For decades, drivers on a Chicago highway have been picking up the same young woman in a white dress — and dropping her off at the same cemetery where she’s been buried since the 1930s.
For decades, drivers on a Chicago highway have been picking up the same young woman in a white dress — and dropping her off at the same cemetery where she’s been buried since the 1930s.
A nurse keeps receiving calm, precise medical orders during the worst ER emergencies — but when she looks up, no one is there.
This morning — a ghost solves her own murder, a 17-ton cheese can’t fit through a door, and a man’s eyeglasses fog over so fast he walks into a lamppost.
Headless riders, vengeful skinwalkers, demon dogs guarding abandoned mines — the frontier may be gone, but its ghosts are still out there.
Charles Dickens didn’t invent the Christmas ghost story — he was continuing a tradition that stretched back centuries. These true tales of holiday hauntings show why the longest nights of winter were once considered the most dangerous.
From a ghost who returned a missing child only to reveal he’d been dead for years, to a bride whose body was found hidden in a chest fifty years after she vanished, these true Christmas hauntings prove the holidays have a dark side.
When ten-year-old Stephen was grabbed by invisible hands and dragged toward the foot of his bed, his parents dismissed it as a nightmare—but years later, his mother revealed a terrifying secret she’d been hiding since she was ten herself.
Long before Dickens penned A Christmas Carol, our ancestors gathered around midwinter fires to tell tales of spirits and monsters lurking in the darkness. Tonight, we explore why Christmas and ghost stories have been intertwined for thousands of years — then share true accounts that prove the tradition is very much alive.
From Abraham Lincoln wandering the White House halls to a Reddit user’s cat being dragged backward by an invisible hand, we’re looking at haunted house claims both famous and personal—and asking whether any of them hold up to scrutiny.
When Patrick Cross bought a Flying V guitar that survived a fatal bar fire in Michigan, he had no idea the instrument harbored an evil entity that would cost him his job, his health, and nearly his sanity.
Clarita Villanueva was orphaned before she was teenager. With no one to care for her, Clarita began living on the streets of Manila, dancing for money and prostituting herself to degenerates. But things were about to get even worse for the poor girl… demonically worse.
When Disney bought the Queen Mary in 1988 and tried to manufacture a ghost story for room B-340 to enhance their haunted tour, they didn’t realize the luxury liner-turned-troopship already harbored decades of documented paranormal encounters—from the spirit of 18-year-old John Pedder crushed in Door 13 to the giggling ghost of little Jackie in the abandoned swimming pool.
Scientists, journalists, and priests have all witnessed the impossible: objects disappearing from locked containers and reappearing through solid walls.
Pearl Curran claimed to receive millions of words from a 17th-century spirit named Patience Worth, producing acclaimed novels that baffled literary critics and scientists alike.
Two respected academics spent a decade trying to prove they accidentally stepped into the last days of Marie Antoinette.
From Victorian orphanages where murdered children still cry out in the night to modern homes where toddlers chat with grandparents who died before they were born, the phenomenon persists across every culture: children see ghosts, and ghost children seek the living.
From toddlers casually chatting with deceased relatives to the ghostly cries of orphaned children still echoing through abandoned buildings, tonight’s stories explore the unsettling connection between children and the paranormal through real accounts from terrified parents, witnesses, and those who were once haunted children themselves.