I appreciate your forthright apology.
It took me a long time to think about the subject of Bigfoot in the way that I do now, and for a long time I thought of William Parcher's take on things as too extreme. But now I think he is dead on, in that it is much more fruitful to look at the subject as a unique combination of myth, quasi-religion, hoax, self-promotion, and wishful thinking.
Skeptics are usually put into a reactive position, in that they usually react to extraordinary claims. In this equation, those who make the extraordinary claims offer up the first serve. In doing so, they frame the topics of debate. If I claim to be running a functioning cold fusion device in my basement, it is the skeptics who REACT to my specific claims.
I remember being involved in a long drawn out debate on Bigfoot Forums about the "Minnesota Iceman". Having been a sideshow performer, it was immediate and obvious to me what the equation really was. Yet Ivan 15-foot-penguin Sanderson and his partner Heuvelmans were able to frame the debate in the popular media. Thus, skeptics were forced to react to claims about things as esoteric as "agouti" hair...
For years, the Bigfoot proponents were able to frame the Patterson film debate about things like "moving muscle masses" "inhuman gaits", "inhumanly long arms", etc, ad infinitum...
No, the fundamental question is simply this: guy-in-a-suit, yes or no? Now we need to figure out who the relevant experts really are to answer this question. And the answer is simple: creature suit guys!
Personally, I find Chorvinsky's investigation into what creature suit guys had to say about the Patterson film to be an underrated gem in the skeptical pantheon:
http://www.strangemag.com/chambers17.html
The fact is, Bigfoot proponents simply lack the relevant background necessary to make the right judgement; guy-in-a-suit, yes or no.
Chorvinsky sums it up well:
"My investigation did not lead to the craftsman of the Patterson suit, but one thing is clear -- none of the foremost makeup special effects experts in Hollywood that I interviewed think that the Patterson Bigfoot is anything but a man in a suit. Bigfoot buffs have perpetuated the myth that special makeup effects artists believed that the Patterson film was hard, if not impossible, to fake. This article should lay to rest any notion that makeup experts were generally impressed by the Patterson film."
There was a time when I was interested enough to investigate various elements of the Patterson film myself. In particular, the "inhuman" "Lower Level Leg Lift" and the "mid-foot pressure ridge". But you see, I was sucked into REACTING to the claims of the Bigfoot proponents. Even David Daegling got sucked into responding to the kinematic and metrological claims about this film. At this point I'm simply not interested in the opinions and musings of the Bigfoot proponents about this film, AS THEY HAVE NO SPECIAL EXPERTISE WITH REGARDS CREATURE COSTUMES.