I served Cesar many times in my restaurant and one thing I can say is, he is absolutely the same guy in real life. He made time during every meal for any and every person that would approach him about their pets. He genuinely and legitimately is trying to help every dog that he can. Guy blew my mind how many times he would invite whole families to eat with him while they discussed their pet's issues and ways to resolve them. I have tons of respect for this guy because of his show and work but also because of how he conducts himself in real life.
@@SnakesandDoggies That is a good one. I have dropped friends because of the way they have treated their dogs. I wanted to kidnap the dogs I was so upset. I had a groomer once and I asked why she had a cast on her foot. She laughed and said, " I got so mad I kicked my dog and broke my foot. " I reported her and of course never went back. Can you imagine? 🤨
Greetings from florida 🐬Cesar Could You make a video about how to help Your dog/dogs cope with being ill and care needed when their master dies. I know it’s not an easy issue. Thank You 🙏 and God Bless You My Brother ✨
HELP! My furbabies bark at every noise they hear, and are very aggressive toward any broom, and mop etc. They're sweet and can be held but that barking is driving me crazy.
Ceasar, I wrote to you about a request for a video. I received a reply from someone claiming to be you. The problem is it is a scam for investing in crypto currency and pet insurance. I never replied. I just investigate the weird initials they used and the person they told me to contact. They are using your name and face on TH-cam. I have the reply.
I have no words to express my admiration for your work with animals and teaching people to be self-confident. You are the doctor of souls. Big big heart to you ❤️
“Several instances of cruel and dangerous treatment - promoted by Millan as acceptable training methods - were documented by American Humane, including one in which a dog was partially asphyxiated in an episode. In this instance, the fractious dog was pinned to the ground by its neck after first being “hung” by a collar incrementally tightened by Millan. Millan’s goal - of subduing a fractious animal - was accomplished by partially cutting off the blood supply to its brain.” Just remember this guy chokes out puppies
I've heard of Cesar before, however was not into such trade given I don't have a dog. And now I cannot stop watching vifeos back-to-back for the last 2 weeks after deciding to watch one. Im in awe of how he trains, the fact 70% is on the owners to change. What a talent Cesar is. Make me want a dog now 🙂
@@cookiedee8473 thanks I actually think a lot more nowadays when I go past a dog, watching their behaviour, thinking of how I would need to react or 'lead' the dog 😄
Cesar will always be a hero in my eyes. For all the animals (not just dogs) that’s he has saved, for the ranch he created to help AND house animals in need, for genuinely loving animals, for raising boys who are gentle and love animals, for being the REAL “American Dream” story and for being open about his fight against a nearly fatal depression. Anyone can give up or quit or let the bullies win…. Cesar never quits on anyone he loves and he doesn’t quit on himself, even when ALL the odds are against him. He’s the reason I founded a small dog rescue (and cats and reptiles occasionally too!) over 14 years ago. He’s saved SO many lives… both animal and human. *LOVE YOU and THANK YOU CESAR!* ❤️🐾💫♾
“Several instances of cruel and dangerous treatment - promoted by Millan as acceptable training methods - were documented by American Humane, including one in which a dog was partially asphyxiated in an episode. In this instance, the fractious dog was pinned to the ground by its neck after first being “hung” by a collar incrementally tightened by Millan. Millan’s goal - of subduing a fractious animal - was accomplished by partially cutting off the blood supply to its brain.”
@@violetm9045 What makes the Humane society an authority? WHy can't they get Cesar charged with animal abuse (when they are such a notable authority?). In my area, the Humane Society cherry picks the dogs they'll rescue from the primary shelter required by law to provide care to (and dispose of) unwanted animals. They primarily take the most adoptable/desireable dogs, and leave the rest to face their fate. That's understandable, of course. People can only do what they can do. But, then the Humane Society boasts about being a "no-kill" shelter, and criticizes the primary (statutory) shelter for not being. It's like the Humane Society lives in a different reality than everyone else. (It's easy criticize others when you don't have to live in the same reality.). Even worse, a shelter found an outlet for dogs via "transport" to other areas where they didn't have a lot of stray/unwanted dogs. The Humane Society complained about this. You'd think they'd view it as an opportunity to show off their "no kill" status they brag about all the time (to everyone else's detriment). You know? Start taking the dogs nobody wants? But, no. They were upset and scandalized that other areas were getting these desirable dogs and the Humane Society wasn't. I would advise AJ to take what you're saying with a healthy dose of skeptism. All that glitters is not gold. There's more to the story you're not telling because it doesn't sound as good. There' nothing sacred about the Humane Society. They're just another "non-profit" with politics and a need to define themselves (at others expense).
@@markfuller 1. I don't give an f about THS 2. He still abuses dogs and nothing changes that. 3. Biggest difference between real dog trainers and this guy is that , WE ACTUALLY HAVE QUALIFICATIONS, and don't use extremely out dated (and proven false) information on a completely different species to train domestic animals.
@@markfuller this has nothing to do with the Humane society, I don't know why you're do desperate for it to. They don't even exist in my country, but what does exist are laws against choking animals and prong collars.
@@violetm9045 Of course you don't care. It doesn't fit your ego-serving agenda to use hyperbole and slurs against someone else. If he "still abuses dogs" why hasn't he been charged with that? Have you reported him? (Walk the talk instead of just talking it?). I was involved in "modern (4 quadrant) training" for over a decade. It doesn't work with most dogs, most problems. It's great in some ways. But, it's not balanced. What it does do is attract people like you who need to push others down to feel better about themselves. That was one of the main reasons I got out of it. Very ugly personalities (read Aesop's fable about "the dog in the manger.").It turns into a religion where it's more important to make the theory work than use what works (balanced training). There were "modern training" religionists who had dogs at home they couldn't control, separated in their own rooms. They would still run down other people. They had some kind of disassociation in their mind where they could keep saying all the ego-satisfying things (us vs them), and never cross that thought with the reality they lived. I knew some who sent their dogs off to a trainer to do the "dirty work." The dogs came back and immediately went back to being kept in separate rooms because they were unruly (again). "New and improved" appeals to some people because they can lord over others that they're "outdated and invalidated." It's just more talking the talk. Not walking it. Claims of "abuse" but no charges. That's easy to say over and over, and feel smug about it (if that's what you need). And then the authority of the Humane Society. Nobody can question them right? Even though they put their pants on one leg at a time too (and have some dirt in their past, and seem to not be able to get Cesar charged with abuse either.). But, you don't care about all that because it doesn't work as well as your "shocking" assertions.
We have a 4 1/2 year old male Giant Schnauser, we’ve had him since he was a pup, we met the dogs mother and saw the home, we watched, learned, read, practiced all the things Cesar says and now have a wonderful, loving, obedient dog that we take everywhere. Thank you Cesar (from England) you are a wonderful guy. Without putting the time and effort in Rufus could be an absolute nightmare, he’s a very strong, clever, agile dog. We love him to bits.
My beloved dog was 17 years old went everywhere with me ,I had to say goodbye, 💔 when he was a puppy he was rescued from a crack house, and obviously abbused, meanest puppy I ever saw. Lot of patients and love he came a long way, my best friend and a basset beagle became the love of his life 🥰 its going to a year he's been gone left me heart broken and so lonely, he gave me a purpose ,God Bless you Cesar you teach us humans how to be a better dog owner, I ve applied to all the local shelters and rescues but they truly make it very difficult to adopt, maybe someday ill find a furry friend again when I least expect it❤✌
“Several instances of cruel and dangerous treatment - promoted by Millan as acceptable training methods - were documented by American Humane, including one in which a dog was partially asphyxiated in an episode. In this instance, the fractious dog was pinned to the ground by its neck after first being “hung” by a collar incrementally tightened by Millan. Millan’s goal - of subduing a fractious animal - was accomplished by partially cutting off the blood supply to its brain.”
