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July 27, 2025 • 85 mins
In one our funnest episodes to prepare for, Jerry and Tracy discuss 9 stories of children with past life memories. We sit down with Bo Keister from Hillbilly Horror Show for an interview

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hello, once again, He'll Billy Nation. I am back. If
you're listening to his episode back to back. If you're
listening to him separately, welcome, Welcome to hell Billy Horror Stories.
I'm not gonna talk too much in this episode. I'm

(00:22):
sure you'll want to get straight into the show. But
before we dive in, I just want to say, if
you have a podcast, we have decided to keep up
the tradition of the Hellbli Horror Stories Halloween special. So
if you have a podcast and you want to be
part of a special, message me on Facebook at Tim

(00:43):
Mullins or email me Tim Mullens at gmail dot com
and that is Tim tim Mullins m u lll i
ns at gmail dot com and just simply let me
know you're interested. The caught off date to get your
episode to me is October fourth. We have two new

(01:03):
iTunes reviews, Sandy Land Gaming and sky Moore's Double O seven.
Thank you to the both of you for taking time
out and leaving those reviews. And yes, I will make
sure Tracy seeds those loving wards y'all both left for her.
So this week's episode goes back to May twenty seventh,

(01:23):
twoenty seventeen personally one of my favorite topics. Jerry and
Tracy discuss nine stories of children with past life memories.
I don't know about you, but I find these just
absolutely fascinating and I can't get enough of them. And afterwards,

(01:44):
Jerry and Tracy sit down and interview bolgu Heister from
The Helly Horror Show see Shortened Sweets. Enjoy the show.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
You then fell right down that rabbit holes. Reality is questionable. Trying,
but you just can't let it.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
Goldie to right here, put it on the show.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
It's paranormal overload with Southern hospitality. Punt and murder may
have him one discussing the immortality locations where the North
past history that comes to light pill village with a
knack or happy thing. He goes on back night, hope,
but thank you to be by yourself the too what have?
He turns on the light, mixing in a little.

Speaker 3 (02:39):
Comedy to make sure that all fens is just right.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
Hey, wellcome to a huge billy horror story.

Speaker 3 (02:46):
Now here's your home. Sherry freaks Pa Tad theer's golf
ns and sometimes they're tad pretty, but never the parrots.

Speaker 5 (02:58):
Hey, this is from California.

Speaker 6 (03:00):
And you're listening to hillbilly horror stories.

Speaker 7 (03:05):
Tracy, as usual, we want to thank all of our
military and civil servants all over the world, no matter
which country you represent, as long as you're one of
the good guys. We just want to say thank you
for what you do for us every single day. To
the men and women and service animals.

Speaker 8 (03:19):
Out there, continue prayers for you guys. Thank you for
keeping us safe. Always, always, always praying for you all.
Thank you for all you guys do for us.

Speaker 7 (03:30):
Tracy's it's been another one of those weeks where we've
talked to a lot of people that are struggling going
through some things. We just we want to make sure
everybody realizes that the group is a safe place. I've
seen a couple of people post because they felt like
there was no other place that they could post with

(03:50):
whatever situation they had going on, and I'm glad that
people feel that way. I just want to make sure
that everybody realizes that it is a safe place. Obviously,
you can contact myself for Tracy, or you can you know,
if you need a professional service. There are professional services
out there obviously, places like Betterhelp, who've been sponsors on
the show, in the past and Tracy, what else could

(04:13):
they do?

Speaker 8 (04:13):
You can call nine eight eight the Crisis hotline. You
can also text is seven four one, seven four to one.
We love you, guys, and just reach out to us, please.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
All right, Tracy, let's get into the meat of this.

Speaker 6 (04:29):
Meat.

Speaker 8 (04:31):
It's what dinner?

Speaker 3 (04:33):
Sorry?

Speaker 7 (04:36):
All right, everybody, and welcome to episode forty two, our
Past Lives episode.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
This is Jerry and I'm with Tracy.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
Hey.

Speaker 7 (04:43):
Hey, hey, hey, it sounded a lot like Dwayne from
What was that?

Speaker 4 (04:48):
What was that?

Speaker 3 (04:49):
What's happening out? Hey?

Speaker 8 (04:51):
Hey, hey, oh, I forgot all about that show. Okay,
what's up y'all?

Speaker 6 (04:55):
Oh?

Speaker 8 (04:55):
That sounds like.

Speaker 3 (04:55):
Something too, don't I like somebody? He hal oh he guys.
We are excited to do this episode.

