This Paranormal Life - #273 The Bridgewater Triangle - A Paranormal HOTBED
Episode Date: July 26, 2022All life's great mysteries involve triangles. The pyramids: how were they built? Pizza: why is it so delicious? And the Bridgewater Triangle is no exception. Rivalling even the infamous Bermuda Triang...le, the Bridgewater Triangle contains a paranormal smörgåsbord - cryptids? You got it. Satanic cults? Of course! Ancient scriptures? A thousand times, yes! But is ANY of it real? Only Kit and Rory can answer that question.VOTE FOR THIS PARANORMAL LIFE IN THE IRISH PODCAST AWARDShttps://www.theirishpodcastawards.ie/vote/ Support us on Patreon.com/ThisParanormalLife to get access to weekly bonus episodes!Buy Official TPL Merch! -  thisparanormallife.com/storeFollow us on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTubeJoin our Secret Society Facebook CommunityAdvertise on This Paranormal Life via Gumball.fmResearch by Amy GrisdaleEdited by Giles BidderIntro music by www.purple-planet.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Answers to these questions and more on this episode of
This Paranormal Life!
Hello!
Hey!
And welcome back to This Paranormal Life.
This is the weekly comedy podcast where every Tuesday,
me, Kit Greer-Molvena, and Roy Powers, who's sitting across from me,
we investigate a different paranormal case and try to get to the bottom of whether it's truly paranormal or not. How are you doing today, Roy? I'm doing fantastic, Kit Greer-Molvena, and Roy Powers, who's sitting across from me. We investigated a different paranormal case and tried to get to the bottom of whether it's truly paranormal or not.
How are you doing today, Roy?
I'm doing fantastic, Kit.
And I love the energy in the room today.
We recently, on the iTunes store, got a one-star review.
Huh?
We got a one-star, and they said that, I think they said...
Give me their address.
They said it used to be good, but now it's gotten bad. They they were like i've been a fan for years and now i hate it and i really think that like it's
not an issue with the quality of the show or like the research or the comedy i think it's an energy
thing i think we're not giving it enough energy i see what you mean i'm just pulling up that review
uh yeah they really have lost the uh they've really lost the excitement and passion to
doing the show um some of their views have become kind of weird and outdated over time yeah i think
we need to give it more stacks i think we need to crank up the volume in the room let's go i'm back
in northern ireland we were recording in our home studio i drove here today in little bastard my car
lightning mcqueen um the sun was shining weird thing to call your car by the way whenever the I drove here today in Little Bastard, my car, Lightning McQueen.
The sun was shining.
Weird thing to call your car, by the way,
whenever the guy who famously drove that car, didn't he die in it?
Yeah, he got wiped out and completely obliterated himself,
much like I probably will do in My Little Bastard.
But yeah, I had the top down cruising in the sun.
Unfortunately, the car is old enough that it doesn't have,
all it has is a CD player.
There's no way to hook up your phone or do Bluetooth or anything like that.
Rory is driving one of those 1940s.
He's eight foot off the ground, giant steering wheel,
but who got horns?
He somehow hooked a CD player up to it.
I don't know how. And the only CDs I can get, because my mom lives back here in Northern Ireland,
is just Christian music, like Christian rock.
That's true.
Worship songs.
Well, you are painting Northern Ireland in a weird light.
We have CDs.
We have more CDs than that.
Not at the House of Mrs. Powers.
An angel on earth, alright?
I like to imagine that whenever you're
driving in the car, you're listening to like, I don't know
Korn, Slipknot
and then when your mum is coming for a ride, you're
like, oh shit, eject, eject!
You put in worship
CDs. I think it's a pretty good
way to go because let's face it, I'm probably
going to die in that car.
So at the very least if i die
listening to like christian worship weird amount of acceptance about your fate it's like you have
a death wish it just means whenever the angels come to pick me up they're like oh hey he's
rocking out to our shit oh this is yeah let's bring him upstairs he's gonna love it up there
you know it's pretty good whereas if i was listening to like metallica or cannibal corpse or some of the hardcore shit that i used to listen to the devil is yanking me
off the earth and dragging me down because he's gonna be like you're gonna love it down here buddy
rory is trying to trick the angels he's wearing a cannibal corpse shirt he's wearing eyeliner and
black fingernail paint i feel like no one's ever gotten to heaven by quote unquote,
tricking the angels.
That's a sign you should maybe be in hell.
Hey, it's your words, not mine, bud.
Can you imagine being in heaven with like all these incredible holy people who have,
you know, given their lives to helping others and raising money for the poor?
Sure.
And they're like, um, how did you get in here?
I tricked the angels.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
I'm a bad dude.
I got Leonardo da Vinci to lick his hand and I put the stamp on the back of my hand and they just let me walk right in.
Mother Teresa opened the fire exit and a bunch of us got in the back.
Classic Mother Teresa.
Listen, we are getting ultimately sidetracked.
We need to get into today's ultimate investigation.
Right off the bat, thank you very much in advance to Jason Mercier, Michelle Smith, Sarah Coleman,
Josh Chisholm, Selena Smith,
no relation to Michelle Smith, I don't think,
Scott Campbell, because that's not allowed.
You can't get your family members to email in submissions.
That is multiple votes from the same household.
It will be not considered for future coverage.
Scott Campbell, Amy Hatzijanis,
Ben Symes, Simon Penny,
and Nicholas Jauvin-O'Rourke. What are you doing right now?
