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- Chick sisters Nugget and Chickette have to save Pamela Anderson again. This time Pam has been kidnapped by the evil mascot of McDonalds, Ronald McDonald, who plans to turn her into an unhappy meal along with tortured chickens. On the other side, Mario and Luigi are simply too busy creating video games to rescue Pamela.
- In this old-school game by PETA, real MMA fighters are gonna save lab animals while fighting against animal testing.
- In this game parody of "Super Meat Boy", Tofu Boy has to save Bandage Girl who's been kidnapped by the jealous but enraged Meat Boy.
- In this grotesque game parody by PETA, a skinless Tanooki has to chase down the famous Super Mario in order to get back his bloody skin.
- Project Runway's Tim Gunn tells us about how animals are being true victims of the fashion industry, and how they are abused and cruelly killed for fur, wool, leather and exotic skins.
- PETA have worked undercover inside Primate Products Inc (PPI), where monkeys have been confined to near-barren environments for months. They are traumatized, and sometimes apparently incompatible. They are basically given nothing, eventually leading to fights among the animals. And they have always lived in near-constant fear of being violently handled by any of the PPI workers, or attacked by other monkeys. Loretta, which PETA's video focuses on, is just one of the confined monkeys.
- PETA tells us how to keep your pet animal safe in any stormy weather and natural disasters.
- Monkeys are captured and stolen from the island of Mauritius, and sent to some European countries (mostly Spain, UK and France) where they are forced to endure cruel experiments.
- Shirley Jones, the actress known for "The Partridge Family", speaks out against cruelty against turkeys on factory farms and slaughterhouses.
- Scientists have confirmed that lobsters, crabs and other sea animals feel pain, despite sea food sellers claiming the opposite. PETA investigators have worked undercover inside restaurants that mutilated and slaughtered such creatures alive for food.
- Often we see American Humane's often-unwarranted "no animals were harmed" stamp of approval during closing credits of movies, and its "American Humane Certified" logo on packages of meat. But according to various investigations, including those done by PETA, animals were harmed in the making of many movies, and in the meat industry. And yet, the animal cruelty continues to be take place in both industries that still try to hide it from the public.
- Because male calves are useless in the dairy industry, they never get to live as long as they naturally would. They are stolen from their mothers almost a day after birth, never to see them again. Most of them are confined to cramped pens or tiny crates before they are shipped to slaughter to be made into veal.
- PETA's introduction to TeachKind's empathy-building program called "Share the World" that is provided to K-12 educators for free, as well as highlight of one of the lessons that is included in the kit and how it's connected to academic objectives.
- A PETA investigator worked undercover at Hemopet, a California-based canine blood bank that claims to rescue greyhounds, and to be selling the dogs' blood to more than 2,000 veterinary clinics in North America and Asia. However, according to PETA, this is a sham rescue where approximately 200 greyhounds are confined to tiny cages and barren kennels for about 23 hours a day, even though they are sick and injured. They are bled repeatedly for at least 1 1/2 years for their blood. These dogs used to be bred for the racing industry only to get discarded by them.
- Curtis Jarvis used to operate a breeder chicken farm in Arkansas for Tyson Foods for over four years, but not anymore. Now he reveals himself for PETA, and his allegations about the company are not so nice as the chicken industry claims itself to be. He will tell you about all the chicken farm atrocities he had to be involved in.
- While Canada Goose released an ad promoting merino wool knitwear like sweaters, PETA noticed something important was missing in the "reverse video": The sheep. Sheep are often subject to brutal violence and cruelty, as they are kicked, beaten, punched, stomped on and left to bleed before they are sent to slaughterhouse.
- PETA did undercover investigation inside Boys Town National Research Hospital, to reveal why deafness experiments on cats were condemned by experts.
- An investigator from PETA did undercover inside Pronotic, Miss., a sausage supplier to Mississippi schools where mother pigs were subject to fatal cruelty before they got killed.
- PETA visited the Australian wool industry, where sheep and lambs were subjected to painful mutilation and slaughter while they were fully conscious.
- A PETA investigator worked undercover inside Mahard Egg Farm near Sulphur, Oklahoma, that supplies eggs to The Kroger Co. and many others. According to the investigation, this is a filthy farm where nearly 8,000 hens have died in several weeks in July and August by apparent heatstroke, as the temperatures in the farm's sheds reached 106 degrees. Over several days in early August, workers have killed more than 49,000 unwanted hens by beating and gassing them.
- This TV ad from PETA encourages people to avoid Canada and "explore elsewhere", unless the Canadian government stops the commercial slaughter of baby seals that occurs every year.
- A PETA investigator worked at University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, where cats were subjected to cruel and useless spinal experiments that involved invasive surgery under inadequate sedation.
- Anheuser-Busch, a brewing company, have their famous Clydesdale horses mutilated by having their tailbones cut off when they're foals, just so they'll have a distinctive look. It is also claimed by Budweiser representatives that the tailbone cutting is done for safety purposes. But no matter the reason, this is animal abuse because tailbone amputation is so cruel and painful that it's banned in many European countries. Also, the horses in question are unable to protect themselves from flies and biting insects, something that could be very stressing and could increase their risk of being infected with West Nile virus or other pathogens.
