PETA slams Apple TV+ series ‘Bad Monkey’ claiming ‘animal exploitation’

Ronald Peet in “Bad Monkey” premiering August 14, 2024 on Apple TV+.
Ronald Peet in “Bad Monkey” premiering August 14, 2024 on Apple TV+.

Primatologist and PETA Foundation Director of Captive Animal Welfare Debbie Metzler has issued a statement in response to Apple TV+’s new series “Bad Monkey,” which used a real monkey despite receiving warnings from PETA about the tragic lives of primates used for film and TV:

The real mystery of “Bad Monkey” is why showrunner Bill Lawrence decided to brazenly ignore PETA’s warnings that dragging real monkeys onto a set hinders conservation efforts and fuels an industry that snatches them away from their mothers, in addition to condemning them to lives of deprivation, misery, and pain. PETA is calling on audiences to skip this sad spectacle and for Lawrence to solve the case of his missing moral compass by choosing cutting-edge CGI or other humane technology.

PETA:

PETA notes that most primates used for film are taken away from their mothers prematurely, a practice that denies the infants the maternal care and nurturing that they need for normal development. Their instinctual needs are completely thwarted, and as a result, they often develop neurotic behavior patterns, such as pacing, rocking, swaying, cage-biting, and self-mutilation. Many suffer from debilitating loneliness and depression, as their complex physical and psychological needs cannot be met at training compounds or on movie sets.

Furthermore, PETA and law-enforcement investigations into animal suppliers for the film and television industries have documented that animals are often whipped, deprived of food during training, and housed in deplorable conditions. At one prominent supplier, monkeys were kept in waste-strewn enclosures that went uncleaned for four days, according to a worker. As wild animals mature and become useless to trainers, many are discarded at seedy roadside zoos or other substandard facilities, where they may suffer for years without proper food or veterinary care.

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MacDailyNews Take: Does PETA offer any proof that the animals used in “Bad Monkey” were in any way abused? No, of course not. They simply looked at a production still (above) and shat out a press release, likely while drooling. PETA simply wants to ride the Apple brand in whatever way possible to generate publicity and, most importantly to them, donations. This is what they do and how they do it.

We propose that, back in the 1980s, perhaps from being bombarded with synths, the world experienced a Busybody Boom™ — a Karen born and raised in every other house — the consequences of which we’ll have to unfortunately live with for far too long.

See also:
• PETA names Apple ‘PETA’s 2023 Company of the Year’ for dropping leather for ‘FineWoven’ junk – December 11, 2023

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6 Comments

  1. Monkey goes back to his friends to recommend getting a job on the movie set because of all the great food and drink, people scratching your head and cooing at you and there were no biting insects, or hyenas to worry about. On the weekend, some Michael Jackson types took the monkey for a walk on the Sta Monica pier for some fresh air, popcorn and more cooing and head scratching. PETA needs to get out more.

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