Home > Guests > Jimmy Chilcutt
Jimmy Chilcutt is not someone most people would associate with unsubstantiated stories. Chilcutt, 54, is skeptical by nature. His job, as a fingerprint technician at the Conroe Police Department, requires hard-nosed judgments and painstaking attention to detail. He is highly regarded by agents of the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and state and local law enforcement agencies for his innovative techniques and ability to find fingerprints where others fail. But in doing what comes naturally, being careful and thorough, he ended up rocking his own skepticism about one of the most sensational tales that routinely show up in the tabloids-Bigfoot, also known as Sasquatch.
Bigfoot Roundtable |
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| Tuesday May 3, 2005 |
Researcher Loren Coleman and expedition leader Tom Biscardi were joined byfingerprint technician Jimmy Chilcutt (2nd Hour) and author Smokey Crabtree (3rd Hour) to discuss the elusive creature known as Bigfoot. The evening kicked off with a playing of the song I Still Believe in Bigfoot by Danny Freyer, which was followed by a discussion about the soon-to-be-released Bigfoot video footage from Canada (see below). Coleman said that the creature was photographed from 750 ft. away, so there may be resolution problems, and Biscardi commented that he'd been in touch with the photographer, Bobby Clarke, who impressed him as a reliable witness. Chilcutt reported that the dermal ridges he's studied had been replicated into a cast by Matt Crowley. Biscardi said his group has some hand casts which they hope to show at their upcoming Bigfoot Museum, being planned for a San Francisco location. While he feels we "may be getting very close" to a definitive discovery, Coleman noted that the Big
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Host: George Noory
Mind Matters |
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| Monday October 6, 2003 |
Brain researcher and musician Neil Slade (neilslade.com) returned to C2C as the main guest on Monday night. Sharing such mental techniques as clicking the amygdala, and "mind movie rewrite," (a method to clear out past traumas), Slade said that the use of one's imagination can propel a person into more creative or pleasurable realms of thought. He also conducted an online "Mind Motor Experiment," that sought to test the powers of collective intelligence by seeing if the radio audience could affect the movement of a piece of tin foil inside an airtight bottle. Strangely, the foil seemed to move in the opposite direction requested. The experiment and its photo results can be viewed here.
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Host: George Noory