WEBVTT

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[SPEAKER_01]: I got stuff for you.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Holy moly.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I didn't get some snakes and releasing around my house.

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[SPEAKER_01]: But I love eat people.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I love eat kids.

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[SPEAKER_06]: These guys are the scientists of the supernatural.

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[SPEAKER_06]: Lecturers leaving lessons for inquiring laymen.

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[SPEAKER_06]: They are applying the scientific myth that do a world that baffle signs.

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[SPEAKER_06]: They are the cryptids of the core.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Every day, the European Earth.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I know, right?

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[SPEAKER_04]: I'm more convinced you're the clients.

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[SPEAKER_06]: No.

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[SPEAKER_06]: And it just stood up.

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[SPEAKER_06]: I mean, it just kept coming on and going.

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[SPEAKER_01]: And she goes, what the...

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[SPEAKER_01]: These are idiots.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I was laughing reading this, because I already knew how you would feel.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Idiot!

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[SPEAKER_04]: What is this story?

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[SPEAKER_04]: It fits your balloon.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Well, this isn't a UFO.

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[SPEAKER_04]: But he also has big black wings and red eyes.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Um, Batman.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, mach man.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, yeah, mach man.

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[SPEAKER_00]: Well, everyone, I think we know exactly what it is.

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[SPEAKER_00]: So, say it all with me.

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[SPEAKER_00]: It was a sand bill crane.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Would you try it?

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[SPEAKER_04]: No.

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[SPEAKER_04]: You wouldn't need it?

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[SPEAKER_04]: No.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Why?

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[SPEAKER_04]: Because they're probably toxic.

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[SPEAKER_04]: There'd be a lot of poop in my face.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I've seen a six foot alligator going to swing into the air slam into a tree.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Hello, hello and welcome back to grips with going back guys.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I'm the great and powerful mystery and I'm Jay clone.

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[SPEAKER_01]: 67.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I'm the scap, man, scooty, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no

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[SPEAKER_01]: That the guy with the glasses and yeah, like dustcat man.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, he's good.

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[SPEAKER_04]: But he had his severe like stutter that yeah and Peter is education and everything growing up and then he went with it age you've shown you how do you turn a stutter into the scat.

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[SPEAKER_01]: They did that too for that song, it's by the human beings where it's like, uh, uh, it's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,

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[SPEAKER_01]: made it part of the song.

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[SPEAKER_01]: That's right.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, yes, Wednesday.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Welcome back Wednesday listeners.

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[SPEAKER_04]: This is going to be a short one.

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[SPEAKER_01]: That's all right.

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[SPEAKER_01]: That's right.

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[SPEAKER_04]: But it's cool.

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[SPEAKER_04]: It's just there's nothing on it.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I found one article that had a lot more on it.

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[SPEAKER_04]: And I wish I'm 9% sure it was made up.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Like everything on the article.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, got you.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Like that's our job is to decipher the

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[SPEAKER_04]: And it was just a bunch of repeat like to make the article longer.

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[SPEAKER_04]: It was a bunch of repeating things.

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[SPEAKER_01]: So like in high school when you're just trying to reach that word threshold or definitely reach threshold, you make your periods about four sizes, font sizes bigger, you double space after the periods.

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[SPEAKER_04]: And then after they're for a little bit, we could do the hidden words explained.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So at the end of a paragraph, you could put white words on the paper and when we would turn them in because we would my generation was the one right between turning stuff in physically physically or online.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, but before they had detection technology, right?

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[SPEAKER_04]: And you could do that where they just look at the word count at the bottom.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yep.

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[SPEAKER_04]: And it, so they look at the pages.

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[SPEAKER_04]: You couldn't get away with like, paragraph of it.

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[SPEAKER_01]: No.

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[SPEAKER_04]: But you could put, you could put every paragraph.

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[SPEAKER_04]: You could put a whole sentence of white words.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Ah, genius.

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[SPEAKER_01]: They would never see it.

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[SPEAKER_04]: And it would be like it would just bolster the word count.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_01]: And they never caught it.

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[SPEAKER_04]: No, that's all AI stuff.

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[SPEAKER_01]: And then they caught it like what's this one time so when I was nice who we used to have this thing was called turn it in dot com You guys use that so basically and when at home that doesn't know is you would take care of this is a Well, yeah, it's basically for plagiarism online.

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[SPEAKER_01]: So what it would do is it would scan

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[SPEAKER_01]: You would ever paper euro, it would scan it, and then it would pull like whatever was verbatim online any sources, it would match it up, it would match it up, and then it would say which percentage of your paper is plagiarized, basically.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Well, me growing up, we never had the internet.

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[SPEAKER_01]: We never had it growing up.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I had to pull things from encyclopedias, I had it home, and I did all of my report from encyclopedias and stuff like that.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Well, I had to, so I then I had to go to the school in the morning, go to the library, take my paper.

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[SPEAKER_01]: We had a computer at home, so I was able to type it, but I had to save a USB drive, go to the school, go to library, upload my paper through the internet and turn it on, turn it on, turn it on and in.com.

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[SPEAKER_01]: So all that effort, going through all my encyclopedias and stuff, I got my payer back, docked 20 points for plagiarism.

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[SPEAKER_01]: I was like, I don't even have the internet, how are you, how is this?

