
Strange Deranged Beyond Insane
Everything paranormal and unexplained. History of buildings old hospitals any haunted locations along with personal experiences. Famous murders in Michigan. Ufo and extraterrestrial. Urban legends of Michigan. Folklores witches and tribal tales. Horror movies and unexplained curses and deaths on set.
Strange Deranged Beyond Insane
Behind the Curtain: Celebrities, Shapeshifters, and the Tech That Sells Us Stories
What if the faces we follow are costumes, the rooms we enter are charged with old stories, and the rituals we whisper are tools we forgot we owned? That’s the ride we take—through celebrity as fabrication, shapeshifter lore, neural awe machines, and the quiet comeback of folk magic that puts power back in your hands.
We open by pulling apart the glamour: how fame can function like an ongoing role made of makeup, coaching, timing, and now AI, designed to steer what we buy and believe. A shapeshifter account attributed to Billy Corgan electrifies the question of identity and control, not as proof but as a mirror. From there we slip into the 1980s lab where Michael Persinger’s “God Helmet” aimed complex magnetic fields at the temporal lobes and people reported presences, ecstasy, and out-of-body states. The replication debate matters: are we glimpsing neurotheology in action or suggestion at scale? Either way, it reveals just how close mystery sits to the machinery of the brain.
We then trace a harsher line: whistleblower claims about Project Solace, mind-to-voice tech, and trauma-based conditioning—stories that live where trust has thinned. We don’t ask you to swallow every detail; we ask you to notice the need for meaning when institutions fail. That same need fuels today’s rise in witchcraft and folk practice—ancestor altars, herbs, tarot, and simple intention-setting—not as a trend but as survival and self-trust. You’ll hear a personal manifestation story, plus a concise tour of the Book of Enoch—Watchers, Nephilim, judgment—and why ancient frameworks still shape modern fears.
To lighten the grip without losing the edge, we share fresh horror takes: why Conjuring: Last Rites worked for us, how Weapons surprised, where an Ed Gein drama stumbled, and why True Haunting taps the eerie ecology of college campuses. Finally, we face Stephen King—genius, darkness, and the balance required to engage hard stories—before gearing up for Welcome to Derry and what new fear-lab it might build.
If you’re curious, skeptical, and a little haunted, you’ll feel at home here. Hit follow, rate the show to help more weirdos find us, and text us via our Buzzsprout page with your theory, book rec, or haunted campus story. What thread should we pull next?
Hey weirdos, welcome back. Welcome to Strange Strange Beyond Insane. In case any of you are unfamiliar, this is the show where we dive into the bizarre, the paranormal, and the just plain unexplainable. And this is your host, Melissa. So we've been talking on this show for a long time about, you know, basically the world is a stage and celebrity worshipping is coming to an end, thank God. And I have some videos that I want to share on here and my thoughts too, and here we go.
SPEAKER_04:I told you every celebrity you've ever known, from musicians to actors to politicians, isn't real. They're all characters. Hollywood is way more advanced than they let on. We're not just talking about makeup or CGI. We're talking about full-blown identity fabrication on a scale that would blow your mind. Every celebrity is just a role played by an elite group of actors using crazy advanced Hollywood techniques. I mean, think about makeup artists, voice coaches, body doubles do things. Hollywood's in this tech for decades. They can make anyone look like anyone. What do you think is a celebrity's natural appearance? It's a costume. They're trained to play roles not just in movies, but in life. This whole thing is to control us and celebrities influence how we think, what we wear, what we care about. They're there to sell ideas, lifestyles, keep us distracted from real problems. And there are characters. Those actors just take away some of the biggest names today. Suspiciously similar. They're always just there. Some of the biggest celebrity double leads in history. Hollywood has been using aesthetics, body doubles, and now even AI for years. The real secret, they've perfected face-to-voice changing technology. We're talking micro implants that can change vocal tone, advanced body suits to alter physical appearance, and even psychological conditioning to make the actor believe they are the character. This stuff is beyond anything we've seen publicly. They've got this down to a science man. Entire studios exist just to train these elite actors in multiple celebrity roles. These people live entire lives as different celebrities flipping between roles depending on what the industry needs at the time. If you look at the way these celebrity lives unfold, how perfectly timed their rises and falls are, how eerily similar some of them look and sound, you can't help but wonder.
