0:03 [SPEAKER_00]: The swamp covers nearly 17,000 acres. 0:07 [SPEAKER_00]: At night the mist rises off the water, like something breathing. 0:12 [SPEAKER_00]: The locals have always known there's something wrong with this place. 0:16 [SPEAKER_00]: In 1970, a man named Joseph DeAndre walked into the Hokomok swamp and walked back out screaming about a seven-foot creature. 0:29 [SPEAKER_00]: Covered and hair. 0:31 [SPEAKER_00]: a creature that walked on two legs, a creature that shouldn't exist, but the Wampanoac people, the ones who've lived here for 12,000 years, they weren't surprised, they gave this warmth its name centuries ago. 0:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Akumok, it means place where spirits dwell, and for the past 50 years, 1:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Hello friend, welcome to the haunted bunker, where mysteries hide. 1:07 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm Shane Waters, and tonight we're heading to South Eastern Massachusetts to a 200 square mile region, where big foot stalks, the swamps. 1:19 [SPEAKER_00]: UFOs hover over highways, and the ghost of a Native American war captain still guards 1:33 [SPEAKER_00]: All right, friend. 1:34 [SPEAKER_00]: It's time to descend. 1:35 [SPEAKER_01]: Welcome back. 1:38 [SPEAKER_01]: Hello. 1:39 [SPEAKER_01]: Welcome back. 1:41 [SPEAKER_01]: Welcome back. 1:43 [SPEAKER_00]: All right, Josh. 1:44 [SPEAKER_00]: So let me paint a picture of where we're going to go tonight. 1:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Where do you think we're going? 1:49 [SPEAKER_00]: What country do you think we're in? 1:50 [SPEAKER_01]: Put her away. 1:55 [SPEAKER_00]: No, we're in the country of South Eastern Massachusetts. 1:58 [SPEAKER_01]: Oh, the country. 2:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Hey, if you have a bread there sometimes, it seems like it might be you. 2:05 [SPEAKER_00]: We're talking about 30 miles south of Boston. 2:08 [SPEAKER_01]: Have you ever been to Boston? 2:10 [SPEAKER_01]: Unless we've driven through it, I don't think so. 2:12 [SPEAKER_00]: No, big city. 2:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, there's a region here that covers roughly 200 square miles, and it includes towns that you've probably never heard of unless you're from that area. 2:23 [SPEAKER_00]: Bridgewater, which is both East and West, Bridgewater, Brockton, probably not saying it right. 2:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Freetown, Tanton. 2:33 [SPEAKER_01]: I know Chris Evans is from Boston. 2:36 [SPEAKER_01]: Is it? 2:37 [SPEAKER_01]: The guy who plays Captain America. 2:39 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah. 2:39 [SPEAKER_01]: He hides his accent real well. 2:41 [SPEAKER_00]: But sometimes you catch a glimpse of it and I'm like, Oh, well, right in the middle of all those towns sits the Hockermock Swap. 2:50 [SPEAKER_00]: That sounds so gross. 2:51 [SPEAKER_00]: It does, doesn't it? 2:52 [SPEAKER_01]: When you got something, you throw it. 2:53 [SPEAKER_01]: What do you do? 2:54 [SPEAKER_01]: Hockermock. 2:56 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, 17,000 acres of wetland is what we're talking about. 3:00 [SPEAKER_00]: That's about 27 square miles of swamp. 3:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Damn, skaters. 3:05 [SPEAKER_00]: I know. 3:06 [SPEAKER_00]: Swamp ass. 3:07 [SPEAKER_00]: So cute, right? 3:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, to give you a sense of scale, Manhattan is 23 square miles. 3:13 [SPEAKER_00]: So this swamp is bigger than Manhattan. 3:16 [SPEAKER_00]: Jesus. 3:17 [SPEAKER_00]: The state of Massachusetts designated it as an area of critical environmental concern. 3:23 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a wildlife management area now. 3:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Probably underfunded. 3:31 [SPEAKER_00]: The Wapanoak people knew this place as something else entirely. 3:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Hock them up. 3:40 [SPEAKER_00]: In the Alguanian language, it translates to place where spirits dwell. 3:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, they didn't name it because the sun sets were pretty. 3:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, there's a term, Bridgewater Triangle, and that didn't exist until 1970. 4:01 [SPEAKER_00]: was researching strange reports coming out of this region. 4:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Colman had been documenting sightings of unusual creatures and unexplained phenomena across America. 4:12 [SPEAKER_00]: And he noticed something particularly weird about South Eastern Massachusetts. 4:19 [SPEAKER_00]: The reports were concentrated, they were clustered, as if something about the specific geographical area was generating paranormal activity at a rate that was way higher than anywhere else. 4:32 [SPEAKER_00]: So Coleman drew a triangle on the map, the northern point at Abington, the 4:44 [SPEAKER_00]: and he gave it a name that would stick for the next 50-plus years and that was the Bridgewater Triangle. 4:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, before we get into the big foot sightings and the UFOs and the phantom hitchhikers from this area, we need to talk about what happened here because this land does have a history and it's a brutal one. 5:06 [SPEAKER_00]: There was what they called King Phillips War from 1675 to 1678. 5:11 [SPEAKER_00]: If you've never heard of it, you're not alone. 5:15 [SPEAKER_00]: It doesn't get taught in schools. 5:18 [SPEAKER_00]: But proportionally, it was one of the deadliest wars in American history. 5:22 [SPEAKER_01]: I'm sure. 5:23 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 5:23 [SPEAKER_00]: More colonial died per capita than any other American war. 5:28 [SPEAKER_01]: Not per capita. 5:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Right? 5:30 [SPEAKER_00]: And for the native people, it was catastrophic. 5:34 [SPEAKER_00]: The leader of the resistance was a man named Madacam, the English called him King Philip, hence the war's name. 5:43 [SPEAKER_00]: He was a chief of the Pocanoate band of the Wappanoate people, and he'd watched for years as the English settlers pushed further into the native land. 5:53 [SPEAKER_00]: They were breaking treaty after treaty, and they 6:00 [SPEAKER_00]: In 1675, he'd finally had enough. 6:03 [SPEAKER_00]: The Womp and No Ag and their allies rose up. 6:07 [SPEAKER_00]: The war that followed was brutal on both sides, towns, burned, massacres, prisoners taken and executed. 6:16 [SPEAKER_00]: the fighting raged across all of New England, but some of the most significant events happened right here, and what would later become the Bridgewater Triangle. 6:26 [SPEAKER_00]: On August 12, 1676, Metacom was killed. 6:31 [SPEAKER_00]: The English found him in a swamp. 6:33 [SPEAKER_00]: It wasn't this swamp, but it was a nearby swamp. 6:37 [SPEAKER_00]: And he had been shot. 6:40 [SPEAKER_00]: They cut off his head in his hands. 6:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Jesus. 6:43 [SPEAKER_00]: His head was displayed on a spike in Plymouth for 20 years. 6:49 [SPEAKER_00]: But the war wasn't quite over. 6:50 [SPEAKER_00]: Metacorm had a war capped in, and elderly warrior named Atawan. 6:57 [SPEAKER_00]: He was over 80 years old at the time, and he was still fighting. 7:02 [SPEAKER_00]: to him. 7:03 [SPEAKER_00]: On the night of August 28th, 1676, Captain Benjamin Church, he was the colonial military leader, tracked Anna-Wan to a large rock in what's now, Ray Hobos. 7:17 [SPEAKER_00]: It's called Anna-Wan Rock today and you can still visit it. 7:21 [SPEAKER_00]: While Anna wants to render to that night, he gave church the sacred Wimpum Belts of the Wimpum No Ag. 7:28 [SPEAKER_00]: These are ceremonial belts that have belonged to his people for generations. 7:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Church apparently treated him with respect and promised him protection, but that didn't matter. 7:41 [SPEAKER_00]: in a win was taken to Plymouth and executed anyway. 7:45 [SPEAKER_00]: So when we talk about the Bridgewater Triangle being haunted, when we talk about spirits dwelling in the swamp, there is real human tragedy soaked into this ground. 7:56 [SPEAKER_00]: Thousands of people died, a civilization was shattered. 8:00 [SPEAKER_00]: The survivors were sold into slavery in the Caribbean or forced onto reservations. 