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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,300 --> 00:00:06,230 and may contain mature subject matter. 2 00:00:06,233 --> 00:00:14,703 Viewer discretion is advised. 3 00:00:14,834 --> 00:00:16,574 WILLIAM SHATNER: You know, I've been around for a while. 4 00:00:16,700 --> 00:00:21,300 Met some interesting people, done some crazy things. 5 00:00:21,433 --> 00:00:23,733 So you just might think that there's not much that 6 00:00:23,867 --> 00:00:27,327 can take me by surprise. 7 00:00:27,467 --> 00:00:30,067 You'd be wrong. 8 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:37,670 The world is full of stories and science and 9 00:00:37,800 --> 00:00:41,700 things that amaze and confound me every single day, 10 00:00:41,834 --> 00:00:43,874 incredible mysteries that keep me awake at night. 11 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:45,870 Some I can answer. 12 00:00:46,100 --> 00:00:50,200 Others just defy logic. 13 00:00:50,333 --> 00:00:53,733 NARRATOR: Do monsters exist? 14 00:00:53,867 --> 00:00:55,967 In West Virginia, a town is terrorized by 15 00:00:56,100 --> 00:01:00,130 a seven-foot winged demon. 16 00:01:00,266 --> 00:01:03,866 Did it cause the death of 46 people? 17 00:01:04,000 --> 00:01:06,170 LOREN COLEMAN: It had two huge black wings 18 00:01:06,300 --> 00:01:11,070 and no head, no arms. 19 00:01:12,667 --> 00:01:15,027 NARRATOR: In Newfoundland, a macabre creature washes 20 00:01:15,166 --> 00:01:17,466 up on a local beach. 21 00:01:17,600 --> 00:01:21,470 Are our oceans concealing a mega beast? 22 00:01:21,600 --> 00:01:22,570 GARRY STENSON: It was nothing that either of us 23 00:01:22,700 --> 00:01:25,300 had ever seen or could imagine. 24 00:01:26,600 --> 00:01:29,230 NARRATOR: And in New Delhi, thousands 25 00:01:29,367 --> 00:01:32,867 are attacked by a metal-clawed monster. 26 00:01:33,000 --> 00:01:36,200 Was it a man or a beast? 27 00:01:36,333 --> 00:01:38,473 SANAL EDAMARAKU: People ran off in absolute panic. 28 00:01:38,600 --> 00:01:42,430 They just were fleeing from the scene. 29 00:01:42,567 --> 00:01:46,997 WILLIAM SHATNER: Yeah, it's a weird world. 30 00:01:47,133 --> 00:01:48,433 And I love it. 31 00:01:48,567 --> 00:01:58,527 [♪] 32 00:02:04,467 --> 00:02:05,097 WILLIAM SHATNER: You know I just had a lovely 33 00:02:05,233 --> 00:02:07,133 holiday in Scotland. 34 00:02:07,266 --> 00:02:09,996 Edinburgh Castle, bagpipes - the whole deal. 35 00:02:10,133 --> 00:02:12,933 Even went to Loch Ness where Nessie, the famous 36 00:02:13,066 --> 00:02:14,866 Loch Ness monster, is supposed to live. 37 00:02:15,000 --> 00:02:17,300 We got on this boat, went out on the loch, 38 00:02:17,433 --> 00:02:18,673 searching for hours. 39 00:02:18,800 --> 00:02:20,830 Then guess what I saw? 40 00:02:20,967 --> 00:02:22,067 Nothing. 41 00:02:22,200 --> 00:02:24,830 Absolutely nothing. 42 00:02:24,967 --> 00:02:28,397 Total waste of time and six bucks! 43 00:02:28,533 --> 00:02:31,533 Are monsters nothing more than bait to lure gullible tourists? 44 00:02:31,667 --> 00:02:39,597 Do things like Yeti, Big Foot and Chupacabra exist? 45 00:02:39,734 --> 00:02:43,034 I've got news for you - 46 00:02:43,200 --> 00:02:45,030 they just might. 47 00:02:47,533 --> 00:02:49,573 NARRATOR: Point Pleasant, West Virginia. 48 00:02:51,033 --> 00:02:53,603 Nearly 50 years ago, this sleepy farming town was 49 00:02:53,734 --> 00:02:57,774 brutally awoken by a series of monstrous events 50 00:02:57,900 --> 00:03:00,300 that are still a mystery today. 51 00:03:03,300 --> 00:03:05,530 Loren Coleman is an author. 52 00:03:05,667 --> 00:03:07,197 He documented the incidents, 53 00:03:07,333 --> 00:03:12,033 which began on the night of November 15th, 1966, 54 00:03:12,166 --> 00:03:16,196 when two young couples took a drive. 55 00:03:16,333 --> 00:03:18,533 LOREN COLEMAN: Roger and Linda Scarberry and the 56 00:03:18,667 --> 00:03:23,467 Malletts were driving around in the old TNT area. 57 00:03:23,600 --> 00:03:25,370 It was called TNT because that's where dynamite 58 00:03:25,500 --> 00:03:27,970 was stored during World War II. 59 00:03:30,567 --> 00:03:33,567 NARRATOR: Secluded and dark, TNT was also 60 00:03:33,700 --> 00:03:36,570 a well-known Lovers' Lane. 61 00:03:36,700 --> 00:03:39,970 But instead of fun, the four teenagers are 62 00:03:40,100 --> 00:03:43,300 about to encounter a living nightmare 63 00:03:45,500 --> 00:03:48,970 LOREN COLEMAN: All of a sudden they see this creature. 64 00:03:49,100 --> 00:03:52,130 It's six feet tall and it's coming to them. 65 00:03:52,266 --> 00:03:55,596 It's having glowing red eyes in its chest, 66 00:03:55,734 --> 00:03:56,934 which are reflecting the headlights. 67 00:03:57,066 --> 00:04:03,496 It had two huge black wings, no head, no arms. 68 00:04:05,133 --> 00:04:09,033 All of a sudden it goes into the air and starts flying. 69 00:04:09,166 --> 00:04:12,296 They started racing back to Point Pleasant and 70 00:04:12,433 --> 00:04:14,303 the creature was in back of the car. 71 00:04:14,433 --> 00:04:16,773 Really they felt it almost was touching both sides 72 00:04:16,900 --> 00:04:18,270 of the highway. 73 00:04:18,400 --> 00:04:23,030 Red glowing eyes, no arms, just these huge wings. 74 00:04:24,667 --> 00:04:26,867 NARRATOR: Reaching speeds of one hundred miles an hour, the 75 00:04:27,000 --> 00:04:31,430 chase continues until finally the creature disappears. 76 00:04:31,567 --> 00:04:35,697 [♪] 77 00:04:35,834 --> 00:04:42,204 Was there something unpleasant in Point Pleasant? 78 00:04:43,867 --> 00:04:48,227 This remarkable story sends shockwaves through the town. 79 00:04:48,367 --> 00:04:52,127 The media call the creature the Mothman. 80 00:04:55,066 --> 00:05:00,066 Local resident Faye Leport was fourteen years old at the time. 81 00:05:00,200 --> 00:05:03,430 Three days after the first sighting, she decided 82 00:05:03,567 --> 00:05:06,067 to visit the scene for herself. 83 00:05:06,200 --> 00:05:07,600 FAYE LEPORT: That's the road over there that we 84 00:05:07,734 --> 00:05:10,674 drove down, me and my brother, to come out here 85 00:05:10,800 --> 00:05:14,930 to try to find the so-called Mothman we heard about. 86 00:05:15,066 --> 00:05:17,996 My brother said well I'm just gonna see uh if I can 87 00:05:18,133 --> 00:05:20,203 find it and prove that it's just somebody in a 88 00:05:20,333 --> 00:05:24,173 Halloween costume or something on wires or something. 89 00:05:25,567 --> 00:05:28,197 As we got to the, the area my brother kept looking 90 00:05:28,333 --> 00:05:30,273 past me to the window. 91 00:05:30,400 --> 00:05:31,770 I said well, what is it? 92 00:05:31,900 --> 00:05:33,130 What are you looking at? You know? 93 00:05:33,266 --> 00:05:35,166 He said well don't look right now and he said but 94 00:05:35,300 --> 00:05:38,770 there's something beside the car there by the window. 95 00:05:38,900 --> 00:05:42,630 So he slammed the brakes on and just like it was 96 00:05:42,767 --> 00:05:46,267 nothing just leaped right up on the car. 97 00:05:46,400 --> 00:05:49,770 Even though it was dark, you could still see the eyes. 98 00:05:49,900 --> 00:05:55,830 It had the features of a bird, combined with a human. 