Paranormal Recon

Paranormal Recon Join us on a journey into the unknown. One of my first jobs was as a grave digger in a Pet Cemetary
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With a unique ability to connect with the spirit world, the paranormal investigator's life is a tapestry woven with encounters, investigations, and unexplained phenomena.

Is Bigfoot closer than you think? 👣🌲In this week’s episode of The Dreadful Truth, we are diving deep into the dark, moss...
05/30/2026

Is Bigfoot closer than you think? 👣🌲

In this week’s episode of The Dreadful Truth, we are diving deep into the dark, mossy swamps of Fouke, Arkansas to uncover the terrifying reality behind The Legend of Boggy Creek! 🐊✨For decades, the Fouke Monster has terrorized locals, leaving behind massive three-toed tracks, shattered windows, and bone-chilling midnight screams. But is this creature just an urban legend, or is it a aggressive branch of the Bigfoot family tree hiding right in our own backyards?

We break down the historic encounters, the eerie 1970s docudrama that traumatized a generation, and the modern-day sightings that prove whatever is out there hasn't left.

📻💥👉 Listen to the full episode now

👇 Drop a comment below: Do you think Bigfoot is a gentle forest giant, or is the Boggy Creek Monster something much more dangerous?



Podcast Episode · The Dreadful Truth · May 30 · 22m

Do you call them UAP? 🛸 Or, do you still say UFO? 👽
05/27/2026

Do you call them UAP? 🛸 Or, do you still say UFO?
👽

Podcast Episode · The Dreadful Truth · May 23 · 13m

In Chapter 18 of Blades of Glass, the line between psychological trauma and supernatural terror begins to fracture compl...
05/27/2026

In Chapter 18 of Blades of Glass, the line between psychological trauma and supernatural terror begins to fracture completely.

Officer Grady Reynolds sits alone inside O’Leary’s, a dimly lit cop bar filled with ghosts of memory and stale whiskey-soaked regrets. Still grieving the loss of Emma, Reynolds finds himself drawn into an unsettling conversation with Detective Rhodes about vampires, folklore, and the terrifying possibility that mythology may simply be humanity trying to explain monsters it does not understand. What begins as sarcastic banter slowly transforms into something darker as ancient legends, Lilith, Dracula, and blood rituals collide with the very real murders haunting Lewisville.

Meanwhile, hundreds of miles away beneath the frozen skies of Alaska, Willow and Lacey’s search for the Northern Lights turns into a waking nightmare. Sleep paralysis. Missing time. Scratching at the door. A shadowy bald man from Willow’s past encounters suddenly reappears in the most impossible place imaginable. When Lacey opens the hotel room door and finds Willow half-frozen outside in the darkness, the question becomes unavoidable:

Did Willow experience a hallucination… or was something truly following them?

As the chapter unfolds, the media frenzy surrounding the Lewisville murders escalates. A police sketch hits the airwaves. The entire town begins searching for a monster hiding in plain sight.

This episode explores grief, folklore, paranoia, sleep paralysis, and the terrifying psychology of belief. Because sometimes the scariest thing isn’t whether monsters exist…

…it’s realizing how badly people want them to.

Blades of Glass: A Town Stained in Silence is a Twisted Chapters True Crime Original, written and adapted from the novel Blades of Glass by Rudy Stankowitz available on Amazon. This episode was produced by Joy Riddle, mixed by Cleo Hatshesup, and executive produced by Doodle & Lizzie Borden. For full transcripts and bonus content, click the sow notes Donna Keath

In Chapter 18 of Blades of Glass, the line between psychological trauma and supernatural terror begins to fracture completely. Officer Grady Reynolds sits alone inside O’Leary’s, a dimly lit cop bar filled with ghosts of memory and stale whis...

With Blumhouse – I just got recognized as one of their top fans! 🎉
05/25/2026

With Blumhouse – I just got recognized as one of their top fans! 🎉

🛸 Have you ever seen a UAP? If not, do you believe?
05/23/2026

🛸 Have you ever seen a UAP? If not, do you believe?


