Cryptid: The Swamp Beast: Southern Howl

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on March 3rd, 2014

Cryptid.The.Swamp.Beast

Cryptid: The Swamp Beast: Southern Howl, premieres tonight, March 3, at 10/9c.

Also airs:

March 04, 2014 – 02:01-03:00AM ET
March 09, 2014 – 11:02-12:01AM ET
March 10, 2014 – 03:03-04:02AM ET
March 10, 2014 – 06:00-06:59PM ET
March 15, 2014 – 01:00-01:59PM ET

A remote Southern community contends with more turmoil after countless animal mutilations. With the attacks coming closer to town, an eerie incident in a sugar mill leaves Tammany fending for her life.

Throughout HISTORY, man has created monsters to explain our greatest fears and attempt to define the unknown.

One of America’s oldest and bone-chilling legends comes to life on February 24th. Whether skeptic or believer, there’s no hiding from #Cryptid.

In every region of America, there are legends of strange, unidentified creatures that stretch back for centuries. In the Northwest, many credible people swear to have sighted Bigfoot. Near Lake Champlain, locals have sworn up and down to seeing a strange, prehistoric-like creature in the water. And down south in the swamplands, it’s no different–some of the most deep-rooted and fearsome monster stories have endured. In the new original series Cryptid: The Swamp Beast, one of America’s oldest mysteries and bone-chilling legends comes to life through dramatizations, eyewitness accounts, real news reports and expert interviews.

In a remote southern town, the past few years have brought a dramatic uptick in strange occurrences, but now, whatever has been lurking in the swamps is intruding into human territory. There have been a rash of cattle mutilations and pets being snatched away from backyards. With the attacks not matching up forensically with any known predators, suspicions have spread. Terrified residents claim to have seen signs of voodoo and are conjuring up old Cajun legends like the “Rougarou,” a mythical shape-shifter, as a possible culprit. Others swear they’ve seen a huge, bipedal creature locally known as a “skunk ape” lurking about at night.

The series follows a small animal-control business that responds to various calls and sightings and a deputy sheriff who believes the real culprit is some twisted individual deep in the swamp. As the weeks pass, the sightings intensify and even the most skeptical people in town begin to wonder if its darkest legends, and their worst fears, have in fact come to life.

Cryptid: The Swamp Beast mixes legends with eyewitness accounts and crafts them into an entertaining and scary fictional story that speaks to America’s macabre history of folklore. It features startling real interviews with those who believe the legends, and have seen strange things with their own eyes. Folklore experts, biologists and original news clips play throughout each episode as well to add further real-world context.

#Cryptid

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.


One Response to “Cryptid: The Swamp Beast: Southern Howl”

  1. Doug responds:

    A very entertaining show which is a fictional account that weaves both myth and cryptozoological views into the storyline. The different aspects are presented in interviews with a range of people from Jeff Meldrum and to folklorists. The show seems to favor the rougarou as its culprit, but there have been many twists thus far. I enjoyed it as it was a lot of fun to watch.

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