Corwin’s quest for Yeti is revealed, and the results are what we expected from a skeptic.
For months we’ve known that Jeff Corwin went to the Himalayas on October 20, 2005, to be filmed for the Discovery production (Animal Planet) documentary on the Yeti. See Cryptomundo postings here: 1; 2; and 3.
The program airs April 15, 2006, at 8:00 PM EDT/PDT on the Discovery Networks’ Animal Planet. “Corwin’s Quest: Realm of the Yeti” is two hours long.
Last weekend, “Expedition Everest: Journey to Sacred Lands” screened on the Travel Channel during a one-hour broadcast, on April 9, 2006. From a cryptozoologically point-of-view, it was an engaging program. Surprisingly, Joe Rohde, Walt Disney Imagineering executive designer, did a fairly commendable job, perhaps sometimes with a bit too much geez-whiz asides, now and then. But hey, he was having fun in Nepal and won’t we all enjoy that. Rohde went around to the native peoples, and he was shown by them the Abominable Snowman habitat, their art, and then given their descriptions of the Yeti.
Some of Rohde’s filmed interactions, where he is drawing the Yeti under the locals’ direction, are excellent. I want to see some of those drawings from the natives closeup. How Rohde turned those descriptions into a clawed creature that leaves clawed footprints (back at Disney World), escapes me. However, Rohde’s conclusion may have more to do with a Corwin-based, scientific side bias we see developing and then full blown in the Corwin show.
Tomorrow on the Animal Planet, the “findings” of Jeff Corwin’s quest for Yeti will play across your television screen. But word is leaking out early that he has a debunker’s surprise in store for us.
One Cryptomundo reader has sent this to me: “I just watched a clip on FoxNews in which Jeff Corwin states that he and his team tracked, found and treated a Yeti. He said it weighed 500 lbs. He also said that Bigfoot in the US could not exist. I just hope it’s not a bear that he is calling Yeti.”
Indeed, it looks like that is exactly what Corwin is going to do, and he will probably follow the lead of others, including a famed German mountain climber who wrote a less-than-clear book on the subject, by declaring the Yeti is a bear, perhaps a Tibetan bear or a nocturnal species of brown bear.
Oh well. There’s always reruns of Joe Rohde’s adventures gathering the Yeti info, with mostly an openmind, for the attraction’s creation.
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