A stunning admission from National Geographic:
National Geographic went too far in drawing a definitive connection between climate change and a particular starving polar bear in the opening caption of our video about the animal. We said, “This is what climate change looks like.” While science has established that there is a strong connection between melting sea ice and polar bears dying off, there is no way to know for certain why this bear was on the verge of death. This is an updated version of the video.
Dr. Susan Crockford says in an essay:
Remember that video of an emaciated Baffin Island polar bear that went viral last December? In an unexpected follow-up (“Starving-Polar-Bear Photographer Recalls What Went Wrong“; National Geographic, August 2018 issue), photographer Cristina Mittermeier makes some astonishing admissions that might just make you sick.

It turns out they didn’t just come across the dying bear the day it was filmed: it was spotted at least two days earlier by Paul Nicklen. He must have had a satellite phone with him when he saw the bear but the only call he made was to his film crew — he made no attempt to find a local conservation officer to euthanize the bear, which would have been the right thing to do.
The bear’s emaciated, near-death stagger1 was simply too tantilizing to pass up (video needs action: an emaciated dead bear would not been nearly as effective). Mittermeier claims they knew when they filmed the bear that he was sick or injured, but Nicklon presented it as an effect of climate change regardless. Mittermeier now says National Geographic simply “went too far” with their video caption (“This is what climate change looks like“), that she and Nicklan “lost control of the narrative.”
Actually, what they lost was their humanity.
Here are some excerpts (my bold):
“Photographer Paul Nicklen and I are on a mission to capture images that communicate the urgency of climate change. Documenting its effects on wildlife hasn’t been easy. With this image, we thought we had found a way to help people imagine what the future of climate change might look like. We were, perhaps, naive. The picture went viral—and people took it literally.
Paul spotted the polar bear a year ago on a scouting trip to an isolated cove on Somerset Island in the Canadian Arctic [August 2017]. He immediately asked me to assemble our SeaLegacy SeaSwat team. SeaLegacy, the organization we founded in 2014, uses photography to spread the message of ocean conservation; the SeaSwat team is a deployable unit of storytellers who cover urgent issues. The day after his call our team flew to an Inuit village on Resolute Bay.There was no certainty that we would find the bear again or that it would still be alive.
…Only when it lifted its head were we able to spot it lying on the ground, like an abandoned rug, nearly lifeless. From the shape of its body, it seemed to be a large male.
We needed to get closer; we boarded a Zodiac boat and motored to land. Strong winds covered our noise and smell. From the shelter of one of the empty buildings, we watched the bear. He didn’t move for almost an hour. When he finally stood up, I had to catch my breath. Paul had warned me about the polar bear’s condition, but nothing could have prepared me for what I saw. The bear’s once white coat was molted and dirty. His once robust frame was skin and bones. Every step that he took was pained and slow. We could tell he was sick or injured and that he was starving. We could see that he was probably in his last days.
I took photographs, and Paul recorded video.
When Paul posted the video on Instagram, he wrote, “This is what starvation looks like.” He pointed out that scientists suspect polar bears will be driven to extinction in the next century. He wondered whether the global population of 25,000 polar bears would die the way this bear was dying. …
National Geographic picked up the video and added subtitles. It became the most viewed video on National Geographic’s website—ever. … The mission was a success, but there was a problem: We had lost control of the narrative. The first line of the National Geographic video said, “This is what climate change looks like”—with “climate change” highlighted in the brand’s distinctive yellow. In retrospect, National Geographic went too far with the caption.
Perhaps we made a mistake not telling the full story—that we were looking for a picture that foretold the future.
We had sent a “gut-wrenching” image out into the world. We probably shouldn’t have been surprised that people didn’t pick up on the nuances we tried to send with it. Yet we were shocked by the response.”
Read the rest here.
What kind of people sit around for days knowing an animal is suffering an agonizingly slow death and do nothing but plan how to use that suffering animal to make money? Callous and self-absorbed people.
Not only did Nicklen and Mittermeier cold-bloodedly exploit a defenseless, suffering animal without a thought to ending its pain, they still think that what they did was noble and self-sacrificing (they were “on a mission”). They apparently think that their advocacy for climate change relieved them of the responsibility of being humane.
They still don’t understand that many people were as sickened by their lack of compassion as by the film footage itself. People were also angry that Nicklen and Mittermeier misrepresented the situation: by their own admission, they knew the bear was sick, yet peddled their images as climate change tragedy porn anyway.
Their response to the public backlash (“National Geographic went too far”) is laughable. They just don’t get it: their actions did real damage to their cause.
Bottom line: A polar bear needlessly died a slow, miserable death because of heartless climate change advocacy and it made the public angry.
