Update: Bigfoot Reality TV Show?

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on February 16th, 2007

I was contacted by a reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram several days ago in regards to an article he was writing regarding the Biscardi “Bigfoot Expedition” planned for next month in Paris, TX.

I detailed the incident when I shared the press release for the event here on Cryptomundo last week at Bigfoot Reality TV Show?

Here is the article as it appeared in today’s issue of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram

TV show planned on hunt for Texas Bigfoot
By BILL HANNA
STAR-TELEGRAM STAFF WRITER

2005 Texas Bigfoot Conference

STAR-TELEGRAM ARCHIVES/TOM PENNINGTON
A Bigfoot figure towers over the fifth annual Texas Bigfoot Conference in October 2005 in Jefferson. The conference is not affiliated with the planned TV hunt.

It was probably only a matter of time before someone came up with a Bigfoot reality-TV show.

And that time has apparently come.

Next month in the woods outside Paris, a pilot will be filmed for the proposed series Capturing Bigfoot.

“You’ve got a hot spot out there in your back yard, a hot spot like no other,” Bigfoot explorer Tom Biscardi, 58, said by telephone from Northern California.

Biscardi, who retired from the insurance industry to pursue Bigfoot full time, has made the creature his life’s work. On his Web site he sells Bigfoot DVDs, Bigfoot mugs, Bigfoot T-shirts and pewter Bigfoot belt buckles. He also hosts a weekly Internet radio show about all things Sasquatch.

He believes a Bigfoot family is living in old World War II Army bunkers buried on an abandoned portion of Camp Maxey north of Paris, near the Oklahoma border.

“I think it’s a family pod,” Biscardi said. “What we found is baby footprints next to a mother. This is the first time that has ever happened.”

Not only is Biscardi participating in the TV pilot, but he is also inviting enthusiasts to go along.

For $375, anyone interested in finding “America’s King Kong” can join him on a 24-hour expedition as part of the team trying to capture the elusive beast.

The news that a Bigfoot family is roaming the woods north of town was a surprise to Lamar County Judge Chuck Superville.

Nonetheless, the judge predicted that most residents in the predominantly rural county of 49,644 would welcome the attention, noting that Paris was abuzz recently over an episode of the CW Network’s One Tree Hill being filmed in the area.

“It puts us on the map, which is good,” Superville said. “I think Northeast Texas is a good place to live. It’s a garden paradise.”

Biscardi describes the 16,000-acre area around Camp Maxey — part of which is still used as a Texas National Guard training center — in more dramatic terms.

“You’ve got to look at this place,” Biscardi said. “It’s prehistoric. It looks like something straight out of Jurassic Park.”

The producers will try to sell the show to cable television outlets. If it isn’t picked up, the expedition could be turned into a DVD, said Robert Barrows, a spokesman for the project.

But Biscardi is already drawing the ire of other Bigfoot enthusiasts.

Craig Woolheater, chairman of the Texas Bigfoot Research Conservancy, which has annual conferences in Jefferson, does not condone Biscardi’s methods, which he says “are produced for the sake of media coverage or for commercial purposes.”

“This expedition is not a scientific expedition in my opinion; from what I understand it is being filmed for a reality-TV show entitled Capturing Bigfoot,” Woolheater wrote in an e-mail. “As such, the TBRC is in no way, shape or form, affiliated with the very controversial Tom Biscardi.”

Biscardi says he is often the only person willing to go out to people who have been traumatized by Bigfoot encounters. And he has never denied that he lives off his Bigfoot earnings.

But if by some chance Biscardi is successful, what will he do with Bigfoot?

“We’ve got two compounds at undisclosed locations where we’ll conduct studies for 90 days, then release it back where we found it, I promise,” Biscardi said.Bill Hanna

Below is the email in its entirety as I sent it to Bill Hanna

Mr. Hanna,

The Texas Bigfoot Research Conservancy (formerly the Texas Bigfoot Research Center) or TBRC, is a legitimate non-profit organization of approximately 60 investigators and biologists dedicated to true research, and not events that are produced for the sake of media coverage or for commercial purposes. This expedition is not a scientific expedition in my opinion, from what I understand it is being filmed for a reality TV show entitled “Capturing Bigfoot.” As such, the TBRC is in no way, shape or form, affiliated with the very controversial Tom Biscardi.

The TBRC’s field studies and research projects are not open to public participation and are not announced publicly. The TBRC is involved in ongoing, low-profile research projects in the four-state region of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana that are for purposes of executing the group’s mission statement:

The mission of the Texas Bigfoot Research Conservancy is to investigate and conduct research regarding the purported existence of the unlisted primate species known as the sasquatch or bigfoot; and to facilitate scientific, official and governmental recognition, conservation and protection of the species and its habitat; and help further factual education and understanding to the public regarding the species mainly in, but not necessarily limited to, the states of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana.

Sincerely, Craig Woolheater
Chairman
Texas Bigfoot Research Conservancy

I especially love this quote from the article:

Biscardi says he is often the only person willing to go out to people who have been traumatized by Bigfoot encounters.Bill Hanna

Over the years, I have personally talked to hundreds of people that have claimed to have had a Bigfoot encounter.

Many of them were traumatized by the event. They have broken down in tears recounting their story. They have told me that they have never been able to tell anyone about what they experienced, not family, friends or co-workers.

