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LIVE Stream #11: Cliff Barackman of Finding Bigfoot
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Sasquatch: Out of the Shadows LIVE is a weekly live stream show every Monday night at 8:00 pm EST. Each show features a new guest or guests talking about Sasquatch, Cryptozoology, and related topics! Questions in the live chat encouraged! Cliff has been researching the Sasquatch phenomenon for over two decades, perhaps most prolifically as one of four researchers throughout nine seasons of Animal Planet's "Finding Bigfoot" TV show. Since the program, Cliff has continued his research throughout the United States and opened the North American Bigfoot Center in Boring, Oregon in 2019. Since the Bigfoot Center, like many small businesses, was closed for months and suffered financially to the COVID-19 Pandemic, we're going to do some fundraising for the benefit of the North American Bigfoot Center through "Super Chats" available in the live chat of the stream. If you choose to ask Cliff a question or feel inclined, we ask that if you can, please consider donating a few dollars with the Super Chat option, 100% of which will go towards assisting the Bigfoot Center. Otherwise, check out the awesome store available either on Cliff's website or that of the Bigfoot Center, links below.  Cliff's website: https://cliffbarackman.com/ The North American Bigfoot Center's website: https://northamericanbigfootcenter.com/ On Thursday, June 25th our next guest will be Crystal Panek of the BFRO in New Hampshire! Sasquatch: Out Of The Shadows Read the full article
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iliveworldnews · 6 years
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// Visit EnchantedLifePath.com Donate To Enchanted LifePath Alternative News & MediaClick To Subscribe To Enchanted LifePath TV On YouTube SMALL TOWN MONSTERS | After Hours AM
https://youtu.be/SsJDK338A8A View Video on YouTube On a beastly and cinematic episode of After Hours AM/America’s Most Haunted Radio — scintillating paranormal talk Thursdays 9-11pE with hosts Joel Sturgis and Eric Olsen — we welcome filmmakers Seth Breedlove and Aleksandar Petakov of Small Town Monsters to talk about their latest project On the Trail of… Champ, and their other filmic explorations into the unknown. We welcome Seth and Aleksandar at Top of Hour 2; Hour1 Joel and Eric sift through the hottest paranormal news from the America’s Most Haunted Twitter feed. http://ift.tt/2sRjXk9 http://ift.tt/eA8V8J News, Trending, Truth, Video, YouTube February 24, 2018 at 10:22PM
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t-meier2090-blog · 7 years
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Comp 1302 (Noon) Assignment 1
In doing this assignment, I essentially used phrases with the same meanings, and simply replaced specific words or rewrote the phrase using other, synonymous terms in their place. Starting with the topic phrase, “Cultural Impact of Hashtags,” I then replaced “impact” with “influence”. Then I replaced “culture,” with “society,” and so on, until the yield dropped to a point of nearly nothing. At this point, I would then take the original phrase and word it entirely different. Whereas before the search was for “Cultural Impact of Hashtags,” it became “Hashtags on a Massive Scale.” I then repeated the whole process, until I had a sufficient number of articles from multiple sources. To determine credibility, I considered a variety of factors. If the website was one that was credible in and of itself, such as a university or government website, I simply checked to see if similar information could be found elsewhere. If the credibility of the website was questionable, I evaluated the author, taking into account a variety of factors, such as field of study, degrees acquired, and personal experience in the field. Ultimately, to determine credibility, it is necessary to gather enough data to make an informed decision on one crucial question: Can I trust that the website and author get their facts right consistently? In my search, I also discovered that using Google Scholar was a ridiculously more efficient and productive search engine than basic Google was and could ever hope to be. The articles I viewed in Google Scholar were, without exception, sites that I deemed credible, whereas the same searches on Google returned very few credible sites. Many of the results I received from Google were blogs, lacking any solid evidence or knowledge of the subject. Citations Acosta, Ericka. “Hashtag Activism Can Effect Real-World Change.” American University, American University, 8 March 2016, www.american.edu/media/news/20160308-CMSI_Freelon_hashtag_activism_study.dm Bichard, Shannon L. Seltzer, Trent. Zhang, Weiwu. “Two Sides of the Coin.” Social Science Computer Review. Sage journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0894439313489962 Bruns, Axel. Sauter, Theresa. “#auspol: The Hashtag as Community, Event, and Material Object for Engaging With Australian Politics.” In Rambukkana, Nathan. Hashtag Publics the Power and Politics of Discursive Networks. Peter Lang, New York. pp. 47-60. Chae, Heeju. Ko, Eunju. Shin, Jiye. “The Effects of Usage Motivation of Hashtag of Fashion Brands’ Image based SNS on Customer Social Participation and Brand Equity Focusing on Moderating Effect of SNS Involvement.” Korea Science, Korean Society for Clothing Industry, 2015 (see footnote) www.koreascience.or.kr/article/ArticleFullRecord.jsp?cn=ORSHBT_2015_v17n6_942 Chang, Hsia-Ching. “A New Perspective on Hashtag Use: Diffusion of Innovation Theory.” Wiley Online Library, Proceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology, November 2010 onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/meet.14504701295/full Davis, Bud. “Hashtag Politics: The Polyphonic Revolution of Twitter.” The Mantle, The Mantle, 16 November 2014. digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/pjcr/vol1/iss1/4/?utm_source=digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu%2Fpjcr%2Fvol1%2Fiss1%2F4&utm_medium=PDF&utm_campaign=PDFCoverPages Goggins, Sean. Petakovic, Eva. “Connecting Theory to Social Technology Platforms.” American Behavioral Scientist, Sage Journals, 7 April 2014. journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/0002764214527093 Harris, Isabella. “Cultural Cues Embedded Within Hashtags: Effects on Identification and Advertising Outcomes.” Electronic Thesis or Dissertations, Ohio State University, 2014. OhioLINK Electronic Thesis and Dissertations Center. 6 June 2017. Kitsuregaw, Masaru. Rattanaritnot, Geerajit. Toyoda, Masashi. “Characterizing Topic-Specific Hashtag Cascade in Twitter Based on Distributions of user Influence.” Springer, Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2012 (see same footnote) link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-29253-8_71 Lee, Dave. “How Twitter Changed the World, Hashtag-by-hashtag.” BBC News, BBC, 7 November 2013. www.bbc.com/news/technology-24802766 Lindgren, Simon. Lundstrom, Ragnar. “Pirate Culture and Hacktivist Mobilization: the Cultural and Social Protocols of #Wikileaks on Twitter.” New Media and Society. Sage Journals. 27 June 2011. journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1461444811414833 Moreno, Megan A. Whitehill, Jennifer M. “Influence of Social Media on Alcohol Use in Adolescents and Young Adults.” Alcohol Research Current Reviews, Alcohol Research Current Reviews. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4432862/#!po=92.5000 Ngo, Nancy. “How Hashtag Activism Advances the Future of Global Movements.” The Mantle, The Mantle 16 November 2014. www.mantlethought.org/other/how-hashtag-activism-advances-future-global-movements Steinberg, Alan. Wukich, Clayton. “Non-profit and Public Sector Participation in Self-organizing Information Networks: Twitter Hashtag and Trending Topic Use During Disasters.” Risks, Hazards and Crisis in Public Policy. Wiley Online Library. June 2013. journals.humankinetics.com/doi/abs/10.1123/ijsc.5.4.539 Smith, Lauren Reichardt. Smith, Kenny D. “Identity in Twitter’s Hashtag Culture: a Sport-Media-Consumption Case Study.” HKJournals, Human Kinetics, December 2012. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/rhc3.12036/full
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