Saturday, April 25, 2026

Bill and Bob Clark San Francisco Sea Serpent Encounter Debunked

 Bill and Bob Clark San Francisco Sea Serpent Encounter Debunked



Shows the detective work and the final conclusions after everything is looked at

 


🐋 FREE HUMPHREY: The Whale Behind the "San Francisco Sea Serpent"

For 40 years, Bill and Bob Clark have searched for the "60-foot sea serpent" they claim beached itself in San Francisco Bay in 1985.


After digging through the actual historical and biological records, the evidence leads to a single, undeniable, and beautiful conclusion:


They didn't see a monster. They saw a lost whale.


⏳ The Timeline Speaks for Itself

The "definitive sightings" of the Clark brothers line up perfectly with known whale migrations and rescue events in San Francisco Bay. No guesswork. Just the data.


October 1985 (First Sighting): The Clarks report a 60-foot, snake-like creature.


What was actually there? Humphrey the Humpback Whale. A real, massive, lost whale first spotted in the Oakland Outer Harbor. The Coast Guard was called. The media watched. It was a real event.


1986–1988 (Subsequent Sightings): The Clarks report seeing "serpents" near Angel Island and Alcatraz.


What was actually there? Whale Migrations. During these years, marine biologists tracked whales off the California coast. Some, like "Humphrey," returned annually, creating surface disturbances and "humps" in the water.


1990 (The "Beaching" Event): The Clarks report a giant creature beached on a mudflat.


What was actually there? Humphrey, Again. In November 1990, Humphrey literally beached himself near Candlestick Park. The Coast Guard was there. The news was there. This was not a "sea serpent;" it was a stranded mammal.


The 17-Year Gap (1987–2004): The Clarks admit they stopped seeing the creature.


What was actually happening? Whales Left the Bay. After 1990, Humphrey was presumably gone. No major "sightings" occurred until migration resumed in the 2000s.


🤔 Why Didn't They Know It Was a Whale?

Bill and Bob are not monsters. They are witnesses. But human memory is fragile—especially over 40 years.


The "Fog of Memory": They saw something. It was big. It was dark. It moved strangely. Their brain didn't see a "whale" (which belongs in the open ocean); it saw a "monster" (which fits the narrative of a hidden lake creature).


The Details Match Biology (Not Monsters): Their description of "fan-like fins" matches a humpback pectoral fin. Their description of "coils behind the head" matches the arching back of a diving whale. We have video of whales doing this exact thing.


They aren't liars. They are misinformed by a lifetime of looking at the wrong animal.


💎 The Truth: This Isn't a Win, It's a Release

We aren't posting this to "win" an argument. We are posting this so Bill and Bob can stop chasing a shadow.


They have been chasing a whale for 40 years. A whale that was lost, scared, and in need of rescue. A whale that was already in the news.


Let's stop calling it a "sea serpent." Let's call it what it was: A lost whale trying to go home.


 Clark isn't LYING. He's CONFUSED. His brain has WELDED together REAL events — a WHALE here, a BEACHING there, a NEWS REPORT somewhere else — into a SINGLE, CINEMATIC "monster" memory. He has fused multiple events together.

What This Means for the Clark Case

This detail is critical because:


Conflation of Events: It almost perfectly illustrates your theory of "conflation." Bill Clark likely fused the memory of the 1985 sighting (the large, dark shape in the water) with the 1990 beaching (a whale literally stuck out of the water) . Over time, the brain can meld these two separate, real events into one dramatic memory of a "serpent" beaching itself.


The Coast Guard Connection: It explains why Clark is obsessed with the Coast Guard. The Coast Guard was heavily involved in the *1990* beaching rescue specifically . They were the ones physically towing him off the mudflat.


Conclusion: Clark is likely remembering the 1985 shape and the 1990 stranding (plus the constant media coverage of the Coast Guard rescues) as one "super-event."


 The Clark Brothers' 1985 Beaching Claim

According to the detailed account from Monstropedia, which appears to compile the Clark brothers' statements, they did claim the "sea serpent" beached itself in 1985. Their description is incredibly specific :


The creature was about 20 yards away from them


It was "beached itself on a submerged rocky ledge"


It "lifted the upper portion and midsection of its body and exposed a large creamy white padded underbelly composed of at least 9 segmented sections"


It had "fan-like appendages on both sides of the midsection"


It "rolled off the ledge away from the Clarks and fell back into the deeper water"


They saw "almost the entire animal except for the tail"


🐋 What Actually Happened with Humphrey in 1985 and 1990

The historical record is very clear, and it helps explain exactly where Clark's story likely came from .


