Two respected academics spent a decade trying to prove they accidentally stepped into the last days of Marie Antoinette.
Two respected academics spent a decade trying to prove they accidentally stepped into the last days of Marie Antoinette.
Your computer screen flickers red, a simple question appears, and within days, the walls of your room are painted with your own blood – at least, that’s what thousands of internet users claim happened to them after encountering the most notorious cursed website in digital history.
In 1906, a teenage orphan at a Catholic mission claimed Satan himself had taken control of her body – and hundreds of people watched what happened next.
From Victorian parlors to modern laboratories, the talking board has left a trail of unexplained phenomena, tragic deaths, and scientific mysteries that challenge everything we think we know about consciousness itself.
Set in the Dark Ages, a young Jewish woman — recently widowed on her wedding night — receives guidance from her deceased husband’s ghost. He tells her she is destined to become Queen of the Khazars, but there’s a test she must overcome first. | #RetroRadio EP0486
From a grandmother who survived an entire weekend in morgue refrigeration to a man who woke up during his own autopsy, these shocking true stories of people mistakenly declared dead will make you question everything you thought you knew about the line between life and death.
A comedian just bought America’s most notorious collection of cursed objects — and paranormal experts say people are going to die.
In the sweltering summer of 1895, two boys lived with their mother’s decomposing corpse for ten days while playing cricket and going to the seaside — a Victorian crime that shocked even the most hardened of London’s East End residents.
The Andreasson Affair — a decades-long investigation into one woman’s otherworldly encounters, prophetic visions, and a case that blurred the line between abduction, faith, and something far more unsettling.
Mercy Brown was just 19 when her neighbors cut out her heart, burned it, and fed the ashes to her brother — all in the name of stopping a vampire.
When Reverend William Huffman was called to pray over crash victims in the Missouri woods one night in 1941, he never expected to find himself standing over small, hairless beings with large heads and hieroglyphic-covered wreckage—a secret his family would keep hidden for over 40 years.
A 38-year-old man’s delusion that his elderly neighbor was an extraterrestrial being ended in a seven-shot execution at dawn — and a community left grappling with how fear of the unknown can transform into lethal violence.
Paul Hynek grew up in a house where flying saucer ornaments decorated the Christmas tree and dinner guests included alien abductees who spoke matter-of-factly about their experiences aboard spacecraft.
A possessed doll’s violent obsession with her owner has escalated from attacking men to targeting his girlfriend in increasingly personal ways — and she’s not the only doll with a deadly reputation.
A country music nightclub in Kentucky holds dark secrets beneath its dance floor — secrets that began with a brutal decapitation in 1896 and continue to manifest in violent supernatural encounters today.
When Portuguese colonizers brought their nightmares to Brazil, something changed in the telling — and the creature that emerged from those whispered stories still gallops through moonlit villages, dragging hell itself behind on a leash of spectral hounds.
Three young men dead by their own hands. A priest whose hair turned white overnight. Bloodstains that won’t wash away after more than 180 years. Room 2 at Maynooth’s Rhetoric House holds secrets that the Catholic Church tried desperately to bury.
In 1929, a self-proclaimed prophet and his entire family were found brutally murdered in their Detroit home, their heads severed and arranged in a ritualistic display that police could never explain.
For more than a century, the field of spirit photography has snapped iridescent spheres of light—igniting bitter debate between believers, who say the images are proof of an afterlife, and skeptics, who say there’s nothing more than a dust particle caught in the flash of a camera. Could they both be right?