![61. Pigeons - podcast episode cover](https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/d02ab162-92b1-40d0-9d90-caab30ce394f/c15d5fc4-14ba-4630-a045-4f31e591fbd2/3000x3000/3000x3000-eoet.jpg?aid=rss_feed)
Episode description
Once considered noble and heroic, pigeons are now viewed as an urban nuisance — one that costs cities millions of dollars a year. Zachary Crockett tosses some crumbs.
- SOURCES:
- Andrew Blechman, journalist and author.
- David Champagne, owner of Bird Busters, Inc.
- RESOURCES:
- "Racing Pigeon Sells For A Record-Breaking $1.9 Million At Auction," by Carlie Porterfield (Forbes, 2020).
- "Feathers of Honor: U.S. Army Signal Corps Pigeon Service in World War I, 1917–1918," by Frank A. Blazich Jr. (Army History, 2020).
- "Pigeon Wars," by Jon Mooallem (The New York Times, 2006).
- Pigeons: The Fascinating Saga of the World's Most Revered and Reviled Bird, by Andrew Blechman (2004).
- "Pigeons Have Magnets," by Charles Walcott, James L. Gould, and J. L. Kirschvink (Science, 1979).
- "The Pigeon as a Quality-Control Inspector," by Thom Verhave (American Psychologist, 1966).
- EXTRAS:
- "Freakonomics Radio Live: 'Jesus Could Have Been a Pigeon,'" by Freakonomics Radio (2018).