Journalist Laura Krantz never gave Bigfoot a lot of thought and even considered the mythic creature to be nothing more than tabloid fodder. However, when she realized that hunting for the infamous ...
Laura Krantz spent two years searching for Bigfoot as part of her podcast, Wild Thing. Credit: Jake Holschuh/Foxtopus Ink I brace myself as I open my email: Another note from someone who listened to ...
Plenty of people talk about Bigfoot, but what is it like to go out searching for the famous cryptid? On this week’s episode of the Peak Northwest podcast, we talk to Samantha Swindler, videographer ...
For more than a year, Laura Krantz searched for Sasquatches and the people who love them. She tromped through the Pacific Northwest looking for Bigfoot nests, frequented Sasquatch-enthusiast chat ...
Every year, when NPR opens up our Student Podcast Challenge, thousands of young people send us their stories. We get investigative journalism, heartfelt family interviews, and deeply personal stories.
In our latest podcast episode, Dan Kosloski talks with Gwendolyn Purcell, the founding member of the Bigfoot research group Got Knockers. Gwendolyn shares her incredible personal encounters with ...
It’s no coincidence that, in the last few years, our collective appetite for the unexplained has grown. History has shown that during times of intense stress people start looking for answers beyond ...
Former CU Boulder Journalism Fellow Laura Krantz explores all things Bigfoot in Wild Thing, which the Atlantic named one of 2018's Best Podcasts. Maybe Bigfoot exists in nature, maybe not. What’s for ...
An obsession with finding Bigfoot runs in Laura Krantz’s family. Her distant cousin, Grover Krantz, was a professor of anthropology at Washington State University and became famous as one of the first ...
A few weeks ago, I asked if you knew Paul Giamatti is dating the actress who played his dominatrix on Billions? Now that this question has been answered (you do), I’d like to ask another: Did you know ...
With help from his brother and some creative sound effects, an 11-year-old made us smile with his podcast. It's a finalist in this year's NPR... 'Monster Madness': A sixth grader sent us this ...
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