Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:01,502 --> 00:00:04,253
Creatures of the night.
2
00:00:04,254 --> 00:00:07,089
They hide in the shadows.
3
00:00:07,090 --> 00:00:09,759
Ready to drink the blood
4
00:00:09,760 --> 00:00:12,220
and tear at the flesh
5
00:00:12,221 --> 00:00:15,223
‐of their human prey.
6
00:00:19,228 --> 00:00:22,897
For centuries, mankind
has told frightening tales
7
00:00:22,898 --> 00:00:27,193
of bloodthirsty vampires
and moon‐crazed werewolves.
8
00:00:27,194 --> 00:00:29,987
But what is it about these two
very different monsters
9
00:00:29,988 --> 00:00:33,783
that have made them such
a large part of our nightmares?
10
00:00:33,784 --> 00:00:36,537
Is it because they're also...
11
00:00:37,704 --> 00:00:39,539
...part human?
12
00:00:39,540 --> 00:00:42,375
Could it be that the same
gruesome urges
13
00:00:42,376 --> 00:00:47,421
they have reported to have
also lurk deep inside ourselves?
14
00:00:47,422 --> 00:00:51,509
Well, that is what we will try
and find out.
15
00:00:51,510 --> 00:00:54,112
The UnXplained S02 - EP07
Vampires and Werewolves
16
00:00:54,136 --> 00:00:56,136
Subtitled by Diego Moraes
17
00:01:06,483 --> 00:01:08,568
Vlad the Impaler.
18
00:01:08,569 --> 00:01:11,070
Lycaon of Arcadia.
19
00:01:11,071 --> 00:01:13,281
Nosferatu.
20
00:01:13,282 --> 00:01:16,242
The Beast of Gévaudan.
21
00:01:16,243 --> 00:01:20,413
These are the names of grotesque
and terrifying monsters.
22
00:01:20,414 --> 00:01:23,332
Unearthly creatures that,
according to legend,
23
00:01:23,333 --> 00:01:27,169
thrived on human blood
and feasted on human flesh.
24
00:01:29,673 --> 00:01:33,260
But could they actually be real?
25
00:01:42,311 --> 00:01:45,521
Police arrive upon
a gruesome scene.
26
00:01:45,522 --> 00:01:49,317
A local prostitute lies bloody
and battered on the street.
27
00:01:49,318 --> 00:01:52,611
Her leg is shattered
in three places.
28
00:01:52,612 --> 00:01:54,739
Based on eyewitness accounts,
it's believed
29
00:01:54,740 --> 00:01:58,410
she intentionally leapt
from a balcony 20 feet above.
30
00:02:00,370 --> 00:02:02,580
She'd been with a wealthy man.
31
00:02:02,581 --> 00:02:05,624
He'd been friendly, generous,
funny, kind.
32
00:02:05,625 --> 00:02:07,918
He'd made no advances,
though he'd paid for her time.
33
00:02:07,919 --> 00:02:11,381
But then he attacked her.
34
00:02:12,883 --> 00:02:15,551
He moved upon her
with unnatural swiftness
35
00:02:15,552 --> 00:02:17,970
and wrapped his arms around her,
pulled her head to the side
36
00:02:17,971 --> 00:02:21,266
and began to, quote,
"rip at her flesh."
37
00:02:22,643 --> 00:02:24,644
Her attacker was a man
38
00:02:24,645 --> 00:02:26,979
by the name
of Jacques St. Germain,
39
00:02:26,980 --> 00:02:31,692
an affluent, well‐known fixture
in the New Orleans upper class
40
00:02:31,693 --> 00:02:33,402
who claimed to be
a direct descendant
41
00:02:33,403 --> 00:02:34,821
of French nobility.
42
00:02:36,156 --> 00:02:37,740
Historical accounts
described him
43
00:02:37,741 --> 00:02:39,909
as a charming ladies' man,
44
00:02:39,910 --> 00:02:41,702
celebrated throughout
the French Quarter
45
00:02:41,703 --> 00:02:46,332
for his tales of adventure
and elaborately catered parties.
46
00:02:46,333 --> 00:02:49,502
But curiously, his guests
never see him partake
47
00:02:49,503 --> 00:02:52,004
of so much as a morsel
of the food he serves.
48
00:02:52,005 --> 00:02:55,424
Instead, he reportedly
got all of his sustenance
49
00:02:55,425 --> 00:02:59,804
from bottles that were thought
to be filled with red wine.
50
00:02:59,805 --> 00:03:03,849
But when police went to question
Jacques St. Germain
51
00:03:03,850 --> 00:03:06,352
about the murder
of the prostitute,
52
00:03:06,353 --> 00:03:08,771
they found that
his preferred wine
53
00:03:08,772 --> 00:03:13,609
was of a very unusual vintage.
54
00:03:13,610 --> 00:03:16,862
When they went
to the house in the morning,
55
00:03:16,863 --> 00:03:19,031
it was entirely empty
no furniture,
56
00:03:19,032 --> 00:03:20,700
everything was gone.
57
00:03:20,701 --> 00:03:22,743
Jacques had
completely disappeared.
58
00:03:22,744 --> 00:03:25,871
However, on the second floor,
according to the story,
59
00:03:25,872 --> 00:03:29,501
they found bottles of wine
mixed with human blood.
60
00:03:30,710 --> 00:03:33,421
Bottles of wine
61
00:03:33,422 --> 00:03:35,756
mixed with human blood?
62
00:03:35,757 --> 00:03:39,385
Was Jacques St. Germain
merely a demented killer
63
00:03:39,386 --> 00:03:42,221
who preyed upon
a vulnerable woman?
64
00:03:42,222 --> 00:03:45,724
Or could his taste for blood
65
00:03:45,725 --> 00:03:49,146
have had a more disturbing
explanation?
66
00:03:51,148 --> 00:03:53,732
Jacques St. Germain resided
in New Orleans
67
00:03:53,733 --> 00:03:56,026
in the early part
of the 20th century.
68
00:03:56,027 --> 00:03:57,862
And one must look back
in history
69
00:03:57,863 --> 00:04:00,906
at an eerily similar‐looking
figure named Count St. Germain,
70
00:04:00,907 --> 00:04:03,826
who lived in Paris, France
over a century earlier.
71
00:04:03,827 --> 00:04:06,745
The similarities
between the two gentlemen
72
00:04:06,746 --> 00:04:08,831
are pretty striking.
73
00:04:08,832 --> 00:04:12,042
Count St. Germain was known
to the French court
74
00:04:12,043 --> 00:04:13,627
in the 1700s.
75
00:04:13,628 --> 00:04:15,087
He was a mysterious figure.
76
00:04:15,088 --> 00:04:16,755
He was rumored to be
an alchemist,
77
00:04:16,756 --> 00:04:20,468
and he let the rumor slip
that he had found the secret
78
00:04:20,469 --> 00:04:23,596
to eternal life
through his alchemy.
79
00:04:23,597 --> 00:04:26,098
He would speak as if
80
00:04:26,099 --> 00:04:28,184
he had lived in the 1500s,
81
00:04:28,185 --> 00:04:30,854
and he never looked
a day over 40 years old.
82
00:04:32,731 --> 00:04:35,232
We have portraits of
the original Count St. Germain
83
00:04:35,233 --> 00:04:36,942
when he's 40 years old.
84
00:04:36,943 --> 00:04:39,570
Jacques St. Germain
was also 40 years old
85
00:04:39,571 --> 00:04:41,614
when he disappeared,
and some people commented
86
00:04:41,615 --> 00:04:43,449
that he looked like
the man in the portrait.
87
00:04:43,450 --> 00:04:44,992
Early 40s,
88
00:04:44,993 --> 00:04:47,036
maybe five foot,
six inches tall,
89
00:04:47,037 --> 00:04:48,746
140 pounds,
90
00:04:48,747 --> 00:04:50,998
pale skin and high cheekbones,
thin lips, hawk nose,
91
00:04:50,999 --> 00:04:52,833
long, curling dark hair,
large blue‐gray eyes.
92
00:04:52,834 --> 00:04:55,461
He's elegant, he's charming,
he's French.
93
00:04:55,462 --> 00:04:57,171
He spends money like it's water.
94
00:04:57,172 --> 00:04:59,173
Many people say
that Jacques St. Germain
95
00:04:59,174 --> 00:05:01,425
and the Count St. Germain
are the same person.
96
00:05:01,426 --> 00:05:06,222
Jacques St. Germain
and the Count de St. Germain:
97
00:05:06,223 --> 00:05:07,807
one in the same?
98
00:05:07,808 --> 00:05:11,519
If so, that would have made him
almost 170 years old
99
00:05:11,520 --> 00:05:15,397
at the time of his disappearance
from New Orleans in 1903.
100
00:05:15,398 --> 00:05:19,151
That is, if he ever
really disappeared.
