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Mireya Mayor

Mireya Mayor

Location: North America

✈️ Miami

Shows: 2 x 45 min 


Anthropologist, Explorer & TV Host Mireya Mayor, Ph.D.


Pink Boots and a Machete

In this wild, insightful romp, Dr. Mireya Mayor, affectionately known as "Her Wildness,"

shares her unorthodox path to becoming a world-renowned scientist and popular TV

Host. Journey with Mireya through her childhood as the daughter of Cuban immigrants

in Miami where she was a Miami Dolphins Cheerleader, and the Fulbright Scholarship

that would be her ticket to adventure and the wonders of science, eventually leading to

a co-discovery of the world's smallest primate, deep in the jungles of Madagascar. One

of National Geographic's most popular speakers, Mireya's message reminds us that

nobody should reject their dreams, no matter how unlikely they may seem.


Behind the Scenes of My Wild Life

Mireya got her start in front of the camera as National Geographic's first Latina wildlife

correspondent, reporting back from far-flung locales, then eventually hosting her own

show for Nat Geo Wild. Next, for the History Channel series, Expedition Africa, Mireya

and three fellow explorers traced the footsteps of legendary explorers, Stanley and

Livingstone, across Africa with nothing but a compass, a few maps, and Stanley’s original

journals. Most recently, Mireya delights fans and skeptics alike with her current search

through the backwoods of North America for evidence of the legendary apelike creature

known as Bigfoot, in the third season of Travel Channel’s Expedition Bigfoot. When she's

not shooting, Mireya serves as the Director of Exploration and Science Comms for FIU, in

Miami, where she also juggles a family of 8.

Dr. Mireya Mayor—hailed by The New York Times as “The Female Indiana Jones”—is a world-renowned primatologist, explorer, and Emmy Award-nominated TV host. What she is not is typical!

As National Geographic’s first female wildlife correspondent, Mireya launched her TV career, reporting to Lisa Ling from remote locales where she was conducting field research.  Since then, she has hosted dozens of documentaries, including her own series Wild Nights with Mireya Mayor (Nat GeoWILD), Mark Burnett’s Expedition Africa (The History Channel), and the current hit series, Expedition Bigfoot, (Travel Channel).  Get the idea that she writes her own rules?  Mireya grew up in Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood, overprotected by her Cuban immigrant parents, so, when she won a Fulbright Scholarship that would send her packing a machete, and hiking into the jungles of South America, it would be her first camping trip.

Not one for rules or limitations, Mireya carved her own path.  Why should she not be a budding scientist during the week and a Miami Dolphins cheerleader on Sundays?  And, despite her choice of careers and her target area of early fieldwork, Madagascar, why should she not also have a family?  Mireya has pretty much redefined what it means to write your own narrative.

This loving mother of six is in near-constant motion, pushing strollers, being a dance mom, kissing scraped knees, while reading scripts, coaching FIU professors in the art of science communication, and searching for that elusive figure in the backwoods that looks a little like Chewbacca. Mireya knows a thing or two about searching for elusive and little known species.  She co-discovered and described the world’s smallest primate, a tiny mouse lemur, in the fragmented jungles of Madagascar. In addition to her regular TV appearances, Dr. Mayor is the Director of Exploration and Science Communications at Florida International University (FIU). Onstage she pairs fascinating real-life stories of her adventures—and misadventures—with inspiring solutions for the next generation of leaders, educators, innovators, creators, and  fearless young women.

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