— Marc Morano (@ClimateDepot) November 14, 2024
Fake Beached Whale Near UN ‘Climate’ Summit Aimed at Inducing Fear
BAKU, Azerbaijan — On the shores of the Caspian Sea lies a giant fake sperm whale reeking with the stench of rotten fish during the United Nations’ COP29 climate summit in Baku, Azerbaijan. Created by Belgian artist and activist Captain Boomer Collective, the display was planted to drum up drama surrounding the UN event, complete with actors posing as scientists pretending to take samples of the creature. The New American Senior Editor Alex Newman spoke with two of the whale “researchers” behind the stunt, plus Craig Rucker, the president of CFACT.org, whose organization is involved in litigation to save whales from the devastating effects of windmills along the coast. Despite showmanship from climate alarmists, the COP29 summit is underscored by gloom as Donald Trump’s mandate victory appears to indicate a retreat from dumping billions of U.S. taxpayer money into global warming initiatives. One of the “scientists” behind the display said he hoped people would “use their brain.”
Interview with fake scientist about fake dead whale at COP29
A Rotting Dead Whale is Drawing a Massive Crowd at the World’s Largest Lake
A statue of a beached whale, complete with the smell of rotting fish and actors playing scientists, is a hyper-realistic call to action for climate change.
A statue of a beached whale, complete with the smell of rotting fish and actors playing scientists, is a hyper-realistic call to action for climate change.
Amid the COP29 climate summit, Captain Boomer Collective, an organization that puts on location-based shows exploring the boundaries between reality and fiction, placed a giant beached whale on the shoreline of the Caspian Sea in Baku, Azerbaijan. The dead whale, however, is fake.
The installation is part of the organization’s ongoing project in which they place “a life-size, hyperreal statue of a sperm whale beaches on the shores and river banks of the old world,” their website reads. CNN, who reported the whale’s latest stop, noted that the organization aims to raise awareness of global ecological destruction.
The expertly constructed statue doesn’t just look like a dead whale but smells like one too. The group places the fake whale on shorelines during the night, hiding rotting fish nearby to mimic the smell of a rotting animal. The organization places a fence around the carcass and employs actors to play scientific figures of the fictitious North Sea Whale Association.
Amid these intricate scenes, curious crowds watch the actors expertly mimic autopsy, sampling, dissection, and more on the dead animal.
“During our beachings, we see an intensive interaction among the crowd. People address each other, speculate and wonder,” the website reads. “They offer help and ask for information. The different layers of perception create funny games. Some audience members know it is a work of art but feed the illusion to other people.”
What the Dead Whale Represents
Bart Van Peel, the Chief Navigating Officer of the organization, told CNN the actors play out a “tapestry of stories” amid the installation, “like, maybe because of climate change, it changed its migration route.” The scene has drawn thousands of people, some of whom have stayed at the scene for more than an hour. Many witnesses had “very emotional reactions” to the scene, Van Peel told the outlet.
Per the organization, the installation reconstructs the “magical event” of a beached whale, while also serving as “a gigantic metaphor for the disruption of our ecological system.”
— Marc Morano (@ClimateDepot) November 14, 2024
Mourning the loss of a dead fake whale at Cop29 pic.twitter.com/JLMWIvt6gG
— Marc Morano (@ClimateDepot) November 14, 2024
— Marc Morano (@ClimateDepot) November 14, 2024
— Marc Morano (@ClimateDepot) November 14, 2024