This is all the people who
have requested today's investigation
dating all the way back to 2017.
Oh boy, that's got to be, this means
it's up there with possibly our most
requested case ever. Honestly,
I don't know how we missed it.
They're crying out to cover it,
but I can't hear them over the blaring Christian rock
coming from my tape player.
I really think I'll die any second and need to be safe.
Rory, let's wind the clock back to July 3rd, 1973.
Ooh.
It was Independence Day weekend,
so the people of New England had spent the holiday
having barbecues, sipping lemonade,
and high-fiving one another for escaping the clutches of the bastard British imperialists.
Hell yeah, brother.
But something curious happened that evening that got people looking at the sky, and I'm not talking about fireworks.
One of the first witnesses was a man from a little seaside town called Marshfield, Massachusetts.
Bob, of course, a pseudonym, his real identity will have to be hidden, was out in his backyard about 7 p.m. when suddenly something caught his eye far above him. It looked
like a singular wing of an airplane. Bob thought it might be some kind of space debris hurtling
towards Earth, but it soon became clear that it was flying along by itself. He heard one of his
neighbors exclaim behind his wooden fence, holy hell! The neighbors
had spotted the object too. It was a strange sight to behold. It almost seemed translucent.
Bob could see the blue sky behind it, but the edges were pure white and well-defined.
This is really strange. Within minutes, the entire neighborhood were out of their houses,
gawping at this thing in the sky. It hovered above the town for 45 minutes before
disappearing into the clouds. But once it was gone, he couldn't get it out of his mind. He was
one of 20 or so witnesses, but he felt duty-bound to report it. So, he contacted the Weymouth Naval
Base, hoping they had some answers. And if not, they needed to know something was afoot.
Hello, I wondered if maybe you had any aircraft out flying this evening
because I saw something I cannot explain
and I don't think I'll be able to sleep without knowing.
Yes, I'll hold.
His call was just one of dozens of reports from at least nine different towns.
Everybody wanted to know what they'd seen,
but the military couldn't, or wouldn't, help.
Reports flooded in for two
straight hours and each of them was turned away with the same reply we don't know wow okay so
they're not even denying that it exists this is uh like the first 20 minutes of what happened at
roswell you know that beautiful 20 minutes when the military was like, it's aliens!
I guess they're here! Batten down
the hatches everyone and get your rifle!
Before the general
called down the ranks and was like,
zip it! It's a weather
balloon! Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is that beautiful
grace period of just openness
where people are like, you saw
what? I better tell my boss
and then that guy gets sniped in the back of the head yeah bob's like hello hello
wow this isn't this is crazy very mysterious and to this day we don't know what bob and the others
actually saw one thing we do know is that this wasn't the first mass UFO sighting in mass state.
And it wasn't the last.
A few years later, in 1979,
hundreds of people saw a
UFO flying low overhead.
It was the shape of a baseball diamond.
A what? Brackets to which the
uncultured swine that don't follow baseball
talking to you, Kit, writes
Amy. It's a triangle with two straight
edges and one curved one okay
i think i can gather that that is the pitch you play on yeah the pitch okay yeah jesus and rory
it turns out that these are not isolated incidences far from it they are examples from a clear and
repeated pattern of paranormal behavior all centering over one area paranormal researchers
documenting these stories like a seasoned detective
connecting strings on a cork board across a map of Massachusetts
stood back one day looking for a pattern
when they suddenly dropped their mug of coffee and exclaimed,
Mother of God, realizing that the corks and strings formed a clear shape.
We've all heard of the Bermuda Triangle,
but it turns out there's a new spooky triangle in town,
the Bridgewater Triangle.
Ooh, so what we're talking about
is some sort of UFO hotspot located in Massachusetts.
I wish it was only UFOs, Rory.
Really?
Because I was going to say, I didn't want to be rude.
We've been doing this podcast for a long time.
It takes a lot to move the needle these days. guy seeing a craft in the sky nothing doesn't do nothing for me i feel like we've we did
an episode not long ago where a ufo landed on earth ate a man's jeans off of his body i think
fused with his legs and then took off into the night sky. Right. And not long before that, a UFO abducted a bunch of children in front of their babysitters
and then I think did like open heart surgery on them and dropped them off again.
A boy disintegrated in front of his parents.
Yeah.
So I'm just saying we've been in the game a long time.
It takes a lot to shock us these days, but it sounds like you're telling me it's not
just UFOs appearing in the sky.
There is more paranormal activity taking place in this f***ed up triangle.
Rory, right now I feel like an anime villain.
I'm just grinning ear to ear as you goad me into even suggesting that this case doesn't have the cojones to follow through.
This case has too much, more than we need.
Alright, I'm excited.
There have been countless famous UFO reports from within the Bridgewater Triangle,
many of which we've already covered. Betty and Barney Hill, the Allagash abductions,
and the Newtown Lights to name but three. But even more surprisingly,
there are much earlier accounts on record than that. It was recorded on the morning of May 10th, 1760.
Witnesses reported seeing what they described
as an inexplicable sphere of fire in the sky above Bridgewater.
All that saw it said it was even brighter than the sun.
Whoa!
It shone so bright that it cast a shadow on the ground
in broad, blazing daylight.
It also made a strange noise
that multiple witnesses described
as indescribable which makes sense because it doesn't if there was advanced alien technology
flying overhead in the 1700s they wouldn't exactly have the language to describe it they're not going
to say it sounds like craft work to describe it it was indescribable. It was so bright, I couldn't see it.
