Skip to playerSkip to main content
Documentary, River Monsters S06E04 Man-Eating Monster

#RiverMonsters #Documentary

Category

🐳
Animals
Transcript
00:01I'm Jeremy Wade, freshwater detective, explorer and angler.
00:08I've been fishing the world for over three decades,
00:11but it's the impenetrable Amazon that keeps calling me back.
00:16Now I'm returning to South America on the mission of a lifetime.
00:21To spend an entire year going further, deeper and more remote than I've ever been before.
00:28In search of the Amazon's ultimate river monsters.
00:35All along these remote rivers, I've heard stories of a fish so huge it can swallow a man whole.
00:42Locals call it the Lao Lao.
00:45There was a human body inside.
00:49I've spent 20 years trying to hunt down a single colossal specimen.
00:55But so far, this giant has eluded me.
00:59It's left me wondering if there are any still out there.
01:03My mission to find out will push me to the very limit.
01:07But this time, I'm not coming back until I catch one.
01:13In 1913, President Roosevelt ventured deep into the Brazilian Amazon on a dangerous expedition to map a previously unexplored tributary known as the River of Doubt.
01:40He kept a meticulous journal chronicling life in the remote jungle.
01:47One entry stands out.
01:52Two men were fishing on an Amazon tributary.
01:58When, without warning, a vast fish leapt from the water and attacked them.
02:08With wild slashes of their machetes, they fought the animal off.
02:18Until the river ran red with blood.
02:23And the beast succumbed.
02:27Described as a giant over nine feet long, the culprit could only be one of two legendary South American heavyweights.
02:46I've wrangled huge arapaima many times, but the other fish stands alone.
02:55Looking more like a shark than a typical catfish, the Piraiba can grow to monstrous sizes, with the anatomy and some say the attitude to tackle human prey.
03:07Also called the Lao Lao, I've hunted this fish for 20 years.
03:20But from Brazil to Colombia to Peru, the trail has gone cold.
03:26A Lao Lao of man-eating proportions remains the one glaring absence on my monster hunting resume.
03:33Do they really still exist?
03:39But now, there's news of a vicious attack by a large fish on a young boy on Guyana's Esikiba River.
03:48It's just the lead I've been waiting for.
03:52I immediately make my way to Guyana.
03:56Lying just above the equator at the top of South America, Guyana is a wild, little-known place.
04:03Almost the entire country is jungle.
04:08I've been here once before, but Guyana's river system is so extensive I've barely scratched the surface.
04:15It's the perfect place for a giant to hide.
04:22My journey starts in the capital, Georgetown.
04:29I'm heading to the fish market to see what the locals know about the attack.
04:34On route, I re-examine Roosevelt's journal.
04:38President Roosevelt was constantly warned about this fish.
04:41The local people feared it a great deal, and he's pretty detailed in his description.
04:45He says this is a greyish-white fish over nine feet long, with the usual disproportionately large head and gaping mouth.
04:53And one chilling detail, it occasionally makes prey of man.
05:02It's a claim that I still hear throughout South America, over a hundred years on.
05:08But the evidence I need, a man-sized laulau, has so far proven impossible for me to catch.
05:17All I want is some little leaves, something to follow up.
05:22Guyana is a melting pot of cultures and ethnicities, but as a former British colony, English is widely spoken.
05:29I pick my way through the market, taking every opportunity to quiz people about this elusive giant.
05:43You ever have laulau come here?
05:44Yes.
05:45He heard of the fish.
05:46OK.
05:47And this is a long time ago?
05:49Uh, late last year.
05:51So he's saying he saw a fish last year that was getting on for the size of this table, from the end here up to pretty much where the woman is standing.
06:01Very good news.
06:02They're still around, big ones.
06:04But I won't allow myself to get too excited just yet.
06:09I want to know if anyone else has seen one of these giants.
06:12Do you ever see them in here?
06:15Not on the coast, but inland.
06:18Yeah.
06:19And they can get really huge.
06:22But the big ones are rare.
06:24Are people afraid of them at all?
06:26Yeah, they're dangerous.
06:27Because they're catfish, they have a big mouth so they're just like...
06:32A really big one, like a ten or twelve footer, can swallow a human.
06:40Have you heard any stories of people being attacked, being swallowed?
06:43Yes.
06:44Do you hear about people getting attacked?
