Wendigo Origins - Mythology Matters - Extra Mythology

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2025

Комментарии • 497

  • @extrahistory
    @extrahistory  5 лет назад +266

    Help us make Extra Mythology a *weekly* show! bit.ly/EMPatreon

    • @safetyinstructor
      @safetyinstructor 5 лет назад +2

      Wait a minute ...could you please poke the fire and make sure there isn't any frozen hearts in it ...

    • @supremelordoftheauspicious2928
      @supremelordoftheauspicious2928 5 лет назад +3

      Extra Credits Have you ever thought of making a video on Persian mythology(Shahname)?
      The reason it's an intresting topic to discuss is that the early history of Iranians was not written down for them and thus the stories of Powerful Achaemenid kings and Alexander the great became mixed with legends and myths and it's kind of intresting to trace their origins. Although these are from its historic parts. Its mythical part has some very intresting and powerful stories like Zahhak the king with serpents on its shoulders or Arash the archer or Rostam(He's kind of similar to Hercules i think)

    • @ОлегКозлов-ю9т
      @ОлегКозлов-ю9т 5 лет назад

      Can you spell what the lady in the intro is singing?

    • @snaketooth0943
      @snaketooth0943 5 лет назад +1

      I had a teacher at school say the epic of Gilgamesh is one of their favourites, so I'm looking foreword to seeing if I agree with him.

    • @Luxaeonun666
      @Luxaeonun666 5 лет назад

      Wonder if these guys would like the game, "Until Dawn," which has the Wendigo as the primary antagonist?

  • @mvple743
    @mvple743 5 лет назад +685

    Being indigenous my self. This used to give me nightmares

    • @asti5052
      @asti5052 5 лет назад +21

      I still find that idea of a wendigo I shit my pants and ran into to the forest and then died

    • @soygato2722
      @soygato2722 5 лет назад +28

      Mecha How do you get rid of wendigos? I really wanna know straight from a person who has lived in this culture.

    • @mattmatonek3251
      @mattmatonek3251 5 лет назад +21

      I'm from the great lakes area in a small town surrounded by woods and terrified to back in the woods and to be out late at night

    • @ttn68579
      @ttn68579 5 лет назад +9

      Soy Gato with fire

    • @soygato2722
      @soygato2722 5 лет назад +8

      Minato Wantae But isn't there other stuff to do? Hearts and all that?

  • @m4jdealer57
    @m4jdealer57 5 лет назад +122

    I’m very glad you have pointed out the fact there are different variations of the Wendigo depending on the tribes, and that you discussed the fact the land was taken away. Being First Nation myself, stories are a key part of our history and culture and telling these stories to the next generation keeps our culture alive.
    I remember hearing and finding different stories and I remember first hearing of the Wendigo. At first there was hardly anything on the Wendigo, but then the game “Until Dawn” came out and then suddenly there was Wendigo everywhere and people telling different stories of it, and yet many I’ve seen were not from the culture.
    But I also appreciate the fact something if our First Nation culture has become popular and I hope more positive stuff will be known one day and maybe other people will be able to learn more of who we are as a people.
    I do appreciate the research you seem to put into this.

  • @zackakai5173
    @zackakai5173 5 лет назад +447

    As someone who reads too much Creepypasta, this series was really interesting because of how often wendigo show up in that particular sphere of the internet. It's interesting to see how these traditional myths continue evolving into modern mythology.

    • @MyLadyPanda
      @MyLadyPanda 5 лет назад +22

      I do like the Wendigo and Skinwalker stories in the creepy pasta fandom? I have a few problems with it though. People seemingly interchange Skinwalkers and Wendigo as the same creatures. The most prevalent image/description of the Wendigo is based off of a Pathfinder homebrew version of it, not the actual Native tale description. Plus the people writing them clearly don't do enough research on either legend. Skinwalkers aren't going to be in Scotland, Wendigo aren't going to be in Russia. If writers could fix that..then I think the stories would be much better.

    • @dragonmandestructinator2847
      @dragonmandestructinator2847 5 лет назад +12

      @@MyLadyPanda I think worse than Wendigo in Russia is Wendigo in Arizona. At least Russia is the right climate and superficially matches the Great Lakes and Canadian Shield regions

    • @MyLadyPanda
      @MyLadyPanda 5 лет назад +7

      @@dragonmandestructinator2847 That is true. I'm sorry for that. I think my point was that people just take these cryptids and myths and creatures and just plop them where they want to, regardless of where the stories place them.