SPEAKER_00:Okay, so this is kind of funny because a co-worker and I were just talking about um Billy Corgan from um Smashing Pumpkins this past Saturday, and there's so many things about him. But anyways, there's an interview about him recalling a terrifying shapeshifter experience, and I thought this was very, very um it was I'm I'm trying to find like the right words to say without putting my own spin on it, you know, too much of my own experiences, but I I do I will say this, I 1000% believe this man. But here we go.
SPEAKER_02:I was with somebody once and and I saw I saw a transformation that I can't explain. The person transformed into something other than human. Yes. I saw it. Were you on drugs? I was not, it was totally sober. Wow. I wasn't saying that. Imagine you're doing something and suddenly you turn around and there's somebody else. A different human. It's hard to explain without going into it. I'm not going to pump it. What did you say to the person? What did you just do here? And what did they say they were? The person was making them.
SPEAKER_03:Were you in bed with the paper? Were you making love? Were you uncomfortable? I find this story so crazy, and I'm so glad they came forward with it. The Smashing Pumpkins frontman later explained that he was being vague on here out of fear for his career and well-being for his loved ones. In a later interview with the People's Voice, he alleged, demons exist. They are real. They are reptilian. That's why the Bible says Eve was seduced by a snake. Substitute reptile for snake. Billy later elaborated about his experience with the record industry in Illuminati. He said that he had an encounter with an industry executive who shapeshifted right in front of him during a meeting. He said, I can't remember his exact words to me, but he said something along the lines of, all humans will suffer in unending agony. You will do our will. Let's see.
SPEAKER_00:Yeah, so I definitely don't think he would even say that publicly, um, if it wasn't true, knowing that it could, you know, his life he fears for his life and for his career, right? So I truly do believe him. Um all right, so I came across this article and I did fact-check it and make sure, made sure that it was real, and it is very intriguing. Um, I can't believe like there wasn't an actual fucking movie made about this, like based on true events that this really happened, right? There's been a lot of movies like this, but I mean, I've never heard anyone talk about this. So we're gonna talk about the God helmet that was made in the 1980s. So in the 1980s, Canadian nur neuroscientist Michael Persinger began pioneering the experiments that would lead to the development and public fascination with the God helmet. Working with his colleague Stanley Corrin, Persinger designed a modified helmet that applied weak, complex magnetic fields to the brain's temporal lobes. The experiments explored the engineering field of neurotheology, which studies the neural correlates of religion and spirituality. The experiment and its results. Okay, so the first God helmet was a modified yellow snowblowing, I'm sorry, snowmobiling helmet fitted with magnetic coils, solenoids. The helmet was designed to apply weak, fluctuating fluctuating magnetic signals to a subject's temporal lobes, the brain regions associated with the motion, memory, and the processing of sensory information, the procedure, okay. The test subjects, obviously, people, humans, would sit in a dark, soundproof room or a chamber, which shielded them from all external stimuli, including the Earth's natural magnetic field while wearing the helmet, they would receive the magnetic stimulation. So these are reported experiences. Persinger reported that a significant majority of participants experienced a sensed presence in the room with them. These presences were sometimes interpreted as god, angels, ghosts, or other spiritual beings. Some subjects also reported out-of-body experiences, feelings of ecstasy, or visions. Um Wow. So the theory behind the helmet. Persinger's work was based on the idea that many spiritual and paranormal experiences are neurological artifacts, particularly linked to activity in the temporal lobes. The theory proposed that by applying a magnetic field mimicking the neural signals of a temporal lobe, epileptic seizure, it might be possible to induce similar mystical states in non-epileptic individuals. The experiences were explained by Persinger as inner hemispheric intrusions. Well, um, a disruption of communication between the two cerebral um hemispheres, which caused the right hemisphere's sense of self to intrude into the left hemisphere's dominant consciousness. So obviously, this gained a lot of controversy. Um it was failed. The most significant point of content is that many other research groups have failed to replicate Persengers' results under controlled double-blinded conditions. In some cases, participants wearing um this hat sham helmets reported similar effects. The role of it was some studies suggest that the