NBC Sports: We 'Should Not Have Aired' Show In Which NRA Lobbyist Killed Elephant

NBC Sports Responds To Backlash Over Show In Which NRA Lobbyist Killed Elephant
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NBC Sports Network was forced to respond to a flurry of criticism this week, after the internet caught wind of a show that depicts safari hunting for big game in Africa.

On Sunday, an episode of the National Rifle Association-sponsored "Under Wild Skies" aired, showing NRA lobbyist and host Tony Makris shooting and killing an elephant, and then celebrating over champagne. The spectacle sparked vocal backlash, with criticism on social media and a petition at Causes.com that has since received more than 50,000 signatures.

In a statement released to the Los Angeles Times on Thursday, NBC Sports noted the legality of the hunt, but said it would take into account the sensitive nature of the content.

"We've listened to our viewers and will not air that particular episode of 'Under Wild Skies' again. We're also taking a close look at our internal standards as part of this process because this content should not have aired," the network said. "While this form of hunting is legal, we understand that many viewers find it objectionable. As a result we are taking an aggressive approach towards objectionable content within future episodes of 'Under Wild Skies' and other series."

So, NBC will not re-run the episode of "Under Wild Skies" that shows Makris shooting the elephant. But the network's claim that the "content should not have aired" seems strange, considering the program is entirely dedicated to the hunting of large African mammals, including lions, rhinos, leopards and other animals that many of the show's critics would likely find objectionable.

Makris, a public relations strategist for the NRA for decades, recently responded to the criticism on an NRA program. In an exchange captured by Media Matters, he claimed that he hunts elephants because he hunts all animals. Makris said that those who were fine with him hunting ducks and squirrels but believed killing elephants was wrong were practicing "animal racism."

"And they said, 'but [elephants are] so big and special and they're smarter,'" Makris recalled of a recent discussion with a detractor. "And I went, 'you know, Hitler would have said the same thing.'"

Elephant hunts like the one Makris was on aren't unusual. Many African nations charge hefty fees to allow Western hunters to come on big game safaris. The money is supposed to help fund the preserves and pay the staff who manage them. While supporters of the system claim the specific animals are carefully vetted before being killed, this is not always the case. In 2010, a beloved elephant was shot dead by an American hunter after straying out of its sanctuary and onto hunting grounds.

The approach to legal elephant hunting could soon be changing in parts of the continent. Citing concerns over declining elephant and other wildlife populations, a ban on all commercial hunting on public lands is set to go into effect in Botswana by January 2014.

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Before You Go

Extinct Prehistoric Animals
Titanis walleri(01 of09)
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This North American bird, which stood over 8 feet tall, would have had an enormous, axe-like beak. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Dunkleosteus terreli(02 of09)
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This heavily-armored predator had the second most powerful bite of any fish. (credit:Nobu Tamura / Wikimedia Commons)
Indricotherium(03 of09)
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The hornless rhinoceros-like creatures of this genus were the largest land mammals of all time. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Megatherium(04 of09)
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Giant ground sloths of this genus were about the size of today's elephants. The megatherium only went extinct around 10,000 years ago (right around the time when humans started farming), and smaller relatives may have survived as late as the 16th century! (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Dinornis novaezealandiae(05 of09)
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Richard Owen, director of London's Museum of Natural History, stands next to the largest of all moa. Moa, which originated in New Zealand, were flightless, and some were even wingless. (credit:John van Voorst)
Argentavis magnificens(06 of09)
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The Argentavis magnificens, an early relative of the Andean Condor, was the largest flying bird ever discovered. (credit:Stanton F. Fink / Creative Commons)
Diprotodon optatum(07 of09)
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These creatures, the largest marsupials that ever lived, roamed Australia. Some scientists have suggested that stories of the supernatural 'bunyip' creature in Aboriginal folklore could be based on diprotodonts. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Deinotherium giganteum(08 of09)
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These distant relatives of modern elephants had an imposing appearance, with strange, downward-curving tusks and heights of up to 16 feet at the shoulder. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Leedsichthys problematicus & Liopleurodon rossicus(09 of09)
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The fearsome Liopleuredon, right, had a jaw nearly ten feet long. The Leedsichthys, left, was a bony fish that may have been even larger than it looked; some estimates put its maximum length at 53 feet.Correction: An earlier version of this slide had the positions of the Liopleuredon and Leedsichthys reversed. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)