06:49Yes.
06:51Recently, two boys were fishing in a canoe, fish with bow and arrow.
06:58And something hit the boat.
07:01And one of them was thrown overboard.
07:05Grabbed him on his leg.
07:07They had to rush the boy for medical attention.
07:12He went back into his village probably about a week ago.
07:15So it's possible that if I'm in that area or if I ask around, I might even be able to meet the boys or something?
07:22Yes.
07:24Well, I wasn't, to be honest, expecting an awful lot from that.
07:27There weren't any la la on view.
07:28People were saying, yes, it's big, it's dangerous, it can swallow you.
07:32But then this one story which was incredibly similar to the one in the Roosevelt Journal.
07:37And in this case, the boy was physically grabbed.
07:41Something which sounds totally outlandish, like it's a complete one in a million event.
07:46But it turns out that maybe it isn't.
07:48But maybe it isn't.
07:51It's this apparent malicious intent that sets the la la apart.
07:56People say this is a fish that actively targets human prey.
08:02To discover exactly what happened to the young boy, I find a pilot willing to fly me into the heart of Guyana's rainforest.
08:10To the boy's village of Apatere.
08:18Down below me is an expanse of rainforest, so impenetrable that it hid one of the world's biggest waterfalls, Taitia Falls, from outsiders until just 150 years ago.
08:36If true giants are still to be found anywhere, it's deep in the unspoilt tropical water below me.
08:49But where exactly?
08:52As we approach the small Amerindian outpost of Apatere, the jungle becomes blanketed by dense cloud.
08:59I have to say, I'm slightly bothered by all this cloud. It's pretty well unbroken, quite thick.
09:06It could mean it's raining down there. That could mean higher water levels.
09:11And that is going to make the fishing harder.
09:13I learned that the young boy will arrive with his father later that day.
09:30I'm itching to get a line in the water, so I head off with a fisherman named Neville to find some bait.
09:36He leads me through the forest to a particular tree, but it's what falls to the ground from it that we're looking for.
09:45We use the seeds for catching a bait. We cut it and then you find a worm inside.
09:53A worm?
09:54The insect. Just lay inside and then form up a worm.
09:58So it's feeding on the nuts?
09:59They're feeding on the nuts, all the time feeding on the nuts.
10:01So do you want to open this one?
10:03Ah, there's a hole.
10:06Ah, yeah, yeah.
10:08That's big.
10:10Oh, it's trying to bite me actually.
10:12So it's really sharp because they actually cut through this hard nut.
10:17It's just a sack of amino acids and goodness.
10:22From a fish's point of view, they're going to love that.
10:26One thing this really underlines is the importance of local knowledge, how to actually get started.
10:31If I was having to work this out for myself, I'd just be wasting time.
10:35It's perfect bait to entice smaller fish.
10:39Ah, and the fish are coming already.
10:40Yeah.
10:41That is quite incredible.
10:42You could see the fat forming a sort of slick on the surface.
10:44And these fish just came from nowhere.
10:47Ah, first time.
10:48Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
10:50Look at that.
10:51We're on the way.
10:52This is moving up the food chain.
10:54So from palm grub to miniature fish, to slightly bigger fish, to top predator.
11:03It's just the essentials.
11:04It's just a hook, a little bit of wire just to protect against piranha teeth, a bit of weight, and the line.
11:09I'm going to whirl that round my head, lob it out.
11:13That's the one.
11:14And then you're feeling with your fingers on the line, which is what I like to do with the rod, actually.
11:19You get a lot of information if there is anything moving down there.
11:27Now, it's a waiting game.
11:29Oh.
11:34There's something, there's something, there's something, there's something.
11:36Fish.
11:38Something bigger than I bargained for has taken my bait.
11:42I'm going to go in the water if it's tipped over like that.
11:44I'm exploring a secret stretch of Guyana's jungle waterways on the trail of a giant fish that's said to swallow men whole.
12:05A really big one to swallow a human.
12:10While hand lining for bait with my guide, Neville.
12:14Fish.
12:15I've hooked into something much bigger than I expected.
12:25That is just a beautiful, beautiful fish.
12:28More to the point, it's very encouraging.
12:31Incredible to think that a couple of hours ago, a palm nut on the floor in the forest has turned into this.
12:39Known locally as a basher, it has a huge mouth for its size.
