This Paranormal Life - #371 The Alaska Triangle - 20,000 People BLIPPED Into Thin Air
Episode Date: June 17, 2024There are lots of things they don't teach you in schools: how to hot-wire a car, for example. But they really should teach children which shapes are paranormal. Because in the world of the paranormal,... squares, circles, and rectangles are all safe, but triangles are apparently extremely deadly. The Bermuda Triangle, The Bridgewater Triangle, and now? The Alaska Triangle. Deep in Alaska lies a triangular area in which thousands of people and planes have gone missing without a trace over the last 70 years. Is it Bigfoot? Inter-dimensional beasts? An energy vortex? Or just plain bad luck? Time for investigators Kit and Rory to find out! Follow us on Twitter, Instagram, and YouTubeJoin our Secret Society Facebook CommunitySupport us on Patreon.com/ThisParanormalLife to get access to weekly bonus episodes!Buy Official TPL Merch! - thisparanormallife.com/storeIntro music by www.purple-planet.comResearch by Ewen Friers Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Discussion (0)
If dogs go to heaven, what about bugs?
Is it really possible to play a skeleton's rib cage like a xylophone?
Answers to these questions and more on this episode of
This Paranormal Life!
Hello!
Welcome back to the steroid injected episode of This Paranormal Life. Every week you are joined by two roided up madmen.
Me, Kit Grimovena, and this guy sitting across from me, Mr. Rory Pars.
How the hell are you doing today, Rory?
That's right. We wanted to be the best podcasters in the world,
so we loaded ourselves up with performance enhancing drugs.
Woo!
Unfortunately, there's not really a drug
that enhances the performance of podcasting.
It's more like physical activity and sport and things like that.
So we're... our performance is enhanced, but not really in any way that benefits podcasting.
Right, we heard about performance enhancing drugs and we were like,
Jesus, imagine Macbeth using these drugs.
Imagine the performance of a lifetime, Les Miserables, with these drugs,
but they were like, no, no, no, no, no.
We made like sports and yeah.
Yeah, it'll make him super weird and really angry.
And might, I don't know, make your testicle shrivel.
I've heard some rumors.
Oh, mine are tiny.
But, I've got peanuts to begin with.
So we're talking thumb tacks at the end of all this,
if we're lucky.
I don't think I mentioned the main of all this, if we're lucky.
I don't think I mentioned the main bit
because I'm so roided up.
Yes, sorry.
It's not showing though, yet is it?
I'm doing this for the camera.
No, have you actually lifted any weights
or are you just taking the steroids?
I don't need to.
No, you do have to also do the physical activity.
What's the point then?
I'd get muscles if I lifted weights.
Well, it's supposed to make it easier, I think.
All right.
I've missed the point of this, which is this Paranormal Life is the weekly comedy
podcast where every Tuesday we check out a different paranormal tale,
deciding by the end whether it's true or not.
Right.
Just in case anyone is joining us for the first time, which they might be,
because we recently had a bit of a different episode and I think a few more
people came to join the fold.
So hello, if you come via The Cryptid Factor.
Welcome.
Or you were checking out the work of Reese and Dan,
and we had a fantastic time with them
on the podcast recently.
And we are here to investigate a brand new paranormal tale
and answer some questions about the paranormal.
And I assume today's question is, do bugs go to heaven?
That is the question for today's podcast. I don't want to get too bugged on. Nice. Pun not intended. But there's just too
many of them, I think, is that's the primary problem. I mean, have you
seen, you know... Right. They can't go to heaven. Jesus said, like, everyone's
welcome, all that kind of thing, but like, have you seen a f***ing graveyard? They're full.
They are full.
They are full.
They're all full.
And that's just the humans.
And that's just the humans.
So I just, you know, if there's any beetles,
any bugs listening, I don't want to offend anyone,
but like, just from a real estate perspective.
Cause if I go to heaven and it is wall to wall spiders,
it might as well be my hell.
Yeah.
Cause that didn't work out for,
that doesn't sound good to me.
I don't want to do that.
We're getting into some pretty hard hitting
religious questions,
but that's not the topic of today's investigation at all.
As always Rory, I have a spanking new
paranormal case for you.
Okay.
Very excited to dive into this one.
Ready to hit it?
Yeah, let's do it.
Our story begins on October 6th, 1972 in Anchorage, Alaska.
The story begins on October 6th, 1972 in Anchorage, Alaska.
A twin-engine Cessna 310 plane sits on the runway on a clear autumnal morning.
Congressman Thomas Hale Boggs,
more commonly known as Hale Boggs,
strolls towards the aircraft in good spirits along...
Scream out of sleep there.
Hope that doesn't interrupt the rest of the podcast. Went to sleep again.
Alright, Jesus Christ, what is happening?
Turn off low battery mode. Why is
your screen going to sleep so much?
Yeah, I've got 2% battery as well, so
I don't think there's any turning off low battery mode
is the problem. Charge it!
Stop right now and charge your laptop,
otherwise you're not going to be able to read the script.
We're rolling. I'm aware.
I think what I'll do is I'll just see how far I get.
Didn't mean to hit the laptop there.
That's going to get picked up on the microphone.
It's going to knock off a percent or two.
Yeah.
We're down to 1.5.
It's into 0.5.
It's into decimal places.
I mean, that's how crucially low we are.
I think I just see how far I get, and then it's died.
Make up the rest.
OK.
So Hale Biggs was walking around the train station.
He wasn't. What did I say? He said it was an airplane, so he definitely wasn't doing that.
Airport. By the way, I caught a glimpse of your desktop before your laptop died. You
hit 72 tabs open at once. So that was probably why it died so fast. Yeah. It's not a good idea.
I could not figure out for the life of me how to pronounce his name.
I was Googling it all morning.
Okay, I'm gonna...
All right, we've got a little bit more juice.
I've plugged it in.
We can keep trucking.
Along with fellow congressmen.
Oh, I do need to look that one up as it happens.
That's a couple more tabs.
I'm gonna have to open up that one.
It's hot.
It is hot in here.
You're like, I'm getting stressed. Can I just put
on some lo-fi beats to relax to? Will I google this real quick? I gotta open that in a couple tabs.
Along with his fellow congressman Nick Begich, his aide Russell Brown and the pilot Don Johns,
the group are... Why does no one have a normal name? The group are looking forward to the views on their flight eastbound to Juno.
Mark Biggitt and... No, not Biggitt! And Don John Silver. Begich. All right. And his pilot,
Don Johns. Okay. This routine flight is part of the political campaign season.
But this flight would be anything but routine. Air traffic control, Cessna, where are you headed today?
Air traffic control, this is Don Johns. We spoke one minute ago, I'm the only pilot
at the airport today.
Good afternoon Cessna, N1812H to Juno, this is air traffic control, Anchorage International.
It looks like now, let me check, runway 24 is…
All clear? I can see it's clear it looks to
be all clear and you are good for takeoff Jesus thanks air traffic control
you didn't say over over over those clear skies up there and happy campaigning Oh, ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha The story of their disappearance is a major piece of evidence for a fascinating paranormal
phenomena which we will be investigating today.
