Grizzly Man

#1

checkerboard_charly

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Jan 24, 2005
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#1
this guy has/had the biggest balls ever. he lived with grizzy bears for 13 years.

the doc is on the discovery channel right now. and it is about to come back on from the beginning.

it is real long but very interesting and freaky. check it out if your night is as boring as mine.
 
#2
#2
I'll stick to watching KY/FLA.

When I first read this I thought the documentary was about a guy with the biggest testicles ever? :lol:
 
#3
#3
(vol_freak @ Feb 4 said:
I'll stick to watching KY/FLA.

When I first read this I thought the documentary was about a guy with the biggest testicles ever? :lol:

:eek:lol: I know you must be disappointed.
 
#6
#6
(checkerboard_charly @ Feb 4 said:
this guy has/had the biggest balls ever. he lived with grizzy bears for 13 years.

the doc is on the discovery channel right now. and it is about to come back on from the beginning.

it is real long but very interesting and freaky. check it out if your night is as boring as mine.






It is quiet interesting. Saw it last night.STRANGE.
 
#7
#7
(vol_freak @ Feb 4 said:
I'll stick to watching KY/FLA.

When I first read this I thought the documentary was about a guy with the biggest testicles ever? :lol:
:eek:lol: :eek:lol: :eek:lol: :eek:lol: :eek:lol: :eek:lol: :eek:lol: :eek:lol:


that is part of it freak.

:eek:lol: :eek:lol: :eek:lol:
 
#8
#8
I caught the last 15 minutes of it last night... so what's the deal, are they making a movie about it or is it just that documentary?
 
#9
#9
Wonder if the bear enjoyed them when he ate them for breakfast? (I think it's the same guy)
 
#10
#10
Basically he lived 13 years with the grizzlies in their habitat (sanctuary).I don't know of a movie, just a documentary.If he and his girlfriend were still alive there would be no story. He came across as a guy (a recovering alcoholic) extremely happy doing this.I think he was somewhat delusional, obviously.He trusted wild animals yet told someone maybe if he does die while doing this,it would bring attention to the mistreatment of the Grizzly.
 
#11
#11
what at D.A. "oh lets go live with the bears, there my friends.." I know i have never been eaten by one of my friends.... Are you guys sure he was a recovring alcoholic?? I would have to be pretty drunk to do some of the stuff he did.
 
#12
#12


A California author and filmmaker who became famous for trekking to Alaska's remote Katmai coast to commune with brown bears has fallen victim to the teeth and claws of the wild animals he loved.

Alaska State Troopers and National Park Service officials said Timothy Treadwell, 46, and girlfriend Amie Huguenard, 37, were killed and partially eaten by a bear or bears near Kaflia Bay, about 300 miles southwest of Anchorage, earlier this week.

Scientists who study Alaska brown bears said they had been warning Treadwell for years that he needed to be more careful around the huge and powerful coastal twin of the grizzly.

Treadwell's films of close-up encounters with giant bears brought him a bounty of national media attention. The fearless former drug addict from Malibu, Calif. -- who routinely eased up close to bears to chant "I love you'' in a high-pitched, sing-song voice -- was the subject of a show on the Discovery Channel and a report on "Dateline NBC." Blond, good-looking and charismatic, he appeared for interviews on David Letterman's show and "The Rosie O'Donnell Show" to talk about his bears. He even gave them names: Booble, Aunt Melissa, Mr. Chocolate, Freckles and Molly, among others.

A self-proclaimed eco-warrior, he attracted something of a cult following too. Chuck Bartlebaugh of "Be Bear Aware,'' a national bear awareness campaign, called Treadwell one of the leaders of a group of people engaged in "a trend to promote getting close to bears to show they were not dangerous.

"He kept insisting that he wanted to show that bears in thick brush aren't dangerous. The last two people killed (by bears) in Glacier National Park went off the trail into the brush. They said their goal was to find a grizzly bear so they could 'do a Timothy.' We have a trail of dead people and dead bears because of this trend that says, 'Let's show it's not dangerous.' ''

But even Treadwell knew that getting close with brown bears in thick cover was indeed dangerous. In his 1997 book "Among Grizzlies,'' he wrote of a chilling encounter with a bear in the alder thickets that surround Kaflia Lake along the outer coast of Katmai National Park and Preserve.

"This was Demon, who some experts label the '25th Grizzly,' the one that tolerates no man or bear, the one that kills without bias,'' Treadwell wrote. "I had thought Demon was going to kill me in the Grizzly Maze.''

Treadwell survived and kept coming back to the area. He would spend three to four months a summer along the Katmai coast, filming, watching and talking to the bears.

"I met him during the summer of '98 at Hallo Bay,'' said Stephen Stringham, a professor with the University of Alaska system. "At first, having read his book, I thought he was fairly foolhardy ... (but) he was more careful than the book portrayed.

"He wasn't naive. He knew there was danger."

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