99 00:05:55,967 --> 00:05:58,597 We were really scared and I was begging and crying 100 00:05:58,734 --> 00:06:02,234 for my brother to go ahead and, and let's get out of here. 101 00:06:02,367 --> 00:06:05,227 That's when I finally saw it open up its wings and 102 00:06:05,367 --> 00:06:09,727 just flew off in the sky so pretty and it was gone. 103 00:06:11,400 --> 00:06:13,330 NARRATOR: For the next year, the Mothman 104 00:06:13,467 --> 00:06:15,997 terrorizes the people of Point Pleasant. 105 00:06:18,066 --> 00:06:19,166 WITNESS 1 (ARCHIVE): We were coming up around here 106 00:06:19,300 --> 00:06:21,800 and we looked around the thing, around the curb 107 00:06:21,934 --> 00:06:24,204 there and we thought it was a car light so we stopped 108 00:06:24,333 --> 00:06:26,173 the car and the thing came over top of the car. 109 00:06:26,300 --> 00:06:27,400 WITNESS 2 (ARCHIVE): Well I just think it's 110 00:06:27,533 --> 00:06:29,673 something supernatural that we can't explain or 111 00:06:29,800 --> 00:06:31,170 something like that. 112 00:06:31,300 --> 00:06:34,030 I know I can't explain it, that's for sure. 113 00:06:34,166 --> 00:06:36,566 NARRATOR: They wonder where it will all end. 114 00:06:38,266 --> 00:06:41,726 Thirteen months after the first sighting, 115 00:06:41,867 --> 00:06:44,127 they get their answer. 116 00:06:44,266 --> 00:06:47,166 LOREN COLEMAN: The Silver Bridge, between 117 00:06:47,300 --> 00:06:50,970 West Virginia and Ohio starting at Point Pleasant 118 00:06:51,100 --> 00:06:55,170 collapsed on December 15th, 1967. 119 00:06:55,300 --> 00:07:00,200 Sixty-seven people fell into the water of the Ohio River. 120 00:07:00,333 --> 00:07:04,803 Forty-six died and two bodies never were even found. 121 00:07:04,934 --> 00:07:06,374 NARRATOR: There's seemingly no apparent 122 00:07:06,500 --> 00:07:11,130 reason for this horrific tragedy. 123 00:07:11,266 --> 00:07:14,396 Then comes a terrifying report. 124 00:07:14,533 --> 00:07:17,503 The night before the disaster, the Mothman was 125 00:07:17,633 --> 00:07:20,203 seen hanging from the Silver Bridge. 126 00:07:22,200 --> 00:07:23,330 LOREN COLEMAN: And people were scared. 127 00:07:23,467 --> 00:07:24,567 They were so scared they didn't want to talk about 128 00:07:24,700 --> 00:07:26,400 the bridge, they didn't want to talk about 129 00:07:26,533 --> 00:07:29,933 Mothman, they didn't want to talk about anything. 130 00:07:30,066 --> 00:07:33,066 NARRATOR: The Mothman was never seen again. 131 00:07:35,300 --> 00:07:36,870 For forty-five years, this incredible story has 132 00:07:37,000 --> 00:07:40,200 baffled experts. 133 00:07:40,333 --> 00:07:43,273 But some believe recent evidence could finally 134 00:07:43,400 --> 00:07:46,100 explain the mystery of the Mothman. 135 00:07:50,333 --> 00:07:53,673 Joe Nickell is a paranormal investigator 136 00:07:53,800 --> 00:07:56,600 with Skeptical Inquirer science magazine. 137 00:07:58,667 --> 00:08:02,067 JOE NICKELL: We human beings misperceive all the time. 138 00:08:02,200 --> 00:08:04,470 People say I know what I saw. 139 00:08:04,600 --> 00:08:08,370 Actually they know what they think they saw. 140 00:08:08,500 --> 00:08:11,200 NARRATOR: Joe believes the Mothman wasn't quite the 141 00:08:11,333 --> 00:08:14,373 monstrous beast it was made out to be. 142 00:08:14,500 --> 00:08:17,500 JOE NICKELL: I believe the barred owl is the creature 143 00:08:17,633 --> 00:08:22,073 that most clearly fits the bill. 144 00:08:23,467 --> 00:08:27,297 NARRATOR: Was the Mothman simply an owl? 145 00:08:27,433 --> 00:08:30,303 Nickell thinks the answer lies in Linda Scarberry's 146 00:08:30,433 --> 00:08:34,473 first descriptions back in 1966. 147 00:08:35,800 --> 00:08:37,330 JOE NICKELL: Her original description of Mothman is 148 00:08:37,467 --> 00:08:41,697 of a very large winged creature. 149 00:08:41,834 --> 00:08:46,034 She said it had no neck, virtually no real head, 150 00:08:46,166 --> 00:08:50,796 just eyes, very large eyes, round and shining 151 00:08:50,934 --> 00:08:52,804 like a bicycle reflector. 152 00:08:52,934 --> 00:08:57,004 In the owl family there are different degrees of 153 00:08:57,133 --> 00:08:59,173 what's called eye shine. 154 00:08:59,367 --> 00:09:02,467 Among the most potent is that of the barred owl, 155 00:09:02,600 --> 00:09:07,430 which has a deep crimson eye shine. 156 00:09:07,567 --> 00:09:10,227 It's a large owl with big wingspan. 157 00:09:10,367 --> 00:09:12,627 It would look like just eyes set at the top of a 158 00:09:12,767 --> 00:09:14,167 body with wings up. 159 00:09:14,300 --> 00:09:18,070 It flies in a silent moth-like flight. 160 00:09:18,200 --> 00:09:21,730 It has pretty much exactly the characteristics of 161 00:09:21,867 --> 00:09:25,027 Mothman original sightings. 162 00:09:25,166 --> 00:09:29,066 NARRATOR: But does Nickell's theory explain the height? 163 00:09:29,200 --> 00:09:31,400 Eyewitnesses reported a creature that was 164 00:09:31,533 --> 00:09:34,233 six or seven feet tall. 165 00:09:34,367 --> 00:09:35,827 JOE NICKELL: We know that people misperceive and 166 00:09:35,967 --> 00:09:38,797 I'm quite confident that somebody looking and not 167 00:09:38,934 --> 00:09:41,204 knowing what it is at night quickly and maybe 168 00:09:41,333 --> 00:09:44,233 being frightened by it, I dare say I would misjudge 169 00:09:44,367 --> 00:09:47,927 the distance and therefore misjudge the height. 170 00:09:48,066 --> 00:09:50,326 So I would say this in summary. 171 00:09:50,467 --> 00:09:54,467 If it looked like a barred owl and acted like 172 00:09:54,600 --> 00:09:58,930 a barred owl and had red reflector eyes, 173 00:09:59,066 --> 00:10:01,126 maybe it was a barred owl. 174 00:10:01,233 --> 00:10:02,773 WILLIAM SHATNER: It's incredible, isn't it? 175 00:10:02,900 --> 00:10:04,270 Here we have an entire town in fear of their 176 00:10:04,400 --> 00:10:07,400 lives from something they can't explain - a creature 177 00:10:07,533 --> 00:10:09,303 seven feet tall that can fly a hundred miles an 178 00:10:09,433 --> 00:10:12,773 hour and maybe even bring down a bridge and they 179 00:10:12,900 --> 00:10:15,470 blame it on this guy? 180 00:10:15,600 --> 00:10:16,630 Don't get me wrong. 181 00:10:16,767 --> 00:10:20,767 He's scary - if you're a field mouse. 182 00:10:20,900 --> 00:10:23,200 Perhaps the real question here is why did so many 183 00:10:23,333 --> 00:10:26,003 people think they saw a monster and even blame it 184 00:10:26,133 --> 00:10:28,903 for the death of forty-six people? 185 00:10:29,033 --> 00:10:30,173 Weird or what? 186 00:10:32,233 --> 00:10:34,533 NARRATOR: A psychologist believes there is one sure 187 00:10:34,667 --> 00:10:39,367 way to solve the mystery of the Mothman. Using fear. 188 00:10:39,500 --> 00:10:41,000 JIM HOURAN: We are going to try to induce a mild case 189 00:10:41,133 --> 00:10:42,833 of mass psychogenic illness 190 00:10:43,967 --> 00:10:45,527 I feel like someone is following me. 191 00:10:55,500 --> 00:10:57,270 NARRATOR: A mysterious winged creature called the 192 00:10:57,400 --> 00:11:02,370 Mothman terrorizes a town in West Virginia. 193 00:11:02,500 --> 00:11:07,100 Is it proof that monsters exist? 194 00:11:07,233 --> 00:11:10,473 Jim Houran is a psychologist. 