The Cryptid Factor - 5: #005 The Australian Issue (With Special Guest Steve Hughes)
Episode Date: May 20, 2013Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
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We're back. Week 3. This is our third episode of the 2013 season. Unfortunately, tonight, we have a scratching, a late scratching.
You want to get that checked out, but that's David Ferrier. He's out for the count this week.
But with me is the one and only... Baton! Everybody!
So thank God, because if he wasn't here, I wouldn't be here, basically. I have no idea what I'm doing. Is this even on?
This is definitely on.
The green light means on.
The weird thing is, though, being that it's Anzac Day,
where we normally have a building full of bristling activity
of people eating sushi in Ponsabies Central
and pizzas and beer and food and stuff,
we've got nobody, it's empty.
We're alone in it because it's Anzac Day.
And this is our Anzac Day special.
That's right, and by that, we mean
we will not be mentioned.
anything Anzaki or Army in this show.
So that's why it's special.
Weekly World Weird News.
Crazy.
Freaky, watch out.
Yes, this is the first section of the show
where we give you an update on what's happening around the world.
We'll start off with a couple of crazy headlines.
You're not going to be able to beat this one buttons.
Check this out.
I don't know.
High-speed mushroom-fueled ski resort giraffe chase.
Holy moly.
I just want to go straight to that one right now.
Okay.
Of my one, are you ready for this?
Uh-huh.
Men's sex chromosome set to die.
What?
No, it's not as good as you're on, I've got to say.
It's nowhere near as good as you're on.
It's more frightening.
Yeah.
Wake, frightening.
You wait until you hear these stats.
It's terrifying, terrifying.
All right.
Okay.
What else have you got any headlines?
Well, you want some more headlines?
I was going to rock into that first...
Okay, screw the headlines.
Screw the headlines.
No, too late.
I've already clicked on other headlines section in my note.
Okay.
Night turns today as spectacular meteor explodes over Argentina.
Oh my gosh.
That happened this week, folks.
Okay, my next headline, the other bit of weekly World Weird News,
to fill your Thursday by Iranian scientists claims to have invented time machine.
Oh, brilliant.
I know.
This happens every couple of times.
every couple of months, isn't it?
That's fantastic.
The time it's for real.
All right.
Well, let's kick into my article, this first one here.
There's a ski town's most exciting incident in years, as you can imagine, with a high-speed giraffe chase.
All right?
I actually can't imagine that.
And 1005, police received a call from a woman who said her juvenile granddaughter was at the ski area last week
and ran into a person who was selling bags of what she thought were
Portobello mushrooms, dipped in chocolate for $30.
Police said the granddaughter further informed her grandmother
that giraffes were chasing her down the hill after she ate the mushrooms.
So good.
10.17 a.m.
A woman called police to inform them of an incident
that had occurred in the first block 7th Street around Easter.
She told police that she was talking with a group of Russians at a bar
And one of them told her you have to fight for what you believe in
She was concerned that they could have been speaking about the events in Boston this week
Police determined there was no connection
That is seriously seriously amazing
Yeah
Can you imagine if you if you if so if you took some
Portobello chocolate covered mushrooms
What is it that you reckon
you would see chasing you down a hill.
I mean, clearly she's got...
I'm not saying I've taken Portobello mushroom.
I mean, I've definitely put it this way.
I've been to Portobello and I've tried their mushrooms.
But I don't know whether there was a connection there.
Did anything chase you down a mountain?
Well, you know, it was standard mushrooms
and it was legal and everyone was taking them at the time.
I think it was Take Mushrooms Day.
And it was a trying thing, you know.
and I had these brown shoes on, you know,
and I swear to God, one of them turned into a massive chocolate.
And did you, I mean, how fast through did you get?
The worst thing is when someone comes up to you,
when you're eating a chocolate shoe and says,
dude, what are you doing?
Because up until that point, it sort of made sense that I was doing that.
And you're like, no, no, no, this is what I do.
Yeah.
I immediately felt guilty.
I immediately felt it was wrong.
That's seriously, seriously sick.
Okay, well, I can't quite beat that,
but I can scare the entire male nation
by letting them know that unfortunately
we're all set to die off.
Our males, men, us with the Y chromosome,
are basically not going to be around in the future.
Sure, it's going to take about 5 million years
or so, but we're not going to be here.
Basically, the scientists, they have found out that the Y chromosome is rapidly
degenerating and is going to disappear probably within about 5 million years.
But even if humans are still around, there's going to be no blokes.
Really?
Yeah.
That means there'll be no muscle cars.
It means there's going to be no beard.
Yeah, that means it's going to be, it's going to be a terror of the world, it's going to be a terrible place.
No porn.
No porn, none, nothing at all.
No, terrible.
So, it's, it's a man's world really is diminishing that term.
Yeah, it's, it's, it's.
The joke's on us.
It's a man's world is not true.
It's true right now, but not for long.
Evolutionary geneticist, Jenny Graves, says that while the process is likely to happen within
next five million years, it could have begun in some isolated groups already.
And I think we know which are those groups they are.
They're those ones who don't drive muscle cars and drink beer.
Guys that literally don't care about cars.
They're clearly, they're happy to just get in whatever car.
It's terrible.
And who will just drink whatever beer and if given the chance, won't even drink it.
I know.
It's seriously concerning.
So they said as long as, unless something comes along instead,
yeah, we could not even, like, can't even imagine what's going to happen.
Because with no bloke's around, I figure there at some point there's no more babies.
Yeah.
I guess.
Is that what happens?
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Because they're going to, they're going to grab all the, all the sperm, and they're going to, you know, put it in fridges and stuff.
Oh, right.
So it'll be all kept there.
I mean, we're essentially just a vessel.
anyway. That's true. That's a good point. All of the other stuff that we're into, you know, like cars and
drinks, beers and, you know, skiing and Bond films, all that sort of stuff. It's all really
just superfluous. Yeah. The problem is going to go. Well, no, it's gone. Yeah, yeah, totally.
And essentially, we'll just be, we'll just be inside fridges. Yeah. You know. Well, that's fine. That's
probably, there's probably a lot of people out there that are happy with this news. Yeah.
