 03:29:37.280 |
I mean, when you come up with something that intrigues you, 03:29:42.080 |
that you could go physically into deep space, 03:29:50.880 |
- And some of it is, I don't even know if you have that. 03:30:36.640 |
It's got to be a hill that I believe in before I die on it. 03:30:45.200 |
But like, even just the way, I mean, you said, 03:31:18.880 |
there's something trying to preserve you in this world. 03:31:24.720 |
What do you think is the meaning of this whole thing? 03:31:33.520 |
I feel like I'm someone that lives with that a lot. 03:31:39.920 |
I feel like I've always been a little bit apart 03:31:50.400 |
wow, it really made me think about how amazing it is here. 03:31:58.400 |
I can't believe that any of this is possible. 03:32:00.640 |
And that goes from how delicious something tastes 03:32:06.000 |
to being able to talk to someone in your family 03:32:12.480 |
There's times where I'm in the Amazon and I miss home 03:32:20.080 |
to try and survive saber-toothed tigers not that long ago. 03:32:22.640 |
And I'm over there like, yo, mom, look at this. 03:32:28.320 |
And so I actually hope that this is a testing ground 03:32:37.920 |
and whether it's aliens or God or whatever it is, 03:32:46.640 |
That would be nice because it feels like it is. 03:32:52.960 |
that the universe almost created us to see what's possible. 03:32:58.320 |
And that I'd like to believe that beauty and good is possible. 03:33:04.000 |
- And those are the things that make me say that it's not, 03:33:13.280 |
there could be life forms that we can't even understand. 03:33:16.160 |
I'm very open to the idea that there's meanings 03:33:23.040 |
The few things I know are the things that I love 03:33:25.840 |
and some of the things that I love are being pushed to extinction. 03:33:29.760 |
So I try to protect them, but that's my mission. 03:33:33.840 |
But I'm saying like, in terms of what are we doing here? 03:33:36.320 |
I'm just always amazed at the simplest things. 03:33:43.120 |
I mean, that we can sit here doing this, exchanging. 03:33:46.640 |
- Yeah, using our imagination to fill in the gaps, 03:34:01.680 |
You don't really know what it is, but you get a glimpse. 03:34:13.520 |
- You're an important, important and a beautiful man. 03:34:17.520 |
Thank you for being who you are, for everything you're doing. 03:34:26.720 |
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Paul Rosli. 03:34:31.440 |
please check out our sponsors in the description. 03:34:33.680 |
And now let me leave you with some words from Jane Goodall. 03:34:43.920 |
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.