@Calamity, I just want to offer a different view: If Cesar commits abuse, why hasn't he been charged with such? It's easy to go around using hyperbole. But, if it were really true, why wouldn't the people who like to overusing words (to the point that mere dog ownership is considered "abuse") report that abuse, and get that person charged & convicted of the crime they claim is committed? Words are always easy. Actions? Not so much. In other words: it's personal opinion for their ego. The ego loves it when someone is wrong. The more wrong the better! Hyperbole is the secret sauce for the ego. But, but... what about the Humane Society? (someone will say). What makes them special? They're just another non-profit whose insiders profit _handsomely_ . Just like the Red Cross, United Way, ASPCA (all with scandals for enriching themselves through crisis, pandering to heartstrings, etc.). In my area, the Humane Society cherry picks which dogs they will accept (as surrenders), and which dogs they rescue from the county (who is mandated by law to provide shelter and dispose of unwanted animals). They leave the less-adoptable dogs to face their fate. That's not bad. I'm not trying to run the HS down. Everyone who helps, helps. Each dog out of the shelter is good. But, the Humane Society turns around and pats themselves on the back for being a no-kill shelter, and lectures everyone on how virtuous this is, and shelters who aren't no-kill aren't virtuous. They're failing. Clearly they live in a different self-fulfilling reality than everyone else. It's easy to complain about others when you don't have to live up to the standards they're required to live up to. The bottom line is that so-called "modern" training attracts people who need to define "the outgroup." I was involved in it for over 10 years. I saw it all the time (I was even that way. I didn't like Cesar either. Mainly because that's what's expected to be part of the "in group."). Search for Aesop's fable about "the dog in the manger." That's the mentality. You can't win with them. It's not about truth or common-ground. It's hate. It's about their ego feeling empowered and special by pushing others down.
A little more about the Humane Society. In one area the statutory shelter (the shelter that can't play games with delusional rhetoric: "we're 'no kill' while leaving all these other dogs in the statutory shelter to be killed") found a way to "transport" scores of dogs to other areas where they didn't suffer the numbers of unwanted dogs. There was a _demand_ for dogs to adopt in those areas. The local humane society (and various other vanity rescues) turned it into a huge scandal. The smaller, more-desirable breeds (mixes) were going to those other areas. That should be a positive (if you're all moist about "no-kill" and wanting to help the statutory shelter in that goal). But, no. They were outraged that these local groups weren't given "first right of refusal." Like the statutory shelter has the luxury to even coordinate _that_ (while handling their statutory volume of intake, and at the same time trying to be the "no kill" shelter the Humane Society shames it about _not_ being). The Humane Society has no shame, and they live in a different universe than the rest of us. That they would call something abuse (but not seek charges) fits the same self-serving stuff I've seen. They have a narrative that works for their favor. They don't care how it affects others. It's just what a "Humane" group should say (in order to hold the position they claim to hold -- and reap a lot of profit from, while being non-profit.).
I have a Bassett Hound and she is the most loyal and loveable dog you could ever meet. This dog is obviously not a pure bred Bassett. Looks like a Bassett, Pit Bull mix?
Your show used to be my favorite, always wondered what happened but I'm happy to see you're still going strong, I'll be binge watching your channel a lot!
cesar is absolutely amazing. there is nothing else i can really say about him. coming to the end of a really long week filled with loads of emotions in a seminar with cesar and my dog went from tense the first day to him being more or less off leash the third day while i walked his pack. it was absolutely amazing. not just that but i actually walked my dog in one hand with a goat in the other and his bird rio. it was an absolutely fantastic experience. i’m going away from the week with cesar with so much new knowledge. he is an awesome guy☺️
Those 3 days must've been horrible for him not knowing why his owner wasn't responding. Oh, poor little fella. I'm sure he's a protective Basset for sure, but his gentle Basset genes will overthrow his aggressiveness with a little help from his Whispering friend😇🐾💖
I wish you could meet my retired greyhound, Benny. He only likes other greyhounds. If any other dog breed gets too close he attacks. We love him so much, he is so loving ❤
FWIW, Amazon Prime has it. No subscription. $2.99 USD for the episode (4). You then own it and can watch it there anytime. (It ends with him being adopted by one of the 3 families vying for that privilege. One of them does the best with him, being his leader controlling him, setting boundaries, interrupting unwanted behavior.).
Lol it my birthday today and watching this. Is a good gift, I got a shollie and he just turned 2 months and knows how to walk without a lead lol it so cool
That’s so sad!! Anyone who sees this that lives alone with a dog/cat/bird or anything that depends on you and can’t talk make sure somebody you talk to every day checks in with you even if you just say hi and bye!
Some people don't know anyone. They might not have family. Nowadays people often don't know their neighbors. I knew someone in that situation a few years ago. It caused me to think about creating a web site where people could "check in" and if they didn't within the period of time they defined (3 days? a week? One day?) the system would contact whomever they designated (which could be a police non-emergency number for a welfare check). It could all be automated. I never did it. But, I gave it some thought because it seemed like a needed service. There must be quite a few people in that situation. (I worried there could be false alarms. Someone forgets, they lose their internet connection, the police are being contacted for no reason. That could be problematic if it were excessive.).
@@markfuller it is my biggest concern. I mean if I fall dead, ok, but I don't want to melt and not be discovered for months. Automated bill payments make it more likely than in the past. More and more my neighbour's are migrants and immigrants who actively ignore me. So I'd love a check in app of some type. It could have a tone alert or icon that flashes for a set time reminding people that they haven't checked in to help minimize 'false alerts'. Keep working on your idea
@@Stettafire well my migrant neighbour's won't move their coverings enough to acknowledge my existence when I say hello to them and their children on the elevator. You are correct, what happens to them is their choice.
What was this doggie's other parent's breed? Bassets generally have stubbier legs and longer floppier ears, and they're invariably sweeter and cuddlier. I wonder if this dominant-aggression aspect comes from the other breed. Could the other breed be a pit bull or a Rottweiler, based on its head-features...? The Bassets I've been around really never get 'aggressive' unless they're just playing -- going nuts and running around as the odd burst of energy gets them all riled up before they run out of steam and then need to collapse again. Or, if they're hungry -- and when is a Basset Hound NOT hungry? -- and they want some of the food you're eating, in which case they'll drool as they watch you eat, and frown at you and go "Woof!" as if to ask you "Why aren't you giving me some a-that hamburger you're eating and taunting me with?" Anyway, let's hope that Harry got a new home and got the training he needed to fit in without any need to be returned yet again.
Hello Cesar Milan, How are you doing. A different stance we can see for you this time, We can see your assess from word go with all the back history, Lets hope there is happy new found owner and re-trained Basset Hound by the best🙏 Nam myoho renge kyo
jeez, just find an owner with experience ... I just can't understand why people don't follow through .... had three Dogo Argentinos ... wouldn't want to advice you to try that as a first dog but we never even thought a second of giving them up ....