They're probably females and they're probably married.
married females and, you know, probably don't really care.
The only issue they're going to have is, you know, I mean, I was trying to think about, you know, what are our strengths?
And when I think about, you know, being handy men, you know, around the house, doing the lawns, taking out the rubbish, lifting things, reaching high places, that sort of stuff.
Though I was thinking, well, we'll always have that.
I mean, you know, the ladies aren't going to be able to sort of cope without those abilities, those sort of those things that need to be done that they certainly aren't going to do.
not necessarily because they can't do them because they don't want to do them.
And they rely on this. That's what we've got. That's all we've got.
That's all we've got left.
But if that is replaced by robots who can do all that stuff,
then that's our screwed.
And later in the show, when I read an article to you guys about cyborgs
and how robots are increasing.
in their proficiency.
I'm lost for words here, but what I'm trying to say is they're coming.
They're coming.
And robot use?
As they come, we leave.
We leave.
I tell you what, that's why I'm sorry, I've actually just seen one big floor with this
new story.
I've just read ahead a little bit further where I didn't read in my research earlier.
And it says that Professor Graves has been doing her study,
doing sex determining gene study,
on Australian animals to shed light on human genetics.
So she's basing all her study.
And we all know that the Australian male.
Of course he's going.
He's completely...
There's enough Kiwis over there now
to get rid of the Australian males.
So that's why it's actually flawed research.
Floored research.
Yeah.
She's based on Australian animals, males, I guess.
Animals or males?
It's quite a difference because animals, to me,
Australian animals.
Male animals.
You know, are the most loopy, interesting and fascinating animals on the planet.
In contrast, Australian males, you know, are exactly the sort of the redneck species that we're talking about.
You know, the hardcore car lovers, you know, the beer drinkers, the dudes that put posters on their walls of, you know, Arnold Schwarzenegger, that sort of thing.
those dudes
surely they're going to be the last to go
they'll be sitting
hanging on to their guns and their
grenades and their
you know
well just just their manliness
and their manlyness
and their moustaches
Australian men
are the most manly men
you can ever get
and that's why
ladies and gentlemen
we have one with us
this evening
special guest
Steve Hughes
I know
he's Steve
he's here
he's he's
was walked in from the mall
into the studio
no he's in the mall now
no he's just walked out of the studio
he's in the mall two steps
he's back in the studio
look at that now
and he's experiencing what life is like
in the radio world
of New Zealand
couldn't get you a full studio
but we've got you the corner in the mall
we'll bring you a doughnut
and a strawberry milk
none of it actually works
but you can go through the motions
You know, when you get up to speed, we'll get your proper set up.
This actually doesn't go out to anyone.
You have to come into the mall.
You've been here before then.
It's like CCTV, but a radio version.
See, Reese talks, and I go out the front with a loud haler.
What's that, Rhys?
Okay.
If only he was incorrect.
Anyway.
A little cry for help there.
Hey, look, isn't it weird that meteors are coming down quite frequently now?
Yeah, it is real.
Because this is, I think, the third or possibly fourth one in the last couple of weeks.
And of course they had that meteor shower.
Yeah.
I was talking to an insurance company Bigwig the other day,
and he said the first time they've ever had to do a claim for meteor insurance claim.
Yeah.
So heavenly bodies.
It's happening a lot.
When a planet supernovas and it gives birth to, or it's about,
to give birth to another planet.
It always has a meteor shower, meteor shower
just beforehand
and all the other little planets turn up.
Is that right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they all give each other little, you know?
Just gifts.
Gifts them.
Things like that.
And that's what a meteor shower is.
And there's one that's happening over our planet right now.
And so I wonder which planet's going to give birth.
And I think it's definitely in our solar system
because the shower is hitting us, hitting Earth.
Well, it's earthquakes.
Maybe it's us.
Maybe we've got Braxton Hicks.
It's scary.
Actually, I've got their first album.
And it's weird because a lot of the tunes are fake.
Is that right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You think it's a tune, but it's not.
It's getting you ready for when you actually hear a tune.
That is awesome.
Yeah.
That is genius.
A dazzling display of light appeared over Argentina.
on Sunday, April 21st and was captured on video by a concert goer,
filming the band playing on stage.
In the video, a giant fireball can be seen in the background,
lighting up the night sky as it exploded high in the atmosphere.
The flash of light only appeared for a few seconds before it was gone,
but the incident, which was witnessed by thousands of Argentinians,
left most wondering what it could,
have been. Locals said they felt the ground shake in Santiago del Estaro as night turned today
for a fleeting moment. A meteor expert in Argentina said the fireball was in fact a meteor and may
have been traveling at speeds in excess of 80,000 miles per hour when it crashed into the Earth's upper
atmosphere. Freaking fast. Yeah. The fireball was visible and at least
least eight provinces in Argentina and was widely shared with the world via Twitter and Facebook.
See, this is the thing. They're shareable now. You can share a meteor now.
You can. There's an option on Twitter to share a meteor.
Have you had a good meteor today? Share it.
I mean, I love it when you go to websites and you can share it and then you push share and the options comes up.
And quite often it's one of those stink options from LinkedIn or something.
something or on YouTube or something.
You know, what about Twitter?
You know?
I've got a meteorite.
I've got a meteor here.
I don't want to share that with LinkedIn.
Who is LinkedIn?
What's he going to do with it?
Anyway, it was shared widely.
And some traffic cams and other static cameras also caught a glimpse of it.
And so it's been, and you can look it up if you Google night turns today as spectacular meteor explodes over Argentina.
I mean, that's quite long.
You could just Google.
I would just type in Meteor Argentina himself.
But if you want to go straight to where I am, that's what you want to do.
I want to go straight to where you are.
In a later report by 9 News, it was said that it was closer to 9 inches in diameter.
Nine inches.
That's it.
Yeah, very small.
And it made that, it turned night into day.
Yeah, for nine inches.
But second and was visible in at least eight provinces.
That's why when we're going to, when the big one comes,
imagine it.
