Archive for July, 2006

Big Brother 7 Haunted House ?

Posted in BOO! Haunting on July 29th, 2006  (Current Mood: curious)

ACCORDING to the official website, Imogen has had a bit of a fright, the poor thing. In the darkness of the bedroom at around three in the morning it was obvious she was having a bad dream, making noises and writhing around.

Mikey being the dutiful boy who-is-a-friend felt it was only right to wake her up.

Awaking with a start after his prodding, she was convinced she’d seen a ghost of all things.

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Glyn ahd woken too and was on hand to calm her with a few reassuring Welsh words of wisdom. But, after chatting in the kitchen, the pair decided to head for the Diary Room to report the apparition.

“Listen,” said Glyn to Big Brother, “Imogen has just seen a ghost in the bedroom.”

“Yeah,” echoed Imogen. “Like 10 minutes ago -seriously. It just walked past really, really quickly. I think I’m going mental.”

“Anyway,” said Glyn. “What we want you to do is look at that clip, just to make sure, ‘cos if Imogen’s seen it then you must’ve seen it on the cameras.”

Big Brother enquired what the ghost looked like.

“I didn’t see if it was a boy or a girl,” laughed Imogen. “It just went past really quick, like split-second. I did see a figure.”

Big Brother gently suggested that it could have been Mikey.

“No,” protested Imogen. “Mikey was beside me.” And then hastily added: “In the next bed, know what I mean?”

Big Brother obviously wanting to get to the bottom of it, asked if the ghost had said anything.

“Don’t take the p***,” said Imogen playfully, before adding. “Just tell me there’s no ghosts in the House.”

“Big Brother cannot discuss other housemates,” was the ominous response.

The Deadline 7-28-2006 Show

Posted in General BOO! on July 28th, 2006

7-28-2006 Show

Original post by The Deadline and software by Elliott Back

Haunted Houses, Dead Tenants and a Big Tummy Ache

Posted in BOO! Interview on July 17th, 2006

By: Bobbie Grennier, freelance SEO writer

World renown psychic and author Jane Doherty has found herself in a very prominent position on her new reality TV show called “Dead Tenants”, which is hosted by The Learning Channel. I say it’s a prominent position because of the phenomena that separates Jane’s psychic abilities from those of other psychics.

Whenever there are ghosts around Jane, she has an amazing physical reaction to them and handling it is no small feat either. The reaction Jane has is that her stomach area actually enlarges by as much as six inches around within seconds. And, Jane tells us that it’s extremely painful to her when this happens. If you watch Jane while this stomach expansion is happening, you’re going to hear her moaning and see her wincing … and trust me, it’s not dramatics … the woman’s in definite pain.

With regards to her expanding tummy, Jane says, “It feels like a contraction when a woman is in labor, but it doesn’t ever release me until the spirit leaves. Instead, the stomach expands as if I was nine months pregnant.” Jane actually describes it as very intense muscle cramps, where her stomach is physically gripped by the ghost, and if you watch, the belly will actually lift up. Jane continues, “Often I can tell by the grip whether it is a female, male or child spirit. It first happened to me in 1990, when I investigated my first haunted house with a researcher.”

The belly area is associated with the third charka located at the solar plexus, which is the area that dominates the gifts of telepathy, clairvoyance, clairsentience and an awareness of astral entities. It’s interesting that historically the belly area is associated with body’s core of energy sometimes called the “Chi Point” or the “Hara”, both of which translate literally to mean belly. It’s also interesting that historically, psychics felt their gift came from their gut … called “reading with the pit of the stomach” … where today, most psychics describe their gift coming from their third eye charka, between the eyes and centered in the middle of the forehead. With Jane Doherty, it seems to make good sense that the physical phenomena of Jane Doherty’s expanded stomach would be directly related to her psychic gift.

Jane’s devout belief in the power of God comes through in all that she does because she feels strongly that her psychic abilities are a God-given talent. Using her psychic abilities allows Jane to bring comfort to people whose hearts are hurting, and hope to those who need it most. And, that’s her personal goal on Dead Tenants whose families are in desperate need of help and knowledge to deal with their home’s ghosts.

The Dead Tenants TV show follows the journeys of the Preternatural Research Society (PRS) — a team of paranormal investigators — through the attics, basements, living rooms and back yards of some of the most haunted houses in the country. Coming to the aid of families experiencing very unwanted ghosts and unexplainable activity in their homes, Jane Doherty and the PRS team do their best to assist the families. The Dead Tenants show weaves the historical, scientific and psychic into a rich tapestry to help the viewer better understand the hauntings.

“There was never a question of how I would use my gift,” Jane says firmly. “I have taken every possible opportunity to help others.” Jane Doherty is the real deal, on TV and in print. Her words are like the words of her book - so compelling, you won’t be able to put it down.

Jane Doherty’s book, Awakening the Mystic Gift: The Surprising Truth About What It Means to Be Psychic, chronicles Jane’s own psychic awakening and what it truly means to be psychic. For those seeking more information on what it means to be psychic, this book is a very compelling read.

Jane Doherty is a gifted psychic and medium of international acclaim. Many refer to her as the “real deal” because of her accuracy and sincere caring nature. In fact, Hans Holzer, known best for his many books on ghosts and paranormal activities, has named Jane Doherty as “one of the top twenty psychics in the world.” A born teacher, Jane feels part of her own purpose in life is to teach others to open to their own psychic abilities, and for this reason Jane has brought her psychic teachings to an online format through the Herbal-College.com website. Here Jane has established a book club for her readers to explore more about their own psychic abilities with her personally, and Jane will also teach her multi-leveled Psychic Development courses at the Herbal-College.com website.