I worked at a kennel that bred bassets… they are hounds, he’s not neutered, and he’s a hound… did I mention he’s a hound? Just because he’s cute ? He’s a hound… they can be aggressive… he also looks like a Bassett mix… he doesn’t look like a purebred…
It's from Leader of the Pack, season 1, ep 4. It was released on DVD, and streaming services have it. (Amazon Prime has it, which isn't a subscription model. You pay for an episode or season, and own it. But, can only play it there. I've read Prime video is available worldwide except for 4-5 countries. Good chance you could watch it there.). It's worth watching. I like the original Dog Whisperer series better. It seems more focused on educating. LotP is more entertainment, like H Kitchen where contestants are eliminated. It's not bad though. I just think some things would be more understandable if someone had watched DW first. To me, DW is the gold standard.
The Basset Hound I have now was aggressive when we got him from the rescue. We worked with a trainer and gave him lots of love, six years later he is a sweet heart. The dog trainer specialized in aggressive dogs and this was the first Basset he ever worked with.
The previous upload (a week ago) comes from the same episode of Leader of the Pack (season 1, ep 4). That might help. If you want to watch the full episode, it was released on DVD. Often used copies can be found on ebay cheap. You might need a region-free dvd reader. Amazon Prime has it (no subscription necessary. From what I've read, Prime is available almost in almost every nation.). It's a good episode. it's worth watching. I wish Cesar's youtube admin would include this kind of info in the description so people would know where to learn more.
It's Leader of the Pack season 1, ep. 4. The 4-min video is the beginning of 3 families seeking to be the dog's owner. It's kind of entertainment that way. Not so much "here's the solution." You see 3 people trying to provide the solution, and the best person takes the dog home. You should watch it. It's good (much more to see). But, the solution is teaching the dog to walk properly (not lead/pull). In a larger sense it's about being the leader, not letting the dog's excited energy reaching that level which can trigger a fight.
@@markfuller It's weird because I try to apply the same techniques of relaxing around my little dogs, but they always go off on another dog passing by, no matter how I'm relaxed or pulling/not pulling, and no matter where the leash is. Just can't get them to relax, even though there's no actual danger. I'll have to watch the full episode
@@oceangaming88 That stuff's usually not relaxation (or lack thereof). It's the dog believing it's the leader. When you have more than one dog, all it takes is one instigator (one dog who believes its the leader) to marshal the others into "backup" to its lunging/reacting to things on the walk. You might walk one at a time to try to identify if there's one starting it. If you focus on that one. Usually this stuff has to do with the human not being the leader at home, in small things. They let the dog get away with a lot, but want the dog(s) to behave in one circumstance (which is harder to correct when the dogs don't receive "rules, boundaries & limitations" at home in the easy things.). If they're not used to listening to you, then it's harder for them to hear outside with distractions. Little things like letting a dog lead you out the door for a walk (or follow you out excitedly) can make it impossible to control the dog during the walk. I always encourage people to go back to the original Dog Whisperer series and watch that. I think people expect a simple how-to for these things. Like, a special leash (or "tsch") will fix it. It's more about how to "be" all the time, a leader, the energy, who you are to the dog. It's multi-dimensional, not simple like "how to teach a dog to sit." It's about meeting the dog's needs psychologically as a leader (not just loving a dog as a human). You'll see the problem you describe many times in those episodes. It's probably the most common problem. As you see it over and over, you can glean how all the elements come together (the little things that add up).
@@oceangaming88 Just to clarify about my comment that this isn't usually related to relaxation. I meant that more about your dogs' state of relaxation (when you said "can't get them to relax."). Your relaxation is important to being seen as a leader. People often fake/act being calm. But dogs sense the underlying frustration. Dogs can have frustrated energy which makes it hard for them to listen to your discipline. That's usually working breeds who might benefit from a long run before trying to have a structured walk, teaching them to follow you as the leader. So, that can be part of it. But, usually it's lack of leadership overall (in things unrelated to the walk). Not enough calm-assertive energy all the time. Too much affection for the wrong things. If you watch the original DW, you'll see what I mean. it's the common theme. And then, trying to do this with more than one dog at once is even harder because, as I said, there's usually one that is the leader to the other(s). You have to work on that one first.
It's a 4-minute clip from a 40-minute episode of Leader of the Pack (season 1, ep. 4). The prior upload about a week ago was from the same episode. That might add something. The series is an "elimination" reality show where 3 families hope to adopt the dog, but only the one most capable of being a leader to the dog is awarded that honor. So, it's not really a documentary about rehabilitating the dog (the way Dog Whisperer or Cesar 911 is). It's a bit more entertainment oriented like H***'s Kitchen (as each participant is eliminated through the show). It's worth watching. It has some good stuff. It was released on dvd which you can find online used/cheap. Amazon Prime has it (no subscription. You just buy it and own it.). The way it goes is that the dog needs to learn to walk properly on a leash, with less excited "everywhere" energy. That will help it meet dogs with a better energy. The three families demonstrate their abilities to do that. Cesar guides them, and they do their best. He chooses one family to give the dog a home.
Is Amazon Prime available to you? Leader of the Pack is on it. No subscription required. You pay for it, and own it. But, that's the US. Maybe it's not available that way elsewhere? It was released on DVD, but you'd need a region-free player. I don't think he can post the entire episode. Nat. Geo owns it. I'm sure they want to make their money selling it on streaming (but then, they might not make it available everywhere. So, it's them doing it.).
@@markfuller Truth is that I dont pay for entertainment. Games, movies,... maybe except for cinema. I'll just click on something else. Other YT creators are happy to do it for YT money
@@trollmcclure1884 I understand. In that vain, I have seen *a lot* of high-quality Dog Whisperer & Cesar 911 episodes on the "invisible internet project." It's kind of slow downloading due to its nature (privacy). But, some good stuff there. I think Cesar got screwed in his relationship with Nat Geo. There is a Jordan Harbinger vlog (ep 162) titled "Cesar Millan on the Biggest Mistake Dog Owners Make" where he talks about it. (If I recall, nowhere in that video does it actually say what the "biggest mistake" actually is either. Just warning you in advance. ha. ).
HI, I have a question ! I own a Sharpei a female called Elsie she is 12 and extremely jealous towards the other animals of the house.I own 5 cats and before owned 2 other sharpei's a mâle and female, 2 chihuahuas.. When i took in Elsie she was adopted and i think abused she would enter terrible fights with my other female Sharpei to the point of blood gashing everywhere. Now she is alone in the house and i am getting a baby husky boy of three months. I am a bit nervous she will be agressive towards him but being a boy she did not have much agressivity towards my mâle sharpei but try to dominate him all the time and he would show her very quickly he was the boss. Any advice on how to introduce them, in the house or outside ? any tips ? Thanks.
In my experience, that happens because the person allows it (not being the leader; not establishing rules, boundaries, limits in everything all the time; too hands-off and appreciating the wrong things; too spectator, not showing the dogs that the person sorts things out instead of the dogs; allowing a dog to feel it's 2nd lieutenant to the person, vice-leader to the leader. In a pack of dogs, the alpha would not allow that kind of usurpation to the harm of the other members.). I tell everyone: watch the original Dog Whisperer series (9 seasons). There's _many_ episodes of this problem. Even the episodes of pulling/lunging on leash are about the same thing (the dog's being possessive of the human; acts as the leader on the walk). You don't have to watch many episodes to see the constant theme: it's the person. They're too hands-off in the small things. They only want the big problem fixed. If they exhibited more "rules, boundaries & limitations" in the small things (using calm-assertive energy, not baby talk nor yelling), the dog would understand what the person means about the big things. The very first episode (NuNu) is about this. Season 1 ep. 20 (Pepsi) is a german shepherd posessive of the wife, and goes after "Kitty Love." 2-1 (Bandit). 2-18 (Snowflake). 3-6 (Sophie, possessive of owner & attacks pack mate). 3-13 (Rudy, aired as 3-12). 3-19 (Ricky, aired as 4-1). 4-14 (Owen, aired as 4-15). 4-26 (Lotus, aired as 4-33).