You'll know that you're doomed because night will turn into more than day.
Well, you know, I think we're all going to see it.
And no matter where you are on the planet, you'll see it.
I mean, if we're talking about something big enough to wipe out the dinosaurs here,
then yeah, it's going to be bigger than nine inches.
So let's hope that that doesn't happen.
Not soon anyway.
Okay, well, I've got...
I'm just changing the background music
because that one was sounding really sad.
That one, the sad meteorite music
was actually from the Bourne Legacy movie soundtrack,
just in case anybody wanted to know.
My next piece of weekly world weird news,
Iranian scientist claims to have invented time machine.
Wow, tell us about this.
I'm waiting for this moment.
I mean, I'm waiting for the time machine moment, not my news article.
Oh, okay. You're not waiting for your own moment here.
An Iranian scientist claims he has invented a time machine.
No!
Yes, that allows you to predict the future with a 98% accuracy.
Ali Razigi says his...
his device can produce a printout detailing any individual's life between five and eight years in advance
after taking readings from the touch of a user.
He claims the Iranian government whose nuclear program has caused concern around the world
can use his invention to predict military conflicts and forecast the fluctuations in the value of foreign currencies and oil.
What?
Exactly.
He says the device is the size of a land.
laptop and uses a complex set of algorithms, which took him 10 years to develop, but he has
not revealed any concrete details about this invention.
Unlike the time-traveling DeLorean in the hit film Back to the Future, Mr. Rosigi said
his device will not take you into the future, it will bring the future to you.
How good is that?
He tells the Fars State News Agency, my invention easily fits into the size of a person.
computer case and can predict details of the next five to eight years of its
and the life of its users.
Naturally, the government can see five years into the future
and that would be able to prepare itself for challenges that might destabilize it.
That's amazing.
How good would that computer be?
Wow, two things.
First of all, it sounds to me like it's less of a time machine
and more of a sort of a future predictions device.
True, true.
You know, there's no...
I mean, it's always, you know,
it's in the title, isn't it?
It's kind of like you led to believe something,
and then the story itself is very different.
Not quite the same.
If I can take you back to the giraffe chase,
ski incident, you know,
which when I first read that,
I thought, wow, I'm going to tell everyone over this,
I'm going to read it.
I'm going to read it on air live.
I'm not going to look at this beforehand,
simply because, you know, I'm too busy.
I've got a career and kids.
And when you've got the two, the two Cs, a career and kids,
then, you know, your time factor is limited.
A limited time factor.
The second thing I was going to say was,
as you were reading out that article,
an elderly couple looked at through the front doors of the mall
and they saw us, and I could see them looking at us,
and they opened the door,
and then they sort of, they tilted their head
and they could hear what was going on on the radio
and then they slowly close the door and left.
They don't want to predict the future.
Five to eight years' time, they don't want to know what's happening then.
This is the terrible news.
What?
Anyway, it has been said that he's got 179 inventions listed under his name,
but he has been criticized...
Is that all?
179, he's been criticized by friends and family
for trying to play God.
Yeah.
By making a prediction machine.
Well, I'll tell you what, it's always these guys that try to play God.
Yeah.
That end up the biggest villains the world has ever seen
and end up having to be brought down by James Bond.
Yeah.
You know?
Like George Bush.
That's right.
They think they're the almighty God and that they can pull strings
and they can, you know, shift mountains and make things.
It's just something within them that, you know,
the four have had, you know, bad childhoods or something,
and they've been, you know, I don't know, I don't know,
neglected in some way.
Yeah, yeah, that happens.
They feel as though they need to,
they need the whole world.
But, you know, that can be also be a good thing,
because if you use that power for good,
and I'm harking back to Bond again,
because on his plaque, you know,
his family motto is, the world is not enough.
Is that right?
That's right. Is that as a, is it as a crest?
That's his crest, yeah.
Oh, man.
So.
The world is definitely not enough for that, man.
That's right.
He has to go to moon, the moon raker.
But exactly.
You know, the world's definitely not enough.
But you could also argue that is still our world, you know.
I mean, our world isn't necessarily just our planet.
Our world is everything that we can see.
And dimensions.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I know we've sort of, you know, gone off to a weird tangent there.
But my point is...
It's unlike us.
My point is that the big bad guys of the world who want to play God,
you know, they probably feel that the world is not enough for them as well.
Yeah.
Or maybe it's different.
Maybe they feel the world is enough.
They just want to be controlling that.
Either way.
What I'm trying to find here is the difference between good and evil.
Because I know it's only a thin, you know, the ultimate good
It's a fine line.
It's a fine line.
And, yeah, I think you can sway both ways.
And you've got to be, you know that saying you've got to get up to get down, y'all.
And that other one, it cuts like a knife?
Yeah.
Yep, that's the other one.
Yeah.
And I think, so you've got to be able to, you've got to be bad to be good.
You've got to be good to be bad.
Yeah.
But it's when you, it's when you have.
heavily weigh yourself on one side and choose to not join the other side or not even, you know, dip your toes in it.
So, so.
Then you're truly from that side that you've chosen.
So your final piece of advice.
Can I also say, geez, these portobello mushrooms are great.
It's such a funny idea that you, like, bring these on.
Like, because we did that story early and then, like, buttons just took off.
He said, I've got so with me.
I've got some with me, let's have some now.
And, you know, they'd have no effect.
Chocolate
chocolate dipped.
It's just chocolate dipped, portobello mushrooms, readily available.
And, yeah, I'm not finding, sort of like, all I'm finding from them is that is sort of
opening wormholes in my mind, which I think is a good thing.
And we didn't need to open any more of those, isn't it?
There's enough open a room.
Anyway, to wrap it up, this lovely Iranian man says that he's not planning to launch the prototype
just yet in case, quoting,
in case the Chinese will steal the idea
and produce it in millions overnight.
Wow, and they will.
They will, millions overnight.
There's obviously a little bit of issues there
between Iran and China.
They're keeping all there.
Yeah.
And I'd be itching to put one of those made-in-China stickers
on the back of it, wouldn't they?
Future prediction device.
Yeah.