It was so fast, it barely moved.
When did you say this was?
The 1700s?
1760.
What were we doing at that point?
Were we still like...
If by we, you mean the Europeans in North America?
A lot of bad s***.
Okay.
A lot of bad s***.
I just meant like, as a human race, kind of, where were we? In North America? Uh lot of bad shit. A lot of bad shit. I just meant like as a human race, kind of where
were we? In North America? Uh-oh. Hard to talk about. I'm saying, no, don't talk about that.
I'm saying like, were we playing with like hoops and sticks? We were playing with knives and
dangerous things. We were at the raccoon pelts type of history, I think. Got it.
That weirdly was summed it up for me perfectly.
Yeah.
We were at, I think we had guns just about,
but not much more than that.
Not much more technology.
I know we had guns because we were doing a lot of bad shit over there.
We didn't get those raccoon pelts legally.
Let me tell you.
So let's face it.
We got a good old fashioned paranormal triangle on our hands.
All the most paranormal things come in triangles.
The pyramids.
How did they do it?
Pizza.
Why is it so delicious?
And now finally, the Bridgewater Triangle.
What the f*** is going on there?
Was that a rhetorical question?
I guess we did cover the Bermuda Triangle, another famous triangle.
I don't remember what our conclusion was for that.
I think it was no. Okay. Okay. But it was a bit of a different beast. You know,
the Bermuda Triangle, I think, focuses mostly on disappearances because it is ocean, mostly ocean.
Yeah. So I guess there's not much kind of walking around and looking for paranormal things you can
do. The only people who are traveling through it are people in planes or boats, and they tended to just disappear without a trace. Hopefully that's not what we're going to
see in Massachusetts. Now, the term Bridgewater Triangle was actually coined by cryptozoologist
Loren Coleman in 1983, who described it as a window area of unexplained occurrences. Yikes.
Worrying for a cryptozoologist to be involved in this story
when all we've talked about
is flying crafts.
It might be a slight hint
of things to come.
Notorious pedo hunter
James Blasters.
It's like,
why is he getting involved?
Right.
If you move to a town
and you just strike up
conversation with a local
and they're a cryptozoologist,
move town.
Move to the next town.
He obviously has a thriving career in this place and you should not live here.
If you see a guy who claims to be a cryptozoologist driving a Rolls Royce, move town.
If the cryptozoologist is cycling a busted bike, you know, maybe.
Yeah.
He could just be strolling through,
not getting much work.
If the pedo hunter is wearing a Rolex,
you got problems.
Out of context, man.
What a great sentence that is.
That's one for the out of context.
If the pedo hunter is wearing a Rolex,
you got problems.
He's doing very well here
because there are men to be hunted.
Now, our triangle of discussion today
is 200 square miles in southwest Massachusetts,
a little south of Boston.
For Massachusetts state listeners,
its points are said to be from Rehoboth in
southwest across to Freetown at the southeast corner and then all the way up to Abington.
Bridgewater is smack bang in the middle.
All right, you got to slow down, man. You're throwing a lot of stuff at me here.
That was just for the locals. Don't worry.
Okay.
As I mentioned earlier, there are reports of every kind imaginable. Aliens are just
the tip of this iceberg. So at this point, you might be wondering why this area is riddled with unexplained phenomena. And like I said,
if you know anything about American history, the answer probably won't shock you.
Some of the earliest European settlers to arrive in North America pitched up on the East Coast,
of course. However, despite what Texan school books might tell you, they weren't the first people there.
No.
Indigenous people were systematically forced from their own land and oppressed by the colonizers.
Things went from bad to worse when full-blown war broke out, leading some to believe that the sheer
scale of the bloodshed caused the land to become haunted or even cursed to this day. But even that
level of tragedy and grief is not the whole story.
There's another layer to this.
You see, in the heart of the Bridgewater Triangle is a swamp.
17,000 acres of swamp, actually the largest in North America.
Oh my god!
It's called the Hockomock Swamp,
and it was a vital resource for the Wampanoag tribe for generations.
How big can this triangle be if that much of it is swamp and yet there's still more left?
This is where the Wampanoag people would hunt, forage and even bury their dead.
There's a burial ground the size of almost 8,400 Olympic swimming pools.
Human remains have been discovered there dating back 9,000 years.
Holy shit.
The native community revered the swamp.
It was both worshipped and feared.
Its name literally translates to, quote,
place where the spirits dwell.
Oh my God.
And it's believed that the deity of death and disease lives there.
This is like that place from Lord of the Rings,
where, do you remember in the movies
where the Fellowship,
I think at this point it's just Frodo and Sam,
are like going through the swamp
and Gollum is like,
don't look in the f***ing water.
And there's like ghosts and dead people
like in the water.
And I think there are people who died or fell in.
What's the first thing Samwise Gamgee does?
You're going to want a sip from the forbidden juice. Bad place to get thirsty. I remember I was walking down one of the canals
in London with a few of my friends and we were incredibly hungover on a sunny Sunday.
And I was looking down into the canal, just completely zoned out, dead behind the eyes.
out dead behind the ice and at the bottom of the canal i just saw a bottle of corona resting down there and i was like i can't tell if there is actually a bottle of corona down there
or if it's one of those rivers that shows you your deepest heart's desires to try and lure you
into the water and then it's like a merman that ends up eating your brains or something yeah
there's a london water rat like come in rory yeah you have everything you need roonies but this swamp
just sounds like a straight up swamp they're not even showing you shit that you want 100 this thing
is 50 swamp 50 souls needless to say based on how important this was to the native people,
early English colonists called it the devil's swamp and thought it was, quote,
worthless and planned to drain it and turn it into farmland.
