I love this guy. he is real. his voice does tend to lull me off to lullaby land, however.....we've had some sweet, sweet couch naps together.....thank God he came back in Season 2!
Wednesday, December 26, 2018
Almost Live season 2
Almost Live follows author, bigfoot researcher, survivalist and adventurer Thomas Marcum as he hunts for Bigfoot in the deeps woods of Kentucky. Thomas explores several Bigfoot hotspots during the season to uncover various Bigfoot evidence. Season 2 is bigger and better!
Starring Thomas Marcum
Yetis
The first of the More-on productions feature films. This schlock horror comedy follows a wolf expert and a group of five interns as they trek through the wilderness of Canada. They discover something much more deadly. A hilarious take on b movies that combines modern day feelings. a complete revitalization of the genre, and one of the best Sasquatch based horror films of all time.
Genres Action, Adventure, Horror
Director Michael Butt
Starring Obadiah Boon
Friday, December 21, 2018
The Sasquatch Gang....coming to you from 2016....
The Sasquatch Gang2006
PG-13
Young fantasy and science fiction aficionado Gavin Gore and his friends stumble onto some huge footprints in the woods. A local cop, reporter, and a renowned Sasquatch authority investigate, while two of Gavin's dim-witted neighbors hatch a scheme to profit from the situation.
...another Bigfoot movie...well, technically, another Sasquatch movie....from 2018...I present to you....
Scientists and doctors hunt and capture one of the elusive snow Sasquatch creatures. A serum perfected by the scientists makes the Sasquatch grow to gargantuan size and the team must fight the snow monster to the death and save the world. Genres Horror Director Mark Polonia Starring Titus Himmelberger, Natalie Hallead, Noyes Lawton
very, very, very, very campy. just the way I like 'em!
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Sasq-watch
Nigel and Oscar have finally gotten funding for their sasquatch expedition! But when their guide bails and rival Claus also joins the hunt, they must assemble a rag-tag crew of outdoorsmen to be first to track down the undiscovered beast. Genres Adventure, Comedy Director Drew Hall Starring Paul Brittain, Adam Herschman, Christine Bentley
so, last night I typed in sasquatch on amazon prime search instead of bigfoot....and I have a whole bunch more movies to watch!
You want to stuff and mount the Sasquatch because he punched you in the face?
No. I want to stuff him 'cause he pantsed me.
dear lord, the dad from The Middle is Sampson...as in The Tale of Sampson And The Sasquatch.
Brother, just walk like a Sasquatch, ok?
Saturday, December 15, 2018
Hey, Dad, if we find a Bigfoot, can I keep it as a pet?
The Legend of Sasquatch
The Davis Family - John, Khristy and Maggie - move in to a secluded log cabin in the mountains above Seattle. They soon discover a family of Bigfoot hiding nearby. When the Bigfoot and Ranger Steve ask the Davis family for help the adventure of a lifetime begins.
I knew it. I knew it. I knew the big ones could fly. It's Bigfoot magic. I've said it once, I've said it a buncha buncha times, I love amazon prime and I love animated movies!
Two buddies in a mountain town scare tourists out of their favorite fishing holes with Bigfoot hoaxes. When two hippie chicks, the FBI, a crazy Native elder and an alien join in; life in their community gets more exciting than they planned.
Fishing Naked.
Bro, with all due respect, your Grandma is crazier than bat shit pancakes.
2 hippie college grads living in a teepee out in nature growing their own weed....Grandma Louise leaving offerings for Hairy Man and looking for orbs...(and fooling around with Officer Art?)....Charlie the Accountant turned Wildlife Photographer...my kinda Bigfoot movie...the youtube video....the I'm having Bigfoot's baby blog....it's just too too too much. and I love every minute!
As the Lumber Baron and his gang investigate Bigfoot sightings in the woods, with help from a "specialist" and some eyewitnesses, they soon find themselves in danger.
The Bigfoot Huntin' Club (2018) Short, Comedy | 15 November 2018 (USA)
Hey, Bigfoot Joe, do you ever watch Bigfoot porn?
old Doopsey is going behind Bigfoot Joe, eating all the apples he is leaving for an offering, throwing a partially eaten apple at him, and building stick structures. and Bigfoot Joe falls for it, hook, line, and sinker. But it ends up there really is a Bigfoot..... Then Doopsey, like Boo, gets lucky. Bigfoot is a she, and it's mating season.....and she is a cuddler.