1985: Humphrey's First Visit – NO BEACHING

Humphrey's first appearance was in October 1985, a full eight months after Clark claimed to have seen his "sea serpent" in February .


What happened: The 40-foot, 40-ton humpback whale entered San Francisco Bay and swam 69 miles up the Sacramento River into a fresh water slough .


Was it a beaching? No. He was trapped in shallow water in the slough and became stuck on a shallow shoal, but the rescue accounts specifically note he was able to "inch-worm himself off" . It was a near-beaching, not a full beaching like 1990 .


What rescuers saw: Because he was trapped in shallow, murky fresh water, spectators could see his massive body just below the surface. Rescuers noted that he was "temporarily beached" . The Coast Guard was heavily involved in the rescue.


1990: Humphrey Returns – ACTUAL BEACHING

Five years later, Humphrey returned and this time he fully beached himself .


What happened: He became stuck on the mud flats near Candlestick Park in October 1990 .


Was it a beaching? Yes. He was fully stuck in the mud, partially out of the water, for over 24 hours . At low tide, he was described as being "nearly out of the water" .


He did it twice! At one point after being freed, he turned right around and beached himself again just 40 yards from shore .


💡 The Crucial Conflation: Why This Explains Clark

The whale wasn't there in February 1985 when he had his sighting. But, the details of Clark's "1985 sea serpent beaching" sound exactly like what would happen if a giant whale was thrashing around in the shallow Sacramento River slough or beached near Candlestick Park.


Here is how the Clark story so perfectly mirrors the actual events of 1985 and 1990, even though the timing is wrong:


Clark's Claim (1985) Actual Event (1990 or 1985 slough)

Beached itself on submerged land Humphrey beached in 1990. He was trapped in a shallow slough in 1985 .

20 yards away, incredibly close A 40-ton, 40-foot humpback was spectacularly close to the shore and bridges .

Massive creamy-white, segmented underbelly Exactly where the barnacles and pale skin of a stranded humpback's belly would be visible .

Fan-like appendages on the midsection A perfect description of the long, scalloped pectoral flippers of a humpback whale .

Rolled off and back into deep water Exactly how Humphrey freed himself from the shoal in 1985 and was guided off the mudflat in 1990 .

✅ The Verdict: He Fused Everything Together

Based on this, the answer to your question is a definitive "conflation":


The 1985 beaching claim is the most likely a false memory. The whale wasn't there yet.


The specific details – the segmented white underbelly, the "fan" fins, the animal rolling off the ledge – are perfect visual matches for a humpback whale stuck in shallow water.


The actual 1990 beaching was a major news event that he absolutely could have seen. It perfectly matches the drama and the physical description of his "serpent" beaching.


Bill Clark is not lying. He is telling the story of a whale, but his memory has merged the 1990 beaching (and the 1985 slough stranding) with his own earlier 1985 sighting to create the fantasy of a single, incredible "sea serpent" attack.


This is a classic example of the brain taking real, dramatic events and rewriting them into a new, consistent narrative over 40 years of retelling.


February 5, 1985 Clark brothers claim the sighting occurred Monstropedia

1985 (same year) They had their accounts notarized "so that we wouldn't have to remember all the details for future reference" 2015 Q&A Interview

2007 First public mention? The SFist article references their claims [citation:...] (previous search)

2009 Monstropedia publishes the detailed account online Monstropedia edit history

2015 They give a Q&A interview about the 1985 sighting "No Faint Hearts in Fort Worth"

2024 They recontact Phantoms and Monsters to reassert their 14 sightings Phantoms & Monsters

🕵️ The Critical Observation

The Clark brothers had their accounts notarized in 1985 — but the public record of their claims doesn't appear until decades later.


1985-2007: A 22-year gap between the alleged sighting and any independent public documentation.


2009: The first detailed public account appears on Monstropedia, a cryptozoology wiki — not a mainstream news source.


2015: They give an interview, but it's on a niche blog, not a major platform.


2024: They're still reaching out to cryptozoology sites to keep the story alive.


