Bigfoot Society - Bigfoot on My Family Farm: Generations of Encounters!
Episode Date: July 19, 2024In this episode, we chat with Matt, who has experienced significant Bigfoot activity on his family's farm in Northeast Missouri for generations. Matt shares multiple jaw-dropping encounters, including... his first sighting in the early 1990s, and describes the eerie feelings and strange sounds often felt on the property. He also recounts sightings by various family members and details events involving elusive tracks and unnerving nighttime experiences. Matt reveals how his family's land has been a hotspot for Bigfoot activity for decades, adding to the lore of the Missouri monster, also known as Momo. Don't miss this thrilling discussion filled with tales of mysterious creatures and unexplained phenomena that have persisted over the years.Resources:Darby Orcutt DNA study info - https://sites.google.com/ncsu.edu/darbyorcutt/Contact Matt: Mageefarms72@gmail.comMatt’s channel (Midwest Monsters) Subscribe! - https://www.youtube.com/@midwesternmonsters1Share your Bigfoot encounter with me here: bigfootsociety@gmail.com🔴 Subscribe to hear more Bigfoot encounters: https://www.youtube.com/@BigfootSociety?sub_confirmation=1Share this video with a friend: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5v75Od-X38Watch more episodes of the Bigfoot Society podcast here – https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3t1vwtsKh-MGeHs0XglFJE5LwUHpmJm_&feature=sharedRecommended Playlist – New Jersey Bigfoot Encounters - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3t1vwtsKh-Mk4032IyZtWgP6LVPU8uat✅ Help me help others share their Bigfoot Encounter by joining the community on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/thebigfootsociety✅ Hear ad-free episodes early by joining the community on Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8Qq45W6iaTU8FE9kelxT7Q/joinLet’s connect:Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/bigfootsociety/Twitter – https://twitter.com/bigfoot_societyTiktok - https://www.tiktok.com/@bigfoot.societyAffiliate links mean I earn a commission from qualifying purchases. This helps support my channel at no additional cost to you.My Audio Interface: https://amzn.to/3L1q8XYPut some pep in my step by buying me a coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/bigfootsocietyPick up some merch here: https://www.etsy.com/shop/bigfootsociety/?etsrc=sdtSend mail here:Bigfoot Society125 E 1st St. #233Earlham, IA 50072Send business inquiries to: bigfootsociety@gmail.com
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If you have Bigfoot activity to report from the same areas discussed in this episode,
please reach out to me directly after this episode.
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All right, Bigfoot Society, I've got the privilege of talking to Matt today.
Matt is an individual having some Bigfoot activity
on his family farm area in northeast Missouri.
It's a privilege to talk to you today, Matt.
How's it going?
It's going great.
Thank you very much.
It's nice to speak to you.
Thank you.
And, you know, the more that we talked about this before the episode, the more excited I'm
getting for this because, I mean, you're telling me things like this has been going
on for an extended period of time.
So I'm going to give the reins over to you.
And please share what you've been experiencing over the years, Matt.
Oh, yeah. So a little background in the area. I'm in Northeast Missouri and Pike County, Missouri, which some people may know it for the MoMo sightings, the Missouri Monster from the early 70s. And I mean, the sightings go back farther than that. They're still going on today. And the farm, we have a couple hundred acres just kind of out in the middle of nowhere that has been in the family.
family, well, I mean, there's, shoot, there's been about seven, eight generations of my family
on this farm. My dad was the first one to actually purchase it, but where he lived, my grandfather
was kind of like what you would call a mountain man nowadays, and he hunted and trapped in this area.
My dad was in this area growing up, and my grandfather, my dad, and my mom had had sightings
and encounters. My older brother, he had had a couple sightings.
And my son, my son-in-law, my wife, my daughter, we've all had encounters over, I mean, over generations.
But I'll tell you a little bit about my first one.
And that happened back in the early 1990s.
I was in college, 19 years old.
I lived in a suburb of St. Louis, which was about an hour away.
and, you know, me and my friends, we would come up here camping every chance that we got.
You know, this was kind of our little escape.
We loved it.
And I'd come up here with, I don't know, there were probably about eight or nine of us one night.
And we were camping.
We'd been riding four-wheelers around.
And at this point, and when this happened, I didn't think anything of it because, you know, as a college kid,
I'd had a few beers.
We were driving around on ATVs.
And I see what I thought was my dog way up on the hill in this back area.
And then all of a sudden my dog runs past me on the four-wheeler.
And I look.
And this thing was, I don't know, seven, eight-foot high on the level ground that I was on.
I just turned around, went back, thought it was nothing, you know.
And the only reason, you know, if there's alcohol involved, I use.
I usually don't even talk about sightings, but the only reason I'm bringing this up is because six months later is when I had the, my first, what I consider my first real sighting.
And me and the buddy of mine were coming up.
It was March, I think.
It was early spring, maybe April.
No, I take that back.
It would have been a little later than that because we had corn was growing pretty high.
The grass was high.
So it wasn't a little hard to kind of see around in the woods.
But we had these huge storms coming up.
So we were trying to hurry up, get our tent set, get a fire going.
And we were just going to wait out the storm.
And then we'd have the whole weekend to, you know, relax on the farm.
So we're coming up.
And the animals when we got here were stirred up.
I had deer on our little farm road.
I had a deer jump out of the corn, almost land,
the hood of my Jeep at that point. And I mean, it was just kind of a weird vibe when we got up here.
But we figured it was a storm, not a big deal. We get to our campgrounds that we have set up.
And my buddy that was with me, he starts setting up tents and getting coolers and stuff out.
And I get on the four-wheeler. And I head back to the back part of the farm.
with the idea that I'm going to, you know, grab some firewood and bring the back,
and we're going to start a fire, and we'll have a nice weekend.
So I'm going to the back part of the farm.
I'm going along these creeks that we have.
Now, the creek banks are about eight foot below where I'm riding on.
It's about an eight foot drop off.
And as I come to a bend in the creek, I see this thing squawking.
squatting in the creek.
I don't know if it's,
originally I thought maybe it was drinking water
or maybe it was trying to catch like crawfish
or minnows or something like that.
But I pulled the four-wheeler to a stop
and immediately this thing
turns its head and makes eye contact with me
probably about 20, 25 foot away from me.
and it's in a squatting position that makes eye contact for, you know, it could have been two seconds.
It felt like an eternity at that point.
And all of a sudden, it just turned its head.
From squatting, it jumped an eight-foot creek bank straight up and took off on two feet.
So at this point, I had been kind of frozen.
I couldn't move.
I kind of got my senses back.
And I turned around and went back to the camp.
ground took me a couple of minutes to kind of calm down I told my buddy you know hey you know there's
something back there I'm like I don't know if it's this you know momo thing that that you know I've
heard about all the time but there's something back there so we end up he grabs I had a little
Ruger 1022 rifle and a Mossburg 12-gauge shotgun we each grabbed a gun just in case and we
went down to where I saw it at, and we started tracking down the creek. And it's kind of like a
gravel creek, but there's some little sand beds here and there. And on these sand beds,
we were seeing these enormous footprints. And we're going down. We get down a little bit farther.
The lights going is, you know, starting to fade. We have flashlights, but again, these are
flashlights from the 1990s, desell flashlights that aren't the best.
