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In the midst where the trees lean low,
Squatchin' Holla's gotta tell the show,
whispers creep like a creature spain out.
Every shadow's got a secret to grow.
Monsters ride where the stories are told,
Squatchin' Holla where the legends are born.
Are they here, are they gone?
Who can say, in the holler, the truth just slips away?
Your footprints fade where the creek runs then.
The lanterns sway, let the search begin.
Rustling waves, but there's no one near.
Is it the wind, or the beast you fear?
Every echo's a question, every rustle's a clue.
Squatchin' Holla's got its eyes on you.
Monsters ride where the stories are told,
Squatchin' Holla where the legends are born.
Are they here, are they gone?
Who can say, in the holler, the truth just slips away?
And now, with your Squatchin' Holla hosts,
Roger Williams, Amanda Stowers, and Ashley Rage.
Remember, this podcast can be downloaded everywhere
great podcasts are found.
And now, the show.
Hello, hello.
Uh-oh, we've lost Roger.
He was, we were having some technical difficulties backstage.
Can you hear me?
There you are.
Oh, no.
Carey.
Can you, can you hear me, sir?
I can hear you.
Can you hear me?
OK, I can hear you just fine.
Give me a thumbs up, if you can hear me.
You can hear me?
OK, sorry, y'all.
I'm going to have to do this blind, I guess.
My ears.
All right, let us know in the chat, you guys can y'all hear Roger.
Mand up, can you go ahead and tell people
what we're going to do tonight and maybe show a couple.
Let me try to figure this out.
Absolutely, yeah.
OK, all right.
Sorry, guys.
So yeah, we're having some technical difficulties, y'all.
So give me a second, I'm going to text him, let him know
that y'all can hear him at least, which is a good thing.
Maybe, maybe not, I don't know if it depends.
So yeah, we're just going to kind of fly off the cuff tonight.
Roger and I were talking, we didn't have a guest
really this week.
And we wanted to share with you some of the projects
and other fun stuff that we've got going on backstage.
So I've got several of my YouTube videos and tiktoks and stuff
like that that I wanted to share with you guys.
And Roger's got some other fun stuff
that he's got going that I'm going to let him bring up
and share whenever he gets himself straight and back out.
So since I'm not used to running this thing,
and this is the joys of live, we're just
going to go ahead and get started.
So as many, you know, Roger asked me to come and join the show
here.
It's been about a year now.
It's been at least a year.
So he interviewed me way back when
on the old Squatch and Holler channel.
So I just thought I'd share with you
some of the backstage stuff for that
that I posted on my tiktok.
So let's pull that up from the internet.
So this evening, I will be interviewing live
with Squatch and Holler on their YouTube channel.
And it should be at 7 p.m. Central 8 p.m. Eastern.
And I'll let you do the math for the rest
of the standard time zones.
So yeah, if any of my followers is interested
and wants to hear me share any crazy stories,
so you'll catch me at tonight.
Thanks.
So yeah, that was at least a year and a half ago.
It's not almost two years now that Roger invited me
to come on and interview with him
on the old Squatch and Holler channel
before we went under the Untold Radio Network umbrella here.
So yeah, it's been a fun ride.
I'm really glad that you all have invited me along
for the ride.
And it's been fun through all of this.
So Roger's still having some technical difficulties
backstage, so we're just going to keep playing off
some fun silliness here.
So when I started, what I did, my TikTok
was I wanted to start sharing silly fun internet things
because I'm a millennial and I live for the internet culture.
So I was making all kinds of silly memes and things like that.
So here's a couple of them that I made just first
in silliness.
So let's full of one or two of these here.
Let's start with this one.
Here we go.
Yeah, that's something that people try to bring up with me
all the time.
Like, you really think there's still more than one bigfoot?
Like, I just wanted to just see how many times I can
smack my face.
Because it just blows my mind.
Greg, man, are you going to see the free burger?
Nope.
I ate that salad and sorry, all right.
Let's see what other fun this I can hear you now.
I can hear you.
Y'all, I apologize.
You hear me?
My stupid computer did an update without letting me know
how that happened.
He's back.
I'm back.
So for now, anyway, that's all I can say to you saved me.
I was kind of leaving it there, not in a very good way.
I'm like, how am I going to do this?
And I can't hear what's going on.
Y'all, thanks for everybody showing up.
Did you explain what we're doing tonight?
Yeah, I tried and started.
And I started showing some of my silliness in a yard
or a bunch of nerds.