12:44But they don't reach anywhere near the size of a man-eater.
12:48I don't want to speak too soon, but if things keep on this trajectory, then maybe I will get that monster that I came here for.
12:54With bait sorted for the following day, we head back to the village, where the young boy I heard about at the market is due to meet me.
13:05His name is Nenon.
13:06Still shaken from his ordeal, he's accompanied by his father, Nigel.
13:15Nigel, can you tell me exactly what happened to Nenon in the water?
13:18He was playing in the water with his friends.
13:24And something grabs him on his leg.
13:30One of his friends who was with him shot the creature.
13:33So he was holding on to a canoe while this thing was trying to pull him into the water.
13:40Yeah, he was holding a titanic on it.
13:42His friends with a bow and arrow shot the animal.
13:45Nenon shows me the scars on his legs.
13:58That's something with some big teeth, isn't it?
14:02I mean, that doesn't look...
14:03I heard it was a fish, but this...
14:04What was this?
14:05It was a black caiman.
14:06A big black caiman.
14:07The fact that the perpetrator wasn't a fish is a setback for my search.
14:25My best chance now of finding a lao lao is to head even deeper into the rainforest.
14:31Following the winding river and setting up camp on its banks.
14:37Stringing up my hammock on the edge of the village, I rest up for the trip.
14:43We leave at first light.
14:54I don't know how long this rain has been going.
14:55I woke up to the sound of it.
15:01It's not heavy as yet, but it's pretty constant.
15:04It's not good news.
15:12At dawn, Neville helps me assemble a crew from the village and gather supplies for the treacherous journey ahead.
15:18I'm dependent on the locals to get me to the remotest parts of this river.
15:34As I feared, there's been unseasonably heavy rain and high water disperses the fish, making them much harder to find and catch.
15:45Encouragingly though, we pass absolutely no other boats or habitation for the entire journey.
15:52Perhaps here, lao lao really are free to grow, unhindered.
16:00We set camp with help from another man, Josie.
16:02See you, Jeremy.
16:03On this trip more than ever, my gear is critical.
16:10A giant lao lao has eluded me for so long that I can't take any chances.
16:14I've got my best equipment from all over the world.
16:18High-tech braided line from Germany, hooks from Japan and a custom-made rod from the US.
16:25The next step is to locate the fish.
16:30The thing about big fish is they get big by minimising their energy output.
16:37And where you've got a dip, a fish can lie there out of the current without expending any energy.
16:42And also, any food that comes down is going to tumble into that space, like a conveyor belt bringing food to them.
16:51A very good rule when you're fishing, think like a fish.
16:53Where would you be if you were a fish?
16:55But lao lao are known to migrate with the annual floods.
17:01With this unexpected high water, are they still here?
17:0633 foot off here.
17:08Okay, just keep coming.
17:10I use a sonar device to help me decipher the structure of the riverbed
17:14and locate deep pools in which to place my bait.
17:17There's a definite hole here.
17:25I fish on well into the evening.
17:38But with absolutely no interest in my bait.
17:44It's absolutely nothing.
17:45It's pretty depressing.
17:47After dinner, my fishing crew and I share stories.
17:56Surely, if huge lao lao are to be found in these waters, these lifelong fishermen will have had encounters.
18:04What's the biggest lao lao that you've seen?
18:07Well, the biggest lao lao I've ever seen was about 210 or 15 pounds.
18:11That is the biggest fish I've ever seen in my life.
18:13The size of the mouth of that, would you be able to put your head in?
18:16Would you be able to put your shoulders in?
18:18A human head could fit in very, very easy.
18:21It can do a lot of damage.
18:23People here are very afraid.
18:26I've read something in an old book about people believing that this fish can actually swallow people.
18:34Have you heard any stories like that at all?
18:37Yeah, I've heard stories from an old guy who was telling me a story about a fisherman.
18:42Somehow, caught the big fish and carried it to the market.
18:48They're showing off with this big fish.
18:50Look at this, lao lao!
18:53The fish was looking very big and like the belly was full that it had something in its belly.
18:59And when they opened it, there was a human body inside.
19:13All mashed up and crushed.
19:17All rotten.
19:18So an entire person inside.
19:28Certainly they know it's a human.
19:30It could be a fisherman or somebody just beating and being caught by lao lao.
19:38And so these fish, they're right here in this river?
