I've been breaking relatively unimpactful laws my whole life. This is ground zero for a lot of environmental action because of the oil spill here in 1969. Just imagining the possibilities of like planting something that would get bigger or, you know, dwarf your lifetime and your physical size. Outsides longstanding literary storytelling tradition comes to life inaudio with features that will both entertain and inform listeners. He undoubtedly spurred people who'd never heard about milkweed to give a damn about the plant. When it comes to wildlife rehabilitation for coyotes, its extremely challenging for coyote pups, she says. As it happens, the particular species of milkweed that Joey wants to find here in South Texas is especially rare. Larsen: Off the clock, Joey began growing rare conifers from seed. He is diversity. It makes life a lot more interesting. Shhh, what appened to yer fokes?. It's just the way it is. We're, we're keeping it civil. And I have no context for anything outside of it. I don't want to hear that. Maren Larsen (host): From Outside magazine, this is the Outside podcast. He keeps a stash of 40 to 50 saplings in his backyard and at a friends nursery, awaiting the next chance to sneak a tree onto a median or into another opportune location. Late in the afternoon Thursday, the twitter account @eedrk posted a two-minute video and captioned it: Guy with a thick Chicago accent helps coyote pup.. From Outside magazine, this is the Outside podcast. Larsen: After hearing Joey talk about milkweed, I'm personally in the mood to go plant a whole shit ton of it maybe even in places where I'm not supposed to. I don't know, six or seven years give or take. A lot of people [who] find that YouTube page seem really upset to find out that Elwood Blues is not really a botanist. By Saturday morning, the clip more than 6 million views and hundreds of thousands retweets and likes. I saw it (the coyote) running across the road, it looked grossly malnourished. I think it's kind of risky. (He also produces a podcast of the same name.) Paintings. We're, we're keeping it civil. But you also get the feeling that botany gave him a way to make sense of the world, and of humans' place within it. If you want to take a look at what I've been up to more seriously, check out my resume. And this is a problem. Specifically, trees. This episode is brought to you by Visit Mississippi, a wonderland for outdoor lovers. Off the clock, Joey began growing rare conifers from seed. I want to help you but I dont want to get bitten, he tells the pup in his put-on accent. The fish and wildlife service posted their proposal to put Asclepius prostrata, the plant that he was searching for the day that I shattered him on the endangered species list. Jesse's assignment was to cover Joey's search for a local plant called lophophora williamsii: otherwise known as peyote. Its like get a side hustle and then use it to fund your pursuit of knowledge in the world and be able to share that with others, he explains. Volo Bog near Crystal Lake is another great resource. The video, he said, is from late June when he was in small Siskiyou County, California, in the northern part of the state. First in his backyard in Oakland, and then, as he ran out of space, at the median park close by that became the star of that illegal tree planting video. I believe Northern Pacific rattlesnake. My work has appeared in newsprint, magazines, websites, and the missed connections section of Craigslist, where I write personalized notes to drivers who cut me off in traffic. I don't want to hear that. (Photo by Jesse Will) I called Joey Santore just as he'd returned from a botanizing trip to South Africa. Here's Joey pointing out a colony of the quarter-sized gray-green buttons in the video he made about the day. Santore: It's, it's like this, recently born into consciousness, species of primate is now able to figure out the world, dissect the world around it and figure out how it fits in. Theres so many different wildlife disease concerns that have significant overlap with human health impact.. Will: It's a real weird cross section of people that are watching this stuff, it's like people that are propagating weed and they got like maybe a little bit more interested in plants than just weed, you know, they want to know more about it. Which brings us to a big question: If Joey can get thousands of people invested in the fate of a scraggly weed, what kind of impact can he have on science and conservation at large? Who discovered botany? Many of those unauthorized trees now are more than 30 feet tall. Larsen: Joey had always liked railroads. On his YouTube channel, Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, which has close to 260,000 subscribers, the vast majority of his videos have him giving half-hour-plus-long lectures on topics like plant morphology and evolutionary relationships in his very distinctive accent. This episode was brought to you by Mississippi, a wonderland for outdoor adventurers. Oh, what's going on here? And especially where we are now as a species with our understanding of science and the world and all this technology that we have. Thats not true. In his videos, Santore offers observations and advice on how to cultivate habitats in neglected urban