experiences reported by participants were more likely influenced by the I'm sorry, by personal and psychological traits, like a belief in the paranormal, than by magnetic stimulation itself. Ongoing legacy. Despite the controversy, Persinger's work sparked significant public and scientific interest in neurotha I'm sorry, neurotheology. It continues to fuel debate about the neurological or origins of spiritual experiences and the fuzzy line between perception and belief. So I just find this so intriguing. I cannot believe I've never in my life have heard of the God helmet. So it was a snowmobiling helmet that was modified basically. And again, I cannot believe I didn't know about this because this is something I would have known about. I mean, I should have, right? But I think it is extremely interesting. Okay, so here's another interesting little story. Sabrina Wallace is a whistleblower who shares her testimony about a secretive defense program she calls Project Solace. She claims her family was pulled into it in the late 1960s, turning what looked like ordinary medical care into long-term experimentation. From childhood, Wallace remembers being connected to a strange machine, undergoing unusual procedures, and experiencing events that she later understood as part of a neural mapping in early human-machine interrogation research. According to her, Project Solace developed implant sensors and electromagnetic technologies capable of transmitting data remotely, projecting voices or thoughts into the mind, and even linking one person's emotions to another. She describes deliberate trauma-based conditioning, military involvement, and the use of satellites and drones to expand the program beyond labs. Today, Wallace warns that these systems did not disappear. They evolved into hidden networks of surveillance and control that still shaped the modern world. So some of the comments include, and again, they're kind of graphic, the guy who just randomly stabbed the girl to death on the train claimed that the implants made him do it. Um, then that this person's talking about that poor Ukrainian girl that was stabbed, and everybody remembers seeing that. Um, this other person commented and said, This is how mass shooters happen. The kids get signals and voices, messages into their brain, and they go on a rampage. Harp, so all cap H A R P is constant constantly throwing signals to the ion osphere that causes confusion and changes in the nervous system. Another user says it's called voice to skull technology. It's not a conspiracy theory, trust me. So I'm just reading these comments. Um another person says she is correct and she's just waiting for everybody to be able to catch up. She's a legend, and I won't let her name disappear. She taught so many people what's happening before it was public. It's publicly because of her. I think a lot of Gen X have gone through this trauma. I know I did. Compton, California schools, severe abuse, and use those headphones, and the entire area was surrounded by MKUltra, which is why there's so much violence back in the 80s. Whether anyone believes it or not, it's happening right under your noses. Why do you think they keep us all distracted? Um, someone commented Sabrina Wallace is the GOAT. Greatest of all time. Um this person said, I know someone born on base in Fort Knox in 1974. His father was commissioned officer on active duty. He has crazy memories going back to I don't know what that what he's trying to say. Um, he has started trying to talk openly about his life experiences. He had hoped that more open disclosure, as was anticipated, but vaporized, would allow him to find community and maybe therapy. But who can you trust? His military father had no idea. Some do, no consent required. Children born to commissioned officers on base were property of underground, and they had easy access. Um, this person comments, we have become experimental, expandable, I'm sorry, expendable lab rats. Wasn't that the truth? So yeah, I mean, I will say this. I think that there are so many stupid fucking distractions nowadays. Like, I'm not gonna really get into the Charlie Kirk thing, but all I can say is that this Charlie Kirk person was a character um on the stage. You know, I will say again, the world is a stage, and I think he was a character, and it was to even to divide people more and to create more chaos to distract us from what? I don't know, but that's my opinion. Um, I'm allowed to talk about my opinion on here, and everyone has them, and that's what I will say. So I definitely this stuff is believable for sure. Okay, and I really want to talk about this. This is called the Book of Enoch, and actually, my husband and I were talking about it, and I really want to get this book and read it because I've seen a lot of stuff that people have posted over the years. So, alright, so I kind of want to sum it up what the book of Enoch is about. The book of Enoch is an ancient Jewish religious text about fallen angels called the Watchers who married human women, which resulted in the