There must be a factory in China
that makes the made-in-China stickers.
Costa is.
And, geez, that have a few, wouldn't they?
Yeah.
Do you know what they look like?
I can tell you now.
They're like a rugby ball.
No, they're not.
I like a little.
They're gold.
They're little thin gold.
And it just says made in China and black.
I thought they were in the shape of a different...
No, that's Korea.
Korea's in the shape of a rugby ball.
Oh, is it?
You'd think that would be New Zealand.
What's the New Zealand one?
The New Zealand one's got a Kiwi on it.
A little Kiwi.
Yeah.
Well, that's the...
That's cool.
Yeah.
That's all right, eh?
Yep.
Well, that's...
That's weekly World Word News.
All right.
And now it's time for our next section called...
Crypted Buzz.
Giving you the rundown on all the latest cryptid news that's happening around the world.
We've got a author here called Colonel Bailey.
He's releasing a book next.
month. This is memoirs. All right. Yeah, he's actually seen the Tasmanian tiger a couple of times
in his life. No, lucky bars. Yeah, he has a couple of times, which is more than anyone, I'd say.
That's so lucky. So this is his second book. It's called The Shadow of the Thylacine,
which is the name of the Tasmanian tiger. And he's seen it twice. So this book should be really
good. It's a read. He's obviously from Australia. The Tasmanian tiger appeared to Colonel Bailey
for the second time in 1995 while he was taking a leak in the bush. What? Yeah, that's right.
That never happens. He's got a quote here. It shot out of some ferns behind me. I thought it was a
cattle dog at first. But then I was face to face with the darn thing. Mr. Bailey said an old bushman had
told him exactly which part of the weird river valley he would find the fabled creature.
But then I just went into lockdown, he said.
I didn't even take my camera out of my pack.
Now I've only got memory to back me up.
A memory to back me up.
So he's placing this on his memory.
Mr Bailey said the encounter was the dramatic highlight of his book,
The Shadow of the Thylacine, which he's releasing.
And it's his second work
On the officially extinct
Because it is officially extinct, of course
Is it?
Yeah, oh yeah, did you know
It's officially extinct, the Tasmanian tiger
How do they know?
Because he's just seen one
Well, yeah, but his last sighting was 1995
Yeah, and did he have any mushrooms before him?
And he was lying then
No, we don't know
But look, you know, some believe, like any other cryptid
That this could still be alive, these guys could still be alive,
they could be hiding in the shadows.
Be nice if they were.
And he's basically, this guy
has spent his life chasing the thylacine.
He's trekked through acres
of remote bushland to chance
a glimpse of the beast's fable hide.
And searching for mushrooms.
He's even gone in helicopters.
And he's just, you know, he's really gone.
Have you seen there's a new film called The Hunter?
Oh, yeah.
And that's...
It looks amazing.
Who's the actor in that one?
He was in...
Sean Coe...
No, not Sean Coe.
No, he was in Platoon.
He did the famous dying scene.
No. Matt Damon.
No, no.
He was also in Speed 2.
Willem Defoe?
Wilm Defoe.
There it is.
Willem Defoe.
It's a Willem Defoe film.
And that's basically...
Seems to be based on what this dude's been doing.
The Search for the Thylacine.
Expanding Civilization, of course,
has pushed it right back into the bush, he says.
to places where people really can't get to.
So he thinks, you know, he's convinced that they're still there,
which I think, you know, it's similar to our dude here with the moose in Fjordland.
Which is huge.
You know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Where's that from?
Tasmania?
Steve has decided to join us again in the studio,
and he's a man of many questions.
Lucky we are men of many answers.
Not many answers. He's more of a question type.
He'll generally ask a question with an answer.
So yeah, what do you take on?
What's your take on that?
Do you believe these Tasmanian tigers are still kicking around?
Yeah, I think Australia is a country full of amazing cryptids still.
I think particularly things like the, you know,
version of the Yeti, the Yowie.
You know, there's so many, they've got lots of big cats over there.
I'm so envious.
It's enough of a reason outside of...
Well, outside of earning 25% more than you do in New Zealand,
that's the other brilliant reason to move to Australia, isn't it?
Yeah, it's the creatures.
The Yauys.
Yeah, absolutely.
And the mushrooms.
Have you seen anything, Steve?
He saw John Howard at the airport.
He saw John Howard at the airport.
Fortunately, he...
Unfortunately, he is anything but a myth.
Oh, God.
Okay, well, in...
Hey, but he's got the same theory as me, this author.
He's up where I'm...
You know, I'm talking about the Sasquatch
and how we will never find it if we jump into the forest
and start walking and look for it, okay, with the cameras.
Because as he says, and I agree with him,
you know, he can smell people a mile off.
The cameras are being set up by people,
so he's not...
He's not going anywhere near them.
You know, so, and when you go in there to set your cameras up, he can smell you then.
Because my, I've always said this.
I haven't always said it, but I think I've said it twice.
You know, we've got to send robots in.
Yeah.
We've got to send those robot dogs in with cameras on their backs.
Yeah.
Because it doesn't matter that they make noise.
They've got no scent.
No, or the blunt.
You pretending to be a rat.
Or if we can't afford that, I'll pretend to be a robot.
I don't have any scent.
And then you go,
Who's that?
Is that another human?
Vhuk!
Oh, that's just a robot.
He's a robot.
Are you a robot?
Yes, I am a robot.
You're a human-being
a voice of a robot.
Yes, you know you got me there.
And then he runs off.
Just built a native, you're up as a robot.
Whilst you're taking photos.
And that whole, that's,
the other thing, when you see something, you know, do you automatically take a photo or do you spend, you know, a good 30 seconds just in awe and in shock?
Yeah.
Because we, none of us know if we haven't seen, you know, I mean, I reportedly, well, to be honest, I didn't report it.
But I saw a ghost, you know, and I didn't, I didn't get the camera out.
No.
Mind you, you know, it was quick.
It was like, boom.
It was quick.
