Poor Keiko... he didn't know how to socialize with them and was lonely...that breaks my heart. That's why he kept seeking out humans, he was alone and that hurts my heart. These people tried to do the right thing, it was just too late.
@knightbane3752 Жыл бұрын
unpopular opinion, but this, in a way, is where alot of the free the whales/dolphins projects, while noble, are wrong. They've not been long term successful. Instead they should petition to make the ones in captivity the last ones there
@eastbow6053 Жыл бұрын
@@knightbane3752 agree they keep breeding this captive whales
@GayToBeHere Жыл бұрын
@@knightbane3752 i think they can both co-exist but i agree 100% the energy should mostly be spent making sure they stop breeding and catching whales
@jusjetz Жыл бұрын
Their work has been in vain.
@basillah7650 Жыл бұрын
if they had released him with other captive whales that were put together it would have made a pod for him
@eyewetodddid Жыл бұрын
This story is the exact reason these whales should never be taken in the first place. Orcas form a very strong bond with their family units. You can't just introduce them to other pods and expect it to work out. It was so sad seeing him all alone.
@theothertonydutch Жыл бұрын
This goes for pretty much most animals that we keep in captivity. I also think there are way too many types of pets that really should not be pets. Dogs and cats are one of the few exceptions I think.
@slashbat2375 Жыл бұрын
@@theothertonydutch dogs and cats are only exceptions because they've been domesticated, they don't do well in the wild since they aren't wild animals (plus I'm pretty sure even if they could survive somewhere in the wild they'd just destroy whatever ecosystem they're put in, I think cats have hunted like 60 different animals into extinction)
@jessecovington6639 Жыл бұрын
Maybe Zoos altogether are wrong
@eyewetodddid Жыл бұрын
@@jessecovington6639 yeah probably
@lunawolfheart336 Жыл бұрын
@@theothertonydutch I'd agree I have two birds but they shouldn't be in a cage when I'm at work or busy with other things they should be free in the wild. But since they were captive breed releasing them would kill them. I guess breeding them is better then what they used to do and take them from the wild but it's still morally questionable as raising a bird is a lot of work and literally a life time contentment and because life is so chaotic people end up having to re-home birds alot and it's really sad as those birds can create such strong bonds with people
@torondin Жыл бұрын
He might have been "free" but did Keiko truly *feel* free? It's tragic that he was separated from his family as a baby, but he had been raised by people, socialized with people, *He* even sought out people after he was freed. The bay in Iceland that they had setup as a home for him might have been possibly the best place for him to have stayed. He could still have gone out swimming in the open ocean of his own accord, but he'd always have a place he could return to, and people that could help make his heart feel at least a little less lonely.
@daelynnmoore8232 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking this exact same thing!
@oliverallen3713 Жыл бұрын
He chose to swim off,its not like he was shooed away.
@lunawolfheart336 Жыл бұрын
Agreed they should if had that still available to him
@MangaGamified Жыл бұрын
The irony of intelligence is that it's also the exact same thing that makes other pods notice the difference and be wary; lesser most people are kind, then it should be allowed to be with humans. The conservation in Iceland was the best balance of free but not being alone.
@elainemelanie9230 Жыл бұрын
Animals don't know what the word "free" even means. He was just humanized to make people release him.
@wyattblaine706611 ай бұрын
I love that Keiko remembered some tricks, and played with kids. Makes me think he at least enjoyed part of his job, despite the decline in health at the time. He liked making kids laugh, and interacting with them.
@wyattblaine706610 ай бұрын
@@blackhorse9729 I wonder if they ever took samples? Could potentially still sire some pups
@erincaf22510 ай бұрын
@@blackhorse9729 breeding of killer whales is illegal now thank god
@Dueiso9 ай бұрын
I think the same, Keiko FREELY chose to be a wild-gentle orca.
@osmosisjones49129 ай бұрын
Freedom would simply giving him a choice
@GingerWolf878 ай бұрын
ROFL. No he did not. He was ONLY doing this because he learned humans = food and being unable to hunt properly by himself he HAD TO interact with humans - his capturers, torturers, abusers, the worse and most demeaning criminals of all centuries - to survive.
@leahsyl81 Жыл бұрын
This is exactly what happened to Luna when they tried to introduce him back into the wild in Vancouver. He just wouldn't leave the bay. They kept trying to take him far into the ocean and even found other pods that welcomed him in but he was just too used to being around humans that he kept coming back. He'd swim up to boats to visit with the people, swim up to docks and visit. Unfortunately, one of the huge tugboats that he visited often, Luna got sucked under from the engines and he was killed. It was extremely heartbreaking for everyone. And even though I don't support any animals in captivity, unfortunately, it's almost always bad to try and reintroduce them back into the wild after many years in captivity. They should all be reintroduced in the ocean but in a rehabilitation area where they learn how to live in the ocean but in a supervised, loving, area where they are safe. And from now on they should only be admired from afar in their own homes and environment 💖
I actually didn’t hear about poor Luna before but I was just thinking the same thing that could happen to animals like this that’s been in captivity almost their entire lives before this video even got going!
@leahsyl81 Жыл бұрын
@@leahdamron9856 there's actually a couple movies and documentaries about Luna. I can't remember the names of them at the moment but just search in KZbin and you'll find them. I believe Disney+ or Prime have the movie too.
@LaTripper Жыл бұрын
Springer made it back! Springer is a total success story
@lunity1111 Жыл бұрын
@@kylieboettcher7438o be fair at least everyone loved Luna and that whale probably got a lot of stimulation love and enjoyment during his time alive. I know it’s sad when any animal dies but I think they Luna got a lot of love by locals far better than these ones in captivity.
@RabblePack Жыл бұрын
What makes me furious from this is that here we are, nearly 30 YEARS since the film came out and created all that passion to free Keiko, and dolphins and whales are still being held captive for entertainment. Hundreds are still captured every year for the trade. More than 3000 worldwide are kept captive including 60 orcas. What the hell is wrong with our species?
@dustman96 Жыл бұрын
@@mr.turbo_boost3383 That's the unfortunate answer.
@FrEDo507 Жыл бұрын
Money is the root of all evil.
@gearshiv Жыл бұрын
You say that like we don't do worse to human beings
@dustman96 Жыл бұрын
@@gearshiv We shouldn't do it to any sentient species
@gearshiv Жыл бұрын
@@dustman96 first thing I think we should all take turns with your mom
@lindacondray7918 Жыл бұрын
Keiko and Free Willy also inspired MANY kids to become marine biologists and other environmental careers. Including 6 year old Lindsey, who always stuck with wanting to become a marine biologist because of that movie. She is now working as one and working on ways to save and rehabilitate coral reefs. The movies and the movement to save one whale did so much more that just brighten the life of one whale. It raised awareness to millions of people of the life of captive animals of all species and the world they and us live in.
@naturegirl5556 Жыл бұрын
This is similar to me haha. Although it was Dolphin Tale that sparked my interest to become a marine biologist around that age! I've still got a little way to go before I can achieve my dream but hopefully I will be working out there soon!
@kxkxkxkx Жыл бұрын
Yes, many random morons are easily manipulated 😚
@arnowisp6244 Жыл бұрын
And they say Fiction can't affect Reality.
@mimiadams247 Жыл бұрын
@@arnowisp6244 Who says that?
@mimiadams247 Жыл бұрын
@Kakuna Rattata OK, so I'm dorky enough I had to look up GTA... 😆
@xykarijehywat081411 ай бұрын
I was 12y when Keiko died. My grandmother used to drive us from Seattle to the Coast every weekend so I could go hang out with him since I was old enough to talk. 4yo me always brought my piggy bank to help my giant friend find his way home. I remember our last trip like it was yesterday, crying when his tank was finally empty bc I couldn't see him anymore but hoping he'd be happy/safe. The news of his passing broke my heart. He's the only reason I still have a VHS player and the 1st Free Willy. I know it's available digitally but it's the same one from 25+ years ago so it's family just as he was. I still have majority of all my pictures I took with him while he was in Oregon. Thank you for sharing some much needed information and beautiful visualization of Keiko's story 🥺❤
@adamgoncalves15919 ай бұрын
Aw what a beautiful story. I wasn't even a year old when he died but saw the movie years later. I was born in 2003 but Free Willy was a movie I loved growing up. May Keiko rest in peace knowing he got to see what freedom was like.
@fathimazenasus44926 ай бұрын
*Can u share those pics as a vdo in ur channel pls*
@mellissa613906 ай бұрын
Oh my goodness would you share those photos? That’s amazing. I’m glad he had someone to love and visit him often. I’m sure he thought of you as part of his pod❤️
@BonnieBlair-zm4uu5 ай бұрын
I drove from Seattle ⛱️ to Newport, Oregon, that final Labor Day weekend, to say goodbye 😢 🙏 to Keiko too. Keiko really enjoyed watching all the aquarium guests through the windows in his "whale pen." Meeting Keiko remains one of the best things I did in my lifetime;🐋🐳 I love God's creatures so much and truly believe Keiko is beyond the Rainbow Bridge, with all other departed creatures and nature.❤🛐 🌈🌉🐳🐋🏝️🌺🐈🐕🦮🐕🦺🏞️🌷🌹🌲🌻🌴🕊️😇😇
@K37-h1z3 ай бұрын
Ok bringing yr piggy bank is making me tear up.
@texknight67 Жыл бұрын
I don't see this as different as someone dying lonely, lost and alone in the streets. This is a heart braking story.
@Lethal_Spoon Жыл бұрын
the comparisons that can be drawn are horrifying
@paulmontoya9468 Жыл бұрын
People in the streets choose their path. Telling God to go F himself. Not showing any respect for life.
@Lily_of_the_Forest Жыл бұрын
That’s why we must be kind to all living, feeling beings - people and animals.
@agnusdeiquitollispecatamundi Жыл бұрын
*breaking
@karenhill3970 Жыл бұрын
I know!! But look too at all the happy times this magnificent creature had!!💚💚 Incredible story ..He actually bonded" with His human Family .sooo awesome G- gave this wonderful creature to us!!!!!!