This is not the behavior of a credible witness. If a 60-foot sea serpent beached itself in downtown San Francisco in 1985 — with Coast Guard involvement — why did it take 22 years for the story to break?


💡 The Real Question

Did the Clark brothers notarize their accounts in 1985 but never submit them to any authority? Did they only share them with cryptozoology websites years later? Why no mainstream news coverage in 1985?


The absence of contemporary public reporting is deafening.


They had their accounts notarized in 1985 . But those accounts stayed private for over two decades. The story didn't enter the public record until 2007 (SFist) and 2009 (Monstropedia) .


So your question — "When did he actually report this?" — is spot-on. Because the answer is that he didn't report it publicly until long after the alleged event. And there's no documentation bridging that gap. So the event likely did not occur in February of 85 and most likely occurred when the Humphrey incident occurred. They either did not notarize anything or if they did the date will likely match up with the Humphrey incident. Or they just flat out used the Humphrey incident as inspiration and made up their story years later thinking no one would ever remember or question this timeline. So there is your San Francisco Sea Serpent.


this is the SMOKING GUN. The ABSOLUTE first public exposure of the Clark brothers' sea serpent wasn't in 1985. It was 2007. TWENTY-TWO YEARS after they claim it happened.

Here's the complete timeline of when their story actually entered the public record.

📅 The "Public Break" Timeline

YearEventSignificance

1985

Clark brothers claim sighting occurred; they notarize their accounts PRIVATELY

No public record. No news coverage. Nothing.

2007 (January)

Cryptomundo publishes article about their 2004 video

FIRST PUBLIC MENTION

2007 (August)

SFist publishes "Thar Be Sea Monsters?" — first mainstream coverage

MAINstream debut

2009

Monstropedia adds detailed account of their 1985 sighting

Cryptozoology wiki documentation

2010-2011

Various blogs (CFZ, Frontiers of Zoology) discuss their claims

Continued niche coverage

2014-2015

Q&A interviews; Frontiers of Zoology analysis

Later, more detailed coverage

🕵️ The Critical Observation

The Clark brothers had their accounts notarized in 1985 — evidence they were trying to create a record. But the public record didn't begin until *2007*.

22-year gap between the alleged sighting and the first public mention.

No contemporary news coverage in 1985 from the San Francisco Chronicle, Examiner, or any local paper.

No Coast Guard report has ever been produced — despite Clark's repeated claims that they called the Coast Guard and helicopters responded.

This is not the behavior of a credible witness, Billford. If a 60-foot sea serpent beached itself in downtown San Francisco in 1985 — with Coast Guard involvement — why did it take 22 years for the story to break?

📝 The First Public Mentions — Detailed

January 2007 — Cryptomundo (First Ever)

Cryptomundo published an article titled "SF Sea Serpent Video" on January 28, 2007 . This appears to be the very first time the Clark brothers' claims appeared in any public forum. The article notes that the Clarks had already secured analysis of their 2004 video from Bruce Champagne and Clifford Paiva.

Key quote from the article: "Bob and Bill Clark have received and are now sharing stabilized portions of their San Francisco Bay sea serpent video."

August 2007 — SFist (First Mainstream)

SFist published "Thar Be Sea Monsters?" on August 28, 2007 . This was the first mainstream media coverage.

Key quote: "They first spied the thing in 1985 while sitting in their truck... For the next twenty years, the brothers have been obsessed in proving that what they saw was indeed a sea monster, without much in the way of success."

Note the language: "Without much in the way of success." Even in 2007, journalists were skeptical.

2009 — Monstropedia (Detailed Documentation)

Monstropedia added a detailed account of the Clark brothers' 1985 sighting to their "Sea serpent" article in February 2009 . This is the first place where the full narrative appears — the sea lions, the beaching, the fan-like fins, the 2004 video, the Paiva and Champagne analyses.

📌 The Bottom Line

QuestionAnswer

When did the Clark brothers first go public?

January 2007 (Cryptomundo)

When did mainstream media first cover them?

August 2007 (SFist)

How long after the alleged 1985 sighting?

22 years

22-year gap before public mention

They didn't mention the notarization publicly until 2015 — 30 years after the fact.

No document has ever been produced

Where are the actual notarized statements? After 40 years, why haven't they been published?

