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33 episodios

episode Anansi artwork

Anansi

In the deep forests of the Akan lands, where ancient trees whisper secrets to the wind and the earth pulses with the heartbeat of generations, there dwells a being both small and boundless. We do not really mean what we are about to say is true. A story, just a story; let it come, let it go.  Episode 32 is the tale of Anansi, the spider whose threads bind the world of stories. Born from the rich oral traditions of the Akan people, particularly the Ashanti of what is now Ghana. Anansi is no mere creature of legend but a paradoxical spirit of cunning, wisdom, and mischief. His stories honor the ingenuity of a people who have long navigated the complexities of life through wit and resilience, respecting the cultural heritage from which they spring. Sources Wikipedia Anansi/Ananse https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anansi/Ananse (/əˈnɑːnsi/): ah-NAHN-see [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anansi] TED-Ed Anansi/Ananses Myth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nWba9Ii5Lo [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nWba9Ii5Lo] Study.com Anansi: https://study.com/academy/lesson/Anansi/Ananse (/əˈnɑːnsi/): ah-NAHN-see-spider-stories-mythology.html [https://study.com/academy/lesson/anansi-spider-stories-mythology.html] Britannica Ananse: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ananse [https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ananse] Gutenberg Jamaica Anansi Stories: https://www.gutenberg.org/files/72735/72735-h/72735-h.htm [https://www.gutenberg.org/files/72735/72735-h/72735-h.htm] Vecsey on Akan Trickster (cultural context): https://pages.mtu.edu/~rlstrick/rsvtxt/faulkner/vecsey.pdf [https://pages.mtu.edu/~rlstrick/rsvtxt/faulkner/vecsey.pdf]

25 de jun de 20269 min
episode The Gowrow artwork

The Gowrow

In the deep hollows of the Ozarks, where limestone caves swallow secrets and rivers carve forgotten paths, something ancient stirs. Not the whisper of wind through cedar, nor the howl of a coyote under a blood moon.  A sound born of hunger and rage, echoing from caverns where bones lie piled like warnings.  In episode 31 we descend into the legend of the Gowrow, a beast of scales and sickles that haunted the hills of Arkansas. We tread carefully, honoring the Indigenous peoples who have known these lands since time immemorial. The Osage, Caddo, Cherokee, and others whose stories of powerful water spirits and cave guardians predate the tall tales of settlers. Their respect for the balance of the wild offers a lens through which we view this shadow.  Sources Encyclopedia of Arkansas (core historical account): https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/gowrow-5669/ [https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/gowrow-5669/] Cryptid Wiki (detailed description and variants): https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Arkansas_Gowrow [https://cryptidz.fandom.com/wiki/Arkansas_Gowrow] Circle of the Dragon (folklore compilation): https://www.blackdrago.com/species/gowrow.htm [https://www.blackdrago.com/species/gowrow.htm] Vance Randolph context (via archive references): Search "We Always Lie to Strangers Vance Randolph Gowrow" for book excerpts.

23 de jun de 20269 min
episode The Honey Island Swamp Monster artwork

The Honey Island Swamp Monster

Deep In the heart of southeastern Louisiana, where the Pearl River bleeds into a labyrinth of bayous and ancient wetlands, lies the Honey Island Swamp. Nearly seventy thousand acres of primeval wilderness, cypress giants draped in veils of moss, black water that mirrors nothing but the void above, and a silence so profound it presses against the chest like a warning. This is a place that time forgot, where the line between the living world and something older, something tainted, grows thin. Here, among the tangled roots and hidden sloughs, whispers persist of a creature the locals call many names: the Honey Island Swamp Monster, La Bête Noire, the Louisiana Wookiee… and, in older stories tied to the land’s first peoples, the Letiche.  This is episode 30: The Honey Island Swamp Monster Sources https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/strange-creatures/honey-island-swamp-monster.htm [https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/strange-creatures/honey-island-swamp-monster.htm] (overview and Letiche ties) Scholarly thesis on belief traditions: https://research.library.mun.ca/10863/ [https://research.library.mun.ca/10863/] (Frances Leary) Choctaw hattak chito references: Memorial University archival content on Indigenous lore. Skeptical analysis (Joe Nickell tracks/hoax evidence): https://web.archive.org/web/20090925135750/http://www.csicop.org/si/show/tracking_the_swamp_monsters/ [https://web.archive.org/web/20090925135750/http://www.csicop.org/si/show/tracking_the_swamp_monsters/] Dana Holyfield documentation/books and film: Search “Honey Island Swamp Monster Documentations” on Amazon or her related works. Documentaries: YouTube searches for “In Search of the Honey Island Swamp Monster” or Animal Planet features. .

18 de jun de 202610 min
episode Walking Sam / Chiye-Tanka artwork

Walking Sam / Chiye-Tanka

In the vast, windswept lands of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, where the Badlands stretch like ancient bones under an endless sky, stories have been passed down through generations of Lakota people. These are not mere tales for entertainment. They are living threads of oral history, woven with respect for the land, the ancestors, and the unseen forces that walk among us. In Episode 29 we approach one such story with care and reverence, the legend of the figure known as Walking Sam, also called Tall Man, Big Man, or in older traditions, Chiye-tanka. We honor the Lakota and broader Indigenous voices who carry these traditions. This retelling draws from documented accounts, elder perspectives, and cultural context, recognizing that folklore here reflects deep connections to place, history, and resilience amid profound challenges. It is shared not to sensationalize, but to explore the mysterious with humility. Sources: https://weirddarkness.com/walking-sam/ [https://weirddarkness.com/walking-sam/] (Detailed sightings and police testimony). https://dailydot.com/walking-sam-myth-lakota-pine-ridge-suicides/ [https://dailydot.com/walking-sam-myth-lakota-pine-ridge-suicides/] (Cultural context and elder accounts).  Additional references from tribal police reports, Peter Matthiessen’s In the Spirit of Crazy Horse, and respectful folklore compilations (searchable via above for further reading).

16 de jun de 202610 min
episode Tata Duende artwork

Tata Duende

They say the monte does not forget. It remembers every footfall, every greedy swing of the machete, every broken promise whispered, or forgotten, beneath its canopy. In the black-soaked lowlands of Belize, where the ancient blood of the Maya still nourishes the roots of towering ceiba and mahogany, something older than empires walks. Not a devil conjured by colonial fear. Not a simple saint of the wild. Something woven from the first covenant between people and the green world, when the pyramids drank starlight and the forest still spoke in unbroken tongues. This is episode 28: Tata Duende. Sources: * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende] * https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tata_Duende] * https://folktalesamerica.com/tata-duende-the-forest-guardian-of-belize/ [https://folktalesamerica.com/tata-duende-the-forest-guardian-of-belize/] * https://www.greaterbelize.com/tata-duende-the-old-man-who-protects-the-forest/ [https://www.greaterbelize.com/tata-duende-the-old-man-who-protects-the-forest/] * http://www.legendsofbelize.com/ [http://www.legendsofbelize.com/] (associated with the book Legends of Belize by GrissyG & Dismas) * https://www.native-languages.org/maya_guide.htm [https://www.native-languages.org/maya_guide.htm] (for broader Yucatec pronunciation context)

12 de jun de 202613 min