areas, his narration veering from erudition (Over here you got some coast live oaks, Quercus agrifolia) to irreverence (Grew these bastards from seed). Larsen: This blend of well-informed science, minor lawbreaking, and humorous rants about the ills of society is what draws people to Joey's YouTube channel, as well as his Instagram account, and his podcast. She had nasal discharge and eye discharge and was just covered in parasites. but I think there's other things happening there it's like in this time that we're in, which is like pretty, anti-science he's getting across these scientific ideas by not sounding like he's shouting at you from the ivory tower, right? According to Jesse Will, Joey's subscribers don't fit any kind of mold. (Joey Santore). His appeal is all about sounding nothing like the stereotypical botanist. [laughs] And I had a pang of regret. My yard now looks a little different from the neighbors next thing you know, it's going to be all milkweed. I'm not trying to harass you. [upbeat . Guy with a thick Chicago accent helps coyote pup, Newest rescued sea otter pups make their fuzzy debuts at Shedd, Photos: Baby animals from around the world, Terrier survives coyote attack caught on camera in Northfield, WTTW Channel 11 profiled him (using the name Joey Santore, I wrote about the Chicago accent and its near total disappearance from TV and film, Microsoft cuts 10,000 jobs, about 5% of global workforce, Seth Jones rallies Chicago Blackhawks past the Buffalo Sabres 4-3 in overtime to close out 4-3-0 homestand, Kevin Warren and Justin Fields, once divided in the Big Ten during the pandemic, are now united with the Chicago Bears, Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information. I would just be going [to school] to learn this stuff rather than get that piece of paper and thats kind of the whole idea behind the Crime Pays But Botany Doesnt thing. I grew up hearin people talk like dat. I just want to create a more pleasant place to go, he says, and provide some sort of food or benefit to birds, bugs, and shit like that.. Joey was born in Chicago and yet --. I don't know why they got to keep grading the road, but you know, you give a man a machine and you tell him, go do this, give him a mower, give him a road grader. It's just, there's something so inherently beautiful about that. But she was covered in fleas and ticks and mites and also had some nasal discharge. Is there anything you miss about living in Chicago? Over the course of 13 years with Union Pacific, he worked his way up to an engineer, reading about the latest updates in the field of botany whenever he could. It was crossing a road on like a 90-degree day at 2 p.m, he says. I did a couple videos where I talked in my normal voice, but it just didnt feel right, says Santore. Joey travels around the world and takes you on plant walks, with colorful commentary. I was out in the country and the nearest rehab center was, like, two hours away, and they weren't open the day I got it. (Picture by Jesse Will) I known as Joey Santore simply as he'd returned from a botanizing journey to South Africa. And I, my friend's pilfered scooter. You need help! Joey travels around the world and takes you on plant walks, with "colorful" commentary. I don't know why. Absolutely. I called them and they said they could take her and everything, but she had already passed away in the night. In real life, his lilt isnt nearly so exaggerated. Larsen: Oh, yeah, there we go. Larsen: Jesse's assignment was to cover Joey's search for a local plant called lophophora williamsii: otherwise known as peyote. In other words, as the ecosystems around us erode under humanity's touch, understanding the ways they fit together is more crucial than ever. Drawings 2019 - 2021; 2010-18; 2005-09; 1995-2004; 1990-94; 1983-88 . And I have no context for anything outside of it. I associate them with a place to like get away from people and, kind of open air playground. Larsen: Which is to say: sometimes what it takes to get us to give a shit about the natural world is a foul-mouthed amateur scientist. Theyre very unpredictableThis gentleman couldve easily been bit or scratched., She went on to say that he brought up some legitimate concerns in the video. I realize maybe I shouldnt have done that because it probably stressed it out, but again this thing was covered in parasites, he says. I remember reading about spectroscopy there and that was what really blew my mind was how you could take the light that's reflected off of a star or a planet and put it through a prism and then you'd get a spectral signature of whatever the atmosphere was composed of or whatever the star was composed of. I mean, on some level it looks, it looks like a weed. Along his routes, he would stop at libraries and gain free access to academic papers with the help of pirate websites. You can follow Joey Santore on his YouTube channel, Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, or on his instagram and podcast of the same name. It makes the nausea a little bit easier to deal with. Basically he stole the scooter or somebody handed him the scooter and that's your intro to the whole video, which just seems like appropriate. Well, he's not pilfered. The YouTube field botany videos came along later, when he