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Bloodwood Cannibals
Nigel Thorne and the crew of the internet series 'Hunting the Unknown' came to Bloodwood Forest to find the legendary Bigfoot monster...They found something worse. Genres Horror Director Joshua Siegel Starring Nathan Anthony Carter, Kate Corey, Cori Jenab
"Could a Sasquatch have droppings of such size?"
"No. I think your sound guy was over here earlier."
"Who gives a prancing fuck about Bigfoot?
(ferals growling and giggling.)
honest to God. I will have nightmares tonight...and I sure as fuck won't be camping in the woods looking for Bigfoot......
"Dave! Don't taunt the cannibals!"
listen to her Dave. for fucks sake, listen!
Sunday, November 25, 2018
Amongst Us 2004
Joe Tamanini ... Bigfoot
B-movie director Billy D'Amato has made a career out of horror movies...but when he meets a real "monster in the woods" on a shoot, he is forced to re-evaluate, and fight for, his life.
Saturday, November 24, 2018
Bigfoot: The Curse of Blood Mountain
Indian spirit Bigfoot guard the hidden gold in the base of the mountain. and if you take it....watch the fuck out. (ask Riggs)
Bigfoot, an animated movie about evil Arvid the Yeti who was the first one on Santa's naughty list.
he has banished Santa to the land of Ice and Thorns. FOREVER. it's adorable. they're all very chatty. their mouths barely move. my kinda movie!
Thursday, November 22, 2018
Brutal Bigfoot
A Bigfoot expedition team finds more than the legendary monster when investigating the disappearance of a hiker and the mutilation of a couple deep in the remote Arkansas countryside. Genres Horror Director Tom Biscardi Starring Tom Biscardi, TJ Biscard, Rob Price
tried to watch this last night, but couldn't stay awake....to be continued....
"Bigfoot's one thing but crazy rednecks with shot guns?"
"No one else is gonna be out here. Jesus."
Friday, September 28, 2018
this was all a bit over my head.....
Zerelda was transfixed, and so was I.
Bigfoot explorers across North America have documented these amazing structures made of trees. Journey with The Trail to Bigfoot team into the swamps of Florida as they explain a possible correlation link. Could these structures have a meaning pointing to the stars? Genres Adventure, Suspense, Documentary Starring Chris Conner, Mark Barton
Thursday, September 27, 2018
Bigfoot: A Hidden Reality
he debate is over, Science was wrong-Bigfoot is real! In this documentary you can finally see what a real Bigfoot looks like. A small team of Researchers have documented several Bigfoot on film. Footage spanning a 3 year research campaign in Florida has yielded critical answers to the greatest question of all time-"Is it real?" Anthropologist Dr. William Lester, Mark and Melanie Zaskey Genres Action, Adventure, Documentary Director MARK ZASKEY, Melanie L. Zaskey Starring MARK ZASKEY, DR. WILLIAM LESTER,, MELANIE ZASKEY
Friday, September 21, 2018
just paid bills online.
did some calculating. still have approx. 3.3 years of student loan payments left. not sure where we are on debt consolidation. hope I can survive 3 more years in the barn.
Rene Dahinden
Rene Dahinden came to Canada from Switzerland in the 1950’s and went to work in a dairy farm in Alberta. Inspired by the 1953 Daily Mail News Expedition to find the Yeti ( Abominable Snowman) in Nepal, Rene opined that it would, indeed, be something to be part of such an expedition.It was at this point that a co-worker confided ..that he didn't have to go half way around the world to find those creatures. There were lots of them just over the mountains in BC. The rest..as they say..is history.! Rene Dahinden came to BC in search of the Sasquatch. He was probably Canada's only full-time Sasquatch hunter, back in those days.From the late 50's onward it became his sole goal to seek out the Sasquatch and bring one into the scientific light. Up and down the PNW he investigated sightings and made casts. Into the 60's and 70's and 80's it was, René Dahinden's accented voice which was the loudest at meeting halls, auditoriums and symposiums. Where ever researchers were seen to gather, Dahinden could be counted upon to turn up and be brash and opinionated. He could not suffer those, that he considered to be, foolish people From many accounts, the passing years without results weighed heavily upon Rene Dahinden's shoulders. And the elusive ape creature tasked him at every turn. Friendships were fleeting in the wake of his, now souring, disposition. For all of his time and effort, he owned a share of the world's only Sasquatch film, but never managed to catch a glimpse of the critter. Even so, he never for a moment allowed his faith in the creature to falter. "I will keep on searching 'til I find the damn thing," he told CBC Television in 1976.
