About the multi-award-winning and NAACP-nominated podcast:
Journey deep into the heart of the world’s most remote jungles, savannas, tundras, mountains, and deserts with wildlife biologist Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant as she studies wild animals in their natural habitats. Rae and her teams spend years studying these animals – in order to protect their futures. Going Wild with Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant takes you inside their hidden worlds – and the action-packed adventures of the wildlife conservationists who track them.
In season four, we’re talking to all sorts of nature advocates. From a paleoanthropologist who hunts fossils in conflict zones to someone who helped save an endangered species while in prison. We will hear from real-life heroes with widely different expertise and life experiences that led them to be champions for the natural world.
What transformation did they undergo to create change within themselves, their community and the world? Together, we’ll discover how these ordinary people fell in love with nature and became their most extraordinary selves.
*Content warning: this conversation contains mentions of animal injuries, death, and the topic of suicide.*
Veterinarians deal with death so frequently that they have some of the highest suicide rates of any occupation. Dr. Hollis Stewart has worked with many animals – from domesticated pets in New York City and Fez, ...
Back in the 1900s, coyotes were kind of like wolves– you could mostly find them in forests and other areas far away from humans. Now, coyotes are everywhere, and Dr. Christopher Schell decided to find out why.
Hyenas might be the most misunderstood animal – Are they dogs? Big cats? Evil, trouble-making sidekicks? (Thanks, Lion King!) Dr. Christine Wilkinson relates to this ambiguous perception as a bi-racial woman, and especially one working in the fields of science and conservation.
What do you do when you get a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to study Jaguars in the Panama rainforest but you can’t find childcare? Bring your kid along! In the first episode of season two of Going Wild, Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant tells of an expedition searching for an elusive creature in the ...
On the new season of Going Wild, podcast host and acclaimed wildlife ecologist Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant explores the human drama of saving animals, bringing more stories of her own and highlighting the stories of fellow conservationists who put their lives on the line to protect the world around us. Listeners ...
Breaking glass ceilings, breaking down barriers, breaking molds: it’s exhilarating. And exhausting. Our season one finale is about what it’s really, truly like to be a Black, female scientist in America.
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Since this is the last episode of the season. I want to say, thanks to you. Hosting the show ...
When I was living in Kenya, I learned a lot about animals and conservation, and I also learned about people and culture, sometimes through my own horribly embarrassing mistakes. I told you about one of those moments last week. This week I'm bringing you another story.
In part one of two, I share some embarrassing cross-cultural misunderstandings from my time living in East Africa. Hear about two of the biggest ones– and what they taught me about the country, the people, and myself.
A dead bear shows up in an unlikely place, and the discovery of how it died and how it got there makes me question my life’s work. A warning: This episode contains details of performing a necropsy of the bear in the woods, it contains language that may not be acceptable for young listeners or those with queasy stomachs.