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Wild Interest

Animal Talk: Paw Two

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People use language to express themselves, but do you ever wonder how other animals communicate with each other? If they don’t speak like us, how do they convey information? In our first Animal Talk episode we learned about the complex ways animals communicate, and how some species even have their own languages and dialects.

© Brain Broccoli Productions Length 50 min 5 November 2025 Season 1 Episode 16 ScienceHistoryNatureAnimalsGirl Power USA Episodic

Full episode description

© Brain Broccoli Productions Length 50 min 5 November 2025 Season 1 Episode 16 ScienceHistoryNatureAnimalsGirl Power USA Episodic

Welcome to Wild Interest!

Welcome to Wild Interest!

This is an episodic podcast, so you can listen to it in any order, but episode one is a great place to start.

Listen to episode one here

People use language to express themselves, but do you ever wonder how other animals communicate with each other? If they don’t speak like us, how do they convey information? In our first Animal Talk episode we learned about the complex ways animals communicate, and how some species even have their own languages and dialects. In “Paw 2” we find out even more about the amazing world of animal talk, and about the science behind linguistic development in animals. Evan interviews Dr. Irene Pepperberg, research professor at Boston University in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences about her groundbreaking work with Alex the African Grey Parrot. Dr. Pepperberg worked with Alex for 30 years and taught him over 100 English words. Not only was Alex able to communicate with humans, he even asked what color he was when looking at himself in the mirror, becoming the first known non-human to ask a question! Nichole goes beneath the waves with Dr. Aude Pacini from the Marine Mammal Research Program at the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology. Dr. Pacini records whale and dolphin song with sophisticated underwater microphones. She was part of an expedition where the world-class cellist Yo Yo Ma played music for whales from the deck of a famous Hawaiian canoe! Evan takes us down to North Georgia with Project Chimps, a chimpanzee sanctuary where over 90 retired lab chimps roam freely on six protected acres of forest. Our hosts are also joined by the very human creator of the Brooklyn Folk Festival, Eli Smith, who plays some banjo for us and talks about the upcoming festival this November 7-9. This episode is jam-packed, but don’t worry, we still found room for favorites like Cryptid Corner, Grandparent Stories, jokes and more. Let’s get wild!

Listen now and have a whale of a time - this episode's a hoot!

Parents: visit our website to help your kids contribute jokes or favorite sounds, or to send us a message.

Timestamps for this episode are available below.

00:00 - Episode 16 Intro

01:36 - Dr. Irene Pepperberg & Alex, the African Grey Parrot

14:03 - Joke Time

14:57 - Cryptid Corner: The Wow! Signal

20:09 - Riddle Clue

20:31 - Deep Listening with Dr. Aude Pacini

27:48 - Favorite Sound

28:35 - Call for Submissions

29:02 - Eli Smith & the 2025 Brooklyn Folk Festival

34:44 - Going Ape at Project Chimps with Caregivers Lauren and Tawnya

44:31 - Grandparent Stories: Papa Artie

48:22 - Riddle Answer

49:00 - Preview of Episode 17

49:13 - Credits

49:45 - Bloopers

The background music in our interview with Dr. Aude Pacini features audio of live performances by Hawaiian musicians Gary Haleamau and Ledward Kaapana, as retrieved from the Library of Congress.

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© Brain Broccoli Productions | 50 min

The content, artwork and advertising within this podcast is not owned or affiliated with Sound Carrot and remain the property of their respective owners.


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