And the shadows are kind of overhanging.
We're kind of down in a valley at this point.
And I look at my buddy and I say, hey, if something wanted to, you know, get us to come down here and ambush us,
this is the perfect situation.
Like, I'm not feeling comfortable.
And he said, I was just thinking the same thing.
So we turned around.
we went back, left our tent, left our food, left everything, basically just do a couple
basic things.
The dog and me and him, we got in the Jeep and we made the hour drive back home and just said,
you know, hey, screw it, we'll come back tomorrow.
So we come up the next day and we were going to try to get some plastered casts of
the footprints that we had seen.
And by the time we got up here, we had, you know,
major storm come through. And these creeks, when you get a big storm, you know, they'll go from
ankle deep to over my head. And, you know, I'm about six foot tall. And that's kind of what
had happened. Everything was underwater. We weren't able to grab any footprints. So that's,
was kind of my first, I guess, real introduction to it. And of course, early 90s, there really
wasn't much in the way of, well, the internet wasn't around yet. So it's not like, you know,
you could get on and look and see and like, oh, hey, there's tons of reports and sightings in
Northeast Missouri. Back then, it's like, well, you know, I'll confide in my family that I know
believes in it and some close friends. But other than that, you know, people are going to think
you're nuts. So, you know, that was kind of, like I said, my first experience. And I'd spend a lot of
time up here alone. I mean, it's a, it's a farm. We had, they had the crop ground and a lot of stuff
leased out to somebody else, but we had like a small orchard and I would come up a lot and take care of it,
brush hog trails. I was up camping a lot. And I'd be up a lot. It was just me and my dog. And I mean,
it was that way until we moved on to the property. But there were a lot of times I would be out in the
middle of nowhere. And I would just get this, like that feeling when something's watching you and all the
hairs on the back of your neck stand up. And the second I would get that, my dog who would be with me,
her hackles would go up on her back. She would start looking into the woods, growling. And this was
the dog at that time that I had. It was a Rottweiler Labrador mitt. She was a huge,
huge dog was not scared of anyone or anything. And this dog basically backed up and was hiding
underneath my legs just to get away from whatever this was. And this wasn't one time.
This would happen constantly. And I mean, it's like, you know, there's something there. There's
something there. Fast forward. Oh, I don't know, maybe about six, seven years.
me and I was married at the time.
Me and my wife had a two-year-old daughter.
And it was springtime, I think, around Mother's Day or Father's Day.
And we hadn't been camping that year, having a younger child.
We didn't get the opportunity to camp as much.
And we decided to go camping for, I believe, it was Father's Day.
So we come up, we set everything up.
and I'm my wife and daughter are at our campgrounds.
I'm up on the hill.
I got in a chainsaw stuck in a tree the day before and ended up leaving it to come back with the right tools to get it out.
And I get it out.
I get on my four-wheeler.
I'm coming down the hill, half throttle, and I hear this scream.
And I mean, it was just like a blood curdling.
like, I don't even know how to describe it.
It was just creepy, just, you know, scary.
I get to the campgrounds.
My wife's in the truck.
She has my rifle out of the truck.
She's trying to figure out how to load it.
She doesn't know what's going on.
And, you know, we kind of calm down a little bit.
We really like camping.
We decided to stay.
And, you know, we got a big bonfire.
Our campground is about.
an acre, acre and a half field that's got a couple big trees in it.
There's a cornfield on one side.
There's a barn on one side.
There's a creek with about an eight foot drop off on one side.
And then there's a big, like grass field on the other.
Well, about 11 o'clock, 10 o'clock,
goes into the tent with my daughter and lays down with my daughter to get my daughter to go to sleep.
And then she's going to come back out to the camp five.
and stay with me.
And she falls asleep.
So I'm sitting out there.
I'm just enjoying sitting by the campfire.
And all of a sudden, I hear something moving around.
Now, I have three Coleman lanterns on the perimeter of this campground.
And the whole campground is lit up pretty well.
This thing never came into where I could see it in the light.
It always stayed out.
But I would hear it in the corn.
I could hear it moving through the corn.
And then I would hear something and could just barely, barely make out something running through the grass field.
And then I'd hear something running through the creek.
And then I wouldn't hear anything.
And then I'd hear something moving through the corn again.
And then the grass field and then the creek.
And this thing circled our campsite for about 20 minutes.
And after that, it moved off.
and that was it for that time frame.
So, you know, since then we've had other instances, like I said, my son-in-law, my son,
we've had other people up here that have seen them, and they've never harmed us.
I actually, you know, I'll give the area that I'm in, but I will never give the exact location
because part of me actually wants to kind of protect them because I know, you know,
the location or whatever got out, I'd probably see, you know, who knows what coming through here.
And they're not hurting anything.
They've never been aggressive to us in any way whatsoever.
That's kind of my story.
Like I said, I've got some others I can share that are from other family members.
But that's the main ones of mine other than just little, you know, seeing something here and there.
Matt, that is incredible.
When you saw the tracks back in the 90s, if you were to estimate how long those tracks were, how big are we talking?
You know, I'd say, I'm trying to go off memory, I'd say at least maybe 14 inches long.
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I mean
they were
but I'm
the ones
that we've seen
and the ones
that have mostly
been seen
I think as a
female
from you know
research that I've done
it seems like
the females
are more
kind of
not going to say
friendly but more
kind of caring
and you'll see them
the males. It seems like usually when people will see them, you know, there might be a female,
but there's usually at least a male or another male, you know, kind of off that you're not seeing.
And I kind of get the impression, you know, that it's something like that.
The other thing that I've noticed is we'll have a whole lot of sightings up here for six months,
three months, maybe a year,
and then we don't see or hear anything
for a year or two, maybe three.
And then all of a sudden, they'll come up again.
But in the time that we're not seeing them,
you know, I'm tracking and I'm seeing Southern Iowa
or over into like Jacksonville, Illinois,
or Pittsfield, Illinois,
there'll be sightings in that area when we're not.
So I think they kind of move around a little.
bit. So I'm going to agree with you 100%. I'm actually from central Iowa, so I do a lot of looking
into Southern Iowa, and I'm going to agree that, yes, there's not an area where it can, you know,
support them, but I think there's some definite moving around the states and neighboring states. So I
absolutely agree with you, Matt. Yeah, and it's, it's just weird, but some of the other sightings,
like my son-in-law.
And one of the kind of crazy things, when we had the experience with my wife,
I'd been talking about it.
And she kept telling me, oh, you're just making it up.
That didn't really happen.
And then the next weekend, we're up here.
And it happened.
And she got firsthand.
My son-in-law, similar situation.
He was talking about it at a hunt club nearest that he worked at.
And he's like, yeah, they're saying you're just making it.
up, it's not real. He'd come down and was spending Valentine's Day at our house. And he goes to take
my daughter's dog out. And he sees it in our front yard. Now, we've got a big front yard. But it was along
the gravel county road. He sees it. The dog notices it. It turns around and it runs off in the other
direction where there's a dusk to dawn light and it runs right under the light where he gets, you know,
a perfect view of it.
And it's like, you know, right after somebody says, you know, no, they don't exist,
it's almost like, you know, that's a trigger for it.
That is very interesting.