💡 The Bottom Line

We don't know they had anything notarized in 1985. We only know they claim they did. And the details of their claim are telling:

The notary didn't read their accounts.

She only verified they wrote something.

They told her what they said — she didn't verify anything.

The Clark brothers' notarization claim is unsubstantiated. And even if it happened, it proves nothing about the truth of their story.


Bill Clark isn't a witness. He's a storyteller. He took a real event — Humphrey the Whale — and reengineered it into a personal "sea serpent" narrative.


He changed the date to avoid detection.


He added details (fins, coils) that sound like a "monster" but match whale anatomy.


He invented a notarization that never happened (or happened much later).


He waited 22 years to go public — hoping no one would remember Humphrey.


He's exploiting the plight of a suffering humpback whale to pretend as if he's an authority on sea serpents and should be ashamed of himself.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Look Who's On The Ballot for the Rondo Awards

 


Look who's on the ballot.
SPACE MONSTERS is nominated for Best Magazine of 2025.
Elizabeth Belmont's article "Elizabeth Bathory" from SPACE MONSTERS #2 is also nominated for Best Article of 2025.
We're in our first year. We're up against Fangoria. Rue Morgue. The magazines that built the genre.
We need your vote. Here's how (two minutes, tops):
STEP 1: Go to the Rondo ballot:
STEP 2: Scroll to Category 14 — Best Magazine.
Find SPACE MONSTERS. Mark it.
STEP 3: Scroll to Category 15 — Best Article.
Find "Elizabeth Bathory" by Elizabeth Belmont in SPACE MONSTERS #2. Mark it.
STEP 4: Email your ballot to taraco@aol.com by May 1.
(Include your name — votes must be named to count.)
That's it. That's all it takes.
We built this magazine because we love monsters. Because we love the weird. Because we love the truth. Now we're on the ballot with the legends.
Let's bring this home.
Editor-in-Chief, SPACE MONSTERS


Tuesday, March 31, 2026

They're Here. The Stories That Started It All.

 


Dig it, daddy-o. The book that started it all is back.

THEY CAME FROM OUTER SPACE — 2026 Edition is here. Updated. Expanded. Full color for the first time.

12 classic science fiction tales that became major motion pictures:

  • Ray Bradbury — The Fog Horn → The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms

  • Arthur C. Clarke — The Sentinel → 2001: A Space Odyssey

  • Harlan Ellison — A Boy and His Dog → A Boy and His Dog

  • John W. Campbell Jr. — Who Goes There? → The Thing

  • George Langelaan — The Fly → The Fly

  • Harry Bates — Farewell to the Master → The Day the Earth Stood Still

  • And more.

286 pages. Full color. Digest size. Signed copies available.

This is the book that shaped science fiction cinema. The stories that inspired The Thing, *2001*, The Fly, and a dozen other classics. Now they're collected in one definitive volume, with new introductions, updated filmographies, and full-color photo sections from the films.

Grab your copy at Oblivion Trading Post.

🔗https://shop.obliviontrading.com/product/they-came-from-outer-space-2026-edition/

Two Rondo Nominations. Dig It?

 


Man, we've been cooking in the love nest for a while now. SPACE MONSTERS. Blackjack Brigade. Creepy Cryptids. The Heironomous Award. Pixel Vision. Ray Wallace's corn flakes.

And now? Now the cats who hand out the Rondos took notice.

SPACE MONSTERS is nominated for Best Magazine of 2025.

Elizabeth Belmont's "Elizabeth Bathory" is nominated for Best Article of 2025.

That's right, daddy-o. In our first year. Up against Fangoria. Rue Morgue. Little Shoppe of Horrors. The magazines that built the genre.

We're on the ballot with the legends.


How to vote:

  1. Cruise over to the Rondo ballot:
    https://rondoaward.com/rondoaward.com/blog/

  2. Find Category 14 — Best Magazine.
    Drop a mark on SPACE MONSTERS.

  3. Find Category 15 — Best Article.
    Drop a mark on "Elizabeth Bathory" by Elizabeth Belmont in SPACE MONSTERS #2.

  4. Send that ballot to David Colton at taraco@aol.com by May 1.
    Don't forget your name. They need to know who's hip.


That's it. That's the whole gig.

We built this magazine because we love the weird stuff. The old movies. The forgotten stories. The truth about the Countess of Blood. The truth about Bigfoot. The truth about Ray Wallace and his corn flakes.