Podcast Episode · The Dreadful Truth · May 23 · 13m

Tonight’s episode dives deep into the modern evolution of the UAP conversation — not through conspiracy theories, but th...
05/19/2026

Tonight’s episode dives deep into the modern evolution of the UAP conversation — not through conspiracy theories, but through official government documents, declassified Cold War records, NASA mission reports, congressional pressure, and the growing psychological effect of unresolved uncertainty. Rudy Dreadful traces the shift from ridicule and denial to permanent institutional acknowledgment, examining how agencies like A A R O, the National Archives, Congress, and the Department of Defense have quietly built an ongoing infrastructure around unidentified anomalous phenomena. From the 1953 Robertson Panel to the Gemini 4 astronaut sighting, from satellite flaring explanations to declassification bottlenecks, this episode explores the uncomfortable reality that the U.S. government is no longer denying the existence of unexplained cases — while simultaneously admitting it still lacks complete answers.
The episode also examines the darker psychological side of disclosure culture. Rudy breaks down how prolonged uncertainty affects the human mind, why unresolved mysteries generate dread instead of fear, and how official acknowledgment without official resolution creates a low-level pressure that lingers beneath modern life. The story of Paul Bennewitz serves as a chilling warning about the intersection of secrecy, obsession, disinformation, and mental collapse, while the South Haven Park incident on Long Island demonstrates how folklore, government proximity, and missing answers combine to create modern American mythology. Throughout the episode, Rudy carefully separates documented fact from speculation, emphasizing where evidence exists — and where it does not.
Featured topics include:
The 1953 Robertson Panel and CIA UFO investigations
A A R O’s explanations involving parallax, forced perspective, and satellite flaring
Record Group 615 and the National Archives UAP records system
Congressional demands for military UAP footage releases
The Gemini 4 astronaut sighting involving James McDivitt
The psychological impact of unresolved government disclosures
The Paul Bennewitz case and alleged intelligence manipulation
The South Haven Park UFO crash legend
Why uncertainty itself may be the most powerful force in the entire UAP debate
This episode is not about proving extraterrestrials exist.
It is about what happens when a government officially acknowledges persistent unknowns… while admitting the answers remain incomplete.
And that may be far more psychologically unsettling.

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-dreadful-truth/id1888469213?i=1000768056594

Podcast Episode · The Dreadful Truth · May 16 · 43m

05/14/2026

🚨 Content Warning: Strong language, murder themes, blood references, psychological horror, and disturbing material.

Blades of Glass by Rudy Stankowitz continues to sharpen its identity in this chapter, blending procedural horror with a cynical understanding of modern media sensationalism. Set against the backdrop of a grieving Florida community unraveling under the weight of fear, Stankowitz captures something unsettlingly believable: the speed at which tragedy mutates into spectacle. The press conference sequence feels ripped from the cable-news age, where reporters chase viral headlines before the bodies are cold, and the phrase “Lewisville’s Vampire” becomes less an investigative lead than a brand.

What makes the chapter effective is its refusal to settle fully into supernatural horror. Instead, it lingers in the uncomfortable space between panic and plausibility. Detective Rhodes, foul-mouthed and exhausted, serves as the reader’s tether to reality while the public spirals into hysteria over garlic, blood types, and trench-coated strangers. The dialogue snaps with authenticity, particularly inside the police department, where the constant ringing phones and flood of irrational tips create an atmosphere bordering on psychological collapse. Stankowitz understands that fear is rarely born from monsters alone; it grows through repetition, rumor, and the media ecosystem feeding it.

There are flashes here of writers like Thomas Harris and Gillian Flynn, particularly in the way humor and horror collide without diffusing tension. The chapter’s standout moment belongs not to the detectives, but to Darius calmly critiquing the killer’s media nickname from the privacy of his living room. It is darkly funny, deeply unsettling, and suggests a villain who may be more disturbed by branding than by murder itself.

Stankowitz writes with a rough-edged voice that occasionally veers into excess, but that rawness often works in the novel’s favor. The profanity-heavy exchanges and procedural sarcasm give Blades of Glass an identity distinct from more polished literary thrillers. This is horror with cigarette burns on the pages and police-radio static in the background.

Available on Amazon







Are Comedian Matt Rife & Elton Castee pushing the demonic boundaries to a point of no return? They are SELLING Annabelle...
05/06/2026

Are Comedian Matt Rife & Elton Castee pushing the demonic boundaries to a point of no return? They are SELLING Annabelle Adjacent Raggedy An. & Andys at $200 a pop…. Check here for deets:
Warner Bros. The Nun Ed and Lorraine Warrens life and cases Ghost Sister Blumhouse Horror Brains Grey Duck Paranormal Donna Keath Joy Riddle

https://open.spotify.com/episode/2QLA2aKBgCIv4YRUZNgX3l?si=iej3rXoKQEKteWKd71AyHg

The Dreadful Truth · Episode

04/30/2026

Bloody Mary • Have you ever?
Urban Legends are some of the most interesting tales.
Yes - Ai Recon says "bloody mary" three times while looking at his reflection in the mitr Suddenly a witch DS appears

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