Speaker 7 (05:02):
We've been talking about doing this one for a little bit,
and then as we got deeper and deeper into the stories,
it became a fascinating subject for both of us. We
originally on this show was going to do this and
the Queen Mary, and actually I got so much into
this and I decided we were going to scrap the
Queen Mary. Not really scrap the Queen Mary. I don't

(05:24):
have that authority. I don't own the ship, and I'd
still like to use it as a hotel quest, so
I let them keep the ship, but we're kicking it.

Speaker 3 (05:31):
Off the show.

Speaker 8 (05:32):
And that was a lot of babbling.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
That's what I do, and apparently so to you.

Speaker 8 (05:39):
Excuse excuse my ignorance.

Speaker 3 (05:42):
We'll get into that later.

Speaker 7 (05:45):
But I thought this was just a fascinating show, so
I just started digging up more stories and more stories.
I'm like, we're just gonna do a whole show of this.
So pardon our problems of not doing everything as we're promised,
but that's kind of what we do. We promised suff in,
under deliver, that's how we roll. Anyways, I wanted to

(06:07):
start off by thinking our new patrons. The Patreon account
started off right before the last show, and we try
to announce some people, and I think I cut some
of it off. I went back and listened to the
show with my poor editing skills, and notice that I
cut some of the names off. So what I'd like
to be able to do is just to if I
rename you, it's just because I didn't want to leave

(06:29):
anybody out. So if you guys are yeah, you're helping
us out.

Speaker 3 (06:32):
We want to help you.

Speaker 7 (06:33):
So what I want to first do is just name
all the people who have pledged so far, being Dietzel, Rebecca,
I almost.

Speaker 3 (06:41):
Screw this up. Feel Kowski, you did good. You don't
know that. You don't know if that's to pronounced.

Speaker 8 (06:48):
Have faith in yourself.

Speaker 3 (06:50):
She'll let me know.

Speaker 7 (06:51):
Glenn Burton, Lisa Golman, Pat Kemp, Carolyn Ogle, John Peterson, Garretty,
Heather Leffert, Jerry Kennett, Tyler Acox, Paula Johnson, Ryan Jones,
Priscilla Gordon, Brian Vierlin, Kara George, Jody Peterson, Kathleen Nelson,

(07:16):
Heidi up in Sweden. I won't put your last name
this time, Sarah Rossco, Jackie Gets, and Molly Frius.

Speaker 8 (07:26):
You guys are awesome.

Speaker 7 (07:27):
Thank you. Twenty two of you guys have already signed up,
which means you're going to be getting free stuff. Matter
of fact, the one of the first things that most
of you are going to get is going to be
the Listener's episode, which will be out in June first.
I keep wanting to say May first. It's going to
be out June first. And the cool thing about that

(07:47):
one is going to be some of you guys who
are donating to the Patreon, are going to be on
it already, Jackie gets We've already done your interview, and
then we also did Sarah Rosco's interview, and we've got
a couple more coming up tomorrow night, and we're putting
that thing together. We got a new snazzy little intro
for it. So I think you guys are enjoying this.
We're putting some efforts. I did change some of this

(08:10):
originally when the Patreon came out. I said we were
going to do a minimum forty five minutes show for
the listener episode, and then the people contribute five dollars
getting an extra show that's going to be paranormal or
true crime kind of the same thing. But both of
those are supposed to be minimum forty five minutes, and
I've upped that to a minimum of an hour. You

(08:30):
guys deserve an hour show, and that's what we're going
to do. Sounds great A couple other people real quick
to think. So we had some iTunes reviews and if
you guys will put your name, some of you do,
but if you'll at least tag your name at the
end of it, we'll be able to give you proper credit.
But the iTunes reviews have we've had since last week
Grimlin's zero six two eight. I don't think that's your

(08:51):
legal name, Jane Lynn, that's your name. She actually did
tag hers. I think this would pronounced our dittthlof probably brushing.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
H sheep is here.

Speaker 7 (09:07):
And then we had debris Hut now Debrie Hut. I
normally don't read these reviews, but I'm actually gonna read
this one for a reason.

Speaker 3 (09:19):
Right now.

Speaker 7 (09:19):
I want to start off on this review to say
we're not being critical of the review. We asked you
guys reviews, so we don't have a problem with you
give the reviews. But I just wanted to touch on
this one.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
A little bit.

