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Eric Goode
Eric Goode
from Wikipedia

Eric V. Goode (born December 19, 1957) is an American entrepreneur, conservationist, and Emmy nominated filmmaker. He is known as the creator of the art nightclub Area, numerous hotels and restaurants, including the Bowery Hotel, the Waverly Inn, and the Hotel El Roblar in Ojai, CA. Goode is also known for being the founder of the Turtle Conservancy and Goode Films, which produced Tiger King (Netflix) and Chimp Crazy (HBO).

Key Information

Biography

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Born in Rhode Island in 1957 and raised in New York City until the age of 8, Eric V. Goode[1] relocated with his family to California. He is the second of five children born to Marilyn Goode, a naturalist and conservationist, and Fredrick Goode, a painter and teacher. He has lived in New York City since 1977.

Eric began his career as an artist, educated at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, and Parsons School of Design. Much of his early work was displayed in group shows with other upcoming artists of the day, the earliest in 1981 which was curated by Keith Haring.[2][3] He continued to make and show his art throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s.[4]

In 1983, Goode formed the nightclub Area. Area was known for its constantly changing themes and collaboration with artists of the time (Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Hockney, Keith Haring, Kenny Scharf, and others). Area was Goode's first business venture where he merged art into the context of a nightclub.

In the early to mid-1990s, he directed several music videos for bands such as Nine Inch Nails and Robbie Robertson. He and Serge Becker earned a music video production award for their work on "Pinion".

Over the next two decades Goode transitioned into restaurants[5] and hotels, including many in collaboration with his partners Serge Becker and more recently Sean MacPherson.[6] His most recent projects include the Ludlow Hotel and Hotel El Roblar.

During the 2010s, Eric became focused on filming various characters that led to the creation of Tiger King, and Tiger King 2. The success of these docuseries led to the creation of Eric's film studio, Goode Films.

Eric Goode currently lives in New York City and California.

Nightclubs, restaurants and hotels

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  • 1981 – The Club with no Name
  • 1983 – Area[7]
  • 1988 – MK
  • 1989 – BC (LA)
  • 1990 – Time Cafe and Fez
  • 1994 – B Bar & Grill
  • 2000 – The Park
  • 2001 – The Maritime Hotel
  • 2003 – Matsuri (closed)
  • 2003 – La Bottega (closed)
  • 2003 – Hiro Ballroom (closed)
  • 2006 – Waverly Inn
  • 2006 – Lafayette House
  • 2007 – Bowery Hotel
  • 2007 – Gemma
  • 2008 – The Jane Hotel
  • 2014 – Ludlow Hotel
  • 2024 – Hotel El Roblar

Philanthropy and land preservation

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After a career in the hospitality business, Goode shifted his focus to wildlife philanthropy after being approached by John Behler of the Wildlife Conservation Society in 2003. Goode first created a rescue and breeding center for endangered turtles and tortoises under Behler's guidance. In 2005, Goode formed his own public charity the Turtle Conservancy. The mission of the Turtle Conservancy is to protect threatened turtles and tortoises and their habitats worldwide. Goode's conservation philosophy centers around turtles as umbrella species, whereby thousands of species are saved by protecting land for turtles and tortoises.

Since its inception, Turtle Conservancy has helped to protect over 60,000 acres of wild land around the world. The organization works to protect turtles, tortoises and other animals on five continents. Guerilla documentaries and public service announcements directed by Goode and the Turtle Conservancy have amassed millions of views across various social media platforms. These documentaries raise awareness of wildlife trafficking, habitat destruction, and the pet trade. Goode has personally donated over 30 million dollars towards wildlife conservation and land protection. His conservation work has been featured on 60 Minutes, Charlie Rose, Racing Extinction, The New Yorker, NPR and CNN.

Goode was recognized by the wildlife community for his efforts, with a tortoise named after him in 2016. The Goode's thornscrub tortoise (Gopherus evgoodei) is a desert species from Northern Mexico described by a team of American and Mexican biologists.[1]

South Africa

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In South Africa, the Turtle Conservancy, along with its partner organizations, has purchased over 1,000 acres of the last remaining habitat for the critically endangered geometric tortoise (Psammobates geometricus).

