The Denver Post's Wolf Pup Problem
One of the oldest rules of journalism is that photographs matter. A picture can shape a reader’s perception before he reads a single word of the story. Editors know this. Reporters know this. Political consultants certainly know this.
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Which is why a recent Denver Post article about a Colorado rancher allegedly shooting a wolf after repeated livestock attacks caught my attention.
The headline concerned a wolf involved in livestock depredation. Yet accompanying the story was a photograph not of a mature predator, but of what appeared to be a wolf pup.
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A baby wolf, dated 2025.
The image choice was revealing.
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It can be viewed hered here.
No reasonable person believes a wolf pup was attacking cattle. The livestock attacks that have become increasingly common since Colorado’s wolf reintroduction program began are carried out by adult wolves. Adult wolves kill livestock because that is what wolves do. They are predators. They are not Disney characters. They are not plush toys. They are apex carnivores.
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Yet readers were presented with an image carefully designed to evoke sympathy rather than reality.
That raises an obvious question: Why?
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Colorado’s wolf reintroduction program was never primarily about wildlife management. It was a political project.
In 2020, Proposition 114 narrowly passed, mandating the reintroduction of gray wolves into Colorado. The measure was supported overwhelmingly along the Front Range, particularly in urban and suburban areas such as Denver and Boulder. Meanwhile, many of the people who actually make their living on the land — ranchers, farmers, and rural residents — opposed it.
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The divide was predictable.
Many urban voters experience nature through documentaries, Instagram posts, and hiking trails. Ranchers experience nature differently. Their livelihoods depend on it.
A software engineer in downtown Denver may view wolves as majestic symbols of wilderness. A rancher in North Park or Grand County sees a predator capable of killing thousands of dollars’ worth of livestock in a single night.
One perspective is romantic.
The other is reality.

AI-generated illustration created by ChatGPT
The Denver Post itself endorsed Proposition 114, acknowledging at the time that wolves would inevitably kill livestock but arguing that compensation programs would make ranchers whole.
That was always a dubious claim.
When wolves kill cattle, sheep, or other livestock, the loss is not merely financial. It is emotional, operational, and often brutal.
Wolves typically do not kill with the clean efficiency portrayed in nature shows. Wildlife experts have long documented that wolves often begin feeding on the soft internal organs of prey animals first. The animal may still be alive during portions of the attack. It is a gruesome death, whether the victim is an elk, a deer, or a rancher’s calf.
The same people who profess deep concern for animal welfare often seem curiously uninterested in discussing this reality.
Apparently, compassion extends to predators, but not necessarily to prey. Much like how corporate media treated the stories of Iryna Zarutska's in North Carolina. Or Henry Nowak in the U.K.
Nor does compensation fully address the problem.
Recent reports have shown that wolf depredation claims are already exceeding expectations and straining available funding. Colorado has paid more than $1.3 million in compensation claims since reintroduction began, including more than $700,000 approved for claims in 2025 alone. The state’s compensation fund has struggled to keep pace with growing losses.
Imagine applying the same logic elsewhere.
If someone vandalizes your car, is everything fine because you eventually receive an insurance check?
If someone burns down your house, does compensation erase the trauma?
Of course not.
Yet that was essentially the argument used to reassure skeptical ranchers before wolves were released.
Now that those concerns are proving justified, the media faces an uncomfortable dilemma.
How do you report the consequences of a policy you supported without admitting the critics may have been right?
One solution is subtle framing.
You report the livestock losses.
You report the conflicts.
You report the shooting.
But then you pair the story with an adorable wolf pup.
The reader is gently nudged toward a preferred emotional conclusion.
The wolf becomes the victim.
The rancher becomes the villain.
This technique is hardly new.
Many Americans remember the media coverage of the Trayvon Martin–George Zimmerman case. News organizations frequently selected a youthful photograph of Martin from years earlier while using less flattering images of Zimmerman. Those choices were not random. They helped establish a narrative before the facts were fully known.
Photographs are powerful precisely because they bypass rational analysis and appeal directly to emotion.
Or as Dan Bongino frequently mentions in his podcast, that politics is about “snapshots and soundbites.”
A wolf pup triggers one emotional response.
A snarling adult wolf with blood on its muzzle triggers another.
Neither image necessarily tells the entire story. But editors understand which reaction each will produce.
The Denver Post could easily have chosen a photograph of an adult wolf. There are countless such images available. It could have shown the type of animal actually involved in livestock depredation. It could have illustrated the reality ranchers confront.
Instead, readers got a baby wolf.
Perhaps this was simply poor editorial judgment.
Perhaps it was subconscious bias.
Or perhaps it reflects something deeper.
When journalists become invested in a political outcome, objective reporting becomes difficult. Every negative consequence becomes an inconvenience. Every failed prediction requires explanation. Every victim of the policy becomes less important than preserving the narrative supporting it.
Colorado’s wolf reintroduction debate is no longer about wolves.
It is about whether urban voters and urban journalists are willing to acknowledge the real-world consequences of decisions imposed on rural communities.
The ranchers’ warning about livestock losses was not ignorant. They were not anti-environment. They were not fearmongering.
They understood wolves because they actually live with them.
Journalists living in a Wash Park or a Cherry Creek home do not.
The people casting ballots from safe and comfortable Denver neighborhoods generally do not.
And now, as those consequences become increasingly difficult to ignore, some in the media appear more interested in protecting the wolf’s image than confronting the reality.
The Denver Post’s choice of a wolf pup photograph may seem like a small thing.
It isn’t.
It is a reminder that media bias often appears not in what is written, but in what is shown.
Sometimes the most revealing part of a news story is the picture at the top.
Brian C. Joondeph, M.D., is a Colorado-based ophthalmologist who writes frequently about medicine, science, and public policy.
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