  • @yonokhanman654
    @yonokhanman654 5 лет назад +511

    Your Wendigo drawing looks great! (Just wanted to get that out.)

  • @MrGeneration83
    @MrGeneration83 5 лет назад +222

    I am just going to say that the Wendigo myth sounds very much like a combination of qivittoq and how people go crazy in very small isolated communities during the winter.
    Two things that are rather well known in Greenland.

    • @farmerboy916
      @farmerboy916 5 лет назад +26

      I think it almost certainly developed as a way to explain and rationalize things like cabin fever and people going nuts or cannibal in the middle of winter. Which is probably why people thought there may be such a thing as wendigo psychosis, not that it was interpreted that way to decrease native status (which already was low and didn't matter much)

    • @coolsceegaming6178
      @coolsceegaming6178 5 лет назад +23

      Greenland: yeah, you don’t want to come here, we got wendigos
      Someone: what?
      Native Americans: nope nope nope nope nope nope fu*k this sh*t I’m out.

    • @polomat14
      @polomat14 4 года назад +2

      @@coolsceegaming6178 I wonder if there is an icelandic version of that myth...

    • @thatonecubchoo1541
      @thatonecubchoo1541 4 года назад +6

      @polomat14 Iceland was not settled prior to the Vikings, so that is unlikely to have something near identical to a wendigo. Also that’s why Iceland has no volcano deities despite all the volcanic activity.

    • @itshenry8977
      @itshenry8977 2 года назад

      @@thatonecubchoo1541 Irish MONKS

  • @s7robin105
    @s7robin105 5 лет назад +24

    Should’ve also went into the areas this myth came from. It acted as a deterrent not only for overconsumption but also to say “no matter how bad things get, you cannot eat another human” as it was a large taboo.
    In regards to the windigo psychosis, it wasn’t only westerners who adopted the term, as even native Americans used it for instances where someone ate another person, a father who killed his family said he was controlled by the windigo and that’s why he did it

  • @CarlosOney-km1wi
    @CarlosOney-km1wi 5 лет назад +628

    Used to be a fan but now I’m a toaster

  • @JustinY.
    @JustinY. 5 лет назад +329

    I'm pretty sure almost everyone keeps thinking of the Until dawn rendition when they think of the wendigo

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +15

      +Justin Y. Honestly you're a myhtological creature for th RUclips(!)

    • @HoggleToggler
      @HoggleToggler 5 лет назад +4

      Originally heard of it from my grandmother (I'm 1/4 native). I've never even played that game.

    • @asinineaesthetic9383
      @asinineaesthetic9383 5 лет назад +11

      I normally dont because I grew up with these myths but I like how until dawn made the myth into something more interactive

    • @SharowbladyeGaymerPorate
      @SharowbladyeGaymerPorate 5 лет назад +2

      @@thedoruk6324 Justin Y as a dnd monster

    • @EnoshII
      @EnoshII 5 лет назад +3

      first time I heard of a Wendigo was from an episode of Charmed

  • @carlthesociopathicllama8736
    @carlthesociopathicllama8736 5 лет назад +258

    How did they get an IRL wendigo picture for the thumbnail?
    Disturbing

  • @wp6192
    @wp6192 5 лет назад +370

    What's Keanu Reeves' Cousin doing on this channel!

  • @johnkeefer8760
    @johnkeefer8760 3 года назад +11

    These episode are really important. Focusing on the narratives are great (brings a lot of awareness to many world cultures/beliefs). But explaining their meanings is also very important as that’s their purpose. Some people may walk away without understanding the myths unless they spend the time studying (or watch an episode like this). Good job on this one!

  • @Royal-xr7gt
    @Royal-xr7gt 5 лет назад +136

    I honestly couldn’t wait for the part 2

  • @Dunkle0steus
    @Dunkle0steus 5 лет назад +75

    The beginning of the 17th century is also the mini ice age, that might contribute to the famine.

  • @deaconblues9178
    @deaconblues9178 5 лет назад +19

    I’d love to see a mythology video on the *Nuckelavee* it’s a demonic horse/rider fused into one being in a creepy way. I’d love to see their take on it

  • @HoggleToggler
    @HoggleToggler 5 лет назад +184

    Living in Vancouver I can't sleep with the lights off anymore.
    (I know wendigos aren't real, I know they wouldn't be around here, this comment is NOT literal)

    • @maggiehydeck8182
      @maggiehydeck8182 5 лет назад +4

      I know, when I watched a different video on the Wendigo, I was hiding under the blankets sweating, too afraid to come out.

    • @mipcrazeold
      @mipcrazeold 5 лет назад

      Dang man

    • @mattmcewen794
      @mattmcewen794 5 лет назад +8

      If the wendigo was real we would have photos + proof. They seem to be large creatures therefore they would leave large footprints and bite marks on animal carcuses. Don't be afraid of mythology when you can be afraid of dying in your sleep due to a brain anurism 😊

    • @HoggleToggler
      @HoggleToggler 5 лет назад

      @@mattmcewen794 of course it's all for joke's sake.

    • @melted_1
      @melted_1 5 лет назад

      Matt Mcewen you mean human carcasses?

  • @doctor_owl
    @doctor_owl 5 лет назад +14

    The wendigo has always been one of my favorite mythological monsters. It reminds me of the werewolf, which also served to explain psychological and social problems in the form of a warning, with a scary story to tell the kids to keep them from going out alone at night, and to reinforce social values. I love that it's survived as a myth even into modern times and even in parts of the world where dying of starvation is far less common (i.e. North America) but people still retain that primal fear towards cannibalism. In that vein, it's a great use of two cardinal sins, greed and gluttony. It's also just a lot of fun to draw lol. I really dig your drawings and I've personally drawn many wendigos in my life, they're a fantastic monster to doodle when you want to experiment with different ideas. Those big antlers, rotting flesh, and uncanny human form are artistically awesome!

  • @KrishnaTej21
    @KrishnaTej21 5 лет назад +182

    A little more about the warrior Anwe who finished off these monsters. Can't find anything on Google.

    • @thebard8048
      @thebard8048 5 лет назад +30

      Same..... in fact I haven't found much of any Native American mythological figures anywhere

    • @pocarisweet8336
      @pocarisweet8336 5 лет назад +62

      Not surprising. He is really good at not being seen. lol the legend lives on

    • @loserinasuit7880
      @loserinasuit7880 5 лет назад +28

      @@thebard8048 You won't find a lot because most of them are oral traditions.

    • @licktin1091
      @licktin1091 5 лет назад +9

      Right? What the fuck happened after? I want more Anwe

    • @Firestar4041
      @Firestar4041 5 лет назад +3

      I would assume Anwe was for the Wendigo story only.
      So maybe a different hero per different story

  • @Anglomachian
    @Anglomachian 5 лет назад +4

    Wendigoes are one of those creatures drawn into modern scary stories where they've developed into something decidedly none-human in their appearance and presence, but still retain a nature based on an exaggerated human concept. In many stories regarding them today they possess the kind of cosmic horror dynamic of being something larger and more intrinsic than the temporary mortality of human beings. Not immortal exactly, but something that can't really be fought or evaded, something as fixed and inescapable as time, death, or gravity. A force or presence that, if we weren't something it wanted or needed, wouldn't pay us any attention in the same way we don't regard bacteria or insects.

  • @cheezemonkeyeater
    @cheezemonkeyeater 5 лет назад +8

    I always thought wendigo psychosis was more like a cultural variation of cabin fever. I mean, these tales are told up north, right? Where the nights are super long in the winter? Not that they actually turn into cannibals, but the cabin fever makes them angry and irritable and they become afraid they might become a wendigo.

  • @olenickel6013
    @olenickel6013 5 лет назад +4

    There are a few aspects of what appear to be actual empirical observation and experience buried in the Wendigo myth. Compare the Wendigo myth to actual cases of cannibalistic serial killers, for instance, and you will often find the same dehumanization of their victims, the same attitude towards eating humans as touched upon by the myth. And the same "living a normal life facade". Furthermore, while Wendigo psychosis may be debunked as a racist myth, cannibalism can be somewhat "addictive" and according to some testimonies the practicing of cannibalism in times of need can lead to the developement of an intense craving for human flesh in those survivors who ate humans.
    The notion of the Wendigo always craving more, never being satisfied no matter how many humans he ate can also be a reflection of the fact that humans aren't really all that nutritious (particular in starvation times, when you would resort to cannibalism in the first place, this may be even more pronounced.) Particularily lean meats like rabbit meat are even unable to sustain you (hence why "rabbit starvation" is a thing) and human meat isn't that far off.
    Finally, there are prion diseases, which those who eat other humans (and particular nervous tissue and the brain) are susceptible to. The monstrous, crazed depiction of the Wendigo may well also contain a kernel of this truth: that cannibalism may give you a degenerative brain disease.

  • @allanlank
    @allanlank 5 лет назад +91

    A myth being misapplied to a psychosis? Oedipus complex, anyone.

    • @twotone3471
      @twotone3471 5 лет назад +19

      Back before we had Psychoanalysts working to discover and name various mental illnesses, Religion did that to greater and lesser amounts of successes. The Wendigo myth is just a way of trying to understand people like the Manson Family, or Jeffery Dahmer, or the Columbine Killers Etc.. We see these things as "Modern" but our ancestors are as human as we are, and suffered from human predators as a result.

    • @gemavaliente7675
      @gemavaliente7675 5 лет назад +5

      Oedipus complex is not a pychosis! And oedipus didnt had oedipus complex in his myth, he took his eyes out when he found out, for gods sake

    • @woohooo7634
      @woohooo7634 4 года назад +2

      @@twotone3471 um, no. Wendigo is a spirit that was used to explain the occasional cannibalism caused by arctic hysteria

    • @alicetries5954
      @alicetries5954 3 года назад +1

      Racism, the excuse for us always. For empire or whatever wypipo nonsense of the day

  • @CanuckBacon
    @CanuckBacon 5 лет назад +1

    @ExtraCredits the wendigo-psychosis you mentioned was not only attributed to indigenous people but was classified an actual mental illness in the early to mid 1900's where people who had "previously consumed human flesh in a survival situation or not." Had developed a craving for human flesh even if there were other food sources available, natives believed it would eventually lead to becoming wendigo (witaago in Mi'kmaq algonquian)

  • @furyking380
    @furyking380 5 лет назад +67

    Can you do a video on Skinwalkers at some point?

    • @o76923
      @o76923 5 лет назад +7

      @Mecha I'm pretty sure +furryking380 is referring to yee naaldlooshii from Navajo myth.

  • @LoopyWolf
    @LoopyWolf 4 года назад +1

    I normally don't like videos that are all face, but I just listened and the content was very good

  • @sharker49
    @sharker49 5 лет назад +3

    Years ago, I was hiking through the Smoky Mountains near Gatlinburg Tennessee. At some point I was separated from my group and for fun I thought it would be fun to make a story about American Tarzan. But at some point this character devolved from this strong caveman to a Gollum s creature and finally something that looked just like a wendigo. When I order the name Wendigo the image of it flashed through my mind and I felt a chill down my spine. Before that trip I've never heard of a wendigo.

  • @MediumDSpeaks
    @MediumDSpeaks 5 лет назад +198

    This video sort of made me hungry... anyone else?

    • @kitchenjail3546
      @kitchenjail3546 5 лет назад +21

      Medium D Speaks I guess you are a Wendigo. *Loads Dragon's Breath shells into 12ga Shotgun*

    • @mannharam2791
      @mannharam2791 5 лет назад +17

      I’m feeling pekish, anyone up for some fingers?

    • @gaydes1012
      @gaydes1012 5 лет назад +7

      come on down to ma crib we can make some clay roasted thigh
      edit: I am out of thigh so maybe I could make blood pies with these hearts I have in my freezer

    • @thespy1807
      @thespy1807 5 лет назад +2

      ...

    • @The_Murder_Party
      @The_Murder_Party 5 лет назад +1

      Medium D Speaks ... I’m not at liberty to discuss that information.

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +85

    Waited for this ! Native americans has some of the *best monsters!* :)

    • @asinineaesthetic9383
      @asinineaesthetic9383 5 лет назад +3

      Facts!

    • @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120
      @lelagrangeeffectphysics4120 5 лет назад

      Can i haz chezzemonster?

    • @juggernaut6544
      @juggernaut6544 5 лет назад +3

      My grandma used to tell me about a shadow monster called the nalusa falaya and how it will eat me now that I’m older I know she just wanted to keep me off the creeks

    • @campersr2298
      @campersr2298 5 лет назад +2

      JAPAN has the best monster,change my mind!

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад

      @@campersr2298 2nd

  • @Ghost3210
    @Ghost3210 5 лет назад +2

    Isolation, harsh conditions and starvation can bring out the worst in people ... the wendigo myth demonstrates this perfectly.
    It also is great on showing that some lines should never be crossed, since you won't be able to get back. If you ate human flesh once, you would most likely do it again if in the same situation.

  • @spencerd6126
    @spencerd6126 5 лет назад +2

    These mythology matters episodes are really interesting. It would be cool if you make them a regular thing with the talking about the culture when you do a region, like lies in extra history

  • @hagglyentertains1443
    @hagglyentertains1443 5 лет назад +1

    This wendigo episode was really interesting to watch. And it seems i have actually found something new really interesting to watch, besides extra history. Thanks you! And cogratz on 2,000,000 subs!

  • @forloveofthepage2361
    @forloveofthepage2361 5 лет назад +3

    Native American Myths can be so unique yet follow all the same paths. Great stuff. Love all the Dune merch.

  • @JediJaras
    @JediJaras 4 года назад +2

    I'm surprised no one has made a video game based on the wendigo myth.

  • @margotrosendorn6371
    @margotrosendorn6371 4 года назад +3

    I thought the wendigo myth was partially based on prion diseases one could contract from eating human flesh, especially nerve tissue. (Sort of like mad cow.)

  • @eyes2c..519
    @eyes2c..519 4 года назад +5

    Being native hearing this growing up this is one of the most terrifying things in our culture lol and it’s all from dark magic

  • @airchompz
    @airchompz 2 года назад +1

    Wow this was a really good companion/sequel video to the Wendigo one.

  • @jameswoodard4304
    @jameswoodard4304 5 лет назад +2

    The "Wendigo Psychosis" concept sounds to me like the settlers taking the native stories at face value (as much as they could anyway). You do have cases of inexplicable depravity occasionally cropping up in harsh frontier conditions. People could seem to turn into "monsters." The natives explain it as people giving in to base desires and becoming mosters, while the settlers took this idea and thought of it as a kind of madness. If this is the case, the latter definition isn't functionally much different than the former. I, however, can completely see 19th and early 20th-century psychoanalysts fitting this concept into the racial and ethnic theories of the day, as well as the early settlers assuming such madness to be more of a problem among the more "primitive" natives. The concept of a psychological break manifesting from extreme conditions in which the individual foregoes their "humanity" and behaves in an inhuman manner, however, is hardly racist in itself and actual seems like a fairly reasonable hypothesis.

  • @enzarecchia6411
    @enzarecchia6411 5 лет назад +1

    Now we need a video about the skinwalker and the ravenmocker

  • @Templarkommando
    @Templarkommando 5 лет назад +2

    James,
    I'm loving the series here - especially as it relates to Native American Myth. I'm not a game developer, but I'm something of a student of history, and I have on occasion seen these sorts of things incorporated into games and literature as part of the narrative. I'd personally argue that this sort of thing is present in Life is Strange, where there are certain Native American animistic spirits that are kind of hinted at as being responsible for the phenomena that are present in the game - these things are used (in part) to oppose colonizers and exploiter-type figures.
    This all belongs in a genre of literature that is frequently called "Magic Realism" and is somewhat related to the TV show Twin Peaks and plenty of other aspects that are present in various other media.
    Keep up the great work!

  • @Biochemguy
    @Biochemguy 5 лет назад +1

    I had been thinking of using the Wendigo in a D&D campaign I was going to run. The myths episode solidified that with this as a creature with a great origin, sinister appearance, etc. You guys definitely need to make more of these!

  • @DragonLovingGirl6
    @DragonLovingGirl6 5 лет назад +1

    I love this. The conversation of how people shaped the myth, and how the myth shaped them.

  • @zuke857
    @zuke857 5 лет назад +1

    Next you should do the tales of the odyssey

  • @josephstalin2000
    @josephstalin2000 5 лет назад +6

    Love the Arrakis picture in the background!

  • @halbaloney4593
    @halbaloney4593 Год назад +1

    The reinterpretation of the wendigo as Western expansionism is revisionist, racist bunk. This wasn't the first time tribes were displaced by other tribes, nor that they went hungry, nor that they were faced with a more powerful and competitive tribe. Most mythologies develop with urbanization and cultural expansion, but the earliest-stage myths tend to be: 1) Where the world came from, and 2) What lurks in the dark and eats children. That's why this story becomes more common as literacy spreads.

  • @tomaspadilla209
    @tomaspadilla209 5 лет назад +19

    Very much looking forward to Gilgamesh!

  • @peppyboi9710
    @peppyboi9710 5 лет назад

    The wendigo on the last thumbnail but the one on this one is terrifying

  • @NolanSchuster4
    @NolanSchuster4 4 года назад +1

    The wendigo is absolutely terrifying. Almost didn’t want to watch just cause the thumbnail is so disturbing

  • @meat2023
    @meat2023 5 лет назад +1

    I still want to know where people got the idea that wendigos have horns. I keep trying to find sources but there's none

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 5 лет назад +38

    Korean mythology?

    • @The_Murder_Party
      @The_Murder_Party 5 лет назад +4

      Kim Jong-un only Southern Korea’s mythology!

    • @MagentaDystopia
      @MagentaDystopia 5 лет назад +5

      The myth of kim jong un held a handstand for 5 seconds day

    • @Treviisolion
      @Treviisolion 5 лет назад +10

      The Murder Party Vote Khorne I highly doubt you’ll find any difference between North and South Korean mythology as they’ve only been separated for seventy years, so unless the North Koreans have been busy creating tons of new myths to scare their kids, you won’t see much of a difference.

    • @The_Murder_Party
      @The_Murder_Party 5 лет назад

      Trevyn Case aye, I ken mate! But, eh... That's the fun.

    • @The_Murder_Party
      @The_Murder_Party 5 лет назад +1

      *point.

  • @twotone3471
    @twotone3471 5 лет назад +1

    Modern Serial killers have much in common with Wendigo possessed people. Perfectly normal 90% of the time, you would never know when passing a monster like that on the street.

  • @secondheaven9545
    @secondheaven9545 5 лет назад

    These things are so interesting and terrifying they grow a portion based on the person they eat so the body keeps starving and are still gluttons

  • @crystalqueen3601
    @crystalqueen3601 5 лет назад

    Fun fact: The first year of jamestown (the first colonial town) they weren't prepared for the winter and didn't bring enough supplies. so they started killing and eating each other.

  • @gothicmom5232
    @gothicmom5232 5 лет назад +4

    I am Lakotah and I say send the wendago to DC!! Great video kep up the great job👍👍

  • @BrazenBard
    @BrazenBard 5 лет назад

    "Wendigo Psychosis only affects certain members of the indigenous population"... Yeah, there was that Alferd Packer guy, though... certainly a case to be made for him to be counted as a Wendigo. :P

  • @kellik6680
    @kellik6680 9 месяцев назад

    I am not American Indian. Was raised my people who lived off the land and faced many hardships in the deep woods. I was raised with wendigo stories but was mostly used to scare us into not entering into the woods too far as you could get lost forever. Aka kidnapped by the wendigo and killed.

  • @Fostermoving54
    @Fostermoving54 5 лет назад

    Plz make Extra history a weekly or monthly show

  • @CitanulsPumpkin
    @CitanulsPumpkin 5 лет назад +8

    Looking forward to any Dresden Files fans in the patreon voting for a video on the Skinwalker.

  • @KingindaNorf
    @KingindaNorf 3 года назад

    Oh man this would be a fun Witcher like game, going around the americas as a warrior killing the evil creatures and ghosts of different tribes and civilizations

  • @klatie256
    @klatie256 3 года назад

    I think of the Donner party when I think of the wendigo myth. Hearts turned to ice indeed...

  • @TheCreepypro
    @TheCreepypro 5 лет назад +6

    really interesting how the two people groups interpreted the same myth

  • @thevioletskull8158
    @thevioletskull8158 5 лет назад +1

    James look like a rockstar!

  • @jiiiyyyaann1210
    @jiiiyyyaann1210 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks hippie!

  • @matttowns8175
    @matttowns8175 5 лет назад +2

    Can you do some Aussie monsters?

  • @moodybooze1
    @moodybooze1 5 лет назад

    I was in Northern Manitoba for a few years. The Cree up there call it the Weetago. Even in modern times they are afraid of it. It apparently stays outside of communities and watches for an opportunity to get someone.

  • @isabellamathew9960
    @isabellamathew9960 4 года назад +2

    I found the windigo interesting because there tale look at human morality.

  • @miguelcaramel6598
    @miguelcaramel6598 5 лет назад

    So I work at a summer camp in the Shawnee national park, Camp Ondessonk, it’s a camp that pays homage to Native American culture and brings faith into it. We have a story named the Brebuff walker, simply put it’s a story about how some counselors saw a pale white figure staring at them in the middle of the night that was extremely fast, it’s a rather recent story as well. I didn’t know anything about wendigos until I told the story to one of my friends and said that wendigos match the description of what I said. Idk I jus thought that was kinda cool and wanted to share.

