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The Award for Best Comedy Wildlife Photo Goes to… | Tom Sullam | TED

Makinig/Video/TED Talk/The Award for Best Comedy Wildlife Photo Goes to… | Tom Sullam | TED

The Award for Best Comedy Wildlife Photo Goes to… | Tom Sullam | TED

TED Talk
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0:04I'd like to introduce you to this comedy wildlife competition.
0:09Now no one’s day will ever be as chill as that of a raccoon.
0:13Indeed, life throws bad days at all of us.
0:16And sometimes things can get worse.
0:19You can wake up with a bad hair day.
0:21(Laughter)
0:23Now the pictures you're seeing today
0:24are the result of a wildlife photography competition
0:27that we created to recognize the positive values of wildlife
0:31and how it impacts all of us.
0:34Now as the competition developed,
0:35we started to receive thousands of photographs,
0:38more than we'd expected.
0:39And these photographs began to communicate with us in many different ways,
0:44ways we might have expected,
0:46and then these ways.
0:47(Laughter)
0:49But we began to appreciate
0:51the qualities and charm of these animals,
0:57and we began to put pictures together that told a story.
1:01They can fly, which everyone knows,
1:03and everyone knows that cheetahs are the fastest mammal on the land,
1:06but no one knows they're terrified of being caught speeding.
1:09(Laughter)
1:12While we're on the subject of speed,
1:13woodpeckers make a rather unexpected appearance
1:16because they believe they're the fastest birds.
1:19They're not.
1:20But as we know in life, self-belief is about 95 percent of the job.
1:23(Laughter)
1:25Away from the speed merchants, you've got the sport jocks
1:29who maybe go out for a round of golf or not,
1:32depending on the round.
1:34(Laughter)
1:35Then you've got your left brains, the creatives,
1:38the ones that maybe focus more on their music, air guitar in the wild.
1:42(Laughter)
1:44And then maybe like dancing as if nobody was watching.
1:47(Laughter)
1:49Beyond that, you have the superheroes,
1:52the ones that influence the Marvel Comics.
1:54The Jedi squirrel, the most powerful Jedi in the world.
1:57He controls all the nuts.
1:59And then, probably even more frighteningly,
2:02you have the animal that can become completely invisible in any habitat.
2:05(Laughter)
2:06So what you're finding funny about these pictures, hopefully,
2:10is a little bit different to your neighbor
2:12and to the neighbor next to them and so on and so forth.
2:15And the result is that it's unconditionally personal, your reaction,
2:20which makes these pictures very accessible to everyone.
2:23But it also makes them cross-border and multicultural,
2:26which is why this competition has succeeded.
2:29This could be you and your best friend laughing till you cry,
2:35but it could also just be a very casual backhanded slap.
2:38It depends how you see it.
2:39(Laughter)
2:41And this? Well, this might be the morning after the night before.
2:45Exam time, could be anything.
2:48We started to see some more similarities as we looked at these pictures.
2:52This is the same family row that we all have.
2:55And within these families,
2:56you have partnerships with mature and intelligent adults
3:00who talk and understand each other.
3:01(Laughter)
3:03And those partnerships are normally made up of a talker ...
3:06and maybe a listener.
3:07(Laughter)
3:10The children also seem to show similarities to us humans.
3:13They need little or no supervision.
3:15(Laughter)
3:17They share without being asked, which is lovely.
3:20And fortunately they never, ever squabble.
3:23(Laughter)
3:24And then you have the teenage years.
3:26Well, the teenage years,
3:29they do the same thing.
3:30They have no awareness whatsoever.
3:32(Laughter)
3:34They have the very, very common traits of the staying-in-bed-all-day illness.
3:39Audience: Aww!
3:40TS: And then the even more common trait of too much screen time.
3:44(Laughter)
3:47And if they're not picking their nose on the screen or in bed,
3:51that's the cool kids, and they're out the back having a cigarette.
3:54(Laughter)
3:56Someone said, duck smoking quack,
3:58which I love.
3:59(Laughter and applause)
4:03But if you put a camera on these guys, they react like all of us. They love it.
4:06(Laughter)
4:08And if they love it that much, they start doing photo bombs
4:11even when you don't expect it.
4:12(Laughter)
4:13But at the end of the day, they stay friends
4:15and they come together for the most brutal of all things --
4:18the family portrait session.
4:20(Laughter)
4:22Comedy Wildlife, our organization --
4:25that's the three of us there, you'll recognize me on the left.
4:28(Laughter)
4:29We came together because we wanted to use a positive force
4:32to influence human behavior.
4:34We wanted to use humor to address the serious topic of conservation,
4:39and in so doing, encourage people to look up
4:42and appreciate what they get from wildlife.
4:44Too many messages are negative about conservation.
4:47We wanted to do it the other way.
4:49The heroes of this competition are the real photographs
4:52of wildlife doing funny things.
4:55The success of the competition is based on authenticity,
4:58and the amount of AI talk is great
5:01because this means that we're slightly different to everyone else.
5:04Actually, the success of the competition, the pictures have to be funny.
5:08Fortunately, life is filled with these moments
5:10just waiting to be captured.
5:13This is our 10th year, and each year we get tens of thousands more entries,
5:17unbelievably,
5:18and they get better and better and harder and harder to judge.
5:21But we do get there eventually.
5:24Cartier-Bresson, French photographer, talks about the decisive moment,
5:27that moment when you see an image through your camera
5:31and you press click and you take that shot and you make it permanent.
5:34This young lion would discover what a decisive moment could also mean.
5:38(Laughter)
5:39But as I said at the beginning, life is not all good.
5:42We have our bad days. That's my favorite.
5:44Audience: Aww.
5:46TS: But the bad days mean that life is also full of joy and wonder,
5:50and sometimes that joy and wonder converge onto the absolutely ludicrous.
5:55Our culture over the years
5:57has grown to create a divide between us and wildlife.
6:00The halcyon days of coexistence are now long gone.
6:04But we believe we can change that balance
6:06just by changing the narrative from negative to positive.
6:09My 13-year-old son,
6:12rather innocently and surprisingly sweetly,
6:15said he thought these pictures made the animals feel more human, more equal.
6:20In my mind, more relatable.
6:22And I agree with him.
6:24These images raise our spirits.
6:26They create a positive emotion.
6:28That positive emotion leads to empathy,
6:31and it's empathy which leads to attitudinal and behavioral change.
6:37The pictures I've shown you today,
6:39which are a tiny fraction of the thousands that we have,
6:42are a reminder to us that it's our job to be custodians of these tender moments.
6:48That we should accept coexistence rather than separation,
6:52complete separation from wildlife.
6:55And finally, that ...
6:57diversity on the planet is a privilege that we should cherish.
7:02However, we may have to be honest with ourselves
7:05and accept that some species may already have had enough of us.
7:10Thank you.
7:11(Laughter)
7:12Thank you very much.
7:14(Applause)