Radio Sweden is reporting from their country that a documentary crew is claiming to have finally caught a local Lake Monster on film.
A film team who positioned cameras underwater in northern Sweden’s Storsjön lake during the spring, say they have seen clear indications of an underwater monster, according to Swedish Television’s local news. The film sequence clearly shows a blurry silhouette radiating body heat.
This would be the legendary Great Lake Sea Monster (Storsjöodjuret), which is said to lurk in the waters of the Storsjön outside Östersund in northern Sweden.
I have to officially note that this is a blurry “blobbogey.” Blob is used as in blobsquatch, which is an undefined landbased human-like object shown in a photograph and disseminated by forums and blogs on the Internet. (See “The Short History of Blobsquatch.”) Bogey is a generalized modern slang word, linked to meaning something ill-defined, as an evil or mischievous spirit; a hobgoblin; a cause of annoyance or harassment; and an unidentified flying object.
(Blobbogeying, where one jumps from one blob image to another blob image on various blogs, is not to be confused with blogsquatching, the new term I coined on November 25, 2006, which describes the use of web logs to spread information on unknown hairy hominoids such as Sasquatch, Yeti, and Yowie. Such blogsquatching sites often freely share the latest examples of blobsquatch images and/or arguments about them.)
So now blobbogey images are being found with underwater cameras of alleged Lake Monsters?
This isn’t the first time Sweden has tried to outwit the lake’s most private inhabitant. Back in 1894 a company was created with one specific aim: to catch the underwater monster.
Although that never became a reality, Jämtland’s county administration created a law in 1986 to forbid the “killing, injuring or capture of any living animal of that type.” The law was later repealed in 2005.
Today’s Lake Monster team are stepping up their chances: currently they have six cameras on site, next year they are set for 30 cameras 24/7.
The image from the footage has surfaced and was added to the top at 1:00 PM Eastern, thanks to a Brandeis University alumni’s tip.
See the video, which has now been uploaded here.
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