Épisodes

  • 35: Lecture Halls After Dark: The Most Haunted Universities
    Feb 20 2026

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    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore some of the most haunted universities in North America and the UK — from abandoned asylum buildings and Gothic towers to medieval cathedral ruins and anatomy theatres linked to real historical crimes.

    These aren’t urban legends pulled out of thin air. Many of these campuses are built on documented history involving:

    • Former psychiatric institutions
    • Grave robbing
    • The Burke and Hare murders
    • Public dissections
    • Religious executions
    • Phantom monks and ghostly figures

    📚 Sources

    Ohio University & The Ridges

    • Ohio University. The Ridges History.⁠https://www.ohio.edu/ridges/history⁠
    • Ohio History Connection. Athens Lunatic Asylum Overview.

    University of Toronto

    • Richardson, D., Careless, J.M.S., & Craig, G.M. (1990). A Not Unsightly Building: University College and Its History. Mosaic Press.

    Queen’s University

    • Queen’s University Archives. Grant Hall History.⁠https://www.queensu.ca/archives/⁠

    University of St Andrews

    • University of St Andrews. History of the University.⁠https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/about/history/⁠
    • Historic Environment Scotland. St Andrews Cathedral.⁠https://www.historicenvironment.scot/⁠

    University of Edinburgh

    • University of Edinburgh. History of the University.⁠https://www.ed.ac.uk/about/history⁠
    • Rosner, L. (2009). The Anatomy Murders: The True and Spectacular History of Edinburgh’s Notorious Burke and Hare.
    • Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. Surgeons’ Hall Museums – Burke & Hare Collection.⁠https://museum.rcsed.ac.uk/⁠


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    38 min
  • 34: Love, Loss & Legends: The Dark Side of Valentine’s Day (Bonus Episode)
    Feb 14 2026

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    Valentine’s Day is often framed as a celebration of romance — roses, chocolate, candlelight.

    But beneath the surface, February 14th carries a far older and darker history.

    In this bonus episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore the lesser-known folklore and urban legends connected to Valentine’s Day — from early martyrdom and ritual superstition to backroad ghost stories and industrial-era mining lore.

    Sources & Further Reading

    • Brunvand, J. H. The Vanishing Hitchhiker: American Urban Legends and Their Meanings.
    • Dégh, L. Legend and Belief: Dialectics of a Folklore Genre.
    • Kelly, H. A. Chaucer and the Cult of Saint Valentine.
    • Springhill Miners’ Museum Archives (Nova Scotia mining history).
    • Simpson, J., & Roud, S. A Dictionary of English Folklore.

    If you enjoyed this bonus episode:

    💌 Follow Let’s Talk Spooky
    ⭐ Leave a rating or review
    🖤 Share with someone who loves a little history with their hauntings

    Until next time…
    Stay curious. Stay spooky.

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    26 min
  • 33: Reddit Scary Stories: Glitch in Matrix, Time Slips ...
    Feb 13 2026

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    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore modern accounts of time slips, missing time, and parallel reality experiences shared by users on Reddit.

    From waking up in impossible locations with no memory of how they got there… to stepping into what felt like another universe… these first-hand accounts blur the line between psychological phenomenon and paranormal mystery.

    Are these glitches in perception? Dissociation? Dimensional shifts?
    Or something far stranger?

    Stay curious. Stay spooky.

    📚 Sources

    Stories sourced from public Reddit threads on r/Glitch_in_the_Matrix and r/ParanormalEncounters.
    Additional references include folklore accounts of time slips and psychological research on dissociation and missing time.

    ⚠️ Disclaimer

    The stories discussed in this episode are shared from public Reddit forums and reflect personal experiences and interpretations of the original posters. These accounts are not independently verified.

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    39 min
  • 32: Thin Places, Lost Time
    Feb 5 2026

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    Time slips don’t arrive with spectacle.
    They happen quietly—on familiar roads, well-marked trails, and in places people believe they know.

    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore the folklore, historical accounts, and modern experiences of time slips: moments when people report briefly stepping outside linear time. Across cultures and centuries, these encounters share the same unsettling details—sudden silence, altered landscapes, missing hours, and the instinctive certainty that staying would be a mistake.

    We move from early folklore warnings about “thin places” and forbidden roads into documented case studies and contemporary accounts, including travelers who pass through villages that no longer exist and hikers who narrowly avoid stopping in places that feel profoundly wrong.