195 00:11:10,600 --> 00:11:12,600 He believes the Mothman can be explained by a 196 00:11:12,734 --> 00:11:16,704 phenomenon called MPI. 197 00:11:16,834 --> 00:11:18,104 JIM HOURAN: Mass psychogenic illness, 198 00:11:18,233 --> 00:11:21,973 or MPI, is a psychological term for an outbreak of 199 00:11:22,100 --> 00:11:24,730 mysterious illness that has no medical cause, 200 00:11:24,867 --> 00:11:26,797 but it's entirely in someone's head. 201 00:11:26,934 --> 00:11:28,204 Before you know it, you have a contagion effect, 202 00:11:28,333 --> 00:11:31,233 whereby those social symptoms start spreading 203 00:11:31,367 --> 00:11:33,997 in a large group of people. 204 00:11:34,133 --> 00:11:38,873 NARRATOR: Was Mothman the result of a social contagion? 205 00:11:39,000 --> 00:11:41,070 Houran believes he can prove his theory by 206 00:11:41,233 --> 00:11:44,733 showing what might have happened in Point Pleasant. 207 00:11:44,867 --> 00:11:45,967 JIM HOURAN: We're gonna try to induce a mild case 208 00:11:46,100 --> 00:11:47,900 of mass psychogenic illness. 209 00:11:48,033 --> 00:11:49,603 I've selected a group of volunteers. 210 00:11:49,734 --> 00:11:51,304 I'm going to give them the suggestion that they're 211 00:11:51,433 --> 00:11:54,433 gonna be visiting a very haunted place in the woods. 212 00:11:54,567 --> 00:11:55,727 We're gonna take them out there and let their 213 00:11:55,867 --> 00:11:57,627 imaginations take over. 214 00:11:57,767 --> 00:11:59,397 JIM HOURAN: Was this fact? 215 00:11:59,533 --> 00:12:01,033 Was this fiction? 216 00:12:01,166 --> 00:12:02,426 NARRATOR: Houran begins by telling the group he needs 217 00:12:02,567 --> 00:12:04,897 their help to solve a series of disturbing 218 00:12:05,033 --> 00:12:09,433 paranormal incidents reported in the area. 219 00:12:09,567 --> 00:12:13,567 As night falls, the group sets out into the woods. 220 00:12:13,667 --> 00:12:16,327 JIM HOURAN: Stop please. Everyone fan out. 221 00:12:17,967 --> 00:12:20,427 NARRATOR: They are told to turn off their flashlights. 222 00:12:20,567 --> 00:12:23,897 From this point they can only be turned on when someone 223 00:12:24,033 --> 00:12:29,303 thinks they experience something paranormal. 224 00:12:29,433 --> 00:12:32,633 In just minutes, flashlights come on and 225 00:12:32,767 --> 00:12:37,297 reports of paranormal activity flood in. 226 00:12:37,433 --> 00:12:39,733 Houran believes the flashlights act as social 227 00:12:39,867 --> 00:12:44,767 cues which influence the other members of the group. 228 00:12:46,934 --> 00:12:49,334 VOLUNTEER: I felt a cold breeze before the wind 229 00:12:49,467 --> 00:12:50,597 starting blowing. 230 00:12:50,734 --> 00:12:51,674 JIM HOURAN: You felt a cold breeze? 231 00:12:51,800 --> 00:12:52,970 Someone felt cold over there too. 232 00:12:53,100 --> 00:12:54,900 VOLUNTEER 2: I feel like someone is following me, 233 00:12:55,033 --> 00:12:56,703 and someone is trying to say something. 234 00:12:56,834 --> 00:12:58,574 VOLUNTEER 3: I feel like electricity like 235 00:12:58,700 --> 00:13:00,030 static on my face. 236 00:13:00,166 --> 00:13:01,366 JIM HOURAN: Let me understand this. 237 00:13:01,500 --> 00:13:03,070 Right here you feel like there's static electricity 238 00:13:03,200 --> 00:13:04,470 on your face? 239 00:13:04,600 --> 00:13:08,230 JIM HOURAN: As soon as one or two cues took hold, 240 00:13:08,367 --> 00:13:09,697 then you start seeing a flurry of other 241 00:13:09,834 --> 00:13:10,934 flashlights going on. 242 00:13:11,066 --> 00:13:12,966 It percolated throughout the entire group, exactly 243 00:13:13,100 --> 00:13:16,700 what we would expect with psychogenic illness in a group. 244 00:13:19,533 --> 00:13:24,103 NARRATOR: Was the Mothman all in the minds of its victims? 245 00:13:24,233 --> 00:13:27,003 And does this explain what eyewitnesses like 246 00:13:27,133 --> 00:13:29,633 Faye Leport saw? 247 00:13:31,400 --> 00:13:35,270 Ken Gerhard is a professional monster hunter. 248 00:13:35,400 --> 00:13:37,330 He believes the best way to solve the Mothman 249 00:13:37,467 --> 00:13:40,967 mystery is to hunt it down himself. 250 00:13:41,100 --> 00:13:42,900 KEN GERHARD: For the past decades, I have gone out 251 00:13:43,033 --> 00:13:45,803 and searched for hard physical evidence that 252 00:13:45,934 --> 00:13:49,274 we share our world with creatures, legendary 253 00:13:49,400 --> 00:13:51,770 beasts, things that have not been classified or 254 00:13:51,900 --> 00:13:55,030 verified by scientists. 255 00:13:55,166 --> 00:13:57,066 NARRATOR: Gerhard has come to the McClintic Wildlife 256 00:13:57,200 --> 00:14:02,130 Reserve, close to where the Mothman was first sighted. 257 00:14:02,266 --> 00:14:05,396 KEN GERHARD: It's very exciting to be here uh in 258 00:14:05,533 --> 00:14:07,533 the actual location where Mothman was reported 259 00:14:07,667 --> 00:14:11,067 so many times back in the 1960s. 260 00:14:11,200 --> 00:14:14,370 If Mothman is a real physical animal, 261 00:14:14,500 --> 00:14:16,900 it's gonna make an impact on its environment and this 262 00:14:17,033 --> 00:14:23,273 could be tracks on the ground, nests, markings and the like. 263 00:14:25,934 --> 00:14:28,604 NARRATOR: Using a camera trap, Gerhard is hoping 264 00:14:28,734 --> 00:14:31,474 to catch Mothman unaware. 265 00:14:31,600 --> 00:14:32,900 KEN GERHARD: This is actually 266 00:14:33,033 --> 00:14:36,373 a motion-activated camera with an infrared beam and 267 00:14:36,500 --> 00:14:38,630 anything that passes within that beam is 268 00:14:38,767 --> 00:14:41,197 actually gonna be captured on this particular camera. 269 00:14:41,333 --> 00:14:44,333 I can put the camera out overnight and come back 270 00:14:44,467 --> 00:14:47,027 the following morning to determine whether in fact 271 00:14:47,166 --> 00:14:51,626 I've captured an image of the subject. 272 00:14:51,767 --> 00:14:54,367 NARRATOR: To attract his prey, Gerhard sets up 273 00:14:54,500 --> 00:14:57,070 a 'Blasting Device' - a machine that broadcasts 274 00:14:57,200 --> 00:14:59,770 the sound of forest creatures in pain. 275 00:14:59,900 --> 00:15:03,870 [animal in pain sound] 276 00:15:04,000 --> 00:15:05,470 KEN GERHARD: Many of the eyewitnesses said the 277 00:15:05,600 --> 00:15:08,070 Mothman made kind of a squeaking mechanical mouse 278 00:15:08,200 --> 00:15:11,070 sound and uh fortunately I have a little sound on here 279 00:15:11,200 --> 00:15:15,570 called lip squeak and I think that's exactly what we need. 280 00:15:15,700 --> 00:15:19,770 [animal squeaking sound] 281 00:15:19,900 --> 00:15:20,900 [ruslting] 282 00:15:21,033 --> 00:15:22,633 Did you hear that? 283 00:15:22,767 --> 00:15:23,967 There's something moving around there in the brush. 284 00:15:24,100 --> 00:15:25,530 I don't know what it was but basically that last 285 00:15:25,667 --> 00:15:31,727 sound definitely evoked some type of response or reaction. 286 00:15:31,867 --> 00:15:34,027 NARRATOR: With his equipment set, 287 00:15:34,166 --> 00:15:36,526 it's now a waiting game. 288 00:15:36,633 --> 00:15:40,273 Will the Mothman reveal himself? 