Yeah, man, y'all see what happens when they just
sell anybody a computer in a microphone?
The joys of going live, there is no filter.
It happens as it happens.
This is show number 31 on this untold radio network.
And it's the first time this has happened.
And when I flipped it open and sold it, it updated.
I was like, oh, no.
Patrick, I'm fixed to talk about you a little bit.
But yeah, we want to have guests as much as we can.
But every now and then, we want to do a little different.
So we talked about it.
We're like, you know, a lot of people don't know us
from before.
And we have social media.
I'll bug the heck out of you.
Spencer calls me a social media terrorist.
So, he said, man, you're awful.
But if you want to go to TikTok,
some people don't use that without Facebook.
And Amanda got her start on TikTok.
Well, yeah, I saw that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I had a big old ex on my screen.
I didn't know you're right, Jeffrey.
But so, you know, my size is a story.
Yeah, you share your side of it.
I was sharing mine.
I don't know if you could hear it or not.
Yeah, I can, I can now.
My, my side, you know, I was doing this
and it's a lot to do.
It don't seem like it.
But when you're responsible for everything,
it makes it tough.
So I told Heather, I said, I need a co-host.
And I had a few people in mind,
but then they started co-hosting with other people.
And Amanda came on the show.
Everything went well.
And it was in the back of my mind.
And I was watching her TikToks and on.
And I felt weird to ask in her because, you know,
I didn't want to come off like the creepy old man, right?
So, yeah, and I didn't do it.
I was thinking about it for a while.
But I saw that video where she was about to break down.
I didn't look like, because you're creating a lot of the video.
Because yeah, that's the one that started it all.
Yeah, it was the day that TikTok was supposed to like go away.
Yeah, could you hear that?
I could hear it just fine.
I could.
I couldn't.
So as long as I can hear you, we can do a show.
Perfect.
And obviously, I think you can hear you just fine.
Okay, thank you.
Appreciate it.
Y'all know, I'm not good at this.
So we're just winging it.
So that video, I'm like, I thought about it that day.
I'm going to reach out to her.
So.
And she said, yeah, it was like that same day or the day after.
Yeah, you reached out to me and you're like, so what do you feel about it?
And it's like, you know what?
Why not?
It's been a lot of fun to have people interview me.
There's a lot of times I'm in the middle of conversations.
And I'm like, actually, I want to ask them this instead.
So it's been really fun and I've met so many people.
Everybody's making fun of me.
Welcome in there.
Everybody that's new, welcome in.
We don't edit.
Okay.
So here's what I'm going to do.
I've been working slowly on a documentary.
It's tough to get people lined up to do things like, you know, there are people here locally
that want to do it.
I have to work around their schedule and it's kind of tough.
But I have a few good interviews and we couldn't get it loaded because it's too long.
So Amanda is going to play it from her computer.
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And so the first person you'll see is Kevin Wright.
A lot of you guys in Gauss saw him on the original Squatch and holler had amazing encounter
and we grew up around each other and I had no idea about his encounter and when I started
doing this is when he contacted me and then his brother was there.
So you will you'll hear that and there's Kyle and Javier.
I'm good friends with Kyle and his family and they're in North Lincoln County and they
had and had something happen now.
They're going to talk about a video.
I have the video I might show it, but I'm going to go ahead and tell you you're not going
to see much on this screen because I looked at different screens, but when I went to the
office where they work and they had this massive computer screens, I could see it.
I could see the cloak look.
I could see it moving and you could see how tall it was and it's scared Javier to death.
I mean, because they're what we don't say in the video, they're hunting with crossbows.
So they don't have they have no gun.
I forgot about that.
Yeah, and it's very interesting.
I put them two together.
I didn't put everything in it.
I want to save some for the documentary if it ever happens.
But I wanted to share with y'all like, hey, we do get out here and do this stuff.
You know, Amanda talks to people, I love that her TikTok videos are actually in the museum
a lot of times and then she's been out in the woods.
So I think that's pretty cool.
Yeah, Kevin, let me tell you, Jeffrey, Kevin might be in here.
He's a little shy.
He, I got him on the show and it was, I didn't think it was going to happen.
But he's a great guy.
I've known him all his life.
He is straight up honest, doesn't exaggerate.
And I thank you people that haven't heard his encounter yet.
Some of the details and how close he was is going to be very interesting.
I stop it right before he tells how tall it was.
He's estimating I think 9 or 10 foot.