Let me tell you, folks, if you're walking through the devil's swamp,
you're going to want to crank the songs of praise. So if the devil or some demons come along,
they know to stay away. if the angels come you can
trick them to letting you into heaven what's the idea here that the radio keeps playing after your
moment of death so then when the angels come to i guess take a look at your limp body it's like a
crime scene investigation they're like all right what happened here it's like well he clearly
tried to drink the swamp water and fell in and got tangled in some bushes and drowned.
He seems like a bad man and he seems like an idiot, but he is listening to Raise You Up on Eagle's Wings.
So I guess he was like, give him benefit of the doubt.
Let's take him up with us.
The other one's like, no, his iTunes was on shuffle.
He didn't even mean to listen to that.
But I feel like you could also just keep a Bible in your pocket. Like if you, if you are this committed to the bit, you don't have
to subject yourself to Christian rock, which I'm going to come out and say it isn't very good.
How dare you?
What? So you actually do like it?
It pops off. Are you kidding me? Some of those songs go hard.
I don't think you're listening to it for the sake of God at all. Like you're just listening
to it because you think it slaps.
Well, I started for the God stuff to be, like, a better person and everything.
Some of it's pretty good.
Some of it actually goes hard.
Two weeks into doing this, you're like, oh, God, I guess if I have to listen to it.
I mean, that one's kind of catchy, I guess.
Let me stick that one on again.
Just humming to yourself.
Raise me up on eagle's wings. Now, this swamp is surrounded
by dense forest that many believe to hold a dark power. And you know, now that we're about to enter
the woods in our story, I want to pause and just say, we're about to enter the woods in more ways
than one. I've been real chill telling this story so far about a story and a
place that has absolutely no chill whatsoever. I've been drip feeding you paranormal stories
and hints, but I'm holding back an avalanche of paranormal phenomena. I'm straining to fit the
Bridgewater Triangle into something that resembles a normal episode, but it's anything but. There is
too much going on in this place. I think it's time to open
those floodgates. To give you an idea of how fast we're about to fall off the deep end, in this
forest, you'll pretty quickly come across a boulder called Dighton Rock. It's covered in ancient
carvings in a language that no one knows where it came from to this day. Turn up the music, folks.
Things are getting paranormal. Jesus. Okay, this thing is wild looking.
A big slab of stone protruding from the earth with bizarre scribblings.
They're almost like drawings rather than a language.
Pretty much like nothing I've ever seen before.
Yeah.
Not necessarily creepy, but strange.
It shows you that there's something going on in this here forest.
Yeah.
And genuinely, Rory is not even mentioning the fact that this image is an old-timey one.
Since like the 1800s, people have been trying to work out what the hell is going on.
Some people think these carvings could have been made by a native population,
even though it doesn't match any written language.
It could have been Vikings that found their way over to the Americas a long time ago.
But again, it doesn't quite match up with anything. Yeah. Deep in the woods is an 80 foot deep quarry known
by the locals as the ledge. People avoid it because it compels people to jump to their deaths.
There have been instances of perfectly healthy young people leaping off the ledge for seemingly
no reason at all. Visitors that escaped with their lives from the forest said that they felt the urge to jump
despite having zero inclination to do so.
Ooh, that's creepy.
It's like the Overton Bridge in Scotland
where dogs would just leap off all day long.
Yeah, dog suicide bridge.
But this one affects seemingly humans.
Have you ever had that before?
Been up somewhere like really high
and just been like,
oh, no, I won't jump.
No. But like there's a bit of your brain that's just like, oh, what if you jumped? You know?
No.
No, me neither. Me neither. Me neither.
You're like, oh, I would, but I don't have my Christian rock playlist.
Something you want to share?
No, it's fine. It's fine.
There's another formation called Profile Rock where reports tell of strange glowing light orbs floating in the air where disembodied whispers can be heard.
Now maybe one of the most important paranormal elements to this area is the Devil's Swamp
is home to a race of cryptids that I don't think we've properly covered before called
Pukwudgies.
Never.
I've never heard that before.
And they've been intertwined with native folklore for centuries.
Their name translates to little wild man of the woods that vanishes.
Whoa!
According to legend, these swamp dwellers are troll-like creatures,
generally described as about three to four feet tall,
with smooth, hairy, grey skin and large ears.
According to the native people,
they were once friends of the humans and
have since turned against our kind. That makes sense. We've done a lot of bad stuff. If they've
been around for a while. Although they're the ones living in the devil's swamp. So who's really the
bad guys? The devil's swamp was very much a ignorant European name for what was known by
the natives as the place where spirits dwell. Okay, right. That's on us then. Never mind.
And since they've turned against us,
these evil little beings allegedly push people off cliffs
and are responsible for others disappearing or dying in mysterious circumstances.
Oh my god.
It's believed that they could be behind people falling off these cliffs in the first place.
That's terrifying.
But they're not all ancient legends.
There are shocking sightings even from recent years,
like this one from the early 90s.
Local man Bill Russo had finished the late night shift
at his second job at the Ironworks
and had rushed straight home to take his dog, Samantha.
That's a good name for a dog.
I like to think that he has a bunch of dogs
all named after the cast of Sex and the City.