289 00:15:42,834 --> 00:15:46,674 WILLIAM SHATNER: I don't know about you, 290 00:15:46,800 --> 00:15:49,400 but if I were a monster hunter, indeed if I were 291 00:15:49,533 --> 00:15:52,603 hunting the Mothman, I think I'd be taking 292 00:15:52,734 --> 00:15:55,804 something a little more substantial than this. 293 00:15:55,934 --> 00:15:57,204 [squeak] 294 00:15:57,333 --> 00:16:06,733 I mean at least I would think you'd take something 295 00:16:06,867 --> 00:16:12,927 like this, wouldn't you? 296 00:16:14,200 --> 00:16:17,200 But we have to ask the question if monsters 297 00:16:17,333 --> 00:16:21,473 really exist, why has no one, monster hunter or not, 298 00:16:21,600 --> 00:16:22,900 been able to catch one? 299 00:16:23,033 --> 00:16:25,833 Then again, if monsters were just ordinary critters, 300 00:16:25,967 --> 00:16:31,167 they wouldn't really be monsters, would they? 301 00:16:31,300 --> 00:16:32,530 [squeak] 302 00:16:35,367 --> 00:16:38,567 NARRATOR: Returning the next day, monster hunter Ken Gerhard 303 00:16:38,700 --> 00:16:45,900 checks to see if he's found evidence of the Mothman. 304 00:16:46,033 --> 00:16:51,333 KEN GERHARD: Huh. Well unfortunately it doesn't look 305 00:16:51,467 --> 00:16:52,767 like we got anything on film. 306 00:16:52,900 --> 00:16:55,770 I uh I may have been a little bit wrong about 307 00:16:55,900 --> 00:16:58,200 the, the placement of this camera. 308 00:16:58,333 --> 00:17:00,403 The lesson learned here is that monster hunting is 309 00:17:00,533 --> 00:17:03,473 a very arduous and time consuming process and it 310 00:17:03,600 --> 00:17:05,930 may take quite a, quite a bit of time before 311 00:17:06,066 --> 00:17:10,266 we actually get an image of our quarry. 312 00:17:12,367 --> 00:17:13,697 NARRATOR: The high tech approach has failed to 313 00:17:13,834 --> 00:17:17,234 find anything, but Gerhard thinks he knows exactly 314 00:17:17,367 --> 00:17:20,467 what Mothman is. 315 00:17:20,600 --> 00:17:22,270 KEN GERHARD: I believe Mothman to be the product 316 00:17:22,400 --> 00:17:25,130 of negative energy. 317 00:17:25,266 --> 00:17:27,266 Consider for a moment the main location where 318 00:17:27,400 --> 00:17:29,670 Mothman was encountered. 319 00:17:29,800 --> 00:17:31,070 Many of the Native American tribes would 320 00:17:31,200 --> 00:17:33,830 avoid this area completely because they believed it 321 00:17:33,967 --> 00:17:36,997 to be haunted by monsters and evil spirits and then 322 00:17:37,133 --> 00:17:39,903 you have the great curse of Chief Cornstalk, 323 00:17:40,033 --> 00:17:42,833 the Shawnee Chief who on his deathbed, cursed the area 324 00:17:42,967 --> 00:17:45,367 because the white men had betrayed him. 325 00:17:45,500 --> 00:17:47,800 So in that respect, I believe Mothman to be the 326 00:17:47,934 --> 00:17:50,774 accumulation of all of this negative energy, 327 00:17:50,900 --> 00:17:53,330 perhaps brought to life by some type of mechanism far 328 00:17:53,467 --> 00:17:55,697 beyond the realm of human comprehension. 329 00:17:58,867 --> 00:18:01,567 NARRATOR: Was Mothman a bad omen that somehow 330 00:18:01,700 --> 00:18:05,170 materialized in Point Pleasant? 331 00:18:05,300 --> 00:18:08,570 Or could it simply have been mass hysteria 332 00:18:08,700 --> 00:18:11,430 created by an owl? 333 00:18:11,567 --> 00:18:13,227 Weird - or what? 334 00:18:13,367 --> 00:18:23,327 [♪] 335 00:18:27,667 --> 00:18:31,597 NARRATOR: A fisherman finds a giant unidentifiable creature 336 00:18:31,734 --> 00:18:33,874 on a beach in Newfoundland. 337 00:18:34,000 --> 00:18:35,400 GARRY STENSON: It was nothing that either of us 338 00:18:35,533 --> 00:18:36,873 had ever seen or could imagine. 339 00:18:37,000 --> 00:18:39,830 NARRATOR: Are monsters lurking in the deep? 340 00:18:49,166 --> 00:18:52,066 WILLIAM SHATNER: Ah! Hey. Oooh. 341 00:18:52,200 --> 00:18:53,830 You know I used to love fishing. 342 00:18:53,967 --> 00:18:55,967 Nothing better than the thrill of landing a big one - 343 00:18:56,100 --> 00:18:58,800 the ultimate challenge between man and beast. 344 00:18:58,934 --> 00:19:05,034 But every now and then you catch something you're not expecting. 345 00:19:05,166 --> 00:19:07,826 Strange things that make you wonder - what is 346 00:19:07,967 --> 00:19:13,467 living in the depths of our oceans? 347 00:19:13,600 --> 00:19:15,070 I don't know. 348 00:19:18,700 --> 00:19:22,100 NARRATOR: In 2001, Garry Stenson was working as 349 00:19:22,233 --> 00:19:25,973 a fisheries officer in Newfoundland, Canada when 350 00:19:26,100 --> 00:19:29,430 he received the strangest phone call of his career. 351 00:19:31,600 --> 00:19:33,070 GARRY STENSON: I got a call from a fisherman. 352 00:19:33,200 --> 00:19:35,830 He was telling me about a creature on the beach that 353 00:19:35,967 --> 00:19:37,227 had washed up. 354 00:19:37,367 --> 00:19:40,267 He started to describe it to me and it sounded 355 00:19:40,400 --> 00:19:44,200 unlike anything that I had encountered. 356 00:19:44,333 --> 00:19:46,303 NARRATOR: Mystified, Garry decides to meet the 357 00:19:46,433 --> 00:19:50,103 fisherman and investigate the strange sighting. 358 00:19:52,266 --> 00:19:53,926 GARRY STENSON: It was a very isolated area and as 359 00:19:54,066 --> 00:19:57,166 we came up to it we saw this large creature laying 360 00:19:57,300 --> 00:19:58,730 on the beach itself. 361 00:20:01,200 --> 00:20:03,400 I've never seen anything that looked like this. 362 00:20:03,533 --> 00:20:05,133 There was nothing that looked like a head. 363 00:20:05,266 --> 00:20:06,666 There was nothing that looked like any sort of 364 00:20:06,800 --> 00:20:10,300 structure that we, that we could identify it. 365 00:20:10,433 --> 00:20:13,533 NARRATOR: In over twenty years as a fisheries officer, 366 00:20:13,667 --> 00:20:19,127 Garry thought he had seen it all - until now. 367 00:20:19,266 --> 00:20:20,526 GARRY STENSON: I've worked on a lot of whales and 368 00:20:20,667 --> 00:20:22,797 I've worked on a lot of seals and even some sharks 369 00:20:22,934 --> 00:20:24,634 that have come ashore, but this creature was nothing 370 00:20:24,767 --> 00:20:27,867 like that and there was nothing that we could tell 371 00:20:28,000 --> 00:20:30,470 where it came from. 372 00:20:30,600 --> 00:20:33,930 From a distance, it had what looked like hair, 373 00:20:34,066 --> 00:20:36,466 standing up all over it. 374 00:20:36,600 --> 00:20:39,070 It was about five and a half meters long, about 375 00:20:39,200 --> 00:20:42,730 two meters wide and about a meter high in the middle of it. 376 00:20:42,867 --> 00:20:44,427 There were a number of lobes. 377 00:20:44,567 --> 00:20:49,897 They looked almost like short arms, with notches in between. 378 00:20:50,033 --> 00:20:53,803 It smelled a lot like rotting tissue. 379 00:20:56,133 --> 00:20:57,333 It was pretty heavy. 380 00:20:57,467 --> 00:20:59,927 We tried pushing on it, it was solid. 381 00:21:00,066 --> 00:21:03,496 It was nothing that we could move. 382 00:21:03,633 --> 00:21:05,773 So what we did was we took our knives and we tried 383 00:21:05,900 --> 00:21:11,070 to cut up and cut into the tissue. 384 00:21:12,633 --> 00:21:16,173 NARRATOR: As they cut into the carcass, they made 385 00:21:16,300 --> 00:21:18,500 a bizarre discovery. 386 00:21:18,633 --> 00:21:20,603 GARRY STENSON: The exterior of it was very hard, 387 00:21:20,734 --> 00:21:23,234 it was quite tough but there was no sign of any organs. 388 00:21:23,367 --> 00:21:24,797 If it was a shark, there would be cartilage but 389 00:21:25,033 --> 00:21:26,233 there was no cartilage. 390 00:21:26,367 --> 00:21:27,797 So we looked for bone. 391 00:21:27,934 --> 00:21:30,174 If it was a whale, there would be some bone in it, 392 00:21:30,300 --> 00:21:33,600 but there was none of this either. 