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[SPEAKER_01]: I was so mad and plagiarize how the encyclopedia didn't work very well.

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[SPEAKER_04]: No, it didn't work.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I didn't have the internet Especially now with the internet everything's on the internet.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, so you can find anyways We're gonna talk about the blue dilly Like dilly dilly D-I-L-L-Y.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, the blue dilly.

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[SPEAKER_01]: What what not from a like a beer commercial Dilly dilly.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I think it was but we won't say what beer because we're not from a oh No, no, no by the way.

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[SPEAKER_04]: No, no, no by the way.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Oh by the way real quick

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[SPEAKER_04]: uh, there are products being promoted.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I should have done this on one day.

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[SPEAKER_04]: There are products being promoted through ads on our show that we do not endorse, endorse, endorse, I went through the settings and they're all still appropriate like set.

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[SPEAKER_04]: from the ones we chose yeah the ones we chose not to have on our show so it's it's like they constantly will update the ads but they didn't it's not even that this time and other podcasts are having trouble with it it's a huge complaint right now so just know that we thank you guys because we've got several emails and messages yes like uh one's like mood dot com which don't go to we don't support them i've turned it we've personally turned down actual money from them yeah they tried to give us money to do specific ads for them and yeah we said no yeah

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[SPEAKER_01]: So and yet they still found their way on to our show.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I think it's I don't know how it's happening But there's a huge problem in the podcasting thing right now.

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[SPEAKER_01]: So keep telling us if you hear him Well keep working on it But we got to stay on top they constantly and we don't know because we can't Check what adds by on our show.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, we can only check the boxes about 500 different boxes of what we I would have been this morning too, but they're constantly changing those boxes and what they mean and then you gotta go back through and

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, it's ridiculous and they don't tell you when they do it so yeah, please just let us know But yeah, keep informing us the blue dilly you ever heard this lake monster.

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[SPEAKER_04]: I don't think so I've heard of a dilly bar.

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[SPEAKER_04]: This is one of the weirdest lake monsters and there's just nothing on it I wish there was more did if I lived in Colorado in Summit County I would have a dilly festival a blue dilly festival a dilly fest.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, the blue dilly fest.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Let's start one

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[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, I don't know what, and it's got the Colorado.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Any listeners out there?

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[SPEAKER_04]: So this is a relatively new cryptid.

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[SPEAKER_04]: And starting 2011, okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: The blue daily, also known as the blue Dylan monster, is a legendary creature said to inhabit the Dylan reservoir in Summit County, Colorado.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: So it's the daily's after Dylan.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, gotcha, okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: often dismissed as just local myth or modern fairy tales, stories of this creature have persisted since the creation of the reservoir in 1962.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So people said that they've seen it since 1962, but in 2011 is when it really kind of blew up.

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[SPEAKER_04]: People saying that they could see it so much underwater and stuff like that.

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[SPEAKER_04]: As gained a quite a large local loyal following,

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[SPEAKER_04]: The lead into the blue dilly began after the completion of the dam.

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[SPEAKER_04]: When locals and visitors began reporting seeing strange, large disturbances in the water.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Swales without wind, sudden current changes, and even sightings of a large, gray, aquatic figure beneath the surface that would circle, especially the wooden circle people, especially among nighttime kayakers in fishermen.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Where it would even bump the bottoms of boats and pick boats that would come to the

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, a grayish blob light with what they say grayish just for now.

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[SPEAKER_01]: It's a grayish aquatic figure.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay aquatic figure

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[SPEAKER_04]: One of the most well-known accounts was from a couple who, while kayaking back to the small island of Frisco Bay, has experienced a powerful, unforeseen force pushing their boat forward through the water.

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[SPEAKER_04]: As if a giant orca had gotten behind it and started, you know, gunning it and pushing their boat and they were flying.

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[SPEAKER_04]: There's pushing them, yeah.

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[SPEAKER_04]: The wife later claimed to have seen a wide, gray creature with a fin that appeared to have a clawed hand beneath the kayak.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Hmm.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: She sketched the figure and her husband became obsessed with uncovering the truth behind the creature.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Eventually documenting his findings in a self-published book, which I'm going to buy this book.

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[SPEAKER_04]: They don't name the book anywhere, but I gotta find it the blue dilly monster book.

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[SPEAKER_04]: We'll try it now in listeners.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Payton has been the one that finds it.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Payton.

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[SPEAKER_01]: You got to job the deal.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So let's talk about the blue dilly looks like.

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[SPEAKER_04]: There's just not like we're already almost through all the information I have.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Well, gray, thin or hand or not thin hand, clawed hand.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, so it's hard to describe.

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[SPEAKER_04]: The claws are on the fin like a terosaur.

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[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So like, you know, a terosaur as even chickens and stuff, have the little fingers and stuff on their wing.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_04]: It's like that with the fin.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So it's not like it has a separate arm in hand.

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[SPEAKER_04]: It has a little hand on its flipper.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Right.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Just making that clear.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Like a, like a platypus.

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[SPEAKER_04]: A little more flipper like a duck.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, like a duck.

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[SPEAKER_04]: No, I don't know.

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[SPEAKER_04]: A duck's foot like an aquatic territory.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: What is the territory again?

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[SPEAKER_04]: The flying territories.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: That's what I thought.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: A aquatic territory.