8:05 [SPEAKER_00]: And it's my belief that land remembers, 8:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Let's start with a siding that put this place on the map, April, 1970. 8:14 [SPEAKER_00]: A man to name Joseph DeAndrea, this wasn't some anonymous guy or a local hunter. 8:22 [SPEAKER_00]: This was a specific person who went on record with a local newspaper called the Enterprise. 8:28 [SPEAKER_00]: And his account was documented by Lauren Coleman. 8:32 [SPEAKER_00]: His sightings wasn't the only one. 8:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Throughout the 1970s and into the 1980s, people kept reporting large, air-colleared bipedal creatures in and around Hockermock Swamp. 8:46 [SPEAKER_00]: Do you know what bipedal is? 8:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Oxon-Forelegs? 8:50 [SPEAKER_00]: Terti Legs. 8:50 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 8:52 [SPEAKER_00]: By means two jaws. 8:53 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, there would be quadrupedal. 8:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 8:57 [SPEAKER_00]: While some described them as brown, some as black, some said they made strange vocalizations. 9:04 [SPEAKER_00]: And the big foot reports weren't even the strangest thing happening in the triangle. 9:09 [SPEAKER_00]: In March of 1968, five witnesses reported seeing a UFO, according to reports from that incident, the object hovered slightly before taking off at impossible speeds. 9:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, UFO sightings continue throughout the decades. 9:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Documentary sources claim that on Christmas 1990, two police officers reported seeing an unidentified craft while on patrol. 9:40 [SPEAKER_00]: I couldn't verify these specific police reports, but the account has been repeated in multiple sources when they talk about the triangle. 9:51 [SPEAKER_00]: then there's Route 44. 9:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Route 44 runs right through the triangle, and for decades, drivers have reported something deeply unsettling on that stretch of highway. 10:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Local legend holds that a red haired man will be seen hitchhiking along Route 44, usually at night. 10:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Drivers who stop to pick him up, report that he climbs into their car, sits in the back seat, and then simply vanishes. 10:19 [SPEAKER_00]: gone. 10:21 [SPEAKER_00]: There's no door opening, no sound, just an empty seat where a man had been sitting seconds before. 10:27 [SPEAKER_00]: I've heard that one a hundred times though. 10:29 [SPEAKER_01]: There is unsolved mysteries about it. 10:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Right. 10:32 [SPEAKER_00]: The descriptions are eerily consistent across different accounts spanning for decades. 10:38 [SPEAKER_00]: He always has red hair, disheveled appearance, complete silence, and then poof nothing. 10:46 [SPEAKER_01]: I'd find out more about him. 10:48 [SPEAKER_01]: And he's on circumcised. 10:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Then you've got Anna-1 Rock, where visitors have reported seeing spectral campfires at night. 10:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Phantom flames that flicker along the stones were Anna-1 surrendered over 300 years ago. 11:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Some claim to hear drums. 11:06 [SPEAKER_00]: Some reports seeing the ghostly figures of Native American warriors standing guard. 11:11 [SPEAKER_00]: And in the free-town fall river state forest, 11:17 [SPEAKER_00]: During the 1980s, police investigated reports of cult activity in those woods. 11:23 [SPEAKER_00]: This wasn't paranormal speculation, there were actual criminal cases. 11:28 [SPEAKER_00]: A man named Carl Drew was convicted of murder and connection with the cult operating in the area. 11:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Bodies were found, rituals were documented. 11:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Christopher Balsano, an author who's written extensively about the region, documented these cases in his book called Dark Woods. 