Article Source: http://www.seo-writing.com/free-reprint-articles

About the Author: Bobbie Grennier is a freelance writer and teaches herbalism at Herbal-College.com. She also is the webmaster for HauntedCams.com and offers FREE reprint articles.

Psychic helps find man’s belongings

Posted in General BOO! on July 15th, 2006  (Current Mood: enthralled)

A psychic from Palmerston North has helped searchers find the belongings of a missing elderly man on the banks of the Manawatu River.

James Alexander, 73, disappeared from his rest home in Palmerston North a week ago, prompting an extensive police search.

Search co-ordinator Bill Nicholson says an email from the woman on Friday had enough detail about the missing man for her to be taken seriously.

He says she directed police to a part of a river which they had not considered searching.

A police dive team plans to search the river on Monday near where the belongings were found.

Haunting’ has roots in real ghost story

Posted in BOO! Ghost Story on July 2nd, 2006  (Current Mood: dorky)

By JOHN GEROME

ADAMS, Tenn. — She had a bucket of pig’s blood dumped over her head in “Carrie,” was locked away in an insane asylum in “The Ring Two” and watched helplessly as a ghost dragged her daughter by her hair in the new movie “An American Haunting.”

No wonder Sissy Spacek is a little squeamish about horror movies.

“I think young people get a particular thrill out of scaring themselves to death. I personally don’t get it,” Spacek, 56, said during a recent interview. “But maybe it’s because I’m older, and there are so many frightening things in the world. I’d rather have some escape.”

“An American Haunting” is the latest in a box office frenzy of horror movies – and maybe the most unusual.

It’s based on a well-documented haunting of a family of settlers along Tennessee’s Red River in the early 19th century. According to legend, a spirit haunted the Bell family between 1817 and 1821, taking particular delight in tormenting John Bell and daughter Betsy.

The entity identified itself as the “witch” of Kate Batts, a neighbor with whom John Bell had experienced bad business dealings.

The events began as strange noises and then escalated: Bed covers were pulled off and pillows tossed to the floor; family members were kicked and slapped and their hair pulled; the spirit sang hymns and quoted scripture; and John Bell was poisoned and killed.

Many claimed to have witnessed the occurrences, and in 1819 Gen. Andrew Jackson – four years after he defeated the British at the Battle of New Orleans and 10 years before his presidency – paid a visit to the farm. After some weird goings-on, Old Hickory reportedly said, “I’d rather fight the entire British Army than to deal with the Bell Witch.”

Today the little town of Adams, where much of the Bell farm remains intact, keeps the story alive with plays and tours and an exhibit at the local museum. The town’s welcome sign, about 30 miles northwest of Nashville, shows a witch in a black cape and pointed hat riding on a broom stick.

Whether they truly believe the legend or just enjoy the attention, many residents say they’re convinced it’s true.

“Most everybody around here has at least one Bell Witch story,” says John Mantooth, who works at the Adams Antique Mall, a collection of antiques booths, tea room and cafeteria inside an old school building named for the Bell family.

As if on cue, a woman shopping within earshot comes over and begins sharing something that happened to her on a warm day about 40 years ago while she and her young children were reading about the legend on a marker near where the Bell family is buried.

“As we stood there the coldest, iciest wind came up,” says Melba Smith of Edina, Minn., who grew up in nearby Guthrie, Ky. “It was very strange. I still get goose bumps whenever I tell the story.”

Dozens of books and articles – some well over 100 years old – have been written about the Bell Witch and other movies have been made about it, but none for widespread release like “An American Haunting,” which also stars Donald Sutherland as John Bell and Rachel Hurd-Wood as Betsy Bell.

The movie comes as horror films are doing frighteningly good business. Since last fall, at least nine spooky films — including the ultraviolent “Hostel” and “Saw II,” “The Fog,” “When a Stranger Calls,” “Silent Hill” and the spoof “Scary Movie 4″ — have topped the box office.

Spacek, who hasn’t done much in the genre since playing a troubled teenager with telekinetic powers in the 1976 screamer “Carrie,” said one of the things that drew her to the role of John Bell’s wife, Lucy, was the air of authenticity.

“The fact that it is a legend and has been so documented intrigued me, particularly with someone who became president,” she said. “But even if it wasn’t a documented story, even if all these books hadn’t been written about it, I thought it could stand on its own as a film.”

Director Courtney Solomon spent several days in Tennessee researching the story and wanted to film the movie in Adams, but despite the rolling tobacco fields and wooded hollows, couldn’t find a place where utility poles didn’t mar the scenes. He ended up shooting in Romania, where another period piece set in the South, “Cold Mountain,” was made a few years ago.

Solomon creates an eerie landscape of dark woods and prowling wolves and stays close to the legend. But he bookends the old story with a contemporary one to imply that the Bell curse continues.

If you’re contemplating a trip to Adams to investigate for yourself, consider this: While researching his film, Solomon was struck by how many people there think something is still awry around the old Bell homestead. Locals claim you can’t take a picture there without it coming out foggy.

“At least 15 people told me stories about things that happened to them or to a close family member or friend,” he said. “It’s amazing that it has lasted this long.”

The Associated Press: http://www.thebrunswicknews.com/front/286053381706543.php