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[SPEAKER_04]: The blue dilly is typically described as being grayish blue, with having an extremely large flat body, with the large fin slash flippers on each side.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, it's some time vaguely humanoid ish, hand or clawed hand on each flipper.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, when this often report seeing pulses through the water, unacceptable wigs and disturbances near the surface.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Unlike the traditional lake monsters, the blue dilly is now often seen, but is often felt.

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[SPEAKER_04]: which is a feature that contributes to its area of rotation, but it bumping boats, moving things, and big pulses of water.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Right.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So, have it done anything bad, as far as I could find.

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[SPEAKER_04]: It's not like there's no kid drowning or anything that needs to be eaten by it.

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[SPEAKER_04]: It's been a company, people blame on creatures.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Now, the drawings of the Blue Dealies, for everyone's wife does, they look like giant flying manteray like creatures with a little head, a tail, and two little back leg things.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Hmm, that didn't we, on Monday to discuss something similar?

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[SPEAKER_04]: Oh yeah, yeah, we're not.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that's going to odd.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Uh, what a co-winkey thing.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So I don't know, we've talked about it in the, like in the book and everything like that with UAPs or UFOs, whatever you want to call, maybe some of the organic ones crash into the water too that they live, you know, spend some of their life in the water.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Well, whether they crash in the water or they are not crash, as in they hit the water at high speed.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Not that they're slamming into it on accident.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Sorry, that's not the right word.

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[SPEAKER_01]: They purposely land in the water and use the water.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: reproduction.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So the blue dilly sketches a lot of the people that have claimed to see the blue dilly actually draw what it appears to be like one of our or flying manner race.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay, now why do they call it blue dilly again?

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[SPEAKER_01]: Was it the blue?

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[SPEAKER_01]: It's like blue gray in color.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Uh, and it's dilly for dill and remember the dilly part the dill and but the blue.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, the blue just because it's it's like that gray blue kind of style color.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Just making sure that's much off in the color it's seen in but like I said most time it's not seen it's felt right.

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

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[SPEAKER_04]: So my thing with man-made reservoirs is how to make monsters get in there, right, you know, where it's not natural, or there's no natural large body, where they can get in easily.

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[SPEAKER_04]: And there's not really anything near this thing.

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[SPEAKER_01]: No, they just dug up a big hole in the ground.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Well, I mean, there's a river that flows in and out.

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[SPEAKER_04]: No, okay.

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[SPEAKER_04]: That's out.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Most of the reservoirs are formed.

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[SPEAKER_04]: But if they are flying and spending some time or growing a little bit, what if this is, you know, an apt to breeding ground for these guys?

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[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, or just a resting place or yeah, hmmm.

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[SPEAKER_04]: Bring it water water.

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[SPEAKER_01]: What if it's a feed what if they feed off?

13:27.640 --> 13:28.761
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know feed off.

13:29.182 --> 13:41.577
[SPEAKER_01]: What you know whatever's in the in the pressure reservoir, you know, whether it's some kind of plankton or, you know,

13:41.557 --> 13:45.500
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, I guess arrow planked in this guy, planked in the water, if it they're similar.

13:45.520 --> 14:00.173
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know, but it is, it is, is there any other creatures, creatures besides, well, maybe uh, there's certain ducks and stuff that make their home just as much in the sky as they do in the water?

14:00.213 --> 14:01.994
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, I mean, yeah.

14:02.014 --> 14:05.097
[SPEAKER_04]: So albatrosses are a good example.

14:05.537 --> 14:05.818
[SPEAKER_01]: Okay.

14:06.438 --> 14:10.922
[SPEAKER_04]: Albatrosses are only ever

14:11.003 --> 14:18.591
[SPEAKER_04]: Yes, and isn't it like a certain like place, yeah, depending on the out, depending on the species of albatross, it's very, very, very selective specific.

14:18.691 --> 14:24.618
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, like I think it's the black throated albatross will be extinct here in the next, probably 10 years because of that.

14:25.619 --> 14:29.343
[SPEAKER_04]: All right, he because they're, they're a little island is so trash polluted.

14:29.563 --> 14:29.884
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

14:30.564 --> 14:34.729
[SPEAKER_04]: And they don't, they don't, they don't have the biological abilities to change breeding ground.

14:34.749 --> 14:35.029
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

14:35.510 --> 14:40.335
[SPEAKER_04]: So they're literally stuffing plastic into their, their babies faces biologically stubborn.

14:40.585 --> 14:41.526
[SPEAKER_04]: Right, they're just they're stuck.

14:41.647 --> 14:46.774
[SPEAKER_01]: There's no time to adapt and change and Well, you just that's where you just go there.

14:46.834 --> 14:47.675
[SPEAKER_01]: You kidnap them.

14:48.376 --> 15:06.863
[SPEAKER_04]: People are doing that and you rehabilitate them in new areas Because force them to live in them parents are giving up on nasty and stuff like that so It's bad Yeah, so there are but even I'll out alters Obviously that like greater alters which are our type of marine duck

15:06.843 --> 15:08.245
[SPEAKER_02]: Okay.

15:08.505 --> 15:11.089
[SPEAKER_04]: They are almost always in the open ocean, okay?

15:11.109 --> 15:13.633
[SPEAKER_04]: They're very, very rarely, but they nest in like the Sequoia's.

