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Bigfoot
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Professor Farnsworth: Bunk! Bunk, I say! Bring me a bag full of Bigfoot's droppings or shut up!
Ranger Park: I have the droppings of someone who saw Bigfoot.
Professor Farnsworth: Shut up!

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The other UFO: Unidentifiable Furry Organisms.

Tall hairy humanoids who maintain a furtive existence in various remote corners of the world. "Bigfoot" and "Sasquatch" are different names for essentially the same entity, whose stomping grounds (ahem) are mostly in the northwestern corner of the United States and the southwestern corner of Canada. The "Yeti" or "Abominable Snowman" is a variety found high in the Himalayan Mountains, commonly depicted (whether due to associations with familiar Arctic animals like the polar bear, or just the "snowman" association) with white fur in fiction, although the local legends described it with red to brown hair. Other lesser known varieties turn up in world-wide folklore and history under an assortment of names, such as the "Skunk Ape" of the swamps of the southeastern United States.

Common characteristics are said to include an extreme shyness towards humans, emitting horrible odors and unearthly noises, and of course scattering large footprints about as they frolic in out-of-focus areas. Most scientific authorities regard these creatures as either entirely imaginary or the fabrications of human pranksters, but like lake monsters and the Chupacabra and unlike "out-and-out" fictional species such as the Wendigo or The Jersey Devil, this furry trifecta has devout believers in their existence. Often speculated to be akin to large, herbivorous hominids such as Gigantopithecus.

See also: Yowie, the Australian equivalent.

Examples of Bigfoot, Sasquatch, and Yeti include:

Advertising[]

  • "Jack Links" beef jerky has an ongoing commercial campaign centered around various humans deliberately annoying a Sasquatch and invariably getting attacked as a result.
  • A previous series of commercials for Pop-Tarts featured a yeti explaining how placing Pop-Tarts in the freezer made for a good summertime snack. Then the humans he was talking to would scream in fright, and then he would do the same. Example here.
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"Listen to the Yeti! Kellog's Pop-Tarts! You can freeze 'em, then eat 'em!"

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  • Also the Tab Clear ad, in which the Sasquatch is revealed to be Kaiser Wilhelm II, fallen from his zeppelin into the mud of Oregon. Suddenly everything is clear...
  • A brand of iced coffee used Bigfoot for advertisements on TV and radio. One such ad mentioned that most witnesses saw Bigfoot between the hours of midnight to 3 am—either because Bigfoot was raiding store fridges at night looking for iced coffee, or because most of the witnesses were drunk.
  • Kokanee beer commercials used to feature the sasquatch as a mascot.

Anime and Manga[]

  • In Ranma ½ the character of Pantyhose Tarou fell into the magic Spring of the "Drowned Yeti, Riding a Bull and Carrying a Crane and an Eel" (don't ask us how that happened). It resulted in his transformation essentially being a shaggy Minotaur with an eel for a tail and crane wings. Later, he splashed water from the Spring of Drowned Octopus (again, don't ask us!) across his back and gained Combat Tentacles.
  • A chapter of the Girls und Panzer spin-off manga Motto Love Love Sakusen Desu! featured the girls telling various spooky stories at a party. Duck Team, though, described how, on a camping trip in the mountains, they saw what they considered to be a mundane creepy stranger. Their listeners responded, "No no no! That's totally 'BIGFOOT'!!" (The first image shown of the "stranger" was based on the page image above.)

Comedy[]

  • Comedian Mitch Hedberg lampshaded the fact that photographers always seem to end up having blurry photographs of Bigfoot.
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"I think Bigfoot is blurry, that's the problem. It's not the photographer's fault. Bigfoot is blurry... and that's extra scary to me. Because there's a large, out-of-focus monster... roaming the countryside."

