1 00:00:00,680 --> 00:00:03,200 Speaker 1: And you're here. Thanks for choosing the I Heart Radio 2 00:00:03,240 --> 00:00:06,280 Speaker 1: and Coast to Coast A and Paranormal podcast network. Your 3 00:00:06,360 --> 00:00:10,120 Speaker 1: quest for podcasts of the paranormal, supernatural, and the unexplained 4 00:00:10,240 --> 00:00:13,240 Speaker 1: ends here. We invite you to enjoy all our shows 5 00:00:13,360 --> 00:00:16,120 Speaker 1: we have on this network, and right now, let's start 6 00:00:16,160 --> 00:00:26,800 Speaker 1: with Strange Things with Joshua P. Warren. Welcome to our podcast. 7 00:00:27,200 --> 00:00:30,560 Speaker 1: Please be aware the thoughts and opinions expressed by the 8 00:00:30,600 --> 00:00:33,960 Speaker 1: host are their thoughts and opinions only and do not 9 00:00:34,080 --> 00:00:38,080 Speaker 1: reflect those of I Heart Media, I Heart Radio, Coast 10 00:00:38,080 --> 00:00:42,480 Speaker 1: to Coast AM, employees of premier networks, or their sponsors 11 00:00:42,520 --> 00:00:45,720 Speaker 1: and associates. We would like to encourage you to do 12 00:00:45,800 --> 00:00:49,360 Speaker 1: your own research and discover the subject matter for yourself. 13 00:01:10,160 --> 00:01:15,639 Speaker 1: Get ready to be amazed weird. This is Strange Things 14 00:01:16,160 --> 00:01:27,000 Speaker 1: with Joshua Warren. I am Joshua Fie Warren, and each 15 00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:29,720 Speaker 1: week on this show, I'll be bringing you brand new 16 00:01:29,920 --> 00:01:35,240 Speaker 1: mind blowing content, news exercises, and weird experiments you can 17 00:01:35,280 --> 00:01:39,279 Speaker 1: do at home. And a lot more. On this edition 18 00:01:39,319 --> 00:01:45,120 Speaker 1: of the show are Weird Moon and other strange tales. 19 00:01:45,840 --> 00:01:49,360 Speaker 1: After I update you on what's happening with the Moon, 20 00:01:50,320 --> 00:01:55,880 Speaker 1: I am going to circle back around and finally fulfill 21 00:01:56,560 --> 00:01:59,640 Speaker 1: some of these stories I have promised you in previous 22 00:01:59,720 --> 00:02:02,800 Speaker 1: pod cast I get carried away. You know, I'll be 23 00:02:02,840 --> 00:02:06,160 Speaker 1: doing a show and I'll be focusing on a topic 24 00:02:06,240 --> 00:02:08,920 Speaker 1: and it will like remind me of the story, and 25 00:02:08,919 --> 00:02:11,320 Speaker 1: then I'll say, but I'll save that and tell you 26 00:02:11,320 --> 00:02:15,360 Speaker 1: about that on a future podcast. People remember that, and 27 00:02:15,440 --> 00:02:17,959 Speaker 1: they remind me of it, and so I've been writing 28 00:02:17,960 --> 00:02:19,760 Speaker 1: it down and I'm going to go back and I'm 29 00:02:19,800 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 1: going to finally try to complete some of these stories 30 00:02:24,080 --> 00:02:26,680 Speaker 1: that I've teased, For example, like the time that I 31 00:02:26,800 --> 00:02:32,160 Speaker 1: met the vampires in New Orleans. That's coming up soon. 32 00:02:32,919 --> 00:02:36,839 Speaker 1: But okay, let's get to this moon stuff. The moon 33 00:02:36,960 --> 00:02:42,400 Speaker 1: has fascinated me my entire life. And there is something 34 00:02:43,639 --> 00:02:47,600 Speaker 1: strange about the moon that is well more than meets 35 00:02:47,639 --> 00:02:50,519 Speaker 1: the eye. You know, my good friend, the late great 36 00:02:50,760 --> 00:02:54,880 Speaker 1: Jim Mars, he wrote a book called Alien Agenda, and 37 00:02:54,919 --> 00:02:58,240 Speaker 1: he talked about all of these bizarre characteristics of the moon. 38 00:02:59,040 --> 00:03:03,280 Speaker 1: That the moon seems to be somewhat hollow, that when 39 00:03:03,280 --> 00:03:06,640 Speaker 1: a meteor hits it, it rings like a bell, like 40 00:03:06,680 --> 00:03:11,400 Speaker 1: a metallic bell. And he also said that um, there 41 00:03:11,440 --> 00:03:15,560 Speaker 1: were there were vapors, you know, water vapors and such 42 00:03:15,560 --> 00:03:17,120 Speaker 1: on the Moon, And people said, oh, that's a bunch 43 00:03:17,160 --> 00:03:20,080 Speaker 1: of bologna. Well guess what, it's true. They actually have 44 00:03:20,160 --> 00:03:22,959 Speaker 1: figured out now that there is a slight atmosphere on 45 00:03:23,000 --> 00:03:24,639 Speaker 1: the Moon, and there are some water vapors, and a 46 00:03:24,680 --> 00:03:26,480 Speaker 1: lot of the things that Jim Mars wrote it back, 47 00:03:26,720 --> 00:03:30,560 Speaker 1: wrote about back in the early nineties are now considered true. 48 00:03:31,880 --> 00:03:36,640 Speaker 1: But I was even more amazed by something that really 49 00:03:36,760 --> 00:03:40,200 Speaker 1: hit home for me very personally. You know, when I 50 00:03:40,240 --> 00:03:42,760 Speaker 1: was a teenager, I met a man named Charles A. 51 00:03:43,120 --> 00:03:46,840 Speaker 1: Yost who became sort of a mentor to me. Uh. 52 00:03:46,880 --> 00:03:51,680 Speaker 1: He was a NASA Hall of Fame engineer, and he well, 53 00:03:51,720 --> 00:03:53,440 Speaker 1: he had retired from NASA and he had his own 54 00:03:53,480 --> 00:03:58,160 Speaker 1: laboratory in western North Carolina. And I met him through 55 00:03:58,200 --> 00:04:02,280 Speaker 1: my science teacher. She said, I have a student here 56 00:04:02,320 --> 00:04:04,480 Speaker 1: that I think, you know, you you need to meet, 57 00:04:04,960 --> 00:04:08,960 Speaker 1: And so I started working as his lab assistant and 58 00:04:09,480 --> 00:04:13,680 Speaker 1: did that for many, many years into my adulthood. And 59 00:04:14,000 --> 00:04:18,159 Speaker 1: Charles Yost was a very practical scientist, but he also 60 00:04:18,240 --> 00:04:20,880 Speaker 1: had an open mind and he was really into UFOs. 61 00:04:20,920 --> 00:04:23,719 Speaker 1: He was convinced that there was something to the UFO phenomenon. 62 00:04:23,800 --> 00:04:26,919 Speaker 1: And he was one of the people who worked directly 63 00:04:27,000 --> 00:04:30,120 Speaker 1: on the Apollo project, the one that sent men to 64 00:04:30,279 --> 00:04:34,640 Speaker 1: the Moon. Uh, And he was an engineer who helped 65 00:04:34,680 --> 00:04:40,080 Speaker 1: design that spacecraft. So one day I just had to 66 00:04:40,120 --> 00:04:42,600 Speaker 1: ask him. I was a little hesitant, but I said, so, 67 00:04:42,720 --> 00:04:44,960 Speaker 1: do you think that, like, the whole story about how 68 00:04:45,000 --> 00:04:48,440 Speaker 1: we went to the Moon is exactly as it was presented? 69 00:04:48,560 --> 00:04:52,719 Speaker 1: And he paused a really long time, and he and 70 00:04:52,720 --> 00:04:54,719 Speaker 1: then he said, well, I have two things, he says. 71 00:04:54,839 --> 00:04:59,520 Speaker 1: Number one, it was such a complex operation. It seems 72 00:04:59,560 --> 00:05:04,200 Speaker 1: mirac list that everything just went right, he said. He said, 73 00:05:04,200 --> 00:05:07,600 Speaker 1: things never go right when you're working on something that complicated. 74 00:05:07,600 --> 00:05:10,239 Speaker 1: And he said, everything went right. He said, I always 75 00:05:10,279 --> 00:05:14,240 Speaker 1: thought that was kind of, you know, suspicious. But then 76 00:05:14,240 --> 00:05:16,160 Speaker 1: he said, well, let's and also let me show you this. 77 00:05:17,360 --> 00:05:19,440 Speaker 1: And he took me into his office and we sat 78 00:05:19,480 --> 00:05:22,960 Speaker 1: down and he showed me some video footage. And here 79 00:05:23,000 --> 00:05:25,760 Speaker 1: you see on one of the earlier Apollo missions, they 80 00:05:26,040 --> 00:05:29,800 Speaker 1: were flying over the surface of the Moon, and you 81 00:05:29,839 --> 00:05:34,640 Speaker 1: can see, of course, the lunar landscape moving below as 82 00:05:34,680 --> 00:05:37,680 Speaker 1: they're moving across it. And then there is this little object. 