Sonora, Mexico

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The Turtle Conservancy secured approximately 1,000 acres of tropical deciduous forest in southern Sonora, Mexico, for the protection of the Goode's thornscrub tortoise (Gopherus evgoodei).

Durango, Mexico

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The Turtle Conservancy has purchased a significant portion (over 60,000 acres) of the last remaining habitat of the Bolson tortoise (Gopherus flavomarginatus). The largest of the North American terrestrial reptiles, this tortoise has been known to science only since 1959.

Palawan, Philippines

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1,890 acres was secured for the protection of the critically endangered Palawan forest turtle (Siebenrockiella leytensis) in the Philippines.

Other conservation projects

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Other conservation projects that Eric Goode has spearheaded include:

  • Goode leads conservation for the ploughshare tortoise, the world's rarest tortoise through a partnership with Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust. Goode has supported conservation both in Madagascar and sits on the Angonoka Working Group Committee.
  • Goode supports emerging research for turtles and tortoises by funding the Turtle Conservation Fund, Chelonian Conservation & Biology Journal, and the Turtle Survival Alliance every year since 2005.
  • Goode has created a conservation center in Ojai, CA to support local education and wildlife protection.

Boards and councils

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Publications

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The Tortoise

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The Tortoise is an annual magazine publication of the Turtle Conservancy dedicated to the conservation of turtles and tortoises. The wide scope of the magazine reaches readers from all over the world. Its audience includes everyone from world-renowned scientists and biologists, to travelers, naturalists, ecologists and conservationists, as well as a general audience interested in wildlife preservation and environmental protection. It is not a scientific journal. It is a publication about the wonder of turtles and tortoises and about the conservation challenges they face, and it is about the people who are devoted to saving these creatures from extinction.

Area: 1983–1987

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In 2013, Abrams published a 360-page coffee table book on the seminal nightclub AREA, authored by Eric and Jennifer Goode. Drawing from a rich archive of material, Eric and Jennifer tell the behind-the-scenes story of the club and its people, creating an illustrated memoir of an exciting time and place in the history of New York nightlife. To accompany the launch of the book Eric collaborated with Jeffrey Deitch to curate an exhibition at The Hole gallery.[8][9] The show consisted of original installations as well as pieces from many of the artists that participated or were influenced by the club.[10]

Film and videos

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Docuseries

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In 2020, Netflix premiered Tiger King, a seven-episode docuseries directed and produced by Eric Goode about people who own and breed lions, tigers, and other big cats. The show quickly became one of the most watched shows on the Netflix platform.[11]

In 2024, Goode directed and produced Chimp Crazy for HBO, revolving around animal broker Tonia Haddix, caught up with authorities and animal rights groups over her chimpanzee Tonka.[12][13]

Natural history films

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Year Documentary
2005 John L. Behler Chelonian Center
2006 Galapagos Islands
2007 Madagascar
2008 The Argentine Tortoise
2009 In Search of the Okinawa Leaf Turtle
2010 The Great Tortoise Transect
2011 In Search of the Impressed Tortoise

Music videos

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Year Artist Music video
1992 Nine Inch Nails "Help Me I Am in Hell"
1992 Nine Inch Nails "Pinion"
1993 Digital Orgasm "Time to Believe"
1994 CeCe Peniston "Hit by Love"
1994 Terrorvision "Oblivion"
1998 Robbie Robertson "Unbound"

Art

[edit]

Most of Goode's art is created as a vitrine, or display case, with three-dimensional artwork inside. Similar to Joseph Cornell, his work incorporates many aspects of assemblage. Goode's work also has notable similarities to Damien Hirst and Jeff Vaughan, especially his tendency to represent elements of the natural world in his mixed-media installations.[citation needed]