@@SuryanWarrior Another episode came to mind: Cesar 911 2-9 (Bella). That's a french bulldog who's jealous at a frenchie meet-up. (A fine line between jealously and protecting--as in "owning" the person.).
I think Cesar is heaven sent for us fur parents,🙏 i got my puppy to eat and lessen her anxiety by watching your shows! Just watching your videos sort of put us into that calm state 😂 God bless you! Lots of love from the Philippines❤️
He is brilliant and I try his techniques. So what I’m wondering is when I correct for pulling on the lead or distract my dog when he is being aggressive to other dogs he licks his lips then just carries on pulling on the lead, he stops being aggressive but only until the next dog comes along. I wish I had Cesars talent!
I would say that lip-licking in that circumstances is act of submission. That's a good sign (if I'm right). The dog wants to follow you, or accepts your correction (understands what you want). Sometimes lick licking can be a warning. I'm thinking of a dog laying in a spot it shouldn't (on the bed, on a sofa) and you're going to remove the dog. Lick licking then might signal "I'm going to bite in order to own my space." But, that doesn't sound like the circumstance you see it in. If you watch the original Dog Whisperer series (highly recommended, it's a forgotten resource), you'll see the unwanted behavior _a lot_ . It's almost every other episode. The usual mistakes people make are 1) a harness (control the body, but not the mind). 2) too much leash (they don't keep the dog at their side as a matter of practice). 3) They ignore the signs of the dog becoming excited/fixated. (FOr some reason, it is a human trait to consider the dog innocent until proven guilty. We wait for the dog to lunge rather than interrupt the early signs, and not let the dog's energy raise to a level 6, where it's harder to interrupt). 4) People often let the dog lead them out the door for the walk. Or, they don't wait for the dog to be calm, and looking at the person to be invited out for the walk only when calm. (That little seeming symbolism can have a big effect on who's walking whom). Add to that #2, and it's clearer who's walking whom. 5) The dog doesn't get enough exercise. It can't hear the discipline. (Take the dog for a run first. Release that pent up energy. Then work on discipline/expectations. Then give affection. People get the order wrong.). If you watch a couple seasons of DW, you'll see all of that. Plus, you'll see 6) that it's often a lack of leadership at home. The dog doesn't have to earn its affection at home. The people think it's cute, and they enjoy the relationship at home when nothing really matters. It's only when some challenge in the environment occurs that it matters (that the dog won't listen). But, if they practiced calm-assertive leadership at home (rules, boundaries, limitations), then the dog would understand more what the person means when they do it when in the face of real challenges. In that sense: even the episodes that aren't about this problem will help because it's usually the same thing over and over (different problem): a human who isn't the leader.
Its not a basset hound - its might be some kind of mix of it. Like Jack Russel + Basset Hound - but I think its more like child of basset hound mix with Jack Russel. No floppy ears, no size of basset hound... nah its not a basset hound.
This is so wierd this just came up! I just watched a dog literally kill a cat! I didn't know why my dog was barking in my backyard and looked to see what she ( st.bernard) was barking at... I thought it was a toy at first but it was very aggressive and I went a cross the St to look and it was a bloody dead kitty! Very disturbing and I knocked on there Dr told her her dog just killed a cat in her front yard and she said her dog was in the back...ya that's where it came from & they are moving she said and I'm new here! I'm glad they're moving!
Doesn't look like normal basset looks almost like it's mixed with rat terrier or jack Russell. Look at the face and ears. Normal basset would not behave like that. Be so twitchy and reactive.
I served Cesar many times in my restaurant and one thing I can say is, he is absolutely the same guy in real life. He made time during every meal for any and every person that would approach him about their pets. He genuinely and legitimately is trying to help every dog that he can. Guy blew my mind how many times he would invite whole families to eat with him while they discussed their pet's issues and ways to resolve them. I have tons of respect for this guy because of his show and work but also because of how he conducts himself in real life.
Too bad he didn’t treat his employees with any respect.
@@cascooter hopefully he's grown and become a better employer since your last experiences
So he does choke out dogs irl? So he does have a below average IQ irl?
@@violetm9045 what?
@@cascooter what's that mean?
TH-cam! Thank you for watching the video. What Dog Tip Video would you like us to share with you next? Blessings!
How to deal with extremely ignorant dog owners? How do you stay calm and how do you not just walk away?
@@SnakesandDoggies That is a good one. I have dropped friends because of the way they have treated their dogs. I wanted to kidnap the dogs I was so upset.
I had a groomer once and I asked why she had a cast on her foot. She laughed and said, " I got so mad I kicked my dog and broke my foot. " I reported her and of course never went back. Can you imagine? 🤨
Greetings from florida 🐬Cesar
Could You make a video about how to help Your dog/dogs cope with being ill and care needed when their master dies. I know it’s not an easy issue. Thank You 🙏 and God Bless You My Brother ✨
HELP! My furbabies bark at every noise they hear, and are very aggressive toward any broom, and mop etc. They're sweet and can be held but that barking is driving me crazy.
Ceasar, I wrote to you about a request for a video. I received a reply from someone claiming to be you. The problem is it is a scam for investing in crypto currency and pet insurance. I never replied. I just investigate the weird initials they used and the person they told me to contact. They are using your name and face on TH-cam. I have the reply.
I have no words to express my admiration for your work with animals and teaching people to be self-confident. You are the doctor of souls. Big big heart to you ❤️
thanks!
@@CesarMillanOfficial you are welcome 🥰
“Several instances of cruel and dangerous treatment - promoted by Millan as acceptable training methods - were documented by American Humane, including one in which a dog was partially asphyxiated in an episode. In this instance, the fractious dog was pinned to the ground by its neck after first being “hung” by a collar incrementally tightened by Millan. Millan’s goal - of subduing a fractious animal - was accomplished by partially cutting off the blood supply to its brain.”
Just remember this guy chokes out puppies
Probably the "mix" is the aggressive side. Pure bred Bassets are pretty mellow and usually like other dogs.
Yeah definitely. Had two pure breed Bassets and they were so innocent I could literally take food out of their mouths and they wouldn't do anything.
Looks like a Jack Russel terrier.
I've heard of Cesar before, however was not into such trade given I don't have a dog. And now I cannot stop watching vifeos back-to-back for the last 2 weeks after deciding to watch one. Im in awe of how he trains, the fact 70% is on the owners to change. What a talent Cesar is. Make me want a dog now 🙂
What dog are you tryna get?
I bet you'll be a fantastic dog owner!😊💞
And after watching these videos, you will be trained and ready for a dog to adopt you!
Good luck 😉👍
We’ve all been there. Got a Dog 3 weeks after and she’s so well behaved .
@@cookiedee8473 thanks I actually think a lot more nowadays when I go past a dog, watching their behaviour, thinking of how I would need to react or 'lead' the dog 😄
Get a German shepherd puppy if you can
OMG! Mr. Milan, you have been a staple in our family for decades!
So pleased to see this!
Your way with dogs and animals of all kinds never ceases to amaze me.
