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What Does The Fox Say? Meet Two Foxes Hanging Out By The ĻӰԺ Studios

Jerome Weeks
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ĻӰԺ
Meet Fox and Friend -- some of our furry visitors outside the ĻӰԺ studios near downtown Dallas.

Every day, we welcome visitors to ĻӰԺ – from guests for the midday “Think” program to community groups meeting in our building.

But we also get some furry visitors from time to time.

Meet Fox and Friend -- a vixen and her mate (we think). They were frolicking outside the ĻӰԺ studios Tuesday morning – and Jerome Weeks of Art&Seek caught them on camera.

Once the foxes spotted the camera, they stopped playing around.

Credit Jerome Weeks / ĻӰԺ
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ĻӰԺ
The new ĻӰԺ mascot? Meet one of our furry visitors.

Some ĻӰԺ employees say they’ve spotted foxes around the station, located near Uptown in Dallas, for nearly 20 years.

“We believe they survive moving up and down the whole Reverchon Park/Turtle Creek area,” Weeks says.

Other fox sightings

Foxes have been spotted across North Texas, including recently near Swiss Avenue and in the Casa Linda neighborhood.

Both red and gray foxes can be city dwellers. “Both species readily adapt to urban and suburban park lands, golf course [and] mixed suburban developments,”

In 2011, a gray-and-brown fox ran onto the field at SMU’s Ford Stadium during a high school football game – with less than a minute to go in the game.

See for yourself:

from on .

Foxes seem to like stadiums. Last year, several common gray foxes were living in Lubbock. University officials worked on a plan to remove them.

They love the nightlife

The common gray fox is found throughout most of the state, primarily in the woods of East Texas, The red fox, which is found across Central Texas, was introduced for sport.

Foxes are primarily nocturnal in urban areas. But they will be active in the day if they feel secure or have an easy way to escape, “People are sometimes surprised to learn that foxes live in their neighborhoods. ... Foxes are not dangerous to humans, except when rabid, and fox rabies are rare.”

A dog or a fox?

Two years ago, Weeks from ĻӰԺ was walking out of the station late at night when he saw something moving in the station parking lot. He thought it was a dog wanting to play.

Weeks moved closer to the ground, hoping to lure the dog closer to check if it had a collar.

The animal stopped and stood still.

This was no dog. It was a fox.

The fox had enough with this human encounter, so it ran off toward the Katy Trail. (As sly as a fox.)

The next day, the fox was sunning itself in the station’s courtyard.

Naturally, we ask: What Does the Fox Say?

(If you weren't online last year, let us explain: A dance song about foxes went viral last year. The video, called “The Fox (What Does the Fox Say?),” performed by a Norwegian comedy duo, has been viewed more than 370 million times on YouTube.)

Ducks say quack

And fish go blub

And the seal goes ow ow ow

But there’s one sound

That no one knows

What does the fox say?

(Ring-ding-ding-ding-dingeringeding! Gering-ding-ding-ding-dingeringeding!)

So what does the ĻӰԺ fox say? “It's pledge drive,” Weeks said. “The fox says ‘Support ĻӰԺ.’”

Here’s the viral video:

But what does a fox really sound like? Here you go:

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Eric Aasen is ĻӰԺ’s managing editor. He helps lead the station's news department, including radio and digital reporters, producers and newscasters. He also oversees keranews.org, the station’s news website, and manages the station's digital news projects. He reports and writes stories for the website and contributes pieces to ĻӰԺ radio. He's discussed breaking news live on various public radio programs, including The Takeaway, Here & Now and Texas Standard, as well as radio and TV programs in New Zealand and the United Kingdom.