Dahinden had taken the mystery of the Sasquatch to a world class level. Touring and knocking on the doors of all who might listen. But through his best efforts, the scientific community remained unmoved. His foray into the world of Sasquatch had left him a sad and bitter person. Often this is the outcome with obsessions. With a long broken family and now earning barley enough to keep his hopes for his quest alive... every penny he earned went straight to his search. He carefully followed up every sighting and found witness reports dating back two hundred years.. He died in 2001, after almost half a century of following ridge lines, mountain slopes, and narrow valleys, with nothing to show for his time or effort. Mysteries, whether they are lost mines, treasures, or hidden creatures can take their toll on the unlucky who overstay their alloted time for pursuit of such.
The four grand old men of "Bigfoot Hunting" remain determined in their forty-year quest to find the Big Hairy legend of North America. Sasquatch Odyssey: The Hunt for Bigfoot
Rene Dahinden had some interesting insights:
the mythology has to come from someplace it doesn't just pop out of a Kelloggs Cornflakes box....
I'm not interested in Sasquatch in his god damn mind.
and then the guy with the glasses. the man discussed in last quote. (Bigfoot is) a giant person in a fur coat.
I love these kind of documentaries...it was dated 1999,I think. but it's wean day, I got up waaaaaay tooooo early and there was some couch napping involved....
International UFO Congress | Kewaunee Lapseritis
discovered this guy watching a 1999 bigfoot documentary....Sasquatch Odyssey: The Hunt for Bigfoot. and man, does he have some Bigfoot experiences to share....
Thursday, September 20, 2018
Son of Bigfoot... finally finished this one...
Teenage outsider Adam sets off on a daring quest to find his long-lost father only to learn that he is the legendary Bigfoot! Adam soon discovers that he too has powers like his father, but an evil corporation who wants their DNA is hot on their trail.
Wednesday, September 19, 2018
Swamp Ape: 2017 independent horror slasher about group of college researchers who go camping deep into the Florida Everglades .While entering forbidden Native American territory against being advised not to, the group encounters the Swamp Ape a.k.a. the Skunk Ape or Bigfoot of the southern states.
this was actually Bigfoot porn...got to see his penis! that Indian at the store tried to tell them the area was closed for camping. see, it's the Blood Moon. Bigfoot mating season. he was just a lil' guy trying to get a lil'. there were 2 survivors. and he never got any. a twisted Bigfoot romance, kind of. hard to meet the ladies when you're a hairy beast, I guess...
Friday, September 14, 2018
on tonite's amazon prime Bigfoot agenda....
"Cultured Bigfoot takes a look at a sub-culture within a sub-culture, focusing on the people who search for the elusive Bigfoot with more then just belief in its existence. A well-thought-out film that displays the passion from not only the filmmakers, but a community of people searching for something that could not only break scientific boundaries, but pop-culture as we know it." Genres Documentary Director Bill & Amy Lancaster Starring Dr Jeff Meldrum, Cliff Barackman, James "BoBo" Fay
If you go in the swamp looking for Bigfoot be prepared to expect activity like this. Patterns, crashes, vocals, breaks and knocks. The swamp was falling around the team forming the classic Triangle Pattern not once but twice to the very end. Parabolic audio, FLIR, flute music, interesting tactics and knowing when not to run for it. Genres Action, Documentary Starring Beate Conner, Mark Barton
Buck Swinger, the "Ultimate Bigfoot Hunter," is charged with controlling the Skunk Ape problem in the Mountains of North Ga., where the beasts have been growing in disturbing numbers. His bravery is legendary, so is his over-the-top attitude. A naive reporter from New York wants the exclusive scoop with Buck but gets much more than he bargained for. Horror, farce comedy. 42 min. Genres Comedy, Horror Director Stacey Alexander Starring Stacey Alexander, John Tripwire
Thursday, September 13, 2018
Bigfoot is on the loose and making headlines in rural Alabama. When the stakes are raised, dim-witted Bo McGraw clumsily attempts to capture the elusive creature in this backwards backwoods comedy. Folks who love rural comedy like the Ernest movies and Hee Haw will enjoy Bo McGraw.
