Michael Myers Biography Flash a weekly Biography.
Breaking news from the world of stabby, silent weirdos: the most iconic fictional killer who never learned small talk, Michael Myers, is once again trending — and not just because everyone’s binging Halloween movies and eating regrettable amounts of candy. Yes, it’s me, Marc Ellery, and this is your “Michael Myers Biography Flash,” where we tackle the week’s hottest headlines about a guy who, frankly, couldn’t headline a PTA meeting but somehow manages to headline generations of horror.
First up, headline of the week: William Shatner, the mask muse himself, tried to clear his name on social media. On X, our former Captain Kirk posted a—let me stress—dead-serious photo of the Michael Myers mask caked with makeup, claiming, “Look! That’s not my face!” I mean, who among us hasn’t denied being the inspiration for a blank-eyed killing machine? Sorry, Bill, but if you wanted out of this, maybe don’t have such a hauntingly mask-ready mug. According to CinemaBlend, Shatner’s bid convinced exactly no one except maybe, I dunno, Data from Star Trek. Fans are more convinced than ever that The Shape is just Shatner on a bad hair day.
Out in the wild—and I use the term “wild” loosely—Michael Myers has also been spotted haunting the suburbs of Saskatoon, Canada, but not in the way you think. A local man, Kelvin McFadzen, has elevated his suburban dad game by turning his lawn into a pumpkin-pie-themed haunted wonderland, starring a fifteen-foot inflatable Michael Myers. The result? Kids think their dad IS Michael Myers. The line between “fun family memory” and “years of therapy” grows thinner every Halloween. Marija Robinson of CKOM brings us the story, reminding parents everywhere that at least Michael is a quiet, focused monster who stays on-task. Unlike, say, any kid given Red Bull.
In cinematic news, the official franchise has been eerily quiet—literally. Since 2022’s Halloween Ends saw Jamie Lee Curtis hang up her scream queen crown and Michael himself get industrially shredded, the next official move is still unknown. ScreenRant says if the movies come back, maybe it’s time to dump Myers and bring in new monsters, since apparently, being thrown into a shredder is one of the few things that can retire an eighty-year-old slasher.
But proving that you can’t keep a good villain—or dedicated fanbase—down, a fan film called Halloween Aftermath dropped on YouTube mid-October. Insider reviews say it’s ignited the hardcore fandom and is already being hailed by some as the best entry since, well, before the franchise had timelines more tangled than my bedsheets after a bad night.
And that’s your Michael Myers flash update. In short, the legend’s as unkillable off-screen as on, his mask haunts everyone from William Shatner to traumatized toddlers, and if you ask horror fans, he’s never really gone. Thanks for tuning in. Please subscribe so you never miss an update on everyone’s favorite imaginary menace and search “Biography Flash” for more stories that’ll make you laugh, shudder, or both. Stay safe out there—especially if you see a guy in coveralls who doesn’t talk much.
Get the best deals 
https://amzn.to/45JRxcrThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI