War American reality show contestant kills, eats protected bird in New Zealand

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An American contestant on a reality TV show is under fire for killing — and eating — a large flightless bird that is protected in mainland New Zealand, an offense that can lead to up to two years in prison or a significant fine.

Spencer “Corry” Jones, who lives in Wyoming, was taking part on “Race to Survive: New Zealand” in October last year when he killed and ate the weka, a bird that has become extinct over large tracts of the mainland. Killing a weka can led to a penalty of up to 100,000 New Zealand dollars, or $59,000.

Following an investigation, the country’s Department of Conservation issued Jones and the production team with a written warning instead, noting the “unique set of circumstances” of the show.

In the show, which runs on USA Network, nine pairs of contestants navigate 150 miles of harsh terrain in a bid to win $500,000. Competitors must find their own food and water while also racing to the finish line.

“The unique set of circumstances — cast members were fatigued and suffering from significant hunger, in an unusual group dynamic situation — meant we felt a warning letter was prudent,” Dylan Swain from the New Zealand Department of Conservation’s investigations team said in an emailed statement Wednesday.

“Nonetheless, killing and eating a native protected species in this matter is unacceptable and the company is ‘on notice’ about the need for its program participants to adhere to conservation legislation.”

“I made a mistake,” Jones said in a clip shared by USA Network after he and his teammate were disqualified from the show. “It was shortsighted. ... It was foolish. But the competition is very real. The difficulty of this is real, and survival in the bush in New Zealand is not easy.”

“I knew it was breaking a rule, but that’s not important when you’re hungry,” he continued, noting that it was “difficult to be in a place where you’re so desperate and hungry .... and there’s creatures running around camp that we’re not allowed to eat.”

The weka is native to New Zealand and has “a famously feisty and curious personality,” according to the country’s Department of Conservation, which says the bird’s “populations are subject to large fluctuations.”

They are “charismatic birds that are often attracted to human activity,” according to New Zealand Birds Online, a digital encyclopedia of the nation’s birds. But those who live near them “often have a less charitable opinion, as they have to live with ever-watchful weka snatching opportunities to raid vegetable gardens, pilfer poultry food and eggs, and even steal dog food from the bowl,” it said.

Most native species are protected by law in New Zealand and it is illegal to hunt them. There are four subspecies of weka, only one of which is considered to not be threatened, according to the Department of Conservation.

Jones apologized for his actions on the show, adding that “it doesn’t sit lightly with me.”

“What I did disrespected New Zealand and I’m sorry.”

 
If you're worried about someone killing a protected species, why would you film a show like this in a location where they exist?
 
That is not what extinct means. It's like saying squirrels are extinct in Antarctica. No, they just don't live there. Stop using alarmist language to push a viewpoint. They're not even endangered.
You're right. They're listed as Vulnerable, not even close to Extinction.

Total Journo Death and Total Kiwi Victory

 
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Compliments to the New Zealand government to not sperg out and throw the book at the guy, instead issuing a warning.

Compliments to the guy for apologizing and sounding genuinely remorseful.

The USA Network is the only one that comes out of this looking bad, in my opinion. If you're going to put people through something like that in a foreign nation, you'd best make all of your weka are in a row.
 
Compliments to the New Zealand government to not sperg out and throw the book at the guy, instead issuing a warning.

Compliments to the guy for apologizing and sounding genuinely remorseful.

The USA Network is the only one that comes out of this looking bad, in my opinion. If you're going to put people through something like that in a foreign nation, you'd best make all of your weka are in a row.
It is, what the kids would say, a teachable moment. Big globo homo corporation gets egg on face, stupid person who signed up for reality TV has to do humiliation ritual, the world learns about a vulnerable species nobody had ever heard of before, and everyone agrees to not be naughty again. Everyone wins! Except the bird that got ate of course.
 
That is not what extinct means. It's like saying squirrels are extinct in Antarctica. No, they just don't live there. Stop using alarmist language to push a viewpoint. They're not even endangered.
These birds almost certainly lived on the mainland before the Maori arrived a thousand years ago, and probably up until the "white man" (and, more importantly, rats and cats) arrived.

But no, locally extinct and extinct are very different things.
 
None of this makes any sense.
At a guess?
New Zealand government knew this was a risk when they agreed to let the show be done.
Show runners knew it was a risk and factored that into their costs.
It happened, show gets a minor publicity boost as does New Zealand's efforts to preserve the species. Potentially there was a prior agreement that a small amount is paid by the show runners to cover the contestant's crime but most likely it was all factored in as part of the plans for the programme.

Or to put it differently this whole thing is as scripted as every other reality TV show
 
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