realized that much of the habitat he was enhancing, and in some cases creating, merited documentation before it disappeared to make way for a futureless car-slum, as he puts it. it's still there. He's shooting the shit. It's this squat plant. It makes sense. As a child, Santore took an interest in science early, visiting Chicagos Field Museum with his mother and propagating elm trees from seeds in their yard. In addition we have many gardens here that are maintaining endangered plant species, especially Lotusland. Things that were formerly bland to them become these organisms with their own evolutionary lineages. We have constructed attractive Patreon tiers that allow you to be fully recognized for your regular contribution. Phone service was spotty so he sent a voice memo back "This is going to be a lot easier than typing with my thumbs on a smartphone, which is really a seventh layer of hell for me (we later connected by phone) answering my questions about the video and the fate of the coyote. And when its fur was wet, I realized how skinny this thing was. So a lot of them just kind of look like shit, right. Los Angeles Chargers defensive end Joey Bosa wasn't happy with the officials on Saturday night. You got a Tecate Cyprus, a Santa Cruz Cyprus, and a Guadalupe Cyprus. I just don't think what you're doing is safe behavior. The next day I called around and the nearest wildlife rehab was like 2 hours away down south. Joey had always liked railroads. I love getting people excited about these things I've seen. He admits to being borderline contemptuous of maples and rosebushes. So 30 hours after I found this thing, I woke up and was going to take it to this rehab center on my way back down south. And his science is good., The promised land of Southern Utah where the rednecks dance on cancerous housing developments, the cows (poo) chocolate and Pediocactus sileri grows on nearly barren gypsum hills. So I ham the Chicago accent up a little bit and put on this character of a geriatric, you know, extroverted, really turned-up loudmouth West Side Italian because my familys Italian, thats mostly what I know, just to make it funny and whatever. Santore: Look at that beautiful bastard, not flowering yet may not flower this year at all. All right. All right. You can hit the Explore button [in. ] Joey is extremely interested in natural evolutionary adaptation, observing how plants evolved into different forms and determining how and why each one got to be exactly where they are. Amidst mild profanity, general irreverence and a thick Chicago accent, Joey examines plant life and the nature of the rocks and soil they grow on, as . Hes not afraid to mix the sacred, mundane, and lewd. Santore: I thought you was a gopher snake at first. According to Jesse Will, Joey's subscribers don't fit any kind of mold. He has rather unexpectedly earned a bit of internet fame due to his passion for a far less adrenaline-inducing subject: plants. Larsen: Allow me to introduce you to Joey Santore. I guess I view all those videos as kind of a long-running piece of sketch comedy. We don't get that here. His appeal is all about sounding nothing like the stereotypical botanist. Take it easy, buddy. He didnt grow up in a traditional way and has not had the traditional jobs that bring you into this field. Meanwhile, across the bay, Tony Santoros Guide to Illegal Tree-Planting debuted. But if [the video] gets people to smile a little bit, that's cool. I mean, she almost certainly would have died she was underweight and she had mucus in her nose and eyes but maybe she would have been food for something else. Look at that beautiful bastard, not flowering yet may not flower this year at all. Bosa removed and slammed his helmet on the ground while still on the field. My aim is to give people a context in which to place [the nature] they see around them. The biggest population of it keeps repeatedly getting cleared by a well-intended, albeit somewhat oblivious, road grader. So a lot of them just kind of look like shit, right. As for the thick Chicago accent which wasnt nearly as pronounced when TIME spoke to him on the phone Santore says that he uses it to try to get people invested in his nature videos. I just want people to take a closer look at the nonhuman world and askmore questions. One was rabies transmission and one was mange. This is what happens when you dont have any regulations in place to protect the people on the bottom, he says. Learn to spot shallow conformity in social circles and don't waste your time on them, study plants and geology instead. I don't know why you're taking that kind of stance with me. Maybe I should have just left her alone. He tried going to college, but while he enjoyed learning, it seemed like a waste of time and money since he didn't yet know what he wanted to do. Then there are people who got sucked in because of one of those viral videos. Learn more about all the adventures to be had across Mississippi at visitmississippi.org. Larsen: Joey Santore's path to becoming an unlikely YouTube star really is one of the most winding journeys you could imagine. Joey: You know, and I kind of like seeing trees. But if it gives me a chance to get more people excited about botany and plants and viewing the world outside of this