15:14.254 --> 15:16.697
[SPEAKER_04]: And they're hilarious to watch land.

15:17.198 --> 15:18.640
[SPEAKER_01]: Because they don't know how to do it.

15:18.660 --> 15:20.903
[SPEAKER_04]: It's only time they're ever on land is when they're trying to nest.

15:20.923 --> 15:21.023
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

15:21.384 --> 15:27.993
[SPEAKER_04]: So there are all kinds of animals that make their home in a completely different environment than where they nest.

15:28.434 --> 15:36.225
[SPEAKER_04]: And sea turtles are a great example where they drag their, you know, holes out onto the land

15:36.205 --> 15:38.048
[SPEAKER_04]: But it's what they do to breed right.

15:38.068 --> 15:39.030
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

15:39.050 --> 15:42.997
[SPEAKER_04]: So there's there's tons of animals that, you know, do this kind of thing.

15:43.778 --> 15:52.133
[SPEAKER_04]: Whether any of the speed that Colorado when these things that we talked about them cross in the desert, maybe they can survive in the water for the period of time, or they like the water.

15:52.955 --> 15:55.279
[SPEAKER_04]: So maybe it's a way to refill and rehydrate.

15:55.439 --> 15:55.539
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

15:55.820 --> 15:56.782
[SPEAKER_04]: And they're just hanging out.

15:56.802 --> 15:59.867
[SPEAKER_01]: I just want it's so hard biologically, David.

16:00.556 --> 16:05.722
[SPEAKER_01]: consider how that, well, not only getting in the water's one thing, how about getting back out?

16:06.103 --> 16:07.505
[SPEAKER_04]: It depends on if they're gas filled.

16:08.065 --> 16:15.575
[SPEAKER_04]: So what fish do for example is that the swim bladder organ is they release gas or produce gas to go up and down.

16:16.556 --> 16:22.623
[SPEAKER_01]: So it may be more something like that that when they're ready to leave, I guess they could just jump out of the water like man arrayed, already do.

16:22.743 --> 16:22.924
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

16:23.224 --> 16:28.150
[SPEAKER_04]: And then they're in the air speed and then

16:29.142 --> 16:29.703
[SPEAKER_01]: It seems like fun.

16:29.963 --> 16:30.764
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, it's not.

16:30.784 --> 16:39.375
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, there are all kinds of animals that think about the Kettlequadalus or the Heterior Axi, I don't know, and I think it's how it is.

16:40.036 --> 16:42.219
[SPEAKER_04]: The, you know, these giant flying reptiles.

16:42.819 --> 16:42.920
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

16:43.240 --> 16:44.381
[SPEAKER_04]: They had to get back into the air.

16:45.383 --> 16:45.663
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

16:45.963 --> 16:47.325
[SPEAKER_04]: And they're the size of drafts.

16:47.345 --> 16:48.206
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, how did they do that?

16:48.226 --> 16:49.748
[SPEAKER_04]: They'd specialize leg joints.

16:49.768 --> 16:51.010
[SPEAKER_04]: I would let like a little bit of bounce.

16:51.951 --> 16:53.433
[SPEAKER_01]: Like one big, hmm, yeah.

16:53.593 --> 16:54.775
[SPEAKER_04]: Well, they had gallop a little bit.

16:55.696 --> 16:58.980
[SPEAKER_04]: And then they would bounce and get some speed and get going.

16:59.686 --> 17:00.507
[SPEAKER_01]: They cool to see.

17:01.248 --> 17:07.434
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, that that things scares me more than most things because they ate things our size Cretzel quadalyst.

17:07.454 --> 17:13.621
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, yeah, because they just like they're just giant storks So I'd walk through like the grass in the forest and he's stabbing with stabby weeks.

17:14.061 --> 17:21.309
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah Yeah, that would not be it but the things they were eating were like us sized Big marments for them.

17:21.369 --> 17:24.792
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean They were baby dinosaurs, but I mean, that's what we are big marments.

17:25.253 --> 17:25.373
[UNKNOWN]: Mm-hmm

17:26.112 --> 17:27.393
[SPEAKER_04]: So it could be something like that.

17:27.473 --> 17:27.814
[SPEAKER_04]: I don't know.

17:27.834 --> 17:28.314
[SPEAKER_04]: There are plenty.

17:28.354 --> 17:33.219
[SPEAKER_04]: There are tons of animals though that make two environments their home.

17:33.980 --> 17:34.601
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

17:34.621 --> 17:35.001
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I guess.

17:35.642 --> 17:36.202
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I don't know.

17:36.222 --> 17:38.124
[SPEAKER_01]: It's just hard to for something that size.

17:38.184 --> 17:42.248
[SPEAKER_01]: It's hard for me to even imagine, but is it does exist too?

17:43.229 --> 17:43.490
[SPEAKER_01]: Shoot.

17:43.550 --> 17:44.491
[SPEAKER_01]: I mean, and there's all those.

17:45.111 --> 17:45.732
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, the Coots.

17:46.793 --> 17:52.379
[SPEAKER_01]: Coots are pretty big example of living in the water and fishing, hunting.

17:53.139 --> 17:55.782
[SPEAKER_01]: Like they're always, I've never hardly ever see them out of the

17:55.880 --> 18:02.927
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I mean, they're pretty, I mean, I've, they even breed on like little grass mats, so they're not even going on the true land of breed.