@phillippi2 Жыл бұрын
Yes, Keiko's story is sad. But, it is worth noting a few things. One was that Keiko was the first orca to be released intentionally. As such, we were ignorant of many things that have become obvious since. Another thing to note is that from our experience with Keiko, we have discovered much better methods of preparing not just orca but, dolphins in general, to be released back into the wild. Sometimes sad stories teach us valuable lessons and, help us prepare for the future. Since Keiko was released, we have successfully released quite a few orca back into the wild.
@oliverallen3713 Жыл бұрын
He did swim off and live for a year in the wild before catching pneumonia (happens in nature), so really the only sad part was the fact his pod couldn't be located. Once thing is for sure: he had a much better life for the last 5 years during his rescue - both his physical and mental well-being improved greatly
@aidanwotherspoon905 Жыл бұрын
Ohh, what other whales have been successfully released? What names should I google?
@trueternity Жыл бұрын
@@aidanwotherspoon905There aren't many cases like Keiko's where the said animal was kept in captivity for 15+ years, but there have been quite a lot of releases, and the longest an orca has survived after being released into the wild was nine years, however i think it should also be considered that said orca (named springer if i remember correctly) was only in captivity for a total of a month. There was also Misha, a bottlenose dolphin who survived for 6ish years in the wild after being released from 9 months of captivity. I'm only saying all this from base data though, i do not know how they were sent back, how they were rehabilitated or any of that. You can search their names up. Theres also a pdf containing the records of all cetaceans ever released into the wild which you can find upon googling.
@trueternity Жыл бұрын
Springer had also been sighted with a pod a number of times, though not his natal pod.
@trueternity Жыл бұрын
Sorry for the rambling but i recommend you search them up, the stories of these cetaceans, especially Springer are much different than that of Keiko's.
@alohafromthe3033 Жыл бұрын
This video fails to explain that Keiko was never forced to leave his pen. He chose not to return. He’d spent the previous summer interacting with wild orcas for several hours almost every day. He was completely capable of feeding himself & didn’t lose any weight during this swim to Norway. He was simply exhausted because he wasn’t used to swimming 60 miles per day. This could have weakened his immune system & caused his illness. His trainers knew he was sick and were providing medical attention. He didn’t die alone.
@landkonnudur Жыл бұрын
but...but...my narrative...
@LibertyDino Жыл бұрын
True
@enzoarayamorales7220 Жыл бұрын
This kind of also proves the point of the these whales are unfit to be kept inside since he didn’t have the capacity to swim for that long, it’s like putting a fat man in a forest all alone
@alohafromthe3033 Жыл бұрын
@@enzoarayamorales7220 Absolutely agreed. Thankfully, most of us are now aware how cruel captivity is, especially for orcas & other porpoises. That’s Keiko’s ultimate legacy.
@tikimillie Жыл бұрын
Well thats scuffed
@elliepowell1317 Жыл бұрын
Their intentions were SO pure. Unfortunately it didn't work out for poor Keiko and that is so damn sad. 😭 my heart is broken over this 💔 I hope he knew how much everyone loved him. Man I didn't plan on crying this late at night. 😢
@chesschessableАй бұрын
Atleast he died in his natural habitat. This was my favorite movie when I was growing up, and is my most favorite movie series of all time. I have his necklace hanging on my bedroom door knob
@kuceracm Жыл бұрын
Keiko's story taught us why not all captive animals can be wild again, but that we can and should treat already captive animals well to the best of our ability and not make the same mistakes we made before. Keiko could have and should have lived a long happy life at the Oregon facility. Trying to free him was his death sentence.
@jeanr4886 Жыл бұрын
You are right. Sometimes you can't go back home, but you can stay and be safe, loved and cared for. Nobody even knew where Keiko was, that he was sick, gasping for air, in pain and dying alone. You don't think he died wondering what happened, or felt alone and abandoned? I think he did, being so intelligent, intuitive and emotional. Where were all the righteous people that set him free and then abandoned Keiko to die so cruelly? Those people should have been held responsible for Keiko in some way for the rest of his life, but what glory would there have been in that, instead they did their victory dances, turned their backs on him and walked away, washing their hands of him. Heartless, souless, unforgivable.
@ooXChrissieXoo Жыл бұрын
They may have been able to do it, had they rehab a group of the orcas to be released together. That why Keiko didn't need to join any wild orcas.
@Typhon888 Жыл бұрын
It really shows why you shouldn’t listen to a bunch of idiots calling you demanding some animal that doesn’t belong to them to be put out into the wild.
@boulderbash19700209 Жыл бұрын
Why, of course they won't, even we, human with our resourcefulness cannot survive it if we are taken captive since childhood. A lot of people talk about America's freeing of slaves after their civil war. But only a few pointed out that almost one third of freed slaves died within a year because they just didn't know how to make a living by themselves.
@Typhon888 Жыл бұрын
@@boulderbash19700209 Yeah that was another disaster. Trying hard and too fast hurt many people.
@JesusMartinez-rr2ry Жыл бұрын
Moral of the story: The best way to rehabilitate a killer whale is to never keep them captive in the first place.
@puri_pon Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@dukedematteo1995 Жыл бұрын
Or....who gives a shit if he likes humans. Who says that's how he should live?
@ColterVanidestine Жыл бұрын
Facts
@Resilientlyblessed Жыл бұрын
💯💯💯
@nolancoulombe1950 Жыл бұрын
Factual
@rogerfrazior9548 Жыл бұрын
I was fortunate enough to be directly involved with the Keiko project from the point that he was flown from Oregon to Iceland and for a couple of years afterwards. Everyone involved that I met who was involved in this project was deeply passionate about what they were doing with Keiko. The time that I spent with Keiko, the caretakers and support staff in Oregon and Iceland will always be one of my fondest memories. It may not have been a perfect plan, but it was not done out of malice, and it has inspired children and adults alike. One of them being my own daughter who is studying to become a veterinarian.
@RonLarhz Жыл бұрын
Lucky u.
@jturtle5318 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for trying to help him. I never saw Free Willie, but I recently saw Blackfish, and the kidnapping scene was horrible. No cetacean should taken from its home and family.
@CUTESWON Жыл бұрын
Do you know if either of keikos pens are still usable? Cause I can't help budge the idea his Iceland pen would be ideal as a sanctuary for some of the orcas still in captivity today. Would be amazing to see them moved into a sanctuary or at least where they have space to swim 🥺
@MrScuba1972 Жыл бұрын
Some past friends were a trainer and attendant in Newport and Iceland. Their enthusiasm for Keiko and the project were infectious and as young professionals they were afforded an amazing opportunity to be a part of the project. Due to what I assume were NDA's they couldn't speak about the nuts and bolts but it seemed to me that there experience was enormously positive and then it wasn't? Maybe that had something to do with funding but that is just my speculation. I did learn a new term though, "Pissed on Skate", which I was told is a bar snack in Iceland that has skate cured/aged by a unique process. Very interesting history and folks today should remember that not only was this a first but also a very different time :)
@roundsm18 Жыл бұрын
I saw Keiko in Oregon. I remember it being a sad experience. He never really looked happy. I remember them telling our class that.
@bc286410 ай бұрын
I cried so much. Couldn't be more thankful for having him released and taken care by his caretakers. Everyone did their best for Keiko.
@Donnirononon9 ай бұрын
They left him alone...
@jseevers818 ай бұрын
Maybe you should do some research, other orcas won’t except him.
@younglove33628 ай бұрын
Don't try to reason with animal lovers. They're delusional and amoral and make situations worse than they already are.
@tessdurberville7118 ай бұрын
@@younglove3362 Put "animal lovers" in quotes to denote sarcasm.
@Alisha_798 ай бұрын
I cried too. Agreed they did the best they could for Keiko!
@albatross4920 Жыл бұрын
I think the issue about integrating Keiko to a pod was that orcas live in pods led by a mother or grandmother whale. Orca live in a matralinial family were it's a family of females, their offspring and their adult sons that kinda come and go as they please (but ALWAYS come back to mom). The reason Keiko was rejected was because he wasn't their son, therefore a stranger. If they found his original pod and his mother or grandmother was still alive, he could have been taken in through them.
@edgeofsevnteen Жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@PetaHewitt Жыл бұрын
There is no guarantee they would recognise him. Would a human family be able to immediately recognise a child that was removed from them at the age of 2. And that child has no recognizable ability to use language and acts in bizarre ways.
@jellybean7283 Жыл бұрын
Male orcas are solitary by nature so him being rejected shouldnt be a cause for concern
@emilycarrick3570 Жыл бұрын
@Jellybean Male Orcas are not solitary animals. They may break from their natal pod to hunt or to breed, but they return in time.
@piratekit3941 Жыл бұрын
If Keiko had been female, this would have had a much happier ending. Male orcas only have their mothers, and any brothers, or the occasional bachelor pod. Wild male orcas live a MUUUUCH shorter lifespan than wild females, entirely due to the fact they don't have that family dynamic. At least he was free, and people didn't just give up on him.
@amatuspragensis6106 Жыл бұрын
Maybe from Keikos point of view, during all the years in captivity, he begun to consider humans as his pod. And what humans considered to be release to freedom, Keiko considered as banishment from his own pod...
@kitkat47chrysalis9511 ай бұрын
disgusting. he should have been allowed to stay in Oregon. releasing an animal in the wild after 25 years with humans should be animal cruelty. Everyone involved should be sent to jail for at least 2 months so they can think long and hard about the suffering they caused on one of the most intelligent and social creatures on this planet.
@billrobinson789710 ай бұрын
@@kitkat47chrysalis95and the people that captured him in the first place? How many months in jail for them?
@kitkat47chrysalis9510 ай бұрын
@@billrobinson7897 one, two for the ones who decided that he should be in a chlorinated freshwater tank, but good luck convincing the cartels in mexico to enact this justice. you are racist if you even try to hold the Latinos accountable.