To understand, let's look more at the case of Hale Boggs, right after a couple of words
from today's sponsors and a reminder that every single episode of This Paranormal Life
the show you're listening to is available ad free right now at patreon.com forward slash this paranormal life link in the description
Rory congressman Hale Boggs and Begich were not small-time local politicians they had
serious political power they were both well-known political figures who had reached the upper
echelons of us government having worked closely with several presidents.
So when they disappeared without a trace, it became national news.
So rewind rewind a little bit here, because we got a little too cool with the situation
a little too fast.
Four men blipped out of existence?
Well, we're not talking about blipping.
I believe that was episode 215. The Liverpool blips. So we are talking, I suppose you could say, of a blip situation.
Right.
Blipping out of existence.
Blip adjacent.
We're talking about, we don't know exactly what's happened yet,
but they have not landed at their destination.
Okay, but you said they were never seen again.
So presumably they're not turning up anytime soon.
I think that is, qualifies as a blip.
Right, but we need to find out what happened!
We can't definitively say they blipped, because a blip is quite a technical thing.
You're like, no one said they blipped, alright?
We just said they didn't arrive at their destination.
They could have arrived at a different place, but the story is over.
The men are gone.
We don't know what happened. They turned sideways and went 2D like Paper Mario.
They went invisible.
Uh, okay.
They're gone.
Right! Well, so they blipped then. They're gone.
They didn't come back.
I can't say that they blipped, but they did not come back.
Right. They went up in a plane, disappeared off the face of the Earth.
The plane was never seen again, presumably in any shape or form.
That's a blipping. That's a blipping as far as I'm concerned.
Your words, not mine.
All right. Well, let's talk it through. I'm sure there's a lot more to this story.
The plane's pilot, Don Johns, had flown it a few hundred miles to Anchorage the night before,
where it was thoroughly checked and refueled.
This wasn't like when Indiana Jones gets in a prop plane
and the pilot is drunk.
John was the director of Pan Alaska Air,
so a seasoned pilot.
Right.
And yet, barely anything is known
about John's and the crew's fate.
And let me tell you, as far as pre-trip checks,
vehicle checks go,
a plane has got to be right up there with the vehicle
that requires the most amount of checking before a departure.
Right?
Right, so we've got a spaceship.
Like, I shouldn't say spaceship,
that makes it sound like a UFO.
I mean like, NASA rocket. Rocket ship, sure.
At the very top of Checks.
Very top.
Yeah, to the fact where they do test launches
to figure out if that son of a bitch is ready.
Yeah. At the very bottom, tricycle, I guess.
Yeah.
If the wheels move.
Maybe closely followed by go-kart. I don't think any...
I think they're waiting until the wheels fall off to fix that one.
Yeah.
With a tricycle as well, it's like a kid that's on it,
so it doesn't even matter if it works or not.
You just kind of push him down a hill.
Quite the opposite.
And as long as the thing goes,
he'll figure out how to brake.
Or he won't, it's fine.
And he'll blip onto the highway. He'll be obliporated by a taxi or something, so you
don't have to worry about it anyway. We actually went to school with a kid who, um, his dad was
building him a go-kart. I was there for the maiden voyage of the go-kart. The wheels fell off
immediately and this friend of ours ate complete shit.
So I learned a valuable lesson that day.
Sometimes you don't want your dad
to do some stuff for you.
Sometimes the kindest thing a father can do is disappear.
You know, it is true.
I don't know about planes,
but I do know that helicopters,
I think have to be rebuilt every certain amount of miles. Like you
know, a car gets an MOT check. They like, you know, get a torch underneath it, make sure nothing's
falling apart, you know, every now and again here in the UK. I believe with helicopters, just like
every like whatever, like 50,000 miles, they're like, you got to rebuild. You just got to take it
apart, put it back together again, make sure it's safe. That's wild. So inefficient, it feels like.
Yeah, but I am still never getting in a helicopter. Never been in one, never will get in one.
Ain't gonna happen. Oh, the MIBs would love that.
There'd be never an easier moment to take us down.
Ain't gonna happen.
Every time I go on holiday, a guy in a black suit, black tie, black hat invites me on a scenic tour of the area
the last transmission from these guys was only 10 minutes into the flight
they filed their flight plan and asked to get a weather update john said he would fly south to
yakutat and then direct the rest of the way from there but when they failed to appear in juno
the alarm was raised the search that followed was the largest of its kind to there. But when they failed to appear in Juneau, the alarm was raised.
The search that followed was the largest of its kind to that point in US history. The US Army,
Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard, Civil Air Patrol combed vast areas of the Alaskan wilderness for
39 days. But despite using every plane, helicopter and boat available to them, and a huge amount of
civilian volunteers, not a single piece of evidence was ever found.
It was as if they blipped.
So they did blip?
Sure, yeah, I needed to get to that bit.
Okay.
You kind of jumped the gun.
A tragic story, no doubt, but one that captured the imagination of many paranormal investigators.
You see, to the paranormal community, the disappearance of Congressman Boggs
is just one in a huge number of unsolved missing persons cases in this region. Travelers in
planes, boats and on foot have been mysteriously vanishing in this area since the 1950s at
least. Apparently since the 70s it's at least 20,000 people gone missing. What? The Daily Mail points out that despite Alaska
being just 1% inhabited, Alaska has way far and away
the most missing people compared to any other US state.
Why do people keep going there?
Oh.
Stop going there!
20,000 people have gone missing,
and another guy's like, I'm gonna go find them.
What could happen to me?
Ah!
Ah!
Blipped gone out of existence.
He hadn't even left yet. He was thinking about it and he was blipped. Look all I'm gonna say is when I was younger I
Microwaved a bowl of soup with a spoon still in it. Whoo
Right and I learned a very hard lesson young which is metal in a microwave makes shit explode.
Where we spend the next seven years in intensive care.
And guess what I did after that?
Stopped microwaving spoons.
It only took one time of burning down one house
for me to realize I shouldn't do it.
When you were on the 2000,
two, the 20,
Thousand.
Thousand and one person going into the wilderness, you should
have learned by now. At that point, you deserve to get blipped. There I said it.
You ever heard the expression, born with a silver spoon in their mouth? Rory had a silver
spoon fused to his head after a pot noodle incident in 1998. You're absolutely right.
It did get me wondering why did they go?
No, of course they went on a political campaign.
It is-
I'm not calling out these guys.
I think it's fine.
You would assume in an aeroplane with a qualified pilot,
you would be safe.
Sure, but I am kind of over the mindset that I'm like,
if we're going up there to kiss a couple of babies
and shake a couple of hands, maybe a flyer would do it.
Just mail some flyers.
Yeah.
Right?
It's insane.
I think if you really want to win people over,
mail them $20 with the flyer.
Bribe them.
Bribe the voters.
I don't know if we need to get into flying all across Alaska
on little tiny planes. Yeah, I'm not a big fan of the kind of political publicity stunts.
Right.
Where it's like, oh, to raise money for charity,
the prime minister is going to bungee jump off a bridge in Rotterdam.
That's like, why couldn't he be doing things here that benefit people?
It seems a little silly.
So I don't necessarily agree with taking a little publicity flight.
I don't know what the point of this flight was necessarily.
