During my recuperation process, I spent more time watching television than usual. Remember when they used to call the T.V. the idiot box? Now we have tablets/computers to turn our minds into jelly. But I digress.
I've been watching a bunch of oddball shows during my recuperation. One (and not just during recuperation) is The Mystery of Oak Island. Two brothers own property on an island in Canada where it's purported the Knights Templar buried treasure. The brothers have been treasure hunting there for a bunch of years, and they keep finding clues that motivate them to keep looking. One of the brothers is looking for the treasure, and the other is looking for the "hunt." Curiosity.Here's the thing. There's another show on the same channel where they were diving shipwrecks in the Bermuda Triangle. That show captivated me. Every week you knew you would have a payoff. Maybe it isn't the one they hoped it would be (I found this show while I was writing Horned Owl Hollow, which covers the Cyclops, a naval ship lost at sea in the Bermuda Triangle), but they always find something. On Oak Island, they always find something, usually with archeological significance, but there isn't a payoff. I'm intrigued by archeology, so from that standpoint the show is interesting, but the treasure hunt ... well, I don't have enough patience to be a treasure hunter. Feels a lot like throwing good money after bad in a highly competitive industry where you might get beaten out of a payoff.
Another point that hits me sideways with this show is that they're turning this island into Swiss cheese in their search for treasure - a treasure they don't even know is there. They've found lots of artefacts that indicate settlers were there, which is historically significant, and they've found traces of elements that keep them going. They bring up manmade boards from a hundred feet below the surface, which indicates there are tunnels and chambers. They've taken field trips to visit other Templar caches, and those caches are usually in existing caves under the ground. Which brings me to ...
The Lagina brothers are using heavy equipment to dig hundreds of feet below the earth. How did settlers who arrived in the 1600s and later dig that far below the surface, including building a series of boobytraps in the form of flood tunnels to keep people out? I do realize the Templars built some of their chambers, but they built them in existing infrastructure. To start from scratch seems counterintuitive, including sabotaging their efforts with flood tunnels.
Okay, that's the skeptic in me. The Laginas have found some very interesting things, and they've uncovered some fascinating history and theories to support their finds. As someone who is interested in Templar lore (I studied it extensively while writing Touched By The Sun), it's interesting to see the evidence of Templars on their island and artefacts dating back to the first Europeans to land in the "New World." Clearly, I'm not the only person watching this show because the network is still financing their treasure hunt.
Now that I'm recovered, I'll likely have less T.V. time, but I'm always looking for interesting shows to watch. What's on your watch list these days?
*We've* been watching Tracker, Reacher, Elspeth, Matlock, Will Trent and more of that ilk. *I've* been watching cooking shows. Nothing related to the reality of the outside world.
ReplyDeleteI’ve watched Tracker and Matlock and Elsbeth, too. The cooki g shows I like are on hiatus.
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