09
Jun
10

Live Webchat Tomorrow!

Hey everyone, some friends of mine do this GREAT internet radio show, Strange Frequencies Radio. While they go live for 3 hours every Sunday, TOMORROW is going to be an exclusive web chat on the SFR site. I’ll be there, loyal listeners will be there and the hosts too.

Tomorrow night at 9pm EST: Is there middle ground between science an…d the paranormal? Skeptics and ghost hunters? Join us for a chat room discussion by clicking “Go Live” on the Strange Frequencies Radio website!

www.strangefrequenciesradio.com

Once in chat, click on your name to change it so we know who you are! No experience in the paranormal is needed! You don’t have to be an expert, no question is too ridiculous AND nobody will not bite your head off like other chat rooms and you don’t get banned for disagreeing with someone.

07
Jun
10

SPLICE: my movie review

So this is spoilery, I will give the whole movie away. That being said, I think you should see it for WTF and laugh-factor alone.

Yeah, it was that kind of movie.

The film starts out with scientists in a lab breeding this blob slug looking things and trying to get them to mate in order to synthesize a protien to like, cure cancer or something. That part isn’t really explained. There’s science, interesting effects, and Adrien Brody pretending to be a cross between Bill Nye and Adam Lambert is entertaining. Meh. Then…the chick scientist decides they are going to create a human hybrid embryo ‘just to prove they can’. Of course, this is the point in every monster/mad scientist movie where things go wrong.

This cute little thing gets born and of course the woman in all her maternal instinct she mothers it. The guy feels indifferent, and he even attempts to drown it (shocker! it can breathe underwater!). So then they take it to a farm and there is a hint that the woman was abused by a mentally ill mother in her youth (oh, and that’s not the weirdest part). The monster grows up to be wicked sexy. She’s a teenager with hormones and that’s crazy awkward!

So Mr. Scientist guy comes home and goes to see Dren (NERD in reverse, how cheeky). He puts on a record, makes a Bob Fosse reference, and starts dancing with Dren. Dren kisses him, he sees something he recognizes and goes to confront his girlfriend and she admits that yes, Dren is her ‘daughter’ on a biological level.

Then…this movie just goes CRAZY! Dren kills a cat, the woman tries to dissect this stinger thing off her tail, and Mr. Scientist guy has sex with his monster. Yes, you read that correctly. He bangs the monster! People in the theater went from groaning to yelling ‘TAP THAT ASS BOY’. Truly…the movie was interesting until that happened.

Miss Scientist Lady walks in to see her boyfriend porking her ‘daughter/monster’ and gets mad. No shit. Then some stupid stuff happens, they go back to the barn and Dren–who ages like super fast–dies. They bury her, start to burn all her toys and things, when the boss of the lab they work at shows up and demands to see her.

Something kills him. Turns out Dren has the ability to change into a male, kinda like the worm thingys at the beginning of the movie. Dren, now a he, begins to kill them. THEN HE RAPES MISS SCIENTIST LADY. Major eye roll. I swear, if Drean hadn’t killed the cat earlier, he would raped it too…

Cut to the end of the movie, the Scientist Lady is the only one left alive and she’s preggers. Yeah. Preggers with her own grandchild. Super strange. And? She sells the thing to her boss’s boss. All in the name of science.

Overall? I thought the movie was going to be way different. It was interesting until all the sex happened. Then it was laughably stupid. I just can’t even wrap my brain around the fact that a movie studio would let someone make a movie so bad. Then again, The English Patient was a hit so I don’t know.

My grade? In terms of visual effects, cool. Plot? F. Acting? D. Laugh Factor? B (if they would have tried they coulda made it a comedy). Meh, wait to rent it.

31
May
10

Weekly recommendations, RLPB news & more!

A new little feature in RLPB! A weekly list of cool things, news stories, pod casts, articles, and more dealing with subjects related to the blog. Some of these might be older items, but I may have just discovered them or they might have current relevance. Hey, don’t like? Don’t check out. If you have stuff to recommend to me, hit me up!

Also, RLPB has a chat room! At the top of the page on the right-hand side of the screen, click ‘GO LARGE’ to open it up in a new window. This is to talk about audio-blogs as you listen, or meet up to discuss anything, I’m not gonna really moderate it. My hope is someday we can to chat interviews in real-time, and this could serve as a chat room for the future live radio show.