FOOTNOTES
1. As I pointed out in my State of the Polar Bear Report (Crockford 2018), cancer can cause the kind of profound muscle wasting exhibited by this polar bear. Muscle wasting is more than simply not having enough to eat: it is the body consuming itself, drawing on all energy reserves to try and fight the illness.
REFERENCES
Crockford, S.J. 2018. State of the Polar Bear Report 2017. Global Warming Policy Foundation Report #29. London. pdf here.
Dr. Crockford also has a summary of why dying polar bears is mostly fake news, well worth the read:
Their article was simply CONfirmation Bias at its worse.
“This is what climate change looks like”
No, this is what LYING looks like.
The ends justify the means. Nothing new for this ilk.
WR2,
Actually, the end always justifies the means. What is egregious is that some feel that their crusade is so important that the end justifies ANY means.
The Afghan girl was right to be nervous.
Dear National Geographic,
What a mealy-mouthed excuse for an apology:
” We PROBABLY shouldn’t have been surprised…”
” PERHAPS ” we made a mistake…”
” while science has established that there is a strong connection…”
I remember the National Geographic of over 60 years ago. Brings to mind “Oh Hamlet, what a falling off was there “.
An apology like that is much worse than doing nothing.
I remember the National Geographic when I was growing up in the 70’s and 80’s – it is quite true how the mighty have fallen…… Sadly today IMO the only “good” thing about the magazine is that it still boasts some very impressive and beautiful photography. And no, I’m not including the dying polar pic in with that assessment. So yeah, admire the photos in the magazine but don’t bother reading the text; or if you do – take it with a HUGE grain of salt!
… and take a thorough hot shower afterwards.
“An apology like that is much worse than doing nothing.”
I’m afraid you’re right. This “apology” gives NG another chance to keep the issue alive and to get in a few licks on “denialists” in the same stroke. I would like to know more about reader comments – i.e. how many comments simply took the bait and how many were skeptics who condemned this blatant propaganda effort.
More important is the disturbing turn made by a once great magazine. I suspect the reason is that indulging in climate propaganda is the most sure-fire method of selling magazines. Cute animals have a huge audience, particularly when the meme is indifferent humans causing animal extinction.
Science, 1. Prophecy (inference), 0.
“…he made no attempt to find a local conservation officer to euthanize the bear, which would have been the right thing to do.”
===========
Right thing, why ?
Didn’t even make sense unless she thinks the media would spin it appropriately. Her own words
“Photographer Paul Nicklen and I are on a mission to capture images that communicate the
urgency of climate change. ”
” He pointed out that scientists suspect polar bears will be driven to extinction in the next century.
Poor bear.
What a round about way of saying, “We flat-out lied.” I think I’ll start using this line, whenever I need to gain something at the expense of the truth.
“No, dear, I did not sleep with that other woman.” LATER: “I lost control of the narrative.”
Does this line really make forgiving such a serious lie any easier? I think NOT.
Let’s go to a country with starving, diseased children now. Do recon for a year to find the perfect specimen. Find a sickly, emaciated, staggering, fly-covered, hungry five-year-old. Do we try to help? No, you stupid ass, we call a prize-winning film crew to set up shop and start a production. Can we, at least, give the child some water? No, dumb ass, that would detract from the realism, reducing the symptoms that sustain the image that we wish to capture, reducing the impact of the message we want to send. What message is that? — This is what CO2 is doing to the Earth.
… cutting edge documentary making. Give these people an award.
… insensitive, heartless, cruel, self-focused, arrogant, shortsighted, narcissistic sons of bitches.
And now for what I REALLY think:
You must be mistaken.
I just checked my Google news aggregator and the only citations about this bear are the original article and other related news items about this “viral” and heartbreaking video.
Since Google news is completely neutral and aims to only report real news, you should check your source.
/sarc
So I guess no polar bears have ever died of disease, old age, injury or a combination of these…. The reason you are more likely to see a polar bear struggling along like this (as opposed to a lion, a hyena or other large predator) is that not only is the polar bear the apex predator of its domain, it is also the only large land (or ice) based predator. In other words, in the African Savannah, a lion would likely be taken out by a pack of hyenas before it even got to this severe a condition. There are no other animals (other than another polar bear) that could kill and eat a sickly adult polar bear. Well, unless it fell into the water, where it might fall prey to a Greenland shark.
Also, I wonder how they reason that polar bears as a species managed to survive much warmer time periods than the present? How did they persist during the MWP when it was possible to grow crops in Iceland? But of course that doesn’t fit with the “climate change” narrative….