Exhibitions

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  • 1981 – Group Show curated by Keith Haring, Mudd Club
  • 1987 – "Subject Object", Group Show, 56 Bleecker Gallery
  • 1988 – Group Show, Bess Butler Gallery
  • 1989 – One Man Show, Bess Cutler Gallery
  • 1989 – "American Pie", Group Show, Bess Cutler Gallery
  • 1989 – "Don't Bungle the Jungle", Group Show, Tony Shafrazi Gallery
  • 1989 – "New Work, New York", Group Show, Helander Gallery
  • 1990 – "Amnesty International", Group Show, Tony Shafrazi Gallery
  • 2013 – "AREA: The Exhibition", Group Show, The Hole Gallery, curated by Jeffrey Deitch and Glenn O'Brien

Awards

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Eric Goode (born December 1957) is an American entrepreneur, conservationist, and documentary filmmaker. He gained prominence in the New York nightlife scene as co-founder of Area, a groundbreaking that operated from 1983 to 1987 and featured regularly changing thematic installations by artists and designers. Goode later expanded into , co-owning establishments such as the Waverly Inn restaurant and . In 2005, Goode founded the Turtle Conservancy, a nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting turtles and tortoises through habitat preservation, captive breeding, and reintroduction programs, including the establishment of protected areas like the 1,000-acre Geometric Tortoise Preserve in South Africa. His conservation efforts have been recognized with awards, such as the 2016 Behler Turtle Conservation Award. Transitioning to filmmaking, Goode co-directed the 2020 Netflix documentary series Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness, which chronicled the eccentric world of private zoo operators and drew over 64 million households in its first month. He followed with Chimp Crazy (2024) for HBO, earning Emmy nominations for outstanding nonfiction writing and directing.

Early Life and Career Beginnings

Childhood and Education

Eric Goode was born in 1957 near Sonoma, California. He was the second of five children born to Marilyn and Frederick Goode within about six years, with his father working as a retired schoolteacher. The family lived on land in Sonoma, where Goode and his siblings experienced a relatively unstructured, "feral" childhood, roaming freely and interacting with local wildlife without much adult supervision. From an early age, Goode displayed a strong interest in reptiles, beginning to collect snakes, spiders, and other species around the age of six. His mother, a longtime conservationist, influenced his approach by emphasizing the release of captured animals back into the wild, though she later critiqued his adult-scale reptile keeping. At age eight, Goode received a Greek tortoise, which sparked a particular fascination with chelonians that persisted throughout his life. He spent time hiking in Sonoma's Carriger Creek area during childhood summers on his grandfather's Rancho Rodeo ranch, catching king snakes, garter snakes, and frogs. Goode also received early mentorship from a herpetologist at the , further nurturing his passion for reptiles.

Entry into New York Nightlife

In 1976, Eric Goode relocated from California to New York City, immersing himself in the burgeoning downtown nightlife scene and experimenting with early ventures such as an unnamed club on 25th Street that drew local crowds through informal operations. Goode's pivotal entry into the professional nightlife industry came in 1983, when he co-founded Area nightclub at 157 Hudson Street in Manhattan alongside his brother Christopher Goode, childhood friends Shawn Hausman and Darius Azari, funding the project through personal resources as a self-sustained creative endeavor inspired by California's experimental ethos. Opening in September 1983 after distributing 5,000 custom invitations, Area distinguished itself with rotating art-installation themes—refreshed roughly every six weeks by teams of artists and carpenters—transforming the 13,000-square-foot space into immersive, ephemeral environments that emphasized visual spectacle over conventional clubbing. This innovative, theme-driven model attracted high-profile attendees including , fostering a selective appeal that underscored the risks of private-sector experimentation in an era of economic uncertainty for ventures. Area's rapid ascent to one of New York City's most coveted venues yielded early financial viability through high-demand entry policies and operational efficiencies born of "reckless abandon" in grassroots management, imparting foundational lessons in scalable hospitality amid the competitive club landscape.