@imle927910 ай бұрын
Him being free was the thing he needed, his health improved a lot and he was seen jumping and swimming fast, something he couldn’t do in an inclosed area. Him being free and seeking out humans is the perfect life for him, and he got to swim freely and visit different people whenever he wanted to. I would say he lived a good life out in the open, even tho it was cut short
@kitkat47chrysalis9510 ай бұрын
@@imle9279 by that logic people should quit their jobs to go live wild and free in the wilderness where they can run free and sleep in until the sun naturally wakes them up hunting and gathering for food like the pre-modern humans did. by your logic a person who spends all day at a desk and then sits down in a moving box only to go sit down in a slightly bigger box is not living their best life. by your logic all of civilization will collapse. if it is good enough for the humans than it is good enough for the whales.
@SmoulderDrache Жыл бұрын
As long as he could hunt on his own, I'd say it was mostly successful and not a waste. The methods for releasing these creatures need improvements, releasing the entire captive group together to form their own pod would likely be the best solution for the loneliness experienced by Keiko as they'd be familiar with each other.
@paulrasmussen8953 Жыл бұрын
Yesnit eas because he is desd and he died alone
@amyang7569 Жыл бұрын
Great idea
@goodday2826 Жыл бұрын
The problem with that is most Orcas in captivity aren't from the same areas, I remember reading somewhere in an article some whales came from Iceland, another from Washington I believe and just overall they were all taken from all over the world, They wouldn't be able to communicate
@DavidSmith-vc5rn Жыл бұрын
Not a pod of orca you want swimming around the ocean,,because 1 the killer whales have only known humans to take care of them so the orca pod would stay close to humans,2nd these animals are very highly intelligent emotionally sentient beings that literally have the largest brains in the world,,and most likely were mistreated on a regular basis,,just by being held captive for entertainment,and 3rd these whales have very long memories,,these whales can think,feel,,and these animals can hate just like a human if not worse ,,now this pod of orca comes to fruition ,,what do you think this pod of released captive whales that were used for entertainment are going to do,,killer whales are highly highly vindictive animals ,,I know this because I used to work with killer whales,,a staff member I worked with hit a male killer whale with his fist one day when we were at work,,after that day ,everyday for 4 months that whale watched,and learned,,one particular day russell was on the deck feeding the wales,and the male killer whale jumped up on the deck grabbed Russell,and drug him to the bottom of the whale pool,and drown Russell,,,that day i learned killer whales were calculating thinking animals,,that can hate human beings if for no other reason that what we are .....
@kiaq1153 Жыл бұрын
not really, whales learn their pods language from birth. But perhaps they couldnt advanced their evolution and formed another cohesive way to communicate
@MariAnKenobi6 ай бұрын
The documentary Blackfish has a good suggestion. There needs to be an enclosed bay in the actual ocean where captive whales are “released” together. They can still hear and feel the movement of the ocean and hunt some of their own snacks. But humans owe them care until their deaths, just as if they were house pets. They aren’t fit for the wild. In Free Willy, Willy was captured as an adult already part of a pod. That’s why his release worked.
@caitlinmace3 ай бұрын
There is a foundation in Nova Scotia trying to do this. I believe it's just called the whale sanctuary
@chantillucas-meek7347 Жыл бұрын
By the end of this I am heavily, openly sobbing. To die completely alone, rejected by your own kind AND neglected by the ones who'd taken you from them. How agonizingly sad.
@magnoliarose5910 Жыл бұрын
Me too! My baby who just turned one saw me crying. He came over, took my hand, put my hand on his face, and gave me his stuffed bear. 😭😭😭. More tissues please!
@Eddieking Жыл бұрын
Same 🥲😭😢
@Alaryicjude Жыл бұрын
That's why I say humanity is 🚮.
@niko7903 Жыл бұрын
@@Alaryicjude Unfortunately there is a lot of truth to that sentiment, however, there still remains an immense amount of good in humanity that tries to counteract the bad. Just try to do your best to not succumb to despair and giving up, that's when all hope is lost. There are many beautiful people who continue to fight to right the wrongs, and I do still believe humans can bring about a better world; we're the only species with that ability, and we need to obligate ourselves to doing just that. With great power comes great responsibility.
@Alaryicjude Жыл бұрын
@@niko7903, I've got control over myself. It's most everyone else that seems to not do the same... I'm doing everything I can while still having lost all of my hope in humanity. I've listened to too much true crime to ever think humanity is worth a shit anymore. If you don't want to lose all faith in your fellow humans then don't look up Junko Futura or Sylvia Likens or any of the other literal children tortured and murdered by not just adults but also other children... Who then get a slap on the wrist and (as far as I recall) all of the people who tortured and murdered those girls are now free to do it again... Humanity does NOT stand up against true evil so that's why it keeps perpetuating.
@aleksandrakrolak Жыл бұрын
Imagine stealing a toddler in California, keeping it for 20 years in a cage, then "rehabilitating" and releasing near a village of a tribe in Amazonia to "be free" - and then being surprised that he's not doing well. Knowing how complex life and culture of whales is, that's why they basically did to Keiko.
@nuclearcatbaby1131 Жыл бұрын
That’s what happened to me. Well I was stolen at a considerably older age. But my foster parent threw me out when I was 20 and it’s a miracle I survived long enough to find my dad and go live with him.
@joriankell1983 Жыл бұрын
And that's funny
@tanepukenga1421 Жыл бұрын
Well they DID find his Clan and release him back into that area, so I'd say it's more like picking the toddler up in LA and dropping them off in San Fran
@lunawolfheart336 Жыл бұрын
Yup it's honestly really sad. But we have to remember they didn't know back then what we do now but it doesn't make it right
@aaaduccs6667 Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@razzlejazzled Жыл бұрын
As a child growing up in Oregon I saw Keiko at the Oregon Coast Aquarium multiple times. I, like many children growing up in Oregon at the time were greatly inspired by Keiko, and followed news reports of his time in Iceland religiously. I was in 7th grade when he died, and I remember his death was huge news not just in school, but throughout the state. Oregonians had become quite fond of him.
@CT5555_ Жыл бұрын
I came to this comment section with the intention of leaving a very similar comment to this. You pretty much covered all the points. I've got old Polaroids of a very young me standing in front of him. The memories are quite fond, but age has sombered me to the reality that my interaction with that whale should have never happened.
@nincumpoop9747 Жыл бұрын
@@CT5555_ many animals live what would seem an unnatural lifestyle and still enjoy much. He lived a dynamic life both in the wild and with humans. Some would say he was blessed to be loved by so many and got a chance to be free which many a man at least has died for. I’m also from Oregon, I remember, I remember that Keiko broke the glass on orca captivity and hopefully his trials have improved the life of many other orcas. Smile for that I hope.
@KappaClaus Жыл бұрын
I am Norwegian and was 9 when he died in my country. My favourite stuffed animal was a killer whale that was named Keiko
@gabrielquinones33439 ай бұрын
I probably bet that everyone knew they did the right thing but they got sad that now she’s dead but now they can say he was born in the wild and died in the wild
@frozenskyhomestead37236 ай бұрын
This project offered us valuable insight and a clearer understanding of the consequences of keeping a whale in captivity, what can be undone and what can't. It breaks my heart that he was starved of the socialisation and sense of family he needed but I'm glad he was free and healthy for a while.
@wompppwompwomppp Жыл бұрын
There's a male orca in Florida who literally committed suicide by slamming his head into the walls of his enclosure to escape captivity. So inhuman to keep such intelligent creatures locked up in such a small pool for so long
@saraiangela Жыл бұрын
Exactly how I feel about human prisons....
@willcurtiss6214 Жыл бұрын
@@saraiangelashut up
@AK-jt9gx Жыл бұрын
And three days ago, his female companion Tokitae died after years of loneliness in a small pool, months before a plan to free her was to set in motion. So incredibly sad.
@tammyirwin703 Жыл бұрын
That orca was Hugo
@giftofthewild6665 Жыл бұрын
@saraiangela some people are too dangerous to be free.
@ginagina9592 Жыл бұрын
Poor baby😢 I’m happy he did get to live in a wide open ocean. it’s so sad he was lonely and I’m glad people still interacted with him .
@104718048 ай бұрын
Im glad to hear that after she was found again keiko was actually interacting with the locals and giving the kids ride on her back. Until the end she was sweet and gentle to kids
@decemberbaby_4566 ай бұрын
Keiko is a boy?
@IcefloeProductions-qv2qg3 ай бұрын
Keiko was a boy
@Inyourbox-kr5uf Жыл бұрын
He got a taste of freedom.. man this made me cry. Just like the movie when I was a kid
@abiekanzy76198 ай бұрын
Freedom is bad for keiko, he did not know how to survive,he was bullied by other orcas. Freedom was not the answer. Leaving him in conservatory is the best option.
@nancywilliams80767 ай бұрын
All in all at least he didn’t kill anyone due to being starved by his handlers like the one in the documentary Blackfish. Those people never took responsibility for what they did.
@kris_jenner_is_a_cryptid_5 ай бұрын
This whale is why all millenials love orcas! I carried around a killer whale doll in elementary school lol
@CATSWITHKYLA5 ай бұрын
@@abiekanzy7619 You obviously haven't done enough looking into his move. He learned how to survive and was on his own while he swam to Norway for over 60 days. He was free in the ocean for 5 years.
@swordchild00135 ай бұрын
@@abiekanzy7619 Absolutely not ! Keeping him in his cage was not the best at all. Disgusting that you would think so.
@zakuraRabbit Жыл бұрын
I got to see Keiko in the wild. The place he settled wasn't that far from the place where my family went on vacation every year. We didn't get to go close though, we just saw him from a distance. I remember the articles about how he was found. Ironically he was discovered by a group of kids who called him "Willy" before even knowing who he really was...then it turned out that they were right.
@mischr13 Жыл бұрын
omg, that's right, we used to call every orca "willy" in the 90's. memory unlocked
@thatonekid9400 Жыл бұрын
@@mischr13 Willy or Shamu
@briskii5329 Жыл бұрын
@tone you from the Bay?
