Hitch
Muse
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2005
- Messages
- 834
belz wrote:
Actually, I wasn't insulting William....I was making FUNof his meaningless rant....that's all.
There's a big difference between the two.
Like the big difference between those two frames?
belz wrote:
Actually, I wasn't insulting William....I was making FUNof his meaningless rant....that's all.
There's a big difference between the two.
belz wrote:
Actually, I wasn't insulting William....I was making FUNof his meaningless rant....that's all.
There's a big difference between the two.
Mine do.My fingers don't change shape when I bend them
Could you please explain how you know that, William?Nobody has ever really seen a Bigfoot, because it doesn't exist.
William Parcher said:Nobody has ever really seen a Bigfoot, because it doesn't exist.
Could you please explain how you know that, William? It's impossible to prove such a claim. How then can it be possible to KNOW it to be true?
I called the arms false because they give a false impression of great length and diameter (thickness). The wearer's arms are inside these, but aren't long enough to have the wearer's hands inside the false hands. The suit is designed to give the impression of very long and bulky arms. It's supposed to look like what a Bigfoot is supposed to look like.
Yeah, and I have to admit it again. It's my workload that's distracting me.
Additionally, NASI does estimate the locations of the joints in the arms and legs - so that is another cause of a misstatement by me.
I still maintain my point about not being able to locate joints when you are looking at a costumed man. That the shoulder is 33% wider doesn't really matter, because a costume can produce that measurement. The suit is meant to look like a big bulky creature, but the guy inside is smaller than the whole thing appears.
Morris may have told Patterson he could use sticks, but Roger didn't use them.
We can't even tell what the hands look like. I never really see anything that looks like fingers. They sometimes look like stumps, sometimes mitten-like, and sometimes like solid semi-circles (cupped). The situation there is so bad that I think people who try to recreate Patty in drawings, statues, etc. really don't know what to do about the hands.
Again, if it's a guy in a costume you can't properly locate the joints. It's been said umpteen times yet you just keep trotting it out. It's also been said that one can't get accuracy when trying to do this from a filmed subject.
That's one of the most goofy things I've seen in my life. Patty looks like a walking man in a Bigfoot costume to all but a few people.
Heironimus normally walks just like Patty. He has her style of striding and her arm swing.
I'm not quite sure what Romney has to do with this.
Bob confessed to wearing the Bigfoot costume that Roger made, and he tells the story of it. When he walks, he's a dead ringer for Patty.
Yeah, several times. The 7'3" - 1,957 pound ape jumps right out at me.
I get the feeling you either haven't seen a good copy or there's something wrong with your eyes.William Parcher wrote:
We can't even tell what the hands look like. I never really see anything that looks like fingers. They sometimes look like stumps, sometimes mitten-like, and sometimes like solid semi-circles (cupped). The situation there is so bad that I think people who try to recreate Patty in drawings, statues, etc. really don't know what to do about the hands.
Nobody has ever really seen a Bigfoot, because it doesn't exist.
I never really see anything that looks like fingers.

Be part of the JREF web community by engaging in intelligent discussions with both skeptics and non-skeptics from around the globe.
Nobody has ever really seen a Bigfoot, because it doesn't exist.
Quote:
I never really see anything that looks like fingers.
......they contribute SO much to the search for the truth. Then why not give it ape-length arms? I don't feel like typing out Krantz' book for you, but he shows human arms would have to be broken in the middle of the humerus to get that kind of width between the joints.
It's the distance between the joints that matters, not the overall width. There's enough movement to indicate where they'd have to be.
No one who did an analysis found any evidence of a suit, but changing the joint estimate by a few inches to account for "football pads" isn't going to change the ratio much. Meldrum's initial estimate was between 80 and 90. Steindorf's was more precise at 88 using inverse kinematics. (I'm not finding any measurements on his work at all - it's strictly off the frames without regard to any height/width estimates).
William Parcher said:Morris may have told Patterson he could use sticks, but Roger didn't use them.
You know that how?
I get the feeling you either haven't seen a good copy or there's soething wrong with your eyes.
And it's been said it's close enough.
Such as the people who have taken the time to really study it rather than dismiss it out of hand?
Criss-cross, hip and knee-rotating motion and ankle twisting too? The figure walks like an Australopith in a time before Lucy's knee was discovered.
It has to do with Korff. There've been "confessions" before. This one's just the only one that got any significant publicity, and that was largely due to Korff. He promoted Romney just as enthusiastically, even though Romney denied it. The reenactment with BH in a suit Morris made for the occasion should have been enough to convince anyone that film does not show BH in a Morris suit. Unfortunately, the animation does not seem to be on Korff's new site. What a loss.
He said Roger shot from horseback, but it was evident when Green and McClarin did their reenactment the steadiest shots were when Roger was squatting (there were no knee prints). Now, how could that be?
BH obviously didn't do his homework.
You know what quote mining is, I suppose.
If the figures are off, it would be interesting to find out why. Why wouldn't the formula work for this species?
The rod method of determining height seemed sound enough. There's also Dahinden's stick (he rather vehemently disagreed with Kranz at a conference). Roger, who was on foot estimated her height at 6, maybe 7 feet (he was short), and Gimlin, who was mounted, thought she was about 6'.
It's important for sceptics to get her within human range so they can cling to the man-in-a-suit idea, but the proportions just don't work, regardless of the height.
Disney Studios pointed Green to the best gorilla costume man in the business, presumably Janos Prohaska, and he said the suit would have have had to be skin tight and no one is built like that.
But BH said he wore his own clothes under the suit.
How does one get muscle definition wearing street clothes under a Chambers, Patterson, Morris, Dynel, horsehide suit?
If you want an example of how an ape costume can provide an effective illusion of long arms,