Speaker 7 (09:29):
Here's what the review said. It was a three star review,
and it said it is a great show and I
will not stop listening. But Tracy, tone it down with
the silly comments. They come across as slightly ignorant. The
show is funny and the stories are excellent, but the
silly questions and giggling is annoying. Keep it light and casual,
but don't get too silly. Here's where my problem lies

(09:54):
with that review, not your opinion. I have no problem
with the opinion at all. And if that's the way
you feel, well, you know, I'm completely with you that
you have a right to feel that way. Where my
problem comes in is when you put that up as
a review. Then what it does is actually hurts the
show because we get a three star review with something
that we wish you would have just contacted us and said, hey,

(10:17):
here's my feelings on the show. There's not a show
that goes by that I don't talk about how we
interact with every one of you guys on Facebook or
on Twitter or email, and I would have just preferred
that you would have just sent us a message rather
than just blasted where it actually hurts the show. If
you actually do like the show, that didn't do anybody
any good, and I can't respond to it other than

(10:39):
this way. I have no way of responding to a
review where if you write us in an email or
on a Facebook you know I can say, hey, for example,
what exactly what kind of comments are you talking about.
I don't even have any way of asking you that
without doing it like this. You know, we're not saying
we're perfect by any means, but at the same time,
this is what we do.

Speaker 3 (10:59):
This is how we do the show.

Speaker 7 (11:01):
This is what I think the majority of people out
there like about the show is the fact that we're
a little goofy. And does she make ignorant comments. Absolutely,
she makes ignorant comments at home. I can't cut those off.
I can at least edit some of.

Speaker 3 (11:15):
Them out here. But the bottom line is this is
who we are.

Speaker 7 (11:20):
We all none of us are perfect, you know, we're
all just you know, riding by the seat of our pants,
doing this thing and trying to get better every single week.
Thanks that, I have no problem with the the comment. Yeah,
I just I just wish you would have just written us.
We are so accessible to be able to say, hey,
here's my opinion, and we probably would have had a
really cool conversation about it and we could have used

(11:42):
it constructively to maybe get better, because it could have
been something you said that we was like, I guess
I could see.

Speaker 8 (11:47):
Your point, and I bet it was about the cell
phone thing, because that was pretty so.

Speaker 7 (11:53):
But but whoever wrote that, we have it's no real
feelings or yeah, so, I mean, I don't want you
to take that way. We're not calling you out, and
that's you know, we you know, but I just, like
I said, we are accessible to anybody out there.

Speaker 3 (12:06):
If anybody has a problem with something to do, write us.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
You know.

Speaker 8 (12:09):
Yeah, really I really would enjoy knowing what you didn't like. Seriously,
in all seriousness, I really would like to know that.
But like I said, there's no hard feelings. We love
you anyway, and just hope you keep listening to the show.
We appreciate it.

Speaker 7 (12:24):
It's been a really good week for the show other
than that review, because we actually have set up. I'm
going to be on Ryan Singer's show. He's a huge,
big time comedian out there. He's on Mark Maron's podcast
all time What the fuck? Actually it's just WTF you
said the well they shortened it sorry, And then he's

(12:46):
on his television show that's on IFC on a regular basis.
He's been on all the big shows, Bob and Tom,
but he's got a paranormal show called Me and Paranormal You,
and he's invited me to be on his show.

Speaker 3 (12:57):
That's huge for our show. It's going to give us
a whole new list base.

Speaker 7 (13:01):
Jim Harold I will be on Campfire sometime in June
telling some personal stories and Jim has agreed to come
on our show in an interview. That's huge because if
anybody knows who Jim is, he is the king of
the paranormal podcast world. So something I've been trying to
do for a long time and finally got accomplished. And
it's because you guys listen enough to where it's worth his.

Speaker 8 (13:23):
Time to come on here exactly. Thank you guys for
that support.

Speaker 7 (13:27):
We have a very cool interview at the end of
this show, and we're going to tie it into some stuff.
Bok Easter, who's been in I keep wanting to say
Clash of the Titans, but it's Remember the Titans.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
Those are two totally different movies. But he was going
to Remember the Titans.

Speaker 7 (13:42):
He's been in a movie, a cool movie on Netflix
called The Taking of Devora Logan. It's like I said,
if you haven't seen it, check it out. A bunch
of other movies and commercials, and but he his main
thing he's in now is him and a couple of
other comedian friends and actors of his do a show
called hill Billy Horror Show. And it's funny because when

(14:04):
we were first starting this podcast, I would google us
to see if we.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
Come up and we didn't.

Speaker 7 (14:09):
But when I put in hill Billy Horror, their show
always came up. So I started watching it a while
back just because I was curious. And what they do
is they will do some little comedy skits He'll Billy style,
and then they will show you a little horror short film.
Sometimes it's twenty minutes, thirty minutes, whatever the case is,

(14:30):
but they're really good movies then that you would probably not.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Get to see otherwise.

Speaker 7 (14:34):
Well, what they did was they sent us four DVDs.
They've actually got season one through four out, and they
sent us two of the seasons, two copies of each
of the two seasons, and we're going to give those
away to you guys. And I'm just trying to figure
out the best way to do it. And after scratching
my head and trying to think what would be the
best way to engage and reward the real fans out there,

(14:57):
which is what I want to do, I've decided that
I need for everybody to go to our Facebook page,
which just go to Facebook and look Uphill Billy Horror Stories.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
Join that page.

