Tiger King, the bizarre new Netflix docuseries you can binge-watch this weekend
It’s been described as the “redneck Game of Thrones”. Start this new Netflix series and you’ll binge the whole thing this weekend.
Exotic animals, criminal plots and very bad mullets – Netflix’s new docuseries Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness hooks you in from its first few bizarre minutes.
The seven-part doco – which dropped on Netflix this week – begins with a grim statistic: There are more tigers sitting in cages across the USA than there are left in the wild.
From there, Tiger King takes viewers inside the fierce rivalries that exist among the underworld of big cat dealers across the US. These deeply eccentric people trade and breed lions, tigers and other big cats, keeping them in their own private zoos and often exploiting them for profit.
It’s a tragic story for the cats stuck in cages – but directors Eric Goode and Rebecca Chaiklin (Goode appears occasionally on camera Louis Theroux-style, giving the subjects enough rope to hang themselves) are far more interested in the unbelievable human stories to be found.
Star of the show is Joe Exotic, a flamboyantly gay redneck Southerner who runs his own private zoo, filled with exotic big cats – and staffed by down-on-their-luck keepers, a disturbing number of whom are missing limbs (the aftermath of one such gruesome accident is even caught on camera). Joe’s like the love child of Liberace and Joe Dirt.
When he’s not tending to his cats, Joe’s boiling over with rage at his mortal enemy, Carole Baskin, another big cat keeper who insists that her private collection is a sanctuary for rescued big cats.
Oh, and Joe’s also a country singer, releasing songs like this little ditty, in which he accuses Carole of murdering her millionaire former husband and feeding his body to her cats:
#TigerKing is by far the greatest thing Iâve ever seen on Netflix pic.twitter.com/ILTqZ2e5CR
— Ù@ln1982 (@ln1982) March 26, 2020
Even the smallest incidental characters in this gripping doco are deeply, deeply strange. Since the show dropped on Netflix this week, those who’ve given it a go have found themselves sucked into a world they never knew existed:
Finished #TigerKing and I think I went through every possible emotion on the human spectrum. It really is the redneck game of thrones pic.twitter.com/PlxCjNVF2r
— Hunter Tyson (@huntertyson30) March 26, 2020
Any previous answer I gave to âwho in the world would you like to have dinner withâ can now officially be changed to Joe Exotic aka Tiger King. That is my final answer. Thanks.
— Daniel Ricciardo (@danielricciardo) March 26, 2020
Since weâre all watching #TigerKing, can we please discuss this manâs interior design choices? pic.twitter.com/isKBaVacAG
— Courtney Altmyer (@Court_Alt) March 26, 2020
For those of you not watching, this ranks 237th on the list of most effed up things to happen on #TigerKing pic.twitter.com/wtjfdDOEbl
— Cousin Sal (@TheCousinSal) March 26, 2020
Me explaining #TigerKing to my friend... âHeâs like a gay Joe Dirt, high on meth who feeds his tigers old walmart meatâ pic.twitter.com/AEEJrO2ZYT
— N. P. (@nannyp9) March 25, 2020
When a documentary starts out with:
— Nay (@XcuseMyFro) March 26, 2020
âThe monkey people are a little bit different. You know, their kind of strange, but the big cat people are back-stabbing pieces of shit.â
itâs time to have a seat and tweet!#TigerKing pic.twitter.com/m1OXqlXOvJ
Me trying to figure out who Iâm supposed to root for #TigerKing pic.twitter.com/1H13QInE6E
— DarkSkinCapability (@LoveOnYourself) March 26, 2020
Netflix just sitting on #tigerking until 250 million American are locked up in their homes to drop it is a boss move. pic.twitter.com/1lWBh8aubb
— White Moses (@IAmWhiteMoses) March 26, 2020
Tiger King is out now on Netflix.