creation of giants called Nephilium. The book expands on these biblical themes by including Enoch's apocalyptic visions of heaven, hell, future judgment, and Masonic figure. Although it was influential in early Christian thought, it was later exclude excluded from most Jewish and Christian canons. But it is considered scripture by the Ethiopian Orthodox Um Tiwa Hedu Church. So the fallen angels, this book describes how 200 angels known as the Watchers rebelled against God by descending to earth to have children with human women, creating giants. It explains this as the cause of much of the world's evil and violence. Um, apocalyptic visions, it contains visions of Enoch's journey to heaven where he sees the secrets of the cosmos, the dwelling of the righteousness, and the fiery prison of the fallen angels. Divine judgment. The book describes God's judgment on both the fallen angels and the wicked humans, providing a justification for the great flood. So this includes prophecies about you know the future, the future figure, the son of man, and the final judgment. So, I mean, that's just like key, you know, like key facts about this book. But I I've been saying it for like two years that I'm gonna order this book and read it, and I still haven't. So if there's any listeners out there that have read this, please give us your feedback. If there's more listeners that want to also get this book and you do get it, um I don't know, let me know what you think. You know, I'm always hesitant on like anything biblical ordering and reading because it's a lot of times it's a lot of words that I don't know, or this or that, and I gotta look up stuff, but um, I'm going to cheat and have my husband read it because he's a very quick reader and he'll kind of like let me know if it's worth reading or not. So, yes, I am gonna cheat essentially, and that's the beauty of having a very intelligent husband, and I take pride in that. Okay, so moving on to other crazy bizarre stories. So I found this topic, even this content, um, very interesting because you know, like witchcraft nowadays is normalized, more of a belief, and not so much like, hey, we need to get burnt at the stake, which we talked about this a couple episodes ago, that no one really got burnt. Um it was a lot worse than that. I well, I don't know if it would be worse being burned alive or being hung or you know, drowned essentially, but um I found this very, very interesting, and I really like how this creator talks about this. Okay, I'm gonna set this up so I can play this.
SPEAKER_01:You've probably noticed it. More people are calling themselves witches, more people are making moon water, and spell jars are popping up on your feet. So why is witchcraft getting so popular all of a sudden? Well, here's what I think that is based on history and not on hype. There is a pattern. In Europe, the most brutal witch once followed famine, plague, and political collapse. It wasn't about magic, it was about control. People turned to folk healers and village midwives when the church and the crown failed them. And suddenly those same healers were called witches. In the 60s and the 70s, witness ceremonial magic and feminist spirituality surged in response to war, civil rights injustice, and patriarchal religion. Books like Drawing Down the Moon by Margaret Adler documented that shift. People were done waiting for salvation. They wanted power in their own hands. And now we are seeing it again after a pandemic, after political unrest, after watching modern systems fail to protect basic rights. People are turning inward. They are remembering that their grandmothers, what their grandmothers did in secret. They are returning to nature, they are picking up tarot, ancestor altars, herbal magic, um, not to be trendy, but for survival and self-trust. History shows us when systems fail, people turn inward. They want autonomy, they want meaning. And witchcraft offers both. It's not about casting fireballs, it's about reclaiming power in a world that constantly takes it away. And that part is deeply historical, too. In Europe, uh, cunning folk, herb women, and village seers practiced folk magic for generations. They weren't called witches until power structures needed someone to blame. In the Americas, the enslaved and indigenous people preserved spiritual knowledge under threat of death. And those traditions became the roots of what we now call conjure and root work, etc. So today's rise isn't a fluke. It is returning to something ancient and very personal. It's folk magic, it's ancestral memory. Uh, it's a private ritual that doesn't need a middleman, a building, or any kind of permission. And in a world drowning in misinformation, burnout, and consumerism, there is something radical about lighting a candle, whispering an intention, and trusting your own energy again. We know witchcraft isn't new. It's not even resurfacing for the first time. It's always been here, quietly surviving underneath everything else. It comes back when we need it most. And apparently we need it now.