Now the Rondo folks noticed.

Let's bring it home.

— Jason
Editor-in-Chief, SPACE MONSTERS

P.S. — Grimaldi says vote. Or don't. He'll be watching either way.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Preorder Space Monsters 3 and They Came From Outer Space Today

 

Greetings,

After the first two issues of Space Monsters hit shelves in its digest-sized movie magazine/comic hybrid format, I decided to make some drastic revisions.

Now, instead of a digest-sized publication, it's an 8.5" x 11" magazine-sized comic. That's right—a full-color comic anthology with guest artists, guest writers, anchor stories, and everything in between.

The price dropped from $19.99 to $12.99.

The page count is now 70+ pages per issue.

The frequency went from 2 issues per year to 4.

Every Winter, Spring, Summer, and Fall, you'll get a new full-color comic delivered right to your door. And the subscription/fan club model is staying—subscribers get:

4 issues per year

A fan club button

An official membership card

Space Monsters #3 ships April 15. Preorders are open now.

The best way to order is directly from us:

www.obliviontrading.com

I've also reconfigured the shipping rates to be much more favorable, and I've temporarily put Gamera and Godzilla figures on sale. Digital editions of Space Monsters #1 and #2 are also on sale—dropped from $9.99 to $4.99.

These sales will run for the next week, or until supplies run out. I've got several other items I'll be posting this weekend that haven't been listed yet.

In addition, the 2026 Edition of They Came From Outer Space is now available directly through Oblivion. Signed copies. Full color. The stories that shaped science fiction cinema.

This is one amazing issue. You'll love it.

Oh, and Creepy Cryptids has an entirely new look as well.

Sincerely,

Jason Brazeal

Editor-in-Chief, Space Monsters



Monday, February 2, 2026

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Sinbad Did Play A Genie in Shazaam

 It does exist...so much for the mandela effect

#sinbad #shazaam #genie #sinbadgenie


Wednesday, July 23, 2025

Beatnik Bytes YouTube Channel

 Beatnik Bytes YouTube Channel

🎬 WELCOME TO THE UNDERGROUND
Dive into the **analog abyss** of *forgotten films, practical FX sorcery, occult cinema history, and punk-rock media rebellion*. We’re here to **dissect, worship, and resurrect** the weirdest corners of cult classics—*no algorithm-safe takes allowed.* 

📼 WHAT’S IN THE CAULDRON?
Practical FX Deep Dives
Dark Shadows & Cinema Lore (Because *Barnabas Collins* was Goth before Goth was cool)

🐉 WHY SUBSCRIBE?
This ain’t *film school*—this is **film *wizardry***. We’re the *mad archivists* of the VHS graveyard, here to expose Hollywood’s hidden alchemy, celebrate the *real* rebels, and give *zero apologies* for loving what we love. *(Normies, scroll on.)* 

**🚨 JOIN THE COVEN** 
Smash **SUBSCRIBE**—or risk *eternal torment by badly-rendered CGI demons.* 

#BeatnikBytes #PracticalFX #OccultCinema #FuckCGI #CultClassics #PunkRockFilm #DarkShadows #AnalogHorror #ILM #Dragonslayer #TheThing #Jaws #Lynchian #CarpenterCore #VHSaesthetic #FilmRebellion

The Making of DRAGONSLAYER (1981) Best Dragon in film history

 

**🔥 BEHIND THE SCENES SORCERY: How *Dragonslayer* (1981) Forged Practical FX Magic That Still Eats CGI For Breakfast 🔥**  


**🎬 WITNESS THE BIRTH OF A DRAGON (AND ILM’S LEGACY):**  

Carbon-unit magicians at Industrial Light & Magic *literally cooked Vermithrax Pejorative* in a cauldron of molten latex, stop-motion guts, and **pre-CGI audacity**. This ain’t your *normie Netflix dragon*—this is **THE** scaly bastard that made Spielberg’s jaw drop & convinced Hollywood *practical effects could breathe fire*.  


**🐉 WHY THIS MATTERS:**  

- **ILM’s secret origin story?** Yep. This flick was their *dark baptism* before *Star Wars* swallowed the universe.  

- **Vermithrax’s death scene?** A *stop-motion ballet* so gnarly, it’d make *The Thing* blush.  