83 00:05:38,120 --> 00:05:41,400 Speaker 1: It looks kind of like a black hair sticking up 84 00:05:41,400 --> 00:05:44,520 Speaker 1: out of the surface of the Moon. And then right 85 00:05:44,600 --> 00:05:47,640 Speaker 1: as the craft is about to pass over it, something 86 00:05:47,680 --> 00:05:49,800 Speaker 1: that looks like a little puff of smoke comes out 87 00:05:49,839 --> 00:05:52,320 Speaker 1: of it and drifts a second to the right, and 88 00:05:52,360 --> 00:05:56,160 Speaker 1: then the footage ends. And he said, at the height 89 00:05:56,200 --> 00:05:59,280 Speaker 1: they were flying to scale, that thing would be like 90 00:06:00,200 --> 00:06:04,040 Speaker 1: I think, he said, like a thousand feet tall. So 91 00:06:04,560 --> 00:06:09,559 Speaker 1: what looks like a smoke stack coming out of the moon, uh, 92 00:06:09,880 --> 00:06:13,479 Speaker 1: really ejecting a puff of smoke or some kind of 93 00:06:13,560 --> 00:06:18,440 Speaker 1: vapor is captured on this official NASA footage and he 94 00:06:19,240 --> 00:06:22,120 Speaker 1: uh published it in his science journal and gave me 95 00:06:22,160 --> 00:06:24,080 Speaker 1: permission to be the first person to put it on 96 00:06:24,120 --> 00:06:27,200 Speaker 1: the internet. If you go right now to my website 97 00:06:27,279 --> 00:06:30,520 Speaker 1: Joshua pe Warren dot com, there's no period after the 98 00:06:30,560 --> 00:06:35,599 Speaker 1: p You will see a menu there that says gallery 99 00:06:35,600 --> 00:06:39,240 Speaker 1: of the Strange. And if you click that menu, then 100 00:06:39,279 --> 00:06:43,440 Speaker 1: it opens up all these really fascinating subcategories, and one 101 00:06:43,480 --> 00:06:46,960 Speaker 1: of them says, simply enough, a smoke stack on the 102 00:06:46,960 --> 00:06:52,920 Speaker 1: Moon with question marks. And uh, you can look at 103 00:06:53,040 --> 00:06:55,840 Speaker 1: this footage for yourself and you tell me what you 104 00:06:55,880 --> 00:06:57,560 Speaker 1: think it is. I mean, I won't go into the 105 00:06:57,600 --> 00:07:00,719 Speaker 1: whole big long story on that, because all the information 106 00:07:00,800 --> 00:07:02,880 Speaker 1: is on that web page and you just need to 107 00:07:02,960 --> 00:07:05,920 Speaker 1: look at it and decide for yourself what the heck 108 00:07:06,000 --> 00:07:09,080 Speaker 1: this is. I went on coast to coast a m 109 00:07:09,120 --> 00:07:13,040 Speaker 1: and talked about this, and oh boy, that that caused 110 00:07:13,040 --> 00:07:18,560 Speaker 1: a controversy. Almost immediately I started being followed around by 111 00:07:18,640 --> 00:07:22,320 Speaker 1: men in black type figures. For almost a year, my 112 00:07:22,480 --> 00:07:27,640 Speaker 1: phone was tapped, I was being attacked seven on the 113 00:07:27,680 --> 00:07:32,120 Speaker 1: internet by people who were obviously trained to debunk anything 114 00:07:32,200 --> 00:07:36,239 Speaker 1: that I even suggested about an anomaly on the Moon. 115 00:07:36,840 --> 00:07:40,640 Speaker 1: It was. It was amazing, and so uh, look to 116 00:07:40,720 --> 00:07:44,680 Speaker 1: this day, I still can't explain what this thing is 117 00:07:44,720 --> 00:07:46,320 Speaker 1: coming out of the surface of the Moon. And if 118 00:07:46,360 --> 00:07:48,440 Speaker 1: you go to that web page, you'll see the arguments 119 00:07:48,440 --> 00:07:52,000 Speaker 1: four and against again. Go to Joshua P. Warren dot com. 120 00:07:52,000 --> 00:07:54,560 Speaker 1: Click the menu heading that says gallery of the Strange, 121 00:07:54,760 --> 00:07:56,360 Speaker 1: and you'll see there where it says, you know, a 122 00:07:56,360 --> 00:07:58,120 Speaker 1: smoke stack on the Moon, and you just look at 123 00:07:58,120 --> 00:08:00,600 Speaker 1: this for yourself and tell me what you think. So, 124 00:08:00,960 --> 00:08:04,000 Speaker 1: now that we're going back to the Moon with the 125 00:08:04,120 --> 00:08:10,880 Speaker 1: Artemis program, uh, we're gonna be subjected to even more 126 00:08:11,080 --> 00:08:17,040 Speaker 1: data and more revelations and so just recently, there was 127 00:08:17,360 --> 00:08:20,920 Speaker 1: a story that broke in the mainstream news, a scientific 128 00:08:20,960 --> 00:08:25,080 Speaker 1: revelation about the moon. And uh, I sent this out 129 00:08:25,400 --> 00:08:27,760 Speaker 1: through my free e newsletter. This is one of the 130 00:08:27,800 --> 00:08:30,200 Speaker 1: reasons you have to subscribe to my free E newsletter, 131 00:08:30,280 --> 00:08:33,920 Speaker 1: because I just blasted this immediately as soon as I 132 00:08:33,960 --> 00:08:38,160 Speaker 1: saw it. Uh. The moon has a tail that shoots 133 00:08:38,200 --> 00:08:43,000 Speaker 1: a beam towards Earth. Now, we have been studying the 134 00:08:43,000 --> 00:08:46,280 Speaker 1: moon since the dawn of time, right, It's it's it's 135 00:08:46,320 --> 00:08:50,440 Speaker 1: so weird because it's this big, obvious, you know, sort 136 00:08:50,440 --> 00:08:54,520 Speaker 1: of blazing light in the night sky, and yet we 137 00:08:54,600 --> 00:08:59,840 Speaker 1: know so little about it really, and therefore, uh, it's 138 00:09:00,080 --> 00:09:03,960 Speaker 1: surprising when you have news of this magnitude about the moon. 139 00:09:04,880 --> 00:09:08,720 Speaker 1: All this time, there has been a beam shooting from 140 00:09:08,880 --> 00:09:12,240 Speaker 1: the Moon towards the Earth, but we have not been 141 00:09:12,280 --> 00:09:14,880 Speaker 1: able to see it with our naked eyes. We are 142 00:09:14,960 --> 00:09:20,680 Speaker 1: now seeing it because we have very special technology cameras 143 00:09:20,720 --> 00:09:24,000 Speaker 1: that are sensitive to this range of light. And long 144 00:09:24,080 --> 00:09:27,800 Speaker 1: story short, uh, And and you can go and look 145 00:09:27,880 --> 00:09:29,760 Speaker 1: this up for yourself. As a matter of fact, the 146 00:09:29,760 --> 00:09:34,400 Speaker 1: the Scientific Journal is right here in front of me. Uh. 147 00:09:34,440 --> 00:09:38,719 Speaker 1: And of course we're talking about UM. I can name 148 00:09:38,720 --> 00:09:40,360 Speaker 1: off all the scientists. But you can look this up 149 00:09:40,360 --> 00:09:42,560 Speaker 1: for yourself. Just look up, you know, do a search 150 00:09:42,640 --> 00:09:45,040 Speaker 1: for the moon has a tail, and you'll bring up 151 00:09:45,080 --> 00:09:48,800 Speaker 1: all kinds of sources. But they say once a month, 152 00:09:49,720 --> 00:09:53,360 Speaker 1: at the time of the new moon, a small, diffuse 153 00:09:53,480 --> 00:09:56,240 Speaker 1: spot of light appears in the sky opposite the Sun. 154 00:09:57,520 --> 00:10:00,600 Speaker 1: And I don't want to read this whole thing to you. Basically, 155 00:10:00,600 --> 00:10:08,920 Speaker 1: what they're saying is that when, especially when the moon 156 00:10:09,160 --> 00:10:12,360 Speaker 1: becomes a new moon, meaning that you can't see it, 157 00:10:12,480 --> 00:10:15,559 Speaker 1: you know, it's it's dark, it's a new moon because 158 00:10:15,600 --> 00:10:20,280 Speaker 1: the moon is between Earth and the Sun, and so 159 00:10:20,320 --> 00:10:23,439 Speaker 1: the opposite side of the Moon is being blasted by 160 00:10:23,480 --> 00:10:27,760 Speaker 1: the Sun, and so there is apparently a great deal 161 00:10:27,800 --> 00:10:31,640 Speaker 1: of sodium on the surface of the Moon, and so 162 00:10:31,720 --> 00:10:36,000 Speaker 1: when the moon is new, in particular, it is the 163 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:41,520 Speaker 1: Sun is blasting all of this sodium to Earth. And 164 00:10:41,720 --> 00:10:44,800 Speaker 1: it literally looks like the tail of a comet coming 165 00:10:44,880 --> 00:10:50,120 Speaker 1: from the Moon into this powerful ray of sodium hitting 166 00:10:50,200 --> 00:10:54,520 Speaker 1: planet Earth. And to some degree, it happens, you know, 167 00:10:54,559 --> 00:10:56,959 Speaker 1: all the time, but it's when the moon is new 168 00:10:57,480 --> 00:11:04,120 Speaker 1: is when it's happening most prominently. And this is amazing 169 00:11:04,160 --> 00:11:10,200 Speaker 1: to me because okay, obviously Sodium is a component in salt, 170 00:11:11,200 --> 00:11:15,720 Speaker 1: and when you add salt to water, it becomes more 171 00:11:15,720 --> 00:11:22,800 Speaker 1: electrically conductive. And so our atmosphere is made of primarily 172 00:11:24,000 --> 00:11:29,160 Speaker 1: water in various stages, right, And so that means when 173 00:11:29,200 --> 00:11:33,960 Speaker 1: a beam of sodium is shooting towards Earth that maybe 174 00:11:34,520 --> 00:11:39,720 Speaker 1: the Earth's atmosphere is more conductive around the new Moon. 175 00:11:41,200 --> 00:11:44,040 Speaker 1: So if that is the case, does that mean where 176 00:11:44,080 --> 00:11:47,600 Speaker 1: there is more paranormal activity possible around a new moon? 177 00:11:48,960 --> 00:11:56,240 Speaker 1: Because you always hear about electricity and electro magnetism being 178 00:11:56,240 --> 00:11:58,760 Speaker 1: connected to the paranormal. Well, when we come back from 179 00:11:58,760 --> 00:12:02,719 Speaker 1: this break, I'm gonna tell you what I have discovered 180 00:12:03,280 --> 00:12:08,560 Speaker 1: about the relationship between the new moon and paranormal activity 181 00:12:09,080 --> 00:12:12,880 Speaker 1: since this news came out. Okay, here's what I've learned 182 00:12:13,880 --> 00:12:17,240 Speaker 1: that's coming up, and just a moment and then so 183 00:12:17,360 --> 00:12:20,800 Speaker 1: much more. Like I say, there are things that I 184 00:12:20,880 --> 00:12:23,520 Speaker 1: just don't talk about on this podcast, there's too much 185 00:12:23,559 --> 00:12:25,960 Speaker 1: to talk about. If you want breaking news, go to 186 00:12:26,080 --> 00:12:30,520 Speaker 1: Joshua pe Warren dot com. Take two seconds sign up 187 00:12:30,520 --> 00:12:34,400 Speaker 1: from my free e newsletter and you will instantly receive 188 00:12:34,880 --> 00:12:39,880 Speaker 1: some really cool gifts that are emailed to you. And 189 00:12:41,160 --> 00:12:44,240 Speaker 1: it's spam free. Okay, I write it with my own fingers. 