    Fear appears to end the experience. Movement restores the world. And those who return are left with the same quiet certainty: something real happened, even if it cannot be explained.

    This episode isn’t about proving time slips.
    It’s about recognizing the patterns they leave behind—and what they suggest about how fragile the present moment may be.

    Condensed Sources & Further Reading

    Historical & Documented Cases

    • Kersey Time Slip (1957) — British soldiers report encountering a medieval version of the village
    • Bold Street Time Slip Accounts — Repeated reports of slipping into the past on the same street
    • Versailles – The Moberly–Jourdain Incident (1901)
      An Adventure by Charlotte Anne Moberly & Eleanor Jourdain

    Folklore & Cultural Context

    • Evans-Wentz, The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries
    • Katharine Briggs, An Encyclopedia of Fairies
    • Dáithí Ó hÓgáin, Myth, Legend & Romance

    Psychical & Modern Accounts

    • Jenny Randles, Time Storms
    • Fortean Times archives
    • Society for Psychical Research case files
    • Reddit: r/HighStrangeness, r/Glitch_in_the_Matrix (comparative modern reports)

    TikTok: @letstalkspookypod

    Insta: @letstalkspooky

    Email: letstalkspookypodcast@gmail.com

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    36 min
  • 31: Ghost ships of Canada
    Jan 30 2026

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    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore four ships whose stories continue to drift through maritime history and folklore. These ships reveal how maritime disasters don’t always sink into history—they linger, resurface, and sometimes drift back into view.

    SS Valencia (1906)

    • Parks CanadaThe Sinking of the SS Valencia
      Government overview of the disaster and its impact on marine safety
      https://www.canada.ca/en/parks-canada/news/2017/06/the_sinking_of_thessvalencia.html

    • Maritime Museum of British ColumbiaSS Valencia: A Theatre of Horror
      Artifact records and historical interpretation
      https://mmbc.bc.ca/exhibits/ss-valencia-a-theatre-of-horror/

    SS Atlantic (1873)

    • Library and Archives CanadaThe Wreck of the Atlantic
      Archival documentation and historical context
      https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/Pages/ss-atlantic.aspx

    • Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21SS Atlantic Disaster
      Immigration history and survivor context
      https://pier21.ca/community-presents/ss-atlantic-immigrant-ship-disaster

    Baychimo (Abandoned 1931)

    • Manitoba MuseumBaychimo: The Adventures of the Ghost Ship of the Arctic
      Museum-based archival research and documented sightings
      https://manitobamuseum.ca/baychimo-the-adventures-of-the-ghost-ship-of-the-arctic/

    • Canada’s HistoryS.S. Baychimo Icebound
      Historical summary grounded in documented events
      https://www.canadashistory.ca/explore/transportation/s-s-baychimo-icebound

    Pass of Melfort

    • Heritage BCPass of Melfort Submerged Heritage Record
      Official wreck record and site documentation
      https://heritagebc.ca/submerged-heritage-resource/pass-of-melfort/

    • Wrecksite.euPass of Melfort
      Maritime registry data and loss details
      https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?167255=

    🎧 Content Note

    This episode blends documented maritime history with regional folklore and later retellings. Where stories move beyond archival evidence, they are presented as cultural responses to loss and danger along Canada’s coast.


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    35 min
  • 30: The Silent Man of Sandy Cove
    Jan 23 2026

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    In 1863, the quiet fishing village of Sandy Cove was forever changed by a single, unsettling discovery.

    Along the rocky shoreline, locals found a young man sitting alone on the beach—both of his legs freshly amputated, his clothes still fine, his expression calm but distant. When asked who he was or how he came to be there, he spoke only one word:

    “Jerome.”

    Over the next fifty years, Jerome would become one of Atlantic Canada’s most enduring mysteries. He lived out his life moving between homes and institutions across Nova Scotia, refusing to explain his past, lashing out violently when pressed, and guarding his silence with almost supernatural determination.

