Category: Paranormal
- The Mandela Effect (2010)
A theory that gained shape around 2009–2010 claiming that widespread false memories are not ordinary errors but evidence of altered timelines, dimensional shifts, or reality edits. One of the most durable later versions links the phenomenon to CERN’s Large Hadron Collider, arguing that high-energy experiments disturbed reality itself.
- Mirror-World Leaks
A niche 2025-era theory claiming that rising reports of “doppelganger” encounters are not psychological projection, folklore, or coincidence, but evidence that the boundary between our world and a nearby parallel one is weakening. In this narrative, high-energy physics experiments are said to be thinning the membrane between realities, allowing temporary overlaps, visual doubles, and cross-world leakage.
- The Rake / Pale Crawler
This theory concerns a pale, emaciated humanoid creature reported in forests, rural roads, caves, and the edges of residential areas, usually at night. Online accounts often describe it as hairless, thin-limbed, low to the ground, and capable of moving on all fours or in a distorted upright posture. In modern lore, two overlapping versions dominate discussion: “The Rake,” which originated as an internet horror creation, and the “Pale Crawler,” which believers treat as a real cryptid repeatedly seen across North America. The theory remains active because many witnesses and online communities now blend the fictional Rake narrative with alleged real-world crawler sightings.
- Jersey Devil
The Jersey Devil is a legendary creature of American folklore said to inhabit the Pine Barrens of southern New Jersey. Known earlier as the Leeds Devil, the figure is tied to a colonial-era origin story about “Mother Leeds” and her cursed thirteenth child. Over time, the legend grew from local oral tradition into one of the most famous monster stories in the United States, especially after the 1909 wave of sightings and media hysteria that helped standardize the modern image of the creature.
- Bigfoot
Bigfoot, also known as Sasquatch, is a large, hairy, upright humanoid cryptid said to inhabit the forests and mountain regions of North America, especially the Pacific Northwest. The legend combines older Indigenous traditions about wild forest beings with modern sighting reports, footprint evidence, expedition culture, film footage, and decades of media attention. Although stories of similar beings long predate the twentieth century, the modern Bigfoot phenomenon took shape in the late 1950s and became one of the most enduring cryptid traditions in American and Canadian popular culture.
- Dog Man
Dog Man, more commonly called the Michigan Dogman, is a North American cryptid legend describing a towering canine-headed humanoid said to move on two legs, emit a terrifying scream-like howl, and appear in remote wooded areas. The story is most closely associated with Michigan, especially the northwestern Lower Peninsula, where folklore places early encounters in the late nineteenth century. The legend expanded dramatically in the modern era after a 1987 radio song by Steve Cook popularized the creature, transforming a regional monster story into one of the best-known dog-headed cryptid traditions in the United States.
- Dodleston Messages
A British time-slip and haunting mystery centered on a BBC Micro computer in a sixteenth-century cottage at Dodleston, where messages allegedly appeared from a man named Lukas living in the 1540s, producing one of the most unusual cross-time communication stories in modern paranormal literature.
- Mel's Hole
A legendary bottomless pit said to exist near Ellensburg, Washington, first brought to wide attention through Art Bell's Coast to Coast AM in 1997 and later expanded into a full anomaly narrative involving resurrection, black projects, secret land seizure, and reality-distorting properties.
- The Phoenix Lights Incident
A massive and widely witnessed March 13, 1997 aerial event over Arizona and the American Southwest, in which thousands of people reported a huge silent V-shaped craft or formation of lights, followed later by a second wave of luminous phenomena over the Phoenix area.
- The Count of Saint Germain
A mysterious eighteenth-century nobleman, alchemist, diplomat, and occult figure whose uncertain origins and legendary longevity transformed him from a historical adventurer into one of the most enduring immortals of esoteric and conspiracy tradition.
- Rush Limbaugh Is Jim Morrison
A bizarre identity-swap conspiracy theory claiming that Doors frontman Jim Morrison faked his 1971 death and later resurfaced as conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh, transforming one of rock’s most mythologized figures into one of American media’s most polarizing voices.
- Aleister Crowley
The infamous English occultist, mystic, and founder of Thelema who has been portrayed by believers as far more than a controversial magician — a hidden architect of modern occultism, elite ritual culture, and twentieth-century esoteric influence.
- The Council of Nine
An alleged group of higher intelligences said to guide humanity from behind the veil of ordinary reality, communicating through channelers, occult circles, and contact networks to influence spiritual evolution, global events, and hidden power structures.
- The Men in Black
A secretive and highly feared network of strange, black-clad operatives believed to silence UFO witnesses, intimidate researchers, confiscate evidence, and conceal humanity’s knowledge of extraterrestrial and interdimensional contact.
- The Mothman
A legendary winged humanoid allegedly seen in and around Point Pleasant, West Virginia, between 1966 and 1967, often associated with glowing red eyes, ominous encounters, paranormal activity, and the collapse of the Silver Bridge.