Thank god for Cesar! God blessed him always 🤍🙏
Blessings to you!
Cesar will always be a hero in my eyes. For all the animals (not just dogs) that’s he has saved, for the ranch he created to help AND house animals in need, for genuinely loving animals, for raising boys who are gentle and love animals, for being the REAL “American Dream” story and for being open about his fight against a nearly fatal depression. Anyone can give up or quit or let the bullies win…. Cesar never quits on anyone he loves and he doesn’t quit on himself, even when ALL the odds are against him. He’s the reason I founded a small dog rescue (and cats and reptiles occasionally too!) over 14 years ago. He’s saved SO many lives… both animal and human. *LOVE YOU and THANK YOU CESAR!* ❤️🐾💫♾
“Several instances of cruel and dangerous treatment - promoted by Millan as acceptable training methods - were documented by American Humane, including one in which a dog was partially asphyxiated in an episode. In this instance, the fractious dog was pinned to the ground by its neck after first being “hung” by a collar incrementally tightened by Millan. Millan’s goal - of subduing a fractious animal - was accomplished by partially cutting off the blood supply to its brain.”
@@violetm9045 What makes the Humane society an authority? WHy can't they get Cesar charged with animal abuse (when they are such a notable authority?).
In my area, the Humane Society cherry picks the dogs they'll rescue from the primary shelter required by law to provide care to (and dispose of) unwanted animals. They primarily take the most adoptable/desireable dogs, and leave the rest to face their fate.
That's understandable, of course. People can only do what they can do. But, then the Humane Society boasts about being a "no-kill" shelter, and criticizes the primary (statutory) shelter for not being. It's like the Humane Society lives in a different reality than everyone else. (It's easy criticize others when you don't have to live in the same reality.).
Even worse, a shelter found an outlet for dogs via "transport" to other areas where they didn't have a lot of stray/unwanted dogs. The Humane Society complained about this. You'd think they'd view it as an opportunity to show off their "no kill" status they brag about all the time (to everyone else's detriment). You know? Start taking the dogs nobody wants? But, no. They were upset and scandalized that other areas were getting these desirable dogs and the Humane Society wasn't.
I would advise AJ to take what you're saying with a healthy dose of skeptism. All that glitters is not gold. There's more to the story you're not telling because it doesn't sound as good. There' nothing sacred about the Humane Society. They're just another "non-profit" with politics and a need to define themselves (at others expense).
@@markfuller 1. I don't give an f about THS
2. He still abuses dogs and nothing changes that.
3. Biggest difference between real dog trainers and this guy is that , WE ACTUALLY HAVE QUALIFICATIONS, and don't use extremely out dated (and proven false) information on a completely different species to train domestic animals.
@@markfuller this has nothing to do with the Humane society, I don't know why you're do desperate for it to. They don't even exist in my country, but what does exist are laws against choking animals and prong collars.
@@violetm9045 Of course you don't care. It doesn't fit your ego-serving agenda to use hyperbole and slurs against someone else.
If he "still abuses dogs" why hasn't he been charged with that? Have you reported him? (Walk the talk instead of just talking it?).
I was involved in "modern (4 quadrant) training" for over a decade. It doesn't work with most dogs, most problems. It's great in some ways. But, it's not balanced. What it does do is attract people like you who need to push others down to feel better about themselves. That was one of the main reasons I got out of it. Very ugly personalities (read Aesop's fable about "the dog in the manger.").It turns into a religion where it's more important to make the theory work than use what works (balanced training).
There were "modern training" religionists who had dogs at home they couldn't control, separated in their own rooms. They would still run down other people. They had some kind of disassociation in their mind where they could keep saying all the ego-satisfying things (us vs them), and never cross that thought with the reality they lived. I knew some who sent their dogs off to a trainer to do the "dirty work." The dogs came back and immediately went back to being kept in separate rooms because they were unruly (again).
"New and improved" appeals to some people because they can lord over others that they're "outdated and invalidated." It's just more talking the talk. Not walking it. Claims of "abuse" but no charges. That's easy to say over and over, and feel smug about it (if that's what you need). And then the authority of the Humane Society. Nobody can question them right? Even though they put their pants on one leg at a time too (and have some dirt in their past, and seem to not be able to get Cesar charged with abuse either.).
But, you don't care about all that because it doesn't work as well as your "shocking" assertions.
We have a 4 1/2 year old male Giant Schnauser, we’ve had him since he was a pup, we met the dogs mother and saw the home, we watched, learned, read, practiced all the things Cesar says and now have a wonderful, loving, obedient dog that we take everywhere. Thank you Cesar (from England) you are a wonderful guy. Without putting the time and effort in Rufus could be an absolute nightmare, he’s a very strong, clever, agile dog. We love him to bits.
My beloved dog was 17 years old went everywhere with me ,I had to say goodbye, 💔 when he was a puppy he was rescued from a crack house, and obviously abbused, meanest puppy I ever saw. Lot of patients and love he came a long way, my best friend and a basset beagle became the love of his life 🥰 its going to a year he's been gone left me heart broken and so lonely, he gave me a purpose ,God Bless you Cesar you teach us humans how to be a better dog owner, I ve applied to all the local shelters and rescues but they truly make it very difficult to adopt, maybe someday ill find a furry friend again when I least expect it❤✌
World's best trainer Cesar millan 👍👌💐🐕🐩
Hello Cesar! You are the first dog trainer that I've come across whose techniques just make sense. Thank you for sharing with us
“Several instances of cruel and dangerous treatment - promoted by Millan as acceptable training methods - were documented by American Humane, including one in which a dog was partially asphyxiated in an episode. In this instance, the fractious dog was pinned to the ground by its neck after first being “hung” by a collar incrementally tightened by Millan. Millan’s goal - of subduing a fractious animal - was accomplished by partially cutting off the blood supply to its brain.”
So animal abuse makes sence to you?
@Calamity, I just want to offer a different view: If Cesar commits abuse, why hasn't he been charged with such? It's easy to go around using hyperbole. But, if it were really true, why wouldn't the people who like to overusing words (to the point that mere dog ownership is considered "abuse") report that abuse, and get that person charged & convicted of the crime they claim is committed? Words are always easy. Actions? Not so much.
In other words: it's personal opinion for their ego. The ego loves it when someone is wrong. The more wrong the better! Hyperbole is the secret sauce for the ego.
But, but... what about the Humane Society? (someone will say). What makes them special? They're just another non-profit whose insiders profit _handsomely_ . Just like the Red Cross, United Way, ASPCA (all with scandals for enriching themselves through crisis, pandering to heartstrings, etc.). In my area, the Humane Society cherry picks which dogs they will accept (as surrenders), and which dogs they rescue from the county (who is mandated by law to provide shelter and dispose of unwanted animals). They leave the less-adoptable dogs to face their fate.
That's not bad. I'm not trying to run the HS down. Everyone who helps, helps. Each dog out of the shelter is good. But, the Humane Society turns around and pats themselves on the back for being a no-kill shelter, and lectures everyone on how virtuous this is, and shelters who aren't no-kill aren't virtuous. They're failing. Clearly they live in a different self-fulfilling reality than everyone else. It's easy to complain about others when you don't have to live up to the standards they're required to live up to.
The bottom line is that so-called "modern" training attracts people who need to define "the outgroup." I was involved in it for over 10 years. I saw it all the time (I was even that way. I didn't like Cesar either. Mainly because that's what's expected to be part of the "in group."). Search for Aesop's fable about "the dog in the manger." That's the mentality. You can't win with them. It's not about truth or common-ground. It's hate. It's about their ego feeling empowered and special by pushing others down.