She was a Rottweiler Cross German Shepherd and a big dog that needed a lot of exercise.
Bill was a complete skeptic and didn't even know about the region's spooky reputation.
So when his huge dog started shaking like a leaf, he didn't suspect for a second that something
paranormal could be going on. What is it, girl? But then he heard something his brain could not
compute. It kept repeating, getting louder and louder. Turn around and go home. Drop the leash.
Let the dog fend for itself. Just run. Yeah, you found an Ewok. A street lamp was illuminating a circle on the pavement that backed onto the trees.
Bill stared in horror as a little creature stepped out of the woods and into the spotlight.
It was three or four feet tall.
If Bill hadn't seen it moved, he'd have assumed it was a stuffed kid's toy.
It must have been a hundred pounds or so, with a round pot belly.
I'll be honest with you right now, brother.
Without blinking, I would drop kick that little f***er into a streetlight.
All you had to hear was three foot tall and you're like, I can take it.
I can kick it.
Yeah.
I'm not even, I'm no hesitation.
I'm not letting them get to the second round of cure Iwachu.
Because it sounds like he's the guy from Indiana Jones
that can take hearts out of bodies
without touching them.
At that moment, it motioned with its
hand, making a come-hither
gesture. That's the heart gesture
too, though. That's the Indiana Jones
heart gesture.
Bill couldn't see if it was
an arm or a paw, but one thing
was clear. It wanted him to approach.
Hey kid, Halloween's over, take off that costume!
But there was no response other than the nonsense words it had been hissing all along.
Bill maintains that he wasn't scared.
He only fled from the creature because his dog was terrified.
He is staunchly of the opinion that he encountered
a Pukwudgie that evening, and that
it was trying to communicate with him.
The thing was saying,
Kir Iwan Chu.
Bill thinks it was saying,
Come here, we want you.
Oh, yeah, that's pretty similar.
So he remembers what it was saying? That's exactly
what it was actually saying? Allegedly.
That's so strange.
I mean, at least it wasn't violent, necessarily.
Intimidating, sure.
Who knows who was trying to snap his neck if he walked over to it.
What are you doing in that situation?
I told you.
I'm dropkicking it into a bush.
And then I'm going to crank up the Christian rock.
The problem is...
Just in case there's more of them in the bushes.
Tears streaming from your eyes.
You raise me up.
Gear you at you.
I'm cranking it
so I can't even hear their voices.
They're actually
biblically accurate angels.
You just drop kicked one of them.
It's like,
oh, you died
the second you hit the swamp.
You fell and drowned.
An angel was saying saying come to heaven and
you drop kicked his wings off of his body you saw an empty budweiser lying in a dirty puddle
you drowned in it if i accidentally drop kicked an angel i think i'd probably take the wings as
quick as i could and put them on my own back so when the angels you're not getting into heaven
when the other angels come around they're're like, yo, everything okay here?
And I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's fine.
It's fine.
I don't know where that guy went.
We should head back up.
We should head back up.
They're like, where did you get converse Chuck Taylors from?
We don't have those in heaven.
I'm panting.
There's like blood all down my face.
We should go back up, right guys?
Why don't you guys fly first so I know how to do it
and I'll come up after you.
I'm kind of tired.
Do you think I could just hold onto one of your feet?
They take off effortlessly into the sky.
I'm flapping.
I don't know how these things work.
But pretty interesting that we have this really storied
ancient legend of Pukwudgie,
known to the native people who've lived there for millennia.
And then a guy in modern times stumbles across one walking his dog.
Yeah. I mean, it sounds like what we're talking about today is a smorgasbord of paranormal
activity taking place in this triangle, but there doesn't seem like there's a real link to any of
this. It started with UFOs. Then there's a cliff that just makes people jump off of it.
And now there's three foot little swamp elves yelling things at strangers. It just seems like
a bizarre mix of the paranormal. It is. I think that there's a few different explanations for
each one, right? So we have the supposed dark energy that surrounds and maybe that's to do with the cursed and grief stricken
nature of this area's history that that causes strange things to happen in the woods that we're
actually going to talk about soon but then on top of that you have a more ancient connection that
this is just a ritualistic site a place with an incredible amount of kind of karmic paranormal
spiritual energy on account of it being used as a burial
ground for so long yeah where humans and maybe puck wudgie lived side by side uh but then you
can't just say things like that you can't just say things like humans and puck wudgie living
side by side with a straight face like i'm supposed to just sit here and accept that sentence but then on top of that on top of that you have
sure the aliens and that does come a little bit out of left field this is like you saying something
like oh yeah there was a massacre that happened here a hundred years ago where a bunch of people
were died in a brutal way that's why they think the glumbos and the tip-tops exist there in this real world.
It's like, no, that's not why anything should happen.
The glumbos aren't real.
Well, sorry, but actually a lot of people, including Bob,
have seen and believe in the Pukwudgie.
They're not glumbos.
All right, I'm willing to suspend my disbelief to continue
because, hey, I like a lot of this stuff.
I like the creepy ledge.
I like the creepy ledge.
I like the UFOs in the skies.
Maybe not won over yet by the Pukwudgie, but I'm here for it.
This is what we're here to investigate.
Good, because we're not done. We haven't even approached potentially the darkest side of the Bridgewater Triangle,
which is mad because the Pukwudgie pushing people off cliffs is pretty dark.
Pretty dark.