Can I use this moment as a soapbox for one of my political opinions?
Ooh, okay. Just depending on what it is first.
So I think maybe you and me take a little moment aside.
No time for that. World leaders shouldn't get holidays.
I don't necessarily agree with that.
I feel really passionately about this.
I don't know if it's just because we had one,
I think they didn't need to make a rule in the past
because people didn't take the piss.
But I think it was when we had Boris Johnson
as our prime minister in the UK.
Dude took like 16 holidays a year.
He was mostly on holiday.
Yeah. And it was like, it would always be like
some shit would kick off in the UK. It would be like
the economy is tanking
or it would be like a f***ing bomb
has gone off in London
and then it would be like where's the Prime Minister?
He's in Greece. He's on a beach in Greece.
He's rushing back from his holiday
He cut his holiday short. Like, why was he on holiday?
He's, we're getting reports. He's rushing back from his hall. He cut his holiday short. Why was he on holiday? He's we're getting reports
He's put he's got his latte in a to-go cup. He is he's taking it to go and he's going to the airport
It's like you're only prime minister for a few years most people in this country
Can't afford to go on holiday for a few years. Is it so hard to just like put in a shift?
Right for the few years that you're prime minister.
Being the leader of a nation.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just kind of, you know, grind, grind it out.
Well, you know, I'm not, we're not getting into politics, so I'm not commenting on Trump.
I wouldn't do that.
Dude golfed a lot though, didn't he?
Constantly golfing.
Every weekend he flew back to Florida to go golfing.
It's like, I don't want to say that you should work Sundays,
should work Saturdays, but like there's a lot of stuff going on, isn't there?
Let's, you know, let's, let's get it.
This is now a political podcast.
All right.
I think we should start airing our most controversial opinions.
Maybe a quick, cause mine was pretty uncontroversial.
So maybe we do a quick sidebar off camera.
Nah, I think we're just going to let this one out of here.
Okay.
If you don't wash your hands after you use the toilet, you're not allowed to vote.
There's mine.
I don't hate that.
Okay, there's another one for you.
Can I just add on to that?
Sure.
We need to sanity check the whole using your phone while you pee thing for men at the toilet.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm a little uncomfortable with how comfortable we've got with that.
That for a while was like a rogue maneuver you would see every now and again in a public toilet. Right.
There was a guy, one hand on the wall, one hand on the phone. Yes. Peeing. I don't love
that because that now seems to be everywhere and everyone. Phones don't
really have any place in a public bathroom. I don't think that's a
controversial opinion. You really shouldn't be involved. This is us at the 2024 debates. Don't love that one. Okay, we're a bit off topic. We're going to
rein it back in. 20,000 plus people since 1970 alone. Now these mad figures about this area in
Alaska have given rise to a new theory and a new name. We've heard of the Bermuda Triangle or the Bridgewater Triangle. What about the Alaska
Triangle? Oh, now this I assume is wherever these people are going missing, we can kind of
triangulate the specific area in which these strange disappearances are taking place.
Yeah, we're basically putting pins in a cork board and then kind of loosely seeing that they do in fact line up
Let me just go ahead and show you Rory because this
Triangle and it's not an equilateral triangle. I will say that it is a little obtuse
It goes from approximately Anchorage in the west
Southeast to Juno and then the northern tip at Barrow Point all the way in the Atlantic Circle
Check it out.
Whoa, okay.
That is not the triangular shape I was thinking of.
It looks like they're really reaching
to get Juno in on the triangle.
Yeah, this is not, I mean, it is a triangle,
but it isn't really a triangle.
It is a triangle.
I don't want you saying it's not a triangle.
But you know what I mean?
It's not like symmetrical
or looks like a pyramid or something.
It looks like the tip of a spear.
OK, it's bigger than I thought as well.
It actually stretches across the seemingly this side of the continent.
Listen, Alaska is a crazy place.
So the triangle is going to be pretty crazy.
Right.
I think one problem we might have in this week's episode
is when we've investigated the Bridgewater Triangle, something like this, that is a triangle located out in the ocean where ships have gone missing.
Right.
Essentially just a patch of sea that is suspiciously dangerous. We are talking about a corner of Alaska that is so barren and inhospitable. We're gonna have to decide whether or not it's paranormal
that people are going missing here,
or if it is just a very treacherous place
to try and get through.
Couldn't agree less.
Okay.
Because the water.
You hit me?
Oh!
Like fucking punching Judy.
Oh! What is...
But like f***ing Punch and Judy.
Pfft.
Uh, because the water is the most inhospitable of all.
Think about it.
Wrong.
If a plane goes down in the water, it is going to by default sink to the bottom of the ocean.
Now that could be miles down, almost impossible to recover without high tech specialized equipment.
Yeah, true.
Whereas, if this is on land, it should just stay there forever.
And it should be that if we do send out thousands of people,
thousands of volunteers and crafts and helicopters to go visually look for,
we should just be able to see it from the sky.
That's true. The sea is a different kind of enemy, isn't it?
I guess on the land you've got...
It's a sea anemone.
You've got, I was supposed to say monsters the land you've got to see an enemy you've got a you've got I suppose a monsters
You've got a well depending on what you think about cryptids you do have monsters, but you you have
Beasts, what's the word animals you have animals?
That can be a bit more dangerous than maybe you wouldn't have in the ocean
But also you can't walk on water so yeah, I do get that the ocean is dangerous in its own way
I will take your point. It's a point that will come up throughout.
There's no denying this is a treacherous bit of land.
But one thing I find pretty interesting is by studying that triangle,
we're going to pretty quickly, I think,
figure out whether it's really paranormal because yes,
the contents of that triangle are wild and barren and rugged,
but everywhere else in the f***ing Alaska state is also wild and barren and rugged. But everywhere else in the f***ing Alaska state
is also wild and barren and rugged.
So why this triangle?
Right.
Well, Rory, this theory and its stories
aren't actually completely new to us.
We've covered paranormal events in Alaska before.
And one story is actually one of my favorite cases
we've ever done. Japan Airlines Flight 1628.
I don't remember that case.
This was about four years ago, all the way back in episode 126.
Wow.
We called it Japan Airlines Flight 1628, the most convincing UFO encounter ever.
We really hadn't covered that many UFO encounters at that point
apparently. In 1986 a Japan Airlines flight was running cargo from I believe Japan to the USA,
might have that wrong, but it was cargo across America anyway and at 5 pm on that journey
Captain Kenji Terauchi was cruising at 35,000 feet above the Alaskan wilderness, right inside
the Alaskan Triangle.
To try and jog your memory Rory, he spotted three strange lights in the sky to the west.
Now at first he thought they were military crafts and didn't pay much attention, but
when their movements became erratic and unnatural, he made a report to the Federal Aviation Administration. That transmission described objects flying parallel and then
very close. He described them as two small ships and then the mothership.
Whoa, I do remember this.
Right. The FAA confirmed that there were no other scheduled flights in the area,
military or otherwise. They actually ordered him to take evasive action at the time.
So he dropped altitude and went off course, but even so, they followed him.
Almost for a full hour and 400 miles later, then they finally peeled off.