SPEAKER_00:You know, I will say this. Um, I wouldn't call it witchcraft that I did. Um, I call my you know, I I claim to be spiritual, I'm not religious, but I can tell you this intention setting is everything. Um, over a year ago, I set intentions to hopefully become pregnant, right? And that was this was on the Lions Gate portal, which is 8-8, so August 8th of 2024, and I asked if I was deserving enough, you know, to have a baby. Um, because we had been trying for a while, and I wanted to say that was my last resort, but I just figured, hey, what the hell? Um, I never really set intentions out there like that, and you know, put myself out there like that in that way, and like I said, so I just decided to do that. Um I did make a manifestation jar. Uh found out I was pregnant in December, and I kid you not, um, would not lie about it because obviously it's a fact and it's on record, right? Um when I gave birth to Jack, um, he was born in the eighth month, so August, and he was born eight pounds eight ounces. So some people might say that's a coincidence. Um, I do not. If people see that as witchcraft, I really don't care. I think witchcraft just got a bad name, and witches were pointed at like they were some supernatural tr you know trolls that were stirring up trouble. And I don't think it's that at all. I mean, how is it any different than going into a church and praying? Alright, so I want to do a few quick reviews on movies and shows. So my godson Ryder and I, that well, Ryder has been on the podcast quite a few times. Um, we finally got to go see the Conjuring Last Rights movie. And honestly, it got a lot of bad feed like awful feedback, actually. And people said it was terrible, and him and I loved it. I thought it was great. Um, it yes, it is based on true event true events. Um, it's on a true it's based on a true story of the alleged haunting of the Smurl family in West Pittston, Pennsylvania. And obviously the investigation was led by Ed and Lorraine Warren. Um again, this movie draws on real life case like case, but it doesn't it does fabricate a little bit and dramatize, right? For for movie, for the whole movie, so people get drawn into it. But anyways, I thought it was amazing. I thought it was actually scary. I really, really liked, you know, the whole 80s theme, how they kept it very almost like simple, scary. It wasn't like over the edge. Um, sometimes the most simple movies are the scariest. I mean, look at the movie The Strangers. I mean, that's as simple as you can get, and I felt that that was fucking terrifying because it can actually happen, and it actually has happened. So yeah, I thought that was a great movie. Um, I also watched, I finally got around to it, and I watched um the movie Weapons, and that got really bad reviews too. Um like my one friend was like, that what that movie was so stupid. I actually really liked it, and Gladys, to me, the character, was very fucking disturbing in that movie. She I have this thing about like old creepy women in movies. It just freaks me out. The women freak me out more than the men in movies. I don't know why. Um, but Weapons is a 2025 American mystery horror film. Um, it's about when all but one child from the same classroom mysteriously vanishes on the same night at exactly the same time. A community is left questioning who or what is behind the disappearance. Um, some people thought it was like comic, and I mean maybe like I can see like how they were running and like certain details of the movie would kind of be funny, right? But I actually really, really enjoyed it. I thought it was original, I thought it was fun. Um like see this on Reddit. Here's a here's a review. Weapons is a surface level horror comedy that is enjoyable on its face, but it's like a six out of ten at the best. I mean, okay, I kind of disagree. I thought I thought it was really good, and you know, on IMDb, it got pretty good reviews. Um, 7.5 out of 10 says weapons is a tense and gripping new horror from Zack Kregger that lives up too much of its immense hype. I thought it was a really very, very good movie. Um, I was very pleased to see two pretty good horror movies because they suck nowadays. Let's let's admit it. Okay, so moving on, let's talk about the uh monster, the Edgane, Edgeen, however you say it. Um so Charlie Hunnan. I think that's how you say his name. Anyways, the everyone, we all think he's so hot. Hunnam. I'm sorry, I always say Hunnan. Hunum, Charlie Hunnum, the hot one from Sons of Anarchy, which every woman agrees, right? Jax, that character. So I watched this for Charlie Hunnam. I mean, because he was gonna be in it, and I could not I didn't I just I didn't like it at all. I thought it was really slow, I thought it was confusing. They kept going back and forth from like Nazi time to you know real time at that point, and I could not stand the fucking way he talked, and I know he was portraying who Edgeen really was, but it I found it annoying and I found it very slow. Um I didn't find it