19:41Oh yes, they are here.
19:43They are here.
19:44So that's quite a thought.
19:45Fish that size.
19:46Yeah.
19:47Very dangerous.
19:50So be careful.
19:51Fish that size.
19:55When it comes to river monsters, it's an incredibly elite few that have the potential to devour a person.
20:07But can a monster lao lao really be capable of swallowing a person whole?
20:12Fish that size.
20:17Never have I wanted to catch one more.
20:21But as I try to drift off, I hear something moving outside my tent.
20:27And realise I'm not alone.
20:30In Amerindian legend, when lao lao grow old, what unusual feature are they said to develop?
20:52The answer is thick black hair.
21:01I'm deep in the South American jungles of Guyana.
21:05Weeks into an exhausting mission to catch an alleged man-eater.
21:10And where I've suddenly been woken by noises in camp.
21:21That was a noise.
21:23Sort of crashing around noise.
21:25It's quiet now, but I think something was moving around out there.
21:30As the sun rises, whatever it was has long gone.
21:40But I'm intrigued and concerned enough that I decide to rig camera traps at the edge of camp.
21:51I place three at different angles, looking out over the water's edge.
22:01Leaving the traps positioned and primed, Neville and I set out onto the water and find another deep pool with the sonar.
22:1052, 52.
22:12Neville shares with me the result of his early morning bait fishing.
22:16We have four species of fish here, silver fish, yakutu, piranha and darei.
22:21Go with half a fish to start?
22:23This here.
22:24Let's do that.
22:26I'm here to catch an elusive giant, but I'm not getting far.
22:30There's very little doing, I mean there's nothing doing, there's nothing really to keep the hope alive at the moment.
22:39To make things worse, tropical storms are striking every few days.
22:44Shedding inches of water in just hours.
22:47If this carries on, then the water's going to go up, it's going to start colouring up.
22:56So I'm really hoping that this is just a passing shower, but no way of telling at the moment.
23:03Even in ideal conditions, Lao Lao are notoriously difficult to catch.
23:11High water not only makes the river harder to read, it gives fish much more room to hide.
23:17The uneventful hours roll into days.
23:22Almost every waking hour, I have a line in the water.
23:26After 20 years of searching for this fish, I have to keep on battling and maintaining my focus.
23:34I might just get one take, and if I mess things up, then that's it.
23:39There'll come a moment where it could go either way.
23:47The elation of catching a fish that I've been trying to catch for so long,
23:51versus the total despair if it's gone.
23:57When that opportunity comes, I just want things to go the right way.
24:07I decide to change tactics.
24:10I take up position on land to stake out the pools.
24:14Is it possible to pull the anchor and just go into the rock, just the quiet water?
24:19If we go closer to the rocks, we're slightly off the main current,
24:24so the bait should just settle to the side, rather than more in the middle of the current.
24:32I've found an ideal spot at the perfect time of day.
24:36I've done everything I can to maximise my chances.
24:40Do good things really come to those who wait?
24:45Do good things really come to those who wait?
25:10I'm on a remote stretch of river, deep in the forests of Guyana,
25:17continuing a 20-year mission to catch a notorious South American monster.
25:22All through this region, I've heard that the laulau can grow to mind-boggling sizes.
25:28A really big one can swallow a human.
25:32But throughout my whole career, I've never landed one bigger than 70 pounds,
25:37let alone a man-eater.
25:39I'm hoping my fortunes are about to change.
25:42I'm hoping my fortunes are about to change.
25:44Oh, it's off. It's off. It's off.
26:01It's off, whatever it was.
26:07So annoying.
26:08All I can do is get another bait up.
26:11All I can do is get another bait up.
26:22That's another session of no interest, whatsoever, in the bait.
26:30I could be fishing an empty river, pretty much.
26:38But I decide to stick with my new tactic of fishing from land.
26:46Neville takes me to a sandbar that he suspects has some deep water alongside.
26:54I just really like this spot here.
26:56It's just perfect predator ambush territory.
27:00This has to give us a better chance than everywhere else.
27:03I'm going to camp on a sandbar here and actually keep a couple of baits out overnight.
27:07I'm going to sleep next to the rods.
27:11Every day, I've been up at dawn and fishing after dusk.
27:15Now, to maximise my chances, I'm going to keep a line in the water through the night.