11:48 [SPEAKER_00]: The force had become a gathering place for something genuinely sinister, not ghosts or cryptids, but humans doing terrible things to other humans. 12:08 [SPEAKER_00]: That match descriptions from one of Pewag folklore. 12:14 [SPEAKER_00]: The Wampanoag called them puck wedges. 12:18 [SPEAKER_00]: These were little four spirits. 12:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, puck wedges. 12:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, these were little four spirits that could be mischievous or dangerous depending on the circumstances. 12:29 [SPEAKER_00]: Modern witnesses have reported seeing small humanoid figures in the woods. 12:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Sometimes described as 2-3 feet tall with grayish skin. 12:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Have you talked about these? 12:39 [SPEAKER_01]: I don't recall either. 12:41 [SPEAKER_01]: These are what I, the only thing I have ever, I have memory of actually like, seen in the woods as a kid at Mount State Park. 12:53 [SPEAKER_01]: Well, that's cool. 12:54 [SPEAKER_01]: But they mention them there, like as part of the local folklore, that there's like a, 13:00 [SPEAKER_01]: Puck wedgie time. 13:02 [SPEAKER_00]: I remember that. 13:03 [SPEAKER_01]: I remember that spirit. 13:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 13:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, then there are the giant birds. 13:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Witnesses have described birds with wingspan of eight to 12 feet, soaring over the triangle. 13:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Watch it all. 13:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Right. 13:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Some call them thunder birds after the legendary creatures from various Native American traditions. 13:21 [SPEAKER_00]: The sightings are hard to verify, but they keep coming in. 13:26 [SPEAKER_00]: And there's one more oddity, Dyson Rock. 13:29 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a 40-ton boulder, originally located in the Tanton River, before being moved to a museum. 13:37 [SPEAKER_00]: The rock is covered with ancient petroglifts, carvings that no one can definitely explain. 13:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Collin is first documented in 1680, and since then, people have attributed the carvings to the Wampanoag, to the Norse, to the phenositions, or to the Portuguese. 13:57 [SPEAKER_00]: No one knows for sure who made them or what they mean. 14:00 [SPEAKER_00]: So what's actually going on in the bridge water triangle? 14:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Let's start with the skeptical explanations because some of them are pretty compelling, a big one is swamp gas, not to be confused with swamp ass. 14:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Right. 14:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Also deadly. 14:16 [SPEAKER_00]: The Hockamux swamp is 17,000 acres and it's made of decomposing organic matter. 14:23 [SPEAKER_01]: It's gasy. 14:23 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 14:24 [SPEAKER_00]: When vegetarian rods underwater it produces methane. 14:29 [SPEAKER_01]: That was bubble up, but I mean, there's even swamp lights that have been attributed to a lot of supernatural myths. 14:36 [SPEAKER_00]: And that's why I was going to mention next. 14:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Under the right condition, these gases can ignite spontaneously. 14:41 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a phenomenon that scientists call in night us. 14:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Fattus. 14:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Sounds like a Harry Potter show. 14:49 [SPEAKER_01]: Ignite us, Fattus asses. 14:51 [SPEAKER_00]: And then there are the reports of the ghostly flames that flicker and dance above the swamp. 14:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, this could explain a lot of the ghost light sightings. 15:02 [SPEAKER_00]: It doesn't require anything supernatural, just chemistry, but ask for the big foot sightings. 15:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, black bears are present in Massachusetts. 15:12 [SPEAKER_00]: And while they're not as common in the South Eastern part of the state, they do wander through. 15:17 [SPEAKER_00]: A bear standing on its hind legs, glimps briefly through the trees, could easily be misidentified as something more terrifying. 15:26 [SPEAKER_01]: Right, all you'd see is something big and brown, furry, and big eyes. 15:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Which, normally what Josh sees on a good side of the night, but the Thunderbirds, while some skeptics point toward the great blue herons, they do have a wing spans of six to seven feet. 15:44 [SPEAKER_01]: I've seen them. 15:44 [SPEAKER_01]: They're okay, herons. 15:46 [SPEAKER_01]: I wouldn't say great. 15:47 [SPEAKER_01]: Right. 15:48 [SPEAKER_01]: No, I do like them. 15:49 [SPEAKER_01]: They're really cool. 15:50 [SPEAKER_00]: In low light, flying overhead with adrenaline pumping, an eight foot wing span doesn't seem 15:57 [SPEAKER_01]: Well, and people aren't good judge-a-care mostly by, you know, how big something is for a distance. 16:03 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah. 16:04 [SPEAKER_01]: It was 30 feet long. 16:07 [SPEAKER_01]: It was eight inches. 16:08 [SPEAKER_01]: Some, even, you know, they're digging their own hand. 16:11 [SPEAKER_01]: Right. 16:11 [SPEAKER_01]: They still can't judge size. 16:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Man, man. 16:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Right. 16:15 [SPEAKER_00]: And the triangle itself. 16:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, that's an interesting critique. 16:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Lauren Coleman drew these boundaries after documenting the sightings, not before. 16:25 [SPEAKER_00]: He essentially gathered a bunch of weird reports from a general area connected them with lines. 16:31 [SPEAKER_00]: You could arguably do the same thing with a lot of regions if you looked hard enough. 16:35 [SPEAKER_00]: There's also confirmation bias to consider. 16:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Once an area gets a reputation for being haunted, every strange experience becomes paranormal. 16:46 [SPEAKER_00]: You hear a weird noise in the woods. 16:48 [SPEAKER_00]: If you're in a normal forest, you just shrug it off. 16:52 [SPEAKER_00]: But if you're in the bridge water triangle, suddenly it's evidence of something supernatural. 16:57 [SPEAKER_00]: But here's where I start to waver on the pure skepticism. 17:01 [SPEAKER_00]: The Womp and No Ac named the Swamp Hockermock. 17:05 [SPEAKER_00]: As a place where spirits dwell, thousands of years before Lauren Coleman showed up, thousands of years before King Philips War, thousands of years before any white person set foot in Massachusetts. 17:21 [SPEAKER_00]: They weren't reacting to Lauren Coleman's book. 17:24 [SPEAKER_00]: They weren't influenced by modern paranormal television shows. 17:28 [SPEAKER_00]: They looked at the swamp and said, there's something here. 17:33 [SPEAKER_00]: And then you have the concentration problem. 17:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Even if swamp gas explains some ghost lights and bears explain some big foot sightings and herons explain the giant birds. 17:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Why is all of this happening in the same 200 square miles? 17:51 [SPEAKER_01]: Oh, it's so big. 17:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 17:54 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah. 17:56 [SPEAKER_01]: Such a big damn place. 17:57 [SPEAKER_00]: And maybe it's just coincidence, maybe South Eastern Massachusetts happens to have a good combination of swamps and wildlife and imaginative locals, or maybe there's something about this place that generates experiences we don't have any good explanations for. 18:15 [SPEAKER_00]: So where does that leave us with the Bridgewater Triangle? 18:18 [SPEAKER_00]: We have a region with documented history, real, verifiable, tragic history, kings' Philips War happened here. 18:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Metacom was killed and a one executed. 18:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Thousands of people died in the conflict, and the land remembers violence like that. 18:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Even if we're not sure how. 18:38 [SPEAKER_00]: We have named witnesses, Joseph DeAndre, in 1970, describing a seven-foot creature in the swamp. 18:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Not an anonymous report, he was a real person who went on record. 18:52 [SPEAKER_00]: We have consistent patterns through 44 hitchhiker stories that share specific details across decades of reports of a man with red hair, silent, and disappeared. 19:06 [SPEAKER_00]: If it's pure folklore, it's remarkably stable folklore. 19:11 [SPEAKER_00]: And we also have real criminal history. 19:14 [SPEAKER_00]: The cult activity in free town state forest wasn't paranormal. 19:18 [SPEAKER_00]: It was documented in court reports. 19:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Real evil happened in those woods, even if it was human evil. 19:32 [SPEAKER_01]: Send her trying to thank 27 square miles. 19:36 [SPEAKER_01]: The man I have been seen is 31 miles from me, and it takes me roughly 45 to 55 minutes to drive. 19:49 [SPEAKER_01]: Going like 55 for the most part, 30 miles. 19:53 [SPEAKER_01]: Like that's such a huge, no wonder so much shit's going there, it's the size of, you said it's bigger than Manhattan. 20:01 [SPEAKER_01]: I'm like, well, that's that explains it. 20:03 [SPEAKER_01]: There's just a lot of space. 20:04 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, they're all that's people breathing in the swamp gas. 20:07 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, you do. 20:07 [SPEAKER_01]: Pray, do intrums or something. 20:10 [SPEAKER_01]: You guys want to go walk through the swamp tonight, right, which I wouldn't know. 20:14 [SPEAKER_01]: Sounds like 27 square miles of swamp. 20:17 [SPEAKER_01]: That's where the snakes live. 20:19 [SPEAKER_01]: I don't need to go there. 20:19 [SPEAKER_01]: All the snakes live there. 20:21 [SPEAKER_01]: I'll be the opposite of that. 20:23 [SPEAKER_00]: But I do think one of the things that's striking for me is that it's not just that people are reporting seeing Thunderbirds. 20:32 [SPEAKER_00]: They're reporting big foot sightings. 20:34 [SPEAKER_00]: They're reporting UFOs. 20:35 [SPEAKER_00]: They're reporting Thunderbirds. 20:38 [SPEAKER_00]: So there's in the reporting those little creatures. 20:41 [SPEAKER_00]: So there's just a lot of variety of reports. 20:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Right. 20:45 [SPEAKER_00]: And the fact that 20:47 [SPEAKER_00]: the natives had already pinpointed that place as like some spiritual somewhere special that had weird stuff happening. 20:55 [SPEAKER_01]: I think if people didn't know about that, there wouldn't be as many. 21:02 [SPEAKER_01]: But it's kind of like one of those almost like a placebo thing. 21:05 [SPEAKER_01]: If you go into a place knowing that like, oh, there's murders here, you know, bad stuff that like I think 21:13 [SPEAKER_01]: especially at night because when I go night fishing, I mean, I'll be out by a big lake and there's no light around, but not at all the sides what you have and if, you know, I'll have my lantern on if I need to bait a hook or, you know, get a fish off a line. 21:31 [SPEAKER_00]: Are you talking about real fishing? 21:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I think we're talking about. 21:33 [SPEAKER_01]: No, I'm not going to go fishing. 21:34 [SPEAKER_01]: No, I'm going to actually go fishing. 21:36 [SPEAKER_01]: I have a lantern, but it'll track mosquitoes. 21:39 [SPEAKER_01]: So I only turn it on when I sit there in the pitch black. 21:43 [SPEAKER_01]: And I mean, you can't see shit. 21:46 [SPEAKER_01]: Like, so when people are like, I was in the middle of the deep dark swamp, and I saw... 21:50 [SPEAKER_01]: I'm like, even with, like, light, it's such a dark darkness that it just like, I don't know, even with a strong lantern, the light only goes, you know, a few feet from you. 22:04 [SPEAKER_01]: It's so hard to see anything, especially when they're like, I saw stuff in the sky. 22:08 [SPEAKER_01]: I'm like, 22:09 [SPEAKER_01]: And I have really good eyesight, like, my eyesight is impeccable and I struggle with, you know, I can see the stars if I look long enough, but seeing a UFO versus, you know, a satellite or a shooting star even. 22:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 22:25 [SPEAKER_00]: I'd be like, oh, good. 22:26 [SPEAKER_00]: In order for you to be able to see it, it'd have to be letting off some type of light. 