But yeah, it definitely seems like there's a correlation there.
You mentioned there's multiple people that have had encounters on the property.
Has anyone gotten like a really solid, like they're looking right at its face.
They're able to see pretty solid details.
tails? I mean, I did on my first one. I was about 20, 25 feet away, and I was making eye contact with it.
That's true. And my son-in-law, he got a, I mean, he got a pretty good look. I mean, our yard, it's, like I said, it's a good-sized yard, but, you know, it's not that far away that he couldn't, couldn't make it out. And we did actually, after his, we went down there in the tree that it was kind of high.
mining behind for a little while, we found a bunch of long, kind of coarse brown hair. It almost
reminded me of like a horse's mane. Did you happen to keep those? I've got them here somewhere.
I mean, this was probably like teen, 2016, so it's been a while. And I've got a lot of files,
a lot of stuff like that I keep. But my office, I'm not the most organized person. It is in my
office somewhere. I totally get it. Just so, and we can talk about this off air as well, but there is a
DNA study going on with North Carolina State with a gentleman named Darby Orkut, and you can send
any evidence to him right now to get tested in their laboratory and it doesn't cost you a thing.
So if you hair, send me that information. I totally will. Yeah, if you have hair, I mean,
this is the time, you can send anything in and no cost. So it is like a golden opportunity to have
your stuff tested.
Yes, I would definitely have to.
So going back to when you had that eye-to-eye contact, based on, well, first, could,
are there any details that stick out in your mind about, like, features of the face you
may have noticed?
The, I mean, the eyes are the, I mean, the eyes were just kind of like hypnotic.
Like, I mean, the minute I made eye contact, I was frozen.
I could not move.
But the face was, and, you know, I've heard this from a lot of other people, but the face was more human looking than anything else.
I mean, you know, but the eyes were just, and, you know, a lot of people talk about, you know, red eyes and all.
I don't remember the eyes being red.
It's just, the face just looked more human than anything else.
There really wasn't any hair on the face.
That was about the only part of it.
I didn't see air.
And it just looked like a human.
The eye itself, did it have like whites around the center of the eye?
Or was it in all one color?
No, it was all kind of a dark, I want to say black, but I'm not, I mean, honestly, as long as it's been, it might have been a little, you know, could have been dark blue or something like that.
But it was like a darker, darker and, no, there were no whites in the eye at all.
Yeah, that lines up actually with a report I took earlier today from Indiana.
That's wild.
Did you see any, was the mouth open?
Did you see teeth?
Anything I thought?
I mean, literally from squatting, it just turned its head, mouth closed, just like, you know,
say you were at a Walmart or somewhere like that, and, you know, you pass behind and look at someone.
You know, kind of the same thing, just kind of looked and just turned its head, jumped and left.
let's say that you know let's say the night played out differently and you had gotten to the point where you're you're running after with the shotguns and you find it and then you're looking at it again but this time it's through the scope or whatever you have could do you think you could have taken that shot or would it been extremely hard because of the way it looked i mean at the time it's hard to say because i had a lot of adrenaline going i mean i i grew up i i grew up i
I grew up hunting, you know, I don't have a problem, you know, hunting and I had a lot of adrenaline going.
But on, you know, the other hand, I grew up with around my grandfather a lot.
He was half Cherokee and spent most of his life hunting and fishing.
And, you know, one thing he would tell me constantly is if you have to kill, there's nothing wrong with it.
but the only reason you ever need to kill something is for protection or for food.
There's no other reason.
So if it was for, you know, if the thing was charging me, I don't think I would have hesitated
other than the fact that, you know, the size of the saying,
I don't know that a 12 gauge or a 22 would have done much to it either.
Absolutely.
Did you notice a certain shape to the head at all?
I mean, kind of like, best description I could give would be like a, kind of like a, like a gorilla at the zoo.
It kind of had that kind of cone shaped on the top.
Gotcha.
But that would be the closest description, I think.
So you mentioned that you saw it jump up eight feet.
Did you see it run at all for any different distance?
Yes.
Okay.
Can you describe how it was running?
So not for a distance.
It was squatting.
So from squatting, it jumped straight up.
It didn't stand up.
It didn't get a running go.
It was squatting.
And it jumped straight up an eight-foot embankment.
When it landed, it was on two feet.
And it moved forward going on two feet.
Now, I did not see it for, you know, a big length of time.
I saw it, like, moving.
And, I mean, honestly, that if, I don't know if you've ever seen one or not,
but the first time you see one, it's a little traumatized.
I have not had the, I've not had that happen yet.
I know that it is, from what I've heard, because I've done a lot of interviews, it can be extremely traumatizing.
And I know that will happen someday if I keep going down the road I am.
So we'll see, but not yet.
Yeah, I mean, I've got a different opinion of it nowadays.
I mean, now, no, I, I mean, I don't go into woods without a very large firearm.
but, you know, I have no plans to hurt or kill or anything like that, you know, this animal,
if anything, I'm more to where I would try to protect it from others that might want to.
So that's interesting.
So you mentioned before that you've never felt threatened by the creatures at all on your property,
but you will not go into the woods without a large firearm.
Is there a reason then that there would be that kind of difference?
Yeah, well, so I've never felt threatened, but that doesn't, you know, logic,
that doesn't necessarily mean that they won't come or maybe, you know,
and it's, you know, it's not just, not just for these.
I mean, we have mountain lions up here.
We don't have bears yet, but they're starting to get a little close to the area.
And just in general, I mean, I've,
I've hiked in the Sierra Nevada's.
I've hiked in Alaska.
I've hiked in, you know, a lot of different countries.
And I will take something for protection because of the unknown out there.
And I will take the biggest thing that I can take.
And, you know, these things, I know they're out there.
They've never threatened in any way.
And I would, you know, I doubt I would ever pull a firearm out of the holster.
but, you know, I'm not going to go out there and not carry anything and then have that one and a million chance happen that, you know, maybe I piss it off or, you know, I get one that, you know, somebody else was out hunting that wasn't supposed to be there, took a shot at it, and it was desperate.
So, yeah, I will, you know, protect myself if I have to.
I think that's smart, definitely.
You mentioned that there was potentially some hair found.
Has there ever been any photos or video evidence taken?
Or do you have game cams up, anything like that?
We have game cams up.
We have never caught anything.
And there was one here recently where people were putting food out.
And it was coming and getting the food.
So they put cameras out there.
and the theory from what I'm reading is the infrared light or whatever the game cameras put out
that it's something that maybe their eyes can see the beam from it
but on this one in particular they moved the cameras to where it could not get the food
without coming into the area and they came back and the food was gone
so they went looking around and they actually have a plaster cast
to where it laid down on the ground
just out of the cameras
and was able to reach up with its arm
and get the food,
but they have a half-body cast.
I think this was in Indiana,
but I'd have to look it up.
That's really interesting.
Hmm, okay.
Yeah, this was just a couple of years ago,
like maybe a year or two.
It hasn't been that long,
and I'll see if I can find it
and send it to you when we get done here.
You mentioned that you moved on to the property.
what's the closest that you have things happen?
Have you ever, or what's the closest to your home residence there on that property that you have had things occur?
Well, like I said, my son-in-law, it was in the front yard at the edge of the yard on him.