The Weekly Woo:

The Ghost Hunting Parablog

Articles on using EMF meters in ghost hunting, the legitimacy of shadow people, and explaining the different types of haunting. For those of you interested in the perpetuating of false information, bad science and irresponsible investigation, here’s your blog.

The Truth About Ghosts

Another Youtube video filled with obviously fake orb or ghost pictures that claims all ghosts are demons. It’s funny, especially reading the comments. Add your own!

Weekly Recommendations of Awesome Audio

For Good Reason: April 25 2010 Deirdre Barrett

Evolutionist educator Professor Barrett talks about the notion of supernormal stimuli: how the very evolutionary drives that have kept humankind alive and thriving are now moot and even dangerous. She talks about pornography and even the paranormal, explaining that the belief in ghosts and myths was crucial to self preservation. DJ Grothe does an amazing job of asking her some hard-hitting questions as well.

Spooky Southcoast Radio

May 1 2010 Paranormal Potpourri

A show that I used to find interesting, but personally has become too much of a perpetuator of woo, this particular episode addresses a topic that I find fascinating: using the paranormal for tourism. While I completely disagree with the hosts on the topic, I think it’s worth a listen.

Strange Frequencies Radio Episode 101: Heidi Hollis

Ms. Hollis talks about shadow people and Hat Man (a term she coined). She also takes a rather disturbing stance on using science to provide people with alternative explanations. Personally, the way she comes up with a personal experience to answer every single question with a personal experience that sounds straight out of Hollywood seems very odd. It’s a bit angering, but at the same she’s fun and it’s worth a listen.

Weekly Recommendations of Bodacious Blogs

Daily Kos: State of the Nation

May 10 2010: Fishgrease: Dkos Booming School

An entry about the current oil spill/crisis in the Gulf of Mexico. It’s humorous and honest, using basic common knowledge and industry expertise to explain how BP is full of shit. It’s another look at how our media tends to pacify us with faulty science, hoping we won’t catch on. Worth a read and a re-tweet.

The Mad Skeptic

May 5 2010 Buh Bye Facebook

The Mad Skeptic is always an interesting read, but I think this article is the perfect demonstration of conspiracy and hypocrisy. The wave of people quitting Facebook over the revelation of the lack of privacy tends to be a popular idea. We get a rant from The Mad Skeptic that I personally disagree with 100%. Yep, I am posting things to read that I don’t agree with. It’s called being well-rounded. If you operate under the illusion that there is privacy in a public forum (aka the internet), you’ll get a kick out of this.

Weekly Recommendations in Wicked Websites (Rachel stop this rhyming crap please!)

 Woo Fighters

A great skeptical website (and Facebook group) addressing the woo. To recommend just one article to read this week would be difficult, so spend some time on this site.

Jenny McCarthy Body Count

Attacking the celebrity at the forefront of the ‘Green our Vaccines’ movement Jenny McCarthy, this is a great place for some facts, mainly the one that there isn‘t a scientifically proven link between autism and vaccinations. Someone tell Jenny?

Weekly Recommendations of Facebook Groups

Jenny McCarthy Body Count

Woo Fighters

Grassroots Skeptics

Things upcoming for RLPB:

More audio blogs (with less animal sex and more discussion I assure you)

Movie/book reviews

Interviews with bloggers/show hosts/writers/investigation teams and more

I’m also putting together a bunch of icons and banners that you can use on your website or blog to promote RLPB! Also, no need to ask if you want to link to the blog, just let me know if you do so I can let readers/listeners know about you too!

30
May
10

Scary Scale for the Paranormal

Here’s a hilarious article from my co-contributor Old Pail. Enjoy!

