The Shrike
Philosopher
Plus, wouldn't "bending over" at the end support Bob H's claim that he stepped down into a hole or something?
You wrote, in "26 reasons alphabet soup with Roger Knights,” item B, on BFF:
Before we get into this, would you please answer my repeated requests for the names of the six witnesses. Surely you asked the three you interviewed who else was there.
I assume you’re counting Bob Heironimus as one witness you interviewed, Howard Heironimus as another, and Gary Record as a third. Am I right? Even if the latter two weren’t always present at the trunk, Bob should have been, and so he should have known all the names.
Of the missing three, one probable witness, Bill Heironimus, is dead. That leaves two living witnesses. Heironimus claims Hammermeister was there. That leaves one. Was it Russ Bohannon? I have a recollection of you hinting somewhere that it was. Please confirm, and tell me if Bob Heironimus (or someone else) told you it was he.
PS: Actually, there's a second unnamed witness, whose name is needed, because BH said that "six people saw the suit," meaning six besides himself.
Thanks for that lead—it’s very relevant. But I note, having just visited it, that that thread is 57 pages long, and pretty meaty! I won’t be able to respond today (Monday), as I’d promised. I’ll need another week.
PS: I'm up to page 2 and so far I think you're right about RP's hoaxing Merritt, and about his motives.
You don’t know that for a fact; you only know what Gary Record told you—and he might have had a motive to change his story from a true one to a false one. I.e., not to stab Bob in the back, as he might have seen it, or not to get in Bob’s bad graces.
Did you ask him if he’d been interviewed by me?
Did you ask him what he’d said to me?
Did you ask him if I’d misrepresented what he’d said?
I’d like to know more details of that sort.
Plus, wouldn't "bending over" at the end support Bob H's claim that he stepped down into a hole or something?
If I've been following along correctly, I think Roger has reported that Bob H. does not remember bending over in the suit that day. Ergo, Bob H. could not be in the suit. Because here's a blurry picture where you can kind of see Patty bending over maybe!
Human beings, of course, remember such tiny details during events that occurred over 40 years ago. The mind is an incorruptible repository of precise memories capable of being recalled exactly decades later. It is known.
In the pics Roger has kindly provided, I can sort of see what he means. Patty appears to be slanting to the right compared to the previous frame, where "she" is fully upright. But that may be a consequence of the camera streaking left and thus distorting the image.
I barely even see a Patty in those pictures, let alone a bending version.
I love that this is supposed to be some startling evidence for the argument that Patty isn't merely a fella in a costume.
Again, it's just another example of Roger's bass-ackward thinking: "Bigfoot may not be real, although it could be a Tulpa, but Patty is real, see, it even bends in this blurry, half-arsed picture."
Here's the article (32 pages) I promised Kit in which I argue that Heironimus was a Yakima-area Bigfoot hoaxer before the PGF. (I've beat the deadline by 7 minutes.)
http://www.pdf-archive.com/2016/08/09/heironimus-apesuit-before-10-67/
Kitakaze—Then read it more slowly and/or carefully until you come to the place where the only incident he [Warehime] can attribute any manner of knowledge about is the Idle Hour showing of the suit in Opal's Buick trunk.
First, in America, though maybe not in Canada, an editorial interjection like the “PGF” above is conventionally surrounded by square brackets. If parentheses are used, Americans assume the interjection was part of the original quotation. Tsk, tsk. Second, Kitakaze did not restore context; he obliterated it. The context of “the monkey suit” was the 1966 local-area sighting reports.Kitakaze—Merle Warehime quote-mining hack context restoration (Merle Warehime interviewed by Greg Long in the summer of 2000)...
"Bob Heironimus was the guy who wore the (PGF) monkey suit. It was always a joke. So when it started getting blown out as it did, it was funny. Nobody said anything about it because we didn't know if it would get Bob into trouble or not."
Kitakaze—No, you're textbook quote-mining. . . . your deceptive quote-mining makes it appear Warehime had firsthand knowledge of hoaxing with a suit. This is a very shifty contextomy...
Roger Knights said::
Les Johnson, Patterson’s brother, a successful rancher] told me that he and Roger went to the Bluff Creek area after the filming on an expedition sponsored by Ford Motor Company and J.B. Hunt (now owner of J.B. Hunt Transport Inc.). Les provided ten horses for the expedition. He recalled that people in Humboldt County treated Roger like a hero. The expedition failed to find a bigfoot, but did find tracks.
—Chris Murphy, Bigfoot Film Journal, p. 52
Resume said:This is a claim, and a weak one at that.
Vortigern99 said:The linked article is demonstrably inaccurate on several key points. Here's one:
Barry Keith said:[Baker's] hairy ape was as anatomically correct as possible, with fake ape extendo arms that stretched his human arms to ape-like proportions.
Vortigern99 said:The first part of this sentence is not correct; the '76 Kong was designed to be bipedal, a human-like ape who walks on two legs. This decision changes the entire anatomy of the animal, including and especially the belly which in Baker's creation is not the bulky rotund bowl of a true gorilla, and of course the leg length. The suit is absolutely and intentionally not "as anatomically correct as possible".
The second half of the sentence is only correct part of the time, in shots where Kong doesn't need to flex his fingers. The writer of the linked article concedes this later in the article, but retains the inaccurate statement quoted above.
Revised sentence by Barry Keith said:[Baker's] hairy ape had fake ape extendo arms that stretched his human arms to ape-like proportions, except in fight scenes where Kong needed working hands. But Patty has ape-like long arms and working hands, all in one “suit, which Hollywood couldn’t match then.
Vortigern99 said:This is not a diligent researcher or writer, . . .
Vortigern99 said:. . . and the majority of his claims can be dismissed as biased and baseless.
The Shrike said:Ha ha, I like way modifying and fixing saddles are nothing like making saddles. Classic!
GT/CS said:Plus, how can you tell Patty is slouched over 20 degrees when we're viewing her from the back? Please show graphically.
Here’s the scanned-in image; I used my swing-arm protractor to measure the lean:Roger Knights said:I measured the angle on Figure B in Krantz’s Bigfoot / Sasquatch Evidence, page 113. The forward lean of the torso, measured along the back, is 20 degrees and the forward lean of the back of the neck is 35 degrees.
Patterson told BH to walk like an ape so he slouched. Is that what you refer to as bending?
Plus, wouldn't "bending over" at the end support Bob H's claim that he stepped down into a hole or something?