But also, I was a kid and I didn't have a camera or a phone, and there was not.
no such thing as a camera phone, but in this day and I, you know, could you honestly say if you
saw something that, you know, that shocked you to the very bones, would you get your camera out
straight away and take a photo of it? I think, you know, this is what people do. They generally
just stare and shock and then are afraid, and then it's gone. And then they get excited and
think about filming it. Then you know what's going to change all of that? It's Google glasses.
There's a little camera on all of our glasses. Everybody wear glasses. Everybody wear glasses.
a little camera recording the whole time with a cache,
and then you'll see something, you'll hit record and record the last 10 minutes that you saw,
and there'll be so much more found when there's cameras rolling the whole time.
Exactly, and that leads me to the other point,
which is most of the video footage that we're getting of these cryptids,
whether it be a Chupacabra or, you know, a Bigfoot or a lake monster of some sort,
they're generally from video cameras that are attached to things that are just filming anyway.
Like it's on a truck that's filming for some...
Just rolling.
Just rolling anyway, you know,
and all of a sudden it's picked up something.
That's what we need.
It's very rarely is it someone who is walking through the bush
with camera rolling,
hooping to capture something.
You know, capture something.
Funnily enough, that leads perfectly into my cryptid buzz story,
which is exactly that.
The very first piece of legitimate film of Bigfoot,
which is obviously the Patterson Gimlin film.
Now, for those that don't know,
the Patterson Gimman film is the two guys who are in the forest and got the classic very, very first bit of footage of the Sasquatch in the forest.
And it's when he's sort of walking between the trees, that classic piece.
You'll be able to find it.
Go to YouTube.
Look at Patterson Gimlin.
I think anyone who's actually bothering to listen to this show, but probably knows.
Okay.
We'll presume that for a moment.
Well, on eBay at the moment is for sale, the second generation copy.
of that film. So not the original film, but the very, very first copy. And as you know,
copies of copies of copies get worse and worse and worse in quality. They, somebody is selling
what is reportedly the second generation. So the very first copy of the original. So it's by
far the best quality. Really?
Yep. And this film, that's the film runs for approximately 10 minutes. It went to Russia
after being in America
and then it was left
by somebody in a vault somewhere
and it sort of just sat around
and now it's coming out for sale
on eBay.
What do they want for it?
It hasn't got a buy now.
I've asked them if they'd like
if they could do a buy now.
Bidding's up to $27.50.
I've put an auto bid
up to 50 bucks.
Okay. Why aren't we buying this?
We should be buying this
and doing something with it.
Yeah, definitely.
Ultimately, watching it.
We'll buy it and watch it.
Yeah.
That's a great idea.
We can roll it here.
We can roll it here.
We can play on these screens.
If you haven't been down to Ponsabee Central,
and I'm guessing a lot of you haven't been down today,
we've got video screens here at the radio station.
There's two massive screens.
We can run it on there.
And we can run...
One of our ideas is to run footage of cryptids on these two big screens.
while we're playing the show.
And so that's, that would be great.
We could, we could buy that footage.
Yeah.
Let's do it.
I'm guessing it would be clearer than anything we've seen on YouTube.
Oh, no, it would be amazing.
It'll be incredible.
They, well, and the other thing is that there's only one other copy,
um, known, uh, copy up there.
So it could go up in value and then we could sell it and make lots of money.
Oh, it's always about money for your stuff.
Well, no, because I'm, ah, you know, you've got to bring the bling.
I just did a...
I know.
I just said...
I just...
But then I kicked my bum out to the side
and kind of did a...
That was weird.
It's all being caught on webcam.
Oh, no.
Has everyone seen that?
Oh, somebody's just seen my ass being kicked out to the side.
All right.
Well, that's fantastic.
Well, maybe we'll bid on that.
And hopefully this time next week, we'll have it.
Now it's time for our next segment,
which is called...
We're all a bunch of...
theories
and it's where we discuss
any theories
that we have
it's week three
this time we've got our special guest with a theory
he's a man with a million theories
please welcome
Steve Hughes
right theories
theories
give us your theory
I don't know if this is a theory
it's an idea I have
oh yeah
it's right about
taking power away from the media
yeah
by all the news
they feed us, which is generally rubbish.
So I was wondering, because we can't
have a revolution anymore, because we have no weapons,
and we don't have any power, because we don't have the cash.
So weapons and power are out for a revolution.
So what we should do is all turn our TVs and radios off, right?
If you could get a whole country, we start with New Zealand,
that's not a massive country, it's not like a Russia or something,
then we'll start with New Zealand, all stop watching and listening,
right?
And then where will the information that they're telling us go?
Right.
It'll just go into a void.
And then they'll just be talking to us and we'll be going,
none of us are listening.
I have no idea what you're doing.
I didn't watch that.
I've just been actually thinking for myself.
Yeah, right.
So you're saying switch off.
So TVs are gone.
Everything.
Radio's gone.
And you actually just go.
What about an internet?
You're saying, oh yeah, see, there's there.
That's that, we're trapped now.
See, I feel you, Steve.
And I have a feeling.
that tonight it's actually already started happening.
People have been turning off their radios all through Ponsonby.
Oh, to be fair.
You know, I've been switching.
They've started already.
This is why I decided to join you on air today to try and kickstart my theory into practice.
Unfortunately, we won't be able to communicate.
You won't hear what we're saying.
Oh, no, we don't have to do anything.
We don't want to communicate anyway.
You've just got to sit down and think for yourself.
Because, you know, the media can't tell you what to think,
but it can definitely tell you what to think about,
kind of.
That's amazing.
Well, that's a great theory.
It is probably more a thought than a theory.
Yeah, yeah, it's more of a dream.
Theory would be an extension of that.
What do you think will happen if everything was shut off
and we had to think for ourselves?
And we just didn't listen to them,
go, the terrorists, and the money and the doom and the whatnot
and Barack Obama is going to bring peace.
you know, we're all going, Barack who?
Yeah.
Who?
I'm sorry, I've been fishing.
Yeah, yeah.
So we'd probably lead much less stressful lives.
Yeah.
Because we wouldn't have to worry about it.
Caught up in our own consciousness being drawn into a sort of psychic acceptance of the apocalypse,
brought about by them in their mischievous ways as they spread peace with F. Hawk Jets.
