We read everything. The polished reports, the overlooked local pieces, the sensational headlines, the dry research summaries. Every week more than 500 tiger-related articles pass through our hands — and most never make it to the website. Some are inaccurate. Some are vague. Some reveal more about human priorities than about tigers. But even the flawed ones matter, because they show how the world frames tiger stories, and how often the real issues get buried.
This is why 30 Years Tiger News Show exists. Not to echo headlines, but to cut through them.
And because we believe in transparency, here is something many outlets hide: we use ChatGPT as part of our writing workflow — and we openly say so. The tool helps us rewrite, format, and organise the daily news. But the voice, the judgment, the selection, the fact-checking, the criticism, and every final decision remain human. AI is a writing force. We are the editors. And we stand behind every word.
The First Pillar: Global Media Monitoring
Tiger news does not come neatly packaged. It comes from everywhere — India, Indonesia, Nepal, Russia, China, Cambodia, Malaysia, Europe, North America, Latin America, Africa. Even from Alaska, Japan and Australia. We monitor established media outlets, regional publications, local reporters, environmental desks, enforcement updates, scientific briefings, and any source that publishes real tiger-related content.
What we track with around 150 keywords:
- Wild tiger conservation and habitat issues
- Captive tiger exploitation
- Poaching and trafficking networks
- Enforcement actions and failures
- Human–tiger conflict
- Policy moves and political blunders
- Science, population data, long-term studies
- Brands that use tigers in branding or marketing
We even follow unrelated “tiger” clickbait.
Every chosen article is reviewed by us. ChatGPT helps format the final text, but never invents information. If a link does not load, it must ask for the full article. No guessing. No hallucinations. No shortcuts.
Our loyalty is to tigers — never to institutions.

The Second Pillar: Our Tiger Archive (2010–Present)
Since the 2010 St. Petersburg Global Tiger Initiative, the world has produced thousands of tiger-related documents — strategies, promises, scientific papers, internal reviews, surveys, enforcement reports, conference presentations, habitat studies, trade assessments. Name it and it is there.
We collect them. All the news, but more than that: all the lies as well.
More than 1,000 serious documents now form our archive, covering:
- Wild and captive tiger issues
- Law enforcement and trafficking
- Habitat degradation
- Political commitments (and lies)
- Conservation science
- Historical baselines and long-term monitoring
This archive keeps tiger knowledge accessible instead of scattered across forgotten PDFs and unindexed conference slides.
The Third Pillar: Our Network
Behind every headline is a world of people who see what the public rarely does. Researchers, field biologists, enforcement officers, conservationists, vets, analysts, camera-trap teams, community coordinators, and insiders within institutions. Sometimes they help us identify context gaps, confirm details, or challenge sloppy narratives. But do know: We never reveal identities. We never publish confidential material.
Their insights keep our reporting grounded in reality, not abstraction.
Why We Disclose Our Use of AI
Because honesty matters. Because AI in media is often hidden. Because we would never ask for transparency in tiger conservation while hiding our own methods.
We use it because ChatGPT speeds up formatting. We can’t do things as fast as ChatGPT. But we want you to know: humans do the thinking. We make sure that the voice is human. We make sure that our integrity still stands. And we want you to know that we will still be accountable.
If something feels off, readers can tell us. We revisit, verify, correct, strengthen. This project is built on transparency — from the tools we use to the truths we chase.
Disclaimer, Media Referrals & Use of Photos
The information we publish originates from international media outlets, conservation organisations, research institutions, enforcement agencies, and local journalists. We do not own their content, and we do not claim to. Every news post links back to the original article so readers can access the full context. That link is our referral — clear, honest, transparent.
The photos we use come from the articles we cover. When a publisher credits a photographer, agency, or organisation, we include those credits as they appear. When a source provides no credit, we do not invent one.
We do not sell photos, redistribute them, or claim rights to them.
Our use is strictly referential — for reporting, commentary, education, and public awareness.
If a photographer, newsroom, or publisher contacts us with concerns, we act immediately. Respecting creative work and legal rights is part of the integrity we demand from ourselves.
Why This Matters
Tigers are not symbols. They are living indicators of political will, ecological health, business acumen, and human choices. The way the world talks about tigers reveals the state of forests, governance, enforcement, justice, and exploitation. Our job is to track that conversation honestly, relentlessly, and without bowing to convenience.
This page is part of that promise.
For this we execute the most comprehensive tiger news show in the world.
For this we need to be unfiltered.
For this we need to be global.
For this we need to be relentless.
Because we are on the side of tigers only.