    Was Jerome a sailor punished for mutiny? A political exile from Europe? A victim of organized crime—or a man deliberately erased? Sources & Further Reading- Primary & Historical Sources

    • Mooney Jr., Fraser. Jerome: Solving the Mystery of Nova Scotia’s Silent Castaway. Nimbus Publishing.
    • Digby County historical records and oral histories
    • 19th-century Nova Scotia newspaper accounts documenting Jerome’s discovery and later life

    Secondary & Folklore Sources

    • Nova Scotia Archives – regional medical and institutional records
    • Local histories of Digby Neck and the Annapolis Basin
    • Maritime folklore collections documenting oral traditions surrounding Jerome

    Online & Reference Materials

    • Canadian Museum of History – regional folklore archives
    • Nova Scotia Museum – coastal community history resources
    • Encyclopedic entries and historical summaries on the Jerome of Sandy Cove case

    Episode Links-

    https://spotifycreators-web.app.link/e/NgYX0NnAXZb

    https://spotifycreators-web.app.link/e/10mSdwwAXZb


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    26 min
  • 29: Vampires of New Orleans's (Pt. 2)
    Jan 15 2026

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    New Orleans has always belonged to the night.

    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we step into the gas-lit streets of the French Quarter to uncover the vampire legends that took root in the city’s earliest days—where European superstition, colonial fear, and scandal blurred the line between myth and history.

    We trace how Old World vampire folklore crossed the Atlantic and embedded itself in New Orleans, shaping burial customs, whispered convent legends, and tales of blood-drinking figures who walked openly among society. From the unsettling story of the Carter Brothers to the infamous legend of Jacques St. Germain, these vampires were not creatures of castles—but of parties, parlors, and disappearing acts.

    This episode explores how fear of the undead reflected real historical anxieties about death, disease, and identity in one of America’s most haunted cities—and why New Orleans remains inseparable from vampire lore to this day.

    Pour yourself a drink, lock the doors, and walk with us into the dark.

    📚 Sources & Further Reading

    Historical & Folklore Sources

    • Davis, Wade. Passage of Darkness: The Ethnobiology of the Haitian Zombie. University of North Carolina Press.
    • Barber, Paul. Vampires, Burial, and Death: Folklore and Reality. Yale University Press.
    • Summers, Montague. The Vampire: His Kith and Kin. 1928.
    • Lecouteux, Claude. The Return of the Dead: Ghosts, Ancestors, and the Transparent Veil of the Pagan Mind.

    New Orleans–Specific Sources

    • Kendall, John S. History of New Orleans. Lewis Publishing Company.
    • Campanella, Richard. The West Bank of Greater New Orleans: A Historical Geography.
    • New Orleans Historic Collection (archival essays and folklore references)
    • French Quarter historical walking-tour records and preserved oral histories

    Jacques St. Germain & Vampire Lore

    • Guiley, Rosemary Ellen. The Encyclopedia of Vampires, Werewolves, and Other Monsters.
    • Ellis, Bill. Lucifer Ascending: The Occult in Folklore and Popular Culture.
    • Contemporary newspaper accounts referenced in late-19th-century New Orleans archives

    Cultural & Pop Culture Context

    • Skal, David J. V Is for Vampire: An A to Z Guide to Everything Undead.
    • Nina Auerbach. Our Vampires, Ourselves. University of Chicago Press.

    📸 Follow @letstalkspookypod on TikTok & Instagram ⭐ Leave a review to help fellow spooky souls find the show 📩 Have a vampire story or local legend? Send it in for a future listener episode

    Until next time…

    🖤 Stay Spooky

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    30 min
  • 28: Ireland’s Vampires
    Jan 8 2026

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    Long before Dracula, Ireland was already telling stories of the dead who refused to stay buried.

    In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore ancient Irish vampire lore—legends of revenants, blood-drinking dead, and cursed burials rooted in fear, famine, and unresolved death. From the tragic tale of the Dearg-Due to the violent legend of Abhartach, these stories reveal a darker understanding of the undead, where vampires were not romantic outsiders, but neighbors, rulers, and lovers.

    These early Irish legends would go on to shape many of the vampire-slaying traditions found across Europe, leaving behind a legacy of fear, ritual, and ancient hunger.


    Sources & Further Reading

    • Ó hÓgáin, Dáithí. Myth, Legend and Romance: An Encyclopaedia of the Irish Folk Tradition.
    • Barber, Paul. Vampires, Burial, and Death: Folklore and Reality.
    • Ellis, Peter Berresford. The Mammoth Book of Celtic Myths and Legends.
    • National Folklore Collection (Dúchas.ie), University College Dublin
    • Geoffrey Keating. Foras Feasa ar Éirinn (17th century)
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    35 min