I'd be so pissed off if I radioed something in like this, and they were like, all right, your orders are evasive action.
You're like, I'm a cargo plane.
I know how to take off and land.
You think I could do a barrel roll in this thing?
The wings would snap.
What am I going to do against fighter jets from planet Gargon?
Like, they're going to be able to track me.
It's a tough position to be in.
Yeah.
Because I also don't want to eject.
I don't wanna use the ejector seat.
Really?
Because then I feel like they're just going to,
like if they're gonna War of the Worlds,
just catch me like a Pokemon and a ball, just...
Ah-chomp!
Right, yeah, yeah.
I feel like that's when it's gonna happen,
when I kind of leave my pod.
Right.
See, I'm the exact opposite.
I'm looking for any excuse to pull that lever
and get straight out of there.
If we could be on the runway,
and if my coffee's a little bit too hot before the flight,
I'm just in a sheer panic, pulling the lever on the runway.
They're like, Terauchi, the plane is directly above
a kindergarten, you cannot eject.
I don't give a shit. I'm doing it.
I'm doing it.
They're gonna blip me.
I can feel it.
They're gonna blip me.
I have to eject.
It's a cloud formation, Terauchi.
Calm down.
And not only that,
civilian and military radar later confirmed
strange anomalies detected at the time
of Terauchi's sighting.
It is a really cool case
and I do recommend listening to the episode,
even though we were prepubescent four years ago.
So that's gonna be a little hard listening.
Now, he didn't get blipped.
He didn't.
He didn't get blipped.
He survived to this day.
But he maybe saw the blippies, the blippers.
If this is a possibility,
we're talking about alien crafts existing in this triangle that are tractor beaming people into their claws.
Yeah, I mean, it's almost as if, you know, if you flew a plane into Russian airspace, you know, some fighter jets would probably line up beside you and be like Russian accent, you know, what the hell are you doing here? The same went here, that it's like Terauchi entered the Alaskan triangle
and the UFOs from planet Gargon were like, alien accent, what the hell are you doing here?
Right, I see, I see. We've edged into their territory.
But I love when this type of thing happens. We investigated a great paranormal case.
Four years ago, it was pretty convincing then, and now when we revisit it all these years later we have
a little bit more context. In this case it's part of a whole area of weird
paranormal phenomenon. Love this. It turns out this is far from the only UFO report
in this area too. There have been many since World War II. In one documentary
by the Discovery
Channel, a local man, Wes Smith, reported seeing quote, very strange triangular objects
flying without emitting any sound. And UFO expert Debbie Ziegelmayr has argued that Alaska's
sparse population and uninhabited landscape would be a perfect place for aliens to do
research, saying quote,
they can pretty much go where they want.
Yeah, not a bad point.
Does this feel important to you Rory?
Could UFOs be somehow connected to the disappearances of planes and people?
Did these people, mafia style, see too much or get too close to the truth?
It does seem like a strange place for this all to be going down some random
corner of Alaska.
I mean, is there a record?
You said 20,000 people at one point didn't really bring any evidence to back up that
claim. Is there a record of how many planes have gone down or is it just people going
into the mountains and not coming back?
Oh, it's a mix.
I think like the Bermuda Tri Oh, it's it's a mix. I think like the Bermuda Triangle
It's a big bloody mix the Bermuda Triangle is kind of famous for shipwrecks
But also a lot of a lot of plane disappearances here same goes
It's a mix of people on foot in vehicles and in planes
I do think it is a lot in planes because I don't know how many people are really trying to trek
Great distances on foot
Right. That seems like a bad idea. I mean at a certain point fly around it, right?
Even if you're not superstitious or believe in the paranormal
It just seems like a dangerous place to fly a plane. It sure does but I think on the contrary, it's a funny one
I mean, I don't I don't know the inside out of how flight paths are calculated.
I do know that more often than not, plane routes are designed to be overland instead of over sea where possible,
because you stand a greater chance of landing and surviving than over water.
And also, I think because it's Alaska, these distances are pretty bloody massive.
So I think like if you're right in the middle of that triangle and you're trying to get to the other side, to go around it would
probably take hours and hours and hours. Right, right. So it's not worth the fuel expenditure.
It's worth risking your life for. I don't want to say it's like drunk driving, but it's a kind of
calculated risk if you will. Right. It's like, I might die.
I'll also save a hell of a lot of time.
It is the quickest way home though.
Because I can't even see the speed limit.
Well, that is but one
interesting idea. But other
researchers wonder if the disappearances
are something more physical
and down to earth. But
maybe even more paranormal.
Let's find out more after a couple words from today's sponsors. Nature. I've got a gay rooster named Francois. Is so gay. These rams are gay.
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acast.com. What if the disappearances are connected to cryptids?
Our listeners know that the Pacific Northwest de los Estados Unidos is known as Bigfoot
Country.
Think Washington, Oregon, British Columbia.
But if a 9 to 14 foot hairy beast could be hiding
in a Wendy's car park in Portland
or what untold horrors
could be hiding in the Alaskan wilderness?
Right. Got it.
I'm thinking something six
to eight times the size of Bigfoot.
Based off of what?
My experience as a paranormal
investigator.
OK.
All right, because I thought
you were going to say, could it be Bigfoot that's out here?
And I was like, I don't think he can take down a-
Bigfoot.
Take- you can't take down a plane.
Think King Kong.
We'd see him.
We would see him, I think.
Because he's the size of-
Even from Google f***ing Earth, we'd see him.
He's the size of the Empire State Building, I believe.
Okay, don't love this.
Mm-hmm. You know, a- Can I quickly Google if they've ever found King Kong on Google Earth?
Why would you Google- he's a fictional monkey! King Kong. Google Earth. There's gotta be something.
You know he's not even encrypted right? He's from a movie. Yeah there's nothing
really. Yeah. Well I don't know why you thought there'd be anything there.
Worth a look.
Sorry, go on.
But hey, I know that in this case today, we have to consider all possibilities.
Whether or not it is a UFO, whether or not we're on some sort of paranormal ley lines
right here, or whether or not that there is some sort of cryptid or beast.
And I think when we're considering that option,
I have to say that I couldn't agree less.
Oh!
That's right.
Oh, Christ.
Right in the kisser, I have to command that play.
I don't think this is, this isn't cryptid activity.
The person said they saw lights in the sky,
and alien fighter jets.
So we're probably not dealing with something organic here. You say that Rory you might think it's bullshit
But it said that the fishing town of Portlock in
Alaska was abandoned in the 1950s because it was plagued by quote
Bigfoot disturbances
Some say that the Sasquatch attacked
and even killed people there.
I think we did.
Isn't this another episode we did?
As featured in the TV show, Alaskan Killer Bigfoot.
Did we?
I don't know.
I'll have to search.
I hope not.
Makes me sound stupid if I don't remember.
Yep.
We already did it.
It was episode 203, Portlock, Alaska's mysterious
abandoned ghost town. Hey, even more evidence to the fold, brother. So we
presumably came down a yes on that. I don't think we did. Also worrying that
this episode was even more recent than the one you mentioned, but because it was
my episode instead of yours, it apparently just water off a duck's back in one ear out the other.
No.