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Comics[]

  • Tintin in Tibet features a Yeti. He befriends Tintin's friend Chang after a tragic airplane accident in the Himalayas prompts Tintin to Send in the Search Team.
  • Marvel Comics Alpha Flight features a team member called Sasquatch, who is more-or-less the legendary beast.
    • Originally, he was a scientist who got hit by gamma radiation, just like the Incredible Hulk, but got orange fur instead of green skin. A later retcon said he had inadvertently opened a gateway to the Realm of Great Beasts, giving him the power of a (fictional) First Nations demon.
      • And even more recently a small tribe of "actual" Sasquatches (Sasquatchii?) have been discovered, with the largest male being mistaken for a mindwiped Sasquatch (the superhero) and actually joining the team for a short time (until his Heroic Sacrifice).
    • Marvel also has several forms of Abominable Snowmen, ranging from an offshoot of the Inhumans to people under a magical curse.
  • Proof is a comic book series about a Bigfoot paranormal investigator that is very similar to Hellboy.
  • In an issue of the Archie Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures series, an assumed-to-be-malevolent alien force is causing the famous legendary creatures of the world to vanish; among them are the yeti and the sasquatch.
  • In an issue of Woody Woodpecker, Woody goes with his (niece and nephew?) over to Asia to film the abominable snowman. His camera is taken by a band of thieves using the legend of the snowman to scare people into giving them gift to appease them. And then the real deal come along and scares the band away.
  • In Carl Barks' Uncle Scrooge story "The Lost Crown of Ghengis Khan", Scrooge McDuck has to recover the titular crown from the hoard of a treasure-loving abominable snowman.
  • In The Perhapanauts, one of the main characters is an uplifted Sasquatch named Big, who is also the scientist of the team.
  • There is a non-canon Star Wars/Indiana Jones crossover comic which features Indy and Shortround tracking Sasquatch in the north-west coast of North America. They come across a massive metal structure that had been there for hundreds of years, and Indy goes inside and sees the remains of a human: Han Solo. Han and Chewie had flown the Falcon into a wormhole and crash landed on Earth. Han was killed by Native Americans while Chewie survived and raged at them, creating legends of a massive furry ape-man. Indy notes an eerie feeling of deja vu when encountering Han's final resting place and he decides to stop the hunt for Sasquatch.
  • In a Pink Panther comic book, two tabloid reporters has PP mistaken for Bigfoot because his foot is big due to being bandaged up. At the end, it turns out that PP knows the real Bigfoot personally, but the reporters leave before he gets the chance to tell them that.
  • Robert Crumb wrote a series called Whiteman Meets Bigfoot, in which his most famously uptight and square character was at least half in love with a hairy female monster. There's also the picture of a sexy(ish) bigfoot girl walking down a New York street.
  • Wynonna Earp: The Yeti Wars: When Wynonna and her team discover that the bad guys have a group of yeti working for them, they bring in a group of sasquatch to help combat them.
  • In one issue of Cherry Comics, Cherry is abducted by a Bigfoot and ends up having sex with him.

Fan Works[]

Film[]

