Friday, May 27, 2022
No Result
View All Result
TimesNewsNetworks.com
  • Home
  • World
    • Politics
    • U.S.
    • Opinion
  • Business
  • Energy
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • Food
  • Arts
  • Style
  • Books
  • Real Estate
  • Magazine
  • Travel
  • Video
  • Home
  • World
    • Politics
    • U.S.
    • Opinion
  • Business
  • Energy
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • Food
  • Arts
  • Style
  • Books
  • Real Estate
  • Magazine
  • Travel
  • Video
No Result
View All Result
TimesNewsNetworks.com
No Result
View All Result

Bug Out review: A $50,000 insect heist gets the Tiger King treatment

March 23, 2022
in Science
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A

A true-crime series on IMDb TV takes a slightly too po-faced look into a theft from an invertebrate zoo where things weren’t quite as they seemed

Humans



23 March 2022

By Elle Hunt

Bug Out reveals the world of insect collectors like Steve Lamond

Courtesy of IMDb TV

Bug Out

Ben Feldman

IMDb TV

ONE morning in August 2018, the chief executive of an insectarium and butterfly house in Pennsylvania arrived at work to find all his live exhibits had disappeared. “Shelves and shelves and shelves that should have been filled with creatures aplenty were empty,” says John Cambridge.

As tales of true crime go, the “Philadelphia bug heist” was immediately intriguing, not least because of the obvious question: what could anyone want with thousands of insects?

Now, the hunt for the perpetrators has been given the Tiger King treatment in a four-part documentary series for IMDb TV. As with the 2020 sensation featuring Joe Exotic, the most eyebrow-raising moments in Bug Out come care of its subjects that walk on two legs.

The Philadelphia Insectarium & Butterfly Pavilion grew out of a 1970s pest-control business called Bug Out that was run by an ex-cop who would display his “catch of the day”. Over the years, the displays got more elaborate and eccentric, and insect enthusiasts were drawn to them like moths to a porch light. It grew into the US’s first invertebrate zoo and, until the robbery, was a family-friendly attraction that chugged along seemingly without incident.

The series follows a broadly chronological structure, starting with the theft before spiralling out into the strange (and surprisingly endearing) world of hobbyists, collectors and traders of creepy-crawlies. On one level, it is an eye-opening insight into an unfamiliar – and, to many, unappealing – pastime, where people are eager to share their enthusiasm for rare cockroaches ($500 a breeding pair) and African land snails the size of small dogs.

A diversion into the booming illegal international trade in rare bugs and other wildlife shows the darker side of human nature, and our obsession with collecting and commodifying every aspect of the natural world.

But just as you didn’t watch Tiger King to learn about big cat conservation, Bug Out‘s real intrigue comes from the people behind the insectarium. In many ways, it is a study of what was a dysfunctional workplace that put human nature, not insects, under the microscope. The most emotionally affecting moments come from employees who fervently wanted to indulge their passion through their work, only to have their dreams crushed by a toxic working environment.

“Just as you didn’t watch Tiger King to learn about big cats, the real intrigue comes from the people”

Until the robbery, these dramas played out on a small stage. Then, the heist was picked up by local media and then national media. Before long it was being discussed by late-night chat-show host Jimmy Kimmel. As a result, Cambridge became a mini-celebrity and the police operation hotted up, with an additional FBI investigation that scrutinised some of the then employees’ surprisingly shady backgrounds.

The crime was more serious than it might sound: Cambridge put the value of the 7000-odd insects taken at as much as $50,000. But the loss of his exhibits was just the tip of the iceberg, as the seemingly wholesome family attraction was revealed to be beset by power struggles and financial mismanagement.

The documentary-makers’ efforts to stoke the drama to true-crime levels are occasionally heavy-handed, suggesting an anxiety about letting the story speak for itself. A dramatically lit corkboard linking suspect mugshots with sticky notes labelled with things like “motive = bugs” is presumably intended to lend drama to the police investigation. The dry humour of the investigating officers, meanwhile, is wasted by the overall po-faced tone of the show.

When the big reveal comes, in the fourth and final episode, it doesn’t quite deliver on the whodunnit promised in the first – in fact, it reveals the narrative to have been somewhat contrived. One gets the sense that the film-makers, having set out to tell the true story behind the Philadelphia bug heist, discovered a vastly different tale to the one they had anticipated and were forced to make the best of it.

The result is a highly diverting although somewhat unsatisfying series: a can of worms that, despite Bug Out‘s best efforts, cannot be tidily contained.

More on these topics:

ShareTweetSendPinShare

Related Posts

Science

Dementia: 7 things to do to avoid the condition even if you have high genetic risk

May 25, 2022
Science

Gun control: Firearm suicides are rising in the US despite declining globally

May 25, 2022
Science

Quantum internet: Teleportation trick shows promise for future secure networks

May 25, 2022
Science

A quantum computer could catch its own errors on any calculation

May 25, 2022
Science

Nuclear power: Do we need it to combat climate change?

May 25, 2022
Science

Covid-19 news: Reinfection eight times higher with omicron than delta

May 25, 2022
Science

Marjan Minnesma: Climate litigation pioneer wins Goldman Environmental Prize

May 25, 2022
Science

Biodiversity: Ecological toll of Japan’s switch to farming revealed by 1850s maps

May 25, 2022
Next Post

Pancreatic cancer immunotherapy based on tetanus shrinks tumours in mice

TimesNewsNetworks.com

Times News Networks is an online news portal that aims to provide the latest news about varies aspects from around the world. We promise to share only high quality content from the world's recent happenings . Feel free to get in touch with us!

What’s New Here!

  • Rangers staring at elimination once again: ‘Desperate hockey’
  • Bridgerton’s Ruby Barker Hospitalized for Mental Health Issues
  • Protests planned as annual NRA meeting set to take place in Texas days after mass shooting

Trending Now

  • Rangers staring at elimination once again: ‘Desperate hockey’
  • Bridgerton’s Ruby Barker Hospitalized for Mental Health Issues
  • Protests planned as annual NRA meeting set to take place in Texas days after mass shooting
  • Write for Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

Copyright ©️ All Rights Reserved | TimesNewsNetworks.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
    • Politics
    • U.S.
    • Opinion
  • Business
  • Energy
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • Food
  • Arts
  • Style
  • Books
  • Real Estate
  • Magazine
  • Travel
  • Video

Copyright ©️ All Rights Reserved | TimesNewsNetworks.com