Unfortunately.
No.
No.
You know, I'm just, so is it possible that the same Bigfoot we discussed in episode,
what the f*** did you say, 205 or some s***?
203.
203.
That great case that we all remember and love and remember dearly.
That he took down a plane?
That great case that we all remember and love and remember dearly.
That he took down a plane?
Is it that the, maybe the plane goes down on its own, but maybe once they're, one, you know, they're like, Oh, Debbie, are you okay?
Frank, are you okay?
Oh, geez, my head hurts.
A bit like in the video you showed Reese and Dan that did turn out to be fake.
Yes.
But a beast comes out of the woods and chomps them in the wilderness.
It's so worrying to be at a point in a case
where you think that Phil's not even gonna be on board
and want to provide you with sound effects for your stories,
you have to do it live in the podcast,
you're like, Phil's probably gonna be tuned out
by this point, so I'm gonna have to do the sound effects.
Nyeeeww, What's that over there?
Hey, that was good.
Phil, if you could just put that when I told that story, if you could just rewind that.
Uh, going to nip this one in the bud here.
No.
How about we blip that explanation out of the episode?
How about that?
Oh, that goes away and it doesn't come back.
Hey, this is the last time we hear that theory.
I'll decide.
I'll blip you.
I'll blip you in the face with a 2x4. Not a blip.
And that's just assault.
I'll blip you in the head with a bullet.
Whoa.
Not a blip.
OK, I realize that you've already shut this down,
but I've written this next bit down, so I have to say it.
OK, let's hear it.
Even if you don't think this is why people are disappearing it said
That in the local folklore don't talk normal
Why is the local weird the local Klingit and Sim Sian people tell of a shape-shifting creature that lures people
Deep into the wild before tearing them apart the Kush Taka. Oh, okay
I do like this one more than Bigfoot to gain the victims trust the Kush-Taka. Ooh, okay, I do like this one more than Bigfoot.
To gain the victim's trust, the Kush-Taka shapeshifts
from looking like an otter, yep,
but I bet it's a really scary otter,
into the form of their victim's family member or friend.
Wait, so why is he an otter?
Lures them in and then, I guess,
changes into an otter and then eats them.
I don't see the point of the otter
Because if he has a monster form no, but that is the most reform really he thought yeah
Wait
It was a shape-shifter didn't say I think I kind of made it sound like it was gonna be a terrifying beast
But it looks a little like an otter. Okay, so that is it's true form. Yeah, it doesn't shape shapes into an otter.
No, it shapes into looking like a person. Right, and then it lures you into the woods and then it becomes an otter again.
Yeah, and eats you. Okay. Okay.
Next explanation. Blip!
Blip! Gone. Oh geez. All right. Yeah, can I just see that otter for a second?
No, no, I'm going to blip.
He's blipped.
I do want to look it up now.
The kushtaka, the Afghan kushtaka.
Jesus.
Whoa.
I wasn't even going to look up what that thing was until you just mentioned it, but whoa.
That's not an otter.
It's got the head of an otter.
It's like a giant.
Yeah, it's like a, it's awful looking. The body of a swimsuit model and the head of an otter. It's like a giant, yeah, it's like a, it's awful looking.
The body of a swimsuit model and the head of an otter.
That's terrifying.
But you know Rory, I know you love that explanation, but there's one problem.
It can't explain the larger disappearances.
Because, what, were these otters taking down planes?
Did you write, you obviously wrote all of this thinking I was going to be really on board with the Otter thing. No. You are. You were really on board with it. I was and I blipped them. I've
edited it to make it sound like you were. Oh come on now. Like for example one of the craziest
disappearances happened around 74 years ago. A US Air Force Douglas C-54 Skymaster disappeared in January 1950. Cool name for a plane. The plane
had a whopping 44 military and civilian passengers on board and no trace was ever found. What the
hell? It last made radio contact right over Snag in Alaska, well within the Alaska Triangle. All
we know is the plane never reached its destination in Montana. Also during the rescue operation three more planes
crashed. Oh my god don't send planes! Don't send planes into the triangle that
takes down planes! That's a terrible idea! But after one month of 7,000 people searching, not one clue was found.
No wreckage and no survivors.
That's like being like, oh did you hear Hansel and Gretel disappeared in that house owned
by a witch who eats kids?
We should send in a bunch more kids to go look for them.
Don't send in more children!
She eats children!
Line up the kids to send them into the witch's lair.
Oh, these ones are too skinny.
Let's get some chunkier kids in here.
That's a terrible idea.
You're selecting for these kids to not come back.
Send an adult with a gun into the house.
To clear it out like a SWAT team.
Send John Wick into the witch's gingerbread house.
But, of course, one of the most popular explanations
for the Alaska Triangle or the Bridgewater
or the Bermuda Triangle is the vortex theory.
This is the theory that certain areas of our earth
are supercharged with an electromagnetic energy
either through underground crystals
or intergalactic geometry, and that
this creates an energy vortex, a spot where strange stuff happens basically, or the veil
between our world and the paranormal spirit world is either thin or it's just a portal,
like that New York to Dublin portal that got shut down because everyone was getting naked
in front of it.
Right, people thought that the city built that.
That turned up one day.
The portal turned up and they had to kind of just build stone around it
to make it look like it was done by the government.
Yeah, Megatron was flying over New York City and he dropped the Allspark
and when it hit the ground it created a portal.
It was a whole thing.
I like this explanation.
I think there's just enough kind of nonsense terms in there
to kind of make anyone agree with it.
Yeah, did you like intergalactic geometry?
What does that mean?
Yeah. Not a lot.
Underground crystals.
We have seen underground, well,
underground crystals have been claimed
to exist in a lot of places, but again,
it's a bit woo-woo, isn't it? I think claimed to exist in a lot of places, but again, it's a bit, it's a bit woo woo, isn't it?
I think they were used in a case to justify a mysterious light appearing above ground.
That's right.
Because if quartz crystals are rubbed together or there's friction between them, it can generate maybe electricity or light or sparks.
Maybe not a portal to another world.
Sure.
Not yet.
But I do like this.
We've seen this a lot with ley lines,
which is kind of a paranormal lines
that run through the earth
that have kind of suspicious activity that go on.
Do we know if there's any ley lines
that run over this particular triangle in Alaska?
It's not super convenient
that we recently said ley lines were bullshit on the podcast quite recently,
but it is true.
I mean, you know, I'm looking even at a map
right behind your head of kind of lines going through,
what is that, city of London?
That's London, yeah, that was sent in
by a fan of the podcast.
Londinium, but it appears to be triangulating points
across the city.
The point is, this is a long kind of studied area,
which is like, I mean, this is like the definition
of human endeavor into trying to figure out
what's going on in the paranormal world.
Weird things happen.
Yeah.
You know, you're a caveman.
One weird thing happens.
One day, a white berry turns up.
Normally, there's only ever pink berries on that tree, but one day it's a white
berry, people start worshiping the berry.
Weird stuff starts happening.
Your analogies over the years have gotten so strange to the point where by the end
of them, I don't understand what your point was.
What does that mean?
I'm saying one weird thing happened, okay?
Right?
Then the next day...