  • The Yeti is one of the 7 Faces of Dr. Lao; among his jobs are pounding in circus-tent pegs and playing a steam organ.
  • Also from the 70's is the classically bad film Snowbeast, about a Bigfoot/Yeti/whatever eating pretty young women at a Colorado ski resort until he gets stabbed to death with a ski pole by Bo Svenson. Read more here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowbeast
  • Harry and the Hendersons is about an American family who hits a Sasquatch with their car and brings him home. It was later a short-lived TV series.
  • Several movies made for the Syfy center around Sasquatches, usually turning the creature into a bloodthirsty killer.
  • The Mummy Trilogy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor includes a sequence with heroic Yetis. They look more like humanoid cats. Word of God is that their design was based on snow leopards and polar bears, in order to give something more exotic than more typical depictions.
  • A really strange movie called They Call Him Sasquatch features a group of unlikely people going to hunt for the aforementioned lifeform. No, they do not parody the theme from Flipper.
  • In Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny, Jables eats psychotropic mushrooms, and imagines he's Sasquatch's baby Sass.
  • The Legend of Boggy Creek is a documentary-style film which shows various dramatized events of people meeting a bigfoot-like Fouke Monster in Arkansas.
  • Yeti: Curse of the Snow Demon has a pack of Yetis hunting down and feeding on the survivors of a plane crash in the Himalayas.
  • A group of students and their professor head off in search of a Yeti in Shriek of the Mutilated. It turns out there isn't one, and that the professor and his associates are cannibals who use the Yeti story to lure in victims.
  • Similar to the above, Night of the Demon had a professor taking his students into the woods in search of Bigfoot, who is for some reason depicted as a demonic entity.
  • The Cinema Snob once reviewed a film called The Geek, which was a bigfoot... porn. Why yes, it was made in The Seventies, why do you ask?
  • Bigfoot shows up in a deleted scene from Bruce Almighty, as another example of Bruce using his powers to boost his ratings. Not content with finding Bigfoot, he goes skydiving, lets his parachute malfunction, and then survives by landing on Bigfoot.
  • In A Goofy Movie, Goofy and Max have a run-in with Bigfoot while out fishing.
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Max: Dad, IT'S BIGFOOT!!!
Goofy: (holding a video camera in front of him) Could you scoot back a bit, Mr. Foot? You're out of focus.

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Literature[]

  • Lamb: The Gospel According To Biff features a Yeti who is the Last of His Kind.
  • In the Discworld novel Thief of Time, our heroes encounter a yeti. It's a kind of troll, with thick fur. Since trolls are made of rock, this is hinted to be the insulating material stone-wool. Yetis are hunted for their huge feet and hands, and as a result, they evolved the ability to save their progress to load it should they die, which the met yeti demonstrates by being beheaded. Lu-Tze successfully uses the ability later in the book. To date, they went extinct thrice.
    • Yetis also appear in Moving Pictures, where they lie down in the snow (camouflaged by their fur) and jump out at travellers. If the ones that encounter the thousand elephants making their way across the mountains have the Reset Button ability, it doesn't get mentioned. Maybe they were overwhelmed by the awesomeness of the scene.
  • Harry Dresden encounters Yeti-like creatures in Proven Guilty after storming Arctis Tor.
  • A ski-simulation attraction at Dream Park included a cute fluffy baby yeti as an obstacle to be avoided.
  • One of the engineered future hominid species in Dougal Dixon's Man After Man resembles a yeti, and some of its descendants evolve into bigfoot-like variations.
  • The Long Walk (Where Slavomir Ravisz escapes from a Gulag), contains an encounter with a Yeti. In fact, that's why he got in contact with a publisher in the first place.
  • The Aquiliad by S.P. Somtow is a wacky Alternate History in which The Roman Empire has developed steamships and is now exploring and settling Terra Nova (i.e., North America). Where the narrator finds the Sasquatii, or, as the scholars put it in proper Greek, the Megapodes—who greet the Romans with, "Shalom." Yes, the Sasquatii are descendants of the Lost Tribes of Israel, kidnapped and mutated by a Time Traveling Mad Scientist ... and it goes on to get even weirder.
  • The Yetis of the Harry Potter universe are given an entry in Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. They're said to grow close to fifteen feet tall, have snow white fur, eat anything it comes across, live in Tibet, fear fire, and possibly are related to Trolls (Though no one has gotten close enough to one to actually study it).
  • In the Geronimo Stilton book I'm Too Fond of My Fur!, the title character goes off to find his friend Professor Von Volt in the Himalayas, and encounters a family of yetis.
  • In American Psycho, Unreliable Narrator Patrick Bateman claims that he saw Bigfoot on his favorite talk show and found him "surprisingly articulate and charming".
  • In the Robert E. Howard story "Three Bladed Doom", the hero, El Borak, encounters and kills a yeti. Weirdly it's both a kill-crazy monster and a vegetarian. Also Conan the Barbarian has a couple of encounters with "grey apes" that are identical to the yeti in "Three Bladed Doom".
  • In Paul J. McAuley's Red Dust yetis are a genetically engineered combination of human and animal DNA created by the early Tibetan colonists when they came to Mars. The only one actually encountered, named Monkey is intelligent but mute.
  • The sasquatch is mentioned in Trixie Belden and the Mystery of the Sasquatch, when the gang are camping in Idaho. There have been several reported sightings, but all of Trixie's encounters turn out to be a man in a snowsuit.
  • There's a gag in one of the Nightside novels, in which a yeti-foot umbrella stand is one of the items on offer at a supernatural auction. Before the selling gets started, a pissed-off yeti stomps into the hall, marches up to the displays, scoops up the umbrella stand, shoots a really nasty look at the auctioneers, and stomps out.
  • The Goosebumps series had "The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena".
  • The Icemen of the Codex Alera are not Yetis, but are largely analogous to them, being furry, bulky, apelike humanoids who live in the far north and all. They're not normally aggressive, but they are powerfully empathic- picking up on humans' initial wariness of them and transmitting it back magnified ended up resulting in centuries of literally meaningless war between the two races until Isana, herself The Empath, managed to get things ironed out.
  • One of the stories in Haunted, by Chuck Palahniuk, is titled "Missing Link" and postulates that these creatures are actually humans with an odd genetic quirk causing were-creature-style transformation. The teller of this story belongs to a fictitious Native American tribe in which this trait is allegedly quite common, including a supposed case in the teller's own family.

