Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I have got some ghost stories for you.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
I feel something crawl into the bed with me and
it starts to spoon me.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
There was a time where I would be in bed,
falling asleep, and I would hear my name being called,
different voices call my name.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
Poof the person disappeared right in front of her.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
Eyes were both.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Like, did you see that? There was this figure of
a woman. Her skin was bluish and her hands were
clawed and her mouth was wide open. So that is
my ghost story.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Hi, and welcome to Honadays the podcast are real ghost
stories told by real people. We are your hosts. I'm
Julie Fisk and I'm Rebecca Black, and welcome to our
final regular episode of twenty twenty four, because next week
is going to be our Missiletoe in Mayhem episode, and
then the week after that it's our Top ten countdown
on New Year's e But actually this isn't very normal.
(00:57):
As you can tell. We are having to tape remotely
because poor Rebecca is so sick right.
Speaker 4 (01:02):
Now, I'm on the mend. I will tell you that,
but I do sound very nasally.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
I'm very apologized.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
I really don't think you sound that bad. You were
warning me but yeah, no, and you don't look bad.
Somebody at work told you you looked bad. So why
do people think it's okay to say that stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:17):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:17):
Somebody was like, you sound better, but you look worse.
Shut up, and you're an asshole.
Speaker 5 (01:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
I feel like if somebody says something like that, you
are open to say whatever you want to say to them.
Speaker 4 (01:29):
I think I responded with, wow, none of the things
you said were nice, and then we chuckled.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
Well that's very that's very sweet of you, but yeah,
you should. I don't know keither car or something.
Speaker 4 (01:41):
No.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
I like to embrace the horror.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
But anyhow, Sorry, back to our script here. We do
have big needs from you guys.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
Yes, we need your help. We need your stories about
the time that.
Speaker 4 (01:51):
You completely blew it over the holidays. We've gotten exactly
one story thus far.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Don't get me wrong.
Speaker 4 (01:58):
It's a great story and it's awesome, but we actually
need more than one, so please send those in. We
also need your favorite stories of the past year for
our top ten countdown. Send all of those to honidaf
podcast at gmail dot com. And since we are taking
off all of January to do some podcast updates, this
is the perfect time to become a hanted AF patron.
(02:18):
That's just five bucks a month you get all this
exclusive content.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Patreon dot com slash HONIDAF.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
In fact, thanks to Jeffrey Leamickey who just became a
patron right before we started taping, and welcome back to
Sean El Sas. Speaking of which, Okay, we wanted to
take a minute to send out love to everybody. Okay,
we've been catching up with some of our longtime listeners
and friends and we know it's been a rough year
for everybody. We spoke to Alan from Marmott Animation, who
(02:44):
just had a birthday. Happy birthday, Alana. Yeah, but he
also just lost his mother, so this is an especially
hard time for him. We heard from our friends Sean
El Sas, who has been in and out of the
hospital most of the year. Same with our friend Alicia,
who listens to every episode and comments on all of them.
And we've had a tough year as well, with a
(03:05):
lost job and some other bs on the table. So
I just want you all to know how grateful we
are for you. Working on this podcast brings joy every
single week, even just like cruising through our social media
and seeing the comments that you guys leave makes our day.
In fact, recently we noticed that one of our posts,
(03:25):
this dancing Crampus video, has gotten so many thirsty comments,
and somebody on there asked if there was any Crampus
smut that they could partake in, and y'all, there were
so many responses. Apparently our listeners are already totally aware
of Crampus smut. So I made Rebecca find some of
(03:45):
the titles for us. And these are real, right, these
are real.
Speaker 4 (03:49):
Absolutely real titles, and they came from good Reads. If
anybody uses good Reads, it's like where people can suggest
all kinds of stuff. And by the way, I am
getting Crampus smut in all of my feeds.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
Now that's not even a joke.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
So so titles that I found Birched by Crampis because
he carries the birch six, so I assume.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
That's a whipon.
Speaker 4 (04:11):
Oh yeah, hid napped by Grandpas, a kiss from Crampis,
and erotic Christmas Tale.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
He's got all those teeth and horns and stuff.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
And then this one might be my favorite, Crampas Snatch
a naughty girl monster romance. Oh I kind of which
one are you reading? Julie Grandpa Snatch obviously.
