A recently discovered family who was born and raised wild lives deep in the Alaskan tundra. Billy Brown, his wife Ami, and their seven grown children — five boys and two girls – live so far away from civilization that they frequently go six to nine months without seeing an outsider. They've evolved their own accent and slang, call themselves a "wolf pack," and sleep in a one-room cabin together at night. They are, simply put, unlike any other family in America. According to the Browns, the cabin where they had resided for years was recently seized and burned to the ground for being in the improper position on public land.
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A recently discovered family who was born and raised wild lives deep in the Alaskan tundra. Billy Brown, his wife Ami, and their seven grown children — five boys and two girls – live so far away from civilization that they frequently go six to nine months without seeing an outsider. They've evolved their own accent and slang, call themselves a "wolf pack," and sleep in a one-room cabin together at night. They are, simply put, unlike any other family in America. According to the Browns, the cabin where they had resided for years was recently seized and burned to the ground for being in the improper position on public land.
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