A little more about the Humane Society. In one area the statutory shelter (the shelter that can't play games with delusional rhetoric: "we're 'no kill' while leaving all these other dogs in the statutory shelter to be killed") found a way to "transport" scores of dogs to other areas where they didn't suffer the numbers of unwanted dogs. There was a _demand_ for dogs to adopt in those areas.
The local humane society (and various other vanity rescues) turned it into a huge scandal. The smaller, more-desirable breeds (mixes) were going to those other areas. That should be a positive (if you're all moist about "no-kill" and wanting to help the statutory shelter in that goal). But, no. They were outraged that these local groups weren't given "first right of refusal." Like the statutory shelter has the luxury to even coordinate _that_ (while handling their statutory volume of intake, and at the same time trying to be the "no kill" shelter the Humane Society shames it about _not_ being).
The Humane Society has no shame, and they live in a different universe than the rest of us. That they would call something abuse (but not seek charges) fits the same self-serving stuff I've seen. They have a narrative that works for their favor. They don't care how it affects others. It's just what a "Humane" group should say (in order to hold the position they claim to hold -- and reap a lot of profit from, while being non-profit.).
@@markfuller maybe the same reason a lot of tv personality's aren't charged.... Y'all let them get away with it.
I have a Bassett Hound and she is the most loyal and loveable dog you could ever meet. This dog is obviously not a pure bred Bassett. Looks like a Bassett, Pit Bull mix?
Yah!!
PLUS Basset hounds are very lazy to be aggressive
Looks like a jack russel terrier plus maybe a beagle.
Your show used to be my favorite, always wondered what happened but I'm happy to see you're still going strong, I'll be binge watching your channel a lot!
You say it all when you say - better humans/better planet !!!!......keep up the Wonderful work - GREAT job !!!
Great...
Seu trabalho é verdadeiramente encantador! Assisto à varios casos do seu trabalho. Admiravel! Parabens! ❤
Sin duda el mejor encantador de perros de la historia, César Millán es único
cesar is absolutely amazing. there is nothing else i can really say about him. coming to the end of a really long week filled with loads of emotions in a seminar with cesar and my dog went from tense the first day to him being more or less off leash the third day while i walked his pack. it was absolutely amazing. not just that but i actually walked my dog in one hand with a goat in the other and his bird rio. it was an absolutely fantastic experience. i’m going away from the week with cesar with so much new knowledge. he is an awesome guy☺️
I enjoy Cesars videos so much! All my love from Berlin Germany 🤩😁👍🤗🇩🇪
Thank you ! My Bassett hound has the long floppy ears 😃
Glad to see other Bassett hound dogs.
God bless you and your family and you guys stay safe
blessings
You guys have a nice day
I'm loving your videos! 😊😊😊🤗🤗🤗 Thank you for sharing it! 😍😍😍❤️❤️❤️
Thank you for watching our videos!
Those 3 days must've been horrible for him not knowing why his owner wasn't responding. Oh, poor little fella.
I'm sure he's a protective Basset for sure, but his gentle Basset genes will overthrow his aggressiveness with a little help from his Whispering friend😇🐾💖
SALUTE CESAR FROM DUBLIN IRELAND 👍🇮🇪
Cesar millan, admiro muito vc ao seu trabalho!🥰❤️🙌🏻
that god u guys all safe and glad this doing this love it!
I wish you could meet my retired greyhound, Benny. He only likes other greyhounds. If any other dog breed gets too close he attacks. We love him so much, he is so loving ❤
Ceasars can u offer advice for keeping a dog busy when u wrk long days?
Yay. Healthyish pup. Good expample of unpredictable. Like random stuff will set him off tricky.
Hello how are you doing?
Leave it to mr millan! Let evolution of life prevail.
I've always have a passion for Animals and the love for Dogs. What you're doing is incredible. ...🤗🐶🐕🦮
Hello how are you doing🕊🕊🕊🕊
Yea cant wait to know of harry's progress, can u show on utube? My Nat geo has ceased airing
FWIW, Amazon Prime has it. No subscription. $2.99 USD for the episode (4). You then own it and can watch it there anytime. (It ends with him being adopted by one of the 3 families vying for that privilege. One of them does the best with him, being his leader controlling him, setting boundaries, interrupting unwanted behavior.).
Love all your videos!
thank you so much!
Lol it my birthday today and watching this. Is a good gift, I got a shollie and he just turned 2 months and knows how to walk without a lead lol it so cool
Love Cesar ❤
Thank you for the video 🤗👏👏
Thank you for watching!
well done Cesar
Omg a new Video 😍!
Maravilloso 🐶
Fantastic video. Thank you.
I haven't watched whole video... but wanted to comment. I would have loved to have Harry as part of my pack. He would have fit in well.
My dog does the same thing. And she went after my sister's German Shepherd and thankfully he didn't shred her. He is 3X her size.
Hello how are you doing👍👍👍👍
I hope that clip of the body was just a little reenactment for reality tv 😂📺
That’s so sad!! Anyone who sees this that lives alone with a dog/cat/bird or anything that depends on you and can’t talk make sure somebody you talk to every day checks in with you even if you just say hi and bye!
Some people don't know anyone. They might not have family. Nowadays people often don't know their neighbors. I knew someone in that situation a few years ago. It caused me to think about creating a web site where people could "check in" and if they didn't within the period of time they defined (3 days? a week? One day?) the system would contact whomever they designated (which could be a police non-emergency number for a welfare check). It could all be automated.
I never did it. But, I gave it some thought because it seemed like a needed service. There must be quite a few people in that situation. (I worried there could be false alarms. Someone forgets, they lose their internet connection, the police are being contacted for no reason. That could be problematic if it were excessive.).
@@markfuller Nothing in life is perfect but that app sounds wonderful please please please work on it!
@@markfuller it is my biggest concern. I mean if I fall dead, ok, but I don't want to melt and not be discovered for months. Automated bill payments make it more likely than in the past. More and more my neighbour's are migrants and immigrants who actively ignore me. So I'd love a check in app of some type. It could have a tone alert or icon that flashes for a set time reminding people that they haven't checked in to help minimize 'false alerts'. Keep working on your idea
@@joywebster2678 I am a migrant, I suspect if I drop dead tomorrow it would be months before my body was found. My neighbours dont really care
@@Stettafire well my migrant neighbour's won't move their coverings enough to acknowledge my existence when I say hello to them and their children on the elevator. You are correct, what happens to them is their choice.
I'm not sure it is a real basset hound....?
He is a mix of Basset Hound and some other breed. Maybe Beagle?
Pepper gel works great for aggressive dogs .... every time!!
My idol
🙏🙏🙏 god bless you Cesar
What was this doggie's other parent's breed? Bassets generally have stubbier legs and longer floppier ears, and they're invariably sweeter and cuddlier. I wonder if this dominant-aggression aspect comes from the other breed. Could the other breed be a pit bull or a Rottweiler, based on its head-features...? The Bassets I've been around really never get 'aggressive' unless they're just playing -- going nuts and running around as the odd burst of energy gets them all riled up before they run out of steam and then need to collapse again. Or, if they're hungry -- and when is a Basset Hound NOT hungry? -- and they want some of the food you're eating, in which case they'll drool as they watch you eat, and frown at you and go "Woof!" as if to ask you "Why aren't you giving me some a-that hamburger you're eating and taunting me with?" Anyway, let's hope that Harry got a new home and got the training he needed to fit in without any need to be returned yet again.
