『Behind the Curtain: Celebrities, Shapeshifters, and the Tech That Sells Us Stories』のカバーアート

Behind the Curtain: Celebrities, Shapeshifters, and the Tech That Sells Us Stories

Behind the Curtain: Celebrities, Shapeshifters, and the Tech That Sells Us Stories

無料で聴く

ポッドキャストの詳細を見る

このコンテンツについて

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?

Send us a text

Support the show

まだレビューはありません