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Montel Williams Talks Tough
on Circuses
Making plans for summer fun? Montel Williams has some advice: Avoid
circuses that use animals.
As circuses tour the country this summer, the Emmy Award-winning host
of The Montel Williams Show is speaking out against the use
of animals in entertainment. In an exclusive interview with PETA,
Montel has some strong words about the cruelty that comes with any
animal circus.
PETA: How do you feel about circuses that use animals?
Montel: I think that now that we are seeing multimedia
types of productions with videos and pictures and human beings performing
the acts that animals used to perform, such as in Cirque du Soleil
and other traveling troops, there is no need to parade animals around
anymore in cages for personal gratification.
PETA: A growing number of cities are restricting
or banning the use of animals in entertainment. Do you think this
is a good idea?
Montel: I think it’s a wonderful idea and I
think that it is about time. As I’ve said often, at the end
of the day, almost every religion has a basic tenet in it about being
judged by what you do for the least of us. It took us all to get here
and it will take us all to get out of here, so we may as well protect
the least of us and that includes the animals, who don’t have
a voice.
PETA: Some people think going to the circus is the
only way to see and learn about wild animals, but in the wild bears
don’t ride bicycles, tigers don’t jump through fiery hoops,
and elephants don’t stand upright on their hind legs. How would
you explain to someone why it’s important to respect animals
in their native habitat and not in the circus?
Montel: Very clearly, we can find that some of the
most entertaining and rapidly growing channels are the Discovery Channel
and Animal Planet. Most children today watch this programming not
only because those are the alternatives that parents have chosen for
them but also because the realism is fascinating. They enjoy being
introduced to animals in their natural habitat, and the added benefit
is that they get to see animals react in ways that they would never
be able to see in a circus act. People are beginning to realize that
it’s important that we see animals in a natural state—but
through film, through video, through documentaries, at wildlife preserves,
and through other humanely protected ways, which don’t involve
… performing for us.
PETA wants people to know that circus trainers use whips, muzzles,
electric prods, and bullhooks to force the wild animals to perform
stressful acts like riding bicycles and jumping through fire. In their
natural homes, these animals would be free to walk and run, choose
lifetime companions, and raise their families. The circus pushes animals
to perform night after night for 48 to 50 weeks every year. Between
acts, elephants are kept chained in railroad cars, and bears and tigers
are “stored” in cages barely large enough for them to
turn around in.
PETA encourages parents to take children to cruelty-free circuses,
such as Cirque du Soleil and the New Pickle Circus, whose acts feature
only willing, paid human performers. A complete list of animal-free
circuses is available here.
You can help stop the suffering of elephants, tigers, and other animals
abused in the name of "entertainment." Click
here to support PETA's vital work.
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