Archive for August, 2006

Ghost Story: Jane Doherty Investigates … New Ghost Hunter DVD

Posted in BOO! Interview, BOO! Ghost Story, BOO! Haunting, General BOO! on August 30th, 2006  (Current Mood: happy)

Red Line Studios films “Jane Doherty Investigates“:
Former Mark Burnett employee and crew member of the hit show “The Apprentice” Matthew J. Pellowski has teamed up with local east coast psychic phenom sensation Jane Doherty to produce a series of paranormal DVDs based on her investigations. Pellowski a central New Jersey native, along with his business partner and Co-Producer, Anastasia Konstantinou of Red Line Studios, an independent production company, first met Jane through a mutual friend several years ago in New Jersey.

Their first DVD of the series which is titled “Jane Doherty Investigates” follows lead psychic investigator Jane Doherty to one of the most haunted areas in the United States located in North West New Jersey and just a stone’s throw away from the big apple. In the hour feature, Jane brings four everyday people with her to act as participants in two very emotional and outer worldly seances conducted in a haunted wood and at the foot of a haunted lake.

This haunted region which lies on the border of NJ and PA is known around the globe by cult paranormal investigators and enthusiasts as “Ghost Lake” “Murderers Mountain” and “Shades of Death Road.” With endless tales of wandering spirits, deadly environmental conditions, and legends of ghosts that are more then happy to approach the curious minded travelers that happen onto this site, Pellowski knew he had found the perfect backdrop for his first paranormal DVD. From cast members to crew, many people went into those woods with a lot of preconceived notions, speculations and doubts, and came out very different. Order your copy of Jane Doherty Investigates here!

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Rosslyn Ghost Sighting Spooks Festival Actors

Posted in BOO! Interview, General BOO! on August 29th, 2006  (Current Mood: enthralled)

Actors rehearsing at Midlothian’s Rosslyn Chapel for a Festival play claim to have spotted two ghosts in the famous building.

A cast member reported seeing a “fairy-like” figure in the grounds of the Chapel, while another said they spotted a person inside the building itself.

The actors are preparing to perform A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which is being produced by the Roslin-based Nonsense Room Productions.

Producer Simon Beattie, who also works as a tour guide at the Chapel and appeared as an extra in Tom Hanks’ blockbuster film The Da Vinci Code, said strange sightings were not unusual at Rosslyn Chapel.

“Last year we were rehearsing for a Fringe show, and when I was locking up I heard a child’s voice in the crypt and so I shouted down that I was locking up,” he said.

“When I went down there however, there was no-one there.

“We’ve no idea who the ghosts might be but it certainly seems that they are budding thespians and they have certainly livened up our rehearsals.”

Ghost World Selects Gettysburg for Conference

Posted in General BOO! on August 28th, 2006

By Meg Bernhardt , The Evening Sun

Gettysburg will be the site of the nation’s largest ghost conference next year, the event’s organizers announced this week.

“It’s a dream destination for a lot of ghost hunters,” said Jeff Belanger, a partner of Ghost World LLC.

The newly formed company is organizing the Ghost World 2007 conference at the Wyndham Hotel and Conference Center at Gateway Gettysburg from July 20 to 22. A paranormal radio show based in Toronto – ‘X’ Zone Radio – will also be broadcasting live from the conference.

There are many more reported sightings of ghosts in Gettysburg than in other cities that have only one or two reported paranormal hot spots, Belanger said.

He expects between 300 and 500 people will come to the event, which is intended to bring together people interested in the paranormal and standardize the procedures they use to document and research ghost sightings.

Previously, Belanger said, there were two different ghost conferences held by the Maryland Paranormal Society and the New Jersey Ghost Hunters Society. Those two groups and www.ghostvillage.com have joined to create the Ghost World Conference.

“It’s a growing field,” Belanger said. “It’s similar to amateur astronomy where people have normal 9 to 5 jobs and then at night they go out and make observations with their telescopes. We want to be like that so we have people documenting these phenomena in a certain way.”

Some of the leading names in the field of supernatural research, including Charles J. Adams III, Rosemary Ellen Guiley, L’Aura Hladik, Mark Nesbitt, Troy Taylor, Kelly Weaver, Vince Wilson and John Zaffic, will be on hand.

Belanger said the conference will attract ghost hunters, psychics, people who’ve witnessed ghosts and people who are trying to apply science to the paranormal.

They’ll host workshops and lectures, but there will also be excursions into town for ghost hunters to test out their techniques. They’ll likely come armed with cameras, recorders, thermometers, infrared equipment and devices that measure electromagnetic fields.

Ghost World hopes to unite theology and science, two fields that are often opposing.

“The idea is, if this phenomena is real, it must effect the environment in some way,” Belanger said.

There have been millions of ghost sightings around the world, Belanger said, which has caused many ghost-researching groups to pop up around the nation. He also said supernatural tourism is starting to take off everywhere.

He believes the story of ghosts is very important, especially to those who’ve seen a ghost.

“When someone has this experience, it’s life-changing,” Belanger said. “Because for that person, that big question of ‘Is there life after death?’ is answered.”

The Deadline 8-25-2006 Show

Posted in General BOO! on August 25th, 2006

8-25-2006 Show

Original post by The Deadline and software by Elliott Back

Psychic Readers Predict The Future - You Create Destiny

Posted in BOO! Interview, General BOO! on August 24th, 2006  (Current Mood: happy)

By: Jane Doherty

Has a psychic ever told you something incredibly amazing about your future that is hard to imagine as true? Or warned you, perhaps frightened you about the future by reading an awful outcome to a situation? Did you know whether to believe the prediction or not? Sooner or later most of us who use the services of a psychic reader are likely to encounter this type of experience even if you have never been to a psychic or think you will ever go to one.

