The Crescent Hotel
Welcome to the start of our haunted hotel miniseries. We begin this week with the infamous Crescent Hotel (and Spa), the unfortunate site of mysterious deaths, frequent hauntings, and deadly experiments.
Welcome to the start of our haunted hotel miniseries. We begin this week with the infamous Crescent Hotel (and Spa), the unfortunate site of mysterious deaths, frequent hauntings, and deadly experiments.
Gremlins - they’re apparently not just in movies! They’re in your airplanes and your…newsrooms? Molly and Abigail discuss the bizarre tales of gremlin encounters. Are they chaotic? Do they want justice from assholes? WHERE DO THEY LIVE?
Molly and Abigail dive into the world of mirror legends. From religious rituals to personal accounts of unsettling reflections, mirrors hold meaning and horrors.
Molly and Abigail discuss the most famous premonitions throughout history as well as more personal tales of brushes with fate. This is some real Final Destination shit.
Molly and Abigail travel to early modern Europe to explore the myth of the werewolf. Where did this shapeshifter originate? Is it real or just superstition? Are you team Edward or Team Jacob?
This week, Molly tells Abigail all about haunted trains around the world. From Lincoln’s ghost train to a suspiciously deadly metro train, this episode has…TRAINS. And they’re really, really creepy.
This week Molly and Abigail discuss a strange forest phenomenon: mysterious staircases that lead nowhere.
This week Molly and Abigail tell tales of reincarnation with evidence that is too astounding to be merely a coincidence. From a Hollywood agent to Anne Frank herself, some spirits seem to pass on memories to their next life.
Molly and Abigail discuss more urban legends! You won’t want to miss this informative episode, full of helpful advice on how to get a bandaged man out of your truck bed (by Tokyo drifting) and how to make sure a boo hag stays out of your bed! PLUS we have our very first listener story and, folks, it is CHILLING.
Molly and Abigail review some of America’s most notorious urban legends and find that some truths are more fascinating than the legends themselves.
Abigail and Molly are back from Thanksgiving break with another round of celebrity ghost stories. From the coal miner’s daughter, Loretta Lynn, to comedy icon Joan Rivers, these stories will chill you.
Abigail and Molly discuss the haunting of Regis Philbin, Fairuza Balk, Linda Blair, and more.
In 1966, the small town of Point Pleasant, West Virginia was plagued by a mysterious cryptid known as the Mothman. Many people reported strange encounters with the creature, but none found any answers as to what exactly the creature was or what it wanted. At the same time, UFOs and Men in Black began making themselves known to the same locals. Was the Mothman a mutation, a natural cryptid, an interdimensional being, or a tulpa?
Spoilers ahead as Molly and Abigail discuss Mike Flanagan’s latest project, The Haunting of Bly Manor. A spiritual successor to The Haunting of Hill House, this series has us spooked. But we have some questions…
Molly and Abigail interview a very special guest: their dad, Bob. The man, the myth, the legend.
Abigail and special guest Collin discuss their favorite thing: movies. Specifically must-watch Halloween movies. From 1977 to 2017, these movies span decades, themes, genres, budgets, and horrors.
A horrifying cryptid and an insatiable cannibal in one, the Native American legend of the Wendigo has both legends and historically documented stories.
On this very special episode, Molly and Abigail talk about the most haunted watering holes while, well, drunk.
The story of a family terrorized by paranormal entities in Amityville, New York fascinated America in the 1970s and set the mold for every haunted house story that came after it. Was it real or a hoax? Were the evil spirits manifested by the brutal crime committed there, or perhaps by a man dabbling in the occult?
The decades and decades of romantic vampire stories have a not-so-romantic origin. Apparently real-life vampires don’t sparkle, they die of tuberculosis. Since science needed time to catch up to the disease, the people of 1800s New England turned to folklore for a cure.