Shangri Ta-Tas

In the second episode of the Wild Bites back, We travel deep into the jungles of New Guinea and explore the Shangri-La plane crash that Killed 21, and left 3 people injured and stranded in a land full of cannibal tribes. We also take a deep dive into the story of Tilikum, the world’s largest captive killer whale. and the Doomed encounter with SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau.

The Shangri-La Plane Crash

‘Suddenly, screams erupt from around the bend. Moments later, I see a throng of naked men brandishing bows and arrows on the riverbank. Kembaren murmurs to the boatmen to stop paddling. “They’re ordering us to come to their side of the river,” he whispers to me. “It looks bad, but we can’t escape. They’d quickly catch us if we tried.”‘- Paul Raffaele, via Smithsonian Magazine

KiliKili, the worlds most notorious Khakhua killer, claims he killed at least 30 Khakhua- photo by Paul Raffaele, via Smithsonian Magazine
WaWa, the 6-year old boy accused of being a KhaKhua by tribesman- photo by Paul Raffaele, via Smithsonian Magazine
WaWa one month after being saved from cannibal tribe members- photo via a VICE article by Georgia Rose ” Meeting the Cannibal Tribes of Indonesian New Guinea”
(L-R) Sgt. Kenneth Decker, Cpl. Margaret Hastings, and Lt. John McCollum were the only 3 survivors of the Shangri-La plane crash- photo via Mitch Zuckoff’s book “Lost in Shangri-La”
After their rescue, Cpl. Margaret Hastings was regarded as a celebrity- photo by B.B. McCollum

Devin’s References

A WWII Survival Epic Unfolds Deep In ‘Shangri-La’

Sleeping with Cannibals

Tilikum and Dawn Brancheau

 “Brancheau died from drowning and blunt force trauma. Her spinal cord was severed, and she had sustained fractures to her jawbone, ribs, and a cervical vertebra. Her scalp was completely torn off from her head, and her left elbow and left knee had been dislocated.”- Wikipedia, Dawn Brancheau

SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau- photo via thefamouspeople.com/
Dawn Brancheau laying in a pool with an Orca in 2005- photo via Orlando Sentinal
Tilikum during a slide out at SeaWorld Orlando-photo via an article by Sophie Turner ” Tilikum: A Killer Whale with a Killer Attitude”

Cody’s References

NOAA Fisheries Species Directory: Killer Whale

Whale and Dolphin Conservation: Orca (Killer Whale)

Whale Facts: Killer Whale Attacks

Wikipedia: Dawn Brancheau

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