4.8 • 9.1K Ratings
🗓️ 28 February 2019
⏱️ 70 minutes
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Feeling a little down and thinking about the Doc.
John Albert Bindernagel (December 22, 1941 – January 17, 2018) was a wildlife biologist who sought evidence for Bigfoot since 1963. He published a book in 1998 entitled North America's Great Ape: the Sasquatch (ISBN 0-9682887-0-7). His second book, The Discovery of the Sasquatch – Reconciling Culture, History, and Science in the Discovery Process, was published in 2010.
Bindernagel grew up in Ontario, attended the University of Guelph, and received a PhD in Biology from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.He moved to British Columbia in 1975largely because the region was a hot spot for Bigfoot sightings. Over the years, he collected casts of tracks that he believed belonged to Bigfoot. He also claimed to have heard the creature near Comox Lake in 1992, comparing its whooping sound to that of a chimpanzee. Bindernagel believed that the Bigfoot phenomena should receive more attention from serious scientists, but remarked, "The evidence doesn't get scrutinized objectively. We can't bring the evidence to our colleagues because it's perceived as taboo."
Bindernagel was a true pioneer in the field of cryptozoology and was a regular on the classic History Channel show MonsterQuest. Bindernagel and Dr. Jeff Meldrum often appeared together on the show and had a real-life friendship. Together they formed the bedrock of the Bigfoot Research Community. Bindernagel was a familiar face on the History Channel appearing on a number of their specials.
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0:00.0 | You know, I don't think people really knew how sick John actually was and all of us |
0:22.6 | were close to him knew how sick he actually was but he never complained about it. He would never, |
0:28.6 | you know, he was always positive, he was always, I remember it was probably a week or two ago, |
0:38.4 | he was trying to say goodbye to me on the phone and I mean like goodbye and I always loved |
0:44.5 | John. He used to always say bye for now and I asked him one time, what do you mean bye for now? |
0:49.5 | Why do you always say that? And he said it's never goodbye Wes and two weeks ago he was trying to |
0:54.8 | say goodbye to me and you know I just wouldn't hear it. He was loved. Sorry man, breaking up, he was loved |
1:08.8 | and he'll be missed, that's for sure. |
1:38.8 | Take me home, I don't think I'm in a day or two. |
1:57.2 | So I need less to say I'm on set ends but that's me I'm stumbling away. |
2:14.4 | Slowly learning that life is okay and say after me it's no better to be safe than sorry and |
2:26.0 | take on me take me home I'll be gone in a day or two |
2:56.1 | out |
3:08.0 | And all things that you say is it liable just to play my worries away. |
3:29.8 | After all the things I've got to remember you shine away. |
3:36.8 | I'll be coming for you anyway. |
3:40.8 | Take on me. |
3:48.8 | Take me on. |
3:55.8 | I'll be gone in a day of truth. |
4:10.8 | I'll be gone in a day of truth. |
4:28.8 | And for the audience too, if they go to YouTube and type in John Bendernaggle, you'll find his YouTube channel. |
4:35.8 | I'll put a link to the website. |
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