Speaker 1 (04:34):
Like I feel like you gotta go with that one first,
you gotta go with that one. Okay, we'll post some
links to those in the show notes. You know that
might be like the perfect white elephant party.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
Gift is oh my goss nut.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Yes, all right, So it's time to jump into our stories.
And this one comes from our birthday friend. This is
Alan from Marmon Animation.
Speaker 6 (04:55):
Hello, ladies, I've teased you with this for long enough,
so I thought it was about time sent you my
ghost story. So back in the mid late nineties, I
was a struggling student and needed to make a few pounds,
so I went to work at our local pub. It
was an old seventeenth century coaching in so Round, about
(05:17):
three four hundred years old at the time, and it
had a bit of a reputation for being a haunted building.
And the landlady was lovely lady, absolutely wonderful woman, absolutely
no nonsense. Though that said, she would not go down
to the kitchen after the kitchen had closed up at night.
So after about half past nine ten o'clock, forget it,
(05:38):
she would not go down there. She said it terrified
her that there was just something down there that she hated. Now,
this kitchen was at the end of corridor, stuck out
at the back of the building, and one night they
decided that they were going to send me down there.
Fair enough, it said, so down we went. It was
sort of easterish time, so beginning to get a bit warm,
(05:59):
and the building certainly wasn't cold, but there was one
spot down that corridor that you walked from nice temperate
warmness into freezing ice cold, and then two steps later
you're out in the warm again. No windows by it,
no fridges, freezers next door, just this spot of absolute iciness.
But coming back the other way, absolutely nothing. So another
(06:22):
night I was on the closing crew, I say the
closing crew. It was just me and the landlord, and
in the bar there was this big old bar stool.
It was one of those ones that you always used
to find. The same elderly gentleman would sit in it
for most most of the evening, although quite how he
got up there, I'm not sure it was quite tall.
You know, the kind of gentle will sit there and
(06:43):
try and put the worlds to right over a half
pint that he would manage to make last all night,
but this thing was solid. It would take two hands
on it and a good pull to get it moving.
End of the night's about pop past eleven. We're closing up.
Their landlord had gone down to the cellar to to
clear out of the barrels. It's just me in the bar.
I'm around the other side, on the bar side, and
(07:04):
suddenly this stool starts moving completely of its own volition,
slid a good two maybe three feet out into the
center of the bar and just stops. Yeah, I moved
fairly quickly, I have to say. And the final one
from said pub. It was mainly a pub, but it
(07:25):
had functionary at the back and had some accommodation upstairs,
normally used by contract workers, construction workers, electricians. This particular night,
though we were empty. We had no guests, no visitors staying,
so we knew the episode was empty, no reason for
anybody to be up there. So one night, I've got
a busy bar ahead of me were we're not quite
(07:45):
three deep at the bar, but it's kind of feeling
that way. It's nice, steady flow of customers coming through
and I'm pulling pintstuff right and diving down into the
cell occasion to change a barrel. So this particular night,
I'm still by the bar and as I'm moving between
the two bars, I flicked my eyes through the door
just in time to see a figure climbing up the stairs.
(08:07):
Didn't get much detail other than and I know it's
a cliche, and I'm truly, truly sorry. She appeared very gray.
But I thought, that's odd. Shouldn't be anybody up there,
So I went up Absolutely nothing, So that was odd,
And I for fact that lot of the housekeeping staff
would not go up there when it was empty. And
(08:27):
I'm beginning to see why. Son, that's my guy's choice.
And keep up the good work, ladies.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
Oh thank you allan.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
It's so nice to hear his voice.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
I know I miss him. We didn't hear from him
for a while.
Speaker 2 (08:38):
All right. This next story comes from Sam. Hello, ladies.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
On the way to work this morning, I was listening
to the episode about the lady who stayed the night
in the Lizzie Borden House. Yes, I was really into
it and deep into thought. Went out of nowhere. Something
hit my windshield very hard. The highway I was on
was very open, nothing above me, and there were no
cars in front of me. Whatever hit my windshield left
(09:02):
a round crack larger than a quarter and it's pretty deep.
After that, I had to turn off the podcast and
listen to some lame talk show. I think I was
I think I was being haunted af Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Bro, we promised we would never throw rocks at your
car though, never promised never, you know, Speaking of the
Lizzie Borden House, has any been following this craziness it's
around the Conjuring House lately.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
Did you see this, Rebecca I havenen?