18:02.987 --> 18:03.268
[SPEAKER_01]: Really.

18:03.688 --> 18:05.910
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, which is, yeah, I don't know.

18:06.051 --> 18:07.232
[SPEAKER_01]: Those are really cool birds, too.

18:07.832 --> 18:08.633
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, American cout.

18:08.994 --> 18:10.155
[SPEAKER_01]: Mm-hmm.

18:10.175 --> 18:15.140
[SPEAKER_04]: Um, yeah, I don't know, uh, otherwise now, I don't know what the blue deli is.

18:15.200 --> 18:23.929
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, the blue deli, obviously, at first when you said like to fan with the claw coming up, I'm like, you know, it's probably just a manatee, like hits a manatee, somehow ended up here.

18:24.230 --> 18:31.020
[SPEAKER_04]: Now, I guess it's hard when you're just verbally to explaining it, but there's a lot of depictions or drawings of this thing and it's pretty consistent.

18:31.200 --> 18:31.500
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

18:32.402 --> 18:34.825
[SPEAKER_01]: Once you get into that, I mean, that doesn't really fit the manatee.

18:35.166 --> 18:36.347
[SPEAKER_04]: No, it looks like a big man array.

18:36.448 --> 18:38.330
[SPEAKER_04]: And even moving the manatee with a face.

18:38.531 --> 18:38.791
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

18:40.073 --> 18:40.453
[SPEAKER_01]: Interesting.

18:40.473 --> 18:41.274
[SPEAKER_01]: What if it's an engine?

18:43.858 --> 18:49.346
[SPEAKER_04]: But yeah, I don't know how an engine got into a man-made reservoir in Colorado.

18:49.767 --> 18:49.987
[SPEAKER_01]: Flu.

18:51.850 --> 18:52.110
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah?

18:54.959 --> 18:57.502
[SPEAKER_04]: It's no more ridiculous than anything else we talk about.

18:57.522 --> 18:58.223
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I know, right?

18:58.643 --> 19:00.506
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, there was a giant trebuchet.

19:00.926 --> 19:01.407
[SPEAKER_01]: Here we go.

19:01.567 --> 19:05.392
[SPEAKER_01]: It climbed onto you by accident and it was a ceremonial trebuchet.

19:05.432 --> 19:07.474
[SPEAKER_01]: They were supposed to launch it, you know, into the ocean.

19:08.015 --> 19:13.522
[SPEAKER_01]: But he was sitting in it and it launched him an all way across the ocean into Colorado and right in the lake.

19:14.463 --> 19:17.787
[SPEAKER_04]: I mean, Colorado also has the salt whales are not Colorado.

19:18.287 --> 19:18.728
[SPEAKER_04]: Are you tall?

19:19.389 --> 19:20.190
[SPEAKER_04]: The Great Salt Lake.

19:20.630 --> 19:20.810
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay.

19:21.411 --> 19:24.595
[SPEAKER_04]: As supposedly whales, they've been seen in the Great Salt Lake.

19:25.300 --> 19:30.185
[SPEAKER_04]: Okay, that's why the only thing in there, though, is Brian shrimp.

19:30.205 --> 19:31.346
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, because nothing can live in there.

19:31.446 --> 19:34.549
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, what are some times more salty than the ocean?

19:34.669 --> 19:37.211
[SPEAKER_01]: What are if that's an illusion, though, like Mirage kind of thing?

19:37.371 --> 19:39.053
[SPEAKER_04]: It could be, I'm just saying that, yeah.

19:39.333 --> 19:45.279
[SPEAKER_04]: Big hand book, my word, though, there's tons and tons of manoray sightings there, and what is that Salt Lake City?

19:48.141 --> 19:51.805
[SPEAKER_04]: We talked about it, and some of them in the book, and then some of our manoray episodes.

19:52.185 --> 19:54.447
[SPEAKER_01]: Great, greater Norman Tabernacle.

19:54.680 --> 19:56.783
[SPEAKER_04]: Oh, it is in the Mormon city, but yeah.

19:56.803 --> 19:57.323
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, okay.

19:58.365 --> 19:58.765
[SPEAKER_01]: Uh, I don't know.

19:58.805 --> 20:01.789
[SPEAKER_04]: They even seen the giant one hanging on like the bell tower and everything like that.

20:01.969 --> 20:02.189
[SPEAKER_04]: Remember?

20:02.970 --> 20:03.892
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, I don't remember that.

20:04.272 --> 20:06.555
[SPEAKER_04]: We were just hanging on it, jumped off and flew over town.

20:06.615 --> 20:08.077
[SPEAKER_04]: Like 30 or 40 people seen it.

20:08.297 --> 20:08.758
[SPEAKER_01]: Not quite.

20:08.818 --> 20:09.559
[SPEAKER_01]: No, I don't.

20:09.579 --> 20:13.383
[SPEAKER_01]: It was like, it was dark purple and I feel like that should be something I should remember.

20:14.044 --> 20:15.486
[SPEAKER_04]: I promise we'd done episodes on.

20:15.506 --> 20:16.227
[SPEAKER_01]: No, I believe you.

20:16.367 --> 20:17.148
[SPEAKER_01]: I'm just saying I don't.

20:17.489 --> 20:20.292
[SPEAKER_01]: It's not, it's escaping my memories.