190 00:12:44,800 --> 00:12:48,000 Speaker 1: It's free in spam free. Follow me on Twitter and 191 00:12:48,040 --> 00:12:51,559 Speaker 1: sign up from my newsletter there at Joshua P. Warren 192 00:12:51,679 --> 00:12:54,319 Speaker 1: dot com. This is gonna be a good one, folks. 193 00:12:55,000 --> 00:12:59,559 Speaker 1: I am Joshua pe Warren. You're listening to Strange Things 194 00:13:00,160 --> 00:13:03,120 Speaker 1: on the I Heart Radio and Coast to Coast a 195 00:13:03,240 --> 00:13:08,760 Speaker 1: m paranormal podcast network, and I will be right back. 196 00:13:39,800 --> 00:13:44,080 Speaker 1: Welcome back to Strange Things on the I Heart Radio 197 00:13:44,240 --> 00:13:47,760 Speaker 1: and Coast to Coast a M there a normal podcast network. 198 00:13:48,360 --> 00:13:52,280 Speaker 1: Blam your host. The Wizards of Weird beaming into your 199 00:13:52,400 --> 00:13:58,600 Speaker 1: wormhole brain from my studio and since city, Las Vegas, Nevada, 200 00:13:58,960 --> 00:14:03,920 Speaker 1: where every day is golden and every night is silver. Hey, 201 00:14:03,960 --> 00:14:08,959 Speaker 1: did you hear the audio that NASA released of the 202 00:14:08,960 --> 00:14:14,320 Speaker 1: new Mars rover on the surface of Mars? You know, 203 00:14:14,400 --> 00:14:17,720 Speaker 1: I I am really following this rover closely because I 204 00:14:17,840 --> 00:14:24,360 Speaker 1: got the honor of seeing this rover called Perseverance here 205 00:14:24,400 --> 00:14:29,040 Speaker 1: on Earth at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, seeing it in 206 00:14:29,120 --> 00:14:33,080 Speaker 1: person thanks to my friend Mr Corby Waste who works 207 00:14:33,120 --> 00:14:36,400 Speaker 1: for jp L, and uh, I got to see this 208 00:14:36,440 --> 00:14:38,640 Speaker 1: thing with my own eyes, and now it's up there 209 00:14:38,640 --> 00:14:44,360 Speaker 1: on Mars roving around, and it's gathering data that may 210 00:14:44,480 --> 00:14:48,760 Speaker 1: prove that there was once life on Mars and maybe 211 00:14:48,800 --> 00:14:53,960 Speaker 1: they're even still is. But anyway, NASA released some just 212 00:14:54,040 --> 00:14:58,520 Speaker 1: some audio of what this thing sounds like as it's 213 00:14:58,600 --> 00:15:01,040 Speaker 1: rolling around the surface of Ours. It's I mean, it's 214 00:15:01,360 --> 00:15:47,520 Speaker 1: it's kind of interesting here listen to some of it. 215 00:15:47,600 --> 00:15:52,880 Speaker 1: Kind of sounds like a creaky old willbarrow, doesn't it 216 00:15:53,800 --> 00:15:59,280 Speaker 1: a two point two billion dollar will barrow will barrow? 217 00:15:59,400 --> 00:16:04,120 Speaker 1: You know, I believe that, um, this rover is the 218 00:16:04,160 --> 00:16:09,800 Speaker 1: most expensive machine of its size ever made and all 219 00:16:09,840 --> 00:16:16,120 Speaker 1: of human history. I believe the most expensive machine is 220 00:16:16,160 --> 00:16:19,240 Speaker 1: the had Drawn collider, but that thing is enormous. It 221 00:16:19,280 --> 00:16:23,200 Speaker 1: goes on for miles and miles. This rover, I mean, 222 00:16:23,240 --> 00:16:25,800 Speaker 1: it's maybe the size of like two or three golf 223 00:16:25,840 --> 00:16:30,360 Speaker 1: carts and two point two billion dollars. So that's why 224 00:16:30,400 --> 00:16:34,360 Speaker 1: that everybody was holding their breath at NASA at JPL 225 00:16:35,000 --> 00:16:37,960 Speaker 1: when that thing came down. And now it's working just great. 226 00:16:38,160 --> 00:16:44,440 Speaker 1: So let's hope they find some amazing stuff up there. Okay, 227 00:16:44,440 --> 00:16:47,920 Speaker 1: back to the moon. So when we have a new moon, 228 00:16:49,200 --> 00:16:53,760 Speaker 1: the sun is blasting the side of the Moon that 229 00:16:53,920 --> 00:16:58,160 Speaker 1: is away from us, and it is therefore blasting all 230 00:16:58,200 --> 00:17:04,359 Speaker 1: of this sodium towards us. And again that should make 231 00:17:04,600 --> 00:17:09,280 Speaker 1: part of our atmosphere more conductive, which might and that 232 00:17:09,359 --> 00:17:16,480 Speaker 1: electrical activity may enhance paranormal phenomena, ghostly stuff, UFOs, interdimensional beings, 233 00:17:16,640 --> 00:17:22,399 Speaker 1: psychic experiences, all that stuff. That's just a theory. But now, 234 00:17:23,160 --> 00:17:26,199 Speaker 1: when I first mentioned this, um, there were people who go, 235 00:17:26,240 --> 00:17:30,600 Speaker 1: wait a second, I thought salts supposed to stop paranormal activity. 236 00:17:30,800 --> 00:17:34,760 Speaker 1: It's supposed to, um, you know, to cleanse an area. Well, 237 00:17:35,000 --> 00:17:37,679 Speaker 1: here's my response to that. You have to understand something. 238 00:17:38,160 --> 00:17:46,639 Speaker 1: Salt is a crystal, and a crystal definitely will alter 239 00:17:47,080 --> 00:17:51,479 Speaker 1: the electro magnetic and electrostatic environment of a space. So 240 00:17:51,520 --> 00:17:54,800 Speaker 1: if you have a space where paranormal stuff is already happening, 241 00:17:55,359 --> 00:17:59,879 Speaker 1: then introducing salt crystals to that space might change the 242 00:18:00,000 --> 00:18:03,879 Speaker 1: electromagnetic environment enough so that it's out of sync and 243 00:18:03,880 --> 00:18:07,840 Speaker 1: the activity stops. But it's never guaranteed. It's just something 244 00:18:07,920 --> 00:18:11,560 Speaker 1: you can you can play with. But also, you're talking 245 00:18:11,600 --> 00:18:16,520 Speaker 1: about salt, and sodium is just one part of salt. 246 00:18:16,600 --> 00:18:20,679 Speaker 1: Sodium is a metal actually, so you're putting all this 247 00:18:20,880 --> 00:18:26,040 Speaker 1: metal into the atmosphere on the new moon. So I 248 00:18:26,080 --> 00:18:30,240 Speaker 1: asked people in the newsletter, go back and let's see 249 00:18:30,320 --> 00:18:34,040 Speaker 1: if if you have had a paranormal experience and where 250 00:18:34,040 --> 00:18:36,440 Speaker 1: you're like, I remember the day, I remember the time, 251 00:18:37,040 --> 00:18:39,119 Speaker 1: and let's see if it was around the time of 252 00:18:39,119 --> 00:18:41,919 Speaker 1: the new moon. So the first thing I did was 253 00:18:42,000 --> 00:18:44,800 Speaker 1: I went back and I looked at some of my 254 00:18:44,920 --> 00:18:47,879 Speaker 1: experiences and I look like, oh my god, no kid, this, 255 00:18:48,040 --> 00:18:50,400 Speaker 1: I mean, this is unbelievable to me. I went back 256 00:18:50,440 --> 00:18:55,680 Speaker 1: to February of two thousand nine when I saw this 257 00:18:56,000 --> 00:19:02,040 Speaker 1: major V shaped UFO fly over Loafelin, Nevada. You've heard 258 00:19:02,080 --> 00:19:04,399 Speaker 1: me tell this story before. Guess what that was a 259 00:19:04,400 --> 00:19:08,080 Speaker 1: new moon. I went back and looked at May twenty 260 00:19:09,800 --> 00:19:13,439 Speaker 1: when I was at Juniad Castle in Romania, one of 261 00:19:13,440 --> 00:19:20,560 Speaker 1: the places where Vlad the Impaler was kept, and um, 262 00:19:20,640 --> 00:19:23,160 Speaker 1: we had all kinds of ghostly stuff happened that night. 