Show Biz Grizzly Bear Kills Trainer
"Rocky" Wrestled Will Ferrell In "Semi-Pro"; Bear Bit Handler In Neck During Training Session
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"Rocky" the grizzly bear at the Forever Wild animal sanctuary in Phelan, Calif. in November 2007. (AP Photo/Christina Bush)
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In this still image taken from video released by New Line Cinema, actor Will Ferrell prepares to wrestle "Dewie the Killer Bear" played by Rocky the bear in a scene from the recent comedy "Semi-Pro." (AP Photo/New Line Cinema)
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Photo Essay Cuddly Cubs Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!
Three experienced handlers were working with the grizzly Tuesday at the Predators in Action wild animal training center when the bear attacked Stephan Miller, 39, said San Bernardino County sheriff's spokeswoman Cindy Beavers.
Stephan Miller is the cousin of training center owner Randy Miller, she said.
Pepper spray was used to subdue and contain the bear, and there were no other injuries, Beavers said.
The state Department of Fish and Game and Occupational Safety and Health Administration were investigating.
Sheriff's Sgt. Dave Phelps said the bear was a 5-year-old male named Rocky. The Predators in Action Web site said Rocky is 7½ feet tall and weighs 700 pounds.
The Web site identified Rocky as the animal that appeared with Ferrell's character in the scene from "Semi-Pro." Randy Miller doubled for Ferrell in the bear wrestling match, according to the site.
The attack took place during videotaping of a promotional video, said Harry Morse, a spokesman for the California Department of Fish and Game. There was no immediate indication Wednesday who had custody of the tape.
It's still a wild animal. Even though it may appear that the bear attacked for no reason, there was a reason.
Denise Richards, Moonridge ZooThere was no word whether the bear would be euthanized because of the attack. Morse said the attack occurred outside the agency's jurisdiction. Representatives of the county's Animal Care and Control Program did not immediately respond to a call seeking comment Wednesday.
Calls seeking comment from Randy Miller were not immediately returned Tuesday evening.
The center, located in the San Bernardino Mountains east of Los Angeles, has two grizzlies, and also trains lions, tigers, leopards, cougars and wolves for uses ranging from film and TV to advertising and education.
In a February interview, Randy Miller called Rocky "the best working bear in the business," The Sun of San Bernardino reported Wednesday. But the paper quoted him as adding: "If one of these animals gets a hold of your throat, you're finished."
Randy Miller won a World Stunt Academy Award for his work wrestling tigers in the 2000 blockbuster "Gladiator" and performed stunts with his animals in films including "The Postman," "The Island of Dr. Moreau," and "The Last Samurai." He also helped recreate animal attacks for National Geographic documentaries and the Discovery Channel.
It was not immediately known how long Rocky has been at the facility.
The attack prompted actress Virginia McKenna, founder of the international wildlife charity Born Free, to call for the entertainment industry to stop using wild animals.
"The movie industry urgently needs to use its technological and creative imagination to put an end to the use of live wild animals in commercials and movies," McKenna, who starred in the 1966 wildlife film "Born Free," said in a statement. "Hollywood is a dream factory - this time the dream has become a nightmare."
Native grizzly bears are extinct in California.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 42 CommentsToday with the advancement in computer graphics we don''t need animals to be used in TV commercials, let them stay in zoo and protected parks.
- beasy63
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I think it''s arrogant to think you know exactly the way animals think and don''t think and that they have no traits that mirror humans. They have fear, happiness, saddness, etc. Of course they have different thinking than humans, but you are very arrogant for assuming they are just robots with no emotion at all!! Who made you God to decide that?
Posted by misands at 04:03 PM : Apr 23, 2008
News Flash: Animals NEVER think like we do. If they did, bears, lions and wolves would have us on farms, fattening us up for their tables. Animals act on instinct. YOur cat acted on instinct. Humans have this nasty tendency to personify other animals. They act without thinking, if they tried to reason things out--by the time they "figured" stuff out they would be dead.
Stop trying to give human traits to animals. It is arrogant to think because we want to cuddle, animals want to cuddle. Because we want to be entertained by them, that they enjoy performing, that they just want to be loved. They just want to survive and to do that--they''ll learn to accept cuddling, being your entertainment, being ridden, etc--but they can no more control their instinct than you can decide when goosebumps will rise on your skin due to cold or fear.
2 bears fighting would naturally bite at each other. And due to their size, the amount of fat and fur around their neck, they would have survived that bite. Humans rarely respect animals and that includes humans who make pets out of them--we don''t do it for the animals--we do it for ourselves and our own neurosis.
Posted by taylor2124 at 12:04 PM : Apr 23, 2008
...and why kill an animal for doing what it does naturally? That is like trying to destroy water because it is wet or electricity because it shocks--it appears Al Qaeda and Bears are not the only ones that don''t think on these boards. LOL
Posted by USBrit at 12:33 PM : Apr 23, 2008
Why shoot him? Let''s just put him in the 100 acres with the bear. Enclosed, no way out and ...oh yeah we''ll give him pepperspray to fend off the bear. We can charge over 1000.00 each ringside to see how long usesomesense lasts against the Bear. Not to mention the side bets.
Posted by tireslinger at 11:55 AM : Apr 23, 2008
Timothy Treadwell. May he R.I.P (got his head torn off by a bear)
Posted by barbaraf4 at 10:26 AM : Apr 23, 2008
animals in long periods of captivity will be too acclimated to humans to survive in the wild. Often they will continue to seek out humans (who often hike or camp in the wild) and if they can''t get enough sustenance from the wild (because they don''t know how) they WILL survive by attacking, killing and eating people. He has bitten a person. Now he knows that it is doable and more importantly, that humans are FOOD.
he should be in a zoo where he can continue to be taken care of. Maybe he can be a stud and then his offspring can be set free.
Even bears who don''t have good survival skills become victims in the wild.
I have a cat (Oscar) who would sometimes attack my boyfriend and I when we were living in some apartments. Even a house cat can be scary when they "lose it". We were close to putting Oscar down, but after a lot of reading and consulting our vet, we figured out that Oscar was smelling a stray tom-cat that was spraying near our air conditioner. Oscar was smelling the other cat and "displaced" his anger on us because he couldn''t reach his true target. It was a lesson that what may seem like bizarre behaivor to us humans makes perfect sense to the animal. I''m happy to say after we moved, Oscar quit attacking us and has been a very sweet cat every sense.
No one may know what set Rocky off that day, but killing him would only make a tragic story that much more tragic.
[Posted by BOT5Plus at 01:42 PM : Apr 23, 2008]
this would be cruel and unusual treatment ... of the bear!
Posted by hbevis "
More people are killed by pet Rottweilers and other dogs than performing bears, statistically speaking it''s insignificant.
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