And at the time, I mean, our front yard, I'm looking at it right now, it's maybe, I don't know, 100, 100, 150 yards.
from where my house sits to the county road.
And right at the county road, we've got a line of trees.
Now, there was another house on the other side of the road at the time.
It was an old house, like a really, really old house that was being rented out.
And it had, that was where the dusk to dawn light was.
So it was at the edge there.
And it actually, you know, ran across the road and ran.
and ran between their garage, which wasn't attached to the house, and the dusted dawn light, like right under the dust of dawn light, and ran into a cowfield behind it.
So that's the closest probably.
I have had another one about three years ago.
I was out at night.
We have livestock, and I was putting, like, our chickens and stuff up out in the backyard.
and I start hearing coyotes, but it's not like a normal kind of coyote.
Normally if you hear coyotes, you'll hear like a small group of them, you know, over here,
and then another small group over another area, and they kind of like go back and forth.
This was like a pack of maybe a hundred or more that was yelping, barking, letting out.
And then I hear this roar, this just this primal deep roar.
And this was, I don't know, maybe 800 yards from the backyard across a creek in this field.
And it was dark at the time.
And I could hear the coyotes.
I could hear this thing roaring.
And I'm out there at the time.
You know, I had a little 38 snub nose.
revolver that I keep in my jacket.
And I'm like, well, for one thing, I don't know what's going on here, but I'm getting something
a little bigger than this.
And I'm going to get my son or someone to come out.
And I got my son.
He came out on the deck.
But at that point, the only thing we heard was the sound of like a whimpering dog.
Like when a dog gets hurt, we could hear that.
So I don't know if like it was one of them fighting with coyotes or something.
or what was going on.
Bigfoot Society will be right back after these messages.
This is Daniel Fischel.
And Ryder Strong from PodMeets World.
Cat parents unite.
We have to look out for each other.
Yes, we all know the feeling of being ignored by our little babies a little too well.
Yeah, I often wonder to myself, does my cat even love me?
Well, there's only one solution to solve that.
Sheba.
Feed your cat, Shiba, and go from feeling ignored to truly adored in 12 days guaranteed or your
money back. Sheba has a wide array of products, appetizers, entrees, treats, and even a kitten's
menu that will win over even the pickiest eater. My cat Bill is all about Sheba grilled. Just snap,
peel, and serve for two gourmet servings and zero messy leftovers. He loves it, licks it to the
bowl. Its protein-rich formula is made with real chicken and seafood without artificial flavors,
preservatives, corn wheat, or soy. So you can be sure your cat is getting the finest ingredients from around
the world, but made right here in the U.S.
Spoil your fur babies and introduce them to the delicious delicacies of Shiba.
To learn more, check out Shiba.com.
Wellness, longevity, health as a lifestyle.
Every week, a new trend explodes across the media landscape.
And depending on who's talking, it's either a miracle breakthrough or just expensive hype dressed up as science.
Enter Kara Swisher.
She's here to cut through the noise with her signature edge, sharp, skeptical, and allergic to nonsense.
Don't miss the CNN original series Kara Swisher wants to live forever,
an essential, smart, and genuinely entertaining guide to the booming longevity industry.
Because let's be real, the non-stop stream of wellness promises,
AI-driven health claims, and expensive tech with sometimes dubious benefits isn't
slowing down.
Kara digs into what actually works and what it really costs, from access gaps to
trade-offs most people would rather ignore. We're all getting older, that's
That part's inevitable.
The choices that come with it?
Not so simple.
You might as well understand what you're buying into.
Say 40% for a limited time.
Get started at CNN.com slash subscribe.
Terms apply.
Kara Swisher wants to live forever.
New series now streaming with a CNN subscription.
At the age of the 50,
I've learned some things,
like the value of the family,
the importance of the job,
and that the 99% of the people of more of 50
you have the virus that causes the Culebrilla.
Although not all the people in risk
will be developed,
I see the eruption dolorousa
with ampollos of the mpollosos,
making that even the tasks
more simple,
are all a lot of a retort.
No, learn about the culebrilla
of the way difficult.
Talked or Pharmaceutical,
patrocinoed for GSC.
And it was about two days
before I was able to really get down there
and, you know,
I was hoping to go down,
find prints in the snow.
was early February, Prince in the Snow, maybe if there was like some blood or something.
But it was one of those times to where it doesn't get light till 7, 8 o'clock, and it gets dark at 4 o'clock.
And with my work schedule, it was dark when I'd leave home and dark when I got home, and I wasn't
going out there in the dark by myself.
So I get out there, and I get to where I could hear it at.
and there's no tracks, there's nothing.
So I go up on the hill right above it,
and there's a lot of tracks,
but there was a tree,
there was snow on the ground,
but there was this tree that had a perfect circle of just grass
where something, almost like something had walked around in a circle,
like it was nervous or pacing or something,
and worn all the snow down.
There was a path on the hill there,
where you're familiar with what a with like a deer path in the woods, correct?
Right, yep.
So it was kind of like a deer path, but this was in locusts like thorn trees,
but this path was about four to five foot wide.
And it's still there now, but it was like what you would expect to see a deer path,
but it was four to five foot wide.
And the other weird thing that I found up there is there was,
grass on the ground, almost kind of like something that built a huge nest, but it wasn't the
grass that grows on that hillside. It was a completely different type of grass like it had been
brought in. Were you able to recognize what kind of grass it was? I mean, it was, it was prairie grass,
which what's up there is, I believe, is a brougham and a Timothy mix that we use for hay.
but this was like prairie grass, which is around in the area, but not on that hillside at all.
That is so, that wearing the snowdown is so interesting.
Wow.
And I mean, on that same hillside, about 15 years ago, I was brush hogging one day, and I found a black calf leg, just the leg of a calf.
We don't have cows.
Our neighbor has cows.
He doesn't have black cows.
checked with all the neighbors around that I know that I have cows, nobody was missing a calf.
This is starting to sound like a place I know in Tennessee.
This is wild, dude.
Oh, man.
So was it like it had been a clean cut or was it like it had been torn off?
It was like it was tore off, but I mean the hair was on it.
Yeah.
It was like just a leg.
This is wild.
Has there like, yeah.
Like Thanksgiving, when you pull the leg off of turkey?
Exactly. Okay. Gotcha. That's what it looked like.
Wow.
Has there ever been a time when you've been on this property and it just things really have kind of been escalated and you're like, you know what, I'm done with this, get me out of here now.
I just don't want to deal with this anymore.
No.
Okay. So you've always felt in control of the situation. That's great.
No. I mean, this is my property.
Yeah.
Like I said, my father and his brothers and sisters grew up nearby.
They would hunt and fish and trap on this property.
My grandfather would hunt and fish and trap on this property.
My dad bought this property in the mid-60s.
And so, you know, he owned it before I was born.
When I was a kid, my dad was a real estate agent.
We moved around a lot, like, you know, a lot of real estate agents.
they get a good deal on a house, they'll buy it, live in it for a couple of years, and flip it.
And we'd move around, like, not like a wide area, but around the different suburbs of St. Louis.
But this was always the one place that I had that was constant, that was home.
We had a little camper up here.
And every weekend, pretty much, like year-round, we would come up and we would spend the weekend up here.
So this, yeah, no, this is my place.