@bugsy220791 Жыл бұрын
I just imagine that in a few thousand years someone will find him and wonder why he was buried, like so many animals that we have found and wondered why our ancestors buried certain animals in elaborate burial sites and not others.
@allenreynolds8389 Жыл бұрын
Imagine if everyone knew where he was burried and left gifts or built a memorial to him archeologists of the future would thin there was a civilization that worshiped a whale as their deity.
@joriankell1983 Жыл бұрын
I doubt they will find much, with all the radiation and whatnot
@jwenting Жыл бұрын
oh, they'll conclude that the people who lived on that site worshipped killer whales as gods. Not too far from the truth, given who was responsible for the burial.
@cheyennes.1878 Жыл бұрын
or they will watch this exact video hahaha
@cheyennes.1878 Жыл бұрын
or google it? Hahaha
@kristenkylemack94776 ай бұрын
He had 5 years living in the ocean. That was better then dieing in captivity! He had freedom for five years.
@IThinkNowListenUp5 ай бұрын
We can't be certain his perspective in death: whether he felt abandoned and lonely, or alone and free to roam. We can only hope for the latter. However, given his interactions with people, I believe humans were his "pod," and he likely suffered from loneliness and stress because of that. I am inclined to think that the stresses of being lonely for a short year led to a premature death. It’s truly sad. He might have liked a vacation in the wild, but would probably have been overjoyed to return to captivity and that and the people there would have been considered "home".
@An.Unsought.Thought3 ай бұрын
I disagree... Humans were his pod for decades.. being alone in the wild may be "free" but it was lonely and ultimately what killed him. I bet if he stayed in Oregon, he'd have lived longer.
@kristenkylemack94773 ай бұрын
@@An.Unsought.Thought There were Biologists on ships that spent a lot of time with him over those five years, too help support him & keep track of his travel &.meeting groups of Orca's. He also gained weight, his skin diseases cleared up by not being in a pool full of his urine & feces bacteria. He was able to swim straight for miles, instead of swimming alone in circles, in a cement pond way to small. He got to see & explore the beautiful ocean, instead of staring at blank white walls. It has been said, Quality of life is better then Quanity of life. Even if neither are perfect! We as humans captured Whales for entertainment back in the 60's we have learned a lot since then about these animals, we have made a lot of mistakes! This is the beginning of discovering how too get them back were they belong. Making plans too develop sanctuaries on different coast lines, for captured Whales too have the safest opertunity too live in the Ocean were they belong! We tought them to do tricks for us, We now need too try to teach them to survive in the ocean & those who were born in captivity too experience living in a large sanctuary in the ocean with human interaction & support. Not alone but with the all the Whales we have in captivity. Their is so much that needs to be considered. But we can't give up too fix a wrong & attempt to make it right! There are other captive Whales that have died alone in tanks at closed down parks. Because of diseases , depression, lack of exercise, food loneliness as well as lack of human companionship! I feel for those Whales. like Lola who died waiting for all the red tape to at least move her too a pool with other Whales. She had health issues, that were not being dealt with by the owners. There are are more waiting for rescue! I feel heartbroken for them. ❤ 💙 💜
@tlove6775 Жыл бұрын
Poor baby. He should have never been taken from his parents to begin with. My heart is broken. I loved free Willy too and grew up during this time but sadly never knew this story. Marine mammals are too beautiful and intelligent to be treated this way by us greedy humans. I’m happy that keiko was able to live free again, but I’m also very sad that he died alone. Poor baby.
@Trazynn Жыл бұрын
Pretty sad that the Norwegian government put restrictions on the interactions with Keiko. He was entirely domesticated and enjoyed the interaction he grew up with. Reminds me of how they shot that human-friendly walrus last year. The government is just terrified of any incident for which they could be blamed.
@CUTESWON Жыл бұрын
Keiko had killed 2 seaworld trainers 🤷♀️
@mimimelendez6594 Жыл бұрын
@@CUTESWON Stop spreading misinformation. It was Keto and Tilikum who killed their trainers.
@CUTESWON Жыл бұрын
@@mimimelendez6594 I literally left the link you can see the information for yourself that keiko killed.
@@CUTESWON I don't see a link, but it doesn't matter. Keiko never killed anyone.
@Luka-DanteGodofMischief Жыл бұрын
The algorithm won this one....I adopted a new puppy a week ago and named him Keiko after Freewilly because it was a childhood favorite that brought me joy in my worst times...since being diagnosed with BPD and two inoperable brain tumors that his disabled me physically, I lost my hearing in my right ear, I have epilepsy and so many other medical issues and mental illnesses and the moment I got Keiko I felt joy return to my life, last night I was having a panic attack but was trying to hide it but somehow Keiko noticed then started pouncing all over me and nibbling on my hat etc I laughed so much tears came to my eyes and my belly hurt...I don't remember the last time I laughed like that...animals are gifts to humans and we definitely don't deserve them
@marthareichhold8201 Жыл бұрын
Hi Luka-Dante, Thank you for sharing your story....I'm so sorry for all your ailments. I love that you & your puppy, Keiko, have each other to love and cherish. God Bless you!
@Luka-DanteGodofMischief Жыл бұрын
@@marthareichhold8201 thank you for your kind words they made me smile and I'm so happy I have him too..
@nielsdekkers67375 ай бұрын
As a little boy the Free Willy movie made me open up my heart for orca's. They became my favorite animal still are. i tried to become a marine biologist sadly i failed. Now i'm a chef amd glad the owner let my put up pictures of Keiko all around my kitchen. He may be gone. But never forgotten ❤
@bdach88 Жыл бұрын
Incredibly sad. Thinking about him being alone is just heartbreaking
@oliverallen3713 Жыл бұрын
More sad than languishing in a barren concrete pool and slowly dying??? True, the ideal would have been for him to find his pod, bu least he had his freedom. Which would you prefer???
@nathanielfitzgerald4583 Жыл бұрын
@@oliverallen3713for a highly social animal stripped of his original family, once he had been seen to reject being independent he should have been aloud to live out his last days with humans. What had been done to him could not be undone, and he experienced “freedom”, but he should died with those that loved him, not alone.
@dukedematteo1995 Жыл бұрын
He was happy with humans in Norway ...
@paulrasmussen8953 Жыл бұрын
@@oliverallen3713but je wasn't their anymore his last human conditions were pretty good.
@stardustring3 ай бұрын
😢
@dylanandrich1949 Жыл бұрын
He's still inspiring and teaching kids how amazing marine life is... That's his legacy forever... He'll always show the new generations why these animals are so important to the world and conservation as a whole
@janmolenaar9781 Жыл бұрын
This. It's often not the specific case, however sweet and sour it may be, but the effect it has on culture. It changed peoples mind.
@lordchaa1598 Жыл бұрын
Imagine being taken from your home as a child by aliens, not all the aliens were nice, but you got lucky and found a group that not only liked you, but you liked them. All for those aliens to bring you back 25 years later and then chose to stick around but chose to ignore you. Family isn’t always blood, sometimes it’s close friends or even animal companions, Keiko didn’t get to choose his family and in the end he was discarded anyway.
@techpriest4787 Жыл бұрын
In other words. Nobody asked him what he actually wanted. He was set "free" to live an actual whale's life. Only to then end on a grave yard that people made because clearly that is how real whales die. I am afraid it has always been ironically more about what people wanted and not the whale.
@sirzorg5728 Жыл бұрын
@@techpriest4787 How exactly are we supposed to ask what an animal wants?
@techpriest4787 Жыл бұрын
@@sirzorg5728 you do not ask in the first place. In Star Trek it is called the prime directive. You do refraining to get involved with lower evolved lives in the first place. For Star Trek the line was a pre-warp civilisation. For out animals it should be the ability to communicate that is required for contact and involvement.
@mangosaurusrex3416 Жыл бұрын
@@techpriest4787too bad we can’t speak orca and ask him so I think our minds fill in the gaps with human attributes.
@Jolis_Parsec Жыл бұрын
@techpriest4787 Release your pets then, Holier Than Thou. 😒
@laurenbobo-shisler547810 ай бұрын
I am from Newport and this story is near and dear to my heart. My sister used to go see Keiko every week at the aquarium and the most significant person in my swimming career (my old swim coach) was actually his trainer while he was in Newport!
@chetyoubetya8565 Жыл бұрын
He was 100% habituated to humans.I don't know why they didn't try an Orca companion so he wouldn't be alone.
@niecyedmon1881 Жыл бұрын
He got pneumonia from being stressed out because he was so lonely !!! Stress can kill you 😪
@onetallpheeesh Жыл бұрын
Do you understand how hard it is to keep Killer Whales in Captivity?! Do you know the kind of space they need to truly have a healthy lifestyle? It's impossible to truly give them that kind of space. Maybe if Elon Musk Hyperfixated on Animal Conservation instead of Space Exploration...
@michellejones5541 Жыл бұрын
@@niecyedmon1881 the FACT is that he got to live for 5 years out in the wild making his own choices in water that was natural for him, it was doubtful he would have survived another month in Mexico, he needed treatment for his skin condition and desperately needed cold, deep, real salt water instead of a bleach filled fresh warm water in a bath sized pool. He relearned how to echo locate catch fish and interact with his environment how is this not a success? Also because of what was learned during his rehabilitation 2 beluga whales have been rescued from China and are being rehabilitated to the wild although it is taking longer than expected because of COVID. People are now becoming supporters of sea pens for captured whales and dolphins rather than leaving them to die in aquariums because of Keiko and that is a fabulous legacy for the world's most famous Orca
@MrJoeyWheeler Жыл бұрын
They should have done that. Hell, they should have doubled down - gradually breed an entirely domesticated version of the Killer Whale.
