About The
Pet Place
The Pet Place television show began in
April, 1990 as a public service program. Supported by a 501 c 3 charity (Fed ID# 33-0595607) its mission remains two-fold:
to save homeless pets and to teach responsible pet ownership.
To date, The Pet Place has been responsible for
saving an estimated 160,000 animals from 45 shelters and rescue groups in the
LA/Orange/Riverside/San Bernardino County area. With an adoption rate of over 96% (including adoptable
disabled pets), it has become the most successful television show of its kind
in the nation.
The Pet Place has been honored by the
US Congress, The California Assembly, the SPCA, the counties of Los Angeles and
Orange, as well as the cities of Los Angeles, Anaheim, Long Beach, and Irvine.
The Pet Place TV show is seen
Saturdays at 1 PM on KDOC-TV, daily on Charter Cable/Long Beach on channels 3
and 8, and The Pet Place Radio Show is heard each Saturday morning at 7:00 on KKGO AM
1260 and 540.
Additional details
available on request, and by reading the following article appearing in the Los
Angeles Times.
Officers
Fred Bergendorff - President/Exec Producer
Larry Wright - Vice President
Hazel Wurfl - Secretary/Treasurer*
Board Members
Ernest Coronel
Angie Dahman
Hazel Darsow
John Gonzales
Kerrie Morgan
Staff/Key Volunteers
Gary Lycan – Senior Producer/Radio & TV Show
Diane Dennis
Margie Olds
Michelle Mahnke
Nell Anderson
Consulting Veterinarian
Dr. Bernadine Cruz
Attorney
Sterling Scott Winchell
*Additional officer position open
pending next board meeting
'Place' Maker Does His Heart Good
Creator-host Fred Bergendorff's hobby and pet
project is an Anaheim produced TV show on KDOC
that features adoptable dogs and cats from area shelters.

Anaheim - The waiting area for Fred Bergendorff's TV guests doesn't
quite compare to the "Tonight Show's." Rather than getting to spend their
nervous preshow moments sequestered in a green room filled with chic furniture,
TV monitors and heaped deli trays, there is merely a riser of tired brown
carpet for them to lounge on off to the left of the spare set.
But Leno and Letterman's guests are never so pampered. Each of Bergendorff's
is being stroked, coddled, massaged and cooed to by an attendant. Some
guests roll over, shameless as Madonna, offering their bellies to be rubbed.
Then some chirpy disco-lite music starts up, a couple of the guests
join in with a high-pitched whine - like the dogs they are -, and another
segment of "The Pet Place" begins taping.
Creator-host Bergendorff earns his keep working behind the scenes in
the radio industry, as promotion director for KNX 1070 news radio, but
on camera he has the assured manner of Casey Kasem or Dick Clark, not
to mention, at 50, the latter's timeless hair. It's something he originated,
intended to convey the message: "Be Kind to Animals."
For a pet lover, "The Pet Place" might be
the best gig in the world: In his half-hour show - aired on KDOC-TV CHANNEL
56 every Saturday at 7 a.m. and Sunday at 6 a.m. - Bergendorff's job,
in essence, is to pet cats and dogs. Volunteers carry them on one by one,
and Bergendorff pets them.
It's petting with a purpose, though. The animal guests, usually a dozen
per show, all come from Southland animal shelters and desperately need
homes. "The Pet Place" does remarkably well at getting them homes. At
this particular taping. last Thursday at KDOC's Anaheim studios, the show
celebrated its three-year anniversary on the station, and its 4,000th
pet adoption.
The anniversary program, which aired the last weekend, was practically
a spectacular, featuring balloons, a cake, a citation from the City of
Los Angeles, as well as a plaque from the show's sponsor, Jonny Cat, purveyors
of fine cat-box filler. Indeed, a costume-character Jonny Cat himself
put in an appearance. Usually there isn't so much icing.
"We don't go heavy on entertainment here", Bergendorff said. "Nothing
should upstage the animals. They're the stars. I like doing it this intense
way, where we showcase many animals in every show and talk about the important
aspects of pet care, without a lot of flash."
Indeed, the set looks like it cost all of $35. There's a sign, and a
carpeted table, on which the furry guests sit, usually, while Bergendorff
introduces them to the home audience and gives out their kennel number
and shelter at which they might be found.
Occasionally, a pet will bolt. One particularly large dog once took
the table over with him. Sometimes there are what they genteely refer
to as "accidents." As is inevitable with the volume of animals they've
had on the show, a couple of helpers have been nipped or clawed in the
guests' nervousness.
At this taping, one would swear many of the animals were experiencing
stage fright. Bergendorff explained: "They might think they're at the
vet's, but it's also a situation they've never encountered before, with
all the bright lights. If they get jumpy, that's all part of the experience
for us, and people are willing to go through that to give these animals
a chance."
He's never been bitten, or even gotten fleas from this guests, though
he does get more dog kisses in an evening than many folks get in a lifetime.
"But one hazard of this is the dry-cleaning bills," he said. "I can only
wear things one time before they have to go in again".
They tape every other week, two shows a night. Most of the animals are
of mixed breeds. "He's a schnauzer, possibly," opined one shelter rep
of the dog he'd brought to the show. And so it proceeds, with Bergendorff's
sweater picking up hairs from semi-spaniels, shepherds, Airedales, terriers
and various cats.
