The Internet Show
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from The Internet Show, Video Creator, Springfield, MO.
05/28/2021
Does anyone else feel like this?
Also remember to like save and follow for more
05/26/2021
This made me laugh this morning, what do you think?
Here is a new video for your viewing pleasure
12/22/2020
Loch Ness Monster is Today's Cryptid and here is that info on the watery beast
The first modern discussion of a sighting of a strange creature in the loch may have been in the 1870s, when D. Mackenzie claimed to have seen something "wriggling and churning up the water". This account was not published until 1934, however. Research indicates that several newspapers did publish items about a creature in the loch well before 1934.
The best-known article that first attracted a great deal of attention about a creature was published on 2 May 1933 in Inverness Courier, about a large "beast" or "whale-like fish". The article by Alex Campbell, water bailiff for Loch Ness and a part-time journalist,[9] discussed a sighting by Aldie Mackay of an enormous creature with the body of a whale rolling in the water in the loch while she and her husband John were driving on the A82 on 15 April 1933. The word "monster" was reportedly applied for the first time in Campbell's article, although some reports claim that it was coined by editor Evan Barron.
The Courier in 2017 published excerpts from the Campbell article, which had been titled "Strange Spectacle in Loch Ness".
"The creature disported itself, rolling and plunging for fully a minute, its body resembling that of a whale, and the water cascading and churning like a simmering cauldron. Soon, however, it disappeared in a boiling mass of foam. Both onlookers confessed that there was something uncanny about the whole thing, for they realised that here was no ordinary denizen of the depths, because, apart from its enormous size, the beast, in taking the final plunge, sent out waves that were big enough to have been caused by a passing steamer."
*ts_world
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Category
Website
Address
Springfield, MO
19064