I ended up building a house about 17 years ago on this property.
I have a son.
My daughter, she got married.
She actually, she and her husband bought a piece of property that's on the back end that joins up to this farm.
And, you know, they're not planning on leaving.
We're not planning on leaving.
They have a kid.
So, you know, hopefully their kid's not planning on leaving.
and it's going to stay in the family forever,
and nothing's going to run us out.
That's awesome.
I love that.
Do you mention, I think, the grandfather had some sightings over the years?
Yeah, he did not really talk about him a whole lot,
but, I mean, talking with him, he would mention, you know,
we would talk about, you know, going out,
we'd go out hunting or fishing or whatever,
and, you know, you'd hear things.
he'd hear like what I now know as a tree knock or a wood knock.
You know, we'd hear something like that off in the distance,
and he would just say, there's a lot of animals out there.
If you don't hurt them, they won't hurt you.
If you're lucky, maybe they'll show themselves to you someday.
And, I mean, he would, you know, say stuff like that.
And, you know, I'd ask him, I'm like, you know, what are you talking about?
and he'd say when the time comes you may know and you know it's like well you know what are they have you seen
him and he said there's a lot of things i've seen out in the woods oh wow you know he would never actually
you know come out and say but like i said he was his mother was Cherokee he grew up pretty much in the woods
he was kind of what we would consider a mountain man today and he
He didn't grow up Cherokee, but he grew up with a lot of their kind of ways and a lot of kind of respect for nature and all that.
And, I mean, it was, he was very interesting.
I mean, we could go fishing out to a lake.
We would get out there and he'd sit there for about a minute.
He'd look at the lake and he'd point to one part of the lake or the pond.
He'd say, that's where the fish are biting.
And sure enough, that's where the fish would be biting.
Wow.
You know, we'd be out on the farm and, you know, he'd say, oh, it's about to rain and, you know,
well, what do you mean it's about to rain?
Well, can't you smell it?
And about a half hour later, it started to rain.
And he was definitely old school.
He'd get his dogs to go hunting.
He'd open the trunk of his car.
His dogs would jump in the trunk of his car.
He'd drive his car out to the farm and go bird hunting.
I would never put my dogs in the trunk of my house.
my car, but, you know, I guess the 70s and the 60s, it was a different time.
I mean, my uncle, you know, he always had like a new Cadillac, and I've seen my uncle
literally driving his Cadillac across a cowfield to go park it to go hunting.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, that's the different time.
But guys like your grandfather are hard to find in these current days, at least in my circles.
maybe I'm in the wrong circles, but it's just that intuition, you know, it's very, very rare.
Are there other sounds that you hear in your area that you attribute to these creatures?
I mean, like I said, wood knocks every once in a while, not really good.
There's just times we just hear like weird noises, and we'll hear like right now where, you know, northern Missouri, we have coyotes here.
we don't have wolves here.
Over the last year, when you go outside at night,
we can hear what sounds like a wolf howling.
Now, I, you know, I've talked to the conservation department,
my daughter has heard it, my wife's heard it, my son's heard it,
and they're like, yeah, that's definitely a wolf
or something trying to imitate a wolf,
but it's like a 50, like the 1950s wolfman movie.
It's like the howls they would use in that movie,
but it's coming from out on the farm somewhere.
And we've heard other like strange noises of like basically animals that shouldn't be here.
But you hear them.
And it's almost like, you know, is something trying to imitate that or is there, you know, something weird going on?
You know, we've got caves on the property.
You know, it's like are these caves, you know, some kind of magnet for something or or what?
Are there certain animal sounds that stick out where you hear them and you're like,
this sounds like an 800 pound owl or something like that?
No.
No, I mean, like I said, this wolf sound is one.
And the first time I heard it, I was way out on the far end of the yard.
It was dark out.
I was finishing taking care of animals for the night.
And I hear a wolf howl.
And it was pretty good distance away.
But it had the sound of like a, you know,
1950s
werewolf horror movie
that, you know,
you go back
to watching those movies
of a kid
and it's like,
oh crap,
I got to get in the house now.
Right.
Like, you know,
it's like that,
uh,
flight or fight.
And the flight's like,
yeah,
I'm going straight to the house
before,
you know,
rational thought kicks in
and be like,
yeah,
there's none of those here.
Um, it's kind of a related topic,
but,
you know,
has there been ever sightings
or talk of,
of the dog man cryptids in the same area that you're aware of?
Not here that I'm aware of.
I think the southern part of the state.
Now we have seen large black cats up here,
and we have seen mule deer up here,
and neither one of those are animals that are in this area.
The mule deer, I had seen them on and off in the woods for about a decade or two,
and no one else had seen them until about two, three years ago.
We were on side by sides.
I was on one.
My daughter, son-in-law, and grandson was on the other one.
And we were way back down the gravel county road.
And we were going through a bean field or a hay field.
I forgot what it was.
And we look over and we see these deer.
And they're hopping like Pepe Lepewue from like the Bugsby.
bunny cartoon, which is what mule deer do.
And, you know, my son-in-law, he's, among other things, he's a professional hunting guide.
And he said, those are mule deer.
And I said, yeah.
And that's not the first time we've seen them.
Large black cats.
I had seen them on and off a couple of times.
I've had a couple people that I've let hunt up here have said, you know, you got large black cats up here.
And I said, well, you know, don't tell the conservation agents that.
because they'll tell you they don't exist.
And we were out fishing last summer on one of our lakes.
And my daughter, who's, you know, pretty calm and collected.
And, you know, I'm in the Navy.
I have a colorful vocabulary, let's say.
Right.
But my daughter's not that way.
And all of a sudden my daughter yells, what the F is that?
And we look up and I did not see them.
my son-in-law is like, it's a black cat.
So I grabbed my handgun and I grab my GoPro and we start walking where it ran into the woods in the hillside.
And we're going to see if we could find some tracks, which we were not able to find tracks.
But we're going to where my son-in-law saw it.
And my daughter's like, no, it wasn't there.
It was over here.
And she's guiding us to another area.
The son-in-law's like, now, it was over here.
So we come back around and like, okay, hon, where did you see it at?
And she said right there, my son-in-law said, oh, the one I saw, it was over here, like about 15-foot
down the bank.
So there were two large black cats.
They both saw them clear as day.
Oh, wow.
And, you know, that's if you've looked into cryptids, you know, the black cats are like
another thing that they don't exist, but everybody's seeing them.
And now it's like, well, now we've got potentially multiple things going on this property.
Do you ever hear anything weird like, you know, things that really don't belong, like a car door closing or a rusty gate type closing sound?
Anything really weird like that?
Don't hear that.
I did when my daughter was at junior high.
I was up here.
It was around Halloween with a bunch of her friends.
and we were down at like the campgrounds,
I'm kind of like where we were at,
but all of a sudden one of the kids,
like there's somebody walking up on the hillside.
And we look over and see, and it was like,
it wasn't a flashlight, but it was like two lights.
I don't know if it was, I'm not going to say it was eyes.
It was almost like somebody had some kind of like a, like glass,
that would have had some kind of a light on them or something
where they could see where they were going.
But, I mean, this farm is in the middle of nowhere.
They're not just going to walk down on this farm.
And, yeah, it was something on the hillside.
