PETA activists campaign for animals all year round. See photos from recent eye-catching PETA protests that grabbed headlines around the country.
PETA is urging the park to save itself from sinking revenue, attendance, and stock value by evolving beyond animal prisons.
Rather than tout SeaWorld’s contrived and meager conservation efforts, the company should devote resources to building seaside sanctuaries.
At SeaWorld, orcas, dolphins, and other animals are always in timeout.
The park had reportedly been trying to breed the juvenile orca “for years.”
Amid plummeting stock prices and ticket sales, scandal, and lost profits, SeaWorld now faces a class-action lawsuit.
On any given day, all around the globe, PETA’s often provocative actions turn people’s heads on the street, stop pedestrians in their tracks, and expose cruelty wherever it occurs.
We took to the streets of Orlando, Florida, and turned an average wall into a larger-than-life protest against SeaWorld.
Their deaths bring the total number of cetaceans who have died in marine parks this year to 53.
Animal rights advocates have to be braver, wittier, and more tenacious than the industries we’re up against. And PETA members have got guts in spades.
Join Mayor Levine in urging the Miami Seaquarium to free Lolita, who has been confined for nearly 50 years to the tiniest orca tank in the world.
The painful damage, including drilled holes and extreme wear from chewing on tank walls, doesn’t affect wild orcas—yet another reason why SeaWorld should empty the tanks.
Swim with whales and dolphins, explore coral reefs while fish dart out of your way, and play with a seal, all without harming animals.
SeaWorld’s violent response to protesters doesn’t help its ugly image.
“I will never forgive SeaWorld for what they have done.” —Eyewitness