Archive for the 'BOO! Ghost Story' Category

Dead Tenants on DVD

Posted in BOO! Interview, BOO! Ghost Story, BOO! Haunting, General BOO! on December 2nd, 2006

Dead Tenants DVDs

Dead Tenants:

Episode 101: The Spirit in the Basement

Episode 102: Lost Souls

Episode 103: The Unknown Soldier

Episode 104: The Last Resort

Episode 105: The Night Stalker

Episode 106: The Shelter

Episode 107: The Crowd in the Kitchen

Episode 108: A Rose in the Junkyard

Episode 109: The Horse Farm

Episode 110: The Third Floor

Dead Tenants does not look like it will be returning to TLC’s network line-up. Discovery is airing the episodes in European countries, but pulled the plug on airing it again the USA despite the efforts of the shows fans.

You can now buy the episodes on DVD as listed above.

Halloween Past And Present

Posted in BOO! Ghost Story, BOO! Haunting, General BOO! on October 28th, 2006

Did you ever wonder why and where Halloween began? I myself have often thought, what a fun way for kids to get some candy, and at the same time enjoy being some other thing or person if only for a few hours. Going trick or treating was the highlight of the evening. The real truth of Halloween goes back over 2000 years and was not for fun but to bring back the dead once each year on Oct. 31st.

The Celtic tribes of Ireland thought on the night of Oct 31st the spirit of the dead would be allowed to come back into the world of the living. And being afraid of the spirits, they dressed up in disguise to try and fool the spirits into thinking they were not living things.

Most would wear old clothes and disguise their face with ashes or berry juice, or anything that was available to keep the spirits of the dead away. Over the many years Halloween has changed a great deal but we still use the same reason for dressing up in disguise. To fool the people as to whom we are and, instead of spirits we expect candy in return for not playing a trick on our neighbors.

As far as Halloween costumes go, today we may see lots of Batman costumes, or Little Red Riding Hood costumes, as well as many of the popular TV characters of today. There are even baby costumes/infant costumes, and toddler costumes available that will be sure to bring you many years of joy just looking at the pictures of that first Halloween. There are even dog Halloween costumes available that are always great for a laugh. It is yet to be seen as to what the most popular Halloween costume will be this year, but you can never go wrong with something traditional

Regardless of the beginning or, to what Halloween has evolved into, it still is a great day and night for our kids to enjoy. Once thought of as the only way to enjoy Halloween, trick or treating seems to be on the way out in most areas today. Although this does seem to be what is happening, trick or treating is still done on a limited base in many areas across the country. Many Malls now offer and encourage kids of all ages to come and trick or treat in a safe and enjoyable environment.

Another way to have a safe Halloween is to entertain your little friends and Goblins with a Halloween party at home. It is important to make a list of friends and family members you want to invite. Plan out a list of games, and contests to keep everyone entertained. You will also need several different kinds of treats for all who come to your party. Maybe you could offer a prize for the best costume. Be sure to decorate with many different Halloween decorations, maybe a few really spooky ones which always create a lot of interest when friends arrive. Keep things as simple as possible so all who attend will understand and enjoy your party.

One great game idea for everyone to play at your Halloween party is called “who’s the mummy”. Divide into pairs give each pair a roll of toilet paper. With one child wrapping and the other child being the Mummy, whoever wraps and uses the full roll of paper fastest is the winner, and receives a treat of your choosing. There are many other games, and I’m sure you will be able to come up with others.

As far as trick or treating being a thing of the past, things may not be what you and I remember but our children can still build Halloween memories of their own to someday tell their children.

For great Halloween costume ideas, as well as halloween party planning ideas and more, visit Haunted Cams and halloween.factslink.com

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A SEASON FOR GHOSTS?

Posted in BOO! Interview, BOO! Ghost Story, BOO! Haunting, General BOO! on September 25th, 2006

Think October. What thoughts pop into your mind? If you are like most people, the cool, crisp temperatures that usher in the fall season will often turn your thoughts to the beautiful hues of yellow, orange, and red colored leaves that will soon fall to the ground, jack-o-lanterns, candy corn, and Halloween. If you are, however, a ghost hunter enthusiast, then you will think of autumn as the most popular time for hunting ghosts.

