Unexplained: Witchcraft, Poltergeists, and the Man Who Wasn't Murdered
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SYNOPSIS: The Weird After Dark ghost hosts dissect Darren Marlar's episode "The Man Who Was Not Murdered," exploring four interconnected stories about reality-bending phenomena. The main focus is the 1958 case of James Eugene Harrison, whose blood-soaked station wagon was found in Jacksonville, Florida, leading serial killer Roy Victor Olson to confess to murdering and burying him with accomplice James Leach—only for Harrison to mysteriously appear alive in Phoenix three months later with no memory of his disappearance, leaving authorities unable to explain whose blood saturated his car or what happened during his missing months. The episode examines the 1626 trial of Joan Wright in Essex, England, accused of witchcraft for causing deaths and illness through cursing, but ultimately acquitted when investigators determined her real crime was incompetent sewing that led to poorly-made garments. The hosts analyze the 1938 case of Alma Fielding, a London housewife experiencing violent poltergeist phenomena including flying objects, phantom coal, and psychic shoplifting, investigated by psychologist Nandor Fodor who theorized her repressed trauma from a brutal rape manifested as physical disturbances—essentially arguing her unconscious created an "estranged alter ego" that externalized her internal turmoil. Finally, the discussion explores "Darklings" or shadow people from folklore traditions, described as malevolent entities that move through walls, possess victims, and commit violence, with particular emphasis on New Orleans voodoo queen Marie Laveau's theory that Darklings are literally the evil thoughts of good people made manifest—suppressed darkness that coalesces into physical form. Throughout, the hosts argue these stories share a common thread: the barrier between internal psychological states and external physical reality may be far more porous than we believe, with intense emotions and unacknowledged darkness potentially leaking out to manipulate the world or take monstrous shape.
NOTE: Some of this content was created with assistance from AI tools and voices, but it has been reviewed, edited, narrated, produced, and approved by Darren Marlar, creator and host of Weird Darkness — who, despite popular conspiracy theories, is NOT an AI voice.
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