At the height of the satanic panic in the United States of the 70s and 80s,
there really was a satanic cult operating within the Bridgewater Triangle
who genuinely killed people and animals.
Yikes.
They slaughtered goats and stray cats, baptizing their members in warm blood.
But at least three women also fell victim to their rituals.
Jeez, that's grisly.
And it's far from the only terrible crime to be committed in the forests.
There are dozens of mysterious murders attributed to this area.
Even the famous Lizzie Borden case of 1892 took place in Fall River, the same place as
the more modern cult murders.
Is it possible that whatever darkness surrounds these woods
has created more terrible happenings?
Of course, there's always the possibility
that brutal murderers were attracted to the woods
because of their reputation.
Listen, you call a place the Devil's Swamp,
it's going to attract a few Satanists.
That's just what's going to happen.
That's a real unintended side effect
of giving things really glib names, isn't it?
I think if they had known the effect that that would have, they would have called it something different.
Yeah, just pick a freaking track off my Songs of Praise CD.
Just call it after that.
Blessings of the Lord Swamp.
Sure.
Eagle's Wings Swamp.
I think their idea, to give them credit, was if we name this something evil, people won't go.
But what they didn't anticipate was there's sick a**es out there who want to hang out at the Devil's Swamp.
You're going to attract all the evil people.
But even so, we're not even getting into the sightings of thunderbirds, ghost hitchhikers, zombies, flocks of black helicopters,
hitchhikers, zombies, flocks of black helicopters,
and countless Bigfoot sightings all taking place within the Bridgewater Triangle.
Thunderbirds? The puppets?
No, the Native American cryptids.
Oh, right, okay.
It's like the f***ing Thunderbirds are in the Devil's Swamp?
That big boulder with markings that slides out of the way
and a rocket shoots out?
It is truly too much for a single episode of this paranormal life.
But yet, we must decide on whether this place is truly paranormal or not.
Look, I know there's a lot of crazy stuff that's happening in this triangle,
but it does sound like an enormous triangle.
The reason the Bermuda Triangle is so bizarre and suspicious is because, yes, it is a large part, corner, slice of the earth, but there's nothing there. It's just open water. That's why it's so weird when planes or ships enter it, they go down. But we're talking about a huge slice of land where people live, where animals live, where there's a lot going on. I mean, could that not be part of the explanations?
You see, Satanists live there.
Maybe just looking at that space.
Yeah, the odds are that a Satanist does probably live in this area.
I guess.
But I mean, without comparing apples to oranges, I mean, look at us.
We're sitting here on the island of Ireland.
And I don't know if we have one of these things in the whole country.
I mean, but we have our own versions, right?
We have banshees, we have leprechauns, we have doulahans.
We don't say that this is a cursed island, the devil's island.
Let me get a map so you can see the size,
because I want to, I for myself, even want to know just how big this is.
Yeah, me too.
I mean, it's small enough that the cryptids residing inside of it need to be three feet tall.
I mean, this isn't that helpful, but it does show that it just links, I mean, a few small towns.
It's smaller than I thought. I will be honest with you.
Because if you look at this map, I mean, as we mentioned earlier, it's kind of, okay, the town of Taunton looks to be...
These all look like made up names, by the way, but the town of Taunton looks to be, these all look like made-up names, by the way,
but the town of Taunton seems to be the center of it.
But the next biggest one seems to be whatever,
Attleboro, Brockton, a bunch of towns I've also never heard of.
Yeah.
I mean, it's not even bordering what seems to be
one of the more well-known ones,
at least Providence or Pawtucket to its west.
Yeah, okay, this is smaller than I thought. I'll be honest
with you. I mean, there's an airport. That seems to take up a big chunk of it. Yeah. Oh, that's
worrying. That is worrying. You know, I'm not immune, Rory, to the skepticism. I'm not immune
to the sensation that a lot of this is a hard pill to swallow. There's a lot of crazy stuff going on.
It's hard to believe. You know, I will say there is a hard pill to swallow. There's a lot of crazy stuff going on. It's hard to believe.
You know, I will say there is a frustrating element to this,
the lack of photos, the lack of videos,
that if this is supposedly some kind of paranormal Disneyland,
some kind of adventure theme park
where you go from Taunton to Attleboro
and ride the paranormal monorail
and see Pukwudgies driving the thing,
there should be more physical evidence. But, you know, there are paranormal researchers who've investigated here. And I did
read about more than one who claimed to have, let's say, dared spirits to attack them in the
forest and also in Lizzie Borden's house. And they claim that they were slammed up against a wall or
pushed down some stairs. So people in our field of work have said, it's real, there's something
going on here but that
doesn't necessarily mean that we have a slideshow of presentation photographs to show you i mean
this is the hard thing about cases like this is like all you're wanting is just something to latch
on to a little bit of concrete evidence but instead of getting a story to the point where
you can really believe in it you get if you if you think that was crazy, what about X?
And you're like, no, I'm still trying to deal with Y here.
Like, tell me a little bit more about, I can't tell you about that,
but another creature, you're just adding more to the pile
instead of elaborating on one of these specific things.
I'm not talking about you.
I'm talking about cases like this.
Because this does feel like a personal attack. Which I apologize for. I'm going to push you. I'm talking about cases like this. Because this does feel like a personal attack.
Which I apologize for.
You did a great job.
You did a great job.
Pukwudgie, absolute nonsense.
I will not entertain that for a second.
But everything else, it's an interesting case.
That's it.
I really thought the Pukwudgie was going to get you all inside.