20:20.973 --> 20:24.197
[SPEAKER_04]: The Mormon scene of drag and leaving their bell tower

20:24.582 --> 20:26.166
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, that's probably not a good sign.

20:26.226 --> 20:30.315
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, if I see now, maybe I just move.

20:31.558 --> 20:32.881
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know, moving's hard.

20:34.003 --> 20:34.825
[SPEAKER_01]: Moving's hard to do.

20:35.507 --> 20:37.471
[SPEAKER_01]: Even if you see a dragon jump out of your belt tower.

20:39.335 --> 20:40.037
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I don't know.

20:40.097 --> 20:41.460
[SPEAKER_01]: This is, this is, what?

20:41.947 --> 21:01.947
[SPEAKER_01]: Probably the weirdest story when it comes to the our atmosphere creatures and then interacting with people not even know what it is now Yeah, just if it were though this would be the honest we're just one and most personal like yes when it comes to Multiple people experiencing interactions with it, but it like moving that boat pushing it is kind of wild to me like that's a

21:03.226 --> 21:04.670
[SPEAKER_01]: That's not just a wild experience.

21:04.770 --> 21:19.969
[SPEAKER_01]: I guess half happened but I don't know somewhere out there I just hope the Dilly the blue Dilly monster is I'm trying to find the book link Oh gosh, just leave it to Pete and she's the super sleuth She is the uh Well, she finds everything

21:21.721 --> 21:22.403
[SPEAKER_01]: Pay, I don't know.

21:22.964 --> 21:24.788
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't personally, I mean, that's it.

21:25.129 --> 21:26.132
[SPEAKER_01]: I think your explanation.

21:27.074 --> 21:30.342
[SPEAKER_01]: Maybe the best one we got that we can give what this thing could be.

21:31.184 --> 21:35.655
[SPEAKER_01]: Or if it's just some unknown aquatic creature, we just don't have it like alchiro.

21:36.637 --> 21:38.582
[SPEAKER_01]: Like what if it's an alchiro type thing?

21:38.602 --> 21:39.865
[SPEAKER_01]: You know, we didn't really, uh...

21:40.958 --> 21:53.923
[SPEAKER_01]: It's, I mean, I'll cure as different, a pattern has like a cow hide, you know, type pattern, but you know, I'll, I'll, I'll, you know what, platter blanket like a quad at creature that ambushes people.

21:54.024 --> 21:57.330
[SPEAKER_01]: Now, I don't remember if I'll cure a talking about hands or,

21:57.631 --> 22:07.447
[SPEAKER_01]: the teeth around it that that was the teeth around it's but that was it's lower half I guess it's underside had its mouth and teeth on it, but that was just more like a death blame.

22:07.467 --> 22:11.473
[SPEAKER_01]: I think I found it down the the deli the blue deli book.

22:12.114 --> 22:12.254
[SPEAKER_01]: Mm-hmm.

22:12.274 --> 22:13.216
[SPEAKER_01]: All right, what's it called?

22:13.897 --> 22:15.199
[SPEAKER_04]: The legend of the blue deli.

22:15.600 --> 22:17.783
[SPEAKER_01]: Well, that's that should be something.

22:19.484 --> 22:20.926
[SPEAKER_04]: It is only got one review.

22:22.147 --> 22:23.089
[SPEAKER_04]: The Blue Daily is real.

22:23.990 --> 22:25.972
[SPEAKER_04]: A great story now before the government shuts down.

22:26.733 --> 22:27.695
[SPEAKER_04]: It's just in 2015.

22:28.015 --> 22:28.636
[SPEAKER_01]: Wow.

22:29.537 --> 22:31.419
[SPEAKER_01]: We're good thing we revived it 10 years later.

22:31.459 --> 22:35.765
[SPEAKER_04]: The Legend of the Blue Daily Monts are Dylan Monts, or Blue Dylan Monts, or sorry.

22:36.306 --> 22:37.848
[SPEAKER_04]: It's 40 bucks.

22:37.868 --> 22:39.350
[SPEAKER_01]: Dang, it's a rare book.

22:39.890 --> 22:42.273
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it's not print anymore.

22:44.416 --> 22:46.639
[SPEAKER_01]: So you just gotta buy them and they print on to me and.

22:46.940 --> 22:47.701
[SPEAKER_04]: No, it's not even that.

22:47.721 --> 22:49.945
[SPEAKER_04]: You got to just like buy one of the old copies.

22:49.965 --> 22:50.505
[SPEAKER_04]: It's not he has.

22:50.565 --> 22:51.587
[SPEAKER_01]: So that's already been printed.

22:53.850 --> 22:53.991
[SPEAKER_04]: Mm-hmm.

22:54.011 --> 22:55.733
[SPEAKER_04]: Somebody find me the blue deal in Monster Book.

22:56.054 --> 22:56.374
[SPEAKER_04]: I'll do it.

22:56.394 --> 22:57.336
[SPEAKER_04]: I'll redo this episode.

22:57.676 --> 22:58.718
[SPEAKER_04]: There's really just nothing.

22:58.818 --> 23:04.847
[SPEAKER_04]: Like if you if you go through it and then the five or six articles that show up on this thing are the exact same.

23:06.089 --> 23:07.531
[SPEAKER_04]: And but it's such a unique thing.