@michellejones5541 Жыл бұрын
@@MrJoeyWheeler they were hoping to reunite him with his own family if they had taken another Orca as a companion that Orca would have then been left alone
@delph.e8580 Жыл бұрын
The movie made me cried every time I watched it when I was a child. And now I am crying again! The case of Keiko raised awareness about captive animals back in 90s. Many kids were inspired to protect animals after the movie. It broke my heart to see him dying alone.
@chockitkat37762 жыл бұрын
I didn't know Keiko meant lucky one and I seriously hope other orcas or the orcas in the wild can be restored. I'm still waiting for Lolita to be released into a better environment. I don't want her to die like Tilikum and the others as a captive orca
@lbabytutorials4852 Жыл бұрын
Kiska Lolita and kshamek have the smallest and worse living conditions
@sunitamosesesq Жыл бұрын
Lolita is my only exception. At her age, and with her disposition, I really fear that moving her will be way too dramatic of a change and will cause her tremendous stress. The exposure to microorganisms in an open sea pen would totally overwhelm her system. And unlike others, Lolita is a privately owned whale. I hate her living conditions more than anything. It should be criminal to keep her in that tiny tank. But the fact is, her owner does love her. The fact that she has lived longer than any other whale in captivity EVER has, says A LOT. It's a testament to the care she's receiving. And even though we hate it, we do have to give that man credit for caring for his whale better than big billionaire SeaWorld/Anheiser Busch company. Lolita has a life and a daily routine which I now believe would cause her tremendous grief to lose, and she doesn't deserve to go through that.
@marieclark7019 Жыл бұрын
Not so lucky though,very unlucky although his life,a very sad story,how man captured him,chewed him up and threw him out,condemned him to death 😢
@horse-lover68 Жыл бұрын
@@sunitamosesesq Lolita's mother is still alive!! Aquarium's are LYING!! The normal lifespan of an orca is like the lifespan of humans, Lolita can become calves, she is NOT OLD, she is sick from captivity. And they left her alone in a hurricane!! Other people get prosecuted when they leave their animals alone. And they had enough time to bring her to SW. Look at this information, if the hurricane would not have made a turn Lolita would be dead.
@Velociiraptor Жыл бұрын
I’m waiting for kiska ❤
@karthikr1777 ай бұрын
Hats off to the people who made all the efforts and gathered all the funding. ❤
@ShadowTeamDark1 Жыл бұрын
People may have not got the results they wanted. But Keiko was able to choose how to live not forced. He chose to live with humans and he was free to leave anytime he wanted. To me, the project was a success. Keiko was free.
@crazyhairsinger Жыл бұрын
He didn't exactly choose to be with humans. It's because he had been kept captive and in terrible conditions his whole life. Basically, it's like manipulating a kid making him think that being abused is ok from birth. The orca didn't even know what freedom tasted like, he didn't even know how to survive in the wild despite being "trained". Plus his injured fin didn't help. He would've been rejected by wild orcas anyway. He already did in 1985.
@dragonstooth4223 Жыл бұрын
he was the equivalent of a toddler when he was taken from his family ... not surprising he struggled to reintegrate. makes me so sad to see these beautiful animals in captivity. I've spoken with an ex trainer (used to be friends with one) and its even more heartbreaking how much they love their animals, but they convinced they are better off in a pool. No they are not.
@marquisdelafayette1929 Жыл бұрын
Dude it was literally Stockholm Syndrome, just like children who are raised in an abusive household don’t realize that what they are receiving isn’t really love. Look at child actors. They were kidnapping infant whales. John Crowe, a former diver, explains the kidnapping process in one of the most poignant interviews in Blackfish. In 1970, he was involved in a kidnapping operation in Puget Sound, Washington. When he and the other hunters tried to get the baby orcas into a stretcher, the family was in a big line communicating and refused to leave when their nets were removed. At that point, he realized he was kidnapping a child from its mother. On the verge of tears, he said it was the worst thing he’d ever done. When the hunt was over, there were three dead whales in the net. Crowe and two others cut the bodies open, filled them with rocks, put anchors on the tails, and sank them. Orca hunters were ejected by the state of Washington in 1976. The order specifically told SeaWorld to stop capturing killer whales, so they went from Washington to Iceland and began capturing there.
@dragonstooth4223 Жыл бұрын
@@marquisdelafayette1929 yeah that's made even more horrifying when you know things like Orcas have culture and family bonds like we do and their maturity rate is about the same as us (its somewhere around the 15-18 years mark that the whales mature). Orcas are about as complex as us, they just don't make things like we do. and worse ... there are still captures going on today for the trade. China for instance loves putting marine mammals in captivity for entertainment. Russia is more than happy to help them with it too.
@alexandriarennie5992 Жыл бұрын
Actually pods are known now to each speak a different language so if one was to join another pod they wouldn't understand what they are saying pods that are created by orcas who were cast out lost or just left aren't even good enough at hunting to hunt large game like actual pods
@zamis21 Жыл бұрын
We were lucky enough to see him in Newport before he left. He seems to love watching baby's and little kids. He seemed to seek them out and would float in front of them. I think the cost of helping Keiko was more then worth it. He died of pneumonia.
@chibicheeks78 Жыл бұрын
I’ve seen dolphins do that at sea world. A toddler in a stroller was plopped in front of one of the viewing windows and the dolphins crowded in front of him. I think it’s because they sense the purity of children and they’re drawn to it
@aina3387 Жыл бұрын
@@chibicheeks78 One of my favorite things about mammals is their ability to recognize babies of other species.
@ye11owman29 Жыл бұрын
@@chibicheeks78 nah cause they want to eat them. i think ur applying some kind of intelligence or human emotions to these animals. plus babies are not pure. they are basically shells w/no one inside of them
@jturtle5318 Жыл бұрын
@@aina3387 my personal observation of that was with horses, the mares always loved kids. I had a mare who could be a bit wild, but the neighbor's kids would go in the field with bouquets of dandelions (she couldn't get enough) and walk under her belly.
@DutchIsraeli Жыл бұрын
This was beautiful! The ending was sad, yes, but still. His life was better by far than staying in that pond in Mexico. Well done and thank you to everyone involved in this! ❤❤❤
@abiekanzy76198 ай бұрын
Freedom is bad for keiko, he did not know how to survive,he was bullied by other orcas. Freedom was not the answer. Leaving him in conservatory is the best option.
@mytruthmylife87258 ай бұрын
Goodness just makes me cry every time. I used to cry watching free Willy every time. We miss Keiko
@MishaSims Жыл бұрын
i went and saw keiko at the oregon coast aquarium on july 16, 1995. it was my friend’s birthday gift to go to the aquarium. i was amazed and we got to feed him as well. i’m 43 now and i was 16 when i saw him. i donated $5000 to help keiko heal. i’m a native oregonian and the oregon coast aquarium has been helping pacific and other aquatic animals for a very long time. seeing keiko is one of my most cherished memories
@codijo-myalaskandog1222 жыл бұрын
This VERY interesting biography of WILLY - aka: KEIKO (his real name) was well done... to ALL OF USE WHO LOVED HIM! ❤
@rhondasorensen8674 Жыл бұрын
He died exactly 8 days after my dad died. My dad died from undiagnosed and untreated Cystic Fibrosis. Keiko died from pneumonia, the fact that they both died of lung issues hurts my heart. Me and my dad LOVED Free Willy and watched it together as a family countless times. I had no idea what happened to him until now. Thank you so much for this video. RIP dad and Keiko. 😔🖤🖤
@SunriseSunsetSoul Жыл бұрын
🦋🌌💙
@jeanninelockridge5235 Жыл бұрын
So sorry for your loss. I lost my dad too. We would watch Free Willy together all the time❤️
@liveuser8527 Жыл бұрын
Sorry, Are you trying to tell me your Dad reincarnated as a whale?... Sorry I wasn't really paying attention to your comment so please clarify
@theothertonydutch Жыл бұрын
@@liveuser8527 You can not be this dense.
@liveuser8527 Жыл бұрын
@@theothertonydutch all I know is..Whales are psychic coinduits
@GrapeApe2018 Жыл бұрын
Because of what was learned from Keiko's journey, There has now actually been a successful release. They kept the project out of the media. They didn't hide it, they just didn't seek publicity. The whale is integrated into a pod, is healthy, and completely independent.
@austrobok2958 Жыл бұрын
how long had he been in captivity?
@GrapeApe2018 Жыл бұрын
@@austrobok2958 I'm not sure. I think they said in the documentary. It was a BBC Earth project.
@kylestrange4494 Жыл бұрын
Can't believe this. It would and should be in the media because of the scientific impact it would have. The world would know about it already
@kylestrange4494 Жыл бұрын
@@GrapeApe2018 watch it. Not alot to go off of in a video thats less than 3 minutes long but these orca were captured as adults and put into the whale jail in Russia. But when released they did so iwhere the orcas were captured from. All these things cannot be matched when talking about captive whales in SeaWorld and others that have been born in captivity. There are not any orcas currently in the US that were captured in the wild. Russia or China thats a different story. We will not have the same success in this video if we try to do this with orcas that were born in captivity. Thats literally the point
@austrobok2958 Жыл бұрын
@@kylestrange4494 So the lesson is: don't breed them in captivity. Just 'borrow' them from the wild for a couple of years then get them back to the sea.
@narwhalking27886 ай бұрын
I was anxious after each transition for you to say "then... Keiko died. " The pauses were unnerving.
@jollythesmith6568 Жыл бұрын
Growing up in Oregon in the 90s i remember being one of those kids writing letters with the rest of my class thanking the group of people who were working to get Keiko to Newport and once they did our class took a trip across the state just to see him in his new facility there. Pretty interesting to look back at it now as an adult and being able to see some other perspectives on the situation.
@birdieberry Жыл бұрын
Oregonian here. I got to see Keiko in Newport; we were so proud to have such a great facility for rehab. Such a cute animal!
@BubblegumLightsaber Жыл бұрын
Same here, also Oregonian. I was a teenager at the time and was on vacation with my family in Lincoln City in the summer of either '96 or '97 (I'm leaning toward '97), and one day we drove up to Newport to visit the Oregon Coast Aquarium and see Keiko.
