the pandemic. “I believe especially right now after Covid — where there’s so much confusion and unhappiness and chaos — that a dog can bring you back to your calmness, to your confidence, to your joy,” Millan, 51, told The Post. “Especially when some people have lost their homes, have lost jobs, have lost family members.
It’s a lot of loss. So that’s why I’m always focusing on, ‘How do I help the human to stabilize?’ because if the human is not stable, then the dog is going to absorb that energy.
And when the dog lives in an unstable environment, he can only show aggression, fear, or avoidance.” Each 45-minute episode of “Better Human Better Dog,” airing Fridays at 9 p.m., follows cases in which people bring their misbehaving dogs to work.