Cowboy rooster with dead cowboy
(Beth Clifton collage)

Accused cockfighters could take lessons from cowpokes & Mickey Mouse in how to cut & spin losses

            BURBANK, California;  CHEYENNE, Wyoming;  IRONTON, Ohio––Suspected cockfighting promoters James and Beckie Newcomb are unlikely to ever be accused of possessing the business smarts behind either the 125-year-old Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo and concert series,  or Walt Disney Studios,  making hit films since 1923.

The Newcombs have,  however,  been known to host at least one country music concert to try to raise the cost of hiring a lawyer,  after James V. "Bub" Newcomb II,  53,  starred in a January 3,  2021 video showing him and co-defendant Shannon Lee Clark,  35,  allegedly assaulting Showing Animals Respect & Kindness [SHARK] founder Steve Hindi.

Hindi had just launched a surveillance drone to follow up on a tip SHARK had received that the Newcombs were staging a cockfight.

James V. "Bub" Newcomb II and co-defendant Shannon Clark.  (Beth Clifton collage)

Felony charges pending

James Newcomb and Clark were subsequently indicted by a  Lawrence County grand jury on a total of eight felony counts,  five against Newcomb,  three against Clark,  whose cases have yet to go to court.

If the Newcombs had handled their conflict with SHARK and Hindi as Cheyenne Frontier Days has,  they would have made their concerts rather than their violence against animals the main event at their Waterloo,  Ohio farm,  an inholding within the Wayne National Forest.

If the Newcombs had handled their conflict with SHARK,  Hindi,  and a multitude of other animal advocates as Walt Disney Studios has,  they would have quietly left the cockfighting business.

Aloha Rodeo bookcover
Aloha Rodeo bookcover

Aloha Rodeo showdown loomed

ANIMALS 24-7 speculated on March 21,  2021,  that "Walt Disney Inc.,  Cheyenne Frontier Days,  and a coalition of animal advocacy groups headed by Showing Animals Respect & Kindness [SHARK] may be headed toward the highest-profile showdown at the 123-year-old Frontier Days rodeo since Hawaiian paniolos Eben Parker "Ben" Low,  Ikua Purdy,  and Archie Kaaua rode into town in 1908 to show some of the last authentic Old West cowpokes how steers were roped in Hawaii.

"The 1908 outcome,  though brutal for the steers involved,  was a debacle for Old West white supremacy,"  ANIMALS 24-7 explained,  "that rodeo cowboy culture spent the next 90 years trying to live down and forget."

Walt Disney Studios had just announced hiring a writer to try to develop a screenplay based on the 2019 book Aloha Rodeo: Three Hawaiian Cowboys,  the World's Greatest Rodeo,  and a Hidden History of the American West.

(Beth Clifton collage)

But Walt Disney Inc. rode away before sundown

SHARK,  targeting Cheyenne Frontier Days in frequent investigations since 2005,  responded by organizing a coalition in opposition to the Aloha Rodeo project.

Signing on were Last Chance for Animals,  the Humane Farming Association,  Anti-Rodeo Action New Zealand,  Fish Feel,  The Animal Cruelty Exposure Fund,  NYCLASS,  United Poultry Concerns,  Animals Voice magazine,  the Animal Alliance of Canada,  the League of Humane Voters-Florida,  and In Defense of Animals,  along with individual activists Peggy Larson and Stevan Harnad.

The online entertainment periodical Deadline,  which had energetically puffed the prospective Aloha Rodeo film,  on May 18,  2021 announced that it had "learned that Disney is no longer moving forward with the project."

Walt Disney Studios has leaked no further information specific to Aloha Rodeo,  but has made recent drastic budget cuts,  after the parent company,  Walt Disney Inc.,  lost $120 million in 2020 due to shutdowns occasioned by COVID 19,  with a 53% drop in revenue during the first quarter of 2021 as compared to 2020.

Frontier Days
Fallen horse at 2015 Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo. (From SHARK video.)

Frontier Days spun ticket sales collapse as "a record"

While Walt Disney Inc.,  as a publicly traded company,  had no choice but to release the bad economic news,  the Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo and concert series announced immediately after the ten days of events ended on August 1,  2021 that it had "set a record for combined ticket sales for the rodeo and concerts in 2021."

Not really.  Total ticket sales in 2018 came to 543,705.  Total ticket sales in 2021 were just 267,369,  nine thousand less than half as many.

Rodeo event attendance did,  however,  reach a record 111,617,  up 14% from the 2019 rodeo attendance of 97,373 people.

The rodeo finals were attended by 14,925 people,  also an apparent record.

At that,  though,  the Cheyenne Frontier Days concerts continued a longterm trend of substantially outdrawing the rodeo.

Rodeo horse & Covid-19
(Beth Clifton collage)

Rodeos remain hard as ever on the animals

Relatively few rodeo injuries to animals were reported in 2020 because few rodeos were held,  due to restrictions on public gatherings imposed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In 2021,  though,  rodeos are again being held,  and animals are again documentedly hurt at every event animal advocates attend with cameras.

"On Thursday,  July 29,"  SHARK reported,  "a SHARK investigator filmed the wild horse race at Cheyenne Frontier Days.  During the event,  one horse had a clearly injured leg,  possibly broken,  yet instead of stopping and giving the horse immediate care,  the cowboy who rode the horse just forced the animal to keep running,"  until "the horse eventually collapsed."

The Medicine Hat Stampede Rodeo held the same night also featured a horse injury.

According to CHAT News Today of Redcliff,  Alberta––whose headline read "Concern for collapsed horse underlines Stampede Rodeo's return"––the horse was not involved in a steer-wrestling competition and was only "standing nearby,"   but "collapsed and suffered convulsions while the crowd watched between heats."

James & Beckie Newcomb
James & Beckie Newcomb watch cockfight, from SHARK video.

Suspects held another cockfight

Back in Waterloo,  Ohio,  James and Beckie Newcomb on July 18, 2021 "held another illegal cockfight on their property,"  Steve Hindi informed the Lawrence County commissioners.

"We reported this information to [Sheriff Jeff Lawless],"  Hindi continued.  "In response, Deputy Michael Delawder was dispatched to the Newcomb property.

"According to Deputy Delawder, he did not make contact with anyone on the Newcomb property.  This is false,"  Hindi charged.  "Deputy Delawder lied.

Michael Delawder
Michael Delawder, from SHARK video.

"Delawder did in fact make contact with the Newcombs––both James and Beckie.

"Deputy Delawder did in fact know there was an ongoing, illegal cockfight,"  Hindi alleged.

"Delawder nevertheless left the property,  allowing the criminal operation to continue,"  while SHARK cameras documented both Delawder's visit and the cockfight itself.

Beth and Merritt please donate
Beth & Merritt Clifton

"James and Beckie Newcomb are clearly shown in those images,"  Hindi said,  posting examples.

Hindi asked that James V. "Bub" Newcomb II's bail bond be revoked,  and that Beckie Newcomb be charged with attending a cockfight.

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