@jordanjoestar-turniptruck Жыл бұрын
Yep, his tank has since been converted into a shark tunnel. It's a great experience! A gentleman working in the gift shop will absolutely talk your ear off about sharks as long as you let him!
@megschmeedafamc Жыл бұрын
I was going to comment this as well. I was about 10 or 11 when I got to see him. Such an amazing creature.
@amyc2546 Жыл бұрын
Is it still in use or usable now?
@NightOwl-M Жыл бұрын
They should let him play with the local, he seemed happy with the human interaction and the freedom in the real ocean. You can’t expect him to be fully wild orca after live so long in captivity.
@jewelvex Жыл бұрын
In theory that would be amazing, as both keiko and humans would benefit from the experience. In reality, however, there is a notable danger to the humans that keiko interacted with. If he had accidentally or purposefully hurt one of the people he swam with, things could have ended much worse for him
@modkip25 Жыл бұрын
but it's still dangerous lol
@ForeverHobbit Жыл бұрын
have you seen what captive orcas have done to their caretakers? Don't play with a fucking orca, captive or not. Can be a life's experience in a way for 1000 people then 1 guy gets trashed and killed
@SaraNightfire1 Жыл бұрын
@@jewelvexAnother big factor is that people aren't always kind to animals. Especially wild ones. There are stories that I read growing up where dolphins would follow and get extremely close to ships. Most ended up being shot at by passengers after they made headlines. Or so close to shore manmade things would kill them.
@mb207 Жыл бұрын
Until somebody got hurt and he would have been put down. STOP TREATING WILD ANIMALS AS THOUGH THEY ARE PETS
@michaelbreeland88233 ай бұрын
He had the opportunity to taste freedom for a while and that's what matters. What a sweet animal. Thanks for the video.
@braddydaddy8818 Жыл бұрын
Keiko was like how we view our dogs today. He needed human love because that’s all he ever knew. As an Oregonian I am so proud we took him in
@frostbitetheannunakiiceind6574 Жыл бұрын
I cried when Keiko's named was translated to "Lucky One". he lived up to the name
@mostlyghostey Жыл бұрын
I did not plan to get this emotional about an orca this late into the evening. This was a very well done documentary. Great job!
@Alisonws Жыл бұрын
@@chairmanofthebored8684R.I.P. Tokitae 🌊🐳🌅
@DoctorZombooАй бұрын
I remember just seeing his drooped dorsal fin as a child and being so sad about it all the time. Especially when I heard it was caused by the fact he was kept in shallows so couldn't deep dive or swim miles to keep it properly strengthened and functional
@hannahk1306 Жыл бұрын
Whilst this wasn't the sunshine and roses ending that people hoped for, it still gave Keiko a better life than he had at the time of filming. His story reminds me of how they release orphaned orangutans back into the wild. The babies are basically hand-reared by humans (they even wear nappies!), then as they grow up the young orangutans move through different stages of forest school learning how to be an orangutan and becoming less and less dependent on humans. Finally, a group of young adult orangutans are taken deep into the forest to form their own blended family unit (they've usually grown up together and have been observed getting along). I wonder if something like this could have been looked into whilst they were getting Keiko back to health? Hopefully, lessons were learnt from Keiko's story in how to help other orcas.
@ASurfgirl Жыл бұрын
Yes I agree. I feel like ppl who want to keep orcas in captivity are making this bout SEE they can’t survive! When there is an orca released in Russia that is with a pod now. I’m pretty sure thousands of cetaceans if not a million have died because of being put in captivity. Slaughtered so they can steal their calves dying from trial & error learning to KEEP them in captivity at all and DEFINITELY dying in deplorable living environments IN captivity. So ppl just want to scrap it cause oh keiko died. I think Keiko would want us to keep on trying to end captivity no more stealing animals from the wild, no more breeding them I’m captivity and keep trying nothing is impossible. Even IF they have to live in sanctuaries it’s better then the way they are living in captivity, The first whale I ever saw in captivity I still remember her name was either Anore or illamar I don’t know which it was a school trip they were Beluga whales I’ll never forget we both recognize each other’s sadness before I was rushed to the next exhibit. I recently found her name cause I looked up what belugas were at that aquarium at that time knowing my age then. They were there only from 1985 til 1989 when illamar died of a bacteria infection and in 1991 Anore was killed by a “supposedly” dolphin attack I’d rather they TRY and free them there was 2 more Belugas came after the Kia and Sikku they shipped off to San Antonio or sea world right after Anore died I can find no further record of them cept one article Sikko was helping another whale keep her new born calf alive by helping it to breathe but it died. It’s like they “conveniently” disappeared meaning they are dead and hidden and ppl do not know how many times that happens. Also yes I’ve seen that show or documentary you speak of I’ve sworn off palm oil because of it. And those ppl do amazing work that’s WHAT we need here more work to undo this terrible wrong
@bs6940 Жыл бұрын
Keiko was a truly kind soul
@joriankell1983 Жыл бұрын
How do you know?
@ye11owman29 Жыл бұрын
you don't know that.
@CUTESWON Жыл бұрын
Keiko killed 2 seaworld trainers...
@lenah111 Жыл бұрын
@@CUTESWONno he didn’t. that was tilikum.
@CUTESWON Жыл бұрын
@@lenah111 keiko killed alexis 2 months before tilikum killed dawn
@samantharenaud370 Жыл бұрын
At the end of the day he would’ve never survived as long as he did if he was left in Mexico City. And in Norway he did not have nets keeping him there and was allowed to come and go as he pleased. His caretakers said he would be gone for days sometimes. So he kind of got the best of both worlds. Just the awareness that came from Keikos journey was worth every penny they spent. If anyone is interested in researching captive orcas in DIRE need of this kind of help please look into Lolita at Miami Seaquarium, she is alone and in very poor conditions. And Kiska at Marineland of the Pacific, she is also alone and in a very small concrete tank and you can literally see the ocean from where she is captive.
@Alejojojo6 Жыл бұрын
Orcas live longer in Aquarium. Specially Orca cubs have a lower mortality rate at them than in the wild. It's a common misconception that people believe.
@lykiaookami6070 Жыл бұрын
@@Alejojojo6 Besides you being completely wrong since the life expectancy of captive orcas is around 10-45 years, while in the wild its up to 30-90 years, Medication to help the cubs live doesn't mean their tiny enclosures they can barely swim 3 body lengths in are amazing for them or the 10 fish they get for performing 20 tricks every 2 hours is enough, nor that the bare, sterile enclosures with no enrichment is amazing for their health and definitely doesn't cause them to self-harm and get aggresive. Orcas are incredibly complex animals, very much like we. Do you think you'd be able to live in a 2m² pure (insert whatever orca enclosure colour) box, with NOTHING in it and the only interaction/joy you get is walking nonstop in that 2m² box, escaping into your mind, blowing raspberries and every now and then from other people who tell you to do tricks and then throw a box of fries at you? Sure for a while, but not for long. We're very social creatures that need a lot of stimulus to be healthy mentally and physically because stress makes sick and kills, Orcas are the same.
@jpraz03 Жыл бұрын
I don't understand how this is still happening. It's sickening and what's it for to give some kids some smiles and laughs. They need to shut this down
@scrdart11 ай бұрын
😐 I'm conflicted. Someone said he was never forced to leave the pen and chose not to return. But what kind of life is it without a pod? If humans were his pod, why did they ignore him? If he's capable of surviving while still interacting with people whats the problem? Seems cruel. Obviously I'm just going off the video here. But this just seems like humans attempting to do the right thing because it'll make them feel better. Not what the best interest of the animal is. (The movie studio definitely got involved to mitigate any negativity towards them, not because they care about a whale.) When you're depressed, your immune system goes down. This could have been a contributing factor to the death. Someone said he was tired and stressed because he wasn't used to swimming the long distances. Either way, don't release a whale unless you find it's pod. Don't release a whale unless its ready to make the swims. Y'all wanna say "don't take whales in the first place" no shit. That's the obvious answer. But what do you do when the damage is already done? In my opinion, do a lot of what they did in their plan. Don't plan for release. Don't ignore your SOCIALISED animal. Just my opinion. You can take it or leave it.
@LatelyDrowsy5 ай бұрын
I agree. Keiko was free until humans drove him away and tried to force him to stay with other pods. While not malicious in their intent, they clearly took away his freedom in other ways and deprived him of socialization in their moral pursuits. A much better solution would have been guided tours where people could pay to see Keiko and see the whale in his natural habitat. While it wouldn’t be perfect, it would allow for a much better life.
@VAL420 Жыл бұрын
I grew up on the Oregon Coast and spent my childhood watching Keiko recover. I always kept an Oregon Coast Aquariun pass even to today even though the underwater tube that replaced him doesn't hit the same and I mostly go for the kids. After watching this yesterday and bawling my eyes out, I went and got the Oregon plate with gray whales that donates to marine mammals. Thank you for making me remember how beautiful Keiko's story was... it was easy to be upset they took him away and he died, but it was a good thing in it's own way. ♡
@Blackfox_Kitsune Жыл бұрын
kaiko was mentally damaged from years of isolation, just as any human would be. his immune system badly damaged from YEARS of isolation, poor care and all the other issues that only happen from holding them in captivity. but unlike many of those poor animals still held captive, HE got to die seeing the sea and feeling freedom.
@susanmccormick6022 Жыл бұрын
Maybe,just maybe,these tragic stories will discourage hoomans from interfering with nature for any reason whatsoever,though am not holding my breath.I am glad Willy found a taste of freedom,but so sad about the outcome.I hope people will have learned their lessons but frankly,doubt it.Homo stupidous has not got a good track record for other species welfare,ask the dodo,great auk, Tasmanian tiger & others.I sincerely hope merefolk,Big foot,Nessie & others rumoured to exist,are never found Because if they are,I dread to think what would happen.As a species,humans are the pits.Thankfully,there are more & more who are seeing the light.May their numbers grow & lessons be learned.
