there's been many, they use the PGF and/or that scream/howl in one way or another, yet Patterson's influence in it all was only minor and he "did very little"? Really?
I think I was hurt by attempting brevity, too. To clarify, I meant minor in the sense of inventing the story. The field of bigfootery was around before him, he just used it as a vehicle to make money, which means it was notable enough for Renee Dahinden to pour money into it and Patterson to see an opportunity. I'll agree that he had a huge influence on it (I never said he didn't, only that the PGF was his notable contribution to the field), and that no one would care about bigfoot today without him, but I still haven't seen anything to indicate he "created" bigfoot. Yes, he published a book and made a film, but from what I've been able to find, his book was mostly plagiarism based on newpaper articles (written by other people including John Green), and the film, at least somewhat based on the Roe encounter and filmed an an area of an earlier expedition he had nothing to do with, would have meant little without a precedent and market for such a creature existing in the first place. I didn't know about the sound file, though; thanks for pointing that out, it's interesting.
I could be totally wrong about this, as I haven't exactly looked very much into the time frame between Wallace and Patterson, or maybe it's about how we're interpreting the evidence, but to me, Patterson can't be credited with inventing bigfoot. He definitely brought its attention to public and made it a pop culture phenomena; he can probably even be blamed for what the field is today, but he didn't start it, or create the lore it relies on, outside of the PGF (which is, admittedly the central piece of the bigfootery). To me, it seems like his contributions are mostly related to pop culture and marketing, which is different than actually creating something. That's just my opinion, though; I don't want to get into an argument because we're defining what "created bigfoot" means differently. I think we both agree the whole thing is made up and Patterson is the main reason people care about it today. I don't want to derail this thread and get away from the point I was trying to make:
The main reason I brought up the articles I did are that it seems to me that there are three main claims bigfooters use to support their field: that the PGF is real, that there are "too many" eyewitness for it be fake, and that there's a long oral tradition for the creature. The PGF has been debunked pretty well and there has been a lot of work done describing how unreliable eyewitnesses are. However, that piece about the oral tradition hasn't been addressed very much, and it probably should.