Scary-Scale for The Paranormal
When visiting the doctor in pain you are inevitably asked to quantify the pain with a number. Paranormal experiences can be scary but how do we know exactly how scary? We need a well defined scale like the pain scale. Doctors give several examples of what a one or a ten is on the pain scale. They often use common injuries such as stubbing your toe for the rankings. I have taken it on myself to create a similar scale for paranormal experiences. With any luck it will be used, improved upon and become a standard of measurement that will advance the scientific nature of paranormal research. Let’s start!
Defining the numbers: Zero. Zero isn’t scary at all. In fact, to be a proper base ranking zero means you’re unconscious. Any awareness could bear with it some fear, however small, so we’ll start with zero being unconscious but not dreaming (dreams can be major scary).
Number One. Oddly number one does not include doing a number one in your pants–that comes latter. Number one is the level of mailing off your Avon order and not remembering if you stamped the envelope. Appropriate number one level responses might be saying, “Oh damn,” or thinking you might have something stuck in between your teeth.
Number Two. Similarly number two does not include doing number two (not just in your pants, but anywhere). The level of scariness here is in double take territory. You might think to yourself, “Did I just see what I thought I saw?” or wondering if the guy you’re with just grabbed your ass. Appropriate number two level responses might be rubbing your eyes or looking around like you actually wouldn’t mind finding something paranormal. Still not very scary (unless the guy you are with actually did grab your ass).
Number Three. The level of scariness is now effecting behavior. At a level three you might think of or suggest alternate activities or prefer the lights on. Talk about scary stuff will be less welcome similar to talking about barfing when your eating leftover stew.
Number Four. The level of scariness is now effecting physiology. Goose bumps and sweating are the most common but some people break out in hives. If you already had the chicken pocks you may be somewhat insulated from the effects at level four but it is no guarantee…
Number Five. Okay if you piss in you pants more than a few drops you are a total cupcake. Level five is where you weed out the newbies and move onto the scary stuff. Level five is not so much a level as a transitioning point from the spider on Johnny Quest scary to the “What did we just run over in the road?” scary.
Number Six. It’s still not normal to pee yet but it is okay to puke. Level six is where you are lobbing vehemently to go clubbing or return to the dorm to play drinking games. At level six everyone is now moving in a line with the bravest souls at the front and the chump at the rear. Most folks are sweating, goose bumpy, and have an increased snot production. Those who have not yet vomited will be feeling queasy as if they just spent an hour or two with a Jehovah’s Witness. Yes, you would be willing to buy several months worth of Watchtowers to go home right now. For some level six is a right of passage.
Level Seven. For those suffering loose bowels level seven could be it. Irritable bowel syndrome kicks into high gear at level seven. If you poop now your chances of staying in the game drop off drastically. For those with normal bowels seven is the level at which you try to rationalize the situation back down to a three. Seven is the level of disbelief.
Level Eight: Time to sweat and wet. At level eight your body liquids have had enough–they are getting the hell out of there with or without you. Snot, tears, drool, sweat, pee, extra runny earwax and that runny stuff you puke up after you already up-chucked. Some theorize it the body preparing for flight (reducing weight so you can take off). For some panic sets in. Because panic manifests itself differently in various individuals there is little more to say about the responses in level nine that would apply across the board.
Level Nine: Everybody poops. You are literally scared shitless! In some strange way dangling a dump in your drawers will nullified the other fear effects temporarily. At level nine half of your crew ran away and half can’t move. Some of those that ran away got lost and ended up right back where they started–they’re weeping profusely now. Oh and if your in a group at least one of you is producing an unnatural smell. Older folks are prone to things like dying or amnesia. Younger people may have the opposite effect and not die or forget the future.
Defining a 10: To be truly the top of the scale a ten must included every response in the scary range. To hit a ten you must have already: shit yourself, wet yourself, turned white or a ethnically appropriate equivalent, lost you mind, tripped over something, hallucinated, all hell breaking loose, thought you were dreaming, drooled, ripped a muscle, running aimlessly while waving your arms about your head, complete memory loss, stigmata, made a nonsensical utterance or began to speak in tongues, started hiccupping, checked to see if you lost your wallet or cell phone, actually in possession of an entire ball of wax, cardiac arrest, worried that you left the oven on at home, swearing off Ouija boards forever, regrets over not having sex with a real girl at least once, thought that you forgot to transfer cash from your savings account to cover a check, death, worried that you might be spotting thought your new tights, spontaneous human combustion, spontaneous organ rejection, fussed with your hair–In short everything but pass out, because if you pass out you are automatically at zero again.
 
29
May
10

May 28/29 Audio Blog

Randall calls me. Randall is from Arkansas. He will remind you several times throughout the 2 1/2 hours.

We mean to talk about something intelligent, and end up shooting the shit for 40 minutes. There is about five minutes of actual hardcore paranormal talk, then I get distracted by Tony on Twitter. I grab some books. I burp. Randall burps. We actually have an interesting conversation that tends to stay towards the paranormal. I call Randall out on his terminology and educate the hell out of him, and we both get hard. How I, a woman, gets hard, is paranormal enought to warrant discussion. 