So I took all the kids, got them kind of to a safe place
where my wife could watch them, and I got in the Jeep,
and I grabbed my rifle and started going up
because I thought we just had like a trespasser.
And we got there, no sign of anybody.
Bigfoot Society will be right back after these messages.
This is Daniel Fischel.
And Ryder Strong from PodMeets World.
Cat parents unite.
We have to look out for each other.
Yes, we all know the feeling of being ignored by our little babies a little too well.
Yeah, I often wonder to myself, does my cat even love me?
Well, there's only one solution to solve that.
Sheba.
Feed your cat, Sheba, and go from feeling ignored to truly adored in 12 days guaranteed or your money back.
Sheba has a wide array of products, appetizers, entrees, treats, and even a kitten's menu that will win over even the pickiest eater.
My cat Bill is all about Sheba grilled.
Just snap, peel, and serve for two gourmet servings and zero messy leftovers.
He loves it. Licks it to the bowl.
Its protein-rich formula is made with real chicken and seafood without artificial flavors, preservatives, cornwheat, or soy.
So you can be sure your cat is getting the finest ingredients from around the world, but made right here in the USA.
Spoil your fur babies and introduce them to the delicious delicacies of Shiba.
To learn more, check out Shiba.com.
Wellness, longevity, health is a lifestyle.
Every week, a new trend explodes across the media landscape.
And depending on who's talking, it's either a miracle breakthrough or just expensive hype dressed up as science.
Enter Kara Swisher.
She's here to cut through the noise with her signature edge, sharp, skeptical, and allergic to nonsense.
Don't miss the CNN original series Kara Swisher wants to live forever.
An essential, smart, and genuinely entertaining guide to the booming longevity industry.
Because let's be real.
The non-stop stream of wellness promises, AI-driven health claims, and expensive tech with sometimes dubious benefits, isn't slowing down.
Kara digs into what actually works and what it really costs.
From access gaps to tradeoffs most people would rather ignore.
We're all getting older, that part's inevitable.
The choices that come with it?
Not so simple.
You might as well understand what you're buying into.
Say 40% for a limited time.
Get started at CNN.com slash subscribe.
Terms apply.
Kara Swisher wants to live forever.
New series now streaming with a CNN subscription.
At the age of the 50,
I've learned some things,
like the value of the family,
the importance of the job,
and that the 99% of the people of more
of 50
have the virus that cause
the Culebrilla.
Although not all the persons in risk
will be developed,
I see the eruption
dolorous with ampollos
during that even
the tasks more simple
are all a real
a realtor.
Not learn about the
Culebilla of the
way difficult.
Talked on your
Dr. Or Pharmaceutical,
patrocinoed for GSC.
Do you remember the color
of them?
Yeah, it was like a reddish
color like a old not not red but a reddish like maybe orange and you know no telling what it was
any when you're walking around the property is there any section where you walk through an area
and you're like oh it kind of feels a little electric here or something just shifted for a minute
or anything like that not any one area but there are times to where you know we'll be walking
and you just kind of get a weird vibe but it's kind of a weird vibe but it's kind of a
weird vibe over the whole like area you know like there's like you know there's something going on
no telling uh you know what but you just kind of you just get that feeling like they're what on right now
and usually when i get those feelings i you know i don't necessarily go in vet i'm like you know what
it's a weird feeling i'm going to leave it be and i'm going to mind my own business yeah absolutely i mean
I think that's that's a smart way to put it because it's not like you're a bigfoot researcher.
I mean, it feels like you're just trying to, you have this property and you're just trying to live on it, you know.
Right.
I mean, I am a researcher to a certain degree just because I've been obsessed with it since seeing it, but I'm not, you know, professional.
I put out a little Facebook group and just basically, you know, ask, just try to go around if I see anybody.
that has, you know, has had a sighting or something like that, you know, I'll try to interview
them or information from them, but that's, you know, that's about the extent of it.
That's actually another question I was going to ask you, you know, after having these sightings,
have you checked with your neighbors?
Have you found out, yes, there's other things happening in the same area outside of your
property?
I have in the past run across some.
there's a few that there's like a lake close to here.
It's like the town reservoir.
And I've talked to one guy that grew up in that area,
and he had multiple sightings growing up.
And they still, his brother lives close by.
And his brother has sightings as well.
Wow.
And I've talked to some other people,
like when my son-in-law had his,
that was like about 2015, 2016, something.
left that two years ago I was up at our local cases and I was talking to the the girl at the
counter and she's like oh my husband has seen it and I'm like can I talk to your husband so I talked to
him and he was talking about being up at the lakes and hearing something and what he described was a
mountain walking I think so I'm like oh okay and then talking to him he tells me about back in about
2015,
2016,
about the same time
that my son-in-law saw it,
which was around Valentine's Day.
They were coming home around Valentine's Day
right at where the exit
where I live at is.
And he said,
we saw what we thought was a huge,
like a pine tree or cedar tree
in the median of the highway.
And I said that it moved.
And his buddy's like,
no, no, no.
so they turned around and there was nothing there in the media.
But that was like the same, about the same time frame that my son-in-law saw it here.
So, yeah, I have talked to, you know, other people, Clarksville, Missouri, two years ago, someone,
and I've been trying to get a copy of the photos, but someone had a whole bunch of large footprints in the snow up around a little attraction.
They had a sky lift.
It's like a high point on the bluff on the river, and it had a bunch of footprints in snow.
And so, yeah, I've talked to quite a few people around and, you know, gather up stuff.
Have you ever looked up?
There's a website called bigfootmap.com, and you can see, like, certain areas of the country where there's way more activity.
I don't know if it's Bigfoot map.
I've seen a couple.
When I had my first couple ones, I was talking with the BFRO, with,
Matt a little bit, and he sent a guy out here, and then we just kind of, you know, lost touch with each other.
But he had a guy that kind of came out and looked around here.
And this was actually right after me and my wife had seen the one when we were camping, that, you know, the Internet was still fairly new at the time.
But we were, we had talked to him.
And he's like, yeah, get on the website.
And there's some audio files.
And the like screen that we had heard was one that they had.
said was like a territorial map but we've I they have a map or they don't have a map they have like a
county by county sighting list right and I have gone through that I think they have a map too but
I haven't been on their site in a while yeah no that is that is a great resource as well uh bigfoot
map is good because it utilizes that database and also he gets stuff himself and it it would be it'd be
really interesting if you check that out because
it might
it'll probably make sense I'm guessing there'll be
a connection to the area where you're
at when you look at the map that's usually
I definitely will check that out
and we get off the phone absolutely
how recent would you say
what was the most
recent Bigfoot related
interaction that you've had
this spring we had
we had something
it was kind of
It was kind of one of those things.
I didn't know if, you know, if it was one that we were waiting to see if something else would happen and nothing else had happened.
But we had, I was coming home early, early spring, well, not even spring, like late February, early March, county road at night.
And I saw some eyes.
And they were like pretty high up, like, you know, seven foot high up just off of the side of the road.
I drove past and I just kind of caught them out of the corner of my eye.
