Animals have amazing abilities that we’re just beginning to understand. So how well do you know them? Test yourself and find out.
As you binge on Netflix’s hit show “Money Heist” during self-isolation, be sure to keep an eye out for PETA friend and animal champion Alba Flores!
With Edmonds’ long history of animal welfare citations, PETA urged the USDA to close his seedy roadside zoo permanently.
Netflix heartthrob Miguel Bernardeau reminds fans that while their isolation will eventually end, animals in marine parks aren’t so lucky.
If you think this is going to be all about cruelty to animals, think again—the label “grass-fed” has way more problems than that.
Chewie has a vegan epiphany, Rose and Finn free fathiers—”The Last Jedi” is the best “Star Wars” movie. We’re willing to duel anyone who disagrees.
Artificial insemination, neglect, and death are just some of the things that go into butter production that the label won’t reveal. What else are butter labels hiding?
Can you imagine feeling so superior that what you scrape across your morning toast seems worth artificially inseminating a cow, stealing her calf, and—eventually—killing her?
Ghee is clarified butter, usually made of milk stolen from animals such as cows and goats. So how is PETA India making vegan ghee?
Did you know that tigers love to swim? “Animalkind” offers to teach you a great deal about the highly intelligent animals in our world.
From “cage-free” eggs to “humane” meat, supermarkets are full of deceptive marketing claims. Learn how cheese, eggs, and bacon are really obtained.
Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the “Man With a Plan” star is demanding a plan for REAL scientific research—not wasteful, cruel experiments on animals.
In her debut PETA ad, “Real Housewife” Tinsley Mortimer gets real about ending animal overpopulation and explains why no one should ever buy dogs from a breeder.
Alicia Silverstone and her son, Bear, share their vegan message with a new generation by recreating a photo of iconic animal rights couple Paul and Linda McCartney.
“[‘Doc’ Antle has] this very highly overinflated sense of self. He sees himself as kind of a guru. And so having followers or having animals that are subservient to him kind of bolsters that narrative.”