- Many bears are getting killed by an indefensible practice called "baiting and shooting", every year in North America. Hunters awaiting the so-called "trophy kill" do the majority of these killings.
- PETA went into restaurants, to reveal how live sea animals like octopuses are prepared and killed for "live seafood" dishes.
- The B-52s want Carson and Barnes to stop all circus animal acts, like many other circuses have done, and to stop using the band's songs for cruel elephant act.
- Many times since 2014, investigators from PETA have worked undercover in the Australian wool industry and revealed painful cruelty and abuse sheep and lambs have been exposed to. 2018 isn't any better, as lambs are still "mulesed", like having their chunks of skin carved off their backsides. And they are cut in the throats or have their necks broken while still alive.
- According to PETA, millions of animals are subject to cruel experiments. Every year, they are routinely cut open, tortured and killed, all for the sake of so-called "research".
- A six-month long undercover investigation done by PETA took place at the Cleveland Clinic, where animal including mice are subjected to cruel, archaic and painful experiments. Their skulls are cut open so their brains can be visible, they are bred so their uterus, bladder, vagina, or rectum would protrude from their bodies, they are injected with chemicals to be paralyzed, and they are genetically manipulated so they can develop large, irritating growths and sores on their skin. Additionally, they get no veterinary care, safe housing, pain and distress relief and humane euthanasia.
- American trophy hunter Aaron Rabi shot an elephant that walked out of the bush and into an area connected to Kruger National Park. He paid 30,000 dollars for a sick "sport" of killing it. After being instructed by his guides to aim better, he shot the animal four more times before it rumbled in distress.
- A PETA observer went undercover inside Sweet Stem Farm, LLC, a Whole Foods supplier in Pennsylvania that supposedly produces "humanely raised pork". What the observer saw was far from what customers were lead to believe. Most pigs were crammed into crowded sheds on concrete floors for the entire life, and were denied everything natural or important for them, until they were transported to another shed, put on scale to be weighted, or to slaughterhouse. Pigs who were sick or injured were denied veterinary care, and left to suffer. Was that supposed to be "happy meat"?
- While the tanooki is basically a "suit" for Mario to wear in his popular games to gain some power-ups, they are actually raccoon dogs who are subject to cruelty by getting bludgeoned, hanged and skinned alive for fur. In this short, PETA warns the raccoon dogs that Mario is on the loose and is after their fur.
- A video was taken at Union County Sportsmen's Club in Millmont, Pennsylvania, where animals are living in cramped and often filthy cages. Dillan is an Asiatic black bear that often rocks back and forth, is morbidly obese and has painful and life threatening dental disease. A raccoon doesn't get to cool off and is panting in the heat. And birds are seen drinking out of an algae covered water trough.
- PETA's discussion about three main reasons why incorporating compassion for animals into the curriculum is very important.
- PETA did a four-month undercover investigation at the Oregon National Primate Research Center in Beaverton, Oregon, where over 4,000 monkeys lived in miserable conditions for the entire life. They were confined to tiny cages, and lived in constant fear of employees' rough handling. The ONPRC could receive at least $30 million a year in taxpayer funding to have these helpless primates tormented in experiments that were nothing more than cruel, useless and deadly.
- In the period of 2004/2005, PETA did an undercover investigation inside a Tyson slaughterhouse in Heflin, Alabama. Then, in 2007, something disgusting came unprepared for the company during their two investigations: Workers were seen urinating in the live-hang area, and on the conveyor belt that moves birds to slaughter during nine separate days of investigation. As if that wasn't enough, sickening cruelty to animals in slaughterhouses in Georgia and Tennessee were also documented: Animals were brutally abused, mutilated and decapitated.
- PETA gives their audience 30 reasons to go vegan today.
- PETA did an undercover investigation inside Sanderson Farms, a chicken meat supplier for Kroger, Sysco, Arby's, Chili's and others. Life is hell for chickens in a massive hatchery operated by the supplier. Unwanted chicks are born alone and left to anguish, before they are ground up alive.
- Investigators from PETA have been revealing cruelty against sheep in the wool industry around the world. Now, PETA Asia worked undercover in Scotland, where brutal cruelty is also rampant. Workers stroke sheep in the face with electric clippers, slammed their face into the floor, beat and kicked them, and threw them off shearing trailers. As a result, PETA Asia had to report this to the Scottish SPCA.
- During the seven-month long investigation inside the Union of Solicitor General Employees, PETA discovered thousands of live and dead turtles confined to overcrowded enclosures. At least 6000 yellow-bellied turtles were packed into one enclosure. Tortoises lived in overcrowded troughs and underfed, while turtles were left packed in shipping containers and pillowcases for days and weeks. For weeks, over 12,000 turtles were confined to boxes in the facility's warehouse, without food, water, and adequate space and ventilation.
- Animal rights organization PETA explains why it has been in the video game business for over a decade now, mostly by making parodies by games such as Mario, Pokemon and Cooking Mama.
- The story of Britches, a little monkey whose eyes were sewn shut after birth due to a cruel experiment. Fortunately, she was rescued by the Animal Liberation Movement (ALF).