101
00:05:19,152 --> 00:05:20,861
Even down to modern times,
102
00:05:20,862 --> 00:05:22,696
there have been sightings
of St. Germain
103
00:05:22,697 --> 00:05:24,824
wandering our streets
late at night.
104
00:05:24,825 --> 00:05:27,868
People will say that they have
encountered him,
105
00:05:27,869 --> 00:05:30,788
‐and now and then,
one of them disappears.
106
00:05:30,789 --> 00:05:34,041
This is actually an account from
some people I know fairly well.
107
00:05:34,042 --> 00:05:35,876
A few years ago, at Halloween,
108
00:05:35,877 --> 00:05:38,462
they were in the middle
of the crowd on Bourbon Street,
109
00:05:38,463 --> 00:05:40,172
when the crowd
just parted itself,
110
00:05:40,173 --> 00:05:41,758
almost of its own accord...
111
00:05:43,176 --> 00:05:45,010
...and there was a man
standing by himself
112
00:05:45,011 --> 00:05:46,637
in the middle of the crowd.
113
00:05:46,638 --> 00:05:48,889
Maybe five‐foot‐six,
somewhat slight of build,
114
00:05:48,890 --> 00:05:52,434
with a long, dark coat
and sunglasses on at night.
115
00:05:52,435 --> 00:05:55,354
He raised his head up
like he's sniffing the air.
116
00:05:55,355 --> 00:05:57,606
The crowd kept parting
around him.
117
00:05:57,607 --> 00:05:59,483
And then they said that
he just vanished.
118
00:05:59,484 --> 00:06:02,069
They swear that
actually happened,
119
00:06:02,070 --> 00:06:05,699
and in New Orleans,
how can I not believe it?
120
00:06:06,908 --> 00:06:08,742
What do we make of people
121
00:06:08,743 --> 00:06:10,494
still seeing someone
of this description
122
00:06:10,495 --> 00:06:12,746
in the French Quarter
in New Orleans today?
123
00:06:12,747 --> 00:06:14,790
That's hard to say.
124
00:06:14,791 --> 00:06:18,210
These stories speak to, uh,
the idea that many people hold
125
00:06:18,211 --> 00:06:20,921
that, walking among us,
our neighbors even,
126
00:06:20,922 --> 00:06:25,050
could actually be
super creatures who never die.
127
00:06:25,051 --> 00:06:27,428
In the French Quarter
in New Orleans at night,
128
00:06:27,429 --> 00:06:28,971
those stories
don't seem as silly
129
00:06:28,972 --> 00:06:30,681
as they might otherwise.
130
00:06:30,682 --> 00:06:34,476
Whether he's called
the Count or Jacques,
131
00:06:34,477 --> 00:06:36,645
there are many who believe
that the vampire
132
00:06:36,646 --> 00:06:39,231
who haunted the streets of
New Orleans for over a century
133
00:06:39,232 --> 00:06:43,235
still walks the streets
at night.
134
00:06:43,236 --> 00:06:46,530
If true, could it mean
that other
135
00:06:46,531 --> 00:06:48,991
seemingly absurd tales
of undead creatures
136
00:06:48,992 --> 00:06:53,746
‐living among us are also true?
137
00:06:53,747 --> 00:06:58,083
Vampires are just part
of the human imagination,
138
00:06:58,084 --> 00:07:01,253
going back to time immemorial.
139
00:07:01,254 --> 00:07:03,297
In folklore, there are
so many different ways
140
00:07:03,298 --> 00:07:05,841
to become a vampire
or to destroy a vampire
141
00:07:05,842 --> 00:07:07,760
or to avoid a vampire.
142
00:07:07,761 --> 00:07:11,764
The idea of the wooden stake,
143
00:07:11,765 --> 00:07:14,600
the recoiling from the crucifix,
144
00:07:14,601 --> 00:07:17,061
the destruction by sunlight.
145
00:07:17,062 --> 00:07:20,939
Vampires like the night,
because they could skulk around
146
00:07:20,940 --> 00:07:24,693
and cover their terrible deeds
in the shadows.
147
00:07:24,694 --> 00:07:28,447
In Eastern Europe, we think that
vampire legends are very old.
148
00:07:28,448 --> 00:07:31,700
In the Middle Ages
and the early modern period,
149
00:07:31,701 --> 00:07:34,703
vampires were seen
as satanic figures
150
00:07:34,704 --> 00:07:36,789
and enemies of the church.
151
00:07:36,790 --> 00:07:38,540
We continually find graves
152
00:07:38,541 --> 00:07:41,460
where people have put stakes
through the corpses
153
00:07:41,461 --> 00:07:42,961
and things like this,
to make sure
154
00:07:42,962 --> 00:07:44,922
that the dead stay dead.
155
00:07:44,923 --> 00:07:47,341
But our idea of the vampire
really comes from a moment
156
00:07:47,342 --> 00:07:49,510
in the 1700s;
and this was a time
157
00:07:49,511 --> 00:07:52,262
when you had vampire panics
going on in Eastern Europe,
158
00:07:52,263 --> 00:07:53,972
where you would have
entire towns
159
00:07:53,973 --> 00:07:56,935
digging up their cemeteries
hunting for vampires.
160
00:07:57,977 --> 00:07:59,687
Even in China,
161
00:07:59,688 --> 00:08:01,647
we have vampire‐like legends.
162
00:08:01,648 --> 00:08:03,857
Creatures known as
the jiangshi,
163
00:08:03,858 --> 00:08:05,818
or hopping vampires,
164
00:08:05,819 --> 00:08:08,987
said to be very stiff‐bodied
with outstretched arms.
165
00:08:08,988 --> 00:08:14,535
These stories come from
the margins of the known,
166
00:08:14,536 --> 00:08:16,995
and the lore tells us
that the boundary
167
00:08:16,996 --> 00:08:18,997
between the known
and the unknown,
168
00:08:18,998 --> 00:08:22,501
life and death itself,
might be traversed.
169
00:08:22,502 --> 00:08:25,003
Perhaps at great cost,
170
00:08:25,004 --> 00:08:28,258
or perhaps there is a way
to live forever.
171
00:08:30,176 --> 00:08:32,219
In Romanian,
the word for a vampire
172
00:08:32,220 --> 00:08:34,346
includes the word "vârcolac,"
173
00:08:34,347 --> 00:08:37,182
which, uh, really means,
uh, "werewolf."
174
00:08:37,183 --> 00:08:40,394
So you have werewolf,
vârcolac, uh, vampyr,
175
00:08:40,395 --> 00:08:43,856
uh, vampire; so, sometimes,
I can see how people
176
00:08:43,857 --> 00:08:48,027
can coalesce and come out
with something that's a mixture.
177
00:08:48,028 --> 00:08:49,862
Every culture on Earth
178
00:08:49,863 --> 00:08:52,281
has stories of humans
who can change into animals
179
00:08:52,282 --> 00:08:55,242
and about the idea
of supernatural beings
180
00:08:55,243 --> 00:08:56,785
living among us.
181
00:08:56,786 --> 00:09:00,706
And so, instead of seeing
an enemy or a nemesis,
182
00:09:00,707 --> 00:09:02,750
we see something of ourselves.
183
00:09:02,751 --> 00:09:06,253
The werewolf and the vampire
merge and morph
184
00:09:06,254 --> 00:09:08,297
and inform each other.
185
00:09:08,298 --> 00:09:11,050
When Bram Stoker
wrote his novel,
186
00:09:11,051 --> 00:09:14,219
Dracula had the power
to become a wolf.
187
00:09:14,220 --> 00:09:15,554
He was a werewolf.
188
00:09:15,555 --> 00:09:18,474
He was a bloodsucking vampire
as well.
189
00:09:18,475 --> 00:09:22,686
And, uh, it was the kind of
arbitrary grab bag
190
00:09:22,687 --> 00:09:25,230
of characteristics
that he chose
191
00:09:25,231 --> 00:09:28,526
that we are still
mostly playing with today.
192
00:09:31,071 --> 00:09:34,198
But are vampires merely
the figments of myth
193
00:09:34,199 --> 00:09:35,783
and imagination?
194
00:09:35,784 --> 00:09:38,494
Perhaps the answer
to that question can be found
195
00:09:38,495 --> 00:09:41,246
by investigating
not those vampires
196
00:09:41,247 --> 00:09:43,165
who hide in the shadows
197
00:09:43,166 --> 00:09:46,251
but those who thrive by daylight
198
00:09:46,252 --> 00:09:51,883
and who dwell right next door.
199
00:10:00,600 --> 00:10:03,477
After a difficult
and dysfunctional childhood,
200
00:10:03,478 --> 00:10:08,065
15‐year‐old Rod Ferrell
finds solace in death,
201
00:10:08,066 --> 00:10:10,734
the occult
and blood‐drenched horror films.