I did enjoy this immensely. Kevin even chuckled a bit. Merle the Squirrel stole the show. and we discovered Bigfoot's musical side. and that you are never too old to wear your hair in boops. never.
Journey with The Trail to Bigfoot team into the swamps of Florida to capture data on the legendary creature. Using the power of the parabolic dish, the team attempts a new tactic to illicit activity. What happens is an unexpected response that surprises Mark and creeps out Betty.
Tuesday, September 11, 2018
I went to Cryptic Con 2018 in Frankfort KY and I met Bobo and Cliff!
FRANK BANGED A FEMALE BIGFOOT is the story of three unlikely friends who go for an overnight hike in the California woods that results in most recognized account of a sexual encounter with a female Bigfoot. Conspiracy theories, Government cover ups and colorful characters bring this story full circle and leave the reader wanting more. Written in the style of a screenplay, this story places the reader within the pages..
ain't ashamed to say I bought this, and I read it, and I'm not even sure what really happened. but I did it. so there.
Thursday, July 5, 2018
Creature in the Woods (2017)
"You stick to the path now. You remember to stick to the path." (howling)..
finished that Bigfoot movie. a different take. they're shooting a survivalist video in the woods. meet creepy hunters. get stalked and killed one by one by Bigfoot. who ends up being one of said creepy hunters in a Bigfoot suit...
Saturday, June 30, 2018
So, Why Do People Believe In Bigfoot Anyway? By Krissy Eliot
Bigfoot illustration by Rick Spears----- Relatively few people, in or out of the field of science, believe in Bigfoot. A purported Bigfoot sighting would likely be met with the same level of credulity as a discovery of Casper, Elvis, Tupac, or Santa Claus. With only 16 percent of Americans Bigfoot believers, you might just write them off as crazy. But contrary to popular assumption, folklore experts say, Bigfoot believers may not be as irrational as you’d think. “It’s easy to assume … that people who believe in Bigfoot are being irrational in their belief,” says Lynne McNeill, Cal grad, folklore professor, and special guest on the reality TV show Finding Bigfoot. “But that’s really not true. People aren’t jumping to supernatural conclusions very often; people are being quite rational. It doesn’t mean they’re correct; it just means they’re thinking rationally.” OK. So what are some reasons why people might rationalize a belief in Bigfoot? Reason 1: They think they saw Sasquatch, and they want to prove to themselves and the world that they’re not “crazy.” If a lifelong non-believer thinks she saw a furry man-beast with glowing red eyes rooting through her undies on a camping trip, then she’s going to have to grapple with that somehow. If she finds herself unable or unwilling to deny that it happened, then she’ll probably try to reconcile that unexplained experience with her otherwise logical life. This attempt at reconciliation, says Tok Thompson, UC Berkeley grad and professor of anthropology and communication at USC, is a pretty common tendency among humans. “People want a belief system that is comprehensive and consistent, and if something in our belief system is inconsistent, we get cognitive dissonance—it bugs us,” Thompson says. “Because of this, we try to make sense of the seemingly fantastical by weaving it into our currently held perspective.” “It’s really easy for us to imagine that belief is an either/or proposition—you either believe in something or you don’t,” says folklore professor Lynne McNeill. “And that’s really not the case.” A popular way of doing this is looking for scientific proof. This, McNeill explains, is why many Bigfoot hunters are desperate to find tangible evidence to prove Sasquatch’s existence. It’s why reality shows like Finding Bigfoot have scientists tag along with amateurs on Sasquatch hunting excursions, and why the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization (BFRO) has been collecting information on evidence and sightings since 1995. People hope that they’ll find evidence that will both satisfy the scientific method and validate their beliefs. Grover Krantz, the Cal grad and first well-respected anthropologist to come out in support of the search for Sasquatch, is a great example. Though he never