2024-07-14
For 54 years, the famed Patterson-Gimlin bigfoot film has been touted as the best proof the creature exists; with AI technology, a never-before-seen restoration of the film makes the figure known as "Patty" clearer than ever before. (Repeat).
A new season kicks off as host Tony Harris separates the real from the fake in some of the top UFOs caught on camera in recent history. Spanning 70 years, videos range from a bizarre shape caught on camera during a 1950s minor league baseball game, to new videos leaked in 2021 of pyramids apparently stalking US warships, to a UFO that seemingly dives into the ocean and disappears. (Repeat).
Examining if a strange silver object seen in the sky over Kansas could be a real UFO, if a sound permeating through the ocean could be a warning that something bigger lies below, and what accounts for a strange purple beam caught on camera in Alaska. (Repeat).
Could a bipedal figure crossing a snowy field be the fabled yeti? Is a color-changing orb in the sky another example in a long history of UFOs in Italy? And is a creature peeking around the corner a real life alien encounter? Tony Harris and his team examine the evidence and reveal which of these sightings are truly unexplained. (Repeat).
Tony and his team of experts find out whether a human flying through the skies could be a real-life "Iron Man." (Repeat).
Investigating if a petrified creature discovered in Russia could be the work of the Baba Yaga and if this two-headed snake could be a genetic experiment gone wrong. Also, examining if fire could have a mind of its own. (Repeat).
Tony Harris and his team examine videos to determine a verdict about the unexplained. (Repeat).
Investigating if a breed of dogs could possess the power to completely freeze time, if invisibility cloaking is finally science fact rather than science fiction, and if there is evidence that aliens crash landed in Antarctica several millenniums ago. (Repeat).
A Japanese Canadian survivor of World War II internment and his daughter discover their family's past. In another child-parent story, the son of a Royal Canadian Airforce bomb aimer uncovers the prisoner-of-war experience his father never spoke about. (Repeat).
Scott and Sheldon scour for hot deals in southern British Columbia. Also: A tip directs them to a golden collectible find. (Repeat).
The hosts seek deals and memorabilia in southern British Columbia—while keeping an eye out for Big Foot. (Repeat).
A Japanese Canadian survivor of World War II internment and his daughter discover their family's past. In another child-parent story, the son of a Royal Canadian Airforce bomb aimer uncovers the prisoner-of-war experience his father never spoke about. (Repeat).
Scott and Sheldon scour for hot deals in southern British Columbia. Also: A tip directs them to a golden collectible find. (Repeat).
The hosts seek deals and memorabilia in southern British Columbia—while keeping an eye out for Big Foot. (Repeat).
Bil tries to answer why people remember the Alamo, how Davy Crockett died, and others. (Repeat).
Bil separates fact from fiction surrounding the Bowie Knife. (Repeat).
Images of the Wild West are inscribed in the American DNA. We've been raised on tales of cowboys with great nicknames dueling it out and then riding off into the sunset. We've consumed so much fiction about the Wild West, it's time to get down to the facts. In search of the truth, Bil Lepp, puts Billy the Kid's famous escape to the test, attempts Annie Oakley's most difficult shot and investigates
Bil sheds light on how Ben Franklin really discovered electricity; examines if Edison truly invented the lightbulb; and sorts out if the Wright Brothers were actually first in flight. (Repeat).
Bil saddles up to find out what Paul Revere's ride was really like; if the turning point in Revolutionary War was a seemingly impossible sniper shot; and if Betsey Ross was really responsible for Old Glory. (Repeat).
Bil gets his hands dirty to figure out what got the Hatfield's and the McCoy's so worked up, if Hamilton really wasted his shot at Burr, and what actually happened at the O.K. Corral. (Repeat).
Great American folk tales have been passed down for generations, often through word of mouth. While many of the stories snowball into legends over the years, most contain at least a kernel of truth. Bil tries to find that truth as he explores the claim that John Henry out-drilled a steam-powered drill, uncovers if Johnny Appleseed is truly responsible for all our delicious apples, and checks if a
Daredevils have always captured our imaginations and the stories of their feats have grown into superhuman myths that persist to this day. Incredible stories that we want to believe but seem downright impossible. Bil pursues the truth around America's most iconic stunts by pulling his very own Houdini, testing if it's possible to survive a plunge over Niagara Falls, and investigates daredevil pion
Bil tries to answer why people remember the Alamo, how Davy Crockett died, and others. (Repeat).
Bil separates fact from fiction surrounding the Bowie Knife. (Repeat).
Images of the Wild West are inscribed in the American DNA. We've been raised on tales of cowboys with great nicknames dueling it out and then riding off into the sunset. We've consumed so much fiction about the Wild West, it's time to get down to the facts. In search of the truth, Bil Lepp, puts Billy the Kid's famous escape to the test, attempts Annie Oakley's most difficult shot and investigates
Bil sheds light on how Ben Franklin really discovered electricity; examines if Edison truly invented the lightbulb; and sorts out if the Wright Brothers were actually first in flight. (Repeat).
Bil saddles up to find out what Paul Revere's ride was really like; if the turning point in Revolutionary War was a seemingly impossible sniper shot; and if Betsey Ross was really responsible for Old Glory. (Repeat).