QAA Podcast - Premium Episode 196: Busting with Bigfoot (Sample)
Episode Date: January 7, 2023Cryptozoological Romance Literature. Sasquatches, mothmen. Please enjoy some mental time off by following Jake and Brad down the insanely horny squatch-hole. Subscribe for $5 a month to get an extra ...episode of QAA every week + access to ongoing series like 'Manclan' and 'Trickle Down': http://www.patreon.com/QAnonAnonymous Brad Abrahams: https://twitter.com/LoveAndSaucers Music by Pontus Berghe, Mazzo. Editing by Corey Klotz. New Merch / Join the Discord Community / Find the Lost Episodes / Etc: http://qanonanonymous.com
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What's up QAA listeners?
The fun games have begun.
I found a way to connect to the internet.
I'm sorry, boy.
Welcome listener to Premium Chapter 196 of the Q&ONONANANANANANAS podcast, the Busting for Bigfoot episode.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rakatansky, Brad Abrahams, Julian Fields, and Travis Vue.
Well, folks, what can I say? It's time to let a little, little loose. Specifically, let nuts of all genders and origins loose upon cryptids. I guess that's the correct term for Bigfoot and his ilk, Sasquatch. Just large hairy men.
Harry and the Henderson's. The ultimate bears. So join us to twink out and bottom for what will surely be the most hair suit loving.
of the year and kick off 2023 in style.
Brad, take it away.
Ever since I was brought on as a correspondent for the podcast,
I've been figuring out how to find my niche.
Travis and Annie are known for exemplary research into pressing issues.
Julian and Liv bring us melted and crazed reports on contemporary niches,
and Jake dazzles with his original writing, comedy, and cinematic nostalgia.
As the Inner Earth correspondent, I've done a few stories on New Age, religious, and spiritual
groups.
But lately, I've been thinking about how to drive the pod even further into the depth of
of esoteric miscellany.
Yeah, you did elves to us,
so this is a perfect follow-up piece of shit.
Are you kidding?
This is a fun day of recording for me.
I'm excited.
Jake finally doesn't have to think about...
Yeah, I don't have to think about
how shitty the fucking world is
and how fucking hopeless everything is.
When I originally pitched this idea to Jake and Julian,
part of me hoped they'd say no.
I gave them multiple opportunities to back out.
Worried this might be too hot for QAA,
but each time they assured me it would be great.
And so, today,
I must preemptively apologize to most of the listeners, and Travis in particular, as Jake and I
immerse you into the world of cryptozoological romance literature. As both the lover of the field of
cryptozoology and having made a documentary about paranormal interspecies romance, I felt somewhat
prepared and qualified for what would await us, but as usual, I was dead wrong. First, a brief
history lesson on erotic literature with Jake. Erotic literature can be traced back as early as the 18th and
19th centuries. With the arrival of authors like Jane Austen and Anne Radcliffe,
stories featuring strong-willed female characters, rejecting society's restraints,
were finally being told. In the 1930s following World War I, historical romance novels
flourished, with epics like Gone with the Wind. New sub-genres emerged, blending romantic
fiction with other types of literature, such as horror or suspense. What is this new Jake
voice? It's the erudite voice.
These books, known as Gothic romance,
remain popular up through the 1950s.
However, slowly over time,
the genre began to boil down to essentially
two or three people of the opposite or same-sex
in an exotic location
fucking and sucking each other dry.
Gone was the satire and social commentary
and in its place, unbridled pornography.
As it stands today,
83% of erotic fiction readers
identify as female,
and out of that 83%,
81% of them are white.
Nice.
In an effort to appeal to the readership,
male authors are often encouraged
to use a female-sounding pseudonym,
so that's a pro tip out there for any listeners
looking to get into the porn lit biz.
Wow.
Some psychologizing has been done
on why the genre is such an appealing escapist fantasy,
for women in particular.
The main thrust is that while these monsters
embody masculine traits,
they don't represent men themselves,
thus partially sidestepping the trauma,
terror, and patriarchal actions of real men.
As a genre, romance with strange beasts has been with us for millennia,
most notably in Greek mythology.