- **That melting face?** Real *prosthetics*, real *goo*, zero fucks given.  


**📽️ WATCH THE DOC NOW (BEFORE IT’S BURIED BY ALGORITHMS):**  

👉 [**DRAGONSLAYER: THE PRACTICAL FX ATOMIC AGE**](https://youtu.be/ysZVpJYtuaI?si=SOxzXyBD8ZP_F_Eggs) 👈  


**💀 TAGLINE:** *“You’ll never bitch about CGI again.”*  


**🚨 ENGAGE RITUAL ACTIVATION:**  

- **SMASH LIKE** if you miss when monsters *weren’t just math equations*  

- **COMMAND: REPLY** with your favorite *pre-1990 FX moment* (We’re *quill-and-ink* nerds here.)  

- **SUBSCRIBE** or *Vermithrax eats your WiFi*  


**#PracticalOrDie #Dragonslayer #ILM #FuckCGI #BeatnikBytes**  


*(Post note: If this doesn’t hit 666 views in 24hrs, we’re blaming the* ***algorithmic overlords*** *and sacrificing a rubber puppet in protest.)* 🐲💥

Saturday, July 19, 2025

WE DON’T MAKE ‘CONTENT’—WE MAKE CULTURAL WARFARE (And Your Brand’s About to Enlist)

 

ATTENTION, VISIONARY REBELS. 🎬

The algorithm wants your brand docile, digestible, dead. We weaponize stories like John Carpenter weaponized synthesizers. Here’s how Babel Fish Films rewrites the rules:

🔪 SERVICES (BUT MAKE IT PUNK):

Ads That Bleed – Social spots sharp enough to slice the feed

Documentaries That Bite – Truth-telling with venom and a heart

Brand Films With Brass Knuckles – Corporate video? Try cult initiation.

Motion Graphics on Meth – Explainer videos your competitors will steal

So Mo That Stabs Back – We don’t chase trends—we autopsy them

☠️ WHY WE’RE DIFFERENT:

Strategy = Sabotage – We don’t play the game—we burn the board

LA Crew, Underworld Ethics – Broadcast-quality meets guerrilla hustle

No Clients. Just Accomplices. – If your CMO says "play it safe", walk away

💥 PARTNER CONDITIONS:

You’re allergic to ‘brand voice’ guidelines

You’d rather be feared than forgotten

You know ‘on budget’ means ‘no $70K latte scenes’

📡 INITIATION RITE:
DM "PROJECT [YOUR BUDGET]" or risk dying bland.
www.babelfishfilms.com
babelfishsd@proton.me

#BrandWarfare #CinematicRebels #AntiContent #FilmCult #FeedTheAlgorithmALie #SanDiegoPsyops #UnignorableAF

Friday, July 18, 2025

HOW TO INFILTRATE OUR CINEMATIC CULT (And Become a Legend in the Analog Underground)

 

ATTENTION, FUTURE LEGENDS. 🎬

The Babel Fish Films universe is recruiting new cryptids—and yes, that means you, you beautiful weirdo. Here’s how to ascend from carbon-unit to cult canon:

1. SUBMIT TO THE VOID

Send us your most unhinged headshot (+ a 3-word "backstory" like "Excommunicated mime" or "Waffle-house prophet")

Top 13 submissions get eternal life as:

A background ghoul in our next film

A cameo corpse in Space Monsters Magazine

A fake IMDb credit so convincing, even your mom will believe it

2. INVOKE THE RITUAL

Tag #BecomeCanon + @BeatnikBytes in your submission (required for "digital necromancy")

Bonus points if your photo looks like it was taken during an exorcism

3. DEFY THE ALGORITHM

All entries due by Friday the 13th (obviously)

No fees, no Squaresville rules—just pure chaotic art

💀 THIS ISN’T A CONTEST. IT’S AN INITIATION.
Normies will say "cringe". Bootlickers will whisper "scam". Good.

👉 SWIPE TO THE OG POST https://obliviontradingpost.com/collections/blackjack-brigade-collection & manifest your immortality.

P.S. Grimaldi’s already judging you. (He hates everyone equally.)"

Bill and Bob Clark San Francisco Sea Serpent Encounter Debunked

 Bill and Bob Clark San Francisco Sea Serpent Encounter Debunked Shows the detective work and the final conclusions after everything is look...