But, but anyway, so I also have a TikTok where I explain Jeremiah Byron from Bigfoot Society.
Our buddy.
I had the big monkeys of Giles County and he challenged me.
He's like, hey, I want to hear more about the big monkey.
So O'Rodge goes and tries to do TikTok for the first time and it was early morning.
You can tell because I was a little sleepy.
Hey, you got to start somewhere, right?
Yeah, and there's another thing also, we'll get into this.
But I wanted to explain first.
I do have a story that a listener watcher sent in and we said we would read emails.
But this story came in and it was amazing and it's fiction and we'll right up front tell
you it's fiction.
But it was so good.
I went ahead and recorded it.
I had a little channel.
Nobody listened to it.
The ones that did said it was, they liked it.
So y'all can laugh at me.
If you want me to, I'm going to leave it up to the audience.
It's nine minutes.
When we get ready to leave, we'll play that and then let that be the end of the show.
And, you know, if y'all want to let me know, if you're tired of hearing me, you ramble,
you just tell me to get off here and I'll leave.
But anyway.
So.
I should be used to you by now, Roger.
I hope so.
Yeah.
Thanks.
You know, everybody joining us, sorry, we're having a little bit people watching live
already.
That's kind of awesome for just a tough show like us tonight.
I'm kind of proud of the interviews because of my setting, painting show, my son showed
me how to use the settings on my iPhone and I thought it did a good job.
So she's going to play it from her computer and it's not finished.
I'm learning how to edit and do all that.
So if y'all want to watch that first, I think it's about 13 or 14 minutes.
Yeah.
It's about 12, 13 minutes, I think.
All right.
So let's go and play that because I think it's a good starter.
So we start with Kevin.
He's local here and then we have Kyle and Javier.
They're only like 25 minutes from here and the particular spot is as a crow flies, maybe
12, 15 miles from the Flintville Monster incident, back in the 70s and people have seen
the white one since then.
Also the second interview, I didn't have my noise canceling mics and there's a small
airport nearby.
So you'll hear a little bit of background noise, sorry about that.
But roll that bean footage from all that bean footage hang on, let me get it going here.
And I'll get on my phone and listen to it.
How about that?
That might work.
There you go.
That might work.
All right.
Let me see if I can figure out how to do this again.
And she's the tech techie all night.
You know, as she said, techie instead of trekkie.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
Here we go.
Oh, yeah.
We got the infinity screen going on again.
All right.
Here we go.
Beautiful bean footage.
That's right.
Mix it.
Beautiful.
And y'all give us the thumbs up if you can hear him when she starts it.
I hope y'all can because it's the most urgent.
What is this?
Anyhow, no sound.
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Say the weird thing. People are desperately seeking realness.
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they were tired, sad, almost human, leaf rose, the air was thick as syrup and time just seemed to stop.
Then the creature made a low soft sound like a hum that vibrated in its chest deep and calm.
Least swallowed hard, you ain't no bear are you? The thing just tilted its head curious and for that
one quite moment, boy and beast understood each other without a word. From that night on,
Le went back to the creek whenever he could. He'd leave biscuits, apples, or a piece of cornbread wrapped
in a napkin. And he started finding gifts left in return, smooth river stones, bundles of feathers,
and once an old deer out in the polished and cleaned. He began to call the creature Boon
after Daniel Boon, a woodsman like no other. Boon always kept his distance hiding in the trees,
but little by little he came closer. Sometimes they'd sit outside by side by the water,
saying nothing, just listening to the frogs, seeing, and the crickets hum.
Le learned Boon sounds, his clicks, hums, soft grunts that almost sounded like a language.
They didn't need words, it was a friendship, pure and true. The kind that don't need explaining.
Not everything in those dark woods was kind. It was late one fall when the quiet of hollow
creek was broken by gunfire. Le, now a teenager, ran toward the ridge and froze when he saw
eyes, dozens of them, glowing red and low to the ground. These were it in big foots,
or big foots. They were dogmen, long, lean, and wrong. Black fur, slick in the moon like teeth
bed, moving like shadows on two legs. Then came a roar so powerful it shook the trees.
Boon first from the darkness charging straight at the pack. The dogmen surrounded him,
snarling, but Boon didn't back down. He fought with a fury that only comes from love.
Protecting the valley, protecting Lee, protecting the folks who didn't even know he existed.
When it was over, the woods were quiet again. Boon was bleeding, but alive.
Lee realized right then that his friend wasn't hiding from the world. He was protecting it.