encountered Bigfoot himself, his review of the evidence led him to believe that the creature was real. He risked his entire career as a professor to accommodate his belief in the creature, including being turned down for promotions and grants, and nearly getting fired. Though his dedication to the search may seem absurd, the practice of using science to reconcile a paranormal belief is surprisingly common. If you’ve owned a television over the last couple of decades you might have seen at least one episode of Ghost Hunters, a show in which people use doodads like digital EMF meters, ambient thermometers, and lures soaked with primate pheromones to collect “scientific” evidence of spirits. The show has been going strong since 2004, and with almost half of Americans admitting to a belief in ghosts, this isn’t surprising. Then there’s Graham Hancock, a controversial journalist, who leads the charge of people looking for proof that advanced ancient civilizations existed 12,000 years ago, an idea that 55 percent of Americans believe to be true despite scientific protestations against it. According to these statistics, at least every other person walking among us believes in ghosts or ancient civilizations. And knowing how people react to survey questions, McNeill says, there are likely more believers in all of these (so-called) myths, including Bigfoot, than the data lets on. Researcher's Desk / Art by Rick Spears “It’s really easy for us to imagine that belief is an either/or proposition—you either believe in something or you don’t. And that’s really not the case. Polls are always asking people whether or not they believe in aliens or ghosts. But the thing is, if their only options for an answer are yes or no, then they know what the right answer is—the right answer is no,” McNeill says. “But if you give people more room and ask them to talk about their beliefs, what you find is a grey area that most people are existing in, where they say, ‘Well, you know, I haven’t seen hard proof myself … but I have a really good friend or family member or someone I trust who has seen Bigfoot.’ Or they’ll say, ‘Well, I don’t believe in this stuff, but—I did see Bigfoot one time.’” Because so few Americans publicly claim to believe in Bigfoot, these kind of answers allow people to express the variations in their beliefs while protecting themselves from potential ostracization. Ironically, another reason people might believe in Bigfoot is that it would put them at odds with their community if they didn’t believe. Reason 2: Their tribe believes in Sasquatch, so it would be weird if they didn’t. Studies show that a person is more likely to believe in fringe or paranormal ideas if they’re a West Coast resident—with California largely being known as Bigfoot country. And according to the BFRO, over 430 sightings have been reported in the state since the 1940s. “Bigfoot represents the Pacific Northwest in a huge way. It’s been taken up as emblematic of the area,” Thompson says. “You’ve got Sasquatch festivals. You’ve got Bigfoot statues. It’s almost like you should believe in Bigfoot at least a little bit if you live that area … like cultural pride or patriotism.” -The controversial 1967 Patterson-Gimlin film, which is still held up by believers as the only “legit” evidence of the creature despite most scientists’ declaring it a hoax, was actually shot in Northern California. Filmmakers Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin recorded what they swear was a real Bigfoot taking a stroll in Humboldt County alongside Bluff Creek, a tributary of the Klamath River. In the footage, Patty the Bigfoot (assumed to be female because she has enormous boobs) looks over her shoulder at the camera before striding away. Between the late 1950s and early 2000s, some 40 more reports of Bigfoot encounters were reported in the Humboldt County area, an apparent hotspot for the fuzzy giant. -Social networks and culture, more than any other influences, Thompson says, are what propel stories and give them staying power. For example, most people who believe in the Loch Ness Monster are from Scotland, and more than half of Icelanders believe in the Icelandic hidden elf people called Huldufólk (to the extent that building projects are often changed or waylaid so as not to disturb the rocks where they’re assumed to live).
“Humans tend to gather our beliefs socially. Not from reading the newspaper, not from reading scientific journals, not even from religious leaders. Most people, I would say, gather their belief systems from their social group,” Thompson says. “Probably the strongest component of most people’s belief is folk belief.” A considerable amount of native tribes from the west coast of British Columbia to the Pacific Northwest—where Bigfoot tales originated—believe the creature exists. The word Sasquatch is actually assumed to be an Anglican-butchering of the Salish tribe’s word sasq’ets, meaning “hairy man” or “wild man.” In the late 1950s, when an influx of sightings occurred at Bluff Creek, a Humboldt Times reporter asked a local, elderly Hoopa Indian if he knew about Bigfoot. The man, seemingly incredulous, responded, “Good Lord, have the white men finally got around to that?” According to Thompson, a widespread acceptance of the existence of Sasquatch is a rare example of Native Americans transferring a belief to Anglo-Americans. “They’re two very radically different cultures. Even though we borrowed a lot of words and terminology from Native American culture, not much of the supernatural world of Native Americans has found its way into the Anglo-American world. And Bigfoot seems to be the exception,” Thompson says. “Bigfoot kind of reminds us of Native Americans, living out in the forest, trying to escape detection.” And escaping modern society appeals to a lot of people.Reason 3: Believing in Bigfoot keeps hope alive that people can be self-sustaining—and that humans haven’t totally destroyed the environment beyond repair. Robert Pyle—a journalist who immersed himself in the lives of scientists, hunters, and others who were obsessed with the search for Bigfoot—said that to hunt for Sasquatch, you have to live like one. It requires spending countless days in the wilderness either alone or with a mere few, he explained, disconnected from modern technology and instead, connected to nature. It’s both exciting and comforting for people to think that a somewhat intelligent, bipedal hominid could live undetected and free in the wilderness, says McNeill, and people like to entertain the idea of doing that themselves. “These guys don’t want to find Bigfoot―they want to be Bigfoot!” Pyle wrote in his book Where Bigfoot Walks. “It’s a better world if Bigfoot can be real… It says something positive about the fact that we maybe aren’t utterly destroying the planet we live on if a species can remain hidden and undiscovered.” Others have imagined Bigfoot as a highly evolved and wise species, unchained by trivial human emotions—a Mr. Spock of the wilderness. “Could an animal be enough like us to escape our endless snooping, yet enough unlike us to escape our endless competitiveness?” author David Rains Wallace writes of Bigfoot in his book The Klamoth Knot: Explorations of Myth and Evolution. “What if another hominid species had emotionally outgrown Homo Sapiens, had not evolved the cruelty, greed, vanity and other ‘childishness’ that seems to arise with our neotenic nature? What if that animal had come to understand the world well enough that it didn’t need to construct a civilization, a cultural sieve through which to strain perception? Such a creature could understand forests in a way we could not.” McNeill guesses that most Bigfoot sightings happen in remote wilderness areas because people are heartened to know that there’s more out there to discover, that humans haven’t planted their flag in every bump in the soil. Also, if Bigfoot were to exist, that might be an indication that the Earth hasn’t been devastated beyond repair by Homo sapiens. “[For some believers], it’s a better world if Bigfoot can be real,” McNeill explains. “It says something positive about our ecosystems and our environment. It says something positive about our retention of wilderness spaces. It says something positive about the fact that we maybe aren’t utterly destroying the planet we live on if a species can remain hidden and undiscovered.” Reason 4: Lack of proof doesn’t disprove that Bigfoot exists, so it’s hard to declare—with certainty—that Bigfoot is fake. Though Bigfoot believers obviously don’t represent a huge section of the American population, and scientific proof of the creature’s existence has eluded them, they don’t seem discouraged. What keeps legends alive is actually the lack of proof, McNeill says, because mysteries appeal to the natural curiosity inherent in human beings. The act of entertaining legends allows people to expand their minds and challenge traditional perceptions. If there were absolutely no chance of Bigfoot being real, then the legend would disappear, McNeill says. And if science came out in full support of Bigfoot’s existence, then that would also make the legend disappear. “It’s a beautifully messy, confused batch of information [surrounding Bigfoot], and because of that, the legend sticks,” McNeill says. “What keeps legends going is the possibility, the ambiguity. Legends are ways that we discuss and articulate what may or may not be possible in reality.” If you liked what you read here, check out our story about academics who say evidence of Sasquatch might deserve to be studied . Also check out our two-part profile on UC Berkeley grad and anthropologist Grover Krantz, known to many as the original “Bigfoot scientist.” (You can find the first part of the profile here and the second part here .) Krissy Eliot is senior associate editor at CALIFORNIA. You can find more examples of her work and her contact info at www.krissyeliot.com . Posted on June 28, 2018 - 3:49pm
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