  • @PainCausingSamurai
    @PainCausingSamurai 5 лет назад +2

    The wendigo has always been one of my favorite movie monsters, but also one of the most realistic in my mind. Its basically just what happens to people once they've been pushed too far beyond societal taboo. A lot of our identity is tied up in our relationships within society. Its difficult to rebuild that sense of belonging once it breaks through trauma or extreme isolation.

  • @Duhluzr21
    @Duhluzr21 5 лет назад +1

    Why is John Wick talking to us about wendigos?

  • @elijahbachrach6579
    @elijahbachrach6579 5 лет назад +1

    Since wendigo psychosis is apparently fake, I hope you will eventually make a video on the real motives for cannibalism within groups where the taboo was not practiced by necessity.

  • @kacpermaciejewski61
    @kacpermaciejewski61 5 лет назад

    I’ve got an idea for a cool Extra Mythology episode!
    You could cover the myth about Lech, Czech and Rus (I wrote it in Polish). It’s slavic and a mythical explanation of where the Polish, Czech and Russian people came from. It would be good, since we haven’t had much of slavic mythology here yet. I think that not many people know them. There is also a legend of King Popiel who was eaten in his tower by mice, which I think of as an interesting topic as well.
    Hope I gave you a good idea!

    • @kacpermaciejewski61
      @kacpermaciejewski61 5 лет назад

      Ps.
      I‚m really happy you’re doing the epic of Gilgamesh next. I loved reading it!

  • @thomasfuller4776
    @thomasfuller4776 5 лет назад

    Can't wait for other monster episodes

  • @ottovonbasedmark
    @ottovonbasedmark 5 лет назад +5

    Could you make an Extra Mythology series about the worst and most disturbing monsters there are?
    Humans

    • @nobodynew1621
      @nobodynew1621 5 лет назад

      Tayebz Tayebz :3 humans are top of the food chain nothing can kill it not even a all the myths can kill it

  • @ShrekaBoy
    @ShrekaBoy 2 года назад

    This is Cool keep going🎉

  • @toothemaxx4027
    @toothemaxx4027 5 лет назад

    I distinctly remember reading about stories of European settler who suffered wendigo psychosis and killed their families

  • @fishmonkey9218
    @fishmonkey9218 5 лет назад

    This channel is so underappreciated, keep it up!

  • @nintenster
    @nintenster 5 лет назад +1

    Next week hype! Cant wait to hear the tale of clay bae and his golden bro

  • @GigawingsVideo
    @GigawingsVideo 5 лет назад +1

    How about the Kuru disease that happened to cannibals caused by eating human brain? That probably part of Wendigo mythos.

    • @GigawingsVideo
      @GigawingsVideo 5 лет назад

      @@zhg4485 The disease happened when someone ate human brain. So it's not a regional based virus.

    • @GigawingsVideo
      @GigawingsVideo 5 лет назад

      @@zhg4485 Well we don't know they eat the brain or not. It's not like they wrote detailed version of how cannibal processed their food.

  • @danielhorvath9563
    @danielhorvath9563 5 лет назад

    your videos are cool

  • @jedimasterpickle3
    @jedimasterpickle3 5 лет назад

    The Epic of Gilgamesh is next? Should be interesting to see what parts of the tale inspired the character in Fate/Stay Night.

  • @chaleyedwards
    @chaleyedwards 5 лет назад +5

    Have to ask if that is a sleep no more mask! Love your show, keep up the awesome content.

  • @jonathansimpson8419
    @jonathansimpson8419 5 лет назад

    Nice Dune collection.