Hospitality Ventures

Nightclubs

Eric Goode co-founded Area, a pioneering , in September 1983 with his brother Christopher Goode, Shawn Hausman, and Darius Azari, all childhood friends from who relocated to . Located at 157 Hudson Street in , the venue operated until its closure in 1987, spanning approximately four years. Unlike traditional clubs, Area functioned as an evolving art installation, with its interior undergoing complete transformations roughly every six weeks to align with curated themes such as "Confinement," "Suburbia," "Garden," "Darkness," and "Gnarly," totaling around 25 distinct iterations. This thematic innovation, driven by private ownership, allowed for unrestricted artistic experimentation, including collaborations with visual artists, designers, and performers who redesigned the space with elaborate sets, lighting, and installations. The approach attracted a mix of celebrities, artists, and creatives, positioning Area as a central node in Manhattan's ecosystem amid the era's economic boom and cultural excess. However, the model's dependence on frequent, resource-intensive overhauls contributed to its brief duration, as the high costs of production—necessitated by custom builds and rapid turnover—proved unsustainable without a shift to more repeatable formats. Regulatory pressures and intensifying competition from other exclusive venues further eroded viability, reflecting broader challenges in an oversaturated market where novelty alone could not guarantee longevity. Prior to Area, Goode had ventured into upon arriving in New York in 1976, opening an unnamed club on West 25th Street that quickly failed due to operational shortcomings. No other major projects under Goode's direct involvement are documented from this period, with Area representing the operational peak of his early hospitality efforts in club formats. The venture's emphasis on experiential exclusivity over standardized underscored a business strategy prioritizing cultural cachet, though it highlighted the risks of over-reliance on transient trends absent scalable revenue streams like merchandise or .

Restaurants and Hotels

Eric Goode transitioned from nightlife ventures into restaurants and hotels through partnerships emphasizing design-driven, experiential hospitality. In 2006, he co-opened the Waverly Inn at 70 Seventh Avenue South in , New York, renovating a historic building previously associated with literary figures like into a dining spot featuring American and celebrity appeal. The opened in February 2007 at 335 in Manhattan's , a 17-story property co-developed with Sean MacPherson and BD Hotels, converting a former industrial area plagued by flophouses and shelters into a bohemian-chic retreat with opulent interiors inspired by early 20th-century , including tasseled sofas and dimly lit public spaces. This evolution marked a shift to stable, revenue-generating operations reliant on private and targeted neighborhood revitalization, contrasting transient club models by prioritizing long-term occupancy and repeat patronage through curated atmospheres rather than ephemera. Goode and MacPherson's collaborations leveraged their design expertise to adapt underutilized properties, funding renovations without public subsidies and achieving market traction via organic buzz in underserved districts. Achievements include pioneering the Bowery's transformation from skid row to desirable lodging, drawing style-conscious guests and contributing to broader without relying on chain affiliations. However, the high-end positioning has drawn critique for fostering exclusivity, with some locals viewing the opulent insertions into gritty contexts as tone-deaf to surrounding socioeconomic realities, potentially alienating non-elite demographics through elevated pricing and insider allure.

Conservation and Philanthropy

Founding of the Turtle Conservancy

In 2005, Eric Goode founded the Turtle Conservancy as a public charity in response to the closure of a research facility at the , which displaced approximately 250 rare tortoises requiring immediate relocation and specialized care. The organization, co-founded with Maurice Rodrigues, prioritized private-sector intervention to address gaps in public institutional management, where such closures highlighted vulnerabilities in long-term species stewardship. The conservancy established its core operations at a 90-acre facility in , designed for , veterinary care, and habitat simulation to maintain among threatened chelonian . Initial housing efforts focused on the tortoises, expanding to encompass over 40 , including critically endangered ones like the and plowshare tortoise, through controlled breeding programs that have produced hundreds of offspring for reintroduction potential. Complementing breeding, the Turtle Conservancy supports field research via global expeditions—such as Goode's 2002 trip to for Burmese star tortoises—and has contributed to over 20 peer-reviewed publications co-authored by Goode on topics including rare tortoise ecology and trade threats. This privately funded approach enables targeted, adaptive conservation without the fiscal and bureaucratic constraints evident in government-affiliated zoos, fostering empirical advancements in species recovery metrics like hatchling survival rates exceeding 80% in controlled settings.

