I used to like following cryptid news to avoid the actual terrible world news. Now, need to stop following Bigfooters because they are getting just as absurd.
At first, it seemed like a joke, a funny meme, to link together the terrible weather, the Bigfoot sightings, and the meteor event in Ohio that have happened in March.
Now, there are people who are calling it a High Strangeness event. The meteor wasn’t really a meteor, it was a phenomenon like past claims where Bigfoot sightings were noted in association with lights. Or it’s not a coincidence that a rare “meteor” happened in the same place as the “flap” of sightings.

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They are killing their credibility, if they ever had any. It seems to be more about attention and sensationalism. But maybe they really believe this stuff and that’s possibly worse.



From Bob Young who asked me to post this as a comment:
Yes, there are believers plus attention seekers who want to get
in on the fun and there may be others who seek to keep it going
for their own purposes. I get deja vu from this one - it's like the
Dec 9, 1965 Great Lakes Meteor - also in daylight in the same
area, including Detroit with seismic record in Northern Ohio.
It morphed into the so-called Kecksburg, Pa "ufo crash", featured
on the 1990 TV show "Unsolved Mysteries. Let's hope this one
dies a quite death.
That meteor exploded one county over from me and we're expecting a rush of people searching for fragments in the coming days. As for Bigfoot, with all of the high quality video cameras (phones) people have now, I find it funny that high quality video has yet to emerge!