I stopped. I put my Jeep in reverse. I backed up and I couldn't see anything. Now, that could have been an owl and a tree maybe. I don't know, but I'm like, well, there's something to watch. Let's see if, you know, we start getting some activity and, you know, haven't really seen anything else. I mean, last summer, we had a couple of, you know, just a couple of minor things, like nothing major. And I think that's a lot of them, too, is.
they kind of get in the woods and, you know, they don't really make their presence known.
Absolutely.
They just kind of slowly build up to the, just the kind of history of the property.
Are you keeping a journal of everything that's been going on or is it just up in your head?
On and off, I've, you know, I would log in.
I would log everything and other people I talk to.
And, I mean, this has been going on since like the early 90s that I've been trying to document it.
And, you know, in that time, it's like it's gone from, like, I've got floppy disks that have all kinds of people I've interviewed.
I've got, like, the little hard discs.
I don't even remember what you call those.
What were they three and a half inch or something like that?
I've got several of those.
I got two of those that are filled with just sightings from this area.
I worked in, when I was younger, I worked in radio, and I kind of used that as a way to, like, get in and talk to people because I'd help.
out there news department occasionally in the area.
So, you know, I kind of be like, yeah, yeah, tell me.
And that got my foot in the door to quite a few.
Oh, wow.
That's really cool that you have those old documentation resources that you made.
Do you mind we talked a little bit off the air about you might have some future projects.
And I'm sure people are curious like, hey, I want to maybe reach out to this guy who's in northeast Missouri because, man, I've heard.
of stuff going on there too.
Yeah, and I would actually appreciate you let me do this.
I do, like I do a YouTube channel.
It's more like farm and homesteading and gardening kind of stuff.
And I've been, I've been thinking about and kind of slowly getting started.
I was going to try to do a YouTube channel and do a podcast with it of, of cryptid-related,
just sightings and stuff, basically,
in the Midwest area, like Missouri, Illinois, Ohio,
I mean, the Momo stuff here.
You know, I've looked into a lot on them.
You know, there's a lot of stuff down in like Cape Girardo, Missouri, down south that I see
occasionally, down in Arkansas, the big muddy monster out in Murphysboro, Illinois.
You know, I go down there for work occasionally.
And there's all these, you know, different things.
there's actually some active dogman sightings down and around the Springfield Branson area right now.
And I'm wanting to start like just basically like what you do, like a YouTube channel and podcast of just crypted stuff.
And I would, you know, if you don't mind, it may be six months before I really get it going.
but if anybody's out there and has a story they'd like to share, I would really like to hear it.
And I can give out my email address.
It's for my other YouTube channel, but I mean, it goes to me.
All I've done so far is I've set up a YouTube channel with nothing on it that's called Midwestern Monsters.
Excuse me.
But my email address, it's McGeeFarm 72 at gmail.com.
and McGee is M-A-G-E.
And, you know, if someone's out there, you know, if they're in the Midwestern area
and they've seen, you know, the big hairy man or a dog man or, you know,
some other kind of animal that shouldn't be there that, you know, doesn't exist.
Or if you've got, you know, one in your town, like a legend of one,
please reach out to me.
I would love to hear your story.
I would love to hear about what's there because I'm trying to put these together.
And like I said, my hope is just to kind of share it when I had my first encounter,
you know, there wasn't a lot of resources.
I had very supportive family members that had also seen and experienced things.
But when you first see it, yeah, people don't believe you, people make fun of you.
And so just getting the resources out there.
So, you know, somebody sees something and they're like, well, yeah, I'm not the only one that's seen it.
You know, I'd like to have that for other people.
Plus, I love hearing about them.
You know, everybody loves a mystery.
Everybody loves a scary story.
And I'm no different.
So if you've got one, please reach out and share it with me.
Yeah, absolutely.
We'll have those links in the show notes for this, the description on YouTube.
So, guys, make sure that you hit that up and you can.
Make sure you're subscribed to his channel, all that good stuff,
because there'll probably be some really cool stuff coming out on it.
But, Matt, thank you so much for hanging out this July 4th.
I appreciate you hopping on and sharing the wild stuff that is going on down at your property in northeast Missouri.
Oh, no problem.
If you ever get down this way, you know, hit me up.
I'll give you a tour of where we've seen some of the stuff.
Oh, yeah, totally.
Well, thanks for chatting, Matt.
Hold on one minute after this, please.
You got it.
Please take a minute to help out the show by subscribing on YouTube,
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Also, if you're listening to us on a podcast,
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Make sure that you're subscribed, share the show with a friend.
Really, it's all about sharing the show wherever you can.
If you've had a Bigfoot encounter related to the following or know someone who has, please reach out to me at Bigfoot Society at gmail.com or pass on my email.
Here's the list.
All right, I'm going to use this space this week to announce that I'll be at the Sasquatch Summerfest in Oak Ridge, Oregon as an attender.
I won't be presenting or anything, but I'll be hanging out trying to interview people that have had Bigfoot encounters.
If you're from the Oak Ridge, Oregon area or surrounding and you've had a Bigfoot experience, please contact me directly, Bigfoot Society at gmail.com.
Also, Priscilla was nice enough that if you get your tickets through Sasquatch Summerfest.com and use code Bigfoot Society and get 50% off the cost of your tickets, which is a big amount.
So code Bigfoot Society to get 50% off your tickets, Sasquatch Summerfest.com and helps out the podcast as well.
a special thank you to all the Bigfoot Society,
Patreon and YouTube channel members.
It's your support that helps keep the show going,
and I extremely appreciate it.
If you want to join in the fun,
you can join over at patreon.com.
forward slash the Bigfoot Society.
I'll see you there.
And again, thanks for listening.
You're her and I can get on here,
and we can tell our stories.
Maybe there's somebody else out there listening.
It's too afraid to tell their story.
Maybe this will give them,
the courage to come out and now I feel so bad about it. Who cares what anybody's things?
I know what I saw. I know what's out there. That's all I care about.
Please let people know. Please let them know if you ever see one of these things. You need to tell
because if you don't, then shame on you. You know, shame on you.
This is Daniel Fischel. And Ryder Strong from PodMeets World.
Cat parents unite. We have to look out for each other.
Yes, we all know the feeling of being ignored by our little babies a little too well.
Yeah, I often wonder to myself, does my cat even love me?
Well, there's only one solution to solve that.
Sheba.
Feed your cat, Sheba, and go from feeling ignored to truly adored in 12 days guaranteed or your money back.
Sheba has a wide array of products, appetizers, entrees, treats, and even a kitten's menu that will win over even the pickiest eater.
My cat bill is all about Sheba grilled.
Just snap, peel, and serve for two gourmet servings and zero messy leftovers.
He loves it.
Licks it to the bowl.
Its protein-rich formula is made with real chicken and seafood without artificial flavors, preservatives,
cornweed, or soy.
So you can be sure your cat is getting the finest ingredients from around the world,
but made right here in the USA.
Spoil your fur babies and introduce them to the delicious delicacies of Shiba.
To learn more, check out Shiba.com.
Wellness, longevity, health is a lifestyle.
Every week a new trend explodes across the media landscape.
And depending on who's talking, it's either a miracle breakthrough
or just expensive hype dressed up as science.
Enter Kara Swisher.
She's here to cut through the noise with her signature edge,
sharp, skeptical, and allergic to nonsense.
Don't miss the CNN original series Kara Swisher wants to live forever,
an essential, smart, and genuinely entertaining guide
to the booming longevity industry.
Because let's be real.
The non-stop stream of wellness promises,
AI-driven health claims, and expensive tech
with sometimes dubious benefits, isn't slowing down.
Kara digs into what actually works
and what it really costs,
from access gaps to trade-offs most people would rather ignore.
We're all getting older, that part's inevitable.
The choices that come with it?
Not so simple.
You might as well understand what you're buying into.
Say 40% for a limited time.
Get started at CNN.com slash subscribe. Terms apply.
Kara Swisher wants to live forever.
New series now streaming with a CNN subscription.
At the age of the 50,
I've learned some things,
like the value of the family,
the importance of the job,
and that the 99% of the people of more of 50
have the virus that causes the Culebrilla.
Although not all the people in risk
the work, I do you see the upturned.
The eruption dolorouss with ampollosures durow times,
making that even
the tasks
more simple
are all a
real real
not learn about
the culebrilla
to the
way to
talk about your
doctor or
pharmaceutical
patrocino
for GSK
This is Daniel
Fischel
and writer
strong from
PodMeets World
Cat parents
unite
we have to
look out
for each other
yes
we all know
the feeling
of being
ignored
by our
little
babies a little
too well
yeah
I often
wonder to
myself
does my
cat
even love me
well
there's only
one solution
to solve that
Shiba
Feed your cat
Shiba and go from feeling ignored to truly adored in 12 days guaranteed or your money back.
Sheba has a wide array of products, appetizers, entrees, treats, and even a kitten's menu that will
win over even the pickiest eater. My cat bill is all about Shiba grilled. Just snap, peel, and
serve for two gourmet servings and zero messy leftovers. He loves it. Licks it to the bowl.
Its protein-rich formula is made with real chicken and seafood without artificial flavors, preservatives,
corn wheat, or soy.
So you can be sure your cat is getting the finest ingredients from around the world,
but made right here in the USA.
Spoil your fur babies and introduce them to the delicious delicacies of Shiba.
To learn more, check out Shiba.com.
Wellness, longevity, health is a lifestyle.
Every week, a new trend explodes across the media landscape.
And depending on who's talking, it's either a miracle breakthrough
or just expensive hype dressed up as science.
Enter Kara Swisher.
She's here to cut through the noise with her signature edge, sharp, skeptical, and allergic to nonsense.
Don't miss the CNN original series Kara Swisher wants to live forever.
An essential, smart, and genuinely entertaining guide to the booming longevity industry.
Because let's be real, the non-stop stream of wellness promises, AI-driven health claims, and expensive tech with sometimes dubious benefits, isn't slowing down.
Kara digs into what actually works.
and what it really costs, from access gaps to trade-offs most people would rather ignore.
We're all getting older, that part's inevitable.
The choices that come with it?
Not so simple.
You might as well understand what you're buying into.
Say 40% for a limited time.
Get started at CNN.com slash subscribe.
Terms apply.
Kara Swisher wants to live forever.
New series now streaming with a CNN subscription.
As
When I was
I've
learned
some things
like the
value of the
family,
the importance
of the
work and that
the 99%
of the
people of
the
people have
the virus
that cause
the
Culebrilla
Although
not
all the
people
in risk
they
will
I am
the
eruption
dolorous
with
long
times
making
that even
the
things
even the
things
are
all
not
you
learn
about the
This is Daniel Fischel.
And Ryder Strong from PodMeets World.
Cat parents unite.
We have to look out for each other.
Yes, we all know the feeling of being ignored
by our little babies a little too well.
Yeah, I often wonder to myself,
does my cat even love me?
Well, there's only one solution to solve that.
Sheba.
Feed your cat, Sheba, and go from feeling ignored
to truly adored in 12 days guaranteed or your money back.
Sheba has a wide array of products, appetizers,
entrees, treats, and even a kitten's menu that will win over even the pickiest eater.
My cat Bill is all about Sheba Grilled.
Just snap, peel, and serve for two gourmet servings and zero messy leftovers.
He loves it.
Licks it to the bowl.
Its protein-rich formula is made with real chicken and seafood without artificial flavors,
preservatives, corn wheat, or soy.
So you can be sure your cat is getting the finest ingredients from around the world,
but made right here in the USA.
Spoil your fur babies and introduce them to the delicious.
delicacies of Shiba. To learn more, check out shiba.com.
Wellness, longevity, health as a lifestyle. Every week, a new trend explodes across the
media landscape. And depending on who's talking, it's either a miracle breakthrough or just
expensive hype dressed up as science. Enter Kara Swisher. She's here to cut through the noise
with her signature edge, sharp, skeptical, and allergic to nonsense. Don't miss the CNN original
series, Kara Swisher wants to live forever, an essential, smart, and genuinely entertaining
guide to the booming longevity industry. Because let's be real, the non-stop stream of wellness
promises, AI-driven health claims, and expensive tech with sometimes dubious benefits, isn't slowing
down. Kara digs into what actually works, and what it really costs, from access gaps to
tradeoffs most people would rather ignore. We're all getting older, that part's inevitable. The
choices that come with it? Not so simple. You might as well understand what you're buying into.
Say 40% for a limited time. Get started at CNN.com slash subscribe. Terms apply.
Kara Swisher wants to live forever. New series now streaming with a CNN subscription.
When you're getting to the 50,
I've learned some things,
like the value of the family,
the importance of the job,
and that the 99% of the people
of more of 50
have the virus that cause a Culebrilla.
Although not all the people in risk
will be, I see the eruption
dolorousa with ampollosures
during that even the
more simple
are all a lot of a retort.
No, learn about the
Culebrae of the way difficult.
Talked today with your doctor
or pharmaceutical.
Patrocino,
Patrocinoed by GSK.
At the
50,
I've learned
some
like the
family,
the importance of
the
people
of the
people of the
that
cause the
Culebrae.
Although not all the
people in
risk,
I do you
the ruption
dolorous with
upon
making
the time
so that's
the
Culebrilla to
the
to doctor or pharmaceutical, patrocinoed for GSC.
This is Daniel Fischel.
And Ryder Strong from PodMeets World.
As cat parents,
writer and I know the feeling of being ignored by our cats.
I often wonder,
does my cat even love me?
Well, there's only one solution to solve that,
Shiba.
Feed your cat Shiba and go from feeling ignored
to truly adored in 12 days,
guaranteed or your money back.
Shiba has so many incredible products
that can satisfy even the pickiest eater.
Like new Shiba,
grilled. Made in the USA with the finest ingredients from around the world. They are savory strips
in a succulent sauce that cats are sure to love. And it's 100% complete and balanced with essential
vitamins and nutrients for adult cats like my bill. Made without artificial flavors or preservatives,
no corn, wheat, or soy. To learn more, check out shiba.com. On this episode of plant killers,
we'll explore one nation's most notorious fruit and vegetable killer, bad dirt. What makes bad dirt so
bad. The answer? The ingredients. But fear not true crime enthusiasts. This story has a happy ending.
Miracle Grow organic raised bed and garden soil. It's made with quality organic ingredients from
upcycled green waste like compost and aged bark. Unlike the other guys who can't say the same,
looks like bad dirt's murdering days are over. Thanks to Miracle Grow. Join us next time on
plant killers.