We have a really cool conversation on the paranormal skeptic shift and how the people who are skeptics because it’s cool are just as bad as believers. Someday I’ll go into this further I’m sure.

I get personal. I watch animals boffing on YouTube.

Listen at your own risk.

CLICKY HERE TO LISTEN TO AUDIO BLOG MAY 28 PART 1

26
May
10

Racism & The Paranormal

Because I actually have some academic background in this topic, I answer the question the lovely Tony Hart-Wilden aka @chasingmidnight posted to Twitter:

A serious question, why is it that the vast majority of the paranormal community are white people ? Is it cultural?

This is a very interesting question that has no real answer, but for the sake of making myself sound important in the paranormal blogosphere, I’ll put in my two cents. Because after all, my words are too important for a mere tweet. Man…if some of you thought I was serious then you need to just GO AWAY.

Let’s look at this from a sociological perspective, because after all, race is a sociological contruction. Hell, I’ll even argue that ghosts are a sociological construction too. That article comes later thought. Anyway,  what we know as ‘race’ is so totally like, made up man. Here’s an example: in the book The Measure of Man by Stephen Jay Gould, he outlines the faulty science of American polygeny and craniometry. Big words Rachel, big words! I THOUGHT THIS WAS THE PARANORMAL AND I DIDN’T HAVE TO ACTUALLY KNOW ANYTHING! I’m basically talking about biological determinism, the notion that people at the bottom are constructed of intrinsically inferior material (poor brains, bad genes, or whatever) (Gould, 31). They used to determine this determinism through craniometry. Below is a picture of some of Benjamin Franklin’s work in the field. Yeah, good ole  B-Note Benny was a fucking racist bastard. Side note: Lincoln ‘The Great Emancipator’ was also a proponent of craniometry:

What a lot of craniometrist would do is fill the skulls of people of all races with rice or dried beans and measure which one held more. Bigger heads were equated to that of apes and savage creatures and seen as inferior. Because this was apparently ‘biological’, it was termed that ‘non-whites’ (I used quotations because who is considered ‘white’ has changed throughout history) are biologically inferior. It’s science. Of course, sample skulls were picked from specific individuals and the research and sample size was in no way random, but picked to fulfill the faulty notion that correlation equals causation. It’s science.

Faulty science.

But what does this have to do with the paranormal dammit?

Society is a collection of individuals and systems that work together and can never, ever sustain themselves singularly. This is why Liberatrians will never rule the earth. Or pandas. Our roles and our worth are defined by the roles and worth of those around us. This is basically what racism is. Racism is a sociological construct that steams all the way back to faulty science like craniometry and the need to push oneself to the top of whatever pedestal you feel the need to be on. It’s systemic, and even with a black man as President, it’s still major building block of modernity.

Still haven’t gotten to why this is paranormal yet Rachel.

Okay. So, you have a group of people who through social programs, de facto segregation and Jim Crow-style social laws (that are all still in existence), white people have solidified the gap between themselves and black people. George Lipsitz states in his book The Possessive Investment in Whiteness that ‘The power of whiteness depended not only on white hegemony over separate racialized groups, but also on manipulating racial outsiders to fight against one another, to compete with each other for white approval, and to seek the rewards and privileges of whiteness for themselves at the expense of other racialized populations’ (Lipsitz, 3). A modern example of this would be comparing Wayne Brady to Snoop Dogg. I had to sing ‘D-oh-double-g’ to spell his name right.

*headpalm*

Wayne Brady has a very different audience than Snoop Dogg for a lot of reasons, but the main one is that Wayne Brady is seen as a ‘non-threating minority.’ He laughs, he makes clean jokes, he’s cool. Remember that skit on The Chappelle Show where Wayne Brady acts totally out of character? Chappelle was onto something. There is a clear division within the black community. Why? Well, there are several reasons for this, but a big one would be that whole competition thing Lipsitz was talking about. Domestic abuse is extremely high in ‘minorites’ (I read this in college, no source citation, and it’s a ratio anyway. Sorry). Sexism in the black community is a real problem. So is classism and especially homophobia. This is all because of competition that many people may or may not be conscious of.

AREN’T YOU GOING TO ANSWER TONY’S QUESTION RACHEL?