scary at all. I didn't find it, I don't know. I just Edgeen isn't like one of the main serial killers, if you can even call him a serial killer for me. But I am looking forward to the new one coming out, Monster, um, the Lizzie Borden story. I'm very, very excited about that. I hope they don't fuck it up because you know, being someone that got to go to the Lizzie Borden house, and I took that whole my husband and I took that um history tour, and it was great. I mean, it was wonderful. I highly recommend if you're gonna go stay at the Lizzie Borden house. I've said this on so many episodes, but make sure you do that history tour because there's way more behind the history um with Lizzie Borden than well, I I should say the Borden family than has ever been, I think, talked about or actually publicly shown on any of the shows or movies that have been about Lizzie Borden. Okay, so I also did watch um True Haunting on Netflix, and I really, really enjoyed that. There's five episodes. Um, it's basically reenactments and present-day interviews about like it's a chilling series that details paranormal encounters from the viewpoint of those who lived them. Um, I absolutely enjoyed it, especially the um first. I'm sorry, not first season, the first episode, Airie Hall, which there's three parts to it. And it's um about a college student in the 80s that was viciously, I guess you can say, haunted by this entity. And well, I'm not- I don't want to ruin it, but at the end of the third episode, it makes so much sense why that happened to him. And there's actually there's um witnesses that came forward that remember going through things themselves along with him and you know their own stuff that happened in this college. So that is one thing too. I I do want to do some episodes on haunted, you know, colleges because there is so many hauntings that go on and that have happened way in in the past and even now, present time. Um, I think in in these college buildings, there's so much history and there's so much bad juju, and there's a lot of unexplained deaths that have happened over the years, you know, the whole initiating thing, and you know, just the pressures that are put onto a younger person, I think can bring on a lot of like poltergeist energy. Um, but yeah, you guys should if you haven't, you should totally watch the show. And then the um second one is a it's called This House Murdered Me. And that that was really good too. I believe there was two episodes. Yeah, there's two episodes on that one, and I found that very interesting. I thought they did a great job. And again, I'm super stoked with how many good shows and movies I've actually been able to see lately because normally spooky season, and a lot of us that are spooky and fucking weird, we don't need it to be spooky season to watch scary shit, right? But it makes it even better when there's like good stuff to watch, right? So yeah, I've been very pleased and um overall everything I've watched has been really good. Okay, so now I want to end this episode with the topic about Stephen King. So Jenny and I, you know, Jenny, one of the hosts here on Strange Strange Beyond Insane, um has brought to my attention that Stephen King is an actual evil man, right? And I've always taken pride in knowing that Stephen King and I share the same birthday September 21st, and we both are weird, you know, people and like horror movies and you know are a little darker people when it comes to that, but um, yeah, so she br she brought these new facts to light, right? And it kind of freaked me out. So people are saying that like he's confessed a lot of times publicly that he is kind of like a psychopath. Um, a lot of people say like Stephen King is a great writer, but he has a very dark hidden side. And I mean, you you have to fucking have a dark side, right? To like write really dark, creepy horror movies, just like this podcast. Like, I obviously have a knack or a like, a love, a passion for all things occult, right? And dark and this and that. But one thing I can say is that I do not let it consume me. And I always say that I'm as light as I am dark, and I try to be very equal in what I do, and I don't make my whole entire life about paranormal and the dead, and you know, the crazy and this and that. There's there's definitely a gray part of me too that likes to just chill out and also likes happy walks in the sunshine and loves to go swimming and loves summertime, even though I love fall, and I will always love fall. You know what I mean? Like there's a balance, and I definitely know I'm self-aware enough to know that I have that balance. Um, but looking up things about Stephen King, it it's pretty shocking. I didn't realize in real life he's kind of a psychopath. Um, you know, a lot of people just say like he's a good film writer, but there's definitely something dark about him. And like some people say, I always thought that Stephen King was a psycho creep. His books are full of hateful things and the kind of description