202
00:10:10,735 --> 00:10:13,070
At his local high school,
203
00:10:13,071 --> 00:10:15,489
Rod discovers a group
of kindred spirits,
204
00:10:15,490 --> 00:10:17,950
among some outcasts
who also enjoy
205
00:10:17,951 --> 00:10:20,786
his favorite vampire
role‐playing games.
206
00:10:20,787 --> 00:10:24,623
In the '90s, people stopped
being afraid of vampires.
207
00:10:24,624 --> 00:10:29,253
They started identifying with
them, sometimes very intensely.
208
00:10:29,254 --> 00:10:32,673
And I think it was the beginning
of a world in which
209
00:10:32,674 --> 00:10:35,300
the boundaries between
imagination and reality
210
00:10:35,301 --> 00:10:38,262
were going to become
increasingly blurred.
211
00:10:38,263 --> 00:10:41,141
And, uh, that can be
a dangerous place to be.
212
00:10:42,892 --> 00:10:46,478
Anne Rice resurrected
what had become kind of a stale
213
00:10:46,479 --> 00:10:48,772
popular culture cliché.
214
00:10:48,773 --> 00:10:50,899
She brought back
the romanticism,
215
00:10:50,900 --> 00:10:53,735
the idea of the vampire
as an antihero.
216
00:10:53,736 --> 00:10:57,030
I think modern people,
when they think of vampires,
217
00:10:57,031 --> 00:10:59,449
think of Anne Rice's vampires.
218
00:10:59,450 --> 00:11:02,995
They think of sexy, dark,
aristocratic,
219
00:11:02,996 --> 00:11:05,914
tragic characters
who live forever
220
00:11:05,915 --> 00:11:07,749
and have supernatural powers.
221
00:11:07,750 --> 00:11:10,294
Vampires have become protectors
222
00:11:10,295 --> 00:11:12,754
rather than just predators
in fiction.
223
00:11:12,755 --> 00:11:15,007
You have this
very powerful creature
224
00:11:15,008 --> 00:11:16,967
that desires you so much.
225
00:11:16,968 --> 00:11:18,719
And they don't want you to die,
226
00:11:18,720 --> 00:11:21,055
but they're willing to kill
for you.
227
00:11:23,558 --> 00:11:27,728
Rod Ferrell did not grow up
with his father around much.
228
00:11:27,729 --> 00:11:32,065
He has alleged that his
grandfather sexually abused him.
229
00:11:32,066 --> 00:11:34,735
Add to that that he was
experimenting with LSD
230
00:11:34,736 --> 00:11:36,403
and other kinds
of psychedelic drugs,
231
00:11:36,404 --> 00:11:39,615
and this is a recipe
for extreme behavior.
232
00:11:39,616 --> 00:11:43,619
He was part of this
vampire coven,
233
00:11:43,620 --> 00:11:46,622
over which he was sort of
the elder, or master.
234
00:11:46,623 --> 00:11:49,041
He knew about vampire lore
through the game
235
00:11:49,042 --> 00:11:50,834
Vampire: The Masquerade.
236
00:11:50,835 --> 00:11:54,630
And he began to believe he was
some sort of, uh, embodiment
237
00:11:54,631 --> 00:11:56,216
of some vampire god.
238
00:12:00,303 --> 00:12:02,304
Rod often told them that he was
239
00:12:02,305 --> 00:12:05,099
a 400‐year‐old vampire
named Vesago.
240
00:12:07,310 --> 00:12:09,186
That he could help them
cross over,
241
00:12:09,187 --> 00:12:11,772
which means to become a vampire
through rituals
242
00:12:11,773 --> 00:12:14,107
that sometimes involved
cutting each other
243
00:12:14,108 --> 00:12:15,693
and drinking each other's blood.
244
00:12:18,071 --> 00:12:20,614
Despite the red flags
in her son's behavior,
245
00:12:20,615 --> 00:12:23,408
Rod's mother, Sondra,
appeared supportive
246
00:12:23,409 --> 00:12:25,869
of his new group of friends.
247
00:12:25,870 --> 00:12:29,373
Some even claim that
she expressed a desire
248
00:12:29,374 --> 00:12:33,043
to be initiated
into her son's coven.
249
00:12:33,044 --> 00:12:35,337
His mother was fascinated
250
00:12:35,338 --> 00:12:38,298
by this vampire role
that he had assumed
251
00:12:38,299 --> 00:12:40,550
for himself and for,
uh, his friends.
252
00:12:40,551 --> 00:12:42,344
She wanted to play, too.
253
00:12:42,345 --> 00:12:45,681
And in this case,
instead of guiding her son,
254
00:12:45,682 --> 00:12:48,517
there was this kind of game
going on between them,
255
00:12:48,518 --> 00:12:50,603
which ultimately became toxic.
256
00:12:54,816 --> 00:12:57,192
In order to protect each other
from a world
257
00:12:57,193 --> 00:12:59,361
that didn't understand
their obsessions,
258
00:12:59,362 --> 00:13:02,656
Rod and his coven
formed a sacred pact,
259
00:13:02,657 --> 00:13:05,285
and then sealed it in blood.
260
00:13:07,912 --> 00:13:10,622
To belong
to a gang, there has to be
261
00:13:10,623 --> 00:13:13,375
some kind of ritual
that distinguishes you
262
00:13:13,376 --> 00:13:14,836
from everybody else.
263
00:13:16,337 --> 00:13:18,672
You're taking a vow
264
00:13:18,673 --> 00:13:21,300
that from this point,
forever, irreversible,
265
00:13:21,301 --> 00:13:23,343
I'm a member of this gang.
266
00:13:23,344 --> 00:13:28,432
And when we get to
the vampire‐type thinking,
267
00:13:28,433 --> 00:13:32,811
there always has to be
blood involved.
268
00:13:32,812 --> 00:13:34,438
We're gonna cut my wrist.
269
00:13:34,439 --> 00:13:36,315
The other member's gonna
suck the blood
270
00:13:36,316 --> 00:13:42,529
so that each one is consuming
the blood of the other person,
271
00:13:42,530 --> 00:13:45,783
so that now we're all
one blooded family.
272
00:13:51,664 --> 00:13:53,665
Over the course
of the next year,
273
00:13:53,666 --> 00:13:57,003
Rod would move with his mother
to Eustis, Florida.
274
00:13:58,087 --> 00:13:59,838
After forming a close friendship
275
00:13:59,839 --> 00:14:03,675
with one of his new classmates,
a girl named Heather Wendorf,
276
00:14:03,676 --> 00:14:06,511
the pair spent their weekends
at the local graveyard,
277
00:14:06,512 --> 00:14:09,307
engaging in
bloodletting rituals.
278
00:14:13,728 --> 00:14:18,482
There are some people
who adhere to a delusion.
279
00:14:18,483 --> 00:14:21,443
A delusion is a belief,
in psychiatry,
280
00:14:21,444 --> 00:14:25,531
that you accept something in
spite of facts to the contrary.
281
00:14:27,033 --> 00:14:29,868
And therefore,
they start to really believe
282
00:14:29,869 --> 00:14:32,788
that they have these
extraordinary powers.
283
00:14:32,789 --> 00:14:35,957
Many people, for example,
can easily,
284
00:14:35,958 --> 00:14:39,252
in a form of
autohypnotic suggestion,
285
00:14:39,253 --> 00:14:43,215
transform themselves
into an imaginary person,
286
00:14:43,216 --> 00:14:46,259
animal, creature
that accomplishes
287
00:14:46,260 --> 00:14:49,096
what they cannot do
in real life.
288
00:14:49,097 --> 00:14:50,556
And they go with it.
289
00:14:55,436 --> 00:14:57,687
During a series
of tearful phone calls,
290
00:14:57,688 --> 00:15:01,274
Rod listens as Heather describes
a miserable home life,
291
00:15:01,275 --> 00:15:04,903
culminating in alleged abuse
at the hands of her father.
292
00:15:04,904 --> 00:15:08,406
Enraged that his close friend
has been mistreated,
293
00:15:08,407 --> 00:15:12,912
Rod and three members
of his clan rush to her aid.
294
00:15:14,747 --> 00:15:19,000
When the group arrived
at the home of Heather Wendorf
295
00:15:19,001 --> 00:15:20,585
in Eustis, Florida,
296
00:15:20,586 --> 00:15:23,505
Rod and one of his companions
went inside.
297
00:15:23,506 --> 00:15:27,050
They came in through the garage,
where Rod found a crowbar,
298
00:15:27,051 --> 00:15:28,594
which he took with him.
299
00:15:30,471 --> 00:15:33,473
When he went inside,
he found Heather's father
300
00:15:33,474 --> 00:15:35,434
asleep on the couch.
301
00:15:39,814 --> 00:15:42,441
And he beat him to death
with the crowbar.
