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  • The story of Cesar Millan is often seen as a typical rags to riches tale about a young

  • man from Mexico crossing the border in pursuit of the American dream.

  • While that's more or less how things happened, the reality of Millan's eventful life is a

  • little more complicated.

  • While Millan became known to millions of viewers worldwide as the Dog Whisperer, his off-camera

  • life has been anything but quiet.

  • He was bullied for his love of dogs

  • Millan grew up on his grandfather's farm in Sinaloa, in northwestern Mexico.

  • During this time he became accustomed to working with a variety of animals, though he claims

  • to have had a "natural way with dogs" from a very young age.

  • This connection with canines was so strong that MIllan found himself being followed by

  • dogs every time he left his home, a fact that didn't go unnoticed by the other kids.

  • He was constantly teased by his peers, who started calling him El Perrero, which, according

  • to Millan, roughly translates to "the Dirty Dog Boy."

  • Millan refused to let bullying change his mind about his love of dogs.

  • Instead, he concentrated on making his dream a reality from a young age.

  • By the time he was 13 years old he had laid out plans to become the best dog trainer in

  • the worldand he'd decided that the best place to begin his takeover was the US.

  • Inspired by the immaculately well-trained performing dogs he saw in TV reruns of Lassie

  • and The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin, Millan set his sights on Hollywood, convinced his

  • talents would be most welcome there.

  • He entered the US illegally

  • In 1991, Millan made his way from his home to a Tijuana bus station with $100 to his

  • name, seeking transportation across the border.

  • When he finally found a way out of Mexico via a hole in the border fence, he was forced

  • to pay $100 — every cent he hadin order to pass through.

  • Millan entered the United States with no money, no friends, little to no knowledge of the

  • English language, and nowhere to live.

  • He spent his early days in America living homeless on the streets of San Diego, sleeping

  • under a freeway and surviving on nothing but convenience store hot dogs.

  • Millan recalled that he could get two hot dogs for 99 cents at the time, meaning all

  • he had to do to survive was somehow make a dollar a day.

  • Many hot dogs later, he managed to land his first real job Stateside.

  • He found work as a dog groomer

  • Using the first English sentence he ever learned

  • "I learned to say "do you have application for work?"

  • That was the first sentence I'm gonna learn."

  • Millan managed to arrange some part-time hours in a local dog groomer's office.

  • The owners were instantly impressed with his assertive handling of larger, aggressive dogs

  • that had previously been impossible to control.

  • Millan saw the value in this and, after moving to Inglewood, decided to start charging for

  • a group dog-walking service.

  • He quickly attracted attention with his unusualand very much illegalstyle of walking

  • his group off leash, quickly earning a reputation as "the Mexican guy who can walk a pack of

  • dogs."

  • Some of his first clients were Will and Jada Pinkett Smith, who paid for Millan to have

  • a year of English language lessons.

  • His reputation grew quickly

  • Millan and his dog-walking business spread like wildfire by word of mouth, and he eventually

  • earned enough money to open his Dog Psychology Center in South Central Los Angeles.

  • His success at rehabilitating dogs with particularly troublesome pasts lead to him being profiled

  • in a 2002 edition of the L.A. Times, and the reaction was huge.

  • The story led a string of producers to his door hoping to create a new TV show highlighting

  • Millan's techniques, and the trainer signed on to front Dog Whisperer with Cesar Millan

  • soon after.

  • The National Geographic Channel ended up picking up the show for 26 episodes after Animal Planet

  • refused to commit beyond a pilot.

  • He has been involved in a number of lawsuits

  • Things weren't all sunshine and rainbows for Millan, however.

  • " … it's alright, it's alright."

  • The Dog Whisperer star was the subject of two lawsuits in a single week in 2006, the

  • first involving his former publicist Makeda Smith and her partner Foster Corder.

  • The couple claimed that they had come up with the name "Dog Whisperer" while in discussion

  • with Millan.

  • After they received no recognition of their contribution they decided to sue the National

  • Geographic Channel, asking for $5 million in damages.

  • Millan was in hot water again days later when 8 Simple Rules producer Flody Suarez claimed

  • that his five-year-old Labrador retriever Gator was subjected to inhumane treatment

  • at the celebrity trainer's facility.

  • Suarez's lawsuit stated that Gator was covered with bruises and gasping for breath after

  • being forced to run on a treadmill.

  • The producer went on to describe how a choke chain had caused damage to Gator's esophagus

  • and that surgery was needed to correct it, with the vet's bills totaling more than $25,000.

  • He has been accused of animal cruelty

  • "Cesar MillanAKA the dog whisperer, is under fire, for of all things, animal cruelty."

  • The incident with Gator the Labrador is not the only allegation of animal cruelty Millan

  • has faced.

  • American Humane, the oldest national organization specializing in the protection of animals,

  • revealed they had sent a letter to the National Geographic Channel in 2006.

  • The letter in question expressed outrage about the "inhumane" and "potentially harmful" tactics

  • employed on Dog Whisperer with Cesar Millan.

  • Other critics of Millan's methods include certified animal behavior consultant and pet

  • journalist Steve Dale, who refers to Millan as the "Dog Screamer," along with British

  • television personality Alan Titchmarsh, who berated Millan over his "barbaric" techniques

  • during an interview on his afternoon TV show.

  • He hit hard times in 2010

  • 2010 was a terrible year for Millan, starting off in the worst possible way when his sidekick

  • Daddy died of cancer at the age of 16.

  • "He helped me for 16 years.

  • You know I don't think I did much for him, as much as he did for me."

  • The gentle giant, whom he'd adopted from rapper Redman, was not just Millan's assistant on

  • the showhe was his best friend off camera.

  • Sadly, Milan barely had time to mourn the loss when he was hit with more bad news.

  • The following month, his wife of 16 years informed him she had filed for divorce.

  • Millan was forced to assess his finances, and that was when the third blow came: He

  • soon realized that, despite being one of the most recognizable TV personalities in America,

  • he'd made a series of bad business decisions that had left him with little to show for

  • his nationwide fame.

  • He tried to end it all

  • In 2012, Millan opened up about the full extent of what he'd gone through two years earlier.

  • He claimed he'd lost his "source of calmness" when his beloved dog Daddy died, and the added

  • pressure of his divorce and financial woes sent him into a downward spiral of depression.

  • The famous trainer got to the point where he didn't want to be alive anymore, taking

  • what he described as "a whole bunch of pills" and hoping not to wake up.

  • Fortunately for Millan, his sons discovered him before it was too late and he was rushed

  • to the hospital.

  • He later talked about how regaining consciousness in a ward full of patients who loved his show

  • helped him to get back on track with his life.

  • He used his own methods to bounce back

  • Millan was offered antidepressants after he failed to take his own life, though he decided

  • that the best way to heal was to practice what he preached.

  • In place of pills, Millan devised a rehabilitation schedule based on his knowledge of pack life,

  • using exercise, discipline and affection to conquer his depressionand it seems to

  • have worked wonders.

  • His path led him to new partner Jahira Darwhom Millan credits as being instrumental

  • in his recoveryalong with a series of new opportunities in television.

  • He was soon back on small screens everywhere in Cesar Millan's The Leader of the Pack and

  • Cesar 911.

  • He's even branched out to younger audiences, working alongside his son Calvin in Nickelodeon's

  • live action series Mutt and Stuff.

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The story of Cesar Millan is often seen as a typical rags to riches tale about a young

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