that must be rooted in something real rather than just relying on imagination. Healthy minds don't just imagine stuff like that. There's more I could say, but I think this is enough. But yeah, he's a creep. My ex was a fan of his and he was a major creep. Wait, it says yeah, but yeah, he's a creep. My ex was okay. My ex was a fan of his, and he was a major creep too, as it turned out. But you know, a lot of people are saying it's not normal to have an imagination like that, but I think it is, and I think you have to have a fucking amazing imagination to be a writer, right? Um, there's a lot of things I disagree. Like Jenny said that she doesn't like that he, you know, in his stories and his movies, children get hurt and you know, killed. You know, and I understand that, and that is, you know, now having a kid of my own, it's it is hard to watch or listen or see that, but it's also a story, too, you know, so it's not like real life. But I can see how people are maybe bothered by that, right? So, you know, Stephen King, also known as Stephen Edward King, often called the King of Horror, is an American author who has sold more than 350 million copies of his work. His writing spans genres including horror, suspense, crime, science fiction, fantasy, and mystery. King's stories are set in various locations from small towns to big cities and fantasy worlds and often feature ordinarily relatable characters. Before finding success, King received many rejection slips for his hundreds of short stories. So let's see, Stephen King. I know I'm definitely right, but I just want to say it out loud again. So Stephen King's birthday, so he was born September 21st, 1947. So he is 78 years old. His place of birth was Portland, Maine, I believe. Um yeah, so I don't know. I like I really like everything of his, and I can't really look any differently at him. I mean, I know people yeah, of course the guy's fucking dark. I mean, you you have to be dark to come out with things that so to end this on a happy, more excited note about Stephen King, his original it movie that inspired the newer modern day, you know, it movies one and two, chapter one and two. Um finally, we have a date for Welcome to Dairy that I've been waiting for for at least five years. So it's supposed to air on HBO Max October 26th, and I cannot wait. So make sure you guys mark your calendars for that. It's supposed to be amazing, and I hope HBO Max does not let us down because I will be extremely upset. Very, very upset because, like I said, I have been waiting for this show for a very, very long time. Alright, you guys, so you can listen to the show Strange Strange Beyond Insane on any platform that you listen to your podcast on. Um, examples including Spotify, Amazon, iHeart, Apple. Um, the list goes on. And, you know, you can find us on TikTok if you look up Strange Strange Beyond Insane. There will be videos of myself and my friends that are always on the podcast that are considered our, you know, main hosts. And you can also follow their content too, which is cool. You know, we have a Facebook page called Macomb Paranormal Research Society. Um, we're on X, we're on what else? I think everything you can think of. I do want to tell you that there are there are a lot of scammers out there, and there are people that like to copy, and there's another name out there that's very close to my Facebook page. So my content, Macomb Paranormal Research Society, with my strange drink beyond insane logo is me. Okay. This other fake McComb Paranormal Society is bullshit. Sorry, not sorry. Um, again, if you go to my Facebook, you will see Macomb Paranormal Research Society with the strange, strange, beyond insane logo. A little birdie told me that someone is kind of being a dickhead out there and thought that was cute to tell someone to basically make the same page as mine, but like a little bit different. So, whatever. You're gonna have haters, and if you have haters, you're doing something right, right? Okay, so yes, again, um you can find us on pretty much all social media platforms and any platform that you listen to. And please, if you guys are listening, my listeners, please rate us. It's very important um that we get more ratings. It helps, you know, for Buzz Sprout itself to move the content around even more and advertise it. And you guys, I have said this, you know, I haven't said it lately. Um, but again, you can directly message me on Buzz Sprout. And if you go into so you go into Buzzsprout and you look up our, you know, or you know, my page, Strange Strange Beyond Insane, and you can go right in and you can send me a text, and it comes right to my phone. So I would love to hear from you guys. Um, again, please text me. Let me know what you guys think, what you guys, you know, what what you want different or different content or you know, even ideas, and please rate again, please, please, please rate us. I will greatly appreciate that. But, anyways, thank you guys for listening and tune in for more.