Yes, in fact my next source is paranormal. In an episode of the popular-but-stupid radio show Beyond Reality, hosts Jason Hawes and Grant Wilson interviewed paranormal researcher and journalist Jeff Belanger. I could go back and find the exact air date of the interview, but I’m sure it was in the last few months the show was on the air, so early spring 2008. Belanger talked about how psychology is still a field struggling for legitimacy, and the reason that the psychology field doesn’t look into the paranormal is because, well, people would think psychology was even crazier than it already is.

Psychology is potentially avoiding/ignoring/glossing over a rather interesting area of study–the belief in the paranormal–in order to save it’s own ass. Okay, point taken. So why would it be so hard to believe that black people wouldn’t do the same? Think about it, on a systemic level if you already have to work harder than everyone else around you for half the same privledges, would you risk it all to run around the dark with an EMF meter? Now, when Tony posed this question, a follower on Twitter replied ‘because white people are crazy.’ This is a sentiment often heard in films, comedic routines, and in every day life. It’s gotta have roots in reality somewhere, right? Perhaps, throughout history, an intercultural ideology has emerged in which black americans don’t see paranormal investigation as interesting, legitimate, or possible enough to warrant investigation.

It could be as simple as: white paranormal researchers are racist assholes who won’t share EMF meters and we are only days away from putting up ‘Whites Only’ and ‘Coloreds Only’ signs in haunted locations. Could be. I’m currently stewing on an article on sexism in the paranormal that would both support and be supported by what I’ve said above. There’s also the issue of classism, because of the current equipment craze, and the ability to purchase gear, take time off work, buy books they never really read, and travel to places to investigate.

Also, there’s the notion that people in the paranormal are somehow using ‘the field’ as a way to compensate for a lack of popularity, friendship, social or network status, and authority in their every-day lives. If you are a just an every day Joe at work, and you become a God in the paranormal, you’re going to fight to protect your status. If that includes racism and sexism, so be it.

Like I said this is only one potential (and really long) explanation for Tony’s question. It’s something I’ve been wanting to write about for a long time, but never really had a chance to articulate my thoughts before.

Thoughs? Am I crazy? Are you? Does anyone have change for a quarter?

24
May
10

Psi Fail

24
May
10

May 23 Audio Blog: Creepy Stories, Shadow Hamsters & More!

So, instead of writing articles that I get to edit and think about, I’ve just started blabbing into my laptop. Tonight I felt inspired, so I went to my folks and got them to chat along.

I sat down to record a 10 minute audio blog with RLP contributor Old Pail. We get off track. He coughs into the mike. The dogs make noise. My mother is drunk. Then, after a half an hour, my parents tell some super creepy and wicked cool stories about paranormal experiences. I tell them something I’ve never told them before. More silliness, more coughing, and me laughing. It’s a riot I tell ya.

GO LISTEN HERE

18
May
10

First Red Letter Audio Blog!

I just recorded by first ‘Audio Blog’. In preparation for Red Letter Pararadio (coming soon) I’ve decided to start doing some of my posts as podcasts, simply because it’s easier for me to talk it out than write sometimes, and I’m lazy.

This episode: ‘Paranormal Investigators’ the new SyFy reality show.

LISTEN HERE 

02
May
10

MOVIE REVIEW: Not Your Typical Bigfoot Movie

Tonight I perused the PLAY IT NOW section of Netflix and stumbled across a documentary entitled ‘Not Your Typical Bigfoot Movie.’ Albiet, the film came out in 2008, so I’m a bit late to the punch. But hey, I’m under the weather and not interested in Chris Rock remakes of films that only came out a few years ago.

I was expecting blind believers to claim they’ve seen bigfoot and that yes, it’s real. I wasn’t expecting to be moved to tears.

We are introduced to a man named Dallas who is claiming his website is near being shut down. He seems just like any other ‘nutter’ in the paranormal. He’s not rich, he’s not well-spoken, but he seems sincere. We learn about his family and his bigfoot partner, Wayne, who is just as blue-collar as Dallas. Dallas is a Reiki Master, and while this stereotypical paranormal enthusiast has you shaking your head, the way the film makers present him will have you scratching it instead.

Wayne is a troubled man. After admitting to severe depression and alienation in youth, he goes into the story of his attempted suicide in 1982. What struck me about Wayne was when he said ‘I’m a loser.’ He feels hopeless in his life. He’s broke, depressed, and feeling like his research into the bigfoot phenomenon is his one lifeline, his hobby that’s keeping him afloat.