Land Preservation Initiatives

The Turtle Conservancy, under Eric Goode's leadership, established the Geometric Tortoise Preserve in , a 1,000-acre site dedicated to protecting the critically endangered geometric (Psammobates geometricus), marking the first such preserve focused on this species. This initiative, developed in partnership with the Rainforest Trust, secures thorn-scrub against agricultural expansion and , providing a potential long-term refuge where the species' population stabilization could occur through reduced habitat loss, though illegal collection persists as a threat to wild numbers. In , the Conservancy acquired approximately 1,000 acres in for Goode's Thornscrub Tortoise Preserve, in collaboration with Nature and Culture International, targeting the habitat of the Goode's thornscrub (Gopherus flavomarginatus), a endemic to arid regions facing fragmentation from development. This preserve emphasizes private land stewardship to mitigate and , yielding outcomes such as monitored tortoise populations and local community partnerships for enforcement, yet challenges remain from cross-border that bypasses protected areas. Separately, the Bolson Tortoise Ecosystem Preserve spans regions in Chihuahua, , and , safeguarding the (Gopherus flavomarginatus) through habitat restoration and release programs, including young tortoises on allied ranches, which have contributed to localized population recoveries amid ongoing pressures. Further efforts include securing 1,890 acres in the for the critically endangered forest turtle (Siebenrockiella leytensis), focusing on lowland forest remnants vulnerable to and pet extraction. These acquisitions facilitate partnerships with local authorities for patrols and monitoring, achieving measurable reductions in encroachment in designated zones, although broader illegal networks continue to undermine regional conservation efficacy. Across these projects, totaling thousands of acres protected, the approach prioritizes direct land ownership and targeted stewardship to counter immediate threats like , demonstrating benefits in species assurance over fragmented public lands, while underscoring the limits of isolated preserves against global trafficking dynamics.

Criticisms of Conservation Approach

Some members of the reptile enthusiast community have accused Eric Goode and the Turtle Conservancy of hypocrisy, arguing that the organization's advocacy against private ownership and breeding of turtles and by hobbyists undermines conservation efforts while the conservancy itself maintains a large private captive collection of over 250 rare specimens. These critics contend that Goode's opposition to "roadside zoos" and unregulated private keeping—evident in his public statements distinguishing his controlled facilities from individual ownership—creates an elite exemption for wealthy conservators, potentially limiting broader participation in species propagation. For example, discussions in forums highlighted surprise over Goode's 2023 appearance as a speaker at a expo, given his perceived anti-hobbyist stance, with attendees questioning whether his talks misleadingly framed private breeding as inherently harmful without acknowledging its role in maintaining . Critiques of the Turtle Conservancy's emphasis on secure, non-releasable assurance colonies—designed to safeguard against wild —extend to concerns over their efficacy compared to wild protection or regulated private breeding programs. General conservation analyses note that often incurs high costs, risks , and yields low reintroduction success rates for , with domesticated traits hindering survival post-release; for instance, one review identified and preemptive breeding as key limitations without addressing root threats. Additionally, the organization's 3-star rating, lower than 4-star peers like the Conservancy, has raised questions about funding transparency and program scalability, potentially reflecting inefficiencies in impact measurement or administrative overhead that limit broader replication beyond elite-funded models. Counterarguments from reptile keepers emphasize that private ownership outperforms centralized conservancies by leveraging incentives for breeding and care, citing cases where hobbyist networks have propagated rare chelonians more cost-effectively than institutional programs, with rates in well-managed private setups rivaling or exceeding those in assurance colonies due to diverse genetic inputs and reduced bureaucratic delays. Proponents argue regulatory frameworks for private breeding, rather than bans, foster empirical successes in recovery, as evidenced by higher viability in decentralized programs versus the risks in long-term . These views frame Goode's model as overly restrictive, prioritizing control over scalable, market-driven preservation.