Why do our thoughts turn to ghostly encounters and haunted places in the fall? Could it be the intrigue of the coming Halloween holiday peppered with its usual ghostly tales? Could it be that the veil of energy between the two worlds is the thinnest on Halloween, making it easier for ghosts to interact with the physical world? Or is there some other explanation for the increased interest in ghosts during the autumn months?

Just like the cyclic pattern of nature where there is a definite ebb and flow of energy, so it is the same with haunted encounters. Reports of ghost activity seem to have a pattern to it that coincides with the energy pattern of nature. There are periods of quiet followed by renewed activity just like the decay of leaves and the re-growth of them. Like clockwork the seasons come and go, and the energy the season brings with it also comes and goes with us hardly ever noticing the subtle changes in energy.

Do you feel more energized during a particular season or time of the day? Does the higher humidity and thicker atmospheric energy of summer reduce your sensitivity to perceive the other world? Do the colder temperatures of the winter keep you focused on trying to keep warm rather than noticing ghost activity? So, why can’t there be a pattern to ghost activity based on the ebb and flow of energy that makes it easier or more difficult for a ghost to manifest?

Calls requesting ghost investigations have usually followed a pattern. There have been a greater number of calls in the fall than at any other time of the year, followed next by the spring season. The cool, crisp autumn temperatures are energizing to most which, I believe, increases our sensitivity to subtle energy fields. The increase in activity is not because it’s the Halloween season. There is, however, a cyclic factor often forgotten that could be another possible reason for the increase in activity. Until modern times, the greater periods of focused energy and increased activity centered around the “fall” harvest season and the “spring” planting season. Ghosts relive memories. Therefore, the autumn would be a ripe time for ghost activity because of the emotionally charged memory of this important time of year.

We will never have a definitive answer but it is that exciting time of year again. So, ghost hunters sharpen your intuitive sense, dust off your cams, digital recorders, temperature gauges, and other equipment and head on down to the nearest haunted building. Tis the season for ghosts!

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

Take me home! I’m frightened!

Posted in BOO! Ghost Story, BOO! Haunting, General BOO! on September 10th, 2006

By Chris Pritchard

BATS, like unpaid extras in a horror movie, glide on cue above our heads on their way to hang out in giant fig trees.

Sudden rain increases a ghostly atmosphere as shrouded figures in white plastic ponchos slip through the foggy darkness of Sydney’s historic Rocks precinct.

Operators say ghost tours are increasingly popular with visitors to Australia’s major cities. But while beyond-the-grave encounters aren’t guaranteed, ghost tours are an entertaining way to spend two or three evening hours.

Predictably, Australian tours draw heavily on our convict history, historic pubs and notorious crimes.

The Rocks
AFTER 20 minutes, a 10-year-old boy whispers to his mum: “This isn’t scary at all!” Two hours later he whimpers to his dad: “Take me home! I’m frightened!”

The Rocks Ghost Tours offers a choice of two routes. One features Sydney Harbour Bridge ghosts including the apparition of a construction worker who plunged to his death. Another ghost, with a well-developed sense of mischief, terrified workers in pylon lookouts by switching off lights and trapping them in total darkness.

At appropriate times, blood-curdling sounds are emitted from equipment concealed beneath guides’ clothing. Among these: screams of a woman chased by her knife-wielding husband but whose spirit reputedly lingers, and the pop-pop-pop of gunshots in an old pub slaying.

Norfolk Island
“I SO love a good flogging!” an elderly woman confides as convict-era cruelty is recreated on the Pacific Ocean holiday isle. Night tours take in Kingston’s eerie cemetery.

Chilling tales tell of ghosts of hapless wretches dumped here and of their sadistic jailers. Visits to imposing old buildings are an excuse for more tales of the supernatural.

St Helena Island
SHORT ferry trips from Manly, on Brisbane’s outskirts, terminate at the national park of St Helena Island. Dinner is served on outbound voyages aboard the Cat-O’-Nine-Tails while dessert, coffee and drinks are available on return trips.

Actors and cunning lighting enhance a mood of spooky gloom amid the ruins of a former maximum-security prison and cemetery.

Kapunda, SA
EVENING transfers are organised from Adelaide hotels to Kapunda, 77km away, to tour haunted old buildings and a haunted cemetery.

The ghost of a pregnant schoolgirl is said to sometimes float across the cemetery, and guide Laurie Pearce swears that guests one night heard a steam train race past even though there’s no rail line nearby.