@maxdurbin3033 Жыл бұрын
I'm isolated and does anyone take ME to the sea? No, no they do not. Why'd HE get to die seeing the SEA and feeling freedom and I DON'T?!?! I'm am intelligent albeit mentally damaged individual. NOT FAIR
@NoFaceMaiden Жыл бұрын
@@maxdurbin3033 you have the means to escape and get to the sea by yourself, go for it. lol
@austrobok2958 Жыл бұрын
He was physically never in shape as his dorsal fin never straightened. Meaning he never went on high speed deep dives while hunting..
@maxdurbin3033 Жыл бұрын
@@NoFaceMaiden No, you don't understand. I'm very fat, not unlike a whale. My enormous gut and limbs do not suport their own weight. Please explain why willy gets special treatment.
@Geelow_Swingin Жыл бұрын
RIP Keiko…you’ll always be a part of my childhood and immortalized through Free Willy ❤
@katiedunn14653 күн бұрын
I have to think he was always surrounded by people and he was never alone , and to seeing him to died alone is so sad .But in the movie 🍿 was absolutely amazing and loving .Sometimes freedom is not that good what we are thinking of 💋
@Fred_Nickles Жыл бұрын
This movie was huge to my childhood, and this documentary brought me to tears 😢
@TalkingHands308 Жыл бұрын
I feel like since Keiko didn't seem like he disliked people, he actually really seemed like he liked them, they should have just kept him in Oregon. There he had a nice big space to swim in, he was kept in salt water like he was supposed to be, was being treated well, unlike in Mexico, he would have lived a long happy life there. They could just do without the performances and just let him swim as he pleases and get regular visits from his handlers for company.
@ye11owman29 Жыл бұрын
best place was the bay in Iceland
@CUTESWON Жыл бұрын
It wasn't mentioned but keiko killed a couple trainers at sea World, I believe it was one woman trainer keltie (cant remember her last name but may she respt in peace) and a male trainer named alexis martinez (RIP) Unfortunately I think being in captivity lead these beautiful orcas to have psychosis episodes or something along those lines. The sea pen they made would have been ideal to keep keiko in for his own sanity but what upsets me most is we know this is a possibility yet still have orcas in fishtanks to this day. They need sanctuaries honestly and keikos pens would be ideal to have used again for other orcas still in captivity.
@TalkingHands308 Жыл бұрын
@@CUTESWON ah, didn't know that. Thought Keiko adjusted well to being in the larger tank.
@CUTESWON Жыл бұрын
@@TalkingHands308 yes I agree, definitely should have kept his Iceland pen accessible for him to come and go as he pleased, may have found some kind of decent balance given all the trauma he went through, he needed humans I think, despite having those incidents, he became accustom to us and it seems unfair to have ignored him when he tried to make contact. I do wonder if his pen would be suitable for some of the orcas still in captivity today though 🤔
@TalkingHands308 Жыл бұрын
@@CUTESWON Yah, that was sad, like it's one thing to force human interaction on him, but if he's seeking out human attention, I don't see why it's bad to let him have what he wants...
@atomicastronaut2456 Жыл бұрын
I was wondering what happened to my favorite childhood whale. It breaks my heart that Keiko never fully recovered.
@youv65893 ай бұрын
I am so happy this happened. It was one of the last times humanity was sane. Animals are meant to be free but, the situation made it different. I think Keiko knew there was more and that he understood that we were trying to help him. He did live better and felt better once he was freed but, it kind of makes sense that he didn’t fit in. And he missed us when that happened. He did feel loved, he did feel free eventually, he was cared for for the most part. I hope he didn’t feel too sad for being alone. Keiko was special and we still love him. And thank you for the movie.👍
@SardonicJackrabbit Жыл бұрын
Okay, but its infinitely better to have the ability to swim freely than live in a literal swimming pool, despite size, though I think they should've set up a station for him to visit (so he wouldn't end up like Luna) since they saw how he needed the socialization he wasnt getting; Having had him in a tiny pool wouldntve made the same care better somehow, but it's clear he used the space he was given even if he saught out something familiar.
@CleverGirlAAH Жыл бұрын
It's a sad ending.... But the boy died in his home land. That alone is a tremendous thing. And, really... We did learn a lot from this as well. And continue to restrict large marine mammal captivities as a result.
@bonghitsandheavyriffs Жыл бұрын
when you mentioned keiko would wait for his caretakers to stop ignoring him because he thought they were playing a game i fucking lost it 😭😭
@meme0619 Жыл бұрын
😂😂
@geleeegelee9625 Жыл бұрын
@@meme0619 i dont see what’s funny
@GrumpyWolfTravel Жыл бұрын
I'm a native Oregonian, and remember when they brought Keiko to Newport, I got to see him once as a kid. I love newport and the Oregon aquarium and visit several times a year. The place where keikos pen once was is now a sea bird exhibit.
@MukiBlalock12 сағат бұрын
I got got to see KEIKO in Newport, OR. In the 90's. I was just about 11-12 and I remember pretty vividly how incredibly small his tank was! His fin was drooped over and he didn't look too healthy. 😢
@Fiox333 Жыл бұрын
While I think that the whole idea of freeing him and reintroducing him to the wild was stupid and doomed from the start, the whole endeavour has for me a positive outcome even though he never really returned to be free. We threw money into reversing an unjustice and while capturing him might have been easy, releasing him is not. So I hope that Keiko's story in the end encourages people to focus on prevention instead of failed tries of undoing a wrong. ( This advice can be used for pretty much everything.)
@plasmicats2000 Жыл бұрын
Did it fail tho? It was free willy not return willy to his family.. as unfortunate as it is
@acefalcons4903 Жыл бұрын
He served a great lesson for humanity, and represent a model for the future that we need to let nature take its course if we did not intend to rescue and find his family pod within those early months. He lived well in that his life with humans served a great purpose to educate us all on wild animals injured or lost all to aid if possible by informing wildlife preserves to help them recover quick without public interactions, and release them back in the wild to their natural habitats.
@pharoahcaraboo9610 Жыл бұрын
Keiko’s story feels like a phyrric victory to me. He lived for 5 years only to get sick and die despite all efforts of his caretakers. He travels thousands of miles but never integrates into a pod. He is lonely and seeks out human companionship whenever possible. Reading these comments it seems we’ve finally had a successful orca captive release, which is good, but I’m of the opinion for most of the captive orcas we should try and give them the best possible care in captivity and let them live their life, and never let this happen again. We can never actually measure how happy Keiko was, or how stressed it may have made him. Orcas are definitely prone to being anthropomorphized thanks to how intelligent and charismatic they are- ultimately I believe we are responsible for doing what is best for them. And what is best for them may not be what we WANT for them.
@scottdelong1 Жыл бұрын
Indeed, the cost-benefit ratio was absurd. By utilitarian grounds it would have made more sense to grind up the carcass and feed it to the poor.
@tanepukenga1421 Жыл бұрын
@@scottdelong1 By utilitarian grounds it's also makes sense to do the same to human criminals. Morals exist for a reason, same as guilt.
@scottdelong1 Жыл бұрын
Even proponents of the death penalty admit it has no deterrent value. The Innocence Project alone has freed 375 death row prisoners. Additionally, it costs approximately 10 times as much to execute a human than to imprison them for life without possibility of parole ( the logical sentence for the worst criminals). The only countries that still use this barbarity (capital punishment) are Cuba, Red China, N. Korea, Muslim theocracies, and a few assorted dictatorships. The civilized world has figured out decades ago that it doesn't work, costs too much, and kills innocents. Immoral, if you will.
@tanepukenga1421 Жыл бұрын
@@scottdelong1 What does that have to do with the utilitarian concept that food is food?
@anyagetman8596 Жыл бұрын
@@tanepukenga1421 ground human criminal will taste like cannabis, which makes me sick.
@RikentАй бұрын
Free Willy is the first movie I had on VHS and I probably ended up watching it 100s of times as a kid and this is my first time hearing about this and it makes me so sad 😢 I get the sense that people just wanted to live the story of the movie selfishly through freeing Keiko. Props to the people who got Keiko the treatment it needed and got it trained and moved back to Iceland, but I wish they didn't tunnel vision on trying to free the orca like in the movie and instead focused on what's best for it. After they realised that the other pods didn't want Keiko and that it was hanging around humans, their plan should have changed from freeing it to taking care of it.
@denniscrane9753 Жыл бұрын
I remember donating to this as a kid! Pretty wild to see so many years later what actually happened!
@Princess.Kathleen26 Жыл бұрын
Keiko's story is sad, especially since they were unsuccessful in integrating him back into a pod. His story also gives me hope, however for other captive orcas. They may not be able to integrate fully, maybe a lucky few will (who knows?), but researchers and caretakers can earn from Keiko's story and make a difference in the lives of other orcas in captivity. An ocean sanctuary is a much better option than a concrete pool. I choose to hang on to the hope that Keiko's legacy gives captive orcas, like Lolita who may actually be returning to Puget Sound after 50+ years in captivity.
@cindyjulian9534 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. He was free and he enjoyed people because he wasn't forced into anything. I'm glad he was around lot's of people who loved him. I love that movie especially when he was freed.
@michaelallen2971 Жыл бұрын
Wasn't forced? How about I put you in a cage and make you do tricks for food?
@trigularity11 ай бұрын
This project is a good proof of concept. Proves two concepts: 1. That large aquatic captive mammals can be mostly rehabilitated. 2. the final step, social integration, is still beyond the scope of modern scientific research, and it is this specific phase that requires further in depth study.
@quinneishahood2259 Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate this video! I'm so glad to see so many people care! Much as I watched Free Willy growing up this is a great update 🙂
@YochevedDesigns Жыл бұрын
Keiko was not a failure. He may have died young, but he died free. The sheer amount of information that marine biologists and animal behaviorists have collected on this project is going to benefit many, many animals for years to come.