Hola cesar Millán soy de Colombia 🇨🇴
Cesar Millan do you have any videos on old English sheep dogs? Please and thank you.
Basset hounds are the best dogs. That is a mutt.
Hello Cesar Milan, How are you doing. A different stance we can see for you this time, We can see your assess from word go with all the back history, Lets hope there is happy new found owner and re-trained Basset Hound by the best🙏 Nam myoho renge kyo
I've NEVER known a basset with aggression. It's the "mix" that's causing the issue!
"Strike three. You only get one more, Mike."
--Joey Tribbiani
Can someone tell me where we can watch Cesar's full episodes
Cesar's got jokes lol "it's a suicide mission"
jeez, just find an owner with experience ... I just can't understand why people don't follow through .... had three Dogo Argentinos ... wouldn't want to advice you to try that as a first dog but we never even thought a second of giving them up ....
I worked at a kennel that bred bassets… they are hounds, he’s not neutered, and he’s a hound… did I mention he’s a hound? Just because he’s cute ? He’s a hound… they can be aggressive… he also looks like a Bassett mix… he doesn’t look like a purebred…
Where is the continuation?
It's from Leader of the Pack, season 1, ep 4. It was released on DVD, and streaming services have it. (Amazon Prime has it, which isn't a subscription model. You pay for an episode or season, and own it. But, can only play it there. I've read Prime video is available worldwide except for 4-5 countries. Good chance you could watch it there.). It's worth watching. I like the original Dog Whisperer series better. It seems more focused on educating. LotP is more entertainment, like H Kitchen where contestants are eliminated. It's not bad though. I just think some things would be more understandable if someone had watched DW first. To me, DW is the gold standard.
@@markfuller Thank you.
video I liked it a lot ,keep up the great work. WOW very interesting 1st class very kool great info.,, AAAAAAAAAAA++++++++++++ again great
Is a Basset Hound mix, may be that is why of his aggession you do not know the other breed, almost all Basset Hound are pure love
How is that a basset tail is far to curled up and the ears are so short?
Cuz its a mix basset that's why.
Poor Harry the Hound.
Hello
Excuse me, I took an 8-month-old puppy from my friends, then the previous owner beat and scared this dog, and I took this dog for guarding!
Not a basset hound. It looks like a Jack Russell Terrier. Can we get this dog a DNA test? 😂
Agresive Basset Hound? I have never heard of that ever in my life. I see now. This dog os a Bassett Hound mix.
The Basset Hound I have now was aggressive when we got him from the rescue. We worked with a trainer and gave him lots of love, six years later he is a sweet heart. The dog trainer specialized in aggressive dogs and this was the first Basset he ever worked with.
Not a purebred basset.
🤣
Saludame cesar Millán
where's the follow up episode?
First time I've ever seen an aggressive Basset. Understandable after a trauma like that though. Poor little guy
The Basset Hound I have now was aggressive when we got him from the rescue. We had to get a trainer who specialized in aggressive dogs.
Where is the rest of this video?
The previous upload (a week ago) comes from the same episode of Leader of the Pack (season 1, ep 4). That might help. If you want to watch the full episode, it was released on DVD. Often used copies can be found on ebay cheap. You might need a region-free dvd reader. Amazon Prime has it (no subscription necessary. From what I've read, Prime is available almost in almost every nation.).
It's a good episode. it's worth watching. I wish Cesar's youtube admin would include this kind of info in the description so people would know where to learn more.
So what's the solution to this one?
It's Leader of the Pack season 1, ep. 4. The 4-min video is the beginning of 3 families seeking to be the dog's owner. It's kind of entertainment that way. Not so much "here's the solution." You see 3 people trying to provide the solution, and the best person takes the dog home. You should watch it. It's good (much more to see). But, the solution is teaching the dog to walk properly (not lead/pull). In a larger sense it's about being the leader, not letting the dog's excited energy reaching that level which can trigger a fight.
@@markfuller It's weird because I try to apply the same techniques of relaxing around my little dogs, but they always go off on another dog passing by, no matter how I'm relaxed or pulling/not pulling, and no matter where the leash is. Just can't get them to relax, even though there's no actual danger. I'll have to watch the full episode
@@oceangaming88 That stuff's usually not relaxation (or lack thereof). It's the dog believing it's the leader. When you have more than one dog, all it takes is one instigator (one dog who believes its the leader) to marshal the others into "backup" to its lunging/reacting to things on the walk. You might walk one at a time to try to identify if there's one starting it. If you focus on that one.
Usually this stuff has to do with the human not being the leader at home, in small things. They let the dog get away with a lot, but want the dog(s) to behave in one circumstance (which is harder to correct when the dogs don't receive "rules, boundaries & limitations" at home in the easy things.). If they're not used to listening to you, then it's harder for them to hear outside with distractions. Little things like letting a dog lead you out the door for a walk (or follow you out excitedly) can make it impossible to control the dog during the walk.
I always encourage people to go back to the original Dog Whisperer series and watch that. I think people expect a simple how-to for these things. Like, a special leash (or "tsch") will fix it. It's more about how to "be" all the time, a leader, the energy, who you are to the dog. It's multi-dimensional, not simple like "how to teach a dog to sit." It's about meeting the dog's needs psychologically as a leader (not just loving a dog as a human). You'll see the problem you describe many times in those episodes. It's probably the most common problem. As you see it over and over, you can glean how all the elements come together (the little things that add up).
@@oceangaming88 Just to clarify about my comment that this isn't usually related to relaxation. I meant that more about your dogs' state of relaxation (when you said "can't get them to relax."). Your relaxation is important to being seen as a leader. People often fake/act being calm. But dogs sense the underlying frustration. Dogs can have frustrated energy which makes it hard for them to listen to your discipline. That's usually working breeds who might benefit from a long run before trying to have a structured walk, teaching them to follow you as the leader. So, that can be part of it. But, usually it's lack of leadership overall (in things unrelated to the walk). Not enough calm-assertive energy all the time. Too much affection for the wrong things. If you watch the original DW, you'll see what I mean. it's the common theme. And then, trying to do this with more than one dog at once is even harder because, as I said, there's usually one that is the leader to the other(s). You have to work on that one first.
The video was unclear with how resolution was achieved or even if it was. Perhaps important details were edited out? :(
It's a 4-minute clip from a 40-minute episode of Leader of the Pack (season 1, ep. 4). The prior upload about a week ago was from the same episode. That might add something. The series is an "elimination" reality show where 3 families hope to adopt the dog, but only the one most capable of being a leader to the dog is awarded that honor. So, it's not really a documentary about rehabilitating the dog (the way Dog Whisperer or Cesar 911 is). It's a bit more entertainment oriented like H***'s Kitchen (as each participant is eliminated through the show). It's worth watching. It has some good stuff. It was released on dvd which you can find online used/cheap. Amazon Prime has it (no subscription. You just buy it and own it.).
The way it goes is that the dog needs to learn to walk properly on a leash, with less excited "everywhere" energy. That will help it meet dogs with a better energy. The three families demonstrate their abilities to do that. Cesar guides them, and they do their best. He chooses one family to give the dog a home.
Não é um Basset Hound puro, pode ser um mestiço. O Basset Hound puro é um cão muito pacífico.
Thats not a pure bred basset hound.