depressing human infrastructure in society that I think is killing so many of us slowly, then I guess its good then I guess the clickbait coyote video served a purpose and its all part of my grandiose plan to get more people interested in science and ecology and I guess, this sounds corny, the natural world in general.. You get, for instance, a cactus that's native to the Chicago area. Will: Every academic botanist that I talked to was super stoked on his work. About that Chicago accent: He lays it on thick for the camera. Joey is standing in the middle of a road in Central California, filming with his phone as he has a heart-to-heart with a very distressed looking Northern Pacific rattlesnake. Subscribe for free today! I bet a bunch of illegal tree planting. Theyre normally crepuscular or theyre out at night.". [Terrier survives coyote attack caught on camera in Northfield]. But he also had this aside at the time, that was like, I get it, yeah of course you had to pitch the psychedelic angle. Warning: The video above contains graphic language. Find out where to go, what to eat, where to live, and more. Larsen: This video went viral when Joey posted it back in 2019, but venomous snakes are not his typical beat. Santore: The biggest population of it keeps repeatedly getting cleared by a well-intended, albeit somewhat oblivious, road grader. Not in a bad way. I impersonate these Chicago characters as a joke to make the subject material more interesting, he says. countries. And then, uh, of course these are a couple of mine as well. If you like what we do here, please support our work on an ongoing basis. He's gonna, I'm sure he'll return it once he's done. And especially where we are now as a species with our understanding of science and the world and all this technology that we have. It makes sense. When I was a kid, a lot of my friends had dads like that. Joey sees an integral and resilient piece of an ecosystem. There's a wealth of stuff in the Chicago area that people should check out. Last fall, two very different approaches to addressing climate change unfolded in the Bay Area. These are just names Im channeling in the form of an ongoing science project to make the information more captivating because the typical dry and boring delivery you usually see has failed people., [Photos: Baby animals from around the world]. Larsen: Using a stick that does not seem nearly long enough to me, Joey herds the snake out of harm's way as it flicks its tongue ominously, seeming to tolerate -- just barely -- this loud, swearing man trying to save it. Real banger right there.
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I've been breaking relatively unimpactful laws my whole life. This is ground zero for a lot of environmental action because of the oil spill here in 1969. Just imagining the possibilities of like planting something that would get bigger or, you know, dwarf your lifetime and your physical size. Outsides longstanding literary storytelling tradition comes to life inaudio with features that will both entertain and inform listeners. He undoubtedly spurred people who'd never heard about milkweed to give a damn about the plant. When it comes to wildlife rehabilitation for coyotes, its extremely challenging for coyote pups, she says. As it happens, the particular species of milkweed that Joey wants to find here in South Texas is especially rare. Larsen: Off the clock, Joey began growing rare conifers from seed. He is diversity. It makes life a lot more interesting. Shhh, what appened to yer fokes?. It's just the way it is. We're, we're keeping it civil. And I have no context for anything outside of it. I don't want to hear that. Maren Larsen (host): From Outside magazine, this is the Outside podcast. He keeps a stash of 40 to 50 saplings in his backyard and at a friends nursery, awaiting the next chance to sneak a tree onto a median or into another opportune location. Late in the afternoon Thursday, the twitter account @eedrk posted a two-minute video and captioned it: Guy with a thick Chicago accent helps coyote pup.. From Outside magazine, this is the Outside podcast. Larsen: After hearing Joey talk about milkweed, I'm personally in the mood to go plant a whole shit ton of it maybe even in places where I'm not supposed to. I don't know, six or seven years give or take. A lot of people [who] find that YouTube page seem really upset to find out that Elwood Blues is not really a botanist. By Saturday morning, the clip more than 6 million views and hundreds of thousands retweets and likes. I saw it (the coyote) running across the road, it looked grossly malnourished. I think it's kind of risky. (He also produces a podcast of the same name.) Paintings. We're, we're keeping it civil. But you also get the feeling that botany gave him a way to make sense of the world, and of humans' place within it. If you want to take a look at what I've been up to more seriously, check out my resume. And this is a problem. Specifically, trees. This episode is brought to you by Visit Mississippi, a wonderland for outdoor lovers. Off the clock, Joey began growing rare conifers from seed. I want to help you but I dont want to get bitten, he tells the pup in his put-on accent. The fish and wildlife service posted their proposal to put Asclepius