23:08.112 --> 23:10.996
[SPEAKER_04]: And the town has like emblems for it and stuff like that.

23:11.016 --> 23:12.799
[SPEAKER_04]: So I know there's more something to it.

23:12.879 --> 23:13.420
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah.

23:13.400 --> 23:28.185
[SPEAKER_01]: will have to go to uh... to uh... it didn't collar at or didn't make it doesn't make county dill and reservoir will just have to go the reservoirs to ask questions get boots on the ground best to get journalist out town seal has the blue dill and monster on it

23:29.971 --> 23:34.476
[SPEAKER_01]: It's a new, it's like the one's not like the Ho-Dag, but the town's just embracing it.

23:34.676 --> 23:36.538
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, it's not as extreme as the Ho-Dag is in.

23:36.578 --> 23:37.759
[SPEAKER_04]: How much the Ho-Dag has?

23:38.260 --> 23:43.605
[SPEAKER_04]: Now yet, but I mean, I can't wait for a giant fiberglass 400 foot long blue dill and monster.

23:43.986 --> 23:47.409
[SPEAKER_01]: Or maybe the unveil it at the blue dill and monster fest.

23:47.750 --> 23:49.291
[SPEAKER_04]: That hosts if I could as a cornfirecast.

23:49.331 --> 23:50.753
[SPEAKER_04]: Yeah, I would do it.

23:51.113 --> 23:52.655
[SPEAKER_01]: Hoots on the ground, let's get that started.

23:52.675 --> 23:54.457
[SPEAKER_01]: We'll show up if you focus, we will come.

23:54.657 --> 23:55.598
[SPEAKER_04]: I hope somebody's near it.

23:56.839 --> 23:57.700
[SPEAKER_01]: Somebody's got to be.

23:58.051 --> 24:02.417
[SPEAKER_04]: But yeah, so this is a short one, but yeah, I mean, it was too unique not to talk about.

24:02.517 --> 24:06.363
[SPEAKER_01]: No, yeah, it's definitely worth talking about and who knows what it could be.

24:06.603 --> 24:09.307
[SPEAKER_01]: Wait, there's a mystery here, it needs to be unveiled.

24:09.327 --> 24:10.589
[SPEAKER_01]: Is there?

24:11.090 --> 24:12.212
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know.

24:12.232 --> 24:12.892
[SPEAKER_01]: No, they're just his.

24:13.253 --> 24:13.353
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah.

24:13.373 --> 24:14.375
[SPEAKER_04]: How do you think else to talk about?

24:14.595 --> 24:21.926
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, I wonder if it would taste good if you put a little, if you caught one hooked in, put a little flavors of the forest on it, maybe.

24:21.946 --> 24:24.770
[SPEAKER_01]: I had cut your awful steak up the blue dilly monster steak.

24:25.791 --> 24:27.754
[SPEAKER_01]: Ooh, someone there should probably sell that.

24:28.983 --> 24:30.385
[SPEAKER_04]: I wonder if anybody's actually hooked it.

24:32.368 --> 24:33.229
[SPEAKER_05]: Hmm.

24:33.249 --> 24:34.991
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know.

24:35.011 --> 24:36.614
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know.

24:36.634 --> 24:37.174
[SPEAKER_01]: It's hard saying.

24:37.875 --> 24:39.057
[SPEAKER_04]: Any updates for everybody?

24:39.878 --> 24:41.100
[SPEAKER_04]: As far as anything.

24:41.500 --> 24:42.762
[SPEAKER_04]: It's a short episode today, so.

24:43.283 --> 24:48.951
[SPEAKER_04]: As far as we're still, hopefully my house was delivered to the homestead.

24:49.011 --> 24:49.432
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh yeah.

24:49.452 --> 24:50.193
[SPEAKER_01]: And this comes out.

24:50.333 --> 24:52.896
[SPEAKER_01]: That's an update.

24:52.916 --> 24:56.982
[SPEAKER_01]: Studio is still almost done on the outside.

24:56.962 --> 25:07.740
[SPEAKER_01]: for new listeners were building a podcast studio to record this stuff in and hopefully have some nice video features and stuff, give you guys some more.

25:08.161 --> 25:11.446
[SPEAKER_01]: At least so you guys can see what's going on and see our ugly faces.

25:12.628 --> 25:15.112
[SPEAKER_01]: Because I know that's just what you're all yearning for.

25:15.133 --> 25:17.797
[SPEAKER_01]: You want to watch us, not just hear us.

25:18.779 --> 25:20.301
[SPEAKER_01]: So yeah, that's happening on instale.

25:20.321 --> 25:21.383
[SPEAKER_01]: It's slowly but surely.

25:22.628 --> 25:24.190
[SPEAKER_01]: one side of it is cited now.

25:25.031 --> 25:25.512
[SPEAKER_01]: That's nice.

25:26.694 --> 25:29.918
[SPEAKER_01]: So, um, yeah, it's next.

25:30.098 --> 25:31.420
[SPEAKER_01]: I once it's all done on the outside.

25:31.460 --> 25:42.215
[SPEAKER_01]: Time to start on the inside to be a lot of running electrical wires, dry wall in and strip the building down where rebuilding it from scratch, basically.

25:43.657 --> 25:46.681
[SPEAKER_01]: All for you guys for your benefit at home.