Speaker 1 (09:29):
Okay, I'm going to post the links to the stories
in the show notes, but you can also go to
Jason Hawes's Facebook page for the update. So he's the
ghost hunter guy. So the same woman who owns it,
her name is Jacqueline Nunez. She almost bought the Lizzie
Borden House, but then she picked up the Conjuring House
instead when it hit the market, so she just lost
(09:49):
her license to run it as a business. She was
kicking people out who were there to investigate it because
you know, they rented out kind of like an airbnb, right, Yeah,
So she would just say like this, don't want you here,
and she would kick people out, and then she started
firing the people who work there, and she said the
ghost of the original owner told her that one of
these guys was stealing stuff. So Jason Hawes from Ghost
(10:12):
Hunters is involved because his daughter Satori, worked there as
a medium. So if you've ever watched these Sam and
Colby videos on YouTube where they stayed at the conjuring House,
they've had like several million views, So if you've watched
any of those, you've seen Satori. And then just in
the past few weeks, authorities were like, we're not going
to renew this license for lots of reasons, but even
(10:34):
the fire marshal was like, look, you don't have proper
sprinkler systems in here to be hosting guests, meaning she
shouldn't have anybody out there. And now she's supposedly stalking
Jason Hawes because he's been calling attention to all of this.
He had to get I know, he had to get
a restraining order. It's just so wild because I was
watching news stories from that area and they're like, yeah,
(10:56):
they're not renewing her license, she's going to have to
shut down. Go check all of that out. I just
think it's amazing that it's like this conjuring house thing
just keeps on giving.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Okay, but there's a part of me that's like, should
we start getting concerned when maybe like more sinister things
start happening there.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
If you look on Facebook on Jason's page, a lot
of people are worried about like is she going to
burn the house down?
Speaker 2 (11:17):
Is she or do something worse?
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Right, because, like you said, it seems to be escalating
a little bit. But yeah, we'll put all the links
to everybody can keep up with.
Speaker 5 (11:25):
It's so good.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
I love it.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
Okay, here we go our dead pet of the week
from Tracy, our precious Penelope and miniature dashhound. And no,
I did not, I must read that. I know it's Dockson.
My family says dashhound. Why my granddad loves Doxon's and
he had Doxin's his whole entire life. And when you
read it out on paper, it looks like a dashound.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
It does look like a dashound. Yes, I've never heard
anyone say it that way.
Speaker 4 (12:14):
Anyways, This Penelope Anne passed away a few months ago
when she was just a month shy of her fifteenth birthday.
She died on a Tuesday and then Wednesday night, I
went to bed while my husband was in the living
room watching TV. We don't sleep in the same room
anymore because of my snoring, but we have two way
radios in case of emergency.
Speaker 5 (12:35):
It's awesome.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
It's like talky talkie.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
That is pretty cool.
Speaker 4 (12:38):
I was lying in bed scrolling TikTok and I heard
a dog barking. I thought it was on the video
I was watching, but then it got louder, so I
put my phone down.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
That's when I noticed it was on the two way radio.
I jumped out of bed and ran to my husband
and he was like, Penelope is on the radio. I
guess she was telling us that she made it to heaven.
It has not happened since. I've attached two pictures of
our sweet girl love the podcast Tracy.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
Thank you, Tracy. That's pretty amazing.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
Lion Jealous.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
Barks from Beyond So okay. We've got a couple of
updates from a few stories that we've had in the past.
One of them is about the Kalida Humphreyes Theater in Dallas.
This is from like I think what season one, So
the Khalida Humphreys is the only theater that was designed
by renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright. So we've heard from
years from actors who worked there about the constant activity
(13:32):
in that building. In fact, our friend Sean Giggy went
out there and interviewed some people about it around around
Halloween last year, and while they were doing the interview,
the lights started flickering. So awesome, awesome. Yeah, Well, it's
thought that Frank Lloyd Wright, who died before the building
was finished, was mad about some of the changes that
were being made to his designs. Now, a bond was
(13:52):
recently passed that grants nine million dollars for repairs and
upgrades to the Khalida Humphreys Theater, and design plans are
scheduled for twenty twenty seven, with construction hopefully starting the
year after that. And we know how ghosts hate it
when you start doing renovations, right.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
Oh yeah, Like this is going to stir up so
much drama.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Right, So hopefully we'll be getting some new stories from there. Also,
we got an update on Robert's story about the Little
Girls with Pitch Black Teeth from last week. Yeah, this
one just came in. One of our patrons, Casey Dikastra
said that in Japan, they used to blacken their teeth
for centuries. It was like a beauty thing. It's called
(14:34):
oh let's see, let me bear with me. It's called
oh gurro, and it was common amongst like wealthy and
upper class women. Now there's actually a demon attached to this,
called the oha gurro batari, which is usually seen late
at night, and it's dressed in wedding clothes. It looks
like a beautiful woman and she calls out to single men,
but once they get close enough to see her, she'll
(14:56):
turn around and they find that her face is completely
white and featureless, and that her mouth is filled with
these sharp, pure black teeth, and then.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
She freezes at them.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Yeah, and she screams at them until they run away.