Okay, that's what, I'll tell you what.
That's a great theory, and how lucky we are to have that come along tonight.
So switch off now, folks.
That's not...
That's what we're getting at.
Switch off now.
You know, and I think more and more, as life goes on, people are switching on more and more electronic items.
I mean, how many things, you know, you've got your iPads, your laptops, your smartphones, your talking watches?
Talking watches.
Our smartphones as smart as if you switched off and actually developed.
telekinetic powers.
Right.
The more they create systems that you can put things through,
the more they take you further away from your
spiritual evolution, which could be
eventually to be able to just
discuss things telekinetically.
Because people go, oh, the internet's wonderful.
But that's no good, really, because you can't get information out
to everyone who start a revolution with the internet, because
then your battle plans are on display.
Unfortunately.
The whole world.
You have literally blown my mind
tonight. See, if you just come in here,
Just to come along and partake a little bit,
and you end up blowing people's minds.
That's what he is.
He's a mind-blower.
He's a mind-blower.
He's a mind-blower.
He's one, Cryptoburger fuel.
It's theory evolution.
That's right.
It's amazing.
I think there's a great point there with regards to the fact that, you know,
Electronica is really turning us into drones.
Because if we didn't have it, yeah, our own mind is far more powerful than anything we can create with electronics.
And everyone gives the internet so good, and spread ideas and everyone here.
Yeah, but the internet is still just a system.
Exactly, and who created the internet?
Yeah.
It's over the system.
And the level of the consciousness of the creatures,
the system can only a system that will represent the level of the consciousness.
It will transform the consciousness, will it?
It's only a system.
No.
And it's not going to, I mean, the only thing it can do is expand.
It's never got, it's not going to get any greater than it is now.
Unless the machines, through having our constant focus on them,
start to imbibe themselves with consciousness.
They are.
That's something that we have been discussing.
Yeah.
My cousin is actually inventing artificial intelligence for the Auckland University.
Eventually you go to turn off your computer, it just goes, bugger off.
I'm staying on.
I don't feel like turning off right now.
That's the moment where you go, oh my God, we've gone too far.
I'm going fishing.
If I can hark back to science fiction films and human minds
and how powerful we are and how great we are
and how we should really back ourselves
and not rely on electronica,
you know, you look back at Star Wars
and one of the greatest lines was,
I've got a bad feeling about this one.
You know, and that's a famous line,
obviously Hans Solo says it,
and then of course, Indiana Jones says it.
I think it's basically Harrison Ford saying many times.
But it's that, it's such a simple line, but it's that feeling.
You've got a bad feeling about it.
And a computer doesn't have a bad feeling about something, you know, and it never will.
It's like when you ring up to get a taxi or something, and, you know, you have to stand there at a party because you're talking to a machine going, one.
Yeah.
Yes.
Ponson B.
And then sometimes the machine goes, sorry, I didn't quite catch that.
No, you're a machine.
You either caught it or you didn't.
You didn't not quite catch it
You're not a person
Stop trying to convince me
You either got it
Or you didn't
Sorry I was just
Sorry I didn't quite catch that
Is that you, race?
You know, it's not, no, it's no, you don't know that
You're going to say that
Is that you, yeah
I've got a theory on Bigfoot, raised
Oh great, go ahead
Well, I think there was really quite a successful mind-blowing session that went from, you know, from news media controlling the world to artificial intelligence.
It covered quite a gamut there.
The final clamp on it would be for me is to, for humans, just as a message, you know, just, you know, don't rely too much on your electronics.
Don't give up.
Don't give up learning.
Don't give up on your brain because it will always be more powerful than anything that we can.
we can create because it's it's our brain that created the thing that we've created that you're
staring at in the first place so um maybe beyond the brain the brain is simply the the antenna
for the invisible realms but they don't want you to believe in visible realms because they
promote empirical science which is why richard dorkins loves to run around the world telling everybody
that god doesn't exist but he doesn't know how does he know is he chatted now i'm not saying
God exists like an old bloat with a beard on a chariot that fires lightning,
but although that would be very cool, I wouldn't really.
But it's very unlikely.
It would be very cool.
Here he comes again.
Definitely something exists.
See, that's what myths are for.
They're the bridge for the mind to actually have some kind of dialect with the unknowable.
Yes, exactly.
They are.
Because you can't speak beyond the consciousness
because you're entering the realm of the unspeakable and the unnameless,
which is God.
That's just a word for the unnamedable.
And then you have myth, and then empirical science goes, myth, know, these crazy, primitive
idiots made all this stuff up because they were a bit dumb.
Well, I don't believe that.
See, I do have to say, guys, you've been poo-pooing artificial intelligence a lot there
and computers and what they do.
But imagine how do we, as mere humans, combat at a dinner table conversation when we've got
an android across the table from us, and you're trying to chat up this check here.
and the android's over there
and he's got all of Wikipedia in him
and a connection to the internet
and you start talking about a topic
and you go, oh yeah, I once read this book
and I think it was about 37% of something
trying to impress a girl
and then all of a sudden the Android points up
and he goes, well actually what it is
is 27.34%.
And what actually happened was the, you know,
and all of a sudden has this wealth of knowledge
and then the asteroids would get all the girls.
That's the bigger problem.
And they wouldn't be affected
through drinking.
No, no.
They will always have that over us.
And as I reach for my next big...
There's your Android friend.
Just constantly hard as a circuit board.
Oh, what have you got there?
Oh, great.
Another eyewitness account.
Account.
Account.
Account.
So as eyewitness account goes,
we would like to bring to you actual real stories of people who have come out the back end,
I've seen something that they cannot explain, generally always within the animal realm.
Because it's Anzac Day special, and because we're an Australian guest,
we'd like to play you some eyewitness accounts from one of our favorite Australian cryptids, the Yaui.
Which essentially is the Australian Bigfoot. It's a hairy hominid,
on two legs and we've got some great recordings. Let's play one buttons.