Filmmaking and Media Production

Wildlife Documentaries

Eric Goode's wildlife documentaries employ an investigative approach that grants extensive access to subjects involved in exotic animal ownership, revealing the often chaotic and abusive undercurrents of private while blending journalistic inquiry with dramatic narrative elements. This style prioritizes on-the-ground footage and personal stories to expose systemic issues, such as inadequate regulations and welfare failures, though it has drawn debate over its reliance on sensational human conflicts to sustain viewer engagement. Goode co-directed Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness, a seven-episode series released on March 20, 2020, which chronicled the rivalries and excesses within the U.S. breeding and ownership industry, centering on operator and his conflicts with activist . The series amassed 34.3 million unique U.S. viewers in its first 10 days and reached 64 million households worldwide within four weeks, propelling it to cultural phenomenon status amid the . It earned Primetime Emmy nominations in 2020 for Outstanding or Nonfiction Series and Outstanding Directing for a /Nonfiction Program. By illuminating the proliferation of unregulated roadside zoos and cub-petting operations, the documentary contributed to heightened public scrutiny that supported passage of the Big Cat Public Safety Act in December 2022, which banned private ownership of s like tigers and lions, prohibited interstate commerce, and ended cub petting practices. In Chimp Crazy, a four-part HBO docuseries premiered on August 11, 2024, Goode directed and produced an examination of ownership through the lens of former nurse Tonia Haddix, who hoarded chimpanzees and monkeys in defiance of authorities, highlighting risks of abuse, escapes, and legal battles over animals like the chimp . The premiere episode garnered 2.3 million cross-platform viewers in its first two weeks, marking 's most-watched docuseries debut in four years. It received a 2025 Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Writing for a Program. Goode has also produced shorter works on and conservation, including films on the Argentine tortoise and searches for rare species like the Okinawa leaf turtle, though these predate his major series and focus more on field expeditions than ownership scandals. While Goode's format has effectively drawn massive audiences to issues—driving policy discourse and donations to sanctuaries—the inherent in foregrounding eccentric personalities and interpersonal drama has faced criticism for overshadowing animal suffering with human spectacle, potentially humanizing abusers and diluting calls for regulatory reform. Advocates note its value in reaching "unconverted" viewers uninterested in dry advocacy, yet detractors argue it risks glamorizing dysfunction over providing nuanced evidence of trade harms, as seen in 's emphasis on feuds that sometimes minimized on-screen depictions of captive conditions. This tension underscores the trade-off in using narrative drive to amplify conservation messages.

Music Videos and Other Films

In the early 1990s, Eric Goode directed two music videos for the band as part of promotions for their Broken EP, collaborating with designer and club visionary Serge Becker. "Pinion," released in 1992, depicted automated machinery in a stark, mechanical environment symbolizing entrapment and dehumanization. "Help Me I Am in Hell," also from 1992, portrayed a figure enduring ritualistic torment amid shadowy, infernal settings, rendered in high-contrast black-and-white cinematography that drew from Goode's background in New York nightlife visuals, emphasizing raw, atmospheric unease over narrative complexity. Goode contributed to the direction of segments within Broken (1993), a 20-minute companion to the EP, which framed individual videos—including his own—within a fictional snuff narrative involving and execution, amplifying the project's provocative edge but sparking controversy for its graphic simulated violence. This work marked an early foray into experimentation, blending Goode's artistic roots in club scenography with emerging aesthetics, though it garnered no major awards and remained niche compared to his later documentary output.

Ethical Controversies in Filmmaking

In Chimp Crazy (2024), director Eric Goode employed undercover tactics by concealing his identity from primary subject Tonia Haddix, posing as a sympathetic supporter to secure prolonged access to her chimpanzee sanctuary amid ongoing legal disputes over animal custody. This deception enabled filming of Haddix's interactions with primates like but drew criticism for ethical hypocrisy, as Goode's methods echoed the subject's own documented fabrications about animal origins and welfare. Reviewers and commentators argued that such manipulation undermined journalistic integrity, transforming filmmakers into active participants who influenced events rather than mere observers, potentially exacerbating the very harms they sought to expose. Similar methodological concerns arose with Goode's co-direction of Tiger King (2020), where extended embedding with exotic animal owners prioritized sensational personalities over systematic critique of captivity conditions, leading to accusations of glorification that overshadowed welfare abuses. Critics contended the series inadvertently boosted public fascination with private big cat ownership, evidenced by post-release spikes in roadside zoo visits and online searches for cub interactions, rather than fostering deterrence through unvarnished causal analysis of breeding cycles and habitat inadequacies. Goode acknowledged that character drama "trumped" ethical messaging on captivity, yet defended the approach as essential for audience engagement amid competing entertainment demands. Goode has countered such critiques by invoking a utilitarian rationale, asserting that deceptive access is warranted when it unveils systemic animal exploitation otherwise shielded from scrutiny, with outcomes justifying procedural lapses. In interviews, he cited 's role in amplifying advocacy, including heightened donations to sanctuaries and congressional inquiries into the trade by mid-2020, as empirical validation of impact over method. Proponents of this view highlight causal links, such as Chimp Crazy contributing to renewed scrutiny of Haddix's facilities by authorities, prompting welfare interventions absent prior public pressure. These practices underscore tensions between independent documentary production and regulated , where private filmmakers evade institutional oversight, enabling narrative biases—particularly in animal rights contexts tied to advocacy groups like PETA, with which Goode collaborated off-camera. While yielding visceral exposés, such tactics risk amplifying eccentricity over evidence-based reform, as seen in debates over whether Tiger King's virality sustained or subverted long-term policy shifts against unregulated ownership. Balanced assessment requires weighing access-driven revelations against potential for distorted causal inferences, favoring outcomes like documented facility closures over unverified sensationalism.