prostrata, the plant that he was searching for the day that I shattered him on the endangered species list. Jesse's assignment was to cover Joey's search for a local plant called lophophora williamsii: otherwise known as peyote. Its like get a side hustle and then use it to fund your pursuit of knowledge in the world and be able to share that with others, he explains. Volo Bog near Crystal Lake is another great resource. The video, he said, is from late June when he was in small Siskiyou County, California, in the northern part of the state. First in his backyard in Oakland, and then, as he ran out of space, at the median park close by that became the star of that illegal tree planting video. I believe Northern Pacific rattlesnake. My work has appeared in newsprint, magazines, websites, and the missed connections section of Craigslist, where I write personalized notes to drivers who cut me off in traffic. I don't want to hear that. (Photo by Jesse Will) I called Joey Santore just as he'd returned from a botanizing trip to South Africa. Here's Joey pointing out a colony of the quarter-sized gray-green buttons in the video he made about the day. Santore: It's, it's like this, recently born into consciousness, species of primate is now able to figure out the world, dissect the world around it and figure out how it fits in. Theres so many different wildlife disease concerns that have significant overlap with human health impact.. Will: It's a real weird cross section of people that are watching this stuff, it's like people that are propagating weed and they got like maybe a little bit more interested in plants than just weed, you know, they want to know more about it. Which brings us to a big question: If Joey can get thousands of people invested in the fate of a scraggly weed, what kind of impact can he have on science and conservation at large? Who discovered botany? Many of those unauthorized trees now are more than 30 feet tall. Larsen: Joey had always liked railroads. On his YouTube channel, Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, which has close to 260,000 subscribers, the vast majority of his videos have him giving half-hour-plus-long lectures on topics like plant morphology and evolutionary relationships in his very distinctive accent. This episode was brought to you by Mississippi, a wonderland for outdoor adventurers. Oh, what's going on here? And especially where we are now as a species with our understanding of science and the world and all this technology that we have. Thats not true. In his videos, Santore offers observations and advice on how to cultivate habitats in neglected urban areas, his narration veering from erudition (Over here you got some coast live oaks, Quercus agrifolia) to irreverence (Grew these bastards from seed). Larsen: This blend of well-informed science, minor lawbreaking, and humorous rants about the ills of society is what draws people to Joey's YouTube channel, as well as his Instagram account, and his podcast. She had nasal discharge and eye discharge and was just covered in parasites. but I think there's other things happening there it's like in this time that we're in, which is like pretty, anti-science he's getting across these scientific ideas by not sounding like he's shouting at you from the ivory tower, right? According to Jesse Will, Joey's subscribers don't fit any kind of mold. (Joey Santore). His appeal is all about sounding nothing like the stereotypical botanist. [laughs] And I had a pang of regret. My yard now looks a little different from the neighbors next thing you know, it's going to be all milkweed. I'm not trying to harass you. [upbeat . Guy with a thick Chicago accent helps coyote pup, Newest rescued sea otter pups make their fuzzy debuts at Shedd, Photos: Baby animals from around the world, Terrier survives coyote attack caught on camera in Northfield, WTTW Channel 11 profiled him (using the name Joey Santore, I wrote about the Chicago accent and its near total disappearance from TV and film, Microsoft cuts 10,000 jobs, about 5% of global workforce, Seth Jones rallies Chicago Blackhawks past the Buffalo Sabres 4-3 in overtime to close out 4-3-0 homestand, Kevin Warren and Justin Fields, once divided in the Big Ten during the pandemic, are now united with the Chicago Bears, Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information. I would just be going [to school] to learn this stuff rather than get that piece of paper and thats kind of the whole idea behind the Crime Pays But Botany Doesnt thing. I grew up hearin people talk like dat. I just want to create a more pleasant place to go, he says, and provide some sort of food or benefit to birds, bugs, and shit like that.. Joey was born in Chicago and yet --. I don't know why they got to keep grading the road, but you know, you give a man a machine and you tell him, go do this, give him a mower, give him a road grader. It's just, there's something so inherently beautiful about that. But she was covered in fleas and ticks and mites and also had some nasal discharge. Is there anything you miss about living in Chicago? Over the course of 13 years with Union Pacific, he worked his way up to an engineer, reading about the latest updates in the field of botany whenever he could. It was crossing a