In 1982, a group in Baltimore sent invitations to a party two years in advance — and also, theoretically, millions of years into the future.
In 1982, a group in Baltimore sent invitations to a party two years in advance — and also, theoretically, millions of years into the future.
“Louis, Louis, Louis” by Dark Weirdness is inspired by the true story of the 1873 Smuttynose Island murders, when a desperate drifter named Louis Wagner rowed ten miles through the night to a lonely island off the New Hampshire coast where three Norwegian women were living alone. By morning two were dead, one had escaped by clinging to the rocks in the freezing darkness, and the only words she could speak to rescuers were the name of her attacker — “Louis… Louis… Louis.” The song retells this chilling piece of New England history as a haunting dark tune about isolation, desperation, and a crime that still echoes in the fog around Smuttynose Island.
On a 27-acre rock six miles off the New Hampshire coast, two Norwegian women were killed with an ax before dawn in 1873 — and the island reportedly hasn’t been quiet since.
In 1903, two hunters tracking moose through the frozen Yukon wilderness stumbled upon a massive furrow in the mud — thirty feet long, flanked by clawed footprints the size of a man — and followed the trail straight to something that shouldn’t exist. What a French traveler, a gold prospector, and a Jesuit priest would witness clambering out of a remote Arctic ravine defies every assumption about what still roams the Canadian wild.
From a colonial massacre site that refuses to stay quiet to a comedian who may still be entertaining guests in his Hollywood bungalow — March 5th is stranger than it should be. | The Morning Weird Darkness
Deep within Navajo culture lives a creature that was once human — a witch who murdered their own family to gain the power to shapeshift, possess the living, and control the dead.
Four Mounties ambushed in a barn, a bank robber who escaped an escape-proof jail whose ghost never did, a murdered exorcist, a barracks room sealed shut for fifty years, and meat falling from a clear Kentucky sky — just another March 3rd.
A faceless figure in a wide-brimmed hat. Standing in the corner. Watching. “He’s The Hat Man” explores the shadow seen during sleep paralysis across cultures and centuries — from Old Norse lore to modern radio legends. Is it a demon… or the brain’s ancient threat alarm misfiring in the dark? Dark Weirdness turns neuroscience and nightmare folklore into a chilling anthem about the presence that never quite leaves the room.
A mysterious figure in a wide-brimmed hat and trench coat has been appearing in bedrooms across the world for centuries — and scientists are uncovering disturbing patterns in who sees him and why.
Across Britain, in ancient cellars, along crumbling walls, and beneath modern city streets, the Roman legions never truly left — and people are still seeing them march.
A Nordic alien connected to U.S. defense personnel delivered a chilling warning to author Whitley Strieber that he’s never forgotten: never go to war with the Grays — because they’ll never let you win, and they’ll never let you stop fighting.
A woman’s body was pulled from the icy depths of Lake Crescent after three years — her flesh transformed into soap, her face unrecognizable, and her identity a mystery that would unravel one of the most sensational murder trials in Washington state history.
In April 1977, three teenagers in Dover, Massachusetts each encountered something small, hairless, and watching — and none of them ever agreed to stop talking about it.
For centuries and across nearly every culture on earth, enormous black dogs with glowing red eyes have appeared to the living as omens of death — and the people who dismissed the legend rarely lived long enough to regret it.
For centuries and across nearly every culture on earth, enormous black dogs with glowing red eyes have appeared to the living as omens of death — and the people who dismissed the legend rarely lived long enough to regret it.
For nearly seven decades, a clawed, flame-spewing figure in a tight white suit and a black cloak terrorized the streets of England — and no one was ever convicted of being him.
Imagine driving down a dark highway and spotting a towering, hairy figure with a peg leg—truckers call it the Road Troll, and its sightings are as eerie as they are baffling!
In late 2023, stones began falling on homes across Thailand, India, Zimbabwe, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Eswatini – flying through windows with impossible accuracy, striking family members, evading every form of surveillance deployed to catch whoever was responsible. The phenomena continued through 2024 and into 2025. The earliest recorded case dates to 530 CE, which means whatever this is, it’s been happening for a very long time.
The devil went for a walk in 1855 and left his footprints across an entire county, a copilot screamed the most chilling words in aviation history, sixty fireballs flew in formation across the sky, a serial killer only struck on one date, and the world’s largest ship was sunk by the people trying to save it. | IT HAPPENED ON FEBRUARY 9TH | The Morning Weird Darkness #MWD