393 00:21:33,734 --> 00:21:37,274 NARRATOR: It seemed Garry and the fisherman had 394 00:21:37,400 --> 00:21:41,600 discovered a creature unknown to science. 395 00:21:44,100 --> 00:21:44,930 GARRY STENSON: It was nothing that either of 396 00:21:45,066 --> 00:21:47,696 us had ever seen or could imagine. 397 00:21:47,834 --> 00:21:49,534 It's not impossible that there's something out there 398 00:21:49,667 --> 00:21:53,027 that we haven't seen before that's lurking in the depths. 399 00:21:55,700 --> 00:22:00,230 NARRATOR: A giant creature washes up in Newfoundland. 400 00:22:00,367 --> 00:22:05,267 Was it an unknown species or a monster from the deep? 401 00:22:05,400 --> 00:22:08,930 And if there was one, could there be others? 402 00:22:09,066 --> 00:22:12,866 Remarkably, the answer is yes. 403 00:22:15,233 --> 00:22:17,173 WILLIAM SHATNER: It's incredible. 404 00:22:17,300 --> 00:22:21,470 In the last century, giant weird blobs of - ooh well 405 00:22:21,600 --> 00:22:25,100 I dunno what - have been washing up all over the planet. 406 00:22:25,233 --> 00:22:30,033 Are they something awful from the bowels of ships? I hope not. 407 00:22:30,166 --> 00:22:32,126 In fact, they're so hard to identify that the only 408 00:22:32,266 --> 00:22:36,926 name scientists could come up with is globsters. 409 00:22:37,066 --> 00:22:38,966 Part glob, part monster. 410 00:22:39,100 --> 00:22:42,800 Globster. Clever. 411 00:22:44,967 --> 00:22:46,297 But what the hell are they? 412 00:22:54,166 --> 00:22:58,026 NARRATOR: Mathew Wedel is a professor of anatomy. 413 00:22:58,166 --> 00:23:01,096 He believes the explanation is simple. 414 00:23:01,233 --> 00:23:02,373 MATHEW WEDEL: It sounds like something very 415 00:23:02,500 --> 00:23:04,430 mysterious, something completely unknown to 416 00:23:04,567 --> 00:23:07,297 science but there's no evidence so far that 417 00:23:07,433 --> 00:23:10,203 they're anything other than dead whales. 418 00:23:10,333 --> 00:23:13,573 NARRATOR: But if globsters are whales, how could tons 419 00:23:13,700 --> 00:23:18,870 of bones and internal organs be missing? 420 00:23:19,000 --> 00:23:20,670 Wedel thinks the answer lies in one of the 421 00:23:20,800 --> 00:23:25,230 strongest elements in nature - collagen, 422 00:23:25,367 --> 00:23:29,697 a protein found in whale skin. 423 00:23:29,834 --> 00:23:32,204 MATHEW WEDEL: Collagen is similar to steel in terms 424 00:23:32,333 --> 00:23:34,603 of tensile strength so it's one of the toughest 425 00:23:34,734 --> 00:23:37,274 substances known to man. 426 00:23:37,400 --> 00:23:39,070 If you feel the back of your heel, feel your 427 00:23:39,200 --> 00:23:41,630 Achilles tendon, that's a big rope of collagen the 428 00:23:41,767 --> 00:23:43,967 size of your finger. 429 00:23:44,100 --> 00:23:46,230 Now imagine something like that woven in overlapping 430 00:23:46,367 --> 00:23:49,097 belts around an animal a hundred feet long and you 431 00:23:49,233 --> 00:23:52,803 get some idea of the strength of whale skin. 432 00:23:53,033 --> 00:23:55,033 It's just incredible. 433 00:23:56,834 --> 00:23:58,504 NARRATOR: Scientists think protective collagen allows 434 00:23:58,633 --> 00:24:03,873 whales to dive up to two miles below the surface of the ocean. 435 00:24:05,300 --> 00:24:06,700 MATHEW WEDEL: Many submarines would crush 436 00:24:06,834 --> 00:24:09,134 before they got down to that depth. 437 00:24:09,266 --> 00:24:11,096 Collagen is their pressure suit when they dive and 438 00:24:11,233 --> 00:24:13,373 their armour against things like sharks that 439 00:24:13,500 --> 00:24:16,170 would try to take bites out of them. 440 00:24:16,300 --> 00:24:17,930 NARRATOR: Wedel also believes collagen causes 441 00:24:18,066 --> 00:24:23,496 whales to decompose in a unique way. 442 00:24:23,633 --> 00:24:25,273 MATHEW WEDEL: Decomposition for whales 443 00:24:25,400 --> 00:24:26,630 is an interesting process. 444 00:24:26,767 --> 00:24:29,997 When a whale dies, the skin doesn't fall apart 445 00:24:30,133 --> 00:24:33,403 the way that normal animal skin does. 446 00:24:33,533 --> 00:24:36,403 NARRATOR: After death, scavengers rapidly devour 447 00:24:36,533 --> 00:24:39,903 the inside of a dead whale, but they leave the 448 00:24:40,033 --> 00:24:43,573 gristly collagen alone. 449 00:24:43,700 --> 00:24:45,000 MATHEW WEDEL: Once animals have eaten their way into 450 00:24:45,133 --> 00:24:47,573 the body to get the good stuff, it's easy for the 451 00:24:47,700 --> 00:24:51,100 bones to slide right out and sink to the bottom of the ocean. 452 00:24:52,467 --> 00:24:55,567 The skin falls off like a sock off of a foot and now 453 00:24:55,700 --> 00:24:59,170 you have a hundred foot long tube of skin floating 454 00:24:59,300 --> 00:25:02,600 through the ocean. 455 00:25:02,734 --> 00:25:05,504 NARRATOR: But many globsters have tentacles, 456 00:25:05,633 --> 00:25:10,273 strange arms, even hair. 457 00:25:10,400 --> 00:25:14,070 Can Wedel's theory explain these bizarre features? 458 00:25:14,200 --> 00:25:16,270 MATHEW WEDEL: Imagine, that sack of skin can float around 459 00:25:16,400 --> 00:25:19,070 in the ocean for months or maybe even years. 460 00:25:19,200 --> 00:25:22,100 It can rip, it can tear, it can shred into all 461 00:25:22,233 --> 00:25:24,803 kinds of interesting shapes and the collagen 462 00:25:24,934 --> 00:25:28,204 actually frays, just like an old pair of pants and 463 00:25:28,333 --> 00:25:30,833 those threads of collagen that stick out are usually 464 00:25:30,967 --> 00:25:33,967 pink or red and they look like hair. 465 00:25:34,100 --> 00:25:37,170 NARRATOR: Are globsters simply giant blobs of 466 00:25:37,300 --> 00:25:40,670 collagen floating around in a suit of whale skin? 467 00:25:40,800 --> 00:25:42,970 Or are they beasts from the deep? 468 00:25:43,133 --> 00:25:44,373 MATHEW WEDEL: I love a good mystery much as the 469 00:25:44,500 --> 00:25:46,870 next person and I would love to think that there 470 00:25:47,000 --> 00:25:49,330 are giant unknown animals in the ocean and there 471 00:25:49,467 --> 00:25:52,797 probably are some new kinds of sharks and maybe 472 00:25:52,934 --> 00:25:54,874 even new species of whales, but there's 473 00:25:55,000 --> 00:25:57,530 no real sea monster. 474 00:25:59,133 --> 00:26:02,273 NARRATOR: Are globsters simply masses of mammal meat? 475 00:26:02,400 --> 00:26:04,970 Some believe they are proof of something 476 00:26:05,100 --> 00:26:07,200 far more terrifying. 477 00:26:07,333 --> 00:26:10,073 HANS LARSSON: It would absolutely be a monster. 478 00:26:22,000 --> 00:26:24,200 NARRATOR: Strange creatures called globsters 479 00:26:24,333 --> 00:26:27,033 are washing up on beaches all over the world. 480 00:26:27,166 --> 00:26:31,496 Are they simply dead whales? 481 00:26:35,100 --> 00:26:38,900 Dr. Hans Larsson is a paleontologist. 482 00:26:39,033 --> 00:26:42,403 He thinks globsters could be a living relic from our 483 00:26:42,533 --> 00:26:45,333 ancient past. 484 00:26:45,467 --> 00:26:48,527 HANS LARSSON: The researchers who, who point 485 00:26:48,667 --> 00:26:51,167 to globsters and say they're nothing more than whales, 486 00:26:51,300 --> 00:26:53,630 they're probably right for most cases, 487 00:26:53,767 --> 00:26:55,497 but pretty much the entire ocean below a hundred 488 00:26:55,633 --> 00:26:58,933 meters' depth hasn't been explored. 