263 00:19:23,240 --> 00:19:26,439 Speaker 1: That was just two days after the new moon. So 264 00:19:26,520 --> 00:19:28,720 Speaker 1: it was right within that little window around the new 265 00:19:28,760 --> 00:19:33,199 Speaker 1: moon on this is this is a weird spin. On 266 00:19:33,280 --> 00:19:40,399 Speaker 1: April of two thousand thirteen, when homeland security at the 267 00:19:40,480 --> 00:19:45,360 Speaker 1: airport in Aguada, Puerto Rico, captured those UFOs flying around 268 00:19:45,359 --> 00:19:50,120 Speaker 1: the airport and then finally disappearing into the ocean. That 269 00:19:50,240 --> 00:19:58,560 Speaker 1: was on a full moon, but a lunar eclipse, so 270 00:19:58,680 --> 00:20:01,439 Speaker 1: that doesn't really applied directly to this, but but that 271 00:20:01,560 --> 00:20:06,320 Speaker 1: I was just like, huh, that's weird. That was on 272 00:20:06,359 --> 00:20:09,160 Speaker 1: a lunar eclipse. When that footage was captured, I'd never 273 00:20:09,200 --> 00:20:13,760 Speaker 1: noticed that before. And then I got this message from 274 00:20:13,760 --> 00:20:17,640 Speaker 1: a listener, Heather, and she wrote, whoa, she goes, my 275 00:20:17,760 --> 00:20:23,480 Speaker 1: husband and I We're watching the Lerid meteor shower about 276 00:20:23,600 --> 00:20:27,240 Speaker 1: three a m. On April twenty three of last year. Okay, 277 00:20:27,280 --> 00:20:31,520 Speaker 1: this is she says. We live on the outskirts of 278 00:20:31,520 --> 00:20:34,600 Speaker 1: a tiny town on the border of Washington and Idaho. 279 00:20:35,280 --> 00:20:37,840 Speaker 1: She says, Uh, we were calling out to each other, Oh, 280 00:20:37,880 --> 00:20:40,760 Speaker 1: there's one, there's one. You know how it goes? And 281 00:20:40,840 --> 00:20:44,159 Speaker 1: she said, then we saw a light that stopped dead. 282 00:20:45,000 --> 00:20:47,800 Speaker 1: Then it shot up, then straight down, then back up, 283 00:20:47,840 --> 00:20:51,159 Speaker 1: and then zipped off into space again. The pattern looked 284 00:20:51,640 --> 00:20:54,200 Speaker 1: a bit like a backwards heartbeat off of an e 285 00:20:54,400 --> 00:20:58,160 Speaker 1: k G machine. My husband and I both said that 286 00:20:58,280 --> 00:21:05,679 Speaker 1: was no meteor. That was on a new moon. Uh, 287 00:21:05,800 --> 00:21:07,960 Speaker 1: she says, you can bet I'm gonna be out there 288 00:21:08,000 --> 00:21:10,960 Speaker 1: this year with my goggles from Mobius and you they 289 00:21:11,080 --> 00:21:13,560 Speaker 1: arrive on Monday. Yeah, she got some of the para 290 00:21:13,640 --> 00:21:17,240 Speaker 1: temporal night vision goggles. You'll find those if you go 291 00:21:17,320 --> 00:21:19,679 Speaker 1: to my curiosity shop. They're the only type of night 292 00:21:19,720 --> 00:21:25,080 Speaker 1: vision goggles that I use for paranormal research. You'll see why. Uh, 293 00:21:25,080 --> 00:21:28,760 Speaker 1: thank you, Heather. So let's look. I'm telling you there's 294 00:21:28,800 --> 00:21:32,600 Speaker 1: something to this new moon phenomenon. So I want you 295 00:21:32,680 --> 00:21:36,600 Speaker 1: to go back and look at things you've experienced. Let 296 00:21:36,600 --> 00:21:38,320 Speaker 1: me know if it happened to you on a new moon, 297 00:21:38,400 --> 00:21:43,199 Speaker 1: and also going forward, plan to do some paranormal investigations 298 00:21:43,200 --> 00:21:45,199 Speaker 1: on a new moon, and let's see if you have 299 00:21:45,280 --> 00:21:50,119 Speaker 1: more activity this moon stuff. I love the fact that 300 00:21:50,440 --> 00:21:53,400 Speaker 1: it shows us that they're the universe is even more 301 00:21:53,440 --> 00:21:56,280 Speaker 1: connected than we thought it was. That yes, you see 302 00:21:56,280 --> 00:21:59,840 Speaker 1: the moon up there, but there is actual stuff from 303 00:21:59,840 --> 00:22:03,159 Speaker 1: the moon that's just shooting down here and connecting us 304 00:22:03,160 --> 00:22:09,720 Speaker 1: in a very tangible, specific way. And the longer week 305 00:22:09,880 --> 00:22:13,239 Speaker 1: we go on researching the world, the more we are 306 00:22:13,280 --> 00:22:16,240 Speaker 1: going to find that these connections exist. You know, my 307 00:22:16,400 --> 00:22:20,560 Speaker 1: friend Dean Worsening, he sent me a fascinating little clip 308 00:22:20,680 --> 00:22:25,600 Speaker 1: from a researcher who was associated with Pair Institute P E. 309 00:22:25,720 --> 00:22:28,439 Speaker 1: A R. Do you know what that is? Pair is 310 00:22:28,480 --> 00:22:33,040 Speaker 1: an acronym for the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research Lab, and 311 00:22:33,040 --> 00:22:37,000 Speaker 1: they do all kinds of parapsychology experiments. And this researcher 312 00:22:37,119 --> 00:22:40,520 Speaker 1: was saying, we didn't experiment where we took a plant 313 00:22:41,800 --> 00:22:47,119 Speaker 1: and we put it in an empty square room, and 314 00:22:47,200 --> 00:22:49,840 Speaker 1: we put that plant in one corner of the room. 315 00:22:50,119 --> 00:22:53,480 Speaker 1: The only thing in that room was that plant except 316 00:22:54,160 --> 00:22:57,639 Speaker 1: for a light source that we had on the center 317 00:22:58,000 --> 00:23:02,760 Speaker 1: of the ceiling. And this light source was hooked to 318 00:23:03,280 --> 00:23:07,920 Speaker 1: a random event generator so that it would just move 319 00:23:08,280 --> 00:23:14,240 Speaker 1: erratically all over the room. And what we found is 320 00:23:14,240 --> 00:23:19,320 Speaker 1: that the plant was thriving because somehow, much more often 321 00:23:19,359 --> 00:23:22,960 Speaker 1: than it should have statistically, this light was moving over 322 00:23:23,000 --> 00:23:26,600 Speaker 1: and shining toward the plant and keeping the plant nourished. 323 00:23:27,480 --> 00:23:34,400 Speaker 1: So the implication was that somehow this plant needed that light, 324 00:23:34,640 --> 00:23:38,119 Speaker 1: and something about that plant's need for that light was 325 00:23:38,200 --> 00:23:41,240 Speaker 1: able to affect that random event generator in order to 326 00:23:41,359 --> 00:23:44,560 Speaker 1: make that light shine on that plant and keep it alive. 327 00:23:45,040 --> 00:23:48,720 Speaker 1: Isn't that amazing? Don't you love stuff like that? You 328 00:23:48,720 --> 00:23:51,560 Speaker 1: can look it up. These are real sycists with PhD 329 00:23:51,760 --> 00:23:54,159 Speaker 1: s telling you this sort of thing. It shows you 330 00:23:54,200 --> 00:23:59,159 Speaker 1: that we are all connected on so many levels that 331 00:23:59,280 --> 00:24:02,560 Speaker 1: we can't always see. Right now this new thing with 332 00:24:02,600 --> 00:24:04,760 Speaker 1: the moon, Oh, now we can see it. They have 333 00:24:04,960 --> 00:24:08,119 Speaker 1: great pictures of this. I posted them on my Twitter 334 00:24:08,160 --> 00:24:12,600 Speaker 1: account at Joshua P. Warren. And so now we see it. Oh, 335 00:24:12,640 --> 00:24:14,560 Speaker 1: we get it, We believe it. That that is how, 336 00:24:18,040 --> 00:24:19,720 Speaker 1: that is how. I don't. I don't want to say 337 00:24:19,760 --> 00:24:22,439 Speaker 1: the word. Uh now. Look, look, that's how we are 338 00:24:22,480 --> 00:24:26,240 Speaker 1: as humans, all right. We we have to see things 339 00:24:26,280 --> 00:24:29,119 Speaker 1: to believe it because we're just not always as imaginative 340 00:24:29,240 --> 00:24:33,320 Speaker 1: as we should be. The moon is a very very 341 00:24:33,359 --> 00:24:36,400 Speaker 1: powerful thing, you know. That's why we talk about werewolves 342 00:24:36,440 --> 00:24:40,119 Speaker 1: coming out around the full moon. And did you know 343 00:24:42,119 --> 00:24:46,000 Speaker 1: that sometimes werewolves, when you kill them, they say they 344 00:24:46,040 --> 00:24:54,080 Speaker 1: come back as vampires. Well, I have a vampire story. 