302
00:15:44,652 --> 00:15:47,362
He also encountered
Heather's mother,
303
00:15:47,363 --> 00:15:50,657
who splashed, uh, coffee on him
in self‐defense,
304
00:15:50,658 --> 00:15:53,452
and he beat her to death
as well.
305
00:15:59,208 --> 00:16:01,793
In the aftermath
of the horrific killings,
306
00:16:01,794 --> 00:16:04,713
Rod was convicted
of first‐degree murder.
307
00:16:04,714 --> 00:16:07,257
Sociologists who study
adolescent crime
308
00:16:07,258 --> 00:16:11,595
have framed this as a kind of
game that gets out of hand.
309
00:16:11,596 --> 00:16:14,556
I think that Rod Ferrell and
his friends had a kind of game
310
00:16:14,557 --> 00:16:17,309
where they played
the role of vampires
311
00:16:17,310 --> 00:16:20,145
until they reached
irrevocable consequences
312
00:16:20,146 --> 00:16:22,981
when Rod Ferrell sort of got
caught up in his role
313
00:16:22,982 --> 00:16:24,649
and murdered the Wendorfs.
314
00:16:24,650 --> 00:16:28,320
This is a little bit like
putting on a Halloween mask
315
00:16:28,321 --> 00:16:31,449
and then discovering
that you can never take it off.
316
00:16:37,580 --> 00:16:41,875
If you still don't believe
that vampires really do exist,
317
00:16:41,876 --> 00:16:45,962
then what would you say to
someone who drinks human blood?
318
00:16:45,963 --> 00:16:49,257
Not only because he has
a strange desire to do so
319
00:16:49,258 --> 00:16:52,761
but also because
he claims he needs it
320
00:16:52,762 --> 00:16:54,639
to stay alive.
321
00:17:06,484 --> 00:17:08,610
My name is Belfazaar Ashantison.
322
00:17:08,611 --> 00:17:10,153
Most of my friends call me Zaar.
323
00:17:10,154 --> 00:17:11,780
Hi, Zaar. Whoo!
324
00:17:11,781 --> 00:17:13,031
Hi, guys.
325
00:17:13,032 --> 00:17:14,991
54 years old.
326
00:17:14,992 --> 00:17:17,202
I've been drinking blood
since I was 11.
327
00:17:17,203 --> 00:17:19,204
And a sanguine vampire.
328
00:17:19,205 --> 00:17:20,538
How you doing, brother?
329
00:17:20,539 --> 00:17:22,749
‐I'm good. How are you?
‐Good, good, good.
330
00:17:22,750 --> 00:17:26,294
At 11 years old,
things started changing for me.
331
00:17:26,295 --> 00:17:30,006
I was short, round
and always sickly.
332
00:17:30,007 --> 00:17:33,802
And one of my uncles
that was big and tall and strong
333
00:17:33,803 --> 00:17:36,680
was picking on us
me and my sister.
334
00:17:36,681 --> 00:17:40,183
And something snapped,
and I went charging.
335
00:17:40,184 --> 00:17:41,935
And he was bigger and stronger,
336
00:17:41,936 --> 00:17:45,272
and he pinned my arms
down to my side.
337
00:17:45,273 --> 00:17:49,777
And then I just kind of reared
my head back and bit him.
338
00:17:53,030 --> 00:17:55,240
He was wearing a coat.
339
00:17:55,241 --> 00:17:58,159
I bit through the coat,
through his shirt,
340
00:17:58,160 --> 00:18:02,998
and into his flesh enough that
I could actually taste blood.
341
00:18:02,999 --> 00:18:05,709
Like, lots of blood.
342
00:18:05,710 --> 00:18:09,879
Once that blood hit my tongue,
it was like
343
00:18:09,880 --> 00:18:13,551
I suddenly came alive.
344
00:18:16,345 --> 00:18:18,388
I really need the blood.
345
00:18:18,389 --> 00:18:20,181
I do.
346
00:18:20,182 --> 00:18:21,850
And I've gone without
347
00:18:21,851 --> 00:18:25,103
for lengths of time
just to see what would happen.
348
00:18:25,104 --> 00:18:28,273
I'm the kind of person
that it physically shows on.
349
00:18:28,274 --> 00:18:29,649
Hi!
350
00:18:29,650 --> 00:18:31,651
My skin will get ashy.
351
00:18:31,652 --> 00:18:34,696
My eyes will be dull and glazed.
352
00:18:34,697 --> 00:18:38,283
It literally physically
shows on me.
353
00:18:40,578 --> 00:18:44,164
So, what are some of
the common misconceptions?
354
00:18:44,165 --> 00:18:46,499
How about:
Holy water gets me wet.
355
00:18:46,500 --> 00:18:49,586
Garlic tastes good on pizza.
356
00:18:49,587 --> 00:18:51,463
Stick a stake through
anything's heart,
357
00:18:51,464 --> 00:18:53,214
and it will die.
358
00:18:53,215 --> 00:18:54,674
I do not sleep in a coffin.
359
00:18:54,675 --> 00:18:56,636
I have a king‐size bed,
thank you very much.
360
00:18:58,763 --> 00:19:00,221
Unlike mythical vampires,
361
00:19:00,222 --> 00:19:02,140
who can turn themselves
into bats,
362
00:19:02,141 --> 00:19:06,061
modern‐day vampires admit
to having to obey physical laws.
363
00:19:06,062 --> 00:19:08,605
Because he can't exactly fly in
364
00:19:08,606 --> 00:19:10,899
through someone's bedroom window
for a quick bite,
365
00:19:10,900 --> 00:19:13,610
Belfazaar has devised
sanitary methods
366
00:19:13,611 --> 00:19:16,529
to suck blood from his victims.
367
00:19:16,530 --> 00:19:20,660
He finds victims...
who are willing to feed him.
368
00:19:22,411 --> 00:19:24,537
‐Well, hello.
‐I'm here.
369
00:19:24,538 --> 00:19:27,123
I like to think I have
a pretty good grasp
370
00:19:27,124 --> 00:19:31,086
on human vampirism after now
ten years of doing field work.
371
00:19:31,087 --> 00:19:35,090
But I realized very quickly
that the only thing
372
00:19:35,091 --> 00:19:37,676
that real vampires are more
secretive about than themselves
373
00:19:37,677 --> 00:19:38,927
are their donors.
374
00:19:38,928 --> 00:19:40,679
They have to hide in the shadows
375
00:19:40,680 --> 00:19:43,264
because almost no one
ever believes them
376
00:19:43,265 --> 00:19:44,933
when they say that
they feel the need
377
00:19:44,934 --> 00:19:46,476
to consume human blood.
378
00:19:46,477 --> 00:19:49,312
I began to realize that
if I want to get
379
00:19:49,313 --> 00:19:51,523
some of my research done,
it might just be
380
00:19:51,524 --> 00:19:53,983
easier for me
to sort of volunteer myself.
381
00:19:53,984 --> 00:19:55,735
I'm gonna go grab
my doctor's bag.
382
00:19:55,736 --> 00:19:57,153
I'll be right back.
383
00:19:57,154 --> 00:19:59,114
I use a clean technique.
384
00:19:59,115 --> 00:20:01,200
I'll clean the area
on the donor.
385
00:20:02,451 --> 00:20:05,954
Honestly, alcohol swabs
always leave
386
00:20:05,955 --> 00:20:08,206
a funny taste afterwards.
387
00:20:08,207 --> 00:20:12,919
I make sure that
the blade is new every time.
388
00:20:12,920 --> 00:20:15,213
‐Ready?
‐Ready.
389
00:20:15,214 --> 00:20:18,551
More often than not, I'll use
the back side of the shoulders.
390
00:20:20,845 --> 00:20:23,805
I poke a series of holes,
and those holes actually
391
00:20:23,806 --> 00:20:25,348
provide me enough.
392
00:20:25,349 --> 00:20:26,975
There we go.
393
00:20:26,976 --> 00:20:28,269
‐You ready?
‐Yeah.
394
00:20:32,606 --> 00:20:35,900
The lore tells us that
vampires live forever.
395
00:20:35,901 --> 00:20:39,112
At least, as long as
they have a victim.
396
00:20:39,113 --> 00:20:41,406
That, of course,
is a great human desire.
397
00:20:41,407 --> 00:20:44,284
So part of the power
and fascination of the story is:
398
00:20:44,285 --> 00:20:45,910
How do I live forever?
399
00:20:45,911 --> 00:20:47,829
Is there some secret here?
400
00:20:47,830 --> 00:20:49,414
Well, yes.
401
00:20:49,415 --> 00:20:51,207
Drink the blood of others.
402
00:20:51,208 --> 00:20:54,086
Steal the life force
from others.
403
00:20:55,755 --> 00:20:58,339
That's not bad.