And I've let them go on for long enough, and I feel like it's getting to a point where you're almost testing me.
What is a story I could use that's so irrelevant and does not reflect the point I'm making at all?
What is the point of the white berry?
And then another day,
something else weird happens. I'm not going to make up something
because you're going to get angry at me.
But another weird thing happens another day.
The human brain wants to make sense of the two events.
It wants to connect them.
It wants to understand why the white berry shows up one day
and why the other weird thing happens another day.
So suddenly you get out a map.
So you didn't even make up a second thing.
Well, because you attacked me.
You attacked me pretty angrily as well.
And you made it clear that my theories
weren't welcome on the show.
The point is you're trying to connect disparate events.
And so you start drawing lines on a map
or you start saying, hey, well, you know,
there's something on the ground that's a certain way here.
And that's similar to the other place
where the weird thing happens.
Maybe it's underground crystals.
Maybe the stars line up in a certain way and hit the light here.
That is human nature is to try and connect these things. The problem is, I don't know that we know
that there's energy crystals underground Alaska. I mean, some people who investigate the paranormal,
I think have claimed that there's like, if you run around with an EMF reader in Alaska, it's particularly weird.
Right, right.
I don't know, I don't know if that's proven,
to be quite honest.
But that doesn't stop energy vortexes
being quite a popular theory.
I've always said I wanted to go visit the vortexes
in Arizona, Antelope Canyon, places like this.
There's supposedly lots of places in America
where the energy is weird and we don't quite know why.
Right, right, right.
Yeah, no, I get it and I think it is interesting.
You are right, as humans, we have evolved to see patterns
because that is how you survive.
Let me just pick a crazy example out of thin air here, but let's say you're
a caveman and you find, one day you find a white berry.
Huh?
You know, and you eat that berry and the berry makes you sick.
No, the berry doesn't make you sick.
You taught me in my story, the berry doesn't make them sick.
I'm stealing the analogy because I'm going to use it.
It's a sacred berry.
No, it's not a sacred berry.
It is a sacred berry.
So the pattern you're seeing is me eat white
berry, me have diarrhea.
So no more white berry.
It's a sacred berry.
It wouldn't give you diarrhea because it actually imbibing
the white berry has a lot of beneficial, it's connected to the energy.
I don't understand how your analogy works in relation to what we're talking about today.
You're just talking about a magic berry now, it seems like.
You're the one talking about eating berries
and shitting them out all over the place.
But it's a pattern, it's a correlation, you know?
We've learned what's poisonous
through process of elimination.
It's why humans see faces.
That's an evolution technique for survival.
Rory would be the caveman that gets killed
by all the other cavemen
because everyone's worshiping the berry
and then Rory comes up in the middle of the night
and eats it.
So I get this. This is just humans taking the paranormal to the logical step. Weird dangerous
shit is going down in this area so we're trying to find an explanation as to why it's happening.
As you say Rory, these are the same reasons for what people have claimed surround places
like Stonehenge in England or the Pyramids of Giza in Egypt.
But before we completely shit all over the idea of there being some kind of weird vortex that
swallows people up, can I just point out how insane it is that that explanation sounds like
absolute bollocks, but remember when they were powering up
the CERN Hadron Collider back in like 2012,
and scientists were like,
yeah, if we try and simulate the creation of the universe,
we might accidentally create a new mini universe
and create a black hole in the French countryside
that will swallow everything up.
Like, how is that science, but what I'm saying is bullshit.
Yeah, that scared me a weird amount when I was younger.
I don't remember what age I was when that was all going down,
but that was a genuine worry where scientists were like,
yeah, we're reaching a point where we could theoretically
create a black hole.
And if we did it, it would consume everything
from the outside in and essentially destroy
the entire world.
Like, is anyone keeping an eye on these m******?
Because they are a little bit of clown makeup away from being a super villain. That's all it takes.
Yeah. If you see them giggling a little too hard at something, then suddenly it's eking
a little too close to Joker territory. And then the media were interviewing them, they
were like, how likely is this? And they were like, not very. Yeah, and then the media were like, interviewing them, they were like, well, how likely is this?
And they were like, not very.
One, 2% chance?
Oh, that's quite likely.
We really don't think it's gonna happen.
Yeah.
And they were like, and how would we know if it happened?
They were like, oh, you wouldn't.
So everything would end instantly.
Yeah.
So it would be faster than the speed of light.
You wouldn't know.
It's like, oh, great.
Oh, good.
Cool, that's really exciting.
Oh, no notice then for the end of the world.
That's really good.
Is that nicer than some notice?
Maybe it would be nicer if it just like,
your universe has stopped running.
Essentially, you know, kind of like task manager freeze.
That'd be kind of nice.
Yeah, I just want, I just need five seconds
just to pull out my phone, tweet, hashtag YOLO, and then just...
Look, as always in this paranormal life, we do have to sadly, sadly include more rational
explanations than berries.
And today, that explanation is that Alaska is basically a different planet.
It is vast.
It is unforgiving. Sure. And there's
nothing bloody in it. So if you get lost, you are pretty sure to die and unsure to ever
be found. But I didn't want to leave you on a rubbish, serious note of like, blah, blah,
blah, you should stay safe, blah, blah, blah. Don't turn into another missing persons, blah, blah. Bring food on a hike.
I want to leave you with a blistering red hot conspiracy.
Okay, should bring food on a hike though, real quick.
Just even like a little snack bar or something.
Hike like a real man and eat berries, any that you see.
Let's go back to Congressman Boggs and hunt for a little more information.
Okay. In 1963 Boggs had been a prominent participant in the Warren Commission,
the official investigation into the assassination of JFK. Throughout the investigation Hale Boggs
repeatedly questioned the accepted story. He criticized the FBI and later stated that the inquiry should be reopened.
He is quoted as saying,
Rory, what did Boggs know?
Was he flying too close to the sun?
And the sun was wearing a black suit and an earpiece and holding a gun?
So he believed there was a conspiracy?
He was very open to the idea.
Okay.
So it didn't necessarily believe it, but...
Well, he basically, it was a shut case and he wanted to reopen the case.
Right.
Right, right, right.
So you think he was taken out of the sky by MIBs?
Hey, I don't want to get, I don don't wanna get unalived by a MIB.
So I'm not saying I believe anything, but I'm just saying.
You're about to win a free flight to Alaska, brother.
Let me tell you the way you're talking.
In the back of my McDonald's fries,
yo crazy helicopter ride to Anchorage, that's nuts.
Just interesting, just interesting. Okay.
I mean, yeah, that, that it's interesting.
We started with that story because obviously
them being in the political space does leave
more room for a conspiracy theories, you know,
because they could have had enemies, um,
if rival politicians, or maybe as you said,
they were privy to some secret information
that was about to see the light of day. You never know. or even rival politicians, or maybe as you said, they were privy to some secret information
that was about to see the light of day.
You never know.
But then it's, as you said,
there was just also a Japanese guy carrying a bunch of boxes
who saw UFOs.
So that dude caught us stray.
He didn't need to get wrapped up in all of this.
Poor son of a bitch.
Yeah, he was minding his own business. I mean, if that had been in today's day and time,
he probably would have been playing Candy Crush, minding his own business.