345 00:24:55,560 --> 00:24:57,600 Speaker 1: This is something that happened to me a long time ago, 346 00:24:58,560 --> 00:25:01,440 Speaker 1: and I've never told it. I've alluded to it, I've 347 00:25:01,480 --> 00:25:04,240 Speaker 1: never told it on this show. When we come back 348 00:25:04,280 --> 00:25:06,280 Speaker 1: from this break, I'm going to tell you what happened 349 00:25:06,280 --> 00:25:10,600 Speaker 1: to me personally when I went down to New Orleans 350 00:25:11,080 --> 00:25:15,200 Speaker 1: as a very naive young man. I wasn't even twenty one. 351 00:25:16,920 --> 00:25:21,720 Speaker 1: I'm Joshua the Warren. You're listening to Strange Things on 352 00:25:21,760 --> 00:25:24,440 Speaker 1: the I Heart Radio and Coast to Coast. I am 353 00:25:24,880 --> 00:26:05,000 Speaker 1: Paranormal podcast Network, and I will be right back. Welcome 354 00:26:05,040 --> 00:26:09,679 Speaker 1: back to Strange Things on the I Heart Radio and 355 00:26:10,000 --> 00:26:14,320 Speaker 1: Coast to Coast, a para normal podcast network. I am 356 00:26:14,359 --> 00:26:17,720 Speaker 1: your host, Joshua P. Warren, and this is the show 357 00:26:18,280 --> 00:26:24,760 Speaker 1: where the unusual becomes usual. We all know you can 358 00:26:24,840 --> 00:26:29,800 Speaker 1: kill a vampire by staking it through the heart with 359 00:26:29,920 --> 00:26:34,720 Speaker 1: a wooden steak, or you expose the vampire to sunlight 360 00:26:34,880 --> 00:26:37,800 Speaker 1: and he or she burst into flames. Did you know 361 00:26:39,000 --> 00:26:43,760 Speaker 1: that you can also, apparently kill a vampire if you 362 00:26:43,920 --> 00:26:50,480 Speaker 1: just throw down a handful of bird seeds or something similar. 363 00:26:51,880 --> 00:26:54,520 Speaker 1: Now you might go, what that, I've never heard that before? Why? Well, 364 00:26:54,560 --> 00:27:00,280 Speaker 1: here's why. Supposedly, vampires are very O. C D and 365 00:27:00,320 --> 00:27:04,120 Speaker 1: they have to count everything, which is I guess where 366 00:27:04,160 --> 00:27:07,879 Speaker 1: the idea of the count from Sesame Street came in. 367 00:27:08,040 --> 00:27:10,760 Speaker 1: It just all it all worked beautifully for for a 368 00:27:10,840 --> 00:27:17,000 Speaker 1: Sesame Street character. And um, so the vampire is like, oh, 369 00:27:17,240 --> 00:27:18,920 Speaker 1: I want to attack you, but I have to stop 370 00:27:18,920 --> 00:27:21,119 Speaker 1: and count all these seeds and it's gonna take the 371 00:27:21,200 --> 00:27:24,240 Speaker 1: vampire forever to do that, and so the idea is 372 00:27:24,320 --> 00:27:27,119 Speaker 1: that he cannot do it before the sun comes up, 373 00:27:27,680 --> 00:27:31,159 Speaker 1: and so you're still killing him with the sun, but 374 00:27:31,320 --> 00:27:35,560 Speaker 1: you're just um creating that scenario for him with the seeds. 375 00:27:36,640 --> 00:27:39,000 Speaker 1: I don't know, man, I'm not telling you I believe 376 00:27:39,040 --> 00:27:41,040 Speaker 1: all that. It's just you know, that's the lure, that's 377 00:27:41,040 --> 00:27:44,679 Speaker 1: the folklore. And uh, you know, when I went to 378 00:27:44,680 --> 00:27:48,360 Speaker 1: Transylvania and I was studying vampires there, and of course 379 00:27:48,359 --> 00:27:52,320 Speaker 1: I'm talking about Transylvania in Romania, not Transylvania County, North 380 00:27:52,320 --> 00:27:56,360 Speaker 1: Carolina where that's where I'm from, what the western part 381 00:27:56,400 --> 00:27:58,719 Speaker 1: of the state, even though they also have their stories, 382 00:27:58,720 --> 00:28:02,600 Speaker 1: but no, the real Transylvania up. Uh, they called the 383 00:28:02,600 --> 00:28:07,639 Speaker 1: the what we would call vampires strigoy and there is 384 00:28:07,680 --> 00:28:12,280 Speaker 1: this idea that they don't like reflective things, especially silver, 385 00:28:13,280 --> 00:28:15,520 Speaker 1: and so you know, it goes back to the whole 386 00:28:15,560 --> 00:28:19,679 Speaker 1: connection between werewolves and killing a werewolf with a silver bullet. 387 00:28:21,200 --> 00:28:24,639 Speaker 1: And so that's one of the reasons that a vampire 388 00:28:24,760 --> 00:28:29,200 Speaker 1: does not have a reflection because a lot of um, 389 00:28:29,240 --> 00:28:31,400 Speaker 1: a lot of mirrors, a lot of the old mirrors 390 00:28:32,200 --> 00:28:35,000 Speaker 1: had some kind of a you know, either an actual 391 00:28:35,119 --> 00:28:40,160 Speaker 1: silver backing, or certainly a silver rebacking, and so it 392 00:28:40,240 --> 00:28:43,760 Speaker 1: almost symbolizes how they would withdraw from that. And what's 393 00:28:43,760 --> 00:28:46,040 Speaker 1: really interesting is that you may or may not realize 394 00:28:46,040 --> 00:28:54,120 Speaker 1: that silver actually does have um anti biotic characteristics. For example, 395 00:28:54,360 --> 00:28:56,560 Speaker 1: in the old days, if like a horse got a wound, 396 00:28:56,600 --> 00:28:59,480 Speaker 1: they would put a silver coin in there and kind 397 00:28:59,480 --> 00:29:01,760 Speaker 1: of like pat it up and that would help it hell. 398 00:29:02,240 --> 00:29:04,719 Speaker 1: Or you could put a silver coin and a bottle 399 00:29:04,760 --> 00:29:08,120 Speaker 1: of wine or something to keep it fresh longer. Uh. 400 00:29:08,120 --> 00:29:10,480 Speaker 1: And so that's why a lot of people take colloidal 401 00:29:10,560 --> 00:29:13,840 Speaker 1: silver these days as some kind of a health supplement, 402 00:29:14,760 --> 00:29:17,120 Speaker 1: and you have to be careful. However, if you take 403 00:29:17,160 --> 00:29:19,240 Speaker 1: too much of it, you will turn as blue as 404 00:29:19,240 --> 00:29:22,080 Speaker 1: a smurf. I met a man one time who had 405 00:29:22,120 --> 00:29:24,640 Speaker 1: done this, but he was drinking like a bath tubload 406 00:29:24,640 --> 00:29:26,600 Speaker 1: of this stuff every day, and I'm telling you, he 407 00:29:26,640 --> 00:29:28,760 Speaker 1: looked like Papa Smurf. It's not a joke. If you 408 00:29:28,880 --> 00:29:31,920 Speaker 1: just have you haven't seen this, get online and look 409 00:29:32,000 --> 00:29:38,560 Speaker 1: up blue people who drink too much colloidal silver. Okay, 410 00:29:38,880 --> 00:29:41,240 Speaker 1: but I've always thought, you know, there's always some truth 411 00:29:41,320 --> 00:29:46,240 Speaker 1: to legend, and so if you thought sickness was created 412 00:29:46,240 --> 00:29:48,840 Speaker 1: by evil spirits and silver would cure that. Well, maybe 413 00:29:48,880 --> 00:29:52,720 Speaker 1: you'd be like, okay, well silver works against vampires. That's 414 00:29:52,720 --> 00:29:54,680 Speaker 1: how I'm always looking for the nuggets of truth. But 415 00:29:54,760 --> 00:29:58,640 Speaker 1: here is my story. All right. This was in ninet 416 00:30:00,120 --> 00:30:06,640 Speaker 1: nine and at that point, I I was not even 417 00:30:06,680 --> 00:30:10,920 Speaker 1: twenty one years old. But I had always wanted to 418 00:30:10,960 --> 00:30:12,760 Speaker 1: go to New Orleans. And I was told, you need 419 00:30:12,800 --> 00:30:16,800 Speaker 1: to go there and explore the mystical you know, atmosphere, 420 00:30:17,640 --> 00:30:21,120 Speaker 1: and and they'll let you drink a beer. They don't cart. 421 00:30:21,560 --> 00:30:24,120 Speaker 1: So I was like, fine, I was not a big drinker, 422 00:30:24,200 --> 00:30:26,680 Speaker 1: but you know, it just seemed like another cool thing. 423 00:30:27,440 --> 00:30:29,680 Speaker 1: So I hooked up with a friend of mine who 424 00:30:29,720 --> 00:30:31,880 Speaker 1: lived in a different state. I don't I'm not gonna 425 00:30:31,960 --> 00:30:36,240 Speaker 1: use his real name here, so I will call him Tim. 426 00:30:36,320 --> 00:30:41,080 Speaker 1: And so Tim and I each flew to New Orleans 427 00:30:42,040 --> 00:30:45,520 Speaker 1: and we had a wild adventure there. We got into 428 00:30:45,560 --> 00:30:49,440 Speaker 1: all kinds of mischief and uh yeah, sure enough, you 429 00:30:49,440 --> 00:30:51,680 Speaker 1: could walk up and order a beer and you know, 430 00:30:51,720 --> 00:30:55,320 Speaker 1: no questions asked. I wasn't really a big drinker, though, 431 00:30:55,360 --> 00:30:57,600 Speaker 1: I mean like I was more of the responsible one. 432 00:30:57,920 --> 00:30:59,920 Speaker 1: He was drinking quite a bit and really make a 433 00:31:00,080 --> 00:31:04,000 Speaker 1: mary himself. And also he you know, he told me 434 00:31:04,040 --> 00:31:07,160 Speaker 1: at one point the streets were packed. This was around 435 00:31:07,360 --> 00:31:09,080 Speaker 1: It wasn't Marty grob and it was I guess it 436 00:31:09,120 --> 00:31:13,400 Speaker 1: was around St. Patrick's Day. And he goes, uh, hell, 437 00:31:13,440 --> 00:31:15,240 Speaker 1: I guess this was like the day before or the 438 00:31:15,320 --> 00:31:17,640 Speaker 1: day after, because we were there for St. Patrick's. Anyway, 439 00:31:17,800 --> 00:31:21,960 Speaker 1: he said, uh, you know what would make this perfect trip? 440 00:31:22,000 --> 00:31:26,240 Speaker 1: I said, what's that? He goes some weed. Now I 441 00:31:26,280 --> 00:31:29,400 Speaker 1: was in the weed, but he was like, really underweed. 