Live Action TV[]

  • Bigfoot "guest starred" in more than one episode of The Six Million Dollar Man.
    • This Bigfoot was actually a robot built by aliens hiding in the woods to scare people away.
    • Bigfoot and Wildboy was a recurring segment in the 1970s children's program The Krofft Supershow, and a Spin-Off from the season it made friends with Steve Austin.
  • In Doctor Who, the second Doctor has dealt with robots disguised as Yeti. (As well as, briefly, a real Yeti.)
  • Eerie, Indiana: Marshall Teller often spots Bigfoot rooting around in his trash.
  • Harry and the Hendersons TV series mentioned above
  • In perhaps the ultimate aversion of this trope, The X-Files—a show which incorporated everything from human-alien hybrids to demonic possession to half-human half-tapeworms, and was filmed for half its run in Vancouvernever once did an episode on Bigfoot.
    • In the official licensed comic book, there was one Bigfoot story. I recall the infamous "Jose Chung's From Outer Space" episode did feature Mulder watching the Patterson footage of an alleged female sasquatch.
    • He also watches it at the end of "The Jersey Devil", an early episode where, after a long pursuit of what the main characters fantasize to be a cannibalistic primitive hominoid that lives in the woods of New Jersey the creature turns out to be a perfect normal (and quite sexy) nude woman. Since she is killed also, there is no final answer to why she did behave that way, however.
  • In The Invisible Man, the invisibility gland was taken from the Sasquatch who had developed it in order to hide in the forest of America. To be fair, the main character was pretty shocked at this revelation as well. He was even more shocked when they informed him that the gland was from a female, which is why the MALE Sasquatch in the episode was so...affectionate.
  • In The Mighty Boosh, there is a tribe of female yeti that live in the woods in England. The episode's plotline is just a Distaff Counterpart version of the original yeti myth.
  • Here Come The Brides featured a Bigfoot hoaxer.
  • Bigfoot and other North American fuzzy walkers appear in several episodes of Lost Tapes.
  • "Big Guy" of Sanctuary is of the Bigfoot abnormal classification.
  • The Goodies did an episode spoofing Arthur C. Clarke's Mysterious World. Tim Brooke-Taylor & Co go into the Canadian Rockies in search of mysterious creatures, only to find that Graham Garden is faking their existence (including the inevitable spoof on the Patterson-Gimlin Film, which is given away by the zipper that Graham has to undo to take a piss). Eventually one of Tim's feet swells up to enormous size due to him constantly walking around steep slopes, and he has to flee into the wild (wearing a furry coat to keep himself warm) to prevent everyone who sees him laughing themselves to death over the sight of his Big Foot.
  • Humourously averted in Supernatural. While the existence of many supernatural and paranormal creatures is never questioned, Bigfoot is stated outright to be a legend. In the one episode where they start to suspect they've found Bigfoot it actually turns out to be a giant Teddy Bear created by a cursed wishing well.
  • Norg, The Scrappy of Power Rangers Operation Overdrive is a hilariously inept Yeti, whose one shining moment was being unwittingly spotted by the heroes while walking in a manner very similar to the Patterson film (se Real Life below).
  • The 1970's paranormal series In Search Of had an episode dedicated to the real life legend of Bigfoot.
  • An episode of the HBO Tenacious D show has the guys meet and sing a song about Sasquatch, which references the episode of In Search Of featuring him. They try to bring him on as their drummer, but he's terrible, so they let him down gently, telling him that they're not ready to be a "power trio." John C. Reilly plays the Sasquatch.
  • One episode of MacGyver featured a Sasquatch that turned out to be a guy in a rubber suit... or did it?
  • Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot series.