“There are no other animals (other than another polar bear) that could kill and eat a sickly adult polar bear. ”
Drop bears?
no trees
More climate alarmism fraud, plain and simple. For another example, on the topic of Pacific islands being doomed by sea leavel rise check out this beauty… https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/26/world/asia/solomon-islands-south-pacific.html?smtyp=cur&smid=tw-nytimesworld
Love how they blame the backlash on people just not understanding the “nuances”, like we just don’t get their edgy truthiness.
Take away reason and responsibility and what do you get?
A) Polar Bear Fake News to drive CAGW (How much money have we wasted on CAGW?)
B) Democrat’s game plan.
Satirical Ocasio-Cortez ‘interview’
Quote – “While science has established that there is a strong connection between melting sea ice and polar bears dying off,…”
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Really? As the temperature warmed and the ice melted somewhat, polar bear populations quintupled. Just what is it that “science” was able to garner from this process that I’m missing?
“Science has established” = get ready for a big, whopper of a lie.
This reminds me of a news report of some “!!!!!” who took a horse to a remote area, hobbled it, tied it to a post and left it there to die. By the time someone else came along, the horse was dead. I put this kind of “environmentalist” on the same level. It is going to take me a while to calm down after this.
I guess that’s how it goes at the top of the food chain. Sick bunnies on the other hand don’t stay around long enough for even the SeaSwat Team to get there.
ResourceGuy,
And there are some who speculate that ‘Mad Cow Disease’ was kept in check in ungulates by wolves weeding out the sick that couldn’t run away. Everything seemed in reasonable balance before humans started making decisions on what things should be killed that weren’t actually food. No action is without consequences. I call it the social corollary to Newton’s Third Law.
Headline is in bold font above the fold, retraction is a month later on B9 under the tire ad. Where was NatGeo’s retraction?
Editor’s note on the linked webpage, partially obscured by a “read more” pulldown menu.
Noble cause corruption.
It’s because they care for a greater good.
Not caring for NG’s snooty climate change junk reporting we cancelled out subscription years ago. Feeling good about trees saved and chemicals not used in a journal we were no longer enjoying.
What, so another fraudulent representation of global warming is something knew? Dont you just love the squirm when they’re caught out “fudging” the truth!
” While science has established that there is a strong connection between melting sea ice and polar bears dying off”
And where did they get this gem from?
I don’t really see any admission that they were wrong here.
Glad to see the bears doing well!
In the meantime, I posit this. Gov. LePage please take note:
Start monitoring the waste coming into Maine from Massachusetts. Specifically at Casella facilities….👍
So we have the greenest states of them all… California and Massachusetts with NY in a tie for second.
Yesiree, them recycling, clean, green fraud money makin machines.
Problem is, they have raped us all on unreliable, intermittent, renewable frauds.
The giant momey states impose their will on their smaller neighbors to do just the opposite while wall street and cronies legislators make billions.
China just put them in their place. Keep your garbage. We’re going green too.
Okie dokie…the most recent effort of one of these states fucking over the little one next door is Ma vs. Me.
Yup these hypocrite environmental terrorists have big law firms and senators in their pockets and now want to plant windmills on the majestic peaks of Maine that the locals who are not tree huggers oppose. It’s easy to pick on poor folks and use excuses like we will do something for you but end up rich and the companies go BK leaving you on the hook with tripling electric bills and paying to clean up the mess when they fail.
Obama did a great job with that! Congratulations /s.
Ok, now for the meat of the matter. Ma. has plenty of space to bury their garbage. They send it to Me to Ma. Run/owned garbage concerns. They also send up radiological and other hazardous waste, (illegally from Ma and RI.. Gee thanks Casella /s.
Of course the other export is heroin and fentanyl, illegal aliens and now fukin windmills.
wanna play hardball?
Ohio and Maine need to stop all waste imported from the greater NE region.
Time to go conservative green!
That includes states that accept Ca trash too. Hey, it a global warming thing and they have plenty of space in the Berkshires and Sonoma Valley.
Same goes for Upstate NY., CT and NH.
Don’t Tread On Us!
Make America green again! Keep you garbage to yourselves!
Like the e REC fraud, make them wallow in it. Save the waste space for for future growth. The Real Estate markets will adjust, taxes there will be exponentially higher and… The business and money will move your way.
Problem, reaction, solution.
Point in case…
https://www.pressherald.com/2018/07/25/cmp-agrees-to-help-low-income-bay-staters-as-part-of-power-line-deal/
So, no benefit to Maine??? This is all about hooking up useless wind turbines in Maine along the route? Yes it is.
And no, it cannot happen.
Keep your trash! Build them there on all your new landfills.
…case in point…