Years rolled by, Lee grew into a man, but he never left the valley. He bought a little farmhouse
not far from the creek, and every week he'd walked down that same path with an old lantern
and a bag of food. Boon would still be there, watching from the trees, older now, slower,
but still keeping guard. By the 1990s, the dogman had returned, bolder than before.
Lee started loading his rifle with silver bullets, melted down from an old pocket cross,
and a few coins. He'd sit by the window, polishing the rounds, whispering a prayer over each one.
The Lord is my shepherd, and I ought to not let wolves rule his woods.
He learned how to fight him with faith, with fire, and with silver, but Boon still took the hardest
fights for himself, the unspoken guardian of hollow creek. It was a stormy October evening.
When Lee felt something tug at his heart, he couldn't explain it. He just knew he had to go.
The rain came down his sheets as he reached the creek. Thereby the old sycamore, Boon was on his knees,
breathing slow, eyes cloudy with age. Lee dropped to the side, easy old friend, easy now.
Boon lifted a trembling hand, placed it on Lee's shoulder. For a long moment, the two just sat
there to boy in his garden, side by side, guardian, side by side. Then Boon let out a final breath,
deep and peaceful like the woods themselves were singing him home. Lee sat in the mud to sunrise,
rainwater mixing with tears. When the storm passed, Lee dug a grave beneath the old sycamore tree,
he route Boon in a wool blanket, laid him down general and filled the earth back in.
No cross, no marker. Just a single smooth river stone. The first gift Boon had ever given him.
Lee figured the world didn't need to know where its protector lay. Some heroes are meant to rest in
silence. These days, Lee's an old man, Harrogon Gray, voice low and gravelly,
folks still whisper about strange sounds in the woods, big tracks in the mud,
houses that don't sound quite right. They say something out there keeps the dogman away, keeps the
holler safe. Lee just smiles when they talk like that, sift his coffee, looks towards the trees
and says nothing. But every now and then, when the moon's hanging low and the creek's running high,
he'll take a biscuit and set down by the old sycamore. Just in case, his friend spirit still walks the
ridges, watching, protecting, and guarding the hollow creek one more night. Some stories don't need
proof. Some friends don't need names. And some legends, they ain't found in books or towns.
They are very deep in the heart of the southern woods. Wow. Great job. Get me a little teary-eyed
there. But thanks, thanks for sending that in. We, we will read emails. I may have guessed every
now and then if I can figure that out. But I'm doing this just for fun. Just give me something to do
and maybe, you know, entertain y'all for a few minutes out of the day. And we appreciate you listening
and join us on Squatch and holler. We do Thursday nights at seven central. And we have great guests. We
had MK Davis own last week last last week. Very great great conversation. And thank y'all for
listening. And we'll see you next time. Bye bye.
We're the mall sang low in the nightlings back. The stories was about a shadow tall big feed moving
where the moon light falls. Some say it be some say it goes in the trees. Some say trouble blowing in
with the breeze. But around here man, we know the call when we just call in friend to Squatch and holler.
Yeah. So lie that fire. Let the cat tell shake you the night bird's cry. Cover his way to hear a howl in the
Georgia fog. They know when they know when the creek runs cold and the shadows get taller. Yeah,
you're cross the line in a Squatch and holler. Well, the legends won't get a break in
but I'm on your step in the Squatch and holler.
But he tell me stories about the thing he sourced a tin foot high with a timber jaw.
Red eyes burning like a summer cold. Left track pick another swallow your soul but the old folks
left say don't you fear. Critters been living here for hundreds of years treat them with respect
when the moon gets smaller and they let you live in Squatch and holler. So lie that fire
let the swamp roam. Oh, you can hear that beast right down your soul. They'll be here to
run from the river call. It ain't no bullfrog barking at all. When the swamp runs still in the
crickets get south. Yeah, you're not alone in a Squatch and holler. Well, the brave thing tries and the
foos walk out of the Lord keep watch on the Squatch and holler.
Some say guards it all pound ridge. Some say he walks from bridge to bridge. One thing show when the
night comes down. Something big still causes ground. So bank that fire let the night get deep
at the Willow's Whistful of the hood. So creeps if you catch a glimpse through the midnight
hall of just not your head don't scream and holler. For the wild runs free and the ledges get taller
out where the roads in Squatch and holler. We ain't scared but we sure stay cautious down in the
dark of that Squatch and holler.
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Untold Radio Network

Untold Radio Network

Untold Radio Network