22:29 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 22:30 [SPEAKER_00]: For sure. 22:30 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah. 22:31 [SPEAKER_01]: And I mean, especially back in the 70s, their flashlights weren't good. 22:34 [SPEAKER_01]: They had the extra. 22:36 [SPEAKER_01]: Especially compared to what we have now. 22:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Right. 22:38 [SPEAKER_01]: Their flashlights were like a candle. 22:40 [SPEAKER_01]: A birthday candle pretty much. 22:42 [SPEAKER_01]: Like, you got light maybe two feet in front of you. 22:46 [SPEAKER_01]: You could still shine it in your face without going blind. 22:49 [SPEAKER_01]: Right. 22:49 [SPEAKER_01]: Now if you tried that with an LED, goodbye eyes. 22:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Alright, y'all, so for my shit fire segment today. 23:00 [SPEAKER_00]: There's a cheese steak joint in Camden, I don't know me too, now I want damn cheese, get cheese. 23:07 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a long day. 23:08 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a long day. 23:08 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a long day. 23:09 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a long day. 23:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, there's a cheese steak joint in Camden, New Jersey, called Donkeys Place. 23:16 [SPEAKER_00]: It's been around since the 1940s. 23:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Anthony Bourdain himself, funny to me, and I've seen that episode. 23:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Said they make the best fillet cheese steaks. 23:26 [SPEAKER_00]: But here's what makes this place truly special. 23:30 [SPEAKER_00]: For decades, and I mean decades, shit fire, they've had a 27-inch walrus penis. 23:39 [SPEAKER_00]: On display behind the bar, it's a penis bone. 23:43 [SPEAKER_01]: Oh, okay. 23:44 [SPEAKER_00]: It sits right next to a Megaladon tooth. 23:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Jesus, I like a big thing. 23:49 [SPEAKER_00]: All right. 23:50 [SPEAKER_01]: The bar dig is the sandwich. 23:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Good. 23:52 [SPEAKER_00]: That's what I want to know. 23:53 [SPEAKER_00]: All right. 23:54 [SPEAKER_00]: The bar tenders would pass it around to customers. 23:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Lot them guess what it is. 23:58 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a whole thing and it's a beloved tradition. 24:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, on the night of December 29th, three guys are drinking at the bar. 24:08 [SPEAKER_00]: The bartender hands them the bone, describes the whole routine. 24:12 [SPEAKER_00]: They're holding a dick bone. 24:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Right. 24:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Then she steps into the back for just a minute, when she comes back out, the three guys are gone. 24:21 [SPEAKER_00]: They still the dick. 24:22 [SPEAKER_00]: And shit fire, so is the 27 inch walrus penis bone. 24:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, hell. 24:29 [SPEAKER_00]: One of them had tucked it under his scarf, and just walked out. 24:35 [SPEAKER_01]: Now, guys, scarf. 24:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, here's the thing that really kills me, Josh. 24:38 [SPEAKER_00]: These guys paid for their food with credit cards. 24:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Oh, my God. 24:44 [SPEAKER_00]: They're on multiple security cameras in the staff. 24:48 [SPEAKER_00]: No exactly who they were. 24:52 [SPEAKER_00]: just give the dick back. 24:54 [SPEAKER_00]: I know, but apparently they still have not given it back. 24:57 [SPEAKER_01]: Man, I wouldn't risk never being able to have a delicious cheese steak. 