Amanda Nicole Meade || \"Roaming Wild\" - Documentary
Description
Vocal Characteristics
Language
EnglishVoice Age
Young Adult (18-35)Accents
North American (General)Transcript
Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
This is Amanda Nicole Mead as the narrator for roaming wild. Since the early 1800s, wild horses have roamed freely, an icon of the west, but today their presence on public lands fuels a heated controversy. Some 30,000 wild horses roam 10 Western states, the only guy who lived just south of Salt Lake City are one of the many wild herds that roamed the west. Some of those herds descend from spanish mustangs, while others like bionic y descend from workhorses that helped settle the west. Wild horses live in family bands and have complex social hierarchies. Mayors nurture their foals, stallions, battle for dominance and the young ones play and squabble like siblings, deeply tied to our history and national identity. These horses live in our imagination as iconic symbols of american freedom and independence Cowboys have rounded up wild horses since the West was first settled and in the 1900s, the captured horses were often slaughtered and sold as pet food, But in the 60s, a massive public protests swept the country and more people wrote to Congress about protecting wild horses than about any other issue in history. With the exception of the Vietnam War. And in 1971 congress passed the wild free roaming horse and burro Act and put the Bureau of Land Management in charge of protecting and managing America's wild horses