404
00:20:58,340 --> 00:21:01,426
Sweeter taste you've been
getting fatty acids again.
405
00:21:01,427 --> 00:21:02,802
Oh, that's good.
406
00:21:02,803 --> 00:21:04,179
I can tell when people
407
00:21:04,180 --> 00:21:06,306
are a little bit low
408
00:21:06,307 --> 00:21:08,391
on their magnesium
and potassium.
409
00:21:08,392 --> 00:21:11,645
I can tell when they're not
getting enough fatty acids.
410
00:21:12,897 --> 00:21:15,231
And, because of the flow,
411
00:21:15,232 --> 00:21:18,110
I can also tell if they're
not drinking enough.
412
00:21:19,862 --> 00:21:22,447
As a psychologist,
I think we're talking
413
00:21:22,448 --> 00:21:24,783
about people caught up
in a story,
414
00:21:24,784 --> 00:21:28,661
caught up in a kind of
melodramatic ritual.
415
00:21:28,662 --> 00:21:31,372
People will go into cosplay
416
00:21:31,373 --> 00:21:34,542
and other, uh, dramas,
because it's creative
417
00:21:34,543 --> 00:21:37,921
and it makes them feel special
and it is very imaginative.
418
00:21:37,922 --> 00:21:39,839
So, the rewards are great,
419
00:21:39,840 --> 00:21:43,301
even though the activity may be
in a way meaningless,
420
00:21:43,302 --> 00:21:46,179
that it‐it isn't an actual
transfer of energy
421
00:21:46,180 --> 00:21:50,433
from one body to another,
as in the old vampire stories.
422
00:21:50,434 --> 00:21:53,436
In the Bible,
in the book of Leviticus,
423
00:21:53,437 --> 00:21:55,855
God tells the Israelites,
"You may not drink blood,
424
00:21:55,856 --> 00:21:57,524
because blood is the life."
425
00:21:57,525 --> 00:22:00,819
And the assumption in
the ancient Israelite religion
426
00:22:00,820 --> 00:22:03,863
was probably that when things
run out of blood, they're dead.
427
00:22:03,864 --> 00:22:06,199
And so, there must be
something important
428
00:22:06,200 --> 00:22:08,034
and supernatural, uh,
about blood.
429
00:22:08,035 --> 00:22:10,537
It's a mysterious substance,
and this is why
430
00:22:10,538 --> 00:22:13,081
it would've been offered
to the gods in animal sacrifices
431
00:22:13,082 --> 00:22:14,582
in ancient cultures.
432
00:22:14,583 --> 00:22:17,126
And, presumably,
this is also why vampires
433
00:22:17,127 --> 00:22:19,212
and similar creatures
would want it,
434
00:22:19,213 --> 00:22:21,297
because it has that power.
435
00:22:21,298 --> 00:22:24,884
At any given time,
I can drink from...
436
00:22:24,885 --> 00:22:27,136
an ounce to six ounces,
depending.
437
00:22:27,137 --> 00:22:28,972
The whole process,
start to finish,
438
00:22:28,973 --> 00:22:31,307
usually takes...
439
00:22:31,308 --> 00:22:33,059
maybe 20, 25 minutes,
440
00:22:33,060 --> 00:22:34,687
depending on how much
I need to feed.
441
00:22:35,938 --> 00:22:38,231
‐You good?
‐Yeah.
442
00:22:38,232 --> 00:22:41,734
When Zaar was feeding
on blood from me
443
00:22:41,735 --> 00:22:44,153
it couldn't have been more than
a couple of teaspoons
444
00:22:44,154 --> 00:22:46,489
I suddenly felt incredibly weak.
445
00:22:46,490 --> 00:22:48,700
Like I had gone from someone
with stamina and energy
446
00:22:48,701 --> 00:22:51,369
to someone who just had
the life drained out of me.
447
00:22:51,370 --> 00:22:52,495
All right.
448
00:22:52,496 --> 00:22:53,913
I only usually feed
449
00:22:53,914 --> 00:22:55,832
two to three times a week,
and I have
450
00:22:55,833 --> 00:22:57,500
four different donors,
so I alternate.
451
00:22:57,501 --> 00:23:00,461
I don't want to take too much
from any one person.
452
00:23:00,462 --> 00:23:02,130
‐Thank you, thank you.
‐All right.
453
00:23:02,131 --> 00:23:04,048
Belfazaar claims
that drinking blood
454
00:23:04,049 --> 00:23:07,176
helps him feel
energized and alive.
455
00:23:07,177 --> 00:23:09,804
Without regular feeding,
he believes that he,
456
00:23:09,805 --> 00:23:12,974
and those like him,
would not be able to survive.
457
00:23:12,975 --> 00:23:16,227
But is Belfazaar simply
458
00:23:16,228 --> 00:23:20,273
the delusional product of
some kind of Dracula fixation?
459
00:23:20,274 --> 00:23:23,776
Or is there an actual
physiological benefit
460
00:23:23,777 --> 00:23:25,820
to his consumption
of human blood?
461
00:23:25,821 --> 00:23:27,196
There have been some
462
00:23:27,197 --> 00:23:29,490
medical conditions
that people have thought
463
00:23:29,491 --> 00:23:33,119
or theorized maybe this is where
we get human vampirism from.
464
00:23:33,120 --> 00:23:35,538
Like people who have porphyria
they are anemic,
465
00:23:35,539 --> 00:23:38,124
or they need blood to sustain
themselves, but they also have
466
00:23:38,125 --> 00:23:40,752
this skin condition where
they can't be out in the sun.
467
00:23:40,753 --> 00:23:43,630
And that will cause
some major defects.
468
00:23:43,631 --> 00:23:45,757
In some of the studies
469
00:23:45,758 --> 00:23:48,843
about why someone
would seek blood,
470
00:23:48,844 --> 00:23:52,180
the closest
that we can see medically
471
00:23:52,181 --> 00:23:55,892
is they have
iron‐deficiency anemia,
472
00:23:55,893 --> 00:23:57,852
and so, theoretically,
473
00:23:57,853 --> 00:24:01,439
if I could get some source
of iron heme,
474
00:24:01,440 --> 00:24:03,816
that I would feel stronger
475
00:24:03,817 --> 00:24:06,945
instead of feeling
without any energy.
476
00:24:06,946 --> 00:24:10,658
That makes some kind of sense
at some level.
477
00:24:12,868 --> 00:24:15,162
The hunger never
fully goes away.
478
00:24:17,122 --> 00:24:20,500
The thirst, whatever
you want to call it...
479
00:24:20,501 --> 00:24:22,377
that hunger is always there.
480
00:24:27,007 --> 00:24:29,717
Is it possible that
folklore about vampires
481
00:24:29,718 --> 00:24:31,970
originated because of
misunderstood
482
00:24:31,971 --> 00:24:34,931
or undiagnosed
medical conditions?
483
00:24:34,932 --> 00:24:38,393
Or is a vampire's
insatiable appetite for blood
484
00:24:38,394 --> 00:24:41,562
due to a supernatural hunger?
485
00:24:41,563 --> 00:24:45,566
Perhaps the answer can be found
not by examining vampires
486
00:24:45,567 --> 00:24:48,236
but a different, and related,
487
00:24:48,237 --> 00:24:50,613
type of human monster.
488
00:24:51,699 --> 00:24:53,659
Werewolves.
489
00:25:04,545 --> 00:25:07,964
Here, on 512 acres
of rugged land,
490
00:25:07,965 --> 00:25:10,926
lies a remote cattle ranch.
491
00:25:12,094 --> 00:25:14,512
But according to local legend,
492
00:25:14,513 --> 00:25:17,181
this desert landscape
is also home
493
00:25:17,182 --> 00:25:21,394
to a creature
of unspeakable evil.
494
00:25:21,395 --> 00:25:24,147
A creature known as...
495
00:25:24,148 --> 00:25:26,607
the skinwalker.
496
00:25:28,652 --> 00:25:31,195
There are whisperings
by the local Ute tribe
497
00:25:31,196 --> 00:25:33,740
that the region
is essentially been cursed
498
00:25:33,741 --> 00:25:35,408
by the Navajo people.
499
00:25:35,409 --> 00:25:39,829
And that it is home
to several skinwalkers,
500
00:25:39,830 --> 00:25:41,372
the yee naaldlooshii.
501
00:25:41,373 --> 00:25:43,499
They're typically witches
or shaman
502
00:25:43,500 --> 00:25:47,086
that use black magic
and evil arts
503
00:25:47,087 --> 00:25:50,716
in order to transform into
the forms of various animals.
504
00:25:57,014 --> 00:25:59,640
The Utes to this day
are very respectful.
505
00:25:59,641 --> 00:26:01,100
They're very mindful.
506
00:26:01,101 --> 00:26:03,019
Matter of fact,
they stand at an arm's length
507
00:26:03,020 --> 00:26:04,937
from this ranch.