So the oh heart, oh haga, damn it, oh ha girl,
oh ha girl bitari. They really just want to scare dudes,
which sounds very much like the little girls in Robert's story.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
Like I want to do that in real life. I
just want to yell at people until make them go away,
Like that's my hero.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
We can just like paint stuff on our teeth. It's funny.
I actually like on YouTube I found a couple of
videos about women blackening out their teeth as kind of
a tribute to this thing that women used to do
in Japan.
Speaker 4 (15:40):
Okay, so our next story comes from Terry. Hi, ladies,
I love the show, and I think you were asking
for magical money stories recently.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Oh yeah, money pitches.
Speaker 4 (15:49):
I work as a housekeeper for about fifteen to twenty
homes at any given time. My clients are all wonderful,
and I didn't think they had any problems with my
work until I started finding dimes. It's not uncommon for
a grandma to hide a dime under a trinket to
check if you're dusting under it or just around it.
Speaker 2 (16:08):
Oh, it's a test.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
It's a test.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
So Terry goes on to say, that's no big deal.
I do a good job.
Speaker 4 (16:14):
But I started finding dimes everywhere and at every client's house. Well,
I was getting mad. If they don't like my work,
they should say something. But then I remembered a story
about angel dimes. It's believed that the deceased loved ones
say hello by leaving a dime for you to find.
I don't take the dimes, by the way. I think
it's like finding a lucky penny on the street. So
(16:36):
I always leave the dime where my client will find it,
or just hand it to them. I've attached three photos
to show what I mean. I enjoy my finding dimes,
but honestly, I'm still hoping i'll find a winning lotto ticket.
I don't need the big one, but a significant prize
would be nice.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
Terry, Oh, Terry, I hope you get that lotto ticket.
And it's funny since Terry sent this in and Terry
provided a few pictures of these dimes she keeps finding,
but since she sent this hint, she responded and was
sending more pictures of dimes. And sometimes it's even like
a stack of dimes.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
That's weird.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
It is weird. And Terry, no, I don't think it's
just people testing you, though I do think some of
that is the case. So before we go, guys, I
did want to share a gift idea with everybody, if
you are shopping for someone who is creepy, or if
you're creepy and you're listening to this podcast, so you
clearly are. But I was looking for brooches recently. I
(17:33):
was looking at antique brooches and I fell down a
rabbit hole of something called mourning jewelry. Have you ever
heard about this stuff, Rebecca Yo. So this was in
like the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth century. So when people
would pass, they would leave money to make mourning jewelry,
and then they would even specify who's going to go to,
(17:53):
like I want my wife and my daughters to have
some morning jewelry. And then they would take these photos
and make brooches out of them or rings. And it's
amazing because you can buy this stuff and sometimes it's
not even that expensive. I was finding stuff on Etsy
that's under one hundred dollars. When I first started looking
at it, it was like, you know, older people, grandma's grandpas,
(18:17):
their pictures in these brooches and pendants. But then there
were tons of kids and apparently part of the reason, yeah,
that they started making this stuff is because the infant
mortality rate was so high back then. Then there were
someone it would be like a mother and a daughter
together and there was one, yeah, two sisters, and I'm like,
what happened here? And in any of the places where
(18:38):
you can buy them, they don't have explanations of who
these people are. But then one step beyond that, they
started taking locks of hair from the deceased and then
making jewelry out of that. So I found one ring
that looked beautiful. It had their initials engraved on the front,
and it looked like it was all gold. But then
you realize that they had taken this blonde hair and
(19:00):
very intricately woven something to go around the back of
the band. And you can buy this stuff, Rebecca, It's amazing.
