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Welcome back to the newsletter! We are excited to have you here and hope that today you find something worth reading.
Table of Contents
Feature Ghost Story
AI Summary: The story follows a classic haunting structure, complete with a dramatic nighttime event and a string of conveniently aligned past experiences. The reactions described don’t match how most people respond to sudden, unexplained knocks or physical contact.
Overall, the narrative feels more like a polished paranormal tale than a realistic account.
The image just shows a real person. As always, the photograph is blurry and misleads the viewer into a paranormal frenzy. The backstory is only part of it, but I wonder if it was built FROM the image.
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Quick Takes
Latest Paranormal Fear video - this was alright. Even to the beginner, you might be hoping to really see some jump scares or actually something caught on video. Always worth the watch to get your paranormal fix.
Waverly Sanitorium - we both still love watching episodes about this place. Might not even get anything during the episodes, but the b-roll is always freaky looking!
Ghost Tour at Scarbro’s Price Mansion - according to a news outlet you can tour this place on the 15th of Nov. Check it out and if you’ve been there, let us know. We all know how “ghost tours” go, but maybe this is the one!
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Debunk or Belief

Ghostly Lollipop Mystery
A recent post in an online paranormal forum has captured attention for its simplicity and strangeness. The poster describes watching a lollipop suddenly begin to roll on its own—no breeze, no disturbance, just a piece of candy behaving as if pushed by an unseen hand. The writer expresses genuine surprise, noting how unexpected and uncanny the moment felt.
While the incident is small in scale, it’s a perfect example of the everyday weirdness that fuels so many personal paranormal stories. There’s no fear or alarm in the account—just curiosity and astonishment as the poster tries to make sense of an object acting in a way it shouldn’t.
Whether it was a trick of physics or something more mysterious, the event leaves readers with that familiar “what if?” that keeps paranormal enthusiasts coming back for more.
My Thoughts
You see the lollipop incident as almost certainly fake. In your view, most genuine paranormal encounters—especially those involving objects moving unexpectedly—would trigger a strong, instinctive human reaction.
People typically startle, panic, or leave the room altogether. The calm, casual tone of the post doesn’t match how someone would realistically behave in a truly unexplained moment, making the story feel more staged or embellished than authentic.
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Outro
Don’t forget to check out our other paranormal articles where we debunk and wonder about the evidence that some find authentic.
Thanks for reading our thoughts on the paranormal, or Paranormal Blah 👻
This Week in Paranormal History
Today, November 13th, in paranormal history, there isn't a single major event, but the date is significant for the start of the premiere for the show Scariest Places on Earth in 2000. Historically, major events include the premiere of Haunted Hotels in 2001 and Creepy Canada in 2002. Additionally, on October 18th, the University of Wisconsin-Madison hosted a paranormal history event, highlighting various local hauntings. [1, 2]
Scariest Places on Earth premiere (2000): On November 13, 2000, the paranormal reality show Scariest Places on Earth premiered. It featured ordinary families exploring some of the world's most famous haunted locations.
Haunted Hotels premiere (2001): Another paranormal television show, Haunted Hotels, premiered on October 25, 2001. This series focused on the ghost stories and lore of historic hotels.
Creepy Canada premiere (2002): The Canadian paranormal series Creepy Canada premiered on October 24, 2002. It explored ghost stories, monsters, and other unexplained mysteries throughout Canada.
University of Wisconsin-Madison hauntings (October 18, 2025): A recent article detailed paranormal lore at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, including a story about the Abraham Lincoln statue and the Majestic Theatre.