Some of the animals are handicapped. Along with a deaf purebred Brittany
spaniel, Eileen Pinder of the Huntington Beach-based Orange County Humane
Society brought on Emma, a dog that had been at the shelter for 2 1/2
months. Though blind, she still had eyes that said "love me," and it is
the show's getting that look into people's homes that will probably place
Emma in one of those homes.
"Let's please be responsible pet owners," Pinder reminded the audience.
"It was pouring rain when Emma was found wandering."
"Isn't that terrible?" Bergendorff commented, with genuine concern.
Bergendorff has loved animals since he had
pets as a kid. "And I've read all the books, 'Lassie,' 'Lad, a Dog,' and
probably seen every pet movie that's ever been out. We had the animal
stars of 'Homeward Bound, the Incredible Journey' come on the show. It
was terrific. I don't know how I feel about human stars, but I was in
awe of these animal stars. That's a favorite movie of mine."
He has only one pet of his own at present, a Maine Coon cat, but he
also feeds a group of strays that live near his Long Beach home. It was
one of these strays that led him to where he is now.
"One day in late 1989, this one little cute black cat from the group
disappeared, and some people told me they thought it had been taken to
the Long Beach animal shelter. Going there was the most important trip
of my life, because it made me aware of the tremendous pet overpopulation
the animal shelters are dealing with," he said.
He proposed to the shelter that he feature some of their animals on
a local access cable show. He began doing that, and still does, and after
a year began also doing the expanded version of the show on commercial
station KDOC.
There have been a few rabbits, snakes and iguanas on the show, but nothing
more exotic. "We encourage people not to get that kind of animal, because
exotic animals belong in exotic places, not people's homes. By far, we
feature cats and dogs because that's where the tragic pet overpopulation
is that we try to address. There are between 15 and 25 million euthanized
a year. Whatever the number, it's tragic to comprehend. We can't do anything
about the rest of the country, but we can certainly do our best for our
area," he said.
With no shortage of his own species suffering in the world, why does
he feel drawn to animals?
"For me, one thing is that they can't speak for themselves. They have
no voice, so some person needs to be the voice for them. And they look
so in need of love and homes. They're so trusting. Give them a little
food and take care of them and they give all this love in return."
The show alternately features animals from
22 Southland shelters. Some 96% of the animals featured become adopted,
and he says that rate is 100% for the typically hard-to-place handicapped
pets that Bergendorff makes a special effort in presenting. Some lucky
times, owners see their missing pets on the show and are reunited.
The 4,000 featured pets that were adopted don't tell the whole story
of the show's success. "The estimate we get from the shelters is that
overall possibly as many as 15,000 animals have found homes because of
the show. There's a reason why we do the show the way we do: People can't
call in to adopt a pet. They have to go to the shelter. We know they'll
be in a mind to get a pet when they go down, and if eight people go down
interested in a dog that was on the show, maybe six of them will go home
with other ones."
"This show has helped us tremendously," says the Humane Society's Pinder.
"Almost 100% of the animals we feature here find homes. I don't know what
I could do for a lot of our handicapped pets without 'The Pet Place.'
It's when they see them here on the show that a lot of viewers feel in
their hearts that they can take on that responsibility. Without that visual
tool, a lot of them would not have gotten homes."
Bergendorff estimates his show draws 40,000 to 50,000 viewers, and he
has derived some small amount of celebrity from it. "I was at Disneyland
a couple of weeks ago, and three different people recognized me, and stopped
and said they enjoy the show. Another came up to me in San Diego yesterday."
He also makes personal appearances at pet shows, where often several
hundred people will stop to talk to him. "Some want reassurance that all
these animals do get taken care of. Some just want to talk or show me
pictures of their cats and dogs. Some have adopted our pets and want to
share how they're doing.
We'd had one beautiful German shepherd named King on, who'd lived in
Big Bear. One night a drunk in a bar had shot him and he lost a leg because
of this cruel act. He ran out into the snow, and there were heroic efforts
of the community for days to find him. We had him on and this wonderful
family adopted him, and they came out to a personal appearance I made
and showed me pictures of King in the swimming pool with the family. I
love things like that."
Most of the people involved in the show volunteer
their services, including Bergendorff and co-producers Missy Will and
Gary Lycan. "We're lucky if we get our expenses covered, " Bergendorff
said. They recently received non-profit status, using donations to defray
production costs. (You can call Elevad Productions (949) 474-9510.)
He says his devoted producers make his work on the show as easy as possible,
and given his druthers, he'd tape it every week. Despite working full
time, teaching broadcast marketing part-time and doing everything tied
to the show (it's not just personal appearances; they've organized emergency
aid for animals following earthquakes, riots and other disasters), Bergendorff
claims that he's not a workaholic.
"When you love something a lot, it's not an effort. Even if I've had
a bad week, my eyes light up when I meet the animals. It makes you feel
that it's important and you're helping, making a difference. That's such
a high that I can't see myself ever not doing it."
From the Los Angeles Times Orange County
Life & Style section, Tuesday, April 26,1994.
Copyright 1994/The Times Mirror Company
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