Publications and Art

Books and Magazines

Goode co-authored Area: 1983–1987 with his sister Jennifer Goode, published in November 2013 by as a 368-page hardcover documenting the New York nightclub Area, which he co-founded in 1983. The book draws on archival photographs, ephemera, and oral histories to chronicle the club's themed environments, celebrity attendees, and role in 1980s culture, emphasizing its experimental art installations that changed every six weeks. While visually rich, the narrative provides firsthand accounts of operational challenges and social dynamics, offering empirical insights into ephemeral urban nightlife as a cultural rather than enduring institution. As publisher and co-editor of The Tortoise, an annual magazine launched by the Turtle Conservancy around 2013, Goode has overseen issues blending scientific reporting, field expeditions, and conservation advocacy focused on chelonian species. Volumes such as Issue 1 (2013) and subsequent editions feature peer-reviewed-style articles on threats like habitat loss and , supported by data from global surveys and breeding programs, aiming to disseminate actionable empirical evidence for species preservation. The prioritizes first-hand field data over speculative narratives, including contributions on rare tortoises' , which have informed policy discussions in herpetological circles by highlighting quantifiable declines, such as in ploughshare populations. Goode has co-authored academic papers advancing herpetological knowledge, including a 2013 contribution to conservation strategies for the ploughshare (Astrochelys yniphora), detailing Madagascar field data on population fragmentation and illegal trade impacts, co-written with researchers like R. Kiester and A.R. Mandimbihasina. Another 2012 paper in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society examines in North American , using molecular evidence to argue against taxonomic splitting despite morphological differences, challenging prior classifications with phylogenetic analysis. These works, cited over 900 times collectively in conservation literature, underscore Goode's role in grounding in verifiable , distinguishing his textual outputs from broader media by prioritizing causal factors like genetic purity and predation risks over popularized accounts.

Artistic Exhibitions and Installations

Eric Goode's artistic endeavors originated with the Area (1983–1987), which he co-founded and conceptualized as a large-scale, immersive art installation rather than a conventional venue. The space at 157 Hudson Street in New York underwent monthly thematic transformations, such as "Suburbia" and "Natural History," incorporating custom sets, lighting, and commissioned works by artists including , , and to create experiential environments blending nightlife, performance, and visual art. These installations emphasized from downtown culture, with Goode overseeing the integration of , props, and to evoke transient, thematic narratives. In 1987, Goode presented a solo titled 1985–1987 at 56 Bleecker Gallery in New York, featuring visual works likely drawn from his photographic documentation and of the preceding club era. The show highlighted personal artifacts and images capturing the raw energy of New York's and scenes, reflecting Goode's shift from participatory installations to curated displays of private creative output. A retrospective nod to Area's legacy came with AREA: The Exhibition at The Hole gallery in New York, opening on November 5, 2013, where Goode collaborated on restaging key elements, including rare 1980s photographs, performance recreations like Warhol's Invisible Sculpture, and new commissions by artists such as . Curator praised the original club's approach as a pioneering form of experiential art that fused commercial nightlife with innovation. Goode's involvement underscored his ongoing influence in translating ephemeral installations into gallery contexts, though some observers noted the works' heavy reliance on nostalgic iconography tied to his entrepreneurial ventures. Goode has extended artistic elements into his hospitality projects, serving as art consultant for installations like a proposed oil at Hotel El Roblar in , in 2024, blending historical motifs with site-specific design. This approach mirrors Area's fusion of and business, prioritizing immersive, thematic environments over standalone gallery pieces.