Maybe if the whole episode was about the Pukwudgie,
then I might have entertained it a little bit more.
All right, we're beating around the bush.
Let's come down on a yes or no.
Is the Bridgewater Triangle a paranormal hotbed?
No.
It's a no from me this week, folks.
I'm going to go yes.
I'm going to go yes.
I'm invested in this case.
I'm invested.
There is no way you're giving this a yes
Don't diminish
The yes
The yes
You don't diminish
The Pukwudgie
How about that?
How about that?
How about
There's a lot of people
Who believe in the Pukwudgie
For a very long time
And then Rory comes along
And just shits all over it
I think like
You better start playing
Some Christian rock
Because I'm about to
Beat your ass Because you're going to hell In a handbasket I think like You better start playing some Christian rock Because I'm about to beat your ass
Because you're going to hell in a handbasket
I think like two weeks ago
I presented a story about
A literal government documented
Craft and a dog fight
Where like 60 plus
Military officers said that
A captain was shot out of the sky
And it was all recorded
And at the end you went no
I say no And now you're sitting there was shot out of the sky and it was all recorded and at the end you went, no.
I say no.
And now you're sitting there and telling me the Pukwudgie?
I showed you a burial ground
dating back 9,000 years
with untold millions of souls.
You didn't, by the way.
You didn't show me that.
You showed me a rock
with some scribbles on it.
And that is not scribbles.
That is ancient carvings from now that I think about it, almost certainly Pukwudgie.
You didn't even show me a picture of a Pukwudgie, by the way.
Well, let's get one.
The episode's over, but I'm pretty sure the picture is going to make you regret not saying yeah.
This is crazy.
Regret.
Oh, my God.
Based on your facial reactions, I don't think I want to see the Pukwudgie
I'm sorry
What is so funny?
What is so funny about this creature?
Not what I thought at all
Alright, completely different from the first image you showed me
God damn it
That's a hedgehog with a staff
They have been known to shapeshift
They really have
Hey, I'm joking around here
Everyone is entitled to their own paranormal beliefs.
I respect your yes in the hopes that you respect my no, brother.
If you believe in this, the triangle, more power to you, man.
I'm about to raise you up with some goddamn secondhand angel wings.
All right.
And then pile drive you through a table.
All right.
That is the end of this investigation.
We decided, well, we didn't really decide.
We're split opinion.
So let us know what you think.
Email into thisparanormallifepodcast at gmail.com.
Hope that was worth the wait, guys.
Some of you had been emailing back from 2017,
but very inspiring to know that there are cases like that out there
just waiting to be plucked.
We've had two recent disagreements now
when it comes down to conclusions,
which is quite worrying because our last disagreement
was like the first one in like 100 episodes
or something crazy.
And now we're basically firing them off back to back.
Man, much like American politics,
shit's getting polarized.
It really is.
Fake news.
There's gonna, our whole audience soon
will be Team Rory or Team Kit
divided basically like the f***ing Twilight saga.
It's going to be werewolf or vampire.
Which side do you want?
One side playing Christian Rock,
the other playing Metallica, I guess.
Thank you so much for listening to this week's episode.
If you can't get enough This Paranormal Life
and you just can't wait until next week,
let it be known.
You can head on over to patreon.com forward slash this paranormal life and you just can't wait until next week let it be known you can head on over to patreon.com forward slash this paranormal life where there is a a podcast
burial ground there is 9 000 episodes waiting to be listened to right now at the drop of a hat not
9 000 i think there's 50 close well yeah sure but that's that's a year's worth, one year's worth. It takes a long time to make them, all right?
If you sign up for as little as $5,
you get access to the entire Patreon bonus episode back catalog
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It's super convenient.
We also have a bunch of other tiers
where you can get access to even cooler rewards
like the After Party, our new weekly show.
Oh, yeah.
You know what, folks?
I'll give that a double
yes because it's some of the hottest content we've ever come out with it's very fun it's something
completely different um you know because we made the weekly bonus episodes that are essentially
more of um our main product like this tuesday main episode and we wanted to do something different
on fridays and that's a little kickback it It's hot out there. It's summertime. Crack a beer, stick on an after party
and join us every Friday.
We also have other tiers
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into a monthly patron only raffle.
You can get a limited edition
Knight of the Commune collector's coin.
And if you're lucky
and you play your cards right
on either of the two top tiers,
you can even get a shout out
right here on the podcast.
It's true.
So why not get stuck in
let's shout out some patrons let's go thanks to cole heartless cole heartless is goddamn heartless
cold and heartless this guy's so cold even the puck wudgy are scared of him he hangs on cliffs
all day long they're like whoa they don't have the balls to push him thank you to matthew richardson
matthew richard's son the preacher's son. No stranger to a Christian rock anthem.
Oh, yeah.
Great choice, brother.
You got to let me,
I'm just dipping my toes
in the genre,
so you got to hit me up
with some sweet recommendations.
I'll see you up in heaven
when the angels come for us both.
That sounded like a threat.
Why are you so worried?
It's strange.
Thanks to Plum Tree Veneer.
You know the Patreon is accessible
when a literal plum tree
is signed up what the
hell could it have to do with a podcast app i don't know but is the fruit up for grabs or is
that weird is that like grabbing your bits you could chaos and yeah maybe the ones at the tops
are fine but the ones on the bottom are weird yeah shake your branches if it's weird plum tree
is that weird to ask you to shake your branches? It seems inappropriate.