road on like a 90-degree day at 2 p.m, he says. I did a couple videos where I talked in my normal voice, but it just didnt feel right, says Santore. Joey travels around the world and takes you on plant walks, with colorful commentary. I was out in the country and the nearest rehab center was, like, two hours away, and they weren't open the day I got it. (Picture by Jesse Will) I known as Joey Santore simply as he'd returned from a botanizing journey to South Africa. And I, my friend's pilfered scooter. You need help! Joey travels around the world and takes you on plant walks, with "colorful" commentary. I don't know why. Absolutely. I called them and they said they could take her and everything, but she had already passed away in the night. In real life, his lilt isnt nearly so exaggerated. Larsen: Oh, yeah, there we go. Larsen: Jesse's assignment was to cover Joey's search for a local plant called lophophora williamsii: otherwise known as peyote. In other words, as the ecosystems around us erode under humanity's touch, understanding the ways they fit together is more crucial than ever. Drawings 2019 - 2021; 2010-18; 2005-09; 1995-2004; 1990-94; 1983-88 . And I have no context for anything outside of it. I associate them with a place to like get away from people and, kind of open air playground. Larsen: Which is to say: sometimes what it takes to get us to give a shit about the natural world is a foul-mouthed amateur scientist. Theyre very unpredictableThis gentleman couldve easily been bit or scratched., She went on to say that he brought up some legitimate concerns in the video. I realize maybe I shouldnt have done that because it probably stressed it out, but again this thing was covered in parasites, he says. I remember reading about spectroscopy there and that was what really blew my mind was how you could take the light that's reflected off of a star or a planet and put it through a prism and then you'd get a spectral signature of whatever the atmosphere was composed of or whatever the star was composed of. I mean, on some level it looks, it looks like a weed. Along his routes, he would stop at libraries and gain free access to academic papers with the help of pirate websites. You can follow Joey Santore on his YouTube channel, Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, or on his instagram and podcast of the same name. It makes the nausea a little bit easier to deal with. Basically he stole the scooter or somebody handed him the scooter and that's your intro to the whole video, which just seems like appropriate. Well, he's not pilfered. The YouTube field botany videos came along later, when he realized that much of the habitat he was enhancing, and in some cases creating, merited documentation before it disappeared to make way for a futureless car-slum, as he puts it. it's still there. He's shooting the shit. It's this squat plant. It makes sense. As a child, Santore took an interest in science early, visiting Chicagos Field Museum with his mother and propagating elm trees from seeds in their yard. In addition we have many gardens here that are maintaining endangered plant species, especially Lotusland. Things that were formerly bland to them become these organisms with their own evolutionary lineages. We have constructed attractive Patreon tiers that allow you to be fully recognized for your regular contribution. Phone service was spotty so he sent a voice memo back "This is going to be a lot easier than typing with my thumbs on a smartphone, which is really a seventh layer of hell for me (we later connected by phone) answering my questions about the video and the fate of the coyote. And when its fur was wet, I realized how skinny this thing was. So a lot of them just kind of look like shit, right. Los Angeles Chargers defensive end Joey Bosa wasn't happy with the officials on Saturday night. You got a Tecate Cyprus, a Santa Cruz Cyprus, and a Guadalupe Cyprus. I just don't think what you're doing is safe behavior. The next day I called around and the nearest wildlife rehab was like 2 hours away down south. Joey had always liked railroads. I love getting people excited about these things I've seen. He admits to being borderline contemptuous of maples and rosebushes. So 30 hours after I found this thing, I woke up and was going to take it to this rehab center on my way back down south. And his science is good., The promised land of Southern Utah where the rednecks dance on cancerous housing developments, the cows (poo) chocolate and Pediocactus sileri grows on nearly barren gypsum hills. So I ham the Chicago accent up a little bit and put on this character of a geriatric, you know, extroverted, really turned-up loudmouth West Side Italian because my familys Italian, thats mostly what I know, just to make it funny and whatever. Santore: Look at that beautiful bastard, not flowering yet may not flower this year at all. All right. All right. You can hit the Explore button [in. ] Joey is extremely interested in natural evolutionary adaptation, observing how plants evolved into different forms and determining how and why each one got to be exactly where they are. Amidst mild profanity, general irreverence and a thick Chicago accent, Joey examines plant life and the nature of the rocks and soil they grow