National Post (National Edition)

In troubled days, exotic, warts and all

Housebound viewers flock to dark docuseries

- CHRIS BENNION

Comfort viewing, we’re told, is all the rage. As many of us cower in our homes, traipsing about in our pyjamas, we huddle around our television­s binging on Friends, The Good Life, Gavin & Stacey, Disney cartoons and other such feel-good fare.

Who could blame us? And yet the must-watch show of the Great Isolation 2020 is about as relaxing as a stroll in your local jogger-infested park. Why have so many of us hungrily gobbled up Netflix’s exceedingl­y stressful Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness?

If you’ve been living under a rock these past two weeks — understand­able under the circumstan­ces — you might not have heard the lurid tale of Joseph Maldonado-Passage, born Joseph Schreibvog­el but best known as Joe Exotic, the flamboyant, drug-taking, gun-toting, unhinged zoo owner from Oklahoma. The seven-part series, from filmmakers Eric Goode and Rebecca Chaiklin, is a surreal, nauseating and totally gripping ride through the U.S. “big cat” scene, with a cast of grotesques, each more extreme and less likable than the last, and enough stranger-than-fiction plot twists to keep Hollywood in business for years.

Exotic is scarcely believable as a character. Part redneck hillbilly, part Liberace, part Breaking Bad’s Saul Goodman, he presided over the thoroughly depressing GW Exotic Animal Park, home to hundreds of caged tigers and lions, as well as a host of other exotic animals. Desperate for fame, Exotic ran his own TV channel from the zoo, pumping out increasing­ly bizarre and offensive online videos, as well as attempting to film his own reality TV show. He is now serving 22 years in prison for, among other things, plotting to have killed the animal rights activist (and fellow big cat zoo owner) Carole Baskin.

Baskin herself has been subject to scrutiny. She runs Big Cat Rescue in Tampa, Fla., a grotty little sanctuary that makes Exotic’s look like paradise by comparison. While her campaign to make the private owning and breeding of big cats illegal in the U.S. is admirable, Baskin is another gaudy attention-seeker, running a profitable big-cat sanctuary. Exotic, and many others in the big-cat world, have accused Baskin of murdering her first husband. She has denied this for many years.

Goode stumbled across these big-cat owners by mistake, but, my, what a teeming pond he found. The result is an irresistib­le tale of greed, envy and violence.

Tiger King reminds us humanity isn’t all health-care angels and delivery driver heroes, that in these dark times we also want to see the worst of us too, the vulgar, profane, immoral, seedy. As we struggle to recover our normal world, it is important to remember what that normal world looks like, warts and all. All hail the Tiger King.

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