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  • 21
    Jun
    2012
    9:55am, EDT

    Monkeys make mockery of monk's video

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING – They say working with animals on screen can be maddeningly unpredictable, even with Zen-like patience. 

    So there could be no better person to test that theory than a Buddhist monk, right? 

    Yen Shen, a monk who serves as a director of the Cangzhou Buddhist Association in China’s Hebei province was at Mount Emei – a popular tourist site and home to a well-known Buddhist temple – in western Sichuan shooting a little video about the beauty of the region.

    With lush forest and fog draped valleys behind him, Yen was speaking poetically about the beauty of the region and the need to take time to connect with nature. “As the years pass, let us bless our friends, let us bless everything,” he waxes on poetically in the video, “when the year’s pass let us bless spring and the autumn.”

    That’s when the monkey business starts. (Click to watch the video above). 

    Just 10 seconds into his monologue, what looks like a Tibetan macaque next to him starts grabbing Yen’s robes and playing with them. Showing incredible TV professional poise though, Yen continues talking about Buddhist spirituality without skipping a beat.


    Then 1:30 into the video, two macaques run up and jump onto Yen, turning him into a human jungle gym. Yen appears momentarily frozen in panic, but recovers and then continues talking; ignoring the growing giggles and chatter of onlookers.

    A third monkey joins in on the fun at 1:58, before someone hands one of the macaques what appears to be a cookie and pulls Yen out of the way.

    Further attempts to continue the video are derailed as one monkey who will not be denied his 15 minutes of fame, perches itself next to Yen and starts clutching his robe, only letting go long enough to devour more biscuits handed to him just off screen by a helper.

    As biscuit after biscuit is handed over to the ravenous monkey, Yen simply looks at him with seeming amusement, all while passersby yell advice on how to deal with the monkeys and urge him to look back up at the camera and continue.

    The video has racked up almost 1 million hits since it was posted on Sina, the Chinese web site, Wednesday. Online commentators mostly express admiration for Yen’s ability to keep talking despite the distraction. Strangely though, many more commentators seemed interested in discussing the monk’s “strange” accent as much as the rambunctious macaques.

    Regardless, a marvelous big screen debut by both man and monkeys. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    16 comments

    Those monkeys are nobody's fool. They realized that Grasshopper was dreadfully dull, so they figured they'd liven up his video so as to increase his viewership, thereby spreading his teachings to the world and earning much Buddhist meritorious good karma for their monkey-selves.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, video, monkeys, featured, monks, ed-flanagan
  • 15
    Dec
    2011
    1:56pm, EST

    'Tame' gibbon severely injures boy at Malaysian zoo

    Lai Seng Sin / AP

    A siamang like this one photographed in a cage at the National Zoo in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, attacked two children Tuesday.

    By msnbc.com staff

    MALACCA, Malaysia — A 3-year-old boy was seriously injured in the right thigh when he was attacked by an 83-pound gibbon at the Malacca Zoo, zoo officials said Thursday.

    The boy, identified as Afiq Haziq Kamarul, underwent a three-hour operation at Malacca Hospital after the incident, which occurred Tuesday afternoon, the New Straits Times reports.

    Read the full story at New Straits Times

    Afiq's mother, Anita Sulaiman, told the paper that the gibbon — specifically, a siamang, a tailless variety with black fur — appeared tame and was allowed to move freely among visitors.


    "Suddenly, the group of people who were standing near the gibbon started running away from it and shouted for help," she said.

    The gibbon let go only when another visitor kicked its stomach, she said.

    More monkeys in the news:

    • Last days of chimp research? Report calls for strict limits
    • Wild monkeys to help detect radiation from crippled Fukushima nuclear plant
    • Lab responds to PETA's monkey abuse allegations

    Agence France-Presse reported that the gibbon had earlier bitten a 5-year-old visitor on her right ankle. She also received medical treatment, according to Ahmad Azhar Mohammed, the zoo's director.

    Mohammad said zoo officials subsequently caught the gibbon and have quarantined the animal. The zoo is investigating how it jumped out of its enclosure, he said, adding that the animal could have been provoked by the visitors.

    A spokesman for the zoo told the Daily News of Malacca that zoo officials had apologized to the family and would help pay Afiq's medical costs.

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    2 comments

    There is no such thing as a tame wild animal. The very idea is an oxymoron.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: malaysia, attack, animals, zoo, monkeys, gibbon

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Ed Flanagan

is a Beijing-based producer for NBC News. In China since 2005, he has been a part of the team's China as well as regional news coverage.

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