We'll play one here. Now these are recorded by a cryptozoologist in Australia, very well-known,
so well-known, I can't remember his name. But he conducted these interviews after people had
said that they had seen something. Most of these people, he had to very much obviously screw down
to try and get the story out of them because they didn't want to talk about it. But we've got a few
of them here. We're going to play just one of them now. A couple of people who were driving along
in Australia, Melbourne, and saw something run across the road and they went back to check it out.
Listen to this. For an instant, I thought there was a bear caught in the fence. Just for an instant,
I thought, what is this? And I thought it was a bear. It sounded like a bear caught in the fence.
What? It was still making a noise at the time that you saw.
saw it. It was not a calling. It was a distressed noise. It was, it was a distress noise.
And it was, I mean, as you came close upon it and saw this figure, it was still making the
noise. This was going load, it was going, but very stressed, screeching. When the headlights
of the four wheeler first hit this thing, I thought it was a bear. It was facing the fence,
and it was in between two porpoas, and I saw it back, and it was bent. I was, I was bent. I was,
over and I saw its back and I thought it was a bear because it had quite shaggy hair and it
was a light brownie reddy brownie colour it was pushing the fence down down into the ground like
crushing the fence down for an instant I thought it was a bear until it stood up and it wasn't a bear
well when you say when you said when you said stood up what was it doing first off it was it was crushing the fence down yeah and making this
distress noise like it was caught in the fence but it didn't appear to be caught in the fence
it was just screaming about something I don't know what what it was screaming about but
it was crushing the fence down it didn't look it didn't look my way but when it stood
up I screamed I screamed and I swung so hard I nearly flipped it over and I screamed as I
turned sharp when it stood up it started to run
was a reddish brown hair. It looked to me about seven foot.
The arms were very long, they were longer than they would have went down to its knees.
Okay.
Nums were long, they were long arm. There was no neck and it had no shoulders as in the shoulders
we had, the shoulders were just like sloped. I was screaming, like hysterical.
And when I got back, the dogs were still, they were howling and crying and and they weren't locked in though. This is the thing. They could have
come up with me but they didn't.
This night they were in their pens
screaming and carrying on like idiots
and they're quite vicious dogs.
There's one there that's an attack train dog
it's quite a very good guard dog, quite vicious.
I was really scared
so I drove right to the
to lock the door shut all the windows
we've got a big lock on the bedroom.
That was a good report.
It's just hard.
I believe that.
Steve Hughes,
because he is purportedly, supposedly Australian,
it's hard to take somebody seriously when they're talking an Australian accent, though.
Oh, come on.
To a degree, to a degree, would you not admit that, listening to her, listening to it.
I'm not offended or patriotic by any stretch of the imagination.
It certainly can.
You've never seen, imagine trying to have an Australian science fiction film.
You know, you're on the spaceship.
Yeah.
That would be amazing.
Yeah, you know, I reckon we should totally get the spaceship totally going, eh?
Oh, the force fields, the force fields are down, mate.
You turn the force field on.
Oh, fuck it, the force fields are down.
Oh, shit.
And what's out, there's aliens coming out for after us now.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, my bolt!
Streuth, a freaking alien shooting a fucking laser at me.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
What a poof-ta.
Ah, get out of it.
Fucking leave it.
I'll ring the cops.
Cops, how's it guard?
Yeah, good on, mate.
I've got a couple of aliens here on the ship.
Oh, yeah, they're driving me barmy, mate.
Oh, did they come in on a boat?
Are they, they bloody...
Just shoot him, mate.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just shoot him.
We'll get him up to Christmas Island, sort of out.
New segment, no, not new segment.
Old segment, but no stings.
so we have to rock this one live.
Are you ready?
Ready for the sting?
It is time for...
Roboot News.
It's the best life's thing ever.
All right.
Russian billionaire wants to create cyborgs.
Ah, yes.
Russian cyborgs is exactly what we need.
Dmitri Itzkov.
All right.
Dmitri, it's gov.
It's Gov.
It's Gov. It's Gov.
Yeah.
Yeah, so he's serious about wanting to make humans immortal
by merging them with machines.
Yes.
This Russian billionaire, Steve.
His name is...
I don't want to be immortal for.
How much tax would you pay then?
I told you he was Australian.
See, he's a realist.
No, tax will be gone.
I'm assuming at this stage.
But he wants, you know, to...
merge people with machines and he's pushing the project forward.
He's been doing it since 2011
when he founded the
2045 initiative
which he's called it.
Ostensibly the deadline for substance independent
minds to receive artificial bodies
what some scientists refer to as singularity.
Have you heard of that?
Yes.
Now that's when your wife leaves here for being a nod.
Life.
Yeah.
What's happening with you?
Oh, singularity.
Oh, really?
You're a cyborg.
You're a cyborg?
I've got robotic arms.
I'm still with the wife.
I've got robotic arms.
What's happening?
Singularity.
What are you coming out Friday?
Totally.
Can I bring my arms?
Are you still with that woman?
Okay.
The ultimate goal is to be able to transfer a person's mind or consciousness
from a living brain into a machine.
With that person's personality.
and memories intact.
Okay, so what happens...
See, that means he's creating immortality,
but if consciousness is not embodied in the physical dimension,
as per se, renders it visible,
then it's eternal anyway.
So you're already living eternally,
and the physical body is just a temporal manifestation
within one certain dimension.
So it's like, it's exactly...
That's exactly what I was going to say,
but I was going to say,
pf, ming, ding, me, my shrewish, please.
But I mean the same thing.
I mean, it feels to me like a snail,
who's, you know, if the snail is the soul or the mind, you know, leaving its shell behind and the shell is our body.
And whether you change the snail's shell into a fancy mechanical shell, you know, the snail's still going to leave it.
Yeah, exactly.
I don't know whether that makes any sense.
That was awesome.
That was awesome.
These people who are thinking they want to create living forever purely based in a physical dimension, I find them.
stupid.
Like atheists.
You're actually Satanists, but you're too dumb to work it out.
Right, right.
Well, there's another spectrum there.
It's an ambitious plan.
He's mapped out several key steps to get there, this Russian guy.