442 00:31:30,160 --> 00:31:32,480 Speaker 1: So he goes, I gotta find some weed in this town. 443 00:31:32,680 --> 00:31:35,200 Speaker 1: I figure, well, that's probably not too too hard. You 444 00:31:35,240 --> 00:31:38,400 Speaker 1: have to remember, kids, if you're listening to this, back 445 00:31:38,400 --> 00:31:41,800 Speaker 1: in those days, weed was illegal. Okay, you would go 446 00:31:41,840 --> 00:31:44,760 Speaker 1: to jail if you got caught with marijuana. Now you 447 00:31:44,800 --> 00:31:47,480 Speaker 1: know it's legal all over the place. You would never 448 00:31:47,520 --> 00:31:51,960 Speaker 1: believe it. Here I am broadcasting to you from Las Vegas, Nevada, 449 00:31:52,280 --> 00:31:54,600 Speaker 1: and uh, you know, they're billboards for weed. And you 450 00:31:54,720 --> 00:31:57,440 Speaker 1: walk into the weed shop like you're going to McDonald's, 451 00:31:57,480 --> 00:31:59,560 Speaker 1: and you know, walk out. It's just no big deal. 452 00:31:59,600 --> 00:32:02,640 Speaker 1: But back those days you didn't want to get in 453 00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:06,320 Speaker 1: trouble with that. He wanted some weed, so he started 454 00:32:06,360 --> 00:32:09,280 Speaker 1: asking everybody in New Orleans. How do I find some weed? 455 00:32:09,360 --> 00:32:12,800 Speaker 1: And I was not comfortable with this, but anyway, finally 456 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:16,680 Speaker 1: this guy said, oh, man, dude, if you want weed, 457 00:32:17,640 --> 00:32:21,880 Speaker 1: you have to go talk to the vampires. Now this 458 00:32:22,000 --> 00:32:25,880 Speaker 1: was probably, you know, like nine or ten o'clock at night, 459 00:32:26,600 --> 00:32:30,120 Speaker 1: and we had already had a very action packed day. 460 00:32:30,520 --> 00:32:33,880 Speaker 1: And uh, Tim goes, what do you mean the vampires. 461 00:32:33,880 --> 00:32:36,960 Speaker 1: He goes, yeah, yeah, they hang out down next to 462 00:32:37,000 --> 00:32:40,560 Speaker 1: the river, down next to the Mississippi River. It just 463 00:32:40,560 --> 00:32:43,680 Speaker 1: looked for the bonfire and you'll find them. But oh, 464 00:32:43,960 --> 00:32:45,440 Speaker 1: you might not want to go down there, you know. 465 00:32:45,440 --> 00:32:47,920 Speaker 1: He kind of like was all sort of wishy washy 466 00:32:47,960 --> 00:32:52,520 Speaker 1: about it. But Tim was like, let's go, man. So 467 00:32:52,560 --> 00:32:56,080 Speaker 1: we walked and we walked and we walked, and we 468 00:32:56,160 --> 00:32:59,360 Speaker 1: got down towards the Mississippi River, which is so giant 469 00:32:59,400 --> 00:33:02,280 Speaker 1: you can't even see a crossing. By the time we're 470 00:33:02,320 --> 00:33:04,120 Speaker 1: getting down there, I'm telling you, like, this is like 471 00:33:04,200 --> 00:33:08,520 Speaker 1: eleven o'clock to midnight, and you can well, it got 472 00:33:08,680 --> 00:33:10,640 Speaker 1: more and more quiet. You know, you could hear the 473 00:33:10,760 --> 00:33:14,520 Speaker 1: party of like Bourbon Street way off in the distance, 474 00:33:14,880 --> 00:33:17,280 Speaker 1: and it was getting really scary because we got into 475 00:33:17,320 --> 00:33:23,800 Speaker 1: this park and this was the outer crust. This was 476 00:33:23,880 --> 00:33:28,480 Speaker 1: the fringe of New Orleans, and I saw people there. Uh. 477 00:33:29,280 --> 00:33:32,360 Speaker 1: I try to keep this podcast kind of family friendly, 478 00:33:32,440 --> 00:33:35,320 Speaker 1: so let me just say I saw like naked people 479 00:33:35,680 --> 00:33:39,120 Speaker 1: doing bizarre things, and Tim and I were just like what. 480 00:33:41,120 --> 00:33:43,800 Speaker 1: So I was ready to like turn around and say, 481 00:33:43,880 --> 00:33:46,040 Speaker 1: maybe this is not for us, but he was determined 482 00:33:46,040 --> 00:33:48,239 Speaker 1: to have that weed. And sure enough, up ahead we 483 00:33:48,280 --> 00:33:54,200 Speaker 1: saw this bonfire. Oh there they are the vampires. So 484 00:33:55,200 --> 00:33:59,200 Speaker 1: as we got closer and closer to this bonfire, and 485 00:33:59,240 --> 00:34:04,240 Speaker 1: Tim was the same age I was. By the way, Um, 486 00:34:04,400 --> 00:34:07,800 Speaker 1: we could see the silhouettes of I would say at 487 00:34:07,880 --> 00:34:12,359 Speaker 1: least thirty people gathered around this bonfire right on the river. 488 00:34:13,400 --> 00:34:15,279 Speaker 1: And as we got even closer, we could see they 489 00:34:15,320 --> 00:34:18,080 Speaker 1: were wearing kind of like outfits a little bit like 490 00:34:18,120 --> 00:34:21,800 Speaker 1: you know, coats and cloaks and you know, all black, 491 00:34:22,400 --> 00:34:26,959 Speaker 1: you very very gothy looking stuff. And so we we 492 00:34:26,960 --> 00:34:29,719 Speaker 1: we was like there was no question, Okay, we found him. 493 00:34:30,320 --> 00:34:34,880 Speaker 1: So we were walking closer and closer and you could smell. 494 00:34:34,920 --> 00:34:37,560 Speaker 1: It's like suddenly hit us like a wall, just boom, 495 00:34:38,160 --> 00:34:42,160 Speaker 1: this wall of marijuana. Uh, this is a roma of marijuana. 496 00:34:42,239 --> 00:34:45,399 Speaker 1: We're like, oh yeah, we're at the right place. And 497 00:34:45,520 --> 00:34:50,960 Speaker 1: so we we walked maybe like another i don't know, 498 00:34:51,120 --> 00:34:55,719 Speaker 1: like another hundred feet, and right when we reached a 499 00:34:55,760 --> 00:35:00,080 Speaker 1: certain point, something happened that I will never forget of 500 00:35:00,120 --> 00:35:04,240 Speaker 1: the day I die. It was like that we crossed 501 00:35:04,239 --> 00:35:07,839 Speaker 1: some kind of boundary and all these people who were 502 00:35:07,880 --> 00:35:09,399 Speaker 1: just kind of like doing their own thing, I don't 503 00:35:09,400 --> 00:35:13,200 Speaker 1: know what they were doing around this bonfire, All of 504 00:35:13,239 --> 00:35:18,720 Speaker 1: a sudden, it was like time stopped, and every single 505 00:35:19,480 --> 00:35:31,160 Speaker 1: person's head snapped instantaneously into our direction, and every single 506 00:35:31,320 --> 00:35:38,160 Speaker 1: person had glowing yellow eyes. Now I just got a 507 00:35:38,200 --> 00:35:42,040 Speaker 1: goose bump, got goose bumps remembering this. Okay, I'm not 508 00:35:42,160 --> 00:35:49,080 Speaker 1: kidding you. Imagine thirty forty people, dark silhouettes, and you're 509 00:35:49,120 --> 00:35:55,040 Speaker 1: just mosey in on up there, and then boom all 510 00:35:55,080 --> 00:35:59,879 Speaker 1: their heads, yeah, with the glowing eyes. Instantly, it likes 511 00:36:00,000 --> 00:36:03,080 Speaker 1: opped me in my tracks, and I got a really 512 00:36:03,360 --> 00:36:06,919 Speaker 1: bad feeling. It was like ice water down my back. 513 00:36:08,400 --> 00:36:12,759 Speaker 1: And Tim goes, oh, cool, these are definitely the vampires. 514 00:36:15,760 --> 00:36:18,919 Speaker 1: So he keeps going and I'm kind of holding back 515 00:36:19,040 --> 00:36:24,200 Speaker 1: a little bit. Okay again, I'm getting a bad feeling 516 00:36:24,239 --> 00:36:29,080 Speaker 1: about this. So we get closer and closer, and it's like, 517 00:36:29,280 --> 00:36:30,879 Speaker 1: you know, It's one of those deals where it's total 518 00:36:30,960 --> 00:36:34,640 Speaker 1: silence and everybody's looking at us, like, who are these insane, 519 00:36:35,920 --> 00:36:43,640 Speaker 1: you know, naive people who are coming into this domain. Again, 520 00:36:43,680 --> 00:36:45,120 Speaker 1: there are a lot of I could I could use 521 00:36:45,160 --> 00:36:48,080 Speaker 1: a lot of derogatory terms and like cuss words and 522 00:36:48,120 --> 00:36:50,439 Speaker 1: stuff in this story, but I'm keeping it as clean 523 00:36:50,480 --> 00:36:56,000 Speaker 1: as I can. So whenever there's a group of vampires, 524 00:36:56,480 --> 00:37:02,200 Speaker 1: there's always like the big vampire dude and you can 525 00:37:02,200 --> 00:37:04,279 Speaker 1: see him from a mile away. I'm not saying there 526 00:37:04,360 --> 00:37:07,040 Speaker 1: is not like a vampire lady or a vampire queen, 527 00:37:07,120 --> 00:37:10,279 Speaker 1: but you can always see the vampire dude. He's got 528 