27:21If I fall asleep, I might miss a take, so I'll need some high-tech gear to keep me on guard.
27:27I'm pretty well attuned to these things.
27:30Basically, what happens, the line is passing over a roller there.
27:34And if the line moves at all, it actually sends to this receiver here.
27:42And this buzzes.
27:44It also vibrates.
27:46You've got some quite big baits on.
27:48If anything goes, it ought to be something quite interesting.
27:51So it's not just a waiting game.
27:53It's time, time, time, time.
27:54It's time, time, time, time.
27:55What's your name?
27:56Pascal Um, it seems to be good.
27:57I'm sorry.
27:58Yeah.
27:59Yeah.
28:08Oh.
28:21Not really quite sure what time of the morning it is now,
28:24but it's been very, very quiet tonight.
28:27Nothing really doing.
28:29Though until this, apparently they call this a blinker locally.
28:32Pretty as this fish is, I'm after something that could actually swallow this thing easily
28:37and possibly even swallow a person.
28:39The thing I'm after is more predatory, more monstrous than this by a long way.
28:52At daybreak, we head back to camp.
28:55My thoughts turn to the camera traps that I've left near my hammock to investigate the noises that have been
29:03waking me at night.
29:05Oh, good grief.
29:11There's a flash of open mouth and teeth.
29:14That's a caiman.
29:15This is a point of view of having your face bitten by one of these things.
29:19Quite disturbing.
29:21It's got something in its mouth.
29:22Just a few bites, that's it.
29:24It's gone.
29:24Oh.
29:25What's going on there?
29:26There's other eyes in the background.
29:31Oh, gosh.
29:32That's incredible.
29:33No wonder I've been hearing noises.
29:34My hammock is just a little way in that direction.
29:35Right.
29:36OK.
29:37Maybe I shouldn't hang around here too long.
29:38The Black Cayman's intrusion into camp is a sobering reminder of the dangers in this wild place.
29:42I'm glad to make my way back onto the water.
29:43But as more days pass, maintaining my focus is becoming a challenge.
29:49I have to dig deep.
30:14I have to dig deep.
30:21This is a fish I've been on the trail of for 20 years now, since I first came to South America,
30:27trying to work out where the big ones are still to be farmed.
30:34In most places, the trail has gone cold.
30:39This place that I thought was unknown to outsiders.
30:43I might have left too late.
30:45Too late.
30:50Fishing daytime, nighttime, evening, morning.
30:54I'm starting to lose track of time, what day it is.
30:59I'm in this sort of in-between state.
31:02It's not exactly awake.
31:03It's not exactly asleep.
31:05Somewhere halfway between the two, the place gets to you.
31:15I must keep my eyes on the prize.
31:18A man-sized lau-lau.
31:20After resting up into late afternoon, I head back to the rock where I lost the fish just
31:29a few days ago.
31:30The water has definitely dropped.
31:33Ooh, there's something.
31:46There's something.
31:47There's something.
31:48There's something.
31:50Ooh.
31:51Ooh.
31:54Ooh.
31:55dumb.
31:58Ooh.