Or sometimes they'll take the hair and they'll make it
like a floral design and then put it inside like
a locket. Clearly, I was fascinated by all of this
(19:21):
is beautiful, but it's also so morbid, and I'm just like,
so if somebody gave you something that had a person's hair.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
In it, would you be able to wear that?
Speaker 1 (19:31):
Like that feels really freaking haunted, right?
Speaker 4 (19:34):
I think it does because you can actually like still
see what it is, like it's like basically a body
part of someone. But I gotta tell you, I asked
my nieces something very similar to what you're talking about.
Did you know that when you die you can have
your body turn into a diamond.
Speaker 2 (19:47):
I've heard about that. I asked my Nieces.
Speaker 4 (19:50):
I was like, how about I just cremate myself into
a diamond and you guys can have.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
Like jewelry of me. And they were like, yeah, okay,
that sounds awesome.
Speaker 4 (20:00):
Like they're completely on board with the idea of wearing
me around forever.
Speaker 1 (20:04):
I mean, it's not a bad idea.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
It's not.
Speaker 4 (20:07):
I told James, I'm gonna fatten him up so that
I can make a really nice diamond and he's gone.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
The thing is that, like what if you lost it?
What if I know, what if you were like wearing
you know, someone you loved on a necklace or something
and you got mugged, And could you be haunted that way?
And what happens fifty years down the road when you're
gone and nobody knows anything about you or whatever, Like
what happens to that diamond?
Speaker 2 (20:32):
That's a good question, I mean.
Speaker 1 (20:34):
And not that it's any worse than being buried in
the ground or burned up, like you know, it's all
really morbid.
Speaker 4 (20:40):
Super morbid. It's super weird. But I'm like, I don't
know if there's a way that you can tell after
the fact, like, oh, this isn't a this isn't an
actual diamond that comes from like Africa.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
This is a this was a person.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
This was a human. Yeah, it would it be like
when they take the little eye thing. Yeah, they're like,
oh hey, hell.
Speaker 2 (20:56):
Busy, Rebecca's head floating on those carts.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
It's me, baes. We need to find a link to that,
because that's pretty fascinating and it's just it's the next
step in morning jewelry, like.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
I'm telling you it is. It's the new modern morning jewelry.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
That or you end up in like an earn a
goodwill or something you know that's always happening.
Speaker 4 (21:17):
Yes, that will happen to me. I guarantee it. All right,
you guys, if you've been wondering.
Speaker 1 (21:22):
What to get us for Christmas, no morning jewelry though,
No morning jewelry, No morning jewelry.
Speaker 2 (21:27):
Yeah that's right, don't.
Speaker 4 (21:28):
We don't want your family members' body parts, and guarantee
and such. We have some ideas for you, so don't worry.
You could start by just leaving us a simple five
star review on Apple Podcasts. Yes, please, you could subscribe
to our YouTube channel.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
Yes you're watching it.
Speaker 4 (21:44):
You can go click that little subscribe button right now.
If you have an extra five dollars laying around. You
could also head to patreon dot com slash Honaday for
all that exclusive content.
Speaker 2 (21:54):
And if you want to.
Speaker 4 (21:55):
Get us a little stocking stuffer, tell us what your
favorite story is of twenty twenty four so that we
can use on our top ten New Year's Eve countdown.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Yes, please very much, and we need your stories about
ruining the holidays for our Mistletoe and Mayhem episode next week.
We're going to be discussing all the horrible things that
have happened on Christmas Day over the years, but we
really want to hear your stories about doing something really
stupid or you know, your mom or dad whatever. Send
all of those Andrew scary stories and freaky dreams to
(22:24):
Hantday of podcast at gmail dot com so we can
use them in twenty twenty five on hanteda AF.
Speaker 3 (22:29):
And don't forget to subscribe to HONTEDAF on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, s,
Dider wherever you listen to podcasts. Please follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube,
and of course TikTok.
Speaker 2 (22:39):
You can even contact us.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
Directly through our website HAUNTDAF dot com.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
Got to say thanks to Andrew Mamalica and Travis Vance
for the HONTIDAEF theme song, and to on air media
for titles and technical support. Also big thanks to all
of the hontidayf Patreon supporters.
Speaker 3 (22:53):
Most of all, we have to thank you for listening
and for sharing your stories with us.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
By the way, Julie, if I die first coming back
to haunt.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
You, I'll come back to haunt you. To Rebecca