00:37:10,400 --> 00:37:12,399 Speaker 1: He's the one with a long black hair and he's 529 00:37:12,480 --> 00:37:16,920 Speaker 1: like so we go straight for the main vampire dude, 530 00:37:20,800 --> 00:37:23,880 Speaker 1: and of course he's got things and he does not 531 00:37:24,000 --> 00:37:28,720 Speaker 1: look happy at all. When we come back from this break, 532 00:37:28,760 --> 00:37:34,000 Speaker 1: I'll tell you what happened next and why I might 533 00:37:34,040 --> 00:37:38,600 Speaker 1: be fortunate that I'm here to tell you this tale. 534 00:37:39,480 --> 00:37:44,080 Speaker 1: I'm Joshua pe Warren. You're listening to Strange Things on 535 00:37:44,120 --> 00:37:47,360 Speaker 1: the I Heart Radio and Coast to Coast, a paranormal 536 00:37:47,480 --> 00:38:28,839 Speaker 1: podcast network. I'll be right back after this. Welcome back 537 00:38:28,880 --> 00:38:32,800 Speaker 1: to the final segment of this edition of Strange Things 538 00:38:32,840 --> 00:38:35,360 Speaker 1: on the I Heart Radio and Coast to Coast, a 539 00:38:35,640 --> 00:38:40,279 Speaker 1: parin normal podcast network. I am your host, Joshua Pete 540 00:38:40,320 --> 00:38:49,320 Speaker 1: Warren and Tim said to the head vampire guy, hey, 541 00:38:49,719 --> 00:38:55,080 Speaker 1: I just want to buy some weed, man, And the 542 00:38:55,239 --> 00:39:01,040 Speaker 1: head vampire guy was not the least bit friendly, and 543 00:39:01,560 --> 00:39:08,239 Speaker 1: he kind of growled and said, we don't have any 544 00:39:08,280 --> 00:39:15,680 Speaker 1: blanking weed. At that point, I was thinking like, okay, well, 545 00:39:15,680 --> 00:39:19,640 Speaker 1: thank you very much, appreciate everything. We'll just mosey on down. 546 00:39:22,080 --> 00:39:29,320 Speaker 1: Tim said, oh, come on, dude, I can smell the weed. 547 00:39:33,520 --> 00:39:36,080 Speaker 1: At this point, I'm thinking, all right, I think I 548 00:39:36,200 --> 00:39:39,919 Speaker 1: just need to turn around and uh like get out 549 00:39:39,920 --> 00:39:45,680 Speaker 1: of here, and I will hear this feeding frenzy behind 550 00:39:45,760 --> 00:39:53,880 Speaker 1: me as I race for my life, and the vampire guy, 551 00:39:54,400 --> 00:39:57,800 Speaker 1: like it becomes even more tense and his crowd starts 552 00:39:57,880 --> 00:40:01,000 Speaker 1: drawing it a little bit more, and the empire to says, 553 00:40:03,440 --> 00:40:11,600 Speaker 1: I told you, we don't have any blanking weed. And 554 00:40:11,680 --> 00:40:17,000 Speaker 1: at that point I think even Tim got it, because 555 00:40:17,160 --> 00:40:21,000 Speaker 1: everybody started drawing in closer. And that is when we 556 00:40:21,000 --> 00:40:23,359 Speaker 1: were both like, all right, thank you very much, and 557 00:40:23,400 --> 00:40:27,680 Speaker 1: we kind of backed away. And then if it weren't 558 00:40:27,719 --> 00:40:31,239 Speaker 1: so humid you could have seen dust clouds behind our 559 00:40:31,680 --> 00:40:38,839 Speaker 1: heels as we breathlessly raced out of there and made 560 00:40:38,880 --> 00:40:43,440 Speaker 1: it back towards that warm, welcoming party music in the distance. 561 00:40:45,200 --> 00:40:49,319 Speaker 1: We got out of there unscathed, and about an hour later, 562 00:40:50,480 --> 00:40:56,080 Speaker 1: uh Tim went into a a bar. We went in together, 563 00:40:56,680 --> 00:40:59,480 Speaker 1: and he met a girl who had a whole backpack 564 00:40:59,600 --> 00:41:04,360 Speaker 1: full of weed, and he was very happy and he 565 00:41:04,480 --> 00:41:12,239 Speaker 1: lived happily ever after. So I guess the point of 566 00:41:12,280 --> 00:41:16,520 Speaker 1: that story is I saw some people who were known 567 00:41:16,640 --> 00:41:19,200 Speaker 1: as vampires, and they were at the right place at 568 00:41:19,239 --> 00:41:23,200 Speaker 1: the right time. Um. I am presuming they all had 569 00:41:23,440 --> 00:41:26,239 Speaker 1: some kind of contact lenses or something, because I don't 570 00:41:26,239 --> 00:41:28,520 Speaker 1: think that there's any other way to explain how they 571 00:41:28,520 --> 00:41:33,839 Speaker 1: all had glowing eyes. But if you ask me, were 572 00:41:33,840 --> 00:41:37,760 Speaker 1: those real vampires? I mean yeah, I think like whatever 573 00:41:37,800 --> 00:41:41,160 Speaker 1: a vampire is like to some degree. If if people 574 00:41:41,239 --> 00:41:44,840 Speaker 1: start believing I'm a vampire and they start drinking blood, 575 00:41:45,360 --> 00:41:48,120 Speaker 1: then they start changing their energy field and they start 576 00:41:48,200 --> 00:41:51,640 Speaker 1: changing their behaviors and they become they kind of shape 577 00:41:51,640 --> 00:41:53,839 Speaker 1: shift a little bit into a different type of thing. 578 00:41:54,520 --> 00:41:56,440 Speaker 1: That doesn't mean that they can go poof and fly 579 00:41:56,560 --> 00:41:59,680 Speaker 1: around as a bat or or turn into a wolf 580 00:41:59,800 --> 00:42:04,520 Speaker 1: or a MR or something. But I think that's about 581 00:42:04,520 --> 00:42:08,680 Speaker 1: as close as you're ever going to come to UH, 582 00:42:08,800 --> 00:42:12,040 Speaker 1: to a group of vampires. And hopefully my telling of 583 00:42:12,080 --> 00:42:14,920 Speaker 1: that story has not ticked off any vampires. If so, 584 00:42:15,520 --> 00:42:19,480 Speaker 1: I apologize. So that's my story about my run in 585 00:42:19,600 --> 00:42:23,680 Speaker 1: with what may have been, you know, the closest thing 586 00:42:23,719 --> 00:42:32,560 Speaker 1: I'll come into contact with, UH being real New Orleans vampires. Okay, 587 00:42:32,640 --> 00:42:37,440 Speaker 1: let's move on to some to some stories that I 588 00:42:37,480 --> 00:42:39,959 Speaker 1: have received. Oh, okay, here's another one that I wanted 589 00:42:40,000 --> 00:42:41,480 Speaker 1: to follow up on a little bit. I have a 590 00:42:41,520 --> 00:42:46,080 Speaker 1: friend named Randy who had told me that his friend 591 00:42:46,239 --> 00:42:50,560 Speaker 1: had recently died, and then right after that, um, his 592 00:42:50,719 --> 00:42:53,520 Speaker 1: smoke detector was going off for a while, even though 593 00:42:53,520 --> 00:42:56,600 Speaker 1: the batteries didn't need to be changed, and he was 594 00:42:56,680 --> 00:43:01,280 Speaker 1: wondering if that could be evidence that when a spirit 595 00:43:01,520 --> 00:43:05,400 Speaker 1: is around, that it's draining the batteries in order to 596 00:43:05,440 --> 00:43:09,840 Speaker 1: try to communicate. And you know what's interesting is that 597 00:43:09,840 --> 00:43:11,960 Speaker 1: that is a well known phenomenon when you go to 598 00:43:12,040 --> 00:43:16,200 Speaker 1: haunted houses and you have cameras and audio recorders that 599 00:43:16,280 --> 00:43:18,440 Speaker 1: all of a sudden, your batteries just get drained. It 600 00:43:18,480 --> 00:43:21,560 Speaker 1: happens all the time, and so that definitely could be 601 00:43:21,600 --> 00:43:24,680 Speaker 1: an indication that a spirit is trying to take energy 602 00:43:24,760 --> 00:43:28,000 Speaker 1: from one place the batteries, and then use it in 603 00:43:28,040 --> 00:43:31,839 Speaker 1: another way to materialize. Well, I went to a very 604 00:43:31,880 --> 00:43:34,680 Speaker 1: haunted house one time, called the Smith McDowell house, and 605 00:43:34,719 --> 00:43:38,959 Speaker 1: I did an interesting experiment. I took two brand new 606 00:43:39,160 --> 00:43:45,640 Speaker 1: identical nine vault batteries and two brand new identical fans 607 00:43:46,440 --> 00:43:49,600 Speaker 1: that were powered by those batteries, and I turned them 608 00:43:49,640 --> 00:43:54,759 Speaker 1: both on at the same exact time. And um, but 609 00:43:54,880 --> 00:43:57,480 Speaker 1: I put I put one at the haunted house with 610 00:43:57,520 --> 00:44:00,160 Speaker 1: a video camera on it, and then I put one 611 00:44:00,239 --> 00:44:03,439 Speaker 1: at my house, which was like ten miles away, as 612 00:44:03,440 --> 00:44:09,440 Speaker 1: a control. And I was amazed by how precisely the 613 00:44:09,480 --> 00:44:13,560 Speaker 1: two fans both stopped running at the exact same moment. 