Steve vs. Scary Animals || STEVE HARVEY - Summary

Summary

On Steve Harvey's show, animal expert Jeff Musial brings in various animals to educate and entertain the host and audience. The segment features a capuchin monkey named Toby, a Mexican red-kneed tarantula, an alligator snapping turtle, a shingle back skink from Australia, a Malaysian jungle nymph, and an aardvark named Sasha. Each animal is showcased with unique features and abilities, such as the monkey's urine washing, the tarantula's venom, the turtle's powerful jaws, the skink's detachable tail, the nymph's thorn-like body hairs, and the aardvark's tongue and molars for eating termites.

Facts

Here are the key facts extracted from the text:

1. Jeff Musial is an animal expert who appears on the show.
2. Toby is a capuchin monkey who is a baby and won't hurt anyone.
3. Capuchin monkeys do something called urine washing, where they pee in their hands and coat themselves with it.
4. Mexican red-kneed tarantulas have venom that can turn the inside of their prey into mush.
5. The venom is not enough to kill a human, but it can cause discomfort.
6. The tarantulas use their front legs to grab their prey and then pump venom into it.
7. Alligator snapping turtles are about 150 years old and have 1,500 pounds of pressure in their mouths.
8. They can live up to 1,500 years in captivity.
9. Shingle back skinks are found in Australia and are super rare.
10. They can fold their head in half and have a tail that can break off and regrow.
11. Malaysian jungle nymphs are a type of insect that can handle themselves.
12. They have thorns on their legs that they use for defense.
13. Aardvarks don't have teeth except for in the back of their mouth.
14. They use their tongues to slurp up food and then grind it with their molars.
15. Aardvarks take over burrows from other animals and defend them with their backs.
16. They sleep for 18 hours a day and come out at night to look for food.
17. Aardvarks are not endangered, but they are preyed upon by leopards, hyenas, and humans.