Will Cryptids Save The Media?

Posted by: Loren Coleman on August 31st, 2010

Technology and Internet columnist Brian Caulfield (below) of Forbes recently asked the question, “Can Animals Save Mainstream Media?”

He noted that the media might want to “Forget crime and celebrities. These websites know what really sells: critters.”

But, indeed, looking a bit deeper, Caulfield revealed it might be the cryptids and odd creatures that do the saving. He wrote:

“The media may be new, but sharing information about animals is an old instinct. Mythologist Joseph Campbell explored the hold animals have on the human spirit in The Way of the Animal Powers, the first book in his planned four-volume work on world mythology.

“Campbell says the human impulse to understand the world began in the Paleolithic era with observations and dreams about animals. Sharing tales of animals is an age-old way to connect.

“And to this day, animals remain a source of mystery and wonder. Those looking for hardcore science on the reproductive habits of egrets can peruse dense, scholarly articles in Nature. The rest of us suck down content from television’s Animal Planet and National Geographic‘s online animal news feed.

“The more adventurous can read tales of animals that seem tantalizingly out of reach on cryptozoologist Loren Coleman’s Cryptomundo, a website specializing in tales of lake monsters, wild men living in the forest and other creatures whose existence remains unverified.

“It’s hard to scoff, considering zoologists are still discovering new species of primates, such as the Callicebus caquetensis titi monkey found earlier this year in Colombia.

“Wilder fare still lurks on Fortean Times, with its tales of mysterious civilizations, weird creatures and aliens. What are aliens, however, if not just the most exotic possible form of animal?”

(Read Caulfield’s entire Forbes article here.)

Of course, the trend of increasing interests in cryptids and cryptozoological topics has been played out in mass media, in the last decade. This has occurred whether it is the electronic version via mainstream television and cable, in reality programming and in journalistic pieces, in the print media, via magazines, newspapers, and books, or on the Internet. The explosion of attention to cryptozoology is way beyond what any of us could have expected in the early days of media awareness to the unknown, hidden animals.

I recall exchanging correspondence with Ivan T. Sanderson in 1965, in which we speculated there were only a handful of people in all of America gathering stories of the “little red men” in the southern swamps, as we two were. To comprehend the thousands of people who daily read about and share information on any one topic in cryptozoology is sometimes mind-boggling.

Yes, news of crimes and celebs does have a certain following, but the role of cryptids, creatures, and cryptozoology on the Internet, and in the media in general, must be acknowledged as a major force in driving passions today.

Any casual media observer surely has realized that during the spring of 2010, as highlighted by mainstream media treatments by Stephen Kurczy of the Christian Science Monitor and Lee Speigel of AOL News, there has been an explosion of cryptozoology-related pieces. For example, the articles have been about an “Oriental Yeti” (a civet), a bald Ontario “monster” (a mink), a Texas “Chupacabra” (a coydog), a couple Loch Ness Monster incidents from the 1930s, and the new discovery of the red panda in Tennessee, thus all centering on cryptic species events.

When even a hoax like the Georgia Bigfoot stupidity of 2008 can move 1.9 million people to click on Cryptomundo to read of the discovered solution of the fakery does, indeed, say something about the times in which we live.

Has the discovery of cryptozoology for marketing purposes been fully realized by the mainstream media?
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This feature and mention by Forbes was most appreciated. Forbes Traveler, it will be recalled in 2009, recognized the International Cryptozoology Museum. It is wonderful to see the Forbes writers, in general, are aware of cryptozoology.

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Loren Coleman About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct). Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015. Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.


4 Responses to “Will Cryptids Save The Media?”

  1. fmurphy1970 responds:

    Talking about using cryptozoology for marketing, just last night, my wife and I were looking through a toy catalogue for a present for my son, who has his birthday next week. Then my wife spotted something and said, “Hey! There’s Bigfoot!” So here was this 14 1/2 inch tall r/c Bigfoot toy by Fisher-Price, so I thought I’ll google that and see what it does. Found this interesting video from the New York Toy Fair where it was demostrated. The guy talks at the end of the video about how they were going to market the toy, by having billboard adds saying “Have you seen Bigfoot?” I haven’t seen any ads like that yet, unless I’ve missed them. Maybe they will start appearing in the lead up to Christmas. I thought it looked fun anyway.

    [CRYPTOMUNDO response: This video was noted on this blog in February 2010, here. Thank you.]

  2. DWA responds:

    “Has the discovery of cryptozoology for marketing purposes been fully realized by the mainstream media?”

    Obviously a rhetorical question. Cryptozoology has not, ever, been touched by the mainstream media. With a ten-foot pole.

    I’m not talking about the multitudinous discoveries of ‘new’ animals similar to those we already know about by mainstream scientists looking for them. That is, technically, crypto. But nobody in the TV biz would know that.

    I’m talking about the search for the yeti; the sasquatch; the orang pendek. OK, Nessie/Chessie/Ogopogo/Champ et al. That kind of cryptid. Everything ever done by the media here has been the-funny-stuff-people-will-do. Yes, even MonsterQuest, really. (Look at the name.)

    There is really no limit to the interest that could be garnered and used to account should the search for unknown animals get treated with respect wherever the evidence appears to merit that. The media could drive this search by coverage the perusal of which could encourage budding scientists to move their interest to crypto. But all we get – when we get anything – is the scaaaaaryyyyyyy-mooooonnnnnnsteeeeerrrrrrrrrr angle, or the dueling idiots: True Believers vs. Bonehead Cynics.

    Crypto, that ain’t.

  3. terry the censor responds:

    > Cryptozoology has not, ever, been touched by the mainstream media. With a ten-foot pole.

    Ever? When I was a kid in the ’70s, there was always In Search Of or a doc about UFOs or the Loch Ness monster on TV. I even saw that crappy Sun Pictures feature-length Bigfoot documentary in a movie theatre! And, of course, the Six-Million Dollar Man fought Bigfoot — that was like the Superbowl for me! I never watched Harry and the Hendersons, but I recall that was on TV more recently.

    So come on! When were you born, 1997?

  4. DWA responds:

    terry the censor:

    Read my post again.

    The things you are bringing up are about as much cryptozoology as…well, name something that isn’t, and you can lump anything you brought up with that.

    In other words: nothing you bring up touches cryptozoology – a science, when it’s treated properly – with a ten-foot pole.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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