25:01 [SPEAKER_00]: I know. 25:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, the owner is just he released a message and he's like, they post like TikTok videos and they're like, just bring it back. 25:10 [SPEAKER_00]: No questions. 25:10 [SPEAKER_00]: I just want for given. 25:11 [SPEAKER_00]: We just want a back. 25:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Because I mean, they've had it for a long 25:20 [SPEAKER_00]: But I thought that was a really interesting story. 25:21 [SPEAKER_01]: Do you know why the walrus penis has a bone in it? 25:27 [SPEAKER_01]: Why? 25:28 [SPEAKER_01]: Because they are so large that they cannot, like, it would take too much of their blood from their bodies to engorge it, and walverses have at least six inches of blubber, so that's why their penises are so long because they've got to push over the blubber. 25:49 [SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that makes sense. 25:51 [SPEAKER_01]: I love animal. 25:52 [SPEAKER_01]: Boy David Attenborough. 25:53 [SPEAKER_01]: He really did. 25:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 25:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah. 25:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Well, that's your, no, everyone's going to be thinking about a huge walrus penis tonight. 26:02 [SPEAKER_00]: You're welcome. 26:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Gross. 26:05 [SPEAKER_00]: But who steals the bone? 26:07 [SPEAKER_00]: Come on now. 26:08 [SPEAKER_01]: Especially like they've, in decades, can't go back to that place to get a cheese. 26:13 [SPEAKER_01]: No, I know. 26:14 [SPEAKER_01]: That's right. 26:15 [SPEAKER_01]: Okay, a nightmare. 26:15 [SPEAKER_01]: We should start a cheese steak cheese cake. 26:18 [SPEAKER_01]: Oh, yeah, we should. 26:20 [SPEAKER_01]: Oh, man. 26:21 [SPEAKER_01]: You do cheese cake on a stick. 26:24 [SPEAKER_01]: Oh, I love a good cheese dipped in chocolate on a steak with like caramel nuts and heaven. 26:30 [SPEAKER_01]: I'm in heaven. 26:32 [SPEAKER_01]: It's a good cheese steak. 26:33 [SPEAKER_01]: That would probably be like, my, if I was gonna be executed. 26:38 [SPEAKER_01]: What do you want your last meal to be? 26:39 [SPEAKER_01]: A good freaking cheese sandwich. 26:42 [SPEAKER_01]: A salad. 26:43 [SPEAKER_01]: A whole cheese steak, cheese steak, and cheese cake. 26:46 [SPEAKER_01]: It's hard to say those two. 26:48 [SPEAKER_01]: That and that breakfast pizza, I had in her, she's Pennsylvania. 26:51 [SPEAKER_00]: We'll have to open it just for breakfast. 26:52 [SPEAKER_01]: That breakfast pizza was one of the best things I've ever had. 26:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Yeah, I miss it too. 26:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Alright guys, we're gonna catch you on unmasked right after this. 27:01 [SPEAKER_01]: Talk at you later. 27:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Bye! 27:03 [SPEAKER_00]: A swamp older than memory. 27:09 [SPEAKER_00]: A war that shattered a civilization. 27:12 [SPEAKER_00]: A name that's been warning people for centuries. 27:16 [SPEAKER_00]: The bridge water triangle isn't just a collection of strange sightings stitched together on a map. 27:23 [SPEAKER_00]: It's a place where history weighs heavy, where the land itself seems to remember things we've tried to forget. 27:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe the skeptics are right, maybe it swamp gas and bears in the power of suggestion. 27:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Maybe we see monsters because we expect to see them, or maybe the Womphanoag knew exactly what they were talking about when they named that swamp 12,000 years ago. 27:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Place where spirits dwell. 27:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Some mysteries aren't meant to be solved. 27:57 [SPEAKER_00]: They're meant to be felt. 28:00 [SPEAKER_00]: The lights are dimming, the bunker door is closing, but the mysteries, they're just getting started. 28:07 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm Shane Waters, Stay Curious, Stay Skeptical, and stay a little bit scared, good night friend.
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