Thank you to Vanessa Lovato.
Come on down to Lovato's Gelato.
That's right.
You can get the iciest, coldest treats for the sunniest days.
It is boiling in the studio right now.
So if we could get some gelato up in here, that would be much appreciated.
Actually, if we could get the plum tree to do a collaboration with Vanessa's gelato.
That's the dream.
Thank you to Misty Kwasnicka.
Misty loves hanging out in the devil's swamp.
Because everyone always says, oh, it's Misty in the swamp.
So people think like it's going to be foggy or something.
But no, Misty's just there chilling on a tree, chatting to frogs.
It's a pretty chill life.
Luring people to their demise from underneath the water.
Well, don't tell them that or they won't go.
Thank you to Daniel Paulson.
Daniel Paulson is pretty impulsive.
How so?
So just making snap decisions, you know?
If someone is just like, hey, what do you want to do today?
Do you want to go to the beach or do you want to go to the city?
Yeah.
Okay.
Sure, yeah.
Okay, what flavor of gelato do you want?
City. Beach. Whatever. Unless you have to make decisions fast. No, but you said, okay, yeah. Okay, sure, yeah. Okay, what flavor of gelato do you want? City, beach, whatever.
You have to make decisions fast.
No, but you said, okay, well,
I thought we were doing gelato.
You were saying, so, okay,
so why don't we go to the beach, did you say, or city?
I don't like gelato.
I don't like gelato.
Yeah, we moved fast to gelato,
so you're very impulsive.
Let's get better at decision making.
Thank you to James Wenkheimer.
James Wenkheimer, the old timer.
He remembers a day when the swamp was...
That's how old he is.
He goes back to the origins of the swamp.
Before it was the devil's swamp.
That's right.
Back when it was Christian rock playing from every corner.
Oh, yeah.
The angels hanging out there.
The Pukwudgie were six,
seven foot tall at that point.
They weren't so malnourished. Thanks to Stephen
Kubica. Stephen,
are you believing in the work
of our Lord and Savior?
He's a man who's up
on the clouds. What's happening? I'm just
wondering if Stephen
is believing in some
of the sick feats. you commit tax fraud or something?
Like, what did you?
They're coming for me.
The angels are coming for me.
They've got a hit out on me.
And I think that they're going to be here any day.
They're not assassins.
I think.
Thank you to Daniel Monteo Jesus.
Daniel, get out.
Daniel, you're not welcome in the Patreon.
No.
We've been through this a million times.
Get out.
You have given us literal thousands of dollars at this point.
And it's not enough to make up for what you did.
No.
It's not.
It just isn't.
No.
Dark shit happens in the commune all the time, but there's a line.
There is a line and you crossed it.
That's why we had to bring in Daniel's Law, which is no Daniels.
Thank you to Sam.
Sam, no stranger to the Devil's Swamp,
because we are looking at Sam the Swamp Jester,
supporting us right here on the podcast.
What a treat.
That's a real flex, isn't it?
For someone to say you're not real,
and then you subscribe to their Patreon.
Yeah, that's pretty amazing.
Yeah, well, you might think I'm real,
this is real cash, bitch.
Sam, I know you have your own microphone,
so feel free to guest on the show at some point.
Thanks to Todd West.
God bless Todd West.
Todd Westy is God's bestie.
Can I hang with you then, Todd?
Can I hang with you and maybe you could put in a good word for me when the angels come?
Oh, man, sure.
Thanks to Matt Gittins.
Matt is always
Gittens these
dollar dollar bills.
Yeah?
He's always grinded,
burning the midnight oil.
Huge.
You know,
hustling,
bustling,
breaking into liquor stores
and grabbing the money
from the cash register.
Just like,
he's a hustler.
He knows how to get shit done.
That's not hustling.
That is.
That's theft. Well, it's like, you know He knows how to get shit done. That's not hustling. Yeah, it is. That's theft.
Well, it's like, you know, working hard, being an entrepreneur.
No, that's not what none of this is.
Stealing from people.
Oh, okay.
Sorry to see why you need all the help you can get.
Thank you to Charles Sims.
Charles Sims?
A sinner?
No, no, no.
Supporting this show?
He's like the games.
Get him away from me, dude, because when the angels come,
I can't have Charles anywhere near me, honestly.
Thanks to Ashley Weeks.
Ashley belongs in the swamp because Ashley reeks.
Okay, that's quite enough.
Not kind.
I'm just saying, Ashley, maybe if you go into the Devil's Swamp
and roll about a little bit in the mud,
it might take the edge off some of that smell.
Maybe the, what are those little guys called?
Pukwudgies.
Pukwudgies.
Maybe they'll take you in as one of their own.
Thanks lastly today, but not leastly, to Dragon and Latte.
Dragon and Latte is an interesting concept because you wouldn't think dragons would enjoy
lattes.
They already have a fiery throat.
They're hot all the time.
So they would want like an ice.
Well, maybe it's an ice latte.
There's a business opportunity
if you haven't thought about that before.
Can we get the gelato person to link up with?
Vanessa's gelato.
Yeah, get linked up with the dragon latte.
It could be a business in there.
I'm just saying, guys.
Thank you to everyone we've shouted out today.
And everyone, we are yet to shout out next week
we'll be back of course
on Tuesday
with a brand new
paranormal tale
and later this month
with the bonus episode
and of course
on Friday
with an after party
woo
praise him
okay
praise him
talk soon everybody
see you next week