Something stirred in the American woods early this year, and it wasn’t just Bigfoot.
In March, a cluster of eight reported sightings erupted in Portage County, Ohio, in wooded terrain along the Mahoning River near Mantua and Garrettsville, southeast of Cleveland. The Bigfoot Society podcast, which tracked and mapped the reports, said the accounts came in between March 6 and March 10, and that Bigfoot activity like this hadn’t been documented in the area since the 1970s. The story landed on CNN, Fox News, and Newsweek. Local residents told reporters everyone was asking the same question: Where is he going?
Just days later, a documentary called Capturing Bigfoot premiered at the South by Southwest Film & TV Festival in Austin, Texas, directed by Marq Evans. The film takes dead aim at the most debated piece of footage in cryptozoology history: the Patterson-Gimlin film, a grainy 59-second clip from 1967 that supposedly captured a large bipedal creature walking through the woods near Bluff Creek, California, and has been argued over for nearly six decades. Evans claims new evidence sheds light on what really happened. One reviewer called it the film that finally delivers the truth, while also noting it doesn’t require viewers to stop believing. Peoplecalled it groundbreaking. The Bigfoot community, meanwhile, is being ‘torn apart’ by what the documentary claims to have found.
The doc doesn’t yet have a streaming home and distribution negotiations are reportedly ongoing, with a public release expected summer 2026 if deals conclude. Which means the argument is still very much alive.
Bigfoot! A New Musical opened off-Broadway in early 2026 to critical praise, a new smartphone emoji was added, and NPR’s Planet Money announced its first-ever original board game, titled Sell Me A Sasquatch. Six Bigfoot-themed horror films are on the 2026 release calendar. Dozens of Bigfoot festivals have spread across small-town America over the past decade, from the West Virginia Bigfoot Festival to events in Minnesota and Alaska. The Kentucky Red River Gorge Bigfoot Festivalis set for May 30. The Great Florida Bigfoot Conference runs in Ocala in June.
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The question worth asking is why now. As one researcher told CNN this month, both believers and skeptics seem to agree on at least one thing; it’s a lot of fun to talk about. There’s also something more elemental at work. In a media landscape where nearly everything is documented, explained, and instantly debunked, an eight-foot mystery that has eluded cameras for 60 years carries the special appeal that something out there still hasn’t been figured out.
The Ohio flap stopped as suddenly as it started. The Capturing Bigfoot documentary is still waiting for a release date. The evidence is still contested. And the festivals are still filling up.
And it’s still a (big) mystery.
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