25:47.742 --> 25:48.804
[SPEAKER_01]: At least that's the goal, anyways.

25:50.306 --> 25:51.167
[SPEAKER_01]: Um, besides that,

25:52.666 --> 25:52.966
[SPEAKER_01]: I don't know.

25:52.986 --> 25:54.048
[SPEAKER_01]: I've been bowling while lately.

25:54.989 --> 25:55.850
[SPEAKER_01]: You guys like bowling?

25:56.852 --> 26:00.677
[SPEAKER_01]: I could talk about bowling for a while, but I don't think... No, I don't want to hear about that.

26:02.059 --> 26:03.080
[SPEAKER_04]: Homestead's come along.

26:03.100 --> 26:04.182
[SPEAKER_01]: Homestead's moving along.

26:05.023 --> 26:07.326
[SPEAKER_01]: We got a driveway put, well, a culvert put in.

26:07.346 --> 26:08.968
[SPEAKER_04]: I was like, well, you did not put a driveway in.

26:09.048 --> 26:10.250
[SPEAKER_01]: We put stone in the driveway.

26:10.670 --> 26:15.477
[SPEAKER_04]: Everybody runs a rock company and once a donate about 100 times, let me know.

26:15.877 --> 26:17.319
[SPEAKER_01]: Owns, yeah, a rock company.

26:17.960 --> 26:19.222
[SPEAKER_04]: Just, you know who listens?

26:19.242 --> 26:22.386
[SPEAKER_01]: There's 75,000 people listening to this.

26:22.906 --> 26:24.091
[SPEAKER_04]: They're rock companies.

26:24.934 --> 26:26.561
[SPEAKER_01]: Oh, I just get hamburger sandwich.

26:27.244 --> 26:28.107
[SPEAKER_01]: Yeah, same difference.

26:28.549 --> 26:29.413
[SPEAKER_01]: Hot dog.

26:29.433 --> 26:30.116
[SPEAKER_01]: Sandwich or not?

26:30.718 --> 26:31.903
[SPEAKER_01]: No, why?

26:33.233 --> 26:34.875
[SPEAKER_01]: Some buttons, you can get away with it.

26:35.255 --> 26:39.179
[SPEAKER_01]: One button can, one button still split.

26:39.339 --> 26:40.100
[SPEAKER_01]: It's a split button.

26:40.981 --> 26:41.501
[SPEAKER_01]: So split.

26:41.781 --> 26:42.302
[SPEAKER_01]: It's split.

26:42.923 --> 26:44.484
[SPEAKER_04]: It's not supposed to be split though.

26:44.504 --> 26:47.527
[SPEAKER_01]: So a peanut butter sandwich with one slice of peanut butter.

26:47.547 --> 26:47.908
[SPEAKER_01]: There's a sub.

26:48.748 --> 26:50.470
[SPEAKER_01]: It's no longer a sandwich.

26:50.490 --> 26:52.272
[SPEAKER_01]: That I'm never calling that a peanut butter sub.

26:52.392 --> 26:53.974
[SPEAKER_01]: But don't do it with a piece of white bread.

26:54.014 --> 26:55.015
[SPEAKER_01]: That's a sandwich still.

26:55.055 --> 26:56.136
[SPEAKER_01]: It's a folded sandwich.

26:56.276 --> 27:00.540
[SPEAKER_01]: No, it's a, so that means a hot dog is a folded sandwich.

27:01.330 --> 27:02.973
[SPEAKER_01]: It's a folded sandwich in me in it.

27:03.013 --> 27:03.794
[SPEAKER_01]: That's a sandwich.

27:04.936 --> 27:05.938
[SPEAKER_03]: What is a sub?

27:06.479 --> 27:07.140
[SPEAKER_01]: A hot dog?

27:07.661 --> 27:08.803
[SPEAKER_03]: Yes, because, yeah.

27:12.470 --> 27:15.335
[SPEAKER_01]: Uh... Yeah, subway subs coming all one piece.

27:15.535 --> 27:16.036
[SPEAKER_01]: That's what I'm saying.

27:16.056 --> 27:16.477
[SPEAKER_01]: It's a sub.

27:17.018 --> 27:19.241
[SPEAKER_01]: So, you're gonna hot dog a sub.

27:20.584 --> 27:22.046
[SPEAKER_04]: I have been the Great and Powerful Mystery.

27:22.207 --> 27:23.389
[SPEAKER_01]: I've been a J. Kloen 67.

27:23.509 --> 27:24.791
[SPEAKER_04]: We'll catch you next week, guys.

27:25.112 --> 27:25.853
[SPEAKER_04]: Bye!

27:30.592 --> 27:31.193
[SPEAKER_04]: Hey guys!

27:31.233 --> 27:32.615
[SPEAKER_04]: Thank you for listening.

27:32.635 --> 27:33.797
[SPEAKER_04]: The Crypt is the Corn Podcast.

27:34.257 --> 27:36.441
[SPEAKER_04]: Remember, the best way you're supposed to show is to share it with a friend.

27:36.961 --> 27:48.659
[SPEAKER_01]: But if you are craving more of the J-clones and more from Mr. E, there's always extra content on Patreon and our paid member space on CryptidsOfTheCorn.com.

27:49.019 --> 27:54.928
[SPEAKER_04]: We'll catch you next time with more exciting, fun, and informative information.