508
00:26:04,938 --> 00:26:08,107
They firmly believe
that this ground is cursed
509
00:26:08,108 --> 00:26:11,069
and that this concentration
of this phenomenon,
510
00:26:11,070 --> 00:26:14,280
this host,
is on the Skinwalker Ranch.
511
00:26:14,281 --> 00:26:18,826
A skinwalker is a shape‐shifter.
512
00:26:18,827 --> 00:26:22,246
It can become many things
a fox, a coyote, a wolf.
513
00:26:23,457 --> 00:26:25,416
There are these recorded stories
514
00:26:25,417 --> 00:26:28,002
of bipedal creatures
that are walking around
515
00:26:28,003 --> 00:26:29,670
with wolflike heads.
516
00:26:29,671 --> 00:26:32,173
The locals on the reservation,
they won't talk about it
517
00:26:32,174 --> 00:26:34,634
because even mentioning
the name of the skinwalker
518
00:26:34,635 --> 00:26:36,511
invites these things in.
519
00:26:39,348 --> 00:26:41,182
Skinwalkers.
520
00:26:41,183 --> 00:26:43,851
Shape‐shifting werewolves
who dwell
521
00:26:43,852 --> 00:26:46,604
not in remote forests
of Eastern Europe
522
00:26:46,605 --> 00:26:51,193
but in the remote desert regions
of North America.
523
00:26:57,866 --> 00:27:00,284
Experienced ranch hands
Terry and Gwen Sherman
524
00:27:00,285 --> 00:27:02,662
purchase the ranch
and the surrounding area.
525
00:27:02,663 --> 00:27:06,124
Almost immediately, they find
themselves face‐to‐face
526
00:27:06,125 --> 00:27:08,709
with something
they would later describe
527
00:27:08,710 --> 00:27:11,420
as pure evil.
528
00:27:11,421 --> 00:27:13,422
One day, Terry had gone up
529
00:27:13,423 --> 00:27:16,300
to check on his cattle and
noticed this extremely large
530
00:27:16,301 --> 00:27:19,512
what appeared to be a wolf
walking around his property.
531
00:27:19,513 --> 00:27:22,139
It grabbed one of the calves
by the snout
532
00:27:22,140 --> 00:27:23,808
and began to tear at it.
533
00:27:23,809 --> 00:27:27,979
So he pulls out his .357 Magnum
534
00:27:27,980 --> 00:27:30,648
and shoots point‐blank,
535
00:27:30,649 --> 00:27:32,525
and the wolf doesn't react.
536
00:27:32,526 --> 00:27:34,193
It doesn't appear fazed at all.
537
00:27:34,194 --> 00:27:37,196
So he grabs
his deer hunting rifle
538
00:27:37,197 --> 00:27:39,490
and shoots the wolf
to knock it down.
539
00:27:41,118 --> 00:27:44,203
A piece of fur and flesh
flies off of the wolf.
540
00:27:44,204 --> 00:27:47,373
And again, completely unfazed,
541
00:27:47,374 --> 00:27:50,167
and at this point the wolf
is kind of trotting off
542
00:27:50,168 --> 00:27:52,545
into the distance, casually.
543
00:27:52,546 --> 00:27:54,213
Leveling his rifle,
544
00:27:54,214 --> 00:27:57,675
Terry cautiously followed
the wolf's trail,
545
00:27:57,676 --> 00:28:01,346
only to discover
it had disappeared.
546
00:28:03,724 --> 00:28:05,725
In the days and weeks
that followed,
547
00:28:05,726 --> 00:28:07,393
the Shermans began to wonder
548
00:28:07,394 --> 00:28:10,187
if what they encountered
was a normal wolf
549
00:28:10,188 --> 00:28:12,815
or something more.
550
00:28:14,818 --> 00:28:17,278
In the case of the bulletproof
wolf, what's interesting
551
00:28:17,279 --> 00:28:19,614
is that wolves are not native
to the state of Utah
552
00:28:19,615 --> 00:28:21,616
for, I think, the past
hundred years or so.
553
00:28:23,201 --> 00:28:25,202
The werewolf of legend
554
00:28:25,203 --> 00:28:27,663
is described
as looking very much
555
00:28:27,664 --> 00:28:30,583
like a regular wolf,
except much larger.
556
00:28:30,584 --> 00:28:32,710
And, oftentimes,
it is said to be
557
00:28:32,711 --> 00:28:35,171
sort of bloodthirsty
and cunning.
558
00:28:35,172 --> 00:28:38,424
We have lots of interesting
legends around the world.
559
00:28:38,425 --> 00:28:40,217
For example, in Russia,
560
00:28:40,218 --> 00:28:43,262
they're known as the vârcolac
or the bodark.
561
00:28:43,263 --> 00:28:46,223
In France, you have
the loup‐garou;
562
00:28:46,224 --> 00:28:47,934
in Scotland, the wolver;
563
00:28:47,935 --> 00:28:51,228
and in South America,
the lobizon.
564
00:28:51,229 --> 00:28:53,564
And even in countries where you
don't traditionally have wolves,
565
00:28:53,565 --> 00:28:55,274
you have similar legends.
566
00:28:55,275 --> 00:28:58,694
For example, in India,
there are weretigers.
567
00:28:58,695 --> 00:29:02,073
And in Africa,
wereleopards and werehyenas.
568
00:29:02,074 --> 00:29:05,409
And even in Mexico, werejaguars.
569
00:29:05,410 --> 00:29:07,745
We have to acknowledge
that the notion
570
00:29:07,746 --> 00:29:11,082
of a shape‐shifter,
like a werewolf,
571
00:29:11,083 --> 00:29:13,334
something that combines
the elements of human
572
00:29:13,335 --> 00:29:15,836
and animal together
into one single body,
573
00:29:15,837 --> 00:29:19,006
from a scientific perspective,
is quite troubling.
574
00:29:20,676 --> 00:29:23,177
But the fact that these legends
are so widespread
575
00:29:23,178 --> 00:29:24,637
is quite intriguing.
576
00:29:24,638 --> 00:29:26,931
An enormous,
577
00:29:26,932 --> 00:29:29,558
bloodthirsty, cunning wolf
578
00:29:29,559 --> 00:29:32,436
that also happens
to be bulletproof.
579
00:29:32,437 --> 00:29:35,231
Is it possible
that the Shermans encountered
580
00:29:35,232 --> 00:29:37,191
one of the werewolves
that may have been
581
00:29:37,192 --> 00:29:40,194
haunting Skinwalker Ranch
for centuries?
582
00:29:40,195 --> 00:29:44,448
And if so,
what physical evidence is there
583
00:29:44,449 --> 00:29:47,493
to support
such a fantastic notion?
584
00:29:47,494 --> 00:29:51,163
There has been numerous reports
of cattle mutilations
585
00:29:51,164 --> 00:29:53,249
that occur not only
on Skinwalker Ranch
586
00:29:53,250 --> 00:29:55,209
but the entire Uinta Basin.
587
00:29:55,210 --> 00:29:56,752
Many of the accounts
588
00:29:56,753 --> 00:29:59,630
of animal mutilations
from Skinwalker Ranch
589
00:29:59,631 --> 00:30:01,632
describe animal carcasses
that have
590
00:30:01,633 --> 00:30:04,385
almost been
surgically dissected.
591
00:30:04,386 --> 00:30:08,139
Certain large cats can make
very clean, precise wounds.
592
00:30:08,140 --> 00:30:10,558
Things like mountain lions.
593
00:30:10,559 --> 00:30:13,644
But it is notable
that you have so many accounts
594
00:30:13,645 --> 00:30:18,149
of weird livestock mutilations
from Skinwalker Ranch.
595
00:30:18,150 --> 00:30:23,487
It's very hard to explain
in terms of the natural world.
596
00:30:23,488 --> 00:30:27,658
With so many accounts
of cattle mutilations
597
00:30:27,659 --> 00:30:31,912
and sightings of unusually large
and ferocious wolves,
598
00:30:31,913 --> 00:30:35,624
it is difficult to escape the
notion that something strange
599
00:30:35,625 --> 00:30:38,627
is prowling the grounds
of Skinwalker Ranch.
600
00:30:38,628 --> 00:30:41,088
But, according
to some scientists,
601
00:30:41,089 --> 00:30:43,966
that doesn't necessarily mean
602
00:30:43,967 --> 00:30:46,719
that people are seeing
a werewolf.
603
00:30:46,720 --> 00:30:49,430
One of the really
fascinating theories
604
00:30:49,431 --> 00:30:52,933
that relates to these monstrous
wolves from Skinwalker Ranch
605
00:30:52,934 --> 00:30:56,437
is that these could, in fact,
be surviving representatives
606
00:30:56,438 --> 00:31:00,191
of a species known
as dire wolves, Canis dirus.
607
00:31:00,192 --> 00:31:03,694
These were very robust wolves
that lived
608
00:31:03,695 --> 00:31:07,656
during the Pleistocene epoch
up until about 11,500 years ago,
609
00:31:07,657 --> 00:31:09,867
and they were very prevalent
in North America.
610
00:31:09,868 --> 00:31:13,913
They were certainly much larger
and stockier than modern wolves.
611
00:31:13,914 --> 00:31:16,373
So it's not beyond
the realm of possibility
612
00:31:16,374 --> 00:31:18,918
that a species
from 11,000 years ago
613
00:31:18,919 --> 00:31:21,378
may have survived
in small pockets
614
00:31:21,379 --> 00:31:24,548
in certain remote areas
of North America.
615
00:31:24,549 --> 00:31:27,009
Perhaps the most powerful story
616
00:31:27,010 --> 00:31:30,513
I have personally experienced
at the ranch:
617
00:31:30,514 --> 00:31:33,015
I came out
with another researcher.
618
00:31:33,016 --> 00:31:35,768
We had gone out there
for almost two weeks straight.
619
00:31:35,769 --> 00:31:38,395
We found nothing each night.
620
00:31:38,396 --> 00:31:40,940
And then we peeked
over the ridgeline.
621
00:31:40,941 --> 00:31:43,359
It's called Skinwalker Ridge.
622
00:31:43,360 --> 00:31:46,112
There was these balls of light
in the field.
623
00:31:46,113 --> 00:31:48,280
They were glowing
and shrinking down.
624
00:31:48,281 --> 00:31:50,991
And suddenly
a ball of light exploded.
625
00:31:50,992 --> 00:31:55,496
And from the light, a very,
very large wolf came towards us.
626
00:31:55,497 --> 00:31:58,165
This thing is literally
right in front of us.
627
00:31:58,166 --> 00:32:01,377
It seemed very comfortable,
almost as if it was studying us.
628
00:32:01,378 --> 00:32:03,796
And then it casually
turned around
629
00:32:03,797 --> 00:32:06,590
and walked around this boulder
and vanished.
630
00:32:06,591 --> 00:32:09,261
It was gone.
631
00:32:10,846 --> 00:32:13,722
This is an actual creature
that haunts the property
632
00:32:13,723 --> 00:32:15,100
and the surrounding area.
633
00:32:16,601 --> 00:32:18,686
It's out there.
634
00:32:20,814 --> 00:32:24,733
If the skinwalker does exist,
635
00:32:24,734 --> 00:32:28,320
could it be just some kind
of rare breed of canine
636
00:32:28,321 --> 00:32:30,531
that simply hasn't been
identified yet
637
00:32:30,532 --> 00:32:31,991
by mainstream science?
638
00:32:31,992 --> 00:32:35,161
Or could it be exactly
639
00:32:35,162 --> 00:32:38,038
what those who've
encountered one insist it is,
640
00:32:38,039 --> 00:32:40,457
a shape‐shifting werewolf?
641
00:32:40,458 --> 00:32:44,920
Perhaps the answer can be found
by examining a group of people
642
00:32:44,921 --> 00:32:47,464
who are afflicted by a rare
643
00:32:47,465 --> 00:32:53,221
and mysterious condition
known as "werewolf syndrome."
644
00:33:04,274 --> 00:33:06,859
After giving birth
to five daughters,
645
00:33:06,860 --> 00:33:08,485
Parvatibai Patidor
646
00:33:08,486 --> 00:33:10,779
and her husband
are overjoyed to find out
647
00:33:10,780 --> 00:33:12,823
that she is once again pregnant,
648
00:33:12,824 --> 00:33:16,243
this time with a boy.
649
00:33:16,244 --> 00:33:19,163
But when their son, Lalit,
is finally born,
650
00:33:19,164 --> 00:33:21,624
the joy turns to shock
651
00:33:21,625 --> 00:33:24,460
because Lalit is very different
652
00:33:24,461 --> 00:33:26,378
from the couple's
other children,
653
00:33:26,379 --> 00:33:30,342
and it's not because he's
the couple's first male child.
654
00:33:31,968 --> 00:33:34,845
Lalit was born with
a rare congenital condition
655
00:33:34,846 --> 00:33:36,722
known as hypertrichosis,
656
00:33:36,723 --> 00:33:41,143
a genetic mutation
which causes excess hair growth
657
00:33:41,144 --> 00:33:43,437
all over the body.
658
00:33:43,438 --> 00:33:48,317
People have often referred to
hypertrichosis by another name:
659
00:33:48,318 --> 00:33:51,070
"werewolf syndrome."
660
00:33:51,071 --> 00:33:53,197
In the case of hypertrichosis,
661
00:33:53,198 --> 00:33:57,076
you can have a tremendous amount
of hair either on your face
662
00:33:57,077 --> 00:33:59,495
or on your arm
or another part of the body
663
00:33:59,496 --> 00:34:01,330
that almost looks like fur.
664
00:34:01,331 --> 00:34:05,417
That is just
a rare kind of mutation,
665
00:34:05,418 --> 00:34:08,128
and people would right away
jump to a conclusion,
666
00:34:08,129 --> 00:34:09,256
this is a wolf.
667
00:34:12,509 --> 00:34:16,428
Could the age‐old tales
about werewolves
668
00:34:16,429 --> 00:34:19,056
simply be due
to ancient ignorance
669
00:34:19,057 --> 00:34:21,058
about genetic mutations?
670
00:34:21,059 --> 00:34:25,062
Centuries ago, there were
all types of monsters.
671
00:34:25,063 --> 00:34:26,897
These were generally
people that were born
672
00:34:26,898 --> 00:34:29,400
with different
genetic deformities
673
00:34:29,401 --> 00:34:31,318
or congenital defects.
674
00:34:31,319 --> 00:34:33,570
You have things
such as atavisms.
675
00:34:33,571 --> 00:34:37,700
An atavism is an ancient trait
that surfaces randomly.
676
00:34:37,701 --> 00:34:41,036
For example, there are humans
that are born with tails.
677
00:34:41,037 --> 00:34:43,205
It's very rare,
but it does happen.
678
00:34:43,206 --> 00:34:47,126
Some believe the reason
we're so intensely fascinated
679
00:34:47,127 --> 00:34:51,255
by such physical deformities
is that they give a face
680
00:34:51,256 --> 00:34:53,549
to our innermost fear.
681
00:34:53,550 --> 00:34:56,385
I think it's human nature
for people to fear
682
00:34:56,386 --> 00:34:57,886
what they don't understand.
683
00:34:57,887 --> 00:35:00,931
So, in that respect,
when someone encounters
684
00:35:00,932 --> 00:35:03,309
an individual
with hypertrichosis,
685
00:35:03,310 --> 00:35:07,981
it's very easy to sort of build
that person into a monster.
686
00:35:12,277 --> 00:35:15,613
In the 19th century,
the sideshow, the freak show,
687
00:35:15,614 --> 00:35:20,535
was a very big part of, uh,
American popular culture.
688
00:35:22,245 --> 00:35:25,039
P. T. Barnum exploited
many of these people
689
00:35:25,040 --> 00:35:27,542
that were born with
different congenital defects.
690
00:35:29,544 --> 00:35:33,297
When the first cases
of werewolf syndrome showed up,
691
00:35:33,298 --> 00:35:36,634
these people were immediately
put on, um, display.
692
00:35:36,635 --> 00:35:41,013
One of the most popular was
named "JoJo the Dog‐Faced Boy."
693
00:35:41,014 --> 00:35:42,640
Certainly easy to understand
694
00:35:42,641 --> 00:35:45,893
how people visiting
these freak shows
695
00:35:45,894 --> 00:35:48,187
may have been inspired
to believe
696
00:35:48,188 --> 00:35:51,315
that things like werewolves
could exist.
697
00:35:51,316 --> 00:35:53,651
We like things to be orderly,
698
00:35:53,652 --> 00:35:57,154
and people that have
unfortunate appearances...
699
00:35:57,155 --> 00:35:59,990
Well, is that man,
or is it a woman?
700
00:35:59,991 --> 00:36:02,785
Is that a human,
or is it a wolf?
701
00:36:02,786 --> 00:36:05,579
That is a very distressing thing
for many people,
702
00:36:05,580 --> 00:36:08,375
and one of the things
that comes out are stories.
703
00:36:09,834 --> 00:36:11,877
Folklore comes out
of this kind of thing
704
00:36:11,878 --> 00:36:15,172
where we have a person
that could shift back and forth
705
00:36:15,173 --> 00:36:17,926
between being a wolf and being
an ordinary shop clerk.
706
00:36:19,469 --> 00:36:21,470
In terms of werewolf hysteria,
707
00:36:21,471 --> 00:36:23,472
one truly has to wonder
if some of these
708
00:36:23,473 --> 00:36:26,475
could be monsters of the mind.