The first goal called Avatar A involves a person controlling a robotic human replica
via a brain machine interface or BMI, which is very similar to IBM.
That's BMI.
Is that a coincidence?
Ah, look at that.
It's a technology apparently that already exists today.
Next step is Avatar B, due in 2025,
which would involve transplanting a human brain
into an artificial body at the end of one's life.
Now, that sounds eerily similar to what one of Doctor Who's most notorious monsters,
the cybermen, due to their victims.
So this is obviously a dude who's watched a lot of Doctor Who,
granting them immortality,
but at the cost of losing all emotion and individuality.
Which is essentially what the side...
Both politicians.
Do.
Ah, ha, ha, ha.
Or politicians.
So who's to say that politicians aren't already there with their singularity?
Don't worry too much about that, though,
since Itzkov will take care of it by the time Avatar C rolls around in 2035,
which would also involve a human machine brain transplant,
only this time with all.
personality intact. To achieve this step, it will be necessary to create a computer model of human
consciousness. Finally, by 2045, Itzkov hopes the initiative will have learned enough about the
human mind to free it completely from physical form. From the internet like hive mind, individual
personalities could manifest themselves as holograms when they need to interact with their
environment. Holy. The hive mind. Wow. That's one of the goals of the ruling elite for
sure. That's actually taken from the Sydney Morning Herald.
So whether that helps it all or answers
any questions you may have. Well, it answers a couple for me.
In my anti-Australian rant
continuation. Okay, well that's great robot news, but how's this for
robot news? Scientists, US researchers
scientists on Wednesday
have reported that they have made a display
which gives three-dimensional images
that can be viewed without special glasses
and is 3D
very much like Princess Leia
coming out of RTD2
that can come out of watches and cell phones.
Oh wow, who's doing this?
When's this happening?
Okay, does it happen now?
Archieger came out of Princess Leia.
That was some of the cut scenes.
Yes, yes, yes.
US researchers.
What is that?
A boy or a girl?
It's hard to say.
Come this way.
It's more of a droid type.
It's very capable.
It can save the universe many times.
Steve Hughes has gone to get some mineral water.
Give him a hand, folks.
That's it for our guest, Steve Hughes.
You can see him in the comedy festival.
It kicks off the end of this week.
He's in the gala this weekend.
and then he's got, I guess, festival shows in Auckland and in Wellington.
And top load.
I'd say he's probably in the top five greatest comics in the world working today.
So go and check him out.
And intelligent too, apparently.
Despite buttons, theories.
My theories are sound.
So anyway, this display, they say,
unlike a lot of the normal technology that's out there
that's trying to do this kind of holographic stuff
they're based on things called a horizontal parallax
which means you only see 3D when you move your head left or right
and actually what they're talking about is technology
that gives full 3D
full parallax view
and so what that means
if you were to display a 3D image
of the planet Earth with the North Pole facing out from the screen
by turning your head around the display
and walking around the display
you'd actually be able to see
and have a full view of every country on the globe.
Wow, that's what I'm waiting for.
I know, same.
I know.
Imagine the movies will be able to make
when you can watch it from multiple different angles.
You'll be able to make one movie
and be able to watch it multiple times
from different angles.
Oh, wow, and see things you never saw the first time.
Exactly.
It sounds very similar to sort of,
you're in a sort of virtual reality zone.
Yeah.
You're almost like you're amongst it.
That's right.
But it sounds like definitely the next step from 3D.
Remember when I saw the avatar the first time,
and it really felt like I was in that forest with the Navi.
And, you know, it's very, it felt very, very, you know, one of those,
you'd hit, you'd hit a moment where you're going, oh, wow, okay, okay,
we've moved to the next step of evolution here.
And it's exciting.
It is.
And I think in our lifetime, you know, that's,
This is just, that's just the beginning.
And it's funny how it's all sort of,
it's starting to manifest in popular culture and,
in entertainment, essentially,
is where it's all going to come from.
Well, remember, it's happened before.
Remember when you used to have a Commodore 64,
and you'd go around to your rich friend's house,
and he'd have an Omega 500.
Oh, yeah.
And you'd go, wow, the graphics are so much better, the color.
You can load off a floppy disc instead of a cassette.
And you're like, this is the future.
And this is the future again.
Yeah.
The future keeps coming back, doesn't it?
It does.
It does.
And it's you in the face.
Anyway, you'll like this.
This paragraph of the article that I'm ripping off here,
it says, unlike a lot of technology out there that only does so-called horizontal parallax from some U.C3.
This gives you full 3D parallax, says David Fetell, who led a team at Hewlett-Packard Laboratories in Palo Alto, California.
Wow.
And so Hewlett-Packard had developed.
Imagine, like, everybody would be like, what's here you've got?
Yeah.
Hewlett Packard.
Yeah.
Fully holographic.
HB.
I'd buy one of them.
I'd buy one of them.
You know, but soon as someone, they're all in it at the same time, aren't they?
You can't tell me that all of those big companies aren't parallel ripping each other off.
They've all got spies.
As soon as someone jumps out with something, you know, a week later, someone else has got the same thing or has tries to undercut it.
It doesn't worry me because competition's good, and as long as the technology is made and we get it.
sure we? Actually, well that's actually
probably about the show
for the evening, isn't it? We're the
next DJ's here
ready to take you through to
the wee hours
10 o'clock.
The wee hours
of the early evening.
It's when buttons will certainly be asleep
by the, I can tell you that much.
I'll be on the couch
watching the following or something
and drifting off with
a glass of red wine.
But
Thank you all for listening to episode three of the Crypted Factor.
It was a disjointed one.
It was a rough diamond.
There was some great stuff, as always.
David Faria wasn't here, and, you know, we missed an element.
Well, we had special guest Steve Hughes, who brought some fantastic thoughts and theories in our new segment.
We're all a bunch of theories.
And, yeah, it's very enjoyable.
The greatest track.
known to mankind, the theme
song to the Crypted Factor.
Thank you very much. We'll see you next week.
Bye, everyone. Bye.
Happy Anzac Day.
Factore with Rhys Darby
and David Farrier.
