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Member
(08-13-2009,
01:10 AM)
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Creepy unsolved/paranormal/strange events thread
#1
Post up anything you find creepy or something interesting.
All of mine come from wikipedia Valentich Disappearance
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Max Headroom broadcast signal intrusion incident
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The Dyatlov Pass incident
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The Battle of Los Angeles
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Issei Sagawa
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"The perfect place to die" Claimed to be haunted. A place where many people go to take their own lives. Video from Japanese TV show:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ik_QAXGpJsk Wiki entry:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aokigahara Last edited by GalacticAE : 08-13-2009 at 01:13 AM. |
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(08-13-2009,
01:25 AM)
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#5
I saw the Max Headroom one live.
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Member
(08-13-2009,
01:29 AM)
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#6
![]() Lizzie Borden took an axe, And gave her mother forty whacks. And when she saw what she had done, She gave her father forty-one.
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Did she really commit the Hatchet murders? |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
01:53 AM)
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#9
Originally Posted by Purkake4:
Thanks for those links. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Celeste
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Originally Posted by GDGF:
This reminds me of that murder I read about where these teens tortured and murdered this girl in Japan. They did some sick stuff from what I remember, including making her eat roaches, burning her, and sticking things in her Vagina. The crazy thing is there's been a manga published about it and even a live-action movie. |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
02:04 AM)
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#14
I find the celebrity around that evil Japanese man to be the most disturbing thing of all. He shot and ate a woman but yet the people love him. Do the Japanese really have that little respect for non-Japanese life? That's the impression I get from brutal crimes involving foreigners in Japan...
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Member
(08-13-2009,
02:05 AM)
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#15
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Banned
(08-13-2009,
02:27 AM)
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#16
Originally Posted by GalacticAE:
Ok THAT one is weird. |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
02:38 AM)
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#19
Originally Posted by KHarvey16:
Irrational things like irradiating themselves. There's probably an explanation. Seriously. |
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massive bear, tiny salmon
(08-13-2009,
02:46 AM)
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#23
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Member
(08-13-2009,
02:53 AM)
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#25
Originally Posted by KHarvey16:
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Member
(08-13-2009,
03:13 AM)
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#26
Originally Posted by striKeVillain!:
Yeah that's fucked up. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grinning_Man |
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(08-13-2009,
03:18 AM)
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#28
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Member
(08-13-2009,
03:22 AM)
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#30
Originally Posted by Micromegas:
![]() Couldn't find the other (funnier) gif
Originally Posted by Adol:
http://www.creepypasta.com ? Last edited by Purkake4 : 08-13-2009 at 03:35 AM. |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
03:42 AM)
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#32
Originally Posted by Johann:
The LaLaurie house is gorgeous and second only to the Beauregarde house in the French Quarter. |
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learned the lesson too late
(08-13-2009,
03:45 AM)
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#33
This shit freaked the hell out of me when I read it
Emilie Sagée http://www.mysteries.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/1,1.htm
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fetch me wild beavers
(08-13-2009,
03:57 AM)
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#34
made this thread a while ago:
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=354542 It's about the Dyatlov Pass Incident- Feb. 2, 1959. OP briefly mentioned it... but yeah... one of my favorites. Creepy Russian shit. @_@ Last edited by TheJollyCorner : 08-13-2009 at 04:41 AM. |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
04:04 AM)
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#35
Originally Posted by Purkake4:
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Member
(08-13-2009,
04:28 AM)
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#40
Originally Posted by canova:
I thought of a secret twin when I read this, sort of like The Prestige (Bale's character). |
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Banned
(08-13-2009,
04:42 AM)
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#42
Originally Posted by Kipz:
THAT IS NOT ACTUAL FOOTAGE. It is from a documentary (History Channel), what you see there was made for the documentary, it is not real. |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
04:51 AM)
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#44
This one has always creeped me out, ever since hearing about it as a kid - Spring-Heeled Jack
Originally Posted by GalacticAE:
Last edited by The_Dude : 08-13-2009 at 04:57 AM. |
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Junior Member
(08-13-2009,
05:12 AM)
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#45
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Member
(08-13-2009,
05:23 AM)
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#46
Here's a fascinating story from Readers Digest:
A German U-boat drifting aimlessly off Ireland was a target too good to miss in July 1918. The American submarine that spotted her was maneuvering for the attack when a huge explosion seized the U-boat and sent her to the bottom with all hands. What caused the explosion will never be known, but for the U-65 it was the final blow in a series of disasters. For she was a jinxed ship. Even before she had left the shipyard at Bruges, Belgium, two years earlier, she had already claimed one life. A shipyard worker was killed when hit by girder that was being lowered into place for the hull. On her first sea trials the engine room filled with fumes, and three men suffocated. As it was wartime, news of the deaths was kept within the General Admiralty. More trials with a group of sister ships were without incident, at first-until the Captain of the U-65 ordered her first dive. The captain sent a sailor forward for a routine inspection of the hatches. The sea was calm, and there was very little wind; but instead of making the inspection, inexplicably, he stepped overboard and was swept away in the back wash. The silent crew gazed nervously at each other as the captain closed hatches to dive. He gave the order to level off at 30 feet, but the U-65 continued down until it struck the seabed, where it refused to budge. For 12 hours it lay there as water seeped in. And for the second time it betgan to fill with battery fumes. Then, once again, for some unexplained reason it lifted from the bottom and rose to the surface. After an overhaul back in Bruges, the U-65 was passed fit for service, and refueling an arming began. During this operation a torpedo warhead exploded, and brought the death toll to 11. One victim was the second lieutenant. As the U-65 was towed into dry dock, a hysterical crewman swore he saw the dead second lieutenant standing, arms folded, on the prow of the ship. Before it sailed for duty again, another seaman had deserted after reporting that he, too, had seen the dead officer. Repaired, the U-65 sailed for the Dover Straights, and during its tour of duty reports of more sightings of the second lieutenant did little to increase morale. The duty officer was found trembling on the bridge after he saw the ghost and watched as it faded from sight. The members of the crew were all thankful when their ship returned to base, although it was under aerial attack. As the captain walked down the gangplank, he was struck and killed by a splinter from a bomb. The Imperial Navy took the case so seriously that they had the U-65 exorcised by a priest. But on the next tour of duty, a gunner went mad, the chief engineer broke his leg, and there was a suicide. On the morning of July 10, 1918, the ship was spotted drifting off the Cape Clear coast of southwest Ireland by an American submarine. When the submarines captain looked through his periscope, he was puzzled by a lone figure, standing with arms crossed on the prow of the ship. Then came the shattering explosion, which ripped the U-65 from stem to stern. Loyal even in death, the second lieutenant had stayed with his comrades to the end. I think that would make an excellent movie, especially since it would be based on supposedly true events. |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
05:31 AM)
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#47
You can get a good fix of paranormal/strange events and whatnot by listening to Coast To Coast AM. I love this show and listen to it almost nightly.
http://www.coasttocoastam.com/ |
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hopelessly misguided
(08-13-2009,
05:39 AM)
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#48
Originally Posted by super-heated plasma:
That's a highly dramatized account :). The spotting reported by the American submarine was of just a periscope and an explosion. In 2004 though the actually found the wreck off the coast of Cornwall. |
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Member
(08-13-2009,
06:08 AM)
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#50
Originally Posted by R2D4:
im scared to go to bed now |