709
00:36:26,476 --> 00:36:30,020
For example, you have something
called "clinical lycanthropy,"
710
00:36:30,021 --> 00:36:32,356
a very rare psychosis
711
00:36:32,357 --> 00:36:34,983
whereby an individual feels like
712
00:36:34,984 --> 00:36:37,820
they are actually transforming
into an animal.
713
00:36:37,821 --> 00:36:42,116
You're operating as if
you're an animal.
714
00:36:42,117 --> 00:36:44,201
Sexual instincts,
sexual behaviors,
715
00:36:44,202 --> 00:36:46,121
and so on, attacking.
716
00:36:47,414 --> 00:36:50,457
It's a way of cooling down
717
00:36:50,458 --> 00:36:52,835
the engine of aggression,
718
00:36:52,836 --> 00:36:54,712
and it can be
physical aggression,
719
00:36:54,713 --> 00:36:56,547
it can be sexual aggression,
720
00:36:56,548 --> 00:37:02,094
and it gets into contact with
early, early primitive things
721
00:37:02,095 --> 00:37:04,847
that maybe we are
carrying with us
722
00:37:04,848 --> 00:37:06,349
over many generations.
723
00:37:08,685 --> 00:37:12,187
If it's true that monsters,
like vampires and werewolves,
724
00:37:12,188 --> 00:37:14,898
really are just
projections of the mind,
725
00:37:14,899 --> 00:37:18,068
what exactly is it
about ourselves
726
00:37:18,069 --> 00:37:21,697
that we're so afraid of?
727
00:37:21,698 --> 00:37:24,950
Every human being
has a primitive side.
728
00:37:24,951 --> 00:37:28,412
There is a beast,
there is a wolf,
729
00:37:28,413 --> 00:37:33,083
there is a monster somewhere
in all of our unconscious minds.
730
00:37:33,084 --> 00:37:36,587
We think of ourselves
as distant from the beasts,
731
00:37:36,588 --> 00:37:39,047
but we're more beast
than intelligence.
732
00:37:39,048 --> 00:37:43,051
We are creatures,
we are animals, we are beasts,
733
00:37:43,052 --> 00:37:45,888
and the beast will come out.
734
00:37:45,889 --> 00:37:49,476
We have to be in touch
with the inner werewolf.
735
00:37:51,728 --> 00:37:54,813
Is it possible
that our morbid fascination
736
00:37:54,814 --> 00:37:57,274
with vampires and werewolves
737
00:37:57,275 --> 00:38:00,944
actually arises out of a fear
that there's a monster
738
00:38:00,945 --> 00:38:03,489
lurking inside each of us,
739
00:38:03,490 --> 00:38:07,618
just waiting to break free
at any moment?
740
00:38:07,619 --> 00:38:11,914
Perhaps, but there are many
who claim that our attraction
741
00:38:11,915 --> 00:38:15,709
to these creatures
isn't about fear at all
742
00:38:15,710 --> 00:38:18,713
but about desire.
743
00:38:28,807 --> 00:38:32,810
Bram Stoker's
literary masterpiece Dracula
744
00:38:32,811 --> 00:38:34,812
is published
to critical acclaim.
745
00:38:34,813 --> 00:38:39,817
It will go on to sell tens
of millions of copies worldwide
746
00:38:39,818 --> 00:38:44,029
and redefine both vampire
and werewolf legends
747
00:38:44,030 --> 00:38:46,323
for generations to come.
748
00:38:46,324 --> 00:38:49,201
According to some scholars,
749
00:38:49,202 --> 00:38:52,329
the reason it became
so influential and successful
750
00:38:52,330 --> 00:38:54,832
wasn't because it was
just selling horror
751
00:38:54,833 --> 00:38:56,793
but because it was selling...
752
00:38:59,254 --> 00:39:00,630
...sex.
753
00:39:02,048 --> 00:39:04,341
Human beings have always needed
754
00:39:04,342 --> 00:39:08,387
fantasy constructs
that can act out impulses
755
00:39:08,388 --> 00:39:10,848
that we would like to do
ourselves
756
00:39:10,849 --> 00:39:13,685
but would rather
just imagine ourselves doing.
757
00:39:15,728 --> 00:39:18,021
And that fantasy
of being released
758
00:39:18,022 --> 00:39:21,608
from all constraints
and strictures
759
00:39:21,609 --> 00:39:25,696
is something vampires get to do,
and we are envious.
760
00:39:25,697 --> 00:39:28,031
I think there are many reasons
761
00:39:28,032 --> 00:39:30,033
people want to identify
as vampires.
762
00:39:30,034 --> 00:39:32,744
Definitely the sexual aspect,
the eternal life.
763
00:39:32,745 --> 00:39:34,538
I mean, who wouldn't want that?
764
00:39:34,539 --> 00:39:36,707
And also the power
that comes with it.
765
00:39:36,708 --> 00:39:41,211
It's a dangerous creature
that's beautiful.
766
00:39:41,212 --> 00:39:44,172
Originally, you became a vampire
767
00:39:44,173 --> 00:39:48,886
if you did something like commit
incest or witchcraft or suicide.
768
00:39:48,887 --> 00:39:52,931
Vampires were horrible,
evil outsiders.
769
00:39:52,932 --> 00:39:55,310
But today, things have changed.
770
00:39:56,978 --> 00:39:59,438
We all feel misunderstood.
771
00:39:59,439 --> 00:40:02,691
We all feel like outsiders,
just as the vampire is.
772
00:40:02,692 --> 00:40:04,943
So instead of becoming
a‐a demonic figure,
773
00:40:04,944 --> 00:40:07,321
it's become a tragic one
774
00:40:07,322 --> 00:40:09,699
and, in some cases,
even a glamorous figure.
775
00:40:11,910 --> 00:40:14,536
We have a need, a desire,
776
00:40:14,537 --> 00:40:17,539
for these sort of creatures
of the night.
777
00:40:17,540 --> 00:40:21,126
Blood drinking is viewed
as kind of a bonding experience,
778
00:40:21,127 --> 00:40:23,420
a way for people
to interconnect.
779
00:40:23,421 --> 00:40:25,756
There is a degree
of intimacy there,
780
00:40:25,757 --> 00:40:31,094
a sexuality in sharing one's
vital life force, one's blood.
781
00:40:31,095 --> 00:40:33,430
There's a particular bond
that can be forged there
782
00:40:33,431 --> 00:40:35,766
that is really beyond
explanation.
783
00:40:35,767 --> 00:40:37,768
The fantasy that a human
784
00:40:37,769 --> 00:40:40,270
turns into a wolf
and back again,
785
00:40:40,271 --> 00:40:43,774
well, it illustrates
one key mythological truth:
786
00:40:43,775 --> 00:40:48,278
we are animals, we are beasts,
and we're humans.
787
00:40:48,279 --> 00:40:53,283
We're both at the same time,
and we live in that tension.
788
00:40:53,284 --> 00:40:55,827
People are always asking me,
789
00:40:55,828 --> 00:40:58,747
"Why don't vampires
reflect in mirrors?"
790
00:40:58,748 --> 00:41:02,125
And there's a very good
and direct answer to that.
791
00:41:02,126 --> 00:41:05,754
If they did,
we would see our own faces.
792
00:41:05,755 --> 00:41:08,131
It shows that,
793
00:41:08,132 --> 00:41:10,050
even if they are
completely disproven,
794
00:41:10,051 --> 00:41:13,512
I think vampires and werewolves
will always be with us
795
00:41:13,513 --> 00:41:15,640
because they're a part
of who we are.
796
00:41:16,808 --> 00:41:18,308
For hundreds of years,
797
00:41:18,309 --> 00:41:20,644
they have been portrayed
in literature and on film
798
00:41:20,645 --> 00:41:24,564
as fiercely intelligent,
sexually powerful
799
00:41:24,565 --> 00:41:27,317
and immortal creatures.
800
00:41:27,318 --> 00:41:31,029
They have prayed
on our innermost fears
801
00:41:31,030 --> 00:41:34,200
and haunted our darkest desires.
802
00:41:36,703 --> 00:41:41,039
Vampires promise us a future
of never‐aging immortality.
803
00:41:41,040 --> 00:41:44,251
That is, if we don't mind the
taste of a little human blood.
804
00:41:44,252 --> 00:41:47,045
Werewolves represent
our collective desire
805
00:41:47,046 --> 00:41:50,507
to break free
of society's restrictions.
806
00:41:50,508 --> 00:41:55,679
And together, they remind us
of the aspects of our own nature
807
00:41:55,680 --> 00:42:01,268
that we try to keep hidden
and safely unexplained.
808
00:42:01,269 --> 00:42:04,671
Subtitled by Diego Moraes
www.oakisland.tk
63682
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.