@ChrisM-wv4gs Жыл бұрын
He was also alone and miserable
@Dust5O2 Жыл бұрын
@@ChrisM-wv4gs which he was for his whole life anyway.
@oliverallen3713 Жыл бұрын
@@ChrisM-wv4gs his physical and mental well-being actually improved greatly from wh3n he was rescued. Alone yes, but able to explore hunt, behave like a whale. Only thing missing was the social side once he swam off
@ChrisM-wv4gs Жыл бұрын
@oliverallen3713 that's good to hear
@Nocturnalux Жыл бұрын
@@oliverallen3713 The “only thing” was something he direly needed, though. For a gregarious species to be cut off from peers is probably hell.
@amynazza Жыл бұрын
I wonder if they had rehabilitated 4 or 5 captive whales simultaneously if they could have been released together as their own pod? It seems like Keiko was fine except for loneliness so having a pod to be released with may have solved that.
@Johannes2128 ай бұрын
I thought about that too it would be so nice if something like this were possible but it could be difficult because most of the killer whales in captivity don't belong to the same family so they can't really communicate and I don't think they can learn other languages sadly :(
@moquilla1 Жыл бұрын
This movie was from my childhood, loved it. Thanks for this, I had no idea.
@benmcreynolds8581 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this. I was born in 1989 and lived in Corvallis, Oregon and my parents took me and my lil brother to see Kaiko so many times until his release. I actually just found some photos of him in a old family photo album. Thank you for this! Seriously
@howardroark7726 Жыл бұрын
This was Keiko's perspective: Kidnapped from his family and exploited by humans for profit. Some of the humans he met were caring but many were despicable. Suddenly, he's kicked out by his adoptive family. Other whales don't accept him because he's not one of them anymore. He tries to seek out humans, remembering that some were kind to him. At first they are welcoming and take rides on his back but suddenly they become cold and he's ostracised again. Occasionally some friendly humans visit him but they also seem aloof, hiding from him to encourage him to leave. He probably lost the will to live. RIP.
@crazydoggentleman7930 Жыл бұрын
Agreed, the poor thing didn’t deserve to feel abandoned after all he had been through. RIP Keiko.
@howardroark7726 Жыл бұрын
@@crazydoggentleman7930 Yea, the intentions may have been good but orcas are social. If he couldn’t fit into a wild pod, he should at least have had some human companionship. In hindsight, the Norwegians could have let people interact.
@sissysovereign1294 Жыл бұрын
I agree. I wouldn't be surprised that along with pneumonia, he also died of a broken heart.
@tanepukenga1421 Жыл бұрын
Your anthropomorphizing. How would a Orca have a concept of money and form an emotional resentment via that? From the Orca's perspective, all that can be said for certain was it remembered it's family vocalization and SEEMED to be lonely. Even then, the lonely part might be wrong since he didn't try to interact with the clans related to him and his previous interactions with Orca other than his own pod were violent and harassing. The best thing we can do for these animals is to stop throwing all our own human emotions, mindsets and expectations at them, hoping something we recognize sticks.
@howardroark7726 Жыл бұрын
@@tanepukenga1421 I didn't say Keiko had a concept of money. Please don't misrepresent what I said. I don't think it's a stretch to say he had interactions which were pleasant and other interactions which were negative. It's not necessary to have a concept of money for an infant to feel distress when it is separated from its mother. What is the basis for saying he didn't try to interact with clans related to him? He was not under observation at all times so what was observed was that he was in the company of a pod of orcas then subsequently he wasn't. I don't think it's unreasonable to think an animal that is social would be uncomfortable outside of a group. In Blackfish, a person who captured young orcas spoke about the distress and anguish the pods seemed to be when a calf was captured. I suppose you don't think that can be assumed to be some form of emotion so there's no reason for us to have a conversation again.
@Smokeyjoedamanedamythdalegend Жыл бұрын
Free Willy slapped so hard when I was a kid. I doubt it would stand up to the rest of time and still be good today, but as a kid it was one of my favorite movies. Honestly this video made me grateful my grandma and grandpa showed me animals as a young kid whether it be going to the zoo or watching free Willy, I feel like it’s why I’m an animal lover today
@Smokeyjoedamanedamythdalegend Жыл бұрын
Little morbid, but I’ve been a drug addict/alcoholic for years, I’d be around hard ass dudes, guns and drugs in the room, just tense vibes. If there was a dog I’d be playing and petting the dog the whole time I mean, literally every time if there is a dog I’m giving it some love. Funniest shit ever because the dealers never gave a fuck bout their dogs, they were usually their baby mammas dog so they just got annoyed by it and I’d be the one high as fuck loving on the dog not giving a damn what anyone thinks lmao. Like yea even in a bad environment a cute animal is a cute animal and I’m not ashamed to say it as a man
@katherineofarrogant6370Ай бұрын
Whales are very social animals, and can form very strong bonds. It makes me think that, on some level, Keiko may have been happy so many tiny, weird land monkeys cared for him so much.
@eternalgravity Жыл бұрын
I'm glad Keiko got the years of 'freedom' he did. I think with whales and dolphins, they needed to take into account that they're social animals that have strong social needs. And take one of these creatures away from its pod from an early age hindered the orca from being able to bond with others. He imprinted on humans. Humans were his pod. He knew how to interact with them. I had a mare, the last time she'd seen another horse when she was six months old. She was 10 when I got her. The video of Keiko by the boat, watching the other orcas, reminded me of her so much. She was an outcast and bullied, she didn't seem to understand their cues. She loved her humans, a big ol puppy. I can't help but wonder if there would have been a better outcome if he had another orca with him.
@bev1603 Жыл бұрын
People aren't aware that Keiko couldn't dive deeper than 20 feet nor hold his breath longer than 3 minutes. He was destined to fail.
@aina3387 Жыл бұрын
I had a mare who was alone for several years and was socially awkward towards other horses when I got her at 14. But I kept her with other horses and I'm happy to say that by the time she passed away she had a "boyfriend" who loved her too and took care of her during her last couple of years here on earth.
@joriankell1983 Жыл бұрын
@@bev1603so... It was like aliens dropping off a caged redditor on an island with savage natives. That's hysterical.
@clowns8421 Жыл бұрын
You sound dumb, your judgement is off, being alone is what caused him passing away.
@sissysovereign1294 Жыл бұрын
When you really think of it like that that's what poor Keiko became. A colossal sized puppy that was loyal to his humans.
@julkap4190 Жыл бұрын
I remember watching the documentary about him during the time when he was released to the sea and wasn't sure yet if he will join other orcas or not. I was happy and full of hopes that he will have a good life. The final ending surprised me. I'm so sorry that it ended like this. He still kind of had a good life, but I'm sad that he had only human friends. He kind of reminds me the cases of children being raised by animals. Those children also kept running away from humans back to the wild.
@Maple373 Жыл бұрын
You did such a good job on this! ❤️ I didn’t know most of his story and you’ve done a beautiful job telling it. I was maybe 13 when this movie came out and I watched it over and over on VHS. :) Thank you for sharing.
@DrFouFou20 күн бұрын
The translation ending was fking amazing. Well done, that hit good.
@joaquingr887 Жыл бұрын
Hi, just wanted to point out that Mexico City is a humid valley where it rains most of the year, not a desert, nor close to one. The hottest days of the year are around 80 F or 27 C, but that only happens during spring, by summer it is quite rainy with temps around 70 F. The rainiest part of the city is the south where Reino Aventura (now Six Flags Mexico) is located. I live in Mexico City and I went to see Keiko as a kid, I agree with you on the inhumane situation he suffered here so I don't have any complaints with that, only with the statement that Mexico City is hot and dry. Although the city is also quite high according to google it sits 7,200 feet above sea level, so I assume that was also a big problem for poor beautiful Keiko. Thanks for such a great video, and I'm sorry for being a pain talking about the weather in Mexico City.
@skuggensdam13 Жыл бұрын
I saw Keiko when he was in Newport, Oregon. He was very happy there because he had plenty of room and he was able to see people every day. During my two visits he followed me like a puppy while I walked along outside of his enclosure. Everyone who saw him wanted him to stay because he was healthy and happy. When they returned him to the wild he never adapted because he thought he belonged with people. He died from a broken heart because he felt abandoned.
@Sam-xr8ne Жыл бұрын
he died from pneumonia.
@leanneadams2549 Жыл бұрын
@@Sam-xr8neI highly dubt that. That’s what they told us.
@pandap4ntz Жыл бұрын
@@Sam-xr8neGetting sick with pneumonia is a "symptom" of his broken heart. When people are sad and stressed for long periods of time, their immune systems weaken, which means it's easier to get sick, the same is true for animals. Keiko's immune system was much stronger when he was in his new enclosure in Oregon, he should have never been released. He was forced to swim the open seas alone, struggling to hunt, longing for his people, stressed out and under weight, all because people were clinging to this idealistic notion of freedom. The solution is to not keep whales in captivity in the first place.
@Sam-xr8ne Жыл бұрын
@@pandap4ntz 😔
@oliverallen3713 Жыл бұрын
He died of pneumonia. Happens in nature. Did spend an entire yr as a free whale, feeding himself etc. Only failing was he never found his pod
@Chicharrera. Жыл бұрын
Keiko had swam all the way from Iceland to Norway all alone. When he arrived and was located he was stressed and fatigued. Dude, he was desperately swimming for hundreds of miles hoping to find land and human contact but was freaking out when none appeared. He was terrified. That's why he was found so stressed out. Depression can weaken one's immune system. He was so sad that he became sick and died from pneumonia.
@David27mk5 ай бұрын
Very sad way to go such an incredible intelligent creature
@stardustring3 ай бұрын
Just like humans depression kills
@GaryGlass13 ай бұрын
This is exactly what I was thinking. You're telling me a "healthy" Orca dies at the age of 26-27. He was definitely heart broken. I bet on my life that he would have been happy and survived another 30 years if they just kept him in captivity.
@theviledelinquent392028 күн бұрын
Seeing a whale loaded onto a plane to fly really puts the absurdity of flight into perspective.