‘Marley & Me’ May Become an NBC Series

Get out those hankies…week after week after week, perhaps.

NBC has ordered a pilot for a TV series based on the heart-tugging book and movie, “Marley & Me,” according to Deadline Hollywood. The show will actually be a sequel to the story by John Grogan, following his family’s adventures A.M. (After Marley), when they take in an equally rascally stray puppy. His name? Marley, of course.

(This is not to be confused with “Marley & Me: The Puppy Years,” the 2011 prequel about the original Marley as a puppy. Who talked.)

If it’s picked up for a series, “Marley & Me” will focus on John and Jenny Grogan (portrayed by Owen Wilson and Jennifer Aniston in the movie) and their three kids, who return to Florida so the dog dad can resume his newspaper column.

David Frankel, director of “Marley & Me,” will also direct the TV pilot. It’s being written by Emmy winner Jenny Bicks, who also wrote for “Sex and The City” (including the episode, “Old Dogs, New Dicks,” which was not, er, actually about old dogs.) The cast of “Marley & Me” has not yet been announced.

“Marley & Me” grossed a whopping $243 million dollars at the box office in 2008. (Tissue manufacturers also probably did very well that year.)

Will the TV version be as popular? (“The original Marley must be rolling over in his grave,” wrote one skeptical commenter on the Deadline Hollywood story.) It remains to be seen whether Marley will be able to give Lassie a run for her money as the most popular TV dog ever.

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Veteran Donates Leg to Cadaver Dog Training Program

When Brent King, a veteran from Spokane, Wash., found out last year that he would have to have a leg amputated due to a bone infection, he decided to do something positive about it.

King donated the limb to the Spokane County Sheriff’s Office, where it has been put to use in training cadaver dogs to find bodies. Thanks to King’s leg, members of the Intermountain Search Dog Team were later able to locate victims of the horrific Oso mudslide in March.

KREM reports that King’s leg is being used in cadaver dog training programs from as far away as Wisconsin, and has helped hundreds of people.

King, who’s president of the Northwest Chapter of Paralyzed Veterans of America, has been paralyzed since 1994. While running an obstacle course during military training, he fell 22 feet and broke his back, according to a 2009 Spokane-Review story.

After losing one of his legs to a bone infection, doctors told King last year he would have to have the other one amputated, for the same reason.

King’s loss turned out to be a major gain. His donation has also inspired others facing amputation. Earlier this year, a woman from Idaho donated part of her foot to the cadaver dog training program, according to KREM.

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Green Acre Kennel Owners Charged with 22 Counts of Felony Animal Cruelty

NOV. 13, 2014 UPDATE: Austin and Logan Flake both pleaded not guilty today to multiple charges alleging they allowed 21 dogs to die at their kennel, ABC15 Arizona reports. “To accuse them of being animal killers is outrageous,” their attorney, Jack Wilenchik, told reporters. “The dogs were dead or in the process of dying. My clients comforted the dogs. People don’t understand the facts.” The couple’s next court date has been set for Jan. 2.

When nearly two dozen dogs died in June at the Green Acre Boarding Kennel in Gilbert, Ariz., the kennel owners claimed the dogs had chewed through a power cord, causing the air conditioner to shut off. They said the dogs — whose bodies were crammed together in a small room — had died of heat exhaustion.

Kennel owners Jesse and Maleisa Hughes were on vacation in Florida at the time, and had left their daughter and son-in-law, Logan and Austin Flake (who’s the son of U.S. Sen. Jeff Flake), in charge of the dogs.

When the Flakes found the dogs the next morning, they tried to hose them down and ice them, but did not summon emergency help.

“I said from the beginning it doesn’t meet the smell test when you put (so many) dogs in a 9-by-12 room,” Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio said at a news conference today, according to CBS5AZ.com.

The pet parents of the dogs who died didn’t buy the chewed wire story, either. (Initially Jesse Hughes had lied to some of them, telling them their dogs ran away from the kennel. “That’s the one mistake we’ve made,” Maleisa Hughes told KTAR last month.)

“How could it be an accident if the people that we hired to do the job left town and left our dogs and family members in the hands of someone else?” David Gillette, whose two Golden Retrievers died at the kennel, asked CBS5AZ.com.

After conducting an extensive investigation — during which the kennel remained open for business — the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO) determined that the dogs had not chewed through the wire. The doors to the room in which at least 30 dogs were kept was sealed with duct tape to prevent the stench from entering the rest of the house, according to the MCSO report. The lack of air is likely what killed the dogs.

Today Jesse and Maleisa Hughes were each charged with 22 felony and seven misdemeanor counts of animal cruelty, as well as one felony count of fraudulent schemes and artifices.

Logan and Austin Flake were each charged with 21 felony and seven misdemeanor counts of cruelty to animals.

Last month, several pet parents whose dogs died at Green Acre filed a civil lawsuit against Jesse and Maleisa Hughes. Attorney John Schill told KTAR the pet parents had been assured that Green Acre was a “doggie Disneyland” with a large yard in which to play — when, in fact, all the dogs were kept in the small room.