32:01I've embedded myself deep in Guyana's dense tropical forest
32:13with one simple goal
32:15to catch the fabled man-eating fish they call the laulau
32:20the giant that's eluded me for 20 years
32:24I've got a local guide
32:27the perfect untouched habitat
32:29and specialized equipment from around the globe
32:32but the water conditions have been far from perfect
32:37and my relentless fishing campaign is wearing me down
32:47I cast into a promising spot near camp
32:51oh there's something there's something there's something there's something there's something there's something
32:57all right deceptive amount of line out here
33:05that's a good sign first cast
33:07fish has woken up
33:09all right there's the leader in sight
33:11that's red-tailed catfish
33:14well I'm hoping that's not a just a one-off that's almost like a switch has been thrown
33:22incredible to get a take on the first cast
33:24it's just blowing air
33:34out the gills
33:36and that clicking noise
33:38the squeak is the pectoral fin
33:40it's a small red-tailed catfish
33:42but it's activity there's finally some activity here
33:54not a huge fish
33:56could be quite a good sign
33:59if the perfect size prey have become active
34:02perhaps the laulau isn't far away
34:08the weather is also clearing
34:10and tell-tale tide marks begin to appear on the boulders
34:14as the water recedes the fish should become more concentrated
34:20today I saw a rainbow
34:24and that lifted my spirits
34:30maybe I'm clutching at straws but I'm
34:32possibly feeling a little glimmer
34:34of hope
34:36I awake to the calls of howler monkeys
34:48and for the first time in over a week
34:52set out into a bright clear day
34:56maybe just here
34:58I position a bait in the middle of the pool
35:02then pay the line back to the rock
35:04it's when the fish takes particularly a big fish
35:12it can go to just complete chaos
35:16in a fraction of a second
35:18if you don't do everything right
35:20that's when you can get human error
35:24a lifetime of observing
35:28and refining my skills
35:30has brought me to this place
35:32the trap
35:34the trap
35:36is set
35:38I'm bringing about
35:58150 yards of line here
36:00it's a truly bizarre looking fish
36:06known as a deer waller
36:08it's just so quiet at the moment
36:10I'd actually rather not be catching to be honest
36:12I wanted the bait to sit there until a laula comes along
36:14what it does mean though is I've got to
36:16get the bait back out there again get the boat out
36:18I'm just going to take up slack on here
36:28I think I'll put that down until something decisive happens
36:32that's more serious
36:46this time I have no doubt about what's on my line
36:50that's gone solid
37:02harness
37:04harness around my waist
37:06can I have the light out of my face please I need to
37:10thank you
37:12can I have the light out of my face please I need to
37:14thank you
37:16can I get that away please
37:18Neville
37:20I'm on the trail of a legendary freshwater beast
37:38after a lifetime of dreaming
37:4220 years of searching
37:44that's more serious
37:46and months in the jungle
37:48now I have one on my line
37:52that's a laula
37:54that's a laula
37:56this gear is designed for the heaviest ocean giants
38:06but is it
38:08strong enough
38:10just round the rock
38:14I'm using thick monofilament line for just this reason
38:20but it's being tested to its limit
38:24I can't let that line break
38:28can we get that away please
38:32we need to be careful with this
38:36that's good it's out of the rock whatever it was
38:42but this fight is not over yet
38:48the fish is nowhere near tied yet
38:52we want the rope please
38:58there it is
39:02just be very careful Neville
39:04the fish could kick off
39:06even though it's like this
39:08because we're coming around the waist
39:10it's an unbelievably muscular animal
39:14built for speed and power
39:16what am I trying to do
39:18let's get that hook out first
39:20and there's its signature weapon
39:22that enormous mouth
39:24it's got a bit of a bite
39:38I want to bring it somewhere where the
39:40it can't if it kicks it's not sloping down
39:42I have to work quickly to remove the hook
39:46good
39:48and measure this enormous beast
39:50I don't want it to be out of the water
39:52any longer than absolutely necessary
39:54in inches
39:58and girth in front of the dorsal fin
40:00is 50
40:02I'm having to use scales
40:04designed for lifting concrete blocks
40:06that's okay
40:08lift, lift, lift
40:10258, 256, 257
40:12254.6
40:14I think guys you can put it down
40:16so it's a 250 pound fish
40:22my whole life
40:24I've longed for this moment
40:26ah
40:28only just starting to be able to
40:30think straight
40:32this is wonderful
40:34this is absolutely wonderful
40:36this I'm going to remember
40:38the size of this fish
40:40and just the drama of getting it in
40:42what a beast this is
40:43lift
40:46well
40:47I came here
40:48with a very simple question
40:49I wanted to answer
40:50can these fish
40:52grow big enough
40:53to be potentially dangerous to humans
40:55can they even engulf a small human
40:56and I'd heard stories
40:58President Roosevelt's account
41:00inspired me to look for one
41:01he never actually saw one
41:03but here it is
41:04this moment is actually very short for us
41:06I think it's got to go back in
41:08and we'll let it swim back down
41:10into the depths
41:13I really actually wanted to sit
41:17and just look at it
41:18and look at it
41:19and look at it
41:20but you can't
41:21I think there's every chance
41:22that fish will never be seen
41:23by anybody again
41:24there's bigger ones down there
41:25believe it or not
41:26there are bigger ones down there
41:27but maybe that's big enough for me
41:28for now
41:29if ever something was worth waiting for
41:33it's this
41:35the river monster of a lifetime
41:38and look you
41:51for now
Be the first to comment
Add your comment

Recommended