Music[]

Radio[]

  • The Stan Freberg Show's abominable snowman interviews. His trade is terrorizing the mountain climbers and he wears size 23 sneakers.

Sports[]

  • The now-defunct Seattle SuperSonics basketball team had two costumed mascots over the decades; the first was an orange Bigfoot-like creature called The Wheedle; following a mascot-free hiatus, the team introduced Squatch, an "actual" Sasquatch.
  • One of the mascots for the Vancouver 2010 Olympics was Quatchi, a sasquatch wearing earmuffs.

Tabletop Games[]

  • Sasquatches appear in the Shadowrun role-playing game, where they are peaceable and sentient beings capable of flawlessly imitating sounds.
  • Some versions of the Dungeons & Dragons Monster Manual include Yeti as potential encounters.
  • Deadlands uses both Sasquatches and Skunk Apes. The former are one of the few non-evil supernatural entities in the setting, while the latter are more malicious. This hasn't stopped one of them from developing a taste for cigars rolled from Cuban tobacco, though.
  • Sasquatches appear in Rifts Canada, as a peaceful native race that prefers to live in harmony with nature. Some of them journey into the world of men (and thus, like a great majority of species' in the game world, are available as Player Characters). There is also a magical Spirit Sasquatch, and the Wendigo, which in this case is a demonic Sasquatch-like monster.
  • Magic the Gathering has a small handful of Yeti creatures, most of them from the Ice Age block.

Theme Park[]

Video Games[]

Web Comics[]

Web Original[]

  • A YouTube user uploads comedic videos starring himself and the bigfoot that ruins his shit on a regular basis.
  • Number 1000 of the SCP Foundation is bigfoot, though the species is presented a bit differently from how it normally is, being the survivors of the once-dominant species that we overthrew.
  • In "The Adventures of The League of STEAM episode, "Hairy Hijinks", members of the league go in search of bigfoot.

Western Animation[]