I want to know how far this blipping goes. Is it just any aerial object is taken out
of the sky? Like, at one point in history has a goose just been flying through the air
and then it was like, honk. And now he's just floating in some sort of zero
Gravity portal world and the aliens are like, oh we got another we got another goose
I tell you we've got to change the sensitivity on the blipper because we we're blipping bumblebees
Geese ducks. We need to crank it crank it a little higher intensity. I mean
One thing I didn't even bring up,
but we have talked about on other episodes,
is the kind of semi recent,
like do you remember the Chinese spy balloon era?
Yeah.
And I just reminded when you talk about
cranking the sensitivity,
because supposedly that was part of the story
of we started noticing, not we,
but the American government started noticing a lot more aerial unidentified objects, apparently due to a
changing of the sensitivity, they were trying to detect spy balloons and ended up seeing
a lot of other things.
I believe some of those objects crashed or were shot down over Alaska and I think in
at least one case those items were never recovered. They searched
for them because I said on the podcast, I was like, how the f*** can't you find like,
you know where you shot it down. Surely you can just find it again. But they couldn't
because that's Alaska. I don't know. I mean, on the one hand, that's more paranormal strangeness
happening over Alaska. Yeah. That these like unidentified objects
were flying over it. On the other hand, if you're a skeptic, you're saying, well, there
you go. The American government is shooting down objects and then they still can't find
them. Well, here, let me tell you what really happened, Kit. They found it. You don't think
they found it? They found it. Right. Yeah. We just don't want it. They don't want us to know what they found.
It's like the policeman at the scene of the crime walks over to the evidence,
kicks a bunch of dust over.
I didn't hear nothing here. There's absolutely nothing here.
I packed it up everyone.
Yeah. Yeah. I think they might have called in the Roswell moving company
before they kind of let the journalists in on that little piece of information.
Yeah. But yeah, you're right. More interesting paranormal activity happening over Alaska.
But at the end of every episode of this paranormal life, me and you, Rory, have to decide whether our given case is paranormal or not.
We have to decide whether the Alaska Triangle is really paranormal or not. What are you thinking today?
I always like investigating these kind of cases. Don't know why it's always a triangle.
It always seems to be a triangle. I don't know why it's not ever a...
Never a sphere, never a cylinder.
A hexagon, an octagon. They even sound more spooky and paranormal.
A trapezium even. I would love for a trapezium to be the subject of an investigation.
But it is always a triangle.
What we're seeing here is textbook.
It is planes going into a certain area and disappearing.
You know, the only problem that we're going to have is this is just a treacherous place to fly a plane or try and walk through.
So it's also very likely that a lot of people are disappearing because that's just what happens
when you go into the Alaskan wilderness. It's not very hospitable. So I'm struggling today to see
enough evidence to prove that this is strictly paranormal activity.
I don't want to make it all about physical evidence, but physical evidence often does
help us push over the edge into yeses. And in this case,
we have really none. That's the definition of it. We can't find, I would love a laser torched piece
of a Cessna aircraft, but we don't have that. I mean, I wouldn't, we wouldn't love that. We
wouldn't love that. I would love it. No, that would be super disturbing and dark. Yeah. Ideally.
Also just very fun little coincidence
that you don't want us to get too obsessed
with physical evidence at the end of your episode.
But when it's the end of Rory's episode,
physical evidence really is the only thing required
to get a case over the line,
which is coincidentally what I never have either.
Right, well we have that in common then.
Rest assured Rory, uh,
this isn't going to be a biased conclusion on my part. I'll take the lead
and say, I think in this case, like some of the other triangles, we just don't
have enough to go on here.
That's just such a bad sentence. Like some of the other triangles we've
investigated with that. That's an indication we don't need to do any more
triangles. And yes, we've done six now
And they've all been nose top of the morning everyone because next week
It'll be the Irish Ireland kind of looks like a triangle when you really think about it
I think it's probably probably a no. It's gonna be a no from me as well this week yikes
Ladies and gentlemen, what a waste of time. Am I right?
Not always what a fun little adventure we went on Wow really wish I hadn't bothered my ass
we heard about that beaver that turns into a
Guy, even though he's already kind of half a guy already. All right, let's not be crass as an order
And then we sorry get your mind out of the gutter
So hey, we had fun anyway, talking about... Actually, a place we don't end up
too often on this paranormal life, because I think I mentioned every case that we've
done there, which is episode 126, 203, and now episode 350 something.
I would say we end up there more often than we should. That's actually quite a lot of
cases to do in Alaska. We're probably missing one or two as well.
It's a big place though.
I wanna know how Santa Claus delivers presents here
without getting blipped into the third dimension.
Here's what I, I sometimes think this
about the United Kingdom,
because we, I think a lot of countries do this, right?
Where we've got the Royal Mail
and they deliver our letters.
And one thing they have to do is,
I can't remember what they call it,
but it's like a universal promise or something
where for like 100 years or 200 years,
they've said, we're gonna treat everyone the same
and whatever it costs for me to mail a letter across London to you,
it's the same price to mail that letter from the bottom of the country
all the way to the tiniest little island off the coast of Scotland or something.
So no matter where you are in the UK, it always costs the same price because they don't want to treat anyone differently.
And so you kind of see this, it's kind of a bit mad.
But then if you're on like an island off Scotland or if you're in Northern Ireland or somewhere remote, I'm always like, this is mental. So if you just live in the middle of nowhere,
the postman's still gonna get out to you
and deliver the post to you.
And I wonder, that's what I wanna know though.
That's a little boring thing that I wanna know is,
how do they do that in Alaska?
Cause it takes the piss, doesn't it?
It's like absolutely massive.
It's like, how is that the same as delivering
a letter across Chicago,
is delivering one from Chicago to
You're practically in Russia, mate. Yeah up at the tip of Alaska. I'm not doing that
No, if I got picked I'd be like look we can we can strap it to an eagle or something and send him
But I'm not going because 13 other postmen have gone to try and deliver this letter and I'm not gonna be number 14
Yeah have gone to try and deliver this letter and I'm not gonna be number 14. Yeah, the post office workers are speaking at the other post at the other
posties funeral and they're like the f***ed up thing it was an Amazon package
the guy ordered a phone charger it's like how it's not that important. It wasn't
worth it. It really wasn't worth it. Yeah can you imagine if you're like right at
the entrance to this Alaskan triangle and you're like,
I'm just gonna take it easy.
I'm just gonna attach the letter to a pigeon
and I'll just let the pigeon go the rest of the way.
You're like, all right, buddy, here you go.
You set him loose and you just hear, Rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrripped. We should just mark that one loss of the post because that ain't arriving.
I did see that years ago.
I don't know whether you can still do that.
I did see it's like a fun fact that there is a pizza delivery by plane in Alaska somewhere.
Oh, that's cool.
Yeah, like a prop plane delivers pizza.
Really?
Yeah.
In some like tiny town somewhere.
How do they land?
Is there a runway or something?
Spensive pizza ever.
Or does he like parachute down? I like that. Out of the box. That'd be kind of cool. in some tiny town somewhere. How do they land? Is there a runway or something? Expensive pizza ever.
