Just as J.D. and Turk sang in that musical episode of "Scrubs," when it comes to proving the existence of the elusive Bigfoot, everything may really all come down to poo.
And that poo may be worth an incredible $10 million,
courtesy of Spike TV and the network's upcoming reality series "10
Million Dollar Bigfoot Bounty."
The series, which premieres in January 2014 and will be hosted by
"Lois & Clark" star Dean Cain, is challenging nine teams to head out
into the Pacific Northwest and find Bigfoot (aka Sasquatch). If they
can, via photographic and DNA evidence, they will be handed an
eight-figure check, guaranteed by famous British insurance company
Lloyd's of London. And about the multimillion-dollar poo: Rantamaki says one of the coolest pieces of technology the teams will use in their search is a mobile DNA lab that can provide DNA sequencing results in as little as a day.
So, finding Bigfoot really could come down to poo?
"Yes," Rantamaki said, laughing.
The show, which is already in production, is a fun but still serious effort to prove whether or not Bigfoot is real, as the $10 million prize suggests. Last November, a Texas veterinarian purported to have DNA evidence that Bigfoot exists, but her results remain controversial.
Rantamaki promises that there will be no room for questioning the winner if someone does indeed snag the big prize on "10 Million Dollar Bigfoot Bounty," as the substantiation needed to win $10 million includes both photographic evidence and DNA evidence "that has been sequenced and proved to be from an unknown primate."
Discovery's "Finding Bigfoot" team investigates sightings in Indonesia:
"A, it's $10 million on the line; B, it's Lloyd's of London, so there's no screwing around on this," Rantamaki said. "No one who isn’t fully credible, and/or vetted by a lot of people, is involved."
As for whether those involved in making the series believe in Bigfoot's existence, Rantamaki said he thinks Cain is open to the possibility, while he said that he himself started off as a "cynical television producer" and is now starting to feel differently. "It really would not surprise me for us to [find out] there's some new kind of primate within the next couple of years, or even sooner. A lot sooner.
If one of the show's Bigfoot hunters does discover the big hairy creature, will we find out about it right away, or, in the age of social media, will Spike TV try to keep the discovery under wraps?
"It is an absolute must [that it remains a secret]," he said. "Then, you would find me and several other folks here in Times Square with a very big cage."


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