They spelled Cesar's name right...
I was asked to write a balancing piece on Cesar Millan for the Mail on Sunday but it was heavily chopped and didn't have the 10 points of how to spot a CM copycat trainer.... so here's the link to paper and the positive Cesar interview and the somewhat altered one from me (even spelled my name wrong online.... only used to write a column for them for eight years, but hey ho!)
The unsubbed article I emailed....
There’s a long queue
of people eager to stab Cesar in the back. His loyal fans claim we’re all just
jealous of his fame and fortune – but there’s a lot more to it than that.
Cesar is a proper modern-day
gladiator. People love to see him wrestle with snarling animals – he calls them
his ‘red zone cases’. Clips of him being bitten are shared rabidly across the
Internet.
He actually gets paid
to punch and kick dogs on TV, without getting arrested! In his defence he
claims he’s merely ‘touching’ them.
Alan Titchmarsh didn’t
let him get away with that excuse on his TV show this week. Alan said he’s seen
Henry Cooper touch people like that and it hurts!
If Cesar thinks a
‘kick’ to the kidneys is a ‘touch with the foot’ does he think a war is a
massage with bullets?
As Sinitta would say,
he’s just so macho.
He’s completely instinctual
and unscientific. He’s just made all his theories up as he’s gone along. Forget
operant and classical conditioning, flooding or learned helplessness, and boring
things like qualifications. He’s got much more interesting celebrity
endorsements and the best teeth that money can buy.
And best of all he
wrestles with powerful dogs that sometimes bite him.
Proper, positive,
scientific, qualified dog trainers won’t do that for the cameras.
Apart from the tweed
skirt, there’s not much difference between Barbara Woodhouse and Cesar - if you
stay away from his Red Zone. And bless her, Barbara was training dogs 35 years
ago when none of us knew any better.
Things really should have
moved on. American boffins wanted to teach dolphins to do subversive things with
weapons and they pretty quickly picked up on the fact that rewards worked a lot
better than punishment. It all there in the history books of animal training.
But someone pleasant
using a clicker and a bit of cheese probably isn’t going to get you sitting on
the edge of your sofa.
Much more visually
interesting watching Cesar zapping a dog with electric shocks, tightening up a prong
collar so the spikes go into a naughty dog’s neck. You’ll never see lovely Victoria
Stilwell kicking and punching (sorry ‘touching’!) a dog to get respect (or
ratings).
On Sky News this week Cesar
told Eamonn Holmes that electric collars were great for people with
disabilities to use on their dogs.
Apart from Welsh
people, obviously.
Everyone forgot to
mention that.
Use a shock collar in
Wales and you can get 6 months in prison or a £20,000 fine. Hopefully our creaky
animal welfare laws will catch up soon, too. For dog’s sake.
While Cesar’s X-rated red
zone clashes are badged “Don’t try this at home,” sadly many people do. Cesar’s
‘calm assertive’ overpowering masculinity may stop him being too badly bitten,
but sadly less assertive types can end up in A&E after a one-way trip to
the vets with their soon to be ex-best friend.
And that’s the core of
the problem, Cesar is at best a very guilty pleasure. But he’s not strictly entertainment
– people will try to emulate his methods.
But when we copy our other
TV heroes things don’t go anywhere near as badly wrong. Imitate Jamie Oliver’s
signature dish and you can always order a take away when we it all goes less
than lovely jubbly.
And how many people
have actually posed as a surgeon after watching Grey’s Anatomy? Hopefully very
few!
Yet Cesar Millan
copycats - whose only qualification is usually watching his show - are breaking
dogs in every town and city and calling themselves varients of ‘dog botherers’.
But, just as they probably
don’t have his gorgeous Hollywood smile - they also don’t have the benefit of
his ‘calm assertiveness’ or crucially his editorial control to deliver the required
happy ending that pet owners dream of.
Here’s 10 ways to spot
a CM clone…
1 If they Alpha roll
your dog. Anyone going on about being the alpha male isn’t up to date on proper
wolf hierarchy. And if dogs are really wolves – we’re all just monkeys.
2 “Touching” your dog
with either their fist or a boot. Suppressing bad behaviour with aversion won’t
cure it, just drives the problem deeper
3 Uses an electric shock collar to teach a dog
what is wrong. Many dogs become paranoid and aggressive after being zapped.
They’re illegal in Wales for very good reasons.
4 Approves of pinch,
prong or choke collars. Anyone who teaches a dog what is wrong rather than what
is right is on the wrong track
5 Claims your dog is
trying to dominate you if he just jumps on the sofa. It’s not just Gary Glitter
who made us uncomfortable about going on about the ‘leader of the pack’.
6 Anyone who goes
“pssstttt” at your dog is a Cesar Millan fan. Tell them to Pssstttt off.
7 Suggests you invest
in a treadmill. Cesar is a huge fan of this type of exercise, but dogs really
do love a good sniff on a walk, to them it’s like reading a newspaper.
8 Anyone who offers you
a quick fix to a complex problem is probably using punishment techniques. Like
pulling up a weed, you will hide the problem and it’ll probably re-emerge twice
as strong next time.
9 Has no
qualifications apart from the school of life and a box set of Cesar’s last
series.
10 Has no affiliation
with any group that is a member of the Animal Behaviour and Training Council (www.abtcouncil.org.uk). The only industry regulatory body with any
teeth.
They
are trying to impose some standards on animal training to protect our best
friends from this sort of abuse.
Comments
All in all, this creep is outdated and dangerous. Ask any victim of domestic violence if they feel 'calm and sumissive' after a beating, then substitute those words for 'terrified and frightened'.
All I will say is that I'm glad I don't know anyone with pro-Cesar comments; if they think it's OK to do the things that CM does to dogs (and sometimes worse!), I'd hate to know what they think is acceptable to do to their partners, children, and/or friends.
How very dare he say that disabled people would find an abusive electric collar useful. We are disabled not cruel or stupid.
At best that is narrow minded at worst it is discrimination.
All dogs can be trained using up to date kind methods there are trainers all over the world doing just that.