Dallas, his wife and one of his sons travel to a bigfoot researcher get-together in Tennessee with other like-minded blind believers. Dallas’s son starts talking about how he sees bigfoot as closer to human than humans are, how they are free and they ‘get it’ and how he’d rather be one of them. It’s here that I see the striking reality of many people in the paranormal field. We may joke about cat-lady psychics or overweight outcasts who are now finding a niche that they can feel important in. On the internet, people are willing to listen, engage, and especially in the paranormal, it’s easy to ‘move up the ranks.’ There are no qualifications, no certainties. Much like the lives of Wayne and Dallas, there’s just a glimmer of hope in the deep well of nothingness and frustration that there is something out there, that things are better than they seem, and that there are answers worth searching for.

The last third of the film serves as a warning and a reminder that this ‘field’ will tear you apart. Both men are extremely poor and state that while they love the field, they would hope to make some money to pay the bills. So what happens? Somehow (and I’m not sure how because I recieved a text of a drunk man’s ass and was distracted) Tom Biscardi gets Wayne booked on a radio show. The rest of the film becomes yet another in a long list of reasons why Tom Biscardi is an asshole who needs to be stopped. Seriously, I have NEVER heard a nice thing about the guy. To sum it up, Tom asked Wayne to lie on a radio show about a picture he took and Wayne, who is obviously suffering from an untreated mental illness and has never done a radio show before, jumbles up the lies he claims Tom told him to tell. Soon, Dallas’s website is declared a hoax and their ‘work’ is discredited on a massive scale. Tom? Oh, he just shrugs it off as ‘that’s not what he told me’. But do Dallas and Wayne hold it against Tom? No, because Tom is coming to work with them in person and as Wayne keeps saying, he’s trying to make a little money on all this.

When Tom comes into the picture, he sounds every bit the paranormal prick. It serves as such a contrast to the story of emotion and passion for the work that we’ve seen in Dallas and Wayne. During the actual investigation, Tom insults Dallas and Wayne to the documentary crew, opts to play ridiculous animal calls to attract bigfoot, and ignores the advice and information from the two men who have been out in those woods every day for years. So the next night, when Tom refuses to take thier calls and claims he’s leaving town early, the viewer isn’t surprised.

This happens in the paranormal all too often. People with means and a resemblance of a reputation swoop down and take advantage of others, all for personal and financial gain. When there is none to be had, they move on. The sad thing is, there are too many people in the paranormal who are looking to the ‘field’ to be their savior. They are trying to fulfill a real or percieved need in thier lives and they see this research as a way to fill it. If people question you, it’s taken as a direct assault on your person and barriers go up, preventing any real work from happening.  As I was watching this, I was struck at how the psychology of the paranormal field mirrors the psychology of drug addiction.

It’s not a movie where at the end they pull out the big money-shot of a bigfoot walking in the woods. There’s no real absolution for anyone. They continue living, they continue researching, and they try. It’s not a story about bigfoot. It’s a story about the people who are chasing him, and really, that’s the more interesting one. In an interview in 2008, Jeff Belanger stated that just the mere fact that people are interested in the field is worth studying, whether or not anything paranormal is real. That belief and the motivations behind it are strong enough and worth our examination.

I suggest spending the hour watching this film. It’s sad, angering, and will make you think about yourself and the people you surround yourself with. It’s available on Netflix or from http://notyourtypicalbigfootmovie.com/.




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Who is Red Letter Rachel?

Hi, I'm Rachel. I'm a 25-year-old graduate student (starting fall 2010) in Applied Behavior Analysis. I'm obsessed with strange things, can recite dialogue from 'Back to the Future' and 'The Burbs' word for word, stalk people on Twitter, and I don't wear matching socks. While I try to write articles with meaning, I do like to be silly, sometimes a bit flirty and self-depricating, and I won't hesitate to attack people for being stupid.

Who the Hell is Old Pail and Why?

Old Pail has been accused of being many things, but has been aquitted more times than he can shake a stick at (which was actually one of the charges leveled against him). He is old. He is not, however, an actual bucket as the name and avatar may imply. Plagued with a rare form of migrating facial hair, he has been occationally responsible, in the past, for inciting a number of sasquatch sightings.

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