  • One episode of Phineas and Ferb has a bored Candace and her grandparents (and her grandmother's crazy twin sister who lives in a closet) pretending to be Bigfoot to scare her brothers. It works. And then the monster is revealed to be Grandpa and all is good. Or is it?
  • Bigfoot appears in an episode of Futurama; the episode ends with a parody/homage to the Patterson film mentioned above. This was made all the funnier by the fact that in the Futuramaverse, Bigfoot is considered a silly superstition. It's surreal when you see robots, mutants, and aliens scoff at the idea of a bigfoot.
    • Did we mention that said episode ("Spanish Fry") had the Omicron Persei VIII aliens Lrrr and Ndnd getting off on said beast's existence and having mad, passionate sex right in front of him?
      • Bigfoot nods approvingly to said scene....before walking off....happily.
  • Monsters, Inc. has a scene where the banished heroes meet their fellow exile, now known as the Adorable Agreeable Abominable Snowman in Nepal. There's an offhand reference to Bigfoot, who was supposedly friends with the Yeti in the past, and was also banished (basically implying that every monster myth originated from the monster dimension). Nessie is mentioned as being an exiled monster as well.
    • When this scene is redone for the closing credits of Cars, the Abominable Snowman is reimagined as a snowplow rather than a monster truck.
  • Jonny Quest TOS episode "Monster in the Monastery". A group of Yeti threatening a small village turn out to be enemy agents in costumes. At the end of the episode all of the agents are found dead, killed by a real Yeti.
    • Jonny Quest the Real Adventures had Yeti who turned out to be Neanderthals in a Monastery (a knowing throwback to the original). It also featured Bigfoot which were revealed to be aliens in disguise (they couldn't survive in Earth's polluted atmosphere otherwise).
    • There was also the yeti who turned out to be a scientist dressed as yeti to scare away snow leopard poachers. The head monk on the other hand...
    • The 80s revamp of the series had a twenty-or-so feet tall viking warrior yeti preserved alive in a glacier.
  • The Abominable Snow Monster/Bumble from Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer.
  • In a Christmas episode of American Dragon: Jake Long Jake and his friends try to get a baby Sasquatch back to his family before various enemies find it first.
  • Bigfoot shows up in A Goofy Movie.
    • An episode of Goof Troop has Goofy and Pete encountering an unusual depiction of Bigfoot which has antlers. Made more unusual by the fact that it's female.
  • A Sasquatch is among the jury-members putting Humanity on Trial in an episode of Captain Planet and the Planeteers.
  • Classic Looney Tunes shorts would sometimes star the Abominable Snowman, a hulking furry giant who would "adopt" fuzzy animals like Bugs Bunny and literally smother them with adoration. He would always call his new pet "George." (This is a Shout-Out to the origin of the character: Lon Chaney Jr.'s portrayal of Lennie in Of Mice and Men.)
  • Roswell Conspiracies: Aliens, Myths and Legend is a show which posits that most of the monsters of human myth are actually different species of aliens living in the hidden corners of the Earth. The Yeti are portrayed as one of the more benevolent groups. Their leader is named Tiyet.
  • The Backyardigans had two Yetis in different episodes: Pablo in the appropriatedly-named episode "The Yeti" (Although he looked more like himself wearing white winter gear) and Tyrone in "Fly Girl" (Which looks more like a Yeti than Pablo did).
  • The Angry Beavers Daggett was taught in the art of stealth by "Big Buttocks". He was really a big hairy, naked Canadian.
  • The Secret Saturdays' Fiskerton is described as a "cat-gorilla", but he looks like pure Bigfoot.
    • An even better, albeit spoileriffic example would be V.V. Argost, the series primary antagonist, who is actually a Yeti.
  • Aqua Teen Hunger Force has an episode where Master Shake moves in with Dirtfoot, basically Bigfoot with one big eye and one big foot.
  • In The Venture Brothers the Bionic Man has fled into the forest and falls in love with Sasquatch. he and Brock shave Sasquatch to get past an Army road block, passing him off as a landmine victim. Another soldier arrives too late to accurately identify him as a shaved Sasquatch. In a later episode Brock stays for a while at their house.
  • X-Men Evolution implies that Sabretooth impersonates Bigfoot from time to time. Hey, you're a seven-foot tall shaggy guy with teeth and claws, what else could you be?
    • And in one episode, Beast is mistaken for Bigfoot by hunters and scientists when he takes a class on a nature retreat.
  • Sasquatch showed up in an episode of Nightmare Ned, where he convinces the Tooth Fairy to let Ned try Chess with Death for his teeth.
  • Nickelodeon's KaBlam!! has Mr. B. Foot, a stage hand who just happens to be a sasquatch. He spends most of his time lounging around on the job and beating up Henry. Although he'll never hurt June.
  • Skips from Regular Show is a Yeti, and one of the few sensible characters on the show.
  • On The Simpsons, Homer is mistaken for Bigfoot after stumbling around a forest covered in mud and ranting incoherently. To add insult to injury, after he's captured, scientists are unable to determine whether he is "a below-average human or a brilliant beast."
  • "Hairy Manilow" from House of Mouse.
  • Although no actual sasquatch is seen on The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, both Billy and Hoss Delgado are mistaken for one when they get covered with super-hair-growth potion, and Billy's mother implies that she's had an affair with one.
  • An episode of Arthur featured a Dexters Laboratory-esque sequence (featuring Alan "The Brain" Powers as Dexter and Arthur Read as Dee Dee) involving Arthur tampering with one of Alan's experiments, resulting in him turning into a sasquatch. He is then later seen running away into a nearby forest where he then sees the actual sasquatch.
  • Lila from The Life and Times of Juniper Lee is a Cute Sasquatch Girl
  • Snow Man from the original Thundercats
  • One episode of Battle Force 5 has the five enter a Arctic Zone. They encounter a giant Abominable Snowman similar to a white King Kong.
  • An episode of Sparkle Friends had them trying to get a photo of Bigfoot. Who turns to literally be a big foot.
  • The National Exaggerator from A Pup Named Scooby-Doo apparently kept Bigfoot, as well as his cousin Bighands, on staff!
  • Shows up quite often on Scooby Doo, naturally. Or at least, people pretending to be Bigfoots/Yetis.
  • The Legend Of Sasquatch
  • When Peter drives into the TV satellite dish on Family Guy, he tells the angry mob Look Behind You! because he saw Bigfoot. Bigfoot then explains this is about Peter, not himself.
  • In the Rick and Morty episode "Mort: Ragnarick", Rick has Bigfoot captured in a Poké Ball, deliberately allowing himself to be killed by Bigfoot so he can ascend into Valhalla. After killing Morty and escaping, Bigfoot is taken prisoner by the Pope to be an assassin against other religions before he aligns himself with a Back From the Dead Rick and Morty to take down the Pope. Using their Body Backup Drive causes Humanity Ensues for Bigfoot, but Rick and Morty still release him back into the wild.

