If it’s a slow news day and the story makes it to the local television news the same formula is followed but they’ll send the weatherman or the jolly reporter that the old ladies seem to like. If he really enters into the spirit of things he might even wear a pith helmet, carry a large net and end his report by making a gurning face to portray his supposed terror after hearing a roaring sound effect off camera. All of this rather makes a mockery of cryptozoology. I have never seen a jolly reporter dressed up in a deerstalker hat parading around with a comic, oversized magnifying glass to report on a hunt for a local serial killer or wearing a face mask and carrying a bag marked ‘swag’ to report upon a spate of burglaries, for example.
The stories about betting on cryptids being discovered tend to be dealt with a bit more sensibly by the press but like the reward stories, they are mainly just an excuse for a business to get free publicity. I can see why a bookmaker would send out stories like this because it is an easy way for them to thwart certain restrictions placed on their advertising, but nearly always the people who believe in the very real possibility of cryptids are there to be portrayed as figures of fun. I recall in particular news reports from the late 1990s of ‘crazy people’ putting bets on the possibility of a UFO, piloted by Elvis Presley crashing into the Loch Ness monster. If such a bet were ever placed my money would be on it having been placed by the owners of the bookmakers shop in the first place in order to get a bit of publicity off the coat-tails of The X-Files. William Hill currently offer 200/1 odds on the discovery of the yeti and 500/1 on Nessie’s discovery within one year of placing the bet.
The worst thing about these stories is that the rewards or winnings will likely never be claimed even if the body of Nessie were slopped down on the floor of William Hill’s
When the deadline of a high profile bounty is reached without the reward being paid out, sceptical people will often take the opportunity to proclaim that since ‘no-one has come forward’ to claim the reward the creature must not exist. This is unscientific codswallop. Even if a person seriously offers a reward in the hope that the creature will be found just waving a cheque under somebody’s nose isn’t going to make a creature any more likely to come out of wherever it is hiding.
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