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Curated Video
Rescuing a 90-Year-Old Turtle!
We rescued a very old box turtle and a teenage red footed tortoise from improper care. Both have medical issues and will need lots of special care and good husbandry from now on.
Curated Video
Rabies Scare
Jessi is bit by one of the animals and has to deal with the consequences of possible rabies exposure.
Curated Video
Our Rabbits: Head Tilt, Companionship, and More
All of our rabbits are special in their own ways, but sometimes unexpected circumstances make caring for them extra challenging. Providing the care they need no matter what comes along is both difficult and rewarding.
Curated Video
Opossum and Skunk Get a Wheel!
Ophelia the opossum and Lollipop the skunk get their first try on a huge running wheel. Do they like it? Will they be able to use it?
Curated Video
Rabbits! What, Where, and How
Jessi shares What rabbits are, Where they came from, and How to care for them in captivity. Cheeks plays the part of "rabbit".
Curated Video
Oldies But Goodies
Jessi shares some extra special animals that have been with Animal Wonders for many years. Some are old and some are still considered young, but they're all valued members of the Animal Wonders family.
Curated Video
Obstacle Course For A Porcupine!
Kemosabe the prehensile tailed porcupine is put to the test to see if he can sniff out a banana and complete the challenges to obtain the prize! 🙌🍌🙌
Curated Video
New Little Rescues - Feathers and Spines
Jessi and Augusto introduce two animals who were rescued from neglect and abuse. They need some tlc and medical care to get to a happy and healthy place. Animal Wonders is happy to be able to help them.
The Guardian
Autism rocks: meet the boys from The AutistiX
Jack, Luke and Saul are The AutistiX, the UK’s premier autistic rock group. The boys are a tight-knit friendship group, expressing themselves through rock and roll in a way that they struggle to off the stage. Can they impress the crowds...
The Guardian
The teenager left paralysed by 'one tiny mistake
Anna White was 15 when she had her appendix removed at the Royal Albert Edward infirmary in Wigan, Greater Manchester. The surgery appeared to go well, but in recovery she suffered a cardiac arrest and stopped breathing. The lack of...
The Guardian
‘I care, but I don't care’: What people in the UK really think about life after the Queen
Far away from pomp and ritual, John Harris and John Domokos spend time in three places where the themes of the Elizabethan age played out: Milton Keynes, inner-city Birmingham, and a former Yorkshire pit village. What emerges is a much...
The Guardian
From dealing drugs to delivering food: Pastor Mick on Burnley's Covid crisis
Pastor Mick Fleming has devoted all of his time in this lockdown to supporting the poorest communities in Burnley. But his life hasn’t always been this way. He tells us how he swapped a life of crime for delivering food parcels seven...
The Guardian
Sucker punch: small town boxing in rural America is going mainstream - but who benefits?
Rough N Rowdy offers local hopefuls, most with limited skills and little training, the chance to win $1,000 and make a name for themselves in the boxing ring. The event is being broadcast by Barstool Sports, whose CEO, Dave Portnoy,...
The Guardian
Europe’s 'baby bust' - can paying for pregnancies save Greece?
Greece’s population is falling fast, with low birth rates and economic instability hitting its island communities hardest. An unconventional new organisation, Hope Genesis, is attempting to inject life back into these remote areas...
The Guardian
UK: I'm British. Island mentality innit
‘I’m British. Island mentality innit.’ A bailiff clears out the house of an unsuspecting couple, but is angered by their surprise. Why should he care – British values have always put individualism at the cost of everything else haven’t...
The Guardian
Heroin to Holyrood? Man behind 'illegal' drug van runs for Scottish parliament
Peter Krykant, who operates a van in Glasgow where people can safely take illegal drugs, is running for Holyrood as part of a campaign calling for the Scottish government to establish legal sites. A former heroin addict, he is pushing...
The Guardian
One man's fight to get knives off the streets of London
Shocked by a series of stabbings in his area of east London, Courtney Barrett set up his own knife amnesty in an effort to get blades off the streets. As he collects 25 knives from members of the public outside Leytonstone tube station,...
The Guardian
I learnt a lot in juvie' : the Aboriginal boy who grew up in detention
When Jared turned 20 in November, it was only his second birthday since the age of 11 that he spent out of detention, hundreds of kilometres from his home. Here he tells Guardian Australia reporter Melissa Davey his story and speaks of...
The Guardian
My homeless brother died on the streets of Glasgow. Who will be next?
Mark Starr died on the streets of Glasgow earlier this year; his family found out five weeks later on social media. As part of the Guardian’s empty doorway series we retraced his final steps alongside his brother Tony. Did Mark have...
The Guardian
The ASMR videos that give YouTube viewers 'head orgasms
Online videos of soothing sounds known as ASMR (autonomous sensory meridian response) are increasingly popular. Fans enjoy the relaxing effects of these ‘head orgasms’. Here, the makers of ASMR YouTube channels including WhisperAudios,...
The Guardian
Why forcing cyclists to wear helmets will not save their lives
Bicycle helmets are compulsory in countries such as Australia and New Zealand, among others, but as the Guardian's Peter Walker explains this does not help save lives. Despite a series of helmet promotion campaigns in the UK, a growing...
The Guardian
How to See Through Fog: a portrait of a mining town in its darkest days
Queenstown, on the remote west coast of Tasmania, is known for two things: copper mining and the harsh gravel oval that is home to the local Australian rules football team. A series of deaths at the Mount Lyell mine brought operations to...
The Guardian
Automating Care: How algorithms are cutting Americans' healthcare
US states are using algorithms to figure out whether people are eligible for public benefits and how much care they should receive. But it isn't without its problems. For example, in Arkansas a combination of design decisions and...