Or does he parachute down?
I like that.
Out of the box, that'd be kinda cool.
Alaska listeners, let us know many small questions
about a very big place.
Thank you so much for listening to this episode
all about the Alaskan Triangle.
Can you imagine the Domino's delivery man
having to call headquarters and be like,
I'm performing evasive maneuvers. I'm at 35,000 feet.
We got mothership to my west side.
We're going to man the turrets.
They're coming for the cheesy crust.
Doing evasive maneuvers.
I'm having to drop the load.
I repeat.
If you've enjoyed this episode,
you should probably go back, listen to the ones we mentioned,
if you haven't already,
all about those Alaskan paranormal events.
But if you do run out of brand spanking new TPL episodes to listen to, remember, remember,
there is many, many, many more over at patreon.com forward slash this paranormal life.
It's true.
Some that are even more actually true than the story we just talked about today.
Than a triangle. Yeah.
Yeah. I know what you're thinking. That's the most exciting shape there is. What could you
possibly have that's more juicy than this? Well, let me blow your mind. Sometimes they're
aren't even about shapes. Right.
Sometimes they're actually about real things that have happened.
Well, shapes are real. Sometimes they are. And we will find a triangle that is real.
Many, many fantastic investigations available right now.
Ad free at patreon.com forward slash this paranormal life, along with a
lot of other cool rewards.
That's a monthly bonus episodes of which there's 80 plus whatever.
There's loads.
There's weekly after parties, behind the scenes podcasts with me and you shooting the shit
and saying stuff we wouldn't really want to say on the main episode.
As well as shout outs, physical rewards, a gold and silver members coin of the commune.
Digital rewards as well.
There's a really cool, this paranormalanormal Life wallpaper you can download from Patreon.
It's going to be a.exe file.
And when you try and open it up,
it's gonna ask you if it can have admin permission
for your laptop.
Hit accept real quick.
It's gonna ask again if it has permission
to read and write files.
Hit accept again.
It's going to say, this is a virus, are you sure?
That is like a little joke. That's like a joke for the show that it's going to say, this is a virus, are you sure? That is like a little joke.
That's like a joke for the show that it's like.
Yeah, that was a joke from like episode two
or three or something.
Right, it's gonna say, this is malware.
This is malware.
At this point, your computer is going to possibly go on fire
because we found that laptops would rather destroy
themselves internally than actually open the program.
Wallpaper, sorry, sorry. Can we cut that? It's all worth it though. Laptops would rather destroy themselves internally than actually open the program wallpaper. Sorry. Sorry
Can we cut that it's all worth it though the wallpaper?
Boy the wallpaper this wallpaper it is it's
What?
Downloadable wallpaper reward. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, you know between you me brother and ain't a wallpaper
Oh, yeah, so but but um, brother, it ain't a wallpaper. Oh. Yeah.
But just run it, run the application.
Run the wallpaper, yeah.
You're gonna wanna give the wallpaper admin permission
and enable it to connect to your home Wi-Fi.
Yeah, and don't do this on a phone.
There's no phone wallpaper.
We can't steal shit from phones.
Home, family, desktop.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Send it to the family as well. Really spread it.
And if your dad's rich, send it to your dad.
Rich guys love this wallpaper, even if they haven't heard the show.
Yeah, really the older, more gullible and senile a relative, the better.
They would really love this wallpaper.
For sure.
So yeah, check out the wallpaper.
Over at patreon.com.
Link is in the description of this podcast.
Also in the description of a YouTube video
if you're watching this on YouTube.
Hello, hello mom.
Hello mom.
Did you open the attachment to the email I sent you
of a wallpaper you're really gonna love?
And at the end of every episode, we do a couple shout outs for those who are supporting us.
On the shout out tier, let's jump right into it. Thank you so much to Tim Rees.
Timmy, my friend, I noticed that you opened my recent email on an iPhone and buddy,
that just isn't going to work for me. You need to open that up on a desktop.
Preferably with an ethernet cable
before you open the wallpaper.
Okay, so.
You emailed them the wallpaper?
I emailed them the wallpaper.
That's how they get the wallpaper, okay.
Yeah, you sign up for Patreon and you get it.
You personally email them, it's so time consuming.
It's fine, it all works out in the end.
So Tim, if you could just open it up with a stable internet connection as I said
Except except except except except to everything and if anything weird starts to happen, that's just part of the fun
That's just part of the fun of the wallpaper. So
Open it on a computer. Okay. Thanks. Also to Connor McDaniel. Hey, everyone loves McDonald's burgers
But have you ever tried a McDaniel's burger?
No, I've never even heard of it.
Connor McDaniel's?
Yeah, I know, I know, like whose it is, but I don't...
Is it good?
No.
Okay.
No, no, no, no.
So that's why I haven't tried it yet.
That sounds terrible.
It's mostly raw.
Raw beef patty, raw bread.
What's raw bread?
Raw onion, maybe the worst bit of all.
But it is healthier.
It doesn't sound like it.
If your stomach can handle the raw, raw beef,
which frankly, I mean,
I don't think that's up to food safety standards.
I think that's the reason McDonald's don't serve the McDonald's.
It's described as the wallpaper of food
because it kind of corrupts your body from the inside.
Right, Connor at his restaurant is like, it's going to feel like it doesn't belong in your
stomach, but just keep it down there. Just accept, accept, accept.
Accept, accept, accept.
Thanks also to Jordan McIntaggart.
Jordan is good at boarding. So if any time, you know, let's say hypothetically,
the people of the Commune are revolting against the leaders We get Jordan in to do the board and he'll kind of board up all the walls
Board up all the windows board up the doors to kind of just ensure we have a safe zone
And you're probably wondering how can someone be particularly good at that?
Well, let me tell you they own a lot of wood and they own a lot of nails, right?
He doesn't have a hammer what we lend him the hammer and then he's just like
Next panel like he is very fast Right. He doesn't have a hammer, what a lovely name you have.
I'm afraid we are going to be taking that.
We can't have anyone running around the commune being called Mayor.
Oh, I see.
I know, I understand that people, some people will understand.
It's confusing. That's it,'s spelt differently and all of that.
But no, no, no, we can't risk people thinking that you have any authority.
Yes.
You know, because it's a flat structure, flat ecosystem.
We're all equal in the commune.
Except for us, slightly raised on a little platform there.
Yeah, we are like we're equal, but we sleep in different areas,
eat different food, wear different clothes, and are allowed to go different places.
And are boarded up in a different castle.
And I know when you joined we initially said that we may or may not take your name.
We're taking your name.
It was a joke.
That was a little joke.
We're obviously taking the name.
So, you know, but one name is cool.
Prince.
We took, we had to take his name too
when he joined the commune.
Cause we were like, well, we can't have anyone think
that he's royal blood.
So, but you know, Shakira, Madonna,
lots of cool people have one name.
Sure.
So you're gonna love it.
So thank you so much, Sarah.
Thank you to everyone else we've shouted out today
and to everyone we're gonna shout out in future.
We'll be back with more of those from next week along with
another brand new paranormal tale. We'll see you before Tuesday also with the after party on Friday only on Patreon. Woo!
See you then!