489 00:26:59,066 --> 00:27:04,096 NARRATOR: Some areas of the ocean are over six miles deep. 490 00:27:04,233 --> 00:27:06,673 Larsson believes that a terrifying creature could 491 00:27:06,800 --> 00:27:12,600 be lurking in the depths - the Megalodon. 492 00:27:12,734 --> 00:27:15,504 HANS LARSSON: Megalodon is a huge fish. 493 00:27:15,633 --> 00:27:17,573 It looks a lot like a great white shark 494 00:27:17,700 --> 00:27:19,730 but it's much bigger. 495 00:27:19,867 --> 00:27:21,927 NARRATOR: It's known as the Tyrannosaurus Rex of 496 00:27:22,066 --> 00:27:25,296 the sea, a monster that terrorized the ocean 497 00:27:25,433 --> 00:27:28,833 for twenty-five million years - 498 00:27:28,967 --> 00:27:34,767 and the right size for a globster. 499 00:27:34,900 --> 00:27:36,330 HANS LARSSON: This is a tiger shark about fifteen 500 00:27:36,467 --> 00:27:39,397 or so feet long and look at the size of the teeth 501 00:27:39,533 --> 00:27:41,573 and the size of the mouth so it's pretty impressive. 502 00:27:41,700 --> 00:27:43,370 I mean this would be scary enough in the water should 503 00:27:43,500 --> 00:27:46,670 you be in front of it but compare that to 504 00:27:46,800 --> 00:27:50,000 a Megalodon and this is an average sized tooth. 505 00:27:50,133 --> 00:27:53,903 It would absolutely be a monster. 506 00:27:54,033 --> 00:27:55,833 NARRATOR: Most scientists believe this marine monster 507 00:27:55,967 --> 00:28:01,897 became extinct one and a half million years ago. 508 00:28:02,033 --> 00:28:06,803 But remarkably, Larsson isn't so sure. 509 00:28:06,934 --> 00:28:08,534 HANS LARSSON: Some people have suggested that the cooling 510 00:28:08,667 --> 00:28:12,467 of the oceans may have driven megalodon to extinction. 511 00:28:12,600 --> 00:28:13,830 I think we should be a little bit skeptical about 512 00:28:13,967 --> 00:28:15,597 that because all the other animals in the ocean 513 00:28:15,734 --> 00:28:17,534 survived quite well. 514 00:28:17,667 --> 00:28:20,497 And if that whole ecosystem could survive 515 00:28:20,633 --> 00:28:23,233 the global cooling of the oceans and the ice ages, 516 00:28:23,367 --> 00:28:26,097 why not megalodon? 517 00:28:26,233 --> 00:28:28,933 NARRATOR: Could science be wrong? 518 00:28:29,066 --> 00:28:32,466 Another giant of the deep, the coelacanth was supposed 519 00:28:32,600 --> 00:28:37,500 to have died out 65 million years ago with the dinosaurs. 520 00:28:37,633 --> 00:28:42,133 But then, in 1938, a fisherman hauled one up. 521 00:28:45,200 --> 00:28:47,870 Are Megalodons alive? 522 00:28:48,000 --> 00:28:52,370 Could globsters be washed up remains of a 25 million 523 00:28:52,500 --> 00:28:55,400 year old living fossil? 524 00:28:55,533 --> 00:28:56,703 HANS LARSSON: We have glimpses of some other 525 00:28:56,834 --> 00:28:59,934 fishes down there, other sharks and other non-shark 526 00:29:00,066 --> 00:29:02,926 fishes but we know practically nothing about them. 527 00:29:03,066 --> 00:29:05,566 I think that that world is just unexplored. 528 00:29:07,700 --> 00:29:11,730 NARRATOR: Do giant killers lurk in our oceans? 529 00:29:11,867 --> 00:29:14,597 Are they monsters of the deep or just globs of 530 00:29:14,734 --> 00:29:18,074 super strength blubber? 531 00:29:18,200 --> 00:29:20,630 Weird or what? 532 00:29:20,767 --> 00:29:30,727 [♪] 533 00:29:37,667 --> 00:29:40,967 In India, a rampaging man-beast causes 534 00:29:41,100 --> 00:29:44,430 widespread panic in the nation's capital. 535 00:29:44,567 --> 00:29:46,367 SANAL EDAMARAKU: They scream and cry and run off. 536 00:29:46,500 --> 00:29:47,570 You know, it was absolute panic. 537 00:29:49,033 --> 00:29:51,633 NARRATOR: Are scientists creating manmade monsters? 538 00:30:02,600 --> 00:30:04,030 WILLIAM SHATNER: You know, when it comes to trying to 539 00:30:04,166 --> 00:30:05,626 prove there's no such thing as monsters, 540 00:30:05,767 --> 00:30:07,197 there's one big problem - 541 00:30:07,333 --> 00:30:08,803 there's just no hard evidence. 542 00:30:08,934 --> 00:30:10,804 They never seem to hang around long enough. 543 00:30:10,934 --> 00:30:12,604 But what if we're looking in the wrong places? 544 00:30:12,734 --> 00:30:14,174 What if instead of creepy shadows or deep dark 545 00:30:14,300 --> 00:30:18,000 corners of our imagination, the monsters 546 00:30:18,133 --> 00:30:20,773 we're looking for are right under our noses? 547 00:30:20,900 --> 00:30:24,970 What if we're the ones creating them? 548 00:30:27,633 --> 00:30:31,333 NARRATOR: Sanal Edamaraku is a journalist. 549 00:30:31,467 --> 00:30:35,427 He was in Delhi in the summer of 2001 and 550 00:30:35,567 --> 00:30:38,167 witnessed for what many is the most bizarre events 551 00:30:38,300 --> 00:30:39,530 in its long history. 552 00:30:42,567 --> 00:30:44,227 SANAL EDAMARAKU: It became very, very warm. 553 00:30:44,367 --> 00:30:46,267 The temperatures went up to forty-eight degrees 554 00:30:46,400 --> 00:30:52,870 Celsius with enormous humidity, which made life unbearable. 555 00:30:53,000 --> 00:30:54,870 Nobody could sleep in home, especially poor 556 00:30:55,000 --> 00:30:56,970 section of the town. 557 00:30:57,100 --> 00:31:00,530 So a lot of people have been sleeping on the rooftop. 558 00:31:00,667 --> 00:31:03,327 NARRATOR: As thousands of people try to escape the heat, 559 00:31:03,467 --> 00:31:07,797 they have no idea a six-week reign of terror 560 00:31:07,934 --> 00:31:09,934 is about to begin. 561 00:31:10,066 --> 00:31:11,726 SANAL EDAMARAKU: Two factory workers said that 562 00:31:11,867 --> 00:31:15,397 they had been sleeping on the factory balcony in the 563 00:31:15,533 --> 00:31:19,403 evening and suddenly some strange creature jumped 564 00:31:19,500 --> 00:31:22,500 from the floor to the second floor and scratched them, 565 00:31:22,633 --> 00:31:26,103 attacked them, screeched and went off. 566 00:31:29,433 --> 00:31:32,203 NARRATOR: In a city home to thousands of monkeys, 567 00:31:32,333 --> 00:31:35,973 at first the attack seemed unremarkable - 568 00:31:36,100 --> 00:31:38,270 until the victims described what they had seen. 569 00:31:38,400 --> 00:31:41,970 [speaking foreign language] 570 00:31:42,100 --> 00:31:44,470 SANAL EDAMARAKU: They said that it had two, three 571 00:31:44,600 --> 00:31:46,530 special things - metallic claws, then special lights 572 00:31:46,667 --> 00:31:50,267 coming from its forehead, one green and the other 573 00:31:50,400 --> 00:31:54,070 red and these lights were moving and it scratched, 574 00:31:54,200 --> 00:31:56,770 made a special whistling sound and disappeared. 575 00:31:56,900 --> 00:31:58,130 The story was like wildfire. 576 00:31:58,266 --> 00:31:59,526 It spread everywhere. 577 00:31:59,667 --> 00:32:02,467 People have been speaking about this special creature. 578 00:32:02,600 --> 00:32:04,970 NARRATOR: What had attacked the workers? 579 00:32:05,100 --> 00:32:07,870 Within twenty-four hours, the newspapers give the 580 00:32:08,000 --> 00:32:12,200 creature a name - the monkey man. 581 00:32:14,467 --> 00:32:16,767 The very next night, it strikes again. 582 00:32:16,900 --> 00:32:18,900 By the end of the week there are reports of 583 00:32:19,033 --> 00:32:22,103 a dozen more attacks. 584 00:32:23,400 --> 00:32:25,530 SANAL EDAMARAKU: Everyone so afraid, so afraid. 