“My clients want change here. They want accountability,” Schill said. “They don’t want Green Acre to accept dogs in the future. They don’t want it to operate as a boarding facility.”

To raise awareness of animal cruelty and raise funds to help save dogs’ lives, the “Gilbert 23” rescue mission has been created in memory of the dogs killed at Green Acre.

“At least 70 dogs — who weren’t supposed to live through Saturday — were rescued in an effort by ‘Gilbert 23’ families hoping to turn their grief into something positive,” according to a post in late August by the Facebook community The Tragedy at Green Acre Dog Boarding Gilbert, AZ. “The $13,000 raised will be evenly distributed per dog saved to the partnering rescues to assist with their care.”

Today, when a CBS5AZ.com reporter asked Green Acre kennel owner Maleisa Hughes for a comment, she said, “It’s my beautiful daughter’s 15th birthday. Also, her high school volleyball team is undefeated, and they just took out Marcos in two. That’s my statement.”

Nice. Apparently she has no remorse over those 23 beautiful dogs who will never have another birthday.

The next court hearing is scheduled for Oct. 23.

Photo via Facebook

 

‘Bright and Alert’ Ebola Patient’s Dog Is Quarantined at Naval Air Base

Bentley, the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel belonging to Ebola patient Nina Pham of Dallas, is “bright and alert this morning. Looking good and happy to see us!” wrote Dallas Animal Services (DAS) today on its Facebook page.

Ever since he was taken by Dallas Hazmat from Pham’s apartment Monday, Bentley has been quarantined and monitored in a residence at the decommissioned Hensley Field, a naval air base owned by the city, according to CBS News. He has a comfortable bed and toys to play with.

Fortunately Bentley won’t suffer the same fate as Excalibur, the rescue dog belonging to an Ebola patient in Madrid. Despite hundreds of thousands of requests to quarantine the 12-year-old dog, Madrid health officials euthanized him last week, insisting that “available scientific knowledge indicates there’s a risk the dog could transmit the deadly virus to humans,” the Associated Press reported. (Just imagine the terror that poor old dog felt as strangers in hazmat suits entered his home, pinned him down and gave him the lethal injection.)

While it is possible for dogs to contract Ebola, there are no documented cases of them transmitting it to people. This is even less likely to occur in places (like Spain and the U.S.) where dogs aren’t usually around dead bodies and don’t eat infected animals, American Veterinary Medical Association spokeswoman Sharon Curtis Granskog told CBS News.

When it was discovered that Pham had a dog, Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings told USA TODAY, “This was a twist. The dog’s very important to the patient and we want it to be safe.”

Pham and her family are very grateful that Bentley’s life was spared. “DAS Operations Manager Dr. Cate McManus just got off the phone with Nina Pham,” DAS wrote on its Facebook page yesterday. “Nina thanked Dallas Animal Services and Adoption Center for caring for Bentley and appreciated the peace of mind of knowing he was safe.”

Photo via Facebook

Dallas Ebola Patient’s Dog Won’t Be Euthanized, Mayor Says

OCT. 13, 2014 UPDATE: The Ebola patient has been identified as Nina Pham of Dallas. Her dog appears to be a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel.

Unlike Excalibur, an Ebola patient’s dog who, despite hundreds of thousands of protests, was euthanized in Madrid last week, a Dallas dog in a similar situation will be allowed to live.

The health care worker at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital — who is the first person to become infected with the deadly virus in the United States — is a dog mom.

“This was a new twist,” Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings told USA TODAY. “The dog’s very important to the patient and we want it to be safe.”

Before the patient’s apartment is decontaminated, Brad Smith, of the hazmat emergency response company CG Environmental, told USA TODAY he will work with the SPCA and Dallas animal control officials to remove (and likely quarantine) the dog.

“We’ll assist with that,” he said. “We have the (personal protection equipment) that needs to be worn.”

According to the Dallas Morning News, a hazmat team member entered the apartment early this evening, and gave the dog food and water. The dog has no signs of the virus.

While dogs in West Africa have tested positive for Ebola, there are no documented cases of dogs transmitting it to people.

Along with hundreds of thousands of protesters, Javier Limon Romero, the husband of the Ebola patient in Madrid, had urged officials not to kill their dog and to quarantine him instead. But Madrid health officials insisted that “available scientific knowledge indicates there’s a risk the dog could transmit the deadly virus to humans,” according to the Associated Press (AP).

“There’s prudence and then there’s, ‘Let’s kill it so we don’t have to think about it,'” wrote Dr. Scott Weese, of the Ontario Veterinary College’s Centre for Public Health and Zoonoses, in the Worms & Germs Blog regarding the Excalibur’s euthanization. “The Spanish response to Ebola in a nursing assistant is a demonstration of the latter.”

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) spokesman Thomas Skinner told the New York Times the center recommends that Ebola patients with dogs or cats should “’evaluate the animal’s risk of exposure” — seeing if the pet ingested bodily fluids from the patient, such as vomit, feces or blood. If so, the pet should be monitored for 21 days, which is the incubation period for Ebola.

Photo via USA TODAY

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