Some of them did tell the aforementioned people and they were ridiculed, called names or were told that they were lying or crazy.

For some reason, Biscardi believes he has cornered the market on speaking to witnesses.

About Craig Woolheater
Co-founder of Cryptomundo in 2005. I have appeared in or contributed to the following TV programs, documentaries and films: OLN's Mysterious Encounters: "Caddo Critter", Southern Fried Bigfoot, Travel Channel's Weird Travels: "Bigfoot", History Channel's MonsterQuest: "Swamp Stalker", The Wild Man of the Navidad, Destination America's Monsters and Mysteries in America: Texas Terror - Lake Worth Monster, Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot: Return to Boggy Creek and Beast of the Bayou.


11 Responses to “Update: Bigfoot Reality TV Show?”

  1. rifleman responds:

    Good for you Craig, any sane researcher would put as much distance between himself and the premier snake oil salesman of the decade.

    How noble, a catch and release program to boot. That should earn him the adulation of the political correctness swooners. The question remains, how much money can he squeeze out of a captured squatch before he releases it?

    I wonder how the other super ego will react to this announcement?

  2. DWA responds:

    Can I organize a TBRC (not that TBRC; mine’s the Tom Biscardi Recreational Committee) expedition instead?

    Here’s my offer. If you come with me, and we capture a Biscardi on the trip, I have two undisclosed brew pubs where we can go and spend 90 days watching him and sampling choice stouts, porters and ales. At the end we sell the footage and all make a mint.

    Shu.

    YEESH!

  3. silvereagle responds:

    The feds couldn’t keep their specimens at Lawrence Livermore National Labs in the 60’s for 2 weeks. How is Biscardi going to keep one for 90 days? Seduce it? Get it hooked on crystal meth? Get it caught up in the rat race? Biscardi has no idea what or how many that he is dealing with. If he is lucky, all he will lose is a few cameras. If Bigfoot chose to show all his capabilities, even the Sci-Fi channel wouldn’t show it.

  4. Sergio responds:

    Same old Biscardi garbage. I am glad the TBRC was not hesitant to ensure distance between them and Biscardi.

    What I find particularly interesting (according to Mr. Woolheater’s email correspondence to the reporter) is the Texas Bigfoot Research Center has changed its name to the Texas Bigfoot Research Conservancy and is now a non-profit group. I think that is great. I also had no idea that the TBRC had 60 individuals in it. That’s quite an organization.

    Will there be an official announcement soon from the group? Maybe Mr. Woolheater can fill us in here at Cryptomundo?

  5. billkirbywofb responds:

    DWA, I like your plan to capture a Biscardi. Study it in its natural environment. Take your video footage. But please, please do not release it !!

  6. Loren Coleman responds:

    Yes, unfortunately, this media treatment reflects a shameful syndrome that is afoot in the land.

    TB gets the ear of the reporter. Then the newsperson shows no level of critical reportage by letting a quote be published conveying that TB is “the only person to go out” to talk to people who have been “traumatized by Bigfoot.”

    It reflects sloppy reporting. Such articles push along the thinking that only those getting publicity and charging for “expeditions” are the ones doing the fieldwork.

    Incredible, but people believe it.

  7. shovethenos responds:

    silvereagle-

    The feds couldn’t keep their specimens at Lawrence Livermore National Labs in the 60’s for 2 weeks.

    Could you elaborate what you mean by this?

  8. Jeremy_Wells responds:

    ‘For $375, anyone interested in finding “America’s King Kong” can join him on a 24-hour expedition as part of the team trying to capture the elusive beast.’

    I think that says enough.

  9. Buzzardeater responds:

    Silvereagle, you’ve mentioned this before. Please do elaborate. Perhaps Mr. Woolheater will also expand upon his remarks in the article? How is this low-profile research going?

  10. mystery_man responds:

    Somehow I get the feeling that anyone who is willing to desecrate graves to dig up bones is probably not going to catch and release no matter what he is saying now. I really kind of hope he doesn’t find it. That is if they even really plan on that happening. This seems to be more about marketing and merchandising a mystery more than actually trying to solve it.

  11. Darkstream responds:

    “We’ve got two compounds at undisclosed locations where we’ll conduct studies for 90 days, then release it back where we found it, I promise,” Biscardi said.

    This quote made me laugh out loud.

    I bowed out of Bigfoot “fandom” somewhere around 1996-1997 when the controversial Erik Beckjord was the reigning Bigfoot presshound. Moneymaker had just begun his website. A show called “Paranormal Investigations” (I think) aired some yeti footage donated by “anonymous” hikers from the Himalayas. Dr. Krantz put me in contact with a guy in Utah who turned out to believe that Bigfoot came from UFOs and the only major forum on Bigfoot was Henry’s mailing list which was deteriorating with in-fighting. I said to myself, “I have better things to do with my time” and walked away from Bigfoot.

    So I don’t know Biscardi. When I started reading this blog a few months ago I couldn’t help but notice the open disregard for this individual but kept an open mind to learn for myself what he was all about. I have now decided that this guy’s a hoot. A bona fide carny. Maybe even the ringmaster in his own media circus. (I state that with the full rights provided me by the First Amendment) He is far more entertaining to me than Beckjord ever was.

    Thanks for the laugh, gents. I needed one today.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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