“It’s simply a better world if Bigfoot is real,” Lynne S. McNeill, a folklorist at Utah State University, told me. “It says something positive about our wilderness spaces. It says we haven’t totally destroyed our planet, that there are enough wild places left that a creature like Bigfoot can live undetected.”
“It’s simply a better world if Bigfoot is real,” Lynne S. McNeill, a folklorist at Utah State University, told me. “It says something positive about our wilderness spaces. It says we haven’t totally destroyed our planet, that there are enough wild places left that a creature like Bigfoot can live undetected.” good take