585 00:32:25,667 --> 00:32:28,097 People ran off in absolute panic. 586 00:32:28,233 --> 00:32:30,973 They just were fleeing from the scene. 587 00:32:32,667 --> 00:32:35,397 They scream and cry and hearing this sound people 588 00:32:35,533 --> 00:32:38,033 shut off the windows, close lights. 589 00:32:38,166 --> 00:32:39,626 You know it was absolute panic. 590 00:32:41,533 --> 00:32:44,273 NARRATOR: All the victims describe the same thing, 591 00:32:44,400 --> 00:32:48,730 a hairy creature with metallic claws and strange lights. 592 00:32:52,700 --> 00:32:54,070 SANAL EDAMARAKU: Everybody has been speaking about 593 00:32:54,200 --> 00:32:57,200 the uh this special kind of movement that it has, 594 00:32:57,333 --> 00:32:59,373 as if it's controlled by somebody. 595 00:33:01,333 --> 00:33:03,373 Some people said that it could be a half man, 596 00:33:03,500 --> 00:33:07,330 half robot and specially created by the neighbouring 597 00:33:07,467 --> 00:33:11,497 country Pakistan to make trouble in India. 598 00:33:11,633 --> 00:33:14,173 NARRATOR: But then comes a new twist. 599 00:33:14,300 --> 00:33:16,400 As rumours grow, so does the panic. 600 00:33:16,533 --> 00:33:18,403 Just two weeks after the first sighting of the 601 00:33:18,533 --> 00:33:22,173 Monkey Man, the entire city of New Delhi is 602 00:33:22,300 --> 00:33:25,470 besieged by terror. 603 00:33:25,600 --> 00:33:28,570 Then, tragedy strikes. 604 00:33:28,700 --> 00:33:33,330 SANAL EDAMARAKU: One lady was on a rooftop sleeping 605 00:33:33,467 --> 00:33:36,227 and someone saw the monkey man, screamed and whole 606 00:33:36,367 --> 00:33:38,027 people started running off. 607 00:33:38,166 --> 00:33:41,326 She had been running off and she had fallen down 608 00:33:41,467 --> 00:33:44,297 from the second floor, straight down, hitting the 609 00:33:44,433 --> 00:33:47,303 floor and she died. 610 00:33:49,934 --> 00:33:51,634 NARRATOR: In the following days, more people die as 611 00:33:51,767 --> 00:33:54,227 crowds rush to escape. 612 00:33:54,367 --> 00:33:58,627 As the panic grows, New Delhi becomes a ghost town. 613 00:34:00,233 --> 00:34:01,933 SANAL EDAMARAKU: People were so afraid to come out. 614 00:34:02,066 --> 00:34:05,166 The Delhi streets were completely empty after 615 00:34:05,300 --> 00:34:07,700 eight o'clock, totally empty. 616 00:34:07,834 --> 00:34:09,334 Not even a car would go out. 617 00:34:09,467 --> 00:34:12,967 The whole city was completely afraid of monkey man. 618 00:34:14,500 --> 00:34:17,600 NARRATOR: Then, just as the terror reaches its peak, 619 00:34:17,734 --> 00:34:20,374 the incredible happens. 620 00:34:20,500 --> 00:34:21,900 SANAL EDAMARAKU: There was no monkey man reported 621 00:34:22,033 --> 00:34:25,073 anywhere after third or fourth week of May and 622 00:34:25,200 --> 00:34:28,100 it simply disappeared. 623 00:34:28,233 --> 00:34:31,803 NARRATOR: What happened in New Delhi? 624 00:34:31,934 --> 00:34:37,274 Something held this giant city in its fearful grip for weeks. 625 00:34:37,400 --> 00:34:42,700 Was it a monster? Could the Monkey Man be real? 626 00:34:45,333 --> 00:34:49,973 Jay Lakhani is a teacher of the Hindu religion. 627 00:34:50,100 --> 00:34:56,100 He believes the Monkey Man can be explained by Indian culture. 628 00:34:56,233 --> 00:34:57,433 JAY LAKHANI: There is nothing here that would 629 00:34:57,567 --> 00:35:00,267 make me feel that there is anything more than 630 00:35:00,400 --> 00:35:03,630 superstition kind of rolled up with fear and 631 00:35:03,767 --> 00:35:06,197 rolled up with this idea of religious iconography 632 00:35:06,333 --> 00:35:08,303 that just kind of produced this story. 633 00:35:11,800 --> 00:35:13,570 NARRATOR: Lakhani thinks that powerful religious 634 00:35:13,667 --> 00:35:17,267 beliefs could have helped create the Monkey Man. 635 00:35:19,600 --> 00:35:20,900 JAY LAKHANI: In the Hindu tradition the word Avatar 636 00:35:21,033 --> 00:35:22,033 is very central. 637 00:35:22,266 --> 00:35:24,566 Avatar means one who descends. 638 00:35:24,700 --> 00:35:26,830 The Hindus say the spirit has a habit of descending 639 00:35:26,967 --> 00:35:29,967 to earth in human form. 640 00:35:30,100 --> 00:35:34,100 NARRATOR: In the Hindu religion, gods known as avatars 641 00:35:34,233 --> 00:35:38,333 are believed to descend to Earth in times of need. 642 00:35:38,467 --> 00:35:43,967 Many are depicted as part human, part animal. 643 00:35:44,100 --> 00:35:48,130 Was the Monkey Man a well-meaning avatar that 644 00:35:48,233 --> 00:35:51,003 was mistaken for something evil? 645 00:35:51,133 --> 00:35:52,633 JAY LAKHANI: India is a poor country struggling 646 00:35:52,767 --> 00:35:55,197 with lots of issues so it's understandable the 647 00:35:55,333 --> 00:35:56,873 public would like to project the idea that an 648 00:35:57,000 --> 00:35:59,630 avatar is here to rescue them. 649 00:35:59,767 --> 00:36:02,867 You see a layperson is very, very gullible. 650 00:36:03,000 --> 00:36:05,330 I suspect it is quite possible that a few 651 00:36:05,467 --> 00:36:08,197 pranksters got together, dressed up a couple of 652 00:36:08,333 --> 00:36:10,903 monkeys and set them loose on the streets of New Delhi. 653 00:36:12,800 --> 00:36:14,630 But for a layperson who is kind of steeped in 654 00:36:14,767 --> 00:36:17,397 religious tradition it is understandable that when 655 00:36:17,533 --> 00:36:20,573 he sees a few pranksters he somehow projects his own 656 00:36:20,667 --> 00:36:24,727 idea that this is an avatar on the streets of New Delhi. 657 00:36:26,200 --> 00:36:27,430 NARRATOR: Were thousands of New Delhi residents 658 00:36:27,567 --> 00:36:30,727 victims of pranks blown out of proportion by 659 00:36:30,867 --> 00:36:34,567 widely held religious beliefs? 660 00:36:34,700 --> 00:36:37,500 Did the Monkey Man exist at all? 661 00:36:37,633 --> 00:36:39,533 JAY LAKHANI: I don't think the monkey man existed at all. 662 00:36:39,667 --> 00:36:41,467 I think all these things combined with a few real 663 00:36:41,600 --> 00:36:44,330 monkeys kind of jumping about and perhaps some 664 00:36:44,467 --> 00:36:47,067 pranksters getting into the, onto the act is the 665 00:36:47,200 --> 00:36:50,170 reason why you got this story developing in India 666 00:36:50,300 --> 00:36:53,230 as an avatar coming down to earth. 667 00:36:53,367 --> 00:36:55,667 WILLIAM SHATNER: So is that the end of this mystery? 668 00:36:55,800 --> 00:36:57,770 Maybe not. 669 00:36:57,900 --> 00:37:00,170 Could monkey man be a product of the human 670 00:37:00,300 --> 00:37:02,100 imagination in a different way? 671 00:37:02,233 --> 00:37:04,973 Not a religiously inspired delusion but 672 00:37:05,100 --> 00:37:09,130 a manifestation of the dark side of science. 673 00:37:09,266 --> 00:37:12,126 Recently declassified documents hint at some 674 00:37:12,266 --> 00:37:18,366 kind of twisted Soviet genetic experiment. 675 00:37:18,500 --> 00:37:20,770 Was the monkey man a secret weapon that escaped 676 00:37:20,900 --> 00:37:26,100 the evil lab of a mad scientist that spawned him? 677 00:37:26,233 --> 00:37:31,233 Is that weird or what? 678 00:37:43,700 --> 00:37:45,230 NARRATOR: In New Delhi, thousands of people claim 679 00:37:45,367 --> 00:37:48,797 to have been attacked by a metal-clawed monster known 680 00:37:48,934 --> 00:37:51,574 as the Monkey Man. 681 00:37:51,700 --> 00:37:58,070 Was it simply mass hysteria or religious superstition? 