Professional Affiliations

Goode serves as a board member of the International Foundation, an organization dedicated to the conservation of threatened iguana species through grants, habitat restoration, and scientific programs. His affiliations extend to several turtle-focused entities, including the Chelonian , which supports peer-reviewed research on chelonian and taxonomy, and the Turtle Conservation Fund (TCF), a coalition administering grants for endangered and freshwater to fund field research, threat assessments, and emergency interventions. He also holds board positions with Rainforest Trust, focused on protecting tropical forests and biodiversity hotspots, and Global Wildlife Conservation, which prioritizes recovery and efforts. Additionally, Goode is an active member of the IUCN/SSC Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group, contributing to international red list assessments and action plans for over 350 species. These roles have facilitated private funding networks that support targeted grants, such as those enabling rapid-response expeditions for critically endangered reptiles, though outcomes depend on collaborative implementation across organizations. In May , Eric Goode, a hotelier owning such as and Waverly Inn, joined as a co-plaintiff in Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington v. Trump, a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York alleging that President violated the of the U.S. by accepting payments from foreign governments through his interests, including the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. Goode claimed competitive , asserting that foreign dignitaries and officials patronized Trump to curry favor with the president, diverting potential from his own hospitality in a manner constituting an unconstitutional rather than ordinary market competition. The district court dismissed the case on December 21, 2017, ruling that the plaintiffs, including Goode, lacked Article III standing due to insufficient evidence of concrete, particularized injury; the alleged harm was deemed speculative, as no direct causation linked foreign patronage of Trump hotels to lost at Goode's properties, and emoluments claims were not shown to fall within the zone of interests protected by the clause. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit vacated the dismissal on September 13, 2019, holding that if plaintiffs could demonstrate direct with Trump properties, standing might exist under a competitive injury theory, remanding for further proceedings. However, the full circuit denied rehearing in August 2020, and the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed the case as moot on January 25, 2021, following Trump's departure from office, without reaching the merits of any emoluments violation. Critics of the lawsuit, including legal scholars and commentators, argued it represented an overreach of the Emoluments Clause, which historically prohibits direct gifts or titles from foreign states to federal officials but does not clearly extend to private commercial profits from arm's-length transactions, absent evidence of corruption or ; empirical data on foreign payments to Trump businesses showed routine hospitality revenue rather than unconstitutional emoluments, and the suit was viewed by some as a partisan vehicle lacking verifiable causal links to presidential influence. Goode's involvement aligned with broader post-2016 legal challenges by —a group with a record of targeting Republican administrations—prioritizing litigation over , though no empirical violation was adjudicated, preserving presidents' autonomy in private business holdings without mandated divestment, as practiced by prior executives. No other documented political or adversarial legal actions by Goode have been identified.

Awards and Recognition

Eric Goode received the Behler Turtle Conservation Award in 2016 for his leadership in establishing the Turtle Conservancy and advancing global turtle protection efforts, including of 25 and habitat preservation initiatives. The award, presented by the Turtle Survival Alliance at its conference in New Orleans in August 2016, recognizes outstanding contributions to chelonian conservation; Goode described it as the most meaningful honor in his career, sharing credit with his organization's team. In 2022, Goode and the Turtle Conservancy were awarded the Legacy Award by the United Nations Hospitality Committee for UN Delegations, honoring their sustained impact on and protection through turtle-focused conservation. Goode has earned three Primetime Emmy nominations for his documentary work. These include a 2020 nomination for Outstanding Documentary or Series for Tiger King, a 2020 nomination for Outstanding Directing for a Documentary/ Program related to the same series, and a 2025 nomination for Outstanding Writing for a Program for Chimp Crazy.

References

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