Real Life[]

  • Tracks of supposed sasquatches are often found, which are sometimes revealed to be the work of pranksters when proper investigation is done, although some of them have been found to be possibly real.
  • The most famous Sasquatch video evidence is the "Patterson-Gimlin Film", which indisputably depicts either a Sasquatch or a man in a hairy suit. The footage as of 2010 still hasn't been proven or disproved.
    • Starting in the early 2000's a man named Phillip Morris came out as saying he was involved in the creation of a gorilla suit and communicating with Patterson as to how to broaden the shoulders and extend the length of the arms. Bob Heironimus who can be seen in the second part of the reel accompanying the documentarians would later claim that he was paid $1000 to wear such a suit and that he was the creature in the film. The involvement of Ray Wallace, the well known Bigfoot hoaxist has also been corroborated by his family after his death. The Other Wiki has more information.
      • However, Morris and Heironimus' stories do not match up, suggesting that at least one of them is lying or misremembering.
  • The Weekly World News was a supermarket tabloid which often ran Bigfoot stories.
  • Some apes, such as gorillas, were known only as legends of "hairy wild men" until properly discovered.
    • Interestingly, the word "gorilla" first time appears in the writings of Carthaginian explorer Hanno, in an area that doesn't seem to have ever had any great apes. Some historians believe that Hanno and his men mistakenly killed and skinned some pygmies they thought to match the description.
  • Paleontologists have discovered species of extinct giant, herbivorous apes that bear a striking resemblance to Yeti. This may be the source of the legend.
    • It is speculated that ancient humans may have discovered or encountered such remains, just like the ancient Greeks misinterpreted elephant skulls for Cyclops. (Northern European Troll legends may be based on similar prehistoric encounters, which didn't end well for the Neanderthals).
  • Sometimes people record alleged vocalizations of Bigfoot like these.
  • I believe hearing that though it has not been proven to exist, Sasquatch is actually a protected species in Washington state. In other words; we don't know if it exists but if you see one don't shoot!
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