Port Arthur
THIS grim prison, with its colourful convict history, hosts highly popular night-time ghost tours.

Children are accepted if parents judge they aren’t prone to nightmares. Unexplained lights and other phenomena have been captured on film, while garrulous guides spin spine-tingling yarns.

Melbourne
FROM Melbourne’s Haunted Bookshop, tours led by self-styled ghostbuster Drew Sinton go on creepy walks to venues including the Mitre Tavern, haunted by a white-clad woman, and Queen Victoria Market, site of the Victorian state capital’s first cemetery.

Alternatively, Old Melbourne Gaol, where 136 hangings took place (including Ned Kelly’s, in 1880), has candle-lit tours in which participants imagine they are joining hangman Michael Gateley as they make the rounds of bleak cells.

Commentaries unveil the life and crimes of infamous villains and describe harsh prison life in the 1800s. Ghost stories abound. After these tours, there’s a half-hour for wandering through the jail.

Fremantle, WA
FREMANTLE Prison is a highly appropriate setting for nocturnal ghost tours.

Spokesperson Maia Frewer says “tourists write to me about photos taken of friends at the gallows where the heads have mysteriously gone missing or there are mysterious lights and auras in pictures”.

Tours encompass an old cell block, solitary confinement unit, whipping post and gallows with ghostly tales spicing the experience.

Summing up, Sydney guide Colleen Harrison says: “We don’t say you’ll see a ghost most people don’t but they do have fun learning history.”

FACT FILE
Ghost tours: Prices are per adult. Various child, family and group rates are available.

NSW: The Rocks Ghost Tours (1300 731 971), $32.
Norfolk Island: Norfolk Touring Company (0011 67 232 2232), $55.
Queensland: AB Sea Cruises (07 3893 1240, www.sthelenaisland.com.au), $79 (inc. dinner).
South Australia: Paranormal Research Investigation Services and Monitoring (08 8234 3334, www.southaustralia.com), $75 (inc. dinner).
Tasmania: Port Arthur Historic Site (1800 659 101), $17.
Victoria: Haunted Bookshop (03 9670 2585, ), $20; Old Melbourne Gaol (Tickets from Ticketek), $25.
Western Australia: Fremantle Prison (08 9336 9200) $19.50.

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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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

‘Ghost’ helps acquit murder suspect

Posted in BOO! Ghost Story on June 26th, 2006  (Current Mood: weird)

Two letters said to be dictated by a ghost helped acquit a woman of murder in Brazil.

The letters, written by a medium who claimed they were from the victim, were used as evidence in a murder trial in Viamao.

The medium claimed the spirit had revealed that the woman accused of his murder was innocent.

A jury declared Iara Marques Barcelos, 63 not guilty of the killing Ercy da Silva Cardoso.

Mr Cardoso was shot dead in his home in 2003. Mrs Barcelos was accused because she was the victim’s lover and was angry he wanted to leave her.

The defence lawyer told Folha de Sao Paulo: “The letters were a low blow and they were decisive to the verdict.”

A court spokesperson said the letters were accepted as evidence because the prosecution lawyers made no objection. - Ananova.com

An American Haunting

Posted in BOO! Ghost Story on April 13th, 2006

There is only one case in the history of this country where a spirit caused the death of a human being.
An American Haunting

This event became the most documented haunting in American history.

AnAmericanHaunting.com

Find out more…

Three Men and a Ghost

Posted in BOO! Ghost Story on March 26th, 2006  (Current Mood: scared)

In all honesty, I was launching into this story not so much to inform about it, but to simply point out how strongly it is still discussed and dissected, even though it was, at least in my point of view, debunked long ago. But while doing some trivial research out of pure curiosity, some people pointed out how I was missing the bigger picture, missing what truly made this little thing a true oddity.

The movie “Three Men and a Baby” is notorious not because it was directed by Mr. Spock or because Steve Guttenberg wasn’t that bad an actor in it, but because of a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it “ghost” who invited himself on the set. I you have seen the movie, or intend to after this read, you’ll find the appearance during the scene where Jack (Ted Danson) is visited by his mother. Right in the background, in front of the window, a small figure can be seen standing, not too tall, dressed in black and white, just lurking there.

View the photos and read more:
http://www.thehollywoodnews.com/article/26030602.php

The Nightly Ritual

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

Honey! I'm hooooome!

MP3 File