614 00:44:15,080 --> 00:44:18,759 Speaker 1: And I say that because for one thing, I mean 615 00:44:18,800 --> 00:44:23,840 Speaker 1: that shows you how calculated the manufacturing is, but also 616 00:44:24,080 --> 00:44:25,919 Speaker 1: that you know, the Smith mcdeal house is a place 617 00:44:25,920 --> 00:44:29,080 Speaker 1: where people's batteries would drain all the time. But in 618 00:44:29,160 --> 00:44:32,880 Speaker 1: my experiment, I didn't see any difference between batteries draining 619 00:44:33,000 --> 00:44:36,960 Speaker 1: at my house versus at the Smith mcdowal house. So 620 00:44:37,000 --> 00:44:38,919 Speaker 1: what I can tell you is that I don't think 621 00:44:38,960 --> 00:44:43,200 Speaker 1: the haunted places always drained batteries. If so, that would 622 00:44:43,200 --> 00:44:46,040 Speaker 1: be a pretty easy test to do to find certain 623 00:44:46,080 --> 00:44:48,719 Speaker 1: places that do that all the time. I think that 624 00:44:48,760 --> 00:44:52,359 Speaker 1: the batteries do get drained when something is around that's 625 00:44:52,400 --> 00:44:57,720 Speaker 1: draining them. So yeah, if the spirit enters and wants 626 00:44:57,760 --> 00:45:01,000 Speaker 1: to tap in or that's just one theory. But there's 627 00:45:01,040 --> 00:45:03,920 Speaker 1: something about the presence of a spirit that I believe 628 00:45:04,040 --> 00:45:07,719 Speaker 1: can take battery power out of a location. And if 629 00:45:07,719 --> 00:45:09,799 Speaker 1: you're interested in the subject, I'd like for you to 630 00:45:09,840 --> 00:45:13,359 Speaker 1: reproduce something along the lines of my experiment where you 631 00:45:13,400 --> 00:45:18,480 Speaker 1: take two identical you know, fans or something similar drawing 632 00:45:18,600 --> 00:45:22,640 Speaker 1: power and uh, two batteries that are identical, and you 633 00:45:22,719 --> 00:45:25,640 Speaker 1: just see if you can find a location on planet 634 00:45:25,640 --> 00:45:28,799 Speaker 1: Earth where where they tend to drain faster on a 635 00:45:28,840 --> 00:45:32,480 Speaker 1: regular basis. That would be a really interesting experience and 636 00:45:32,640 --> 00:45:37,640 Speaker 1: the experiment. Okay, Crystal from California, she wants to share 637 00:45:37,719 --> 00:45:43,960 Speaker 1: with everybody that um, she found that when she is 638 00:45:44,000 --> 00:45:46,960 Speaker 1: experimenting with her p K will. That's sort of like 639 00:45:47,080 --> 00:45:50,719 Speaker 1: you know, psychokinesis or telekinesis will. If you don't know 640 00:45:50,760 --> 00:45:52,920 Speaker 1: how to make one of those, it's really simple. You 641 00:45:52,960 --> 00:45:54,799 Speaker 1: can do it in five minutes with stuff you have 642 00:45:54,880 --> 00:45:58,239 Speaker 1: in your house to practice p K. I talked all 643 00:45:58,280 --> 00:46:02,440 Speaker 1: about it an episode three of this podcast. Go back 644 00:46:02,480 --> 00:46:05,239 Speaker 1: and listen to episode three. She wasn't having a lot 645 00:46:05,239 --> 00:46:09,920 Speaker 1: of success getting her will to move, and then she 646 00:46:10,040 --> 00:46:13,280 Speaker 1: said that she started sitting there and using her poo 647 00:46:13,440 --> 00:46:20,120 Speaker 1: poo ho upono pono. I'm sorry, please forgive me, thank you, 648 00:46:20,320 --> 00:46:22,880 Speaker 1: I love you. I'm sorry, please forgive me, thank you, 649 00:46:23,120 --> 00:46:26,520 Speaker 1: I love you. And guess what, that broke some kind 650 00:46:26,560 --> 00:46:31,440 Speaker 1: of barrier and she started to move the willboar using 651 00:46:32,040 --> 00:46:36,799 Speaker 1: her pono pono. So try that out if you're experimenting 652 00:46:36,920 --> 00:46:39,680 Speaker 1: with PK wheels and TK wheels, and let's see what 653 00:46:39,880 --> 00:46:43,640 Speaker 1: happens to you. I got an email from a man 654 00:46:43,760 --> 00:46:49,520 Speaker 1: named Robert, and he said basically, kind of cat become 655 00:46:49,640 --> 00:46:54,839 Speaker 1: possessed by another cat and and I said, well, I mean, 656 00:46:55,320 --> 00:46:58,880 Speaker 1: I guess what, what what else can you tell me? 657 00:46:59,040 --> 00:47:05,560 Speaker 1: And he said that he has three cats, and that 658 00:47:06,480 --> 00:47:09,400 Speaker 1: two of them are females that have been spayed and 659 00:47:09,560 --> 00:47:13,440 Speaker 1: one is a non neutered male, and they all hang 660 00:47:13,560 --> 00:47:17,839 Speaker 1: out together in the house perfectly fine their friends, he said, 661 00:47:18,600 --> 00:47:21,640 Speaker 1: but he takes them outside to the yard at least 662 00:47:21,680 --> 00:47:24,120 Speaker 1: once a day so they can get some exercise and 663 00:47:24,280 --> 00:47:27,640 Speaker 1: fresh air. And he said that there's this one spot 664 00:47:27,800 --> 00:47:30,200 Speaker 1: in the yard. All of a sudden, like the male 665 00:47:30,280 --> 00:47:34,400 Speaker 1: cat just there's it's like a switch is flipped and 666 00:47:34,480 --> 00:47:39,520 Speaker 1: he just starts attacking the female cats and they have 667 00:47:39,640 --> 00:47:41,799 Speaker 1: to like beat him off of them. And as soon 668 00:47:41,880 --> 00:47:45,000 Speaker 1: as they get these cats back inside, everything's cool again. 669 00:47:46,440 --> 00:47:50,000 Speaker 1: And he said that that neighborhood is kind of, I 670 00:47:50,080 --> 00:47:55,920 Speaker 1: guess infamous, notorious for some stray cats that cause problems. 671 00:47:55,960 --> 00:47:59,440 Speaker 1: And he said, what do you think. Well, look, I 672 00:47:59,560 --> 00:48:03,560 Speaker 1: told my wife Lauren about this, she's an amateur animal expert, 673 00:48:03,640 --> 00:48:06,200 Speaker 1: and she said, maybe there's something in the yard that's, 674 00:48:06,640 --> 00:48:09,360 Speaker 1: you know, irritating the cat or whatever. But I don't know. 675 00:48:09,480 --> 00:48:11,640 Speaker 1: He's gonna send me more information. But what I can 676 00:48:11,680 --> 00:48:15,360 Speaker 1: tell you is, look, living things are living things. We 677 00:48:15,440 --> 00:48:18,279 Speaker 1: all have a spirit. If you take a human and 678 00:48:18,400 --> 00:48:20,680 Speaker 1: a cat and you look at us under a microscope, 679 00:48:20,800 --> 00:48:23,680 Speaker 1: it's not that different. We're all kind of made of 680 00:48:23,760 --> 00:48:26,879 Speaker 1: the same stuff. And so you know, I think it's 681 00:48:26,960 --> 00:48:31,600 Speaker 1: possible that a cat might be possessed by another cat. 682 00:48:32,400 --> 00:48:35,359 Speaker 1: Does that sound crazy? Oh, well, wouldn't be the first time. 683 00:48:35,400 --> 00:48:39,480 Speaker 1: I've been accused of that, so I will uh. I'll 684 00:48:39,520 --> 00:48:42,440 Speaker 1: get back to you with more updates. Okay, folks, take 685 00:48:42,480 --> 00:48:48,760 Speaker 1: a deep breath, relax if you can close your eyes. 686 00:48:49,680 --> 00:48:53,840 Speaker 1: You know what's coming now, don't you the good Fortune tone. 687 00:48:54,000 --> 00:49:19,680 Speaker 1: It's twenty seconds. You need this. Here it is. That's 688 00:49:19,719 --> 00:49:23,120 Speaker 1: it for this edition of the show. Follow me on 689 00:49:23,280 --> 00:49:27,800 Speaker 1: Twitter at Joshua pe Warren, Plus visit Joshua pe Warren 690 00:49:27,880 --> 00:49:30,680 Speaker 1: dot com to sign up for my free e newsletter 691 00:49:31,120 --> 00:49:34,800 Speaker 1: to receive a free instant gift, and check out the 692 00:49:34,840 --> 00:49:38,480 Speaker 1: cool Stuff and the Curiosity Shop all at Joshua pe 693 00:49:38,600 --> 00:49:41,400 Speaker 1: Warren dot com. I have a fun one lined up 694 00:49:41,480 --> 00:49:45,000 Speaker 1: for you next time, I promise. So please tell all 695 00:49:45,040 --> 00:49:48,760 Speaker 1: your friends to subscribe to this show and to always 696 00:49:48,880 --> 00:49:53,920 Speaker 1: remember the Golden Rule. Thank you for listening, thank you 697 00:49:54,120 --> 00:49:57,600 Speaker 1: for your interest in support, thank you for staying curious, 698 00:49:58,320 --> 00:50:02,880 Speaker 1: and I we'll talk to you again soon. You've been 699 00:50:02,920 --> 00:50:06,759 Speaker 1: listening to Strange Things on the I Heart Radio and 700 00:50:07,000 --> 00:50:18,680 Speaker 1: Coast to Coast a UM Paranormal Podcast Network. Thanks for 701 00:50:18,800 --> 00:50:20,879 Speaker 1: listening to the I Heart Radio and Coast to Coast 702 00:50:20,920 --> 00:50:23,799 Speaker 1: a and Paranormal Podcast Network. Make sure and check out 703 00:50:23,920 --> 00:50:26,719 Speaker 1: all our shows on the I heart Radio app or 704 00:50:26,800 --> 00:50:29,160 Speaker 1: by going to I heart radio dot com