Zeus transformed into all manner of creatures in quest for romance,
including an eagle, a bull, and fucking someone while he was a swan.
Unfortunately, Zeus was doing all of that against people's wills.
Yeah.
Zeus, problematic guy.
Yes, there are even rock drawings from the Paleolithic period
that show a man with an erect piece.
penis standing behind a goat.
Hmm.
Well.
Many more human god creature couplings abound,
with perhaps the strangest being the impregnating of a cloud.
Well, that's a Greek myth.
Now, that's a back wall you can't hit.
In contemporary literature,
Monster Love took off an early vampire novels,
such as 1897's Bram Stoker's Dracula.
In movies, one of the most notable examples is
1958's I Married a Monster from Outer Space,
in which an alien race bent on domination wants to learn about human love,
and eventually interspecies procreation.
When it comes to cryptozoological romance specifically,
one of the first tales comes from a quote-unquote true account.
In the summer of 1924, Swedish-Canadian lumberjack Albert Ostman
had Canada's first Bigfoot encounter,
and perhaps the world's first recorded abduction.
After a grueling season felling old-growth trees,
Albert rewarded himself with a little gold prospecting vacation
in the British Columbian wilderness.
One balmy evening, he was awoken by a commotion outside his tent,
and was swiftly abducted by a massive Sasquatch and taken to the valley where it lived,
along with its wife and two offspring.
Over three bizarre days living with the beasts, he intuited why he'd been taken there.
The Patriarch Squatch wanted him to mate with his daughter, who was the last of his line.
In a truly surreal sequence of events, he escaped and lived to tell the tale,
swearing to it under oath in a Canadian high court.
Excuse me? There was a Canadian high court on whether this guy busted in the Sasquatch's daughter?
Dear God.
Come on, this was 1924.
Underground comics artist R. Crum was a big fan of the story
and adapted it into a comic book that was both pornographic
and an anti-capitalist rat race screed.
I'm also in the process of adapting the original story
into a narrative film.
Here's a few panels from Crum's comic for you guys to look at.
Oh, dear God.
This is insane, yeah.
Oh, no.
Oh, he's like, he's, the man has his face
near the female Sasquatch's, you know,
nether regions, let's put it that way.
and she is just busting all over the place,
and then she finally just squats and completely swallows his head.
Yeah, as we find out in my reading in particular,
it seems as if Sasquatches are obsessed with the idea of Dome.
Like literally getting your whole Dome into it.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
This is a new way to give Dome.
I don't recommend it.
You need to breathe.
The rise of Cryptoerotica took off with the advent of Amazon's Kindle Direct publishing platform,
and for a time was a surprisingly lucrative genre.
One of the power players, under the pseudonym Virginia Wade,
was pulling in up to $30,000 a month from e-book sales
with hundreds of thousands of downloads.
She's most famous for her Come for Bigfoot saga,
which had 16 installments,
but she's also written stories about horny Vikings
in Come for the Vikings, Parts 1 to 5.
She then took on sex and space with bred by the alien.
It was apparently a family affair,
with her English teacher dad doing the editing
and her mom doing the German translations.
Dear Lord.
here's an interview with her and a morning radio shock jock where she talks about her inspiration for the series
good morning how are you virginia hi i'm great how are you i'm doing good so uh how in the world
you have this monster sex series which has the uh books i can't even i don't even know if i can
describe the i don't even know if i can say the title of these books it starts with a c word three
letter c word uh four it's that word for bigfoot uh how how
How did you even come up with the idea to write Bigfoot erotica?
It literally just popped into my head.
I had been writing erotica for a couple of months, and I was kind of successful, but not really.
And everybody else that I knew in the business was writing all these daddy stories, and all my daddy stories bombed.
They didn't do very well.
So I kind of rebel.
I thought, well, why don't I write about, you know, sex with this, you know, with this creature from the woods?
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
So now I have to imagine this woman's father editing her stories about fucking...
Wait till you hear some of the stories.
Oh.
You haven't even heard it yet.
No.
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Thank you.
Thanks.
I love you.
Jake loves you.
Thank you.