  • @liam606
    @liam606 5 лет назад +1

    -James and crew
    I don't know what inspired you guys to start such an amazing spread of knowledge. But wow. I'm am eternally grateful and amazed. I was just in your game design section going through a few videos. When I heard something many years old about
    you being forced to be silent due to a nondisclosure agreement. I decieded I would attempt to get your atention by going to your most recent video. I was just going to post the comment and leave ( a few moments ago I didn't care) but I deceided not to be rude and watch your video..... wow
    just... WOW
    A few moments ago I had a bad taste in my mouth about mythology. Now?! I want to know more and I'm going to watch more.
    You've taken stories that nobody hears in extra history and made them heard ( I'm excited to know more about the potato famine.
    You've made game designers ready to fill the world with ethical non-skinner boxy games.
    You changed my dad's mind about video games. Now he lets me play them!
    You've made learning fun
    You've made me want to learn more
    You've made knowledge matter, learning matter, history matter, mythology matter, games matter.
    The time you've dedicated to your many many different series is like Christmas every day.
    The stories of game addiction and just wow
    I really could talk all day about everything I've learned
    But this is already way too long.
    So instead I'll just say...
    From the bottom of my heart thank you.
    You've given me the gift of personal freedom and wisdom. I know more and I'm a more avid learner.
    These gifts are invaluable and I will treasure them always.
    p.s. I almost forgot I was curious about some industry examples of story in games.
    While this started as my main goal I got lost in the amazing history of the wedigo or rather its story and how it was used by both the native populations and the settlers who made America.
    but If it's not too much trouble, people and I seemed really interested if your Nondisclosure agreement still stands on the multiplayer story info. Thanks either way. Have a nice day :)
    ​@

  • @frazyfry2
    @frazyfry2 5 лет назад

    Yay part 2

  • @shannonlove4328
    @shannonlove4328 5 лет назад

    It wasn't originally wendigo psychosis but wendigo hysteria. Hysteria in the early 1800s was all the rage and any extreme behavior could be labled a hysteria. This is the time when the concept of mass hysteria evolved. Hysteria would return to Galen's definition until the 1860s. Psychosis did not become a term until after 1880, long after the eastern American-Indians and First Nations were long settled. Since the last major conflict in the Great Lakes region occurred with Black hawk war in the 1820s, I doubt either concept played much of role.

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +10

    *Deer Women next?!* :^)

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +3

      @bryan diaz varela More like all-female race like nymphs, harpies, the furies, some-yokai, lamia...etc.

    • @thedoruk6324
      @thedoruk6324 5 лет назад +1

      @bryan diaz varela They *are* more akin to nature female creatures

  • @diavolo5662
    @diavolo5662 5 лет назад

    Yes I have been waiting

  • @joshuanaumowicz5115
    @joshuanaumowicz5115 5 лет назад +5

    Could you delve into the Slavic myths at all? I would love to learn more about how the Slavs came to be and how Slavic culture was rooted in its mythology

  • @Mohandas.Gandhi
    @Mohandas.Gandhi 5 лет назад

    Do one on the tikoloshe

  • @collinpace6522
    @collinpace6522 5 лет назад +8

    Christians call that demonic possession.

    • @captainskippy4560
      @captainskippy4560 5 лет назад +1

      @bryan diaz varela not all Christians do or believe that and those who did that to you are simply ignorant.

    • @captainskippy4560
      @captainskippy4560 5 лет назад

      @bryan diaz varela maybe but in today's world I shouldn't be surprised.

    • @redlobsterhobo4972
      @redlobsterhobo4972 5 лет назад

      default dance: ba ba bah baah ba bum bap bah ba bab bada bapapa bada bah bah ba bah

  • @memmermiller
    @memmermiller 5 лет назад

    Whoa, this was even cooler than the mythology episode itself. James is getting so good at this!

  • @BlaqueValue
    @BlaqueValue 4 года назад +1

    I see that you're a fan of Dune. Good. Good.

  • @SavageCommentaryOriginal
    @SavageCommentaryOriginal 5 лет назад

    When you block a shot top-down it makes the subject look diminutive. Button one button up, that's why they're there, and put the camera at eye-level. Otherwise, cool (y)

  • @shadoww4818
    @shadoww4818 5 лет назад

    Now This is the kind of analysis I was hoping for when you first announced this series

  • @xavier84623
    @xavier84623 4 года назад

    I thought the wendigo was native peoples way to process when people actually got very hungry and were forced to canabalize.

  • @AndrewMakesPuns
    @AndrewMakesPuns 5 лет назад

    Congrats on 2million!

  • @lobomuffin1775
    @lobomuffin1775 5 лет назад

    Do Scandinavian myths please

  • @AradanEnvinyatar
    @AradanEnvinyatar 5 лет назад

    Yay new vid!

  • @princesskaylafaulkner
    @princesskaylafaulkner 5 лет назад

    Great video! I love learning about how myths and legends had an impact on society. Can't wait for the Epic of Gilgamesh.

  • @redstatesaint
    @redstatesaint 5 лет назад

    This is what RUclips is for. Thanks.

  • @shawnheatherly
    @shawnheatherly 5 лет назад

    Ooh, Gilgamesh is next? Fun.