More and more, people are seeking answers for their problems through the venue of the paranormal. There are unexplainable experiences reported every day, as well as, insurmountable problems challenging our coping skills in this rapidly changing world. Therefore, there is a good chance that one of these situations may eventually drive you to seek the services of a psychic, whether you think you would or not. Should you believe a psychic’s fateful predictions? If so, can the future be changed?

People tend to think the future is predetermined. Therefore, it can not be changed. That statement couldn’t be any further from the truth. Psychics don’t predict the future. Instead, they predict the probability of the future. Psychics read the future based on the current path you are on at the moment of the reading. If you make a decision that takes you off that path, more than likely the predicted future will no longer be accurate.

What really is the future? There is no set time that we can actually label and claim as the future. Think about what happens to time when you read a page in a book. Before you read the book the first page is the future. While you are reading it, the page can be described as the present. Once you have finished reading it, the page now represents the past. The future isn’t a constant, because it is fluid and always moving.

Why go to a psychic if the future isn’t engraved in stone? Think of a prediction as a mechanism that can provide a meaningful insight or some self-knowledge not consciously apparent to you. For example, a positive prediction can be a motivating force or something that offers you hope. On the other hand, a negative prediction can offer a chance for you to grow emotionally and spiritually. It can be a warning for you to thwart a foreseeable problem by taking a different course of action.

When you go to a psychic, remember to keep the predictions in perspective. Your thoughts and actions today can actually create the destiny you must then meet in the future. The next time a psychic predicts a car accident for your future, take some action. You can watch your speed, drive defensively and be alert as a way to avoid your “so-called” fate. Remember: You are more in control of your destiny than you think.

Article Source: http://article-repository.com/article/psychic-readers-predict-the-future-you-create-destiny-16-1.html

About the Author: Renowned psychic Jane Doherty is the author of “Awakening the Mystic Gift” and co-stars on the Learning Channel’s Dead Tenants TV show. Jane has been named “One of the Top Twenty Psychics” by Dr. Hans Holzer. Jane Doherty is the host of “Psychic Perspective”, which airs on her website at www.Janedoherty.com and Jane teaches “Psychic Development” at www.Herbal-College.com.

Boo! Casting: Haunted House Video

Posted in BOO! Haunting, General BOO! on August 23rd, 2006

Haunted House Video This House is Haunted!

The Deadline 8-18-2006 Show

Posted in General BOO! on August 18th, 2006

8-18-2006 Show

Original post by The Deadline and software by Elliott Back

Haunted house trade to lose the nation’s ‘No. 1′ attraction

Posted in General BOO! on August 13th, 2006  (Current Mood: mischievous)

A frightful farewell: The 2006 Halloween season will be the last for the Rocky Point facility in South Salt Lake.

Like a network executive pulling the plug on a sitcom at the height of its ratings, Cydney Neil will close Rocky Point Haunted House after its 2006 season.

Neil said Monday the event has reached the end of its natural life, and she couldn’t possibly sell “her baby” to another fright master. She plans to go out with a bang and then give her progeny a proper burial.

The 26th and final season will feature a “Pirates of the Scaribbean” attraction, which replaces a “Lord of the Rings” set, in addition to its mainstay sections. They include a slasher wax museum, Freddy Krueger’s neighborhood and a haunted mansion. The season begins Sept. 1 and closes Halloween night, but Rocky Point will reopen in May for “Scream Break,” a two-week run of the haunted house, and a big funeral.

Neil has run the haunted house, which her brother started in Pleasant View as a neighborhood spook alley, for 20 years. Now at 3400 S. State St. in South Salt Lake, Rocky Point has become one of the most recognized commercial haunts in the nation, with about 55,000 people visiting each year.

“It’s not the No. 5 or the No. 10 event. It’s the No. 1 event. People in this industry know that,” said Scott Broad, editor of Haunted Media DVD Magazine, a trade publication based in California. “We’re going to miss the event . . . at the same time, [Neil] is going out at the top of her game.”

The house features Hollywood-style sets, costumes and makeup and has become a training ground for wannabe scare artists. For the past 10 years, it has been run as a Boys and Girls Club program. About 300 youth participate each year as actors, and the event’s profits, typically $25,000 to $50,000, are donated to the nonprofit group.

“We have benefited greatly from our partnership with Rocky Point Haunted House,” said LeAnn Saldivar, director of the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Salt Lake. “In a way, it seems fitting that if Cydney is done doing this, time is up for the haunted house. It was more than a haunted house, it was a youth development program.”

Greg Andersen, co-owner of Solar Shock Pictures in Ogden, has been involved with Rocky Point for 17 years, first as a teenage actor and later as a sound engineer for the event.

His wife and daughter work in the house’s concession stand during the Halloween season.

“To have [Rocky Point] end is almost like losing a family member,” Andersen said. “I’m sad to hear that, but at the same time I can understand, too. [Neil] has been doing this for 20 years.”

Neil works 18-hour days, seven days a week, six months of the year to keep Rocky Point going. In explaining her decision to close, she said only that her time at the haunted house has been a “calling” that is complete. She senses a new opportunity ahead, but isn’t sure what it is.

“The purpose of Rocky Point Haunted House was to create a place that could nurture a lot of kids who otherwise would not have had a place like it. They’re prepared to go out and create their own valuable lives, hopefully in ways that can benefit others,” Neil said. “I’m just going to cherish every single second I have left here.”

http://www.sltrib.com/business/ci_4034957

The Deadline 8-11-2006 Show

Posted in General BOO! on August 11th, 2006

8-11-2006 Show

Original post by The Deadline and software by Elliott Back

The Deadline 8-4-2006 Show

Posted in General BOO! on August 4th, 2006

8-4-2006 Show

Original post by The Deadline and software by Elliott Back