682 00:37:58,200 --> 00:38:01,170 Scott Marlowe is a cryptozoologist with 683 00:38:01,300 --> 00:38:03,030 a remarkable theory. 684 00:38:05,000 --> 00:38:07,500 SCOTT MARLOWE: I believe monsters exist. 685 00:38:07,633 --> 00:38:10,673 They may not necessarily be the Saturday or Friday 686 00:38:10,800 --> 00:38:14,130 night movie version of the monsters that terrify us on 687 00:38:14,266 --> 00:38:17,296 the silver screen, but there are things out there that 688 00:38:17,433 --> 00:38:23,603 go bump in the night that are terrifying to say the least. 689 00:38:23,734 --> 00:38:26,004 When I first heard the story of India's Monkey Man, 690 00:38:26,133 --> 00:38:29,533 I was pretty certain I knew exactly what it was. 691 00:38:29,667 --> 00:38:34,927 NARRATOR: Marlowe's theory is controversial and alarming. 692 00:38:35,066 --> 00:38:38,766 He thinks the Monkey Man is a real life monster 693 00:38:38,900 --> 00:38:40,730 created by us. 694 00:38:42,200 --> 00:38:44,130 SCOTT MARLOWE: Monsters exist and we certainly have 695 00:38:44,266 --> 00:38:48,696 the ability now with genetic engineering to create them. 696 00:38:48,834 --> 00:38:50,634 Based on some of the descriptions there's a 697 00:38:50,767 --> 00:38:53,527 distinct possibility that Monkey Man could be some 698 00:38:53,767 --> 00:38:56,997 kind of human-ape hybrid. 699 00:38:57,133 --> 00:38:59,603 NARRATOR: Could someone have created a creature 700 00:38:59,734 --> 00:39:02,774 half man, half ape? 701 00:39:03,000 --> 00:39:05,230 And if so, why? 702 00:39:05,367 --> 00:39:10,797 Incredibly, this concept isn't as weird as it sounds. 703 00:39:10,934 --> 00:39:15,234 It could even be based in fact. 704 00:39:15,367 --> 00:39:17,827 Declassified Russian military files have 705 00:39:17,967 --> 00:39:22,227 allegedly revealed that in the 1920s Joseph Stalin 706 00:39:22,367 --> 00:39:25,667 secretly tried to create a super soldier. 707 00:39:25,800 --> 00:39:27,500 SCOTT MARLOWE: A super soldier is a genetically 708 00:39:27,633 --> 00:39:30,903 engineered creature that is designed with a 709 00:39:31,033 --> 00:39:33,233 military purpose in mind. 710 00:39:33,367 --> 00:39:36,997 Stalin commissioned a scientist to attempt a 711 00:39:37,133 --> 00:39:42,633 hybridization who went to Africa, collected ape DNA 712 00:39:42,767 --> 00:39:46,997 and then attempted to impregnate human women 713 00:39:47,133 --> 00:39:50,803 with the sperm of these chimps that he collected 714 00:39:50,934 --> 00:39:53,134 the material from. 715 00:39:53,266 --> 00:39:57,026 They were trying to create a soldier that uh had 716 00:39:57,166 --> 00:39:59,026 superhuman strength. 717 00:39:59,166 --> 00:40:01,396 They wanted the strength of an ape, which was known 718 00:40:01,533 --> 00:40:04,733 to be about seven times that of a human, uh 719 00:40:04,867 --> 00:40:09,097 with the intelligence of a human. 720 00:40:09,233 --> 00:40:12,073 NARRATOR: Incredibly, Marlowe believes Stalin 721 00:40:12,200 --> 00:40:16,500 wasn't the only one who was messing with nature. 722 00:40:16,600 --> 00:40:17,830 SCOTT MARLOWE: Not to be outdone by the Russians, 723 00:40:17,967 --> 00:40:20,167 we attempted to do the same thing. 724 00:40:20,300 --> 00:40:25,300 The attempt was not successful by all accounts 725 00:40:25,433 --> 00:40:28,503 but a lot of that had to do with the lack of 726 00:40:28,633 --> 00:40:30,503 knowledge on the genetics. 727 00:40:30,633 --> 00:40:33,003 Today it could probably be done. 728 00:40:34,467 --> 00:40:37,527 NARRATOR: Are scientists using modern technology to 729 00:40:37,667 --> 00:40:40,827 create super soldiers from humans and apes? 730 00:40:40,967 --> 00:40:44,697 Could this explain the Monkey Man? 731 00:40:46,233 --> 00:40:48,973 SCOTT MARLOWE: Some of the evidence that the Monkey Man 732 00:40:49,100 --> 00:40:51,630 is a human-ape hybrid could be that they are 733 00:40:51,767 --> 00:40:54,567 frequently reported wearing some sort of helmet 734 00:40:54,700 --> 00:40:57,170 uh or flashing lights and that kind of thing, 735 00:40:57,300 --> 00:41:00,870 which would probably be some sort of communications device. 736 00:41:01,000 --> 00:41:05,270 The most alarming feature that's reported are metal claws. 737 00:41:05,400 --> 00:41:09,770 That is, seems more of a military weapon. 738 00:41:09,900 --> 00:41:15,100 If such experimentation were going on and these 739 00:41:15,233 --> 00:41:17,403 creatures were intelligent enough, as presumably they 740 00:41:17,533 --> 00:41:23,533 would be to escape from the facility that was creating them, 741 00:41:23,667 --> 00:41:26,767 they could certainly account for the Monkey Man. 742 00:41:28,333 --> 00:41:32,503 NARRATOR: Was the Monkey Man an escaped super soldier? 743 00:41:32,633 --> 00:41:35,133 And why in an age of predator drones and 744 00:41:35,266 --> 00:41:38,066 nuclear bombs would India need one? 745 00:41:40,233 --> 00:41:42,433 SCOTT MARLOWE: Creating a super soldier using 746 00:41:42,567 --> 00:41:45,967 hybridization genetics would probably be a good 747 00:41:46,100 --> 00:41:49,270 solution for a country like India where, yeah, 748 00:41:49,400 --> 00:41:52,170 they belong to the nuclear club, but it's not a very 749 00:41:52,300 --> 00:41:56,530 popular solution to solving one's problems as a country. 750 00:41:58,600 --> 00:41:59,970 SCOTT MARLOWE: A super soldier might be 751 00:42:00,100 --> 00:42:04,300 engineered for stealth purposes. 752 00:42:04,433 --> 00:42:08,203 I do know if Monkey Men had been created with 753 00:42:08,333 --> 00:42:13,433 genetic engineering for a military purpose, I would be 754 00:42:13,567 --> 00:42:17,497 extremely concerned, if not deathly afraid of the outcome. 755 00:42:20,367 --> 00:42:23,367 NARRATOR: Was a hybrid man-ape let loose on the 756 00:42:23,500 --> 00:42:25,500 streets of New Delhi? 757 00:42:25,633 --> 00:42:28,833 Are we creating manmade monsters? 758 00:42:28,967 --> 00:42:31,667 Weird or what? 759 00:42:51,333 --> 00:42:53,803 NARRATOR: So there we have it - monster stories from 760 00:42:53,934 --> 00:42:55,474 all over the world. 761 00:42:55,600 --> 00:42:58,100 [♪] 762 00:42:58,233 --> 00:43:01,203 In West Virginia, a winged monster seven feet tall 763 00:43:01,333 --> 00:43:05,403 with red eyes terrorizes the town of Point Pleasant. 764 00:43:05,533 --> 00:43:10,173 [♪] 765 00:43:10,300 --> 00:43:13,200 In Newfoundland, a mysterious giant mass of 766 00:43:13,333 --> 00:43:16,673 flesh emerges from the depths of the ocean. 767 00:43:16,800 --> 00:43:18,430 [♪] 768 00:43:18,567 --> 00:43:21,727 And in India, a half man/half beast attacks 769 00:43:21,867 --> 00:43:26,367 thousands and sends an entire city into panic. 770 00:43:26,500 --> 00:43:30,800 Are these bizarre stories evidence that monsters exist? 771 00:43:30,934 --> 00:43:35,034 Can we dismiss thousands of eyewitnesses who claim 772 00:43:35,166 --> 00:43:36,666 these things are true? 773 00:43:36,800 --> 00:43:39,630 You decide. 774 00:43:39,767 --> 00:43:41,927 Join me next time for more stories that will 775 00:43:42,066 --> 00:43:46,366 undoubtedly be weird or what? 776 00:43:46,500 --> 00:43:56,470 [♪] 777 00:43:59,934 --> 00:44:09,904 [♪] 778 00:44:12,000 --> 00:44:12,930 [♪] 60357

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