You should give us overseas the whole episode. I dont have no zucking netflix
Is Amazon Prime available to you? Leader of the Pack is on it. No subscription required. You pay for it, and own it. But, that's the US. Maybe it's not available that way elsewhere? It was released on DVD, but you'd need a region-free player.
I don't think he can post the entire episode. Nat. Geo owns it. I'm sure they want to make their money selling it on streaming (but then, they might not make it available everywhere. So, it's them doing it.).
@@markfuller Truth is that I dont pay for entertainment. Games, movies,... maybe except for cinema. I'll just click on something else. Other YT creators are happy to do it for YT money
@@trollmcclure1884 I understand. In that vain, I have seen *a lot* of high-quality Dog Whisperer & Cesar 911 episodes on the "invisible internet project." It's kind of slow downloading due to its nature (privacy). But, some good stuff there.
I think Cesar got screwed in his relationship with Nat Geo. There is a Jordan Harbinger vlog (ep 162) titled "Cesar Millan on the Biggest Mistake Dog Owners Make" where he talks about it. (If I recall, nowhere in that video does it actually say what the "biggest mistake" actually is either. Just warning you in advance. ha. ).
HI, I have a question ! I own a Sharpei a female called Elsie she is 12 and extremely jealous towards the other animals of the house.I own 5 cats and before owned 2 other sharpei's a mâle and female, 2 chihuahuas.. When i took in Elsie she was adopted and i think abused she would enter terrible fights with my other female Sharpei to the point of blood gashing everywhere. Now she is alone in the house and i am getting a baby husky boy of three months. I am a bit nervous she will be agressive towards him but being a boy she did not have much agressivity towards my mâle sharpei but try to dominate him all the time and he would show her very quickly he was the boss.
Any advice on how to introduce them, in the house or outside ? any tips ? Thanks.
In my experience, that happens because the person allows it (not being the leader; not establishing rules, boundaries, limits in everything all the time; too hands-off and appreciating the wrong things; too spectator, not showing the dogs that the person sorts things out instead of the dogs; allowing a dog to feel it's 2nd lieutenant to the person, vice-leader to the leader. In a pack of dogs, the alpha would not allow that kind of usurpation to the harm of the other members.).
I tell everyone: watch the original Dog Whisperer series (9 seasons). There's _many_ episodes of this problem. Even the episodes of pulling/lunging on leash are about the same thing (the dog's being possessive of the human; acts as the leader on the walk). You don't have to watch many episodes to see the constant theme: it's the person. They're too hands-off in the small things. They only want the big problem fixed. If they exhibited more "rules, boundaries & limitations" in the small things (using calm-assertive energy, not baby talk nor yelling), the dog would understand what the person means about the big things.
The very first episode (NuNu) is about this. Season 1 ep. 20 (Pepsi) is a german shepherd posessive of the wife, and goes after "Kitty Love." 2-1 (Bandit). 2-18 (Snowflake). 3-6 (Sophie, possessive of owner & attacks pack mate). 3-13 (Rudy, aired as 3-12). 3-19 (Ricky, aired as 4-1). 4-14 (Owen, aired as 4-15). 4-26 (Lotus, aired as 4-33).
@@markfuller thanks a lot for the reply I will watch the videos and appreciate you took the time to answer.
@@SuryanWarrior Another episode came to mind: Cesar 911 2-9 (Bella). That's a french bulldog who's jealous at a frenchie meet-up. (A fine line between jealously and protecting--as in "owning" the person.).
Definitely didn't seem too bad probably due to Cesar's extensive experience in spotting the signs before they get bad
cesar rocks but that's not a basset hound
Thats not a BASSETT HOUND. It's A Bassett and something else.
That’s not a basset 😣
😀
Hi Cesar , how can I contact you ?
How much do you charge ?
Please let me know
I think Cesar is heaven sent for us fur parents,🙏 i got my puppy to eat and lessen her anxiety by watching your shows! Just watching your videos sort of put us into that calm state 😂 God bless you! Lots of love from the Philippines❤️
I say he’s more Jack Russell beagle mix
He is brilliant and I try his techniques. So what I’m wondering is when I correct for pulling on the lead or distract my dog when he is being aggressive to other dogs he licks his lips then just carries on pulling on the lead, he stops being aggressive but only until the next dog comes along. I wish I had Cesars talent!
I would say that lip-licking in that circumstances is act of submission. That's a good sign (if I'm right). The dog wants to follow you, or accepts your correction (understands what you want). Sometimes lick licking can be a warning. I'm thinking of a dog laying in a spot it shouldn't (on the bed, on a sofa) and you're going to remove the dog. Lick licking then might signal "I'm going to bite in order to own my space." But, that doesn't sound like the circumstance you see it in.
If you watch the original Dog Whisperer series (highly recommended, it's a forgotten resource), you'll see the unwanted behavior _a lot_ . It's almost every other episode. The usual mistakes people make are 1) a harness (control the body, but not the mind). 2) too much leash (they don't keep the dog at their side as a matter of practice). 3) They ignore the signs of the dog becoming excited/fixated. (FOr some reason, it is a human trait to consider the dog innocent until proven guilty. We wait for the dog to lunge rather than interrupt the early signs, and not let the dog's energy raise to a level 6, where it's harder to interrupt). 4) People often let the dog lead them out the door for the walk. Or, they don't wait for the dog to be calm, and looking at the person to be invited out for the walk only when calm. (That little seeming symbolism can have a big effect on who's walking whom). Add to that #2, and it's clearer who's walking whom. 5) The dog doesn't get enough exercise. It can't hear the discipline. (Take the dog for a run first. Release that pent up energy. Then work on discipline/expectations. Then give affection. People get the order wrong.).
If you watch a couple seasons of DW, you'll see all of that. Plus, you'll see 6) that it's often a lack of leadership at home. The dog doesn't have to earn its affection at home. The people think it's cute, and they enjoy the relationship at home when nothing really matters. It's only when some challenge in the environment occurs that it matters (that the dog won't listen). But, if they practiced calm-assertive leadership at home (rules, boundaries, limitations), then the dog would understand more what the person means when they do it when in the face of real challenges. In that sense: even the episodes that aren't about this problem will help because it's usually the same thing over and over (different problem): a human who isn't the leader.
Why not better people, better world?
This is the ONLY hound Cesar has ever worked with.
That you know of?
I have the same problem with my dog, need help !
Basset Hound... mix.
Owwwwwwwwwwwwwww!
Its not a basset hound - its might be some kind of mix of it. Like Jack Russel + Basset Hound - but I think its more like child of basset hound mix with Jack Russel. No floppy ears, no size of basset hound... nah its not a basset hound.
Where are his long ears?
I have a 2 year old gsd and can anyone tell me how to correct him when he's biting my family using Cesar's method
this isnt a pure basset. its a mixed breed maybe not even a basset mix tbh
This is so wierd this just came up! I just watched a dog literally kill a cat! I didn't know why my dog was barking in my backyard and looked to see what she ( st.bernard) was barking at... I thought it was a toy at first but it was very aggressive and I went a cross the St to look and it was a bloody dead kitty! Very disturbing and I knocked on there Dr told her her dog just killed a cat in her front yard and she said her dog was in the back...ya that's where it came from & they are moving she said and I'm new here! I'm glad they're moving!
Hello how are you doing?
Doesn't look like normal basset looks almost like it's mixed with rat terrier or jack Russell. Look at the face and ears. Normal basset would not behave like that. Be so twitchy and reactive.