Every week, we talk about all the things they said weren't real. Guided by strange headlines and ancient mysteries, Jordan, Tom, and Mal explore the paranormal, metaphysical, and supernatural with all the earnestness and insight three big-hearted nerds can muster.
If you don't have a good time, then you don't know what a good time is.
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Every week, we talk about all the things they said weren't real. Guided by strange headlines and ancient mysteries, Jordan, Tom, and Mal explore the paranormal, metaphysical, and supernatural with all the earnestness and insight three big-hearted nerds can muster.
If you don't have a good time, then you don't know what a good time is.
31 | Radioactive Metal Pill and Walking Pants Cryptids
Gods, Ghosts & UFOs
55 minutes
2 weeks ago
31 | Radioactive Metal Pill and Walking Pants Cryptids
Mothman Prophecies screenwriter and fellow podcaster Richard Hatem (!!!) joins us this week to tunnel down into some of the weirdest stuff on the Internet. First up, the Fresno Nightcrawler, followed by a sketchy Las Vegas ghost hunt email scam, and finally a lively discussion about whether “James” the YouTuber actually found a flying, radioactive metallic pill in the desert, or if he’s creating the world’s most tedious ARG.
Bizarre leggy creatures first appeared on surveillance footage in early 2000s Fresno — not biological, not mechanical, but…kind of cute?
The cognitive dissonance of watching something that looks “so janky and fakey” while simultaneously looking completely real
Also: Yosemite National Park footage, a sighting in Poland, another in Billings Montana in 2020, and the “Carmel Area Creature” in Ohio
A “$5,000 ghost hunt contest” at El Cortez Hotel in Vegas is actually just an email scam
But actually lots of hotels and casinos in Vegas are haunted (and some theories as to why)
The Venetian’s Whispering Hallway
MGM Grand/Bally’s Flickering Ghosts
A (probably) Canadian named James posted over 40 YouTube videos since last month about finding a shiny metallic pill-shaped object in the desert
A very small but very dedicated audience
The object is magnetic, burned his hand (he says), weighs 15.8 pounds, has crude markings, causes lights to flicker (??), and allegedly moved itself 10 feet from sawhorses to the ground when he wasn’t watching
The Geiger counter subplot
Is it real??? (Probably not, but we don’t know!)
How younger generations’ first instinct is to post online and crowdsource help rather than calling authorities — a counter-argument to what might look like performative attention seeking to old people like us
Inevitable comparisons to the Dear David thing on Twitter eight years ago (which resulted in a movie deal)
Richard Hatem’s anecdote about how the Blair Witch Project got the smartest and most effective gorilla marketing campaign in Hollywood
And in the epilogue (for paid subscribers only):
Mallory’s existential fear that we’ll eventually discover some kind of “God formula” that solves all the mysteries
How and why people closest to paranormal phenomena sometimes go insane and die, i.e. Keel’s paranoia in Mothman Prophecies, and Blake Smith’s fear of becoming vulnerable to cults like Heaven’s Gate
The great atheist hypocrisy - how materialist skeptics claim their worldview is rational while it’s really just their own “comfortable smugness” and personal opiate
Wanna hear it? Head over to godsghostsUFOs.com
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Gods, Ghosts & UFOs
Every week, we talk about all the things they said weren't real. Guided by strange headlines and ancient mysteries, Jordan, Tom, and Mal explore the paranormal, metaphysical, and supernatural with all the earnestness and insight three big-hearted nerds can muster.
If you don't have a good time, then you don't know what a good time is.