Charles (Chuck) Bryant
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Do it right now.
That actually worked.
I was like, I'm going to have to fake a laugh here, but you got me.
Awesome.
Keep up the great work, guys.
Thanks for making the two of us smile again and again and again.
We've made them smile three times.
All the best from Troutdale, Oregon.
That is Patrick Burton.
That's right.
We're beginning our spookiest month of October.
I am too.
We love our Halloween-y content.
And we're going to talk to you a little bit today about a kind of one of those just fun urban legend stories that seems to be geographically specific in that it's around, you know, maybe Texas, New Mexico, border towns mainly of the La La Chuza, the Owl Witch.
Yeah, and this is one of those things where, you know, because it's lore and legend, it's going to differ from place to place depending on who's telling the story.
By the way, we should thank HowStuffWorks and all that's interesting, Austin Harvey from there.
And I found a fun article in Texas Standard from Sarah Ash and Raul Alonso that helped out with this.
But yeah, this is one of those sort of legends where, and there's a lot of different versions.
We're going to go over a few of those.
One is that La Luchusa will make like sounds like a baby is crying, hoping that someone will go like try and find this baby and all of a sudden be snatchable by the talons and they would be snatched up and returned to the owl's nest ostensibly.