on, as . Hes not afraid to mix the sacred, mundane, and lewd. Santore: I thought you was a gopher snake at first. According to Jesse Will, Joey's subscribers don't fit any kind of mold. He has rather unexpectedly earned a bit of internet fame due to his passion for a far less adrenaline-inducing subject: plants. Larsen: Allow me to introduce you to Joey Santore. I guess I view all those videos as kind of a long-running piece of sketch comedy. We don't get that here. His appeal is all about sounding nothing like the stereotypical botanist. Take it easy, buddy. He didnt grow up in a traditional way and has not had the traditional jobs that bring you into this field. Meanwhile, across the bay, Tony Santoros Guide to Illegal Tree-Planting debuted. But if [the video] gets people to smile a little bit, that's cool. I mean, she almost certainly would have died she was underweight and she had mucus in her nose and eyes but maybe she would have been food for something else. Look at that beautiful bastard, not flowering yet may not flower this year at all. Bosa removed and slammed his helmet on the ground while still on the field. My aim is to give people a context in which to place [the nature] they see around them. The biggest population of it keeps repeatedly getting cleared by a well-intended, albeit somewhat oblivious, road grader. So a lot of them just kind of look like shit, right. As for the thick Chicago accent which wasnt nearly as pronounced when TIME spoke to him on the phone Santore says that he uses it to try to get people invested in his nature videos. I just want people to take a closer look at the nonhuman world and askmore questions. One was rabies transmission and one was mange. This is what happens when you dont have any regulations in place to protect the people on the bottom, he says. Learn to spot shallow conformity in social circles and don't waste your time on them, study plants and geology instead. I don't know why you're taking that kind of stance with me. Maybe I should have just left her alone. He tried going to college, but while he enjoyed learning, it seemed like a waste of time and money since he didn't yet know what he wanted to do. Then there are people who got sucked in because of one of those viral videos. Learn more about all the adventures to be had across Mississippi at visitmississippi.org. Larsen: Joey Santore's path to becoming an unlikely YouTube star really is one of the most winding journeys you could imagine. Joey: You know, and I kind of like seeing trees. But if it gives me a chance to get more people excited about botany and plants and viewing the world outside of this depressing human infrastructure in society that I think is killing so many of us slowly, then I guess its good then I guess the clickbait coyote video served a purpose and its all part of my grandiose plan to get more people interested in science and ecology and I guess, this sounds corny, the natural world in general.. You get, for instance, a cactus that's native to the Chicago area. Will: Every academic botanist that I talked to was super stoked on his work. About that Chicago accent: He lays it on thick for the camera. Joey is standing in the middle of a road in Central California, filming with his phone as he has a heart-to-heart with a very distressed looking Northern Pacific rattlesnake. Subscribe for free today! I bet a bunch of illegal tree planting. Theyre normally crepuscular or theyre out at night.". [Terrier survives coyote attack caught on camera in Northfield]. But he also had this aside at the time, that was like, I get it, yeah of course you had to pitch the psychedelic angle. Warning: The video above contains graphic language. Find out where to go, what to eat, where to live, and more. Larsen: This video went viral when Joey posted it back in 2019, but venomous snakes are not his typical beat. Santore: The biggest population of it keeps repeatedly getting cleared by a well-intended, albeit somewhat oblivious, road grader. Not in a bad way. I impersonate these Chicago characters as a joke to make the subject material more interesting, he says. countries. And then, uh, of course these are a couple of mine as well. If you like what we do here, please support our work on an ongoing basis. He's gonna, I'm sure he'll return it once he's done. And especially where we are now as a species with our understanding of science and the world and all this technology that we have. It makes sense. When I was a kid, a lot of my friends had dads like that. Joey sees an integral and resilient piece of an ecosystem. There's a wealth of stuff in the Chicago area that people should check out. Last fall, two very different approaches to addressing climate change unfolded in the Bay Area. These are just names Im channeling in the form of an ongoing science project to make the information more captivating because the typical dry and boring delivery you usually see has failed people., [Photos: Baby animals from around the world]. Larsen: Using a stick that does not seem nearly long enough to me, Joey herds the snake out of harm's way as it flicks its tongue ominously, seeming to tolerate -- just barely -- this loud, swearing man trying to save it. Real banger right there.
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