Bordertown Strange copertina

Bordertown Strange

Bordertown Strange

Di: Pam Ernest and Jess Holeman
Ascolta gratuitamente

A proposito di questo titolo

Catch the show every other Wednesday night as these two women of woo delve into time anomalies, dimensions and the afterlife, greys and UFO’s, cursed and haunted objects, lost ancient history and much more!

Have a weird story? We want to hear it! Email us at BordertownStrange@gmail.com
2024
Scienza
  • Strange Kentucky_ Goblins_ Ghosts & Mammoth Cave Mysteries _ Bordertown Strange _S3E8_
    Apr 23 2026
    Join Pam and Jess with special guests Mark Bannon and Kentucky native Enzo Cyrille as the Strange Team descends into the shadows of the Bluegrass State.

    From the miles‑deep mysteries of Mammoth Cave to the legends whispered through the Appalachian hills, this episode digs into the weird, the wild, and the downright unexplainable.

    We’re talking:
    • The Mammoth Cave System and its centuries of hauntings, disappearances, and subterranean lore Goblins, ghosts, and cryptids that stalk Kentucky’s backroads and hollers
    • he state’s long history of high strangeness, UFO sightings, and window‑area phenomena
    • How folklore, frontier myth, and modern paranormal encounters collide in one of America’s strangest regions


    GOBLINS and GHOSTS and CRYPTIDS—OH MY. If it crawls out of a cave, peers from the treeline, or knocks on a lonely Kentucky door at 3AM… we’re talking about it.

    Listen. Watch. Wander into the weird with us. New episodes of Bordertown Strange drop regularly—subscribe to stay in the loop on all things uncanny.
    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    2 ore e 11 min
  • Season 3 Episode 7 Ghosts in Photography Part 2
    Apr 9 2026
    Pam and Jess return for Part Two of our deep dive into the uncanny world of ghosts in photography — where history, folklore, technology, and the unexplained collide.

    In this follow‑up episode, we push past the foundations laid in Part One and venture into stranger, more controversial, and more modern territory.

    We’re exploring:
    • New historical spirit photographs we didn’t get to last time
    • The rise of digital-era ghost images and why they’re harder (and sometimes easier) to debunk
    • How pareidolia, compression artifacts, and modern editing tools complicate investigations
    • Additional S.E.K. Bordertown Paranormal Society case files, including photos from our fieldwork across the Four States
    • What separates a compelling anomaly from a misidentified artifact


    Settle in, join the live chat, and bring your own strange captures — we’ll be breaking them down together. And yes… we’re ending the night with more rounds of THE NOTEBOOK GAME.

    If you’re fascinated by paranormal photography, investigative technique, or the blurry line between evidence and illusion, this episode will pull you deeper into the mystery.

    Let’s get strange.
    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    2 ore e 15 min
  • Season 3 Episode 6 Ghosts In Photography
    Mar 26 2026
    Tonight on Bordertown Strange, Pam and Jess dive into the eerie world of ghosts in photography — from the earliest Victorian spirit photographers to modern-day images that continue to spark debate among investigators, skeptics, and believers.

    We’re exploring:
    • The history of ghost photography and how early techniques shaped paranormal culture
    • - Famous and infamous spirit photos and the stories behind them
    • - Modern examples of alleged ghost images
    • - Real S.E.K. Bordertown Paranormal Society case files, including photos from our own investigations across the Four States and beyond.
    • - How investigators analyze, debunk, or validate photographic anomalies
    Join the live chat, share your own experiences, and settle in for a few rounds of THE NOTEBOOK GAME to close out the night.

    If you love paranormal history, haunted photography, or behind‑the‑scenes investigation talk, this episode is for you.

    Subscribe, like, and haunt the comments.

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    2 ore e 12 min
Ancora nessuna recensione