Speaker 7 (15:07):
Because what I'm going to do on Monday is I'm
going to put a trivia question up that's going to
pertain to one of our shows in the next four weeks.
So each of the next four weeks, I'm going to
give you a show to specifically go back and listen to,
and then I'm going to ask a question and whoever
answers that question first will win the DVD.

Speaker 3 (15:30):
So this is going to make you do a little
bit of homework.

Speaker 7 (15:32):
The first show that you need to go back and
listen to, and this is coming out on Sunday, so
you'll have Sunday and Monday to do it before it
comes out. The Alistair Crowley episode.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
Do you remember which episode that was.

Speaker 8 (15:47):
Nine?

Speaker 7 (15:48):
Well, that was a completely ignorant thing to say. It's
actually episode fifteen.

Speaker 5 (15:55):
Off.

Speaker 3 (15:56):
Yeah, just you know six six shows.

Speaker 7 (16:00):
Courts if it's that far off when you're talking about
a girl. So go back and listen to the Alistair
Crowley episode, episode fifteen, and I'm gonna have you a
trivia question that you will have had to have listened
to that show in order to answer. And the first
one that answers it on Monday on our Facebook page.
So that's the second part. You need to go to
our Facebook page and sign up.

Speaker 3 (16:22):
So there we go.

Speaker 7 (16:22):
That's how we're gonna do that. For the next four weeks.
Each show, I will give you a different show to
go back and listen to. And I might even lying
just make up a show that we don't even have
go back and listen to the one you'd be looking right,
I guess that's not funny. Now I'm saying ignorant shit.

Speaker 3 (16:39):
Okay, let's get into this show quick igglin.

Speaker 7 (16:43):
You're gonna get us in trouble. I'll quick stang it
losing listeners. But a second, we're gonna do this show
on past lives. And as I said, I've got I
think nine or ten stories for you, and I think
every one of these are super fascinating. And surprisingly enough,
I chose everyone I chose was about children. I mean,

(17:04):
there's a bunch of adults that had the same situations,
but I was more fascinated with the children's story.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
So let's get into the first one.

Speaker 7 (17:11):
And some of these don't have names, because when you're
dealing with minors, they kind of give false names or
something to kind of protect them.

Speaker 3 (17:17):
But let's talk about the first one.

Speaker 7 (17:19):
The first one is a three year old in Goldln Heights,
which is right on the border of Syria and Israel.
Of course, you know everything's going on over there now,
it's kind of been in the news and stuff. But
this goes back a little bit. The little boy remembers
being killed.

Speaker 3 (17:37):
With an axe, oh my gosh, and he says.

Speaker 7 (17:40):
He remembers who did it three years old. So what
happened was he started telling people that he had been
killed with an axe and that he has a birthmark
on his head.

Speaker 3 (17:51):
And over in.

Speaker 7 (17:53):
The Far East, they're really big into reincarnation past lives.
They take all this stuff serious. When you start talking.
You know, if you're little kid and you start talking
about this, they don't you know, poof poo it and
assume that you're just, oh, he's making up stuff. They
take it really serious, and they believe that if you
have a birthmark, a birthmark is something to do from
your past life. So keep in mind, he actually had

(18:17):
a birthmark on his head. And so he starts and
he's telling people about this, and the people in the community,
you know, obviously, like I said, they took it serious,
and they, you know, they start asking him what else
he remembered about his past life. Now, doctor Eli Lash,
who was actually one of the townspeople. He witnessed some

(18:39):
of these events. So you've got an actual doctor who's credible,
who's seeing all these things, so it's not just you know,
townspeople rumors. So the little boy led them to the
place where he said his body was actually buried.

Speaker 3 (18:53):
Oh gosh.

Speaker 7 (18:54):
They start digging, they find a skeleton. Along with the skeleton,
they find an axe.

Speaker 6 (19:02):
Oh lord.

Speaker 3 (19:05):
On the skull, there was a fracture.

Speaker 7 (19:11):
Obviously made from the acts, exactly where the boy's birthmark
is on his head.

Speaker 8 (19:18):
That is sick. I can't. I can't, and I can
picture that in my head now and it's not so.

Speaker 7 (19:25):
Then on top of that, he tells them the name.
It's the time that he had never been in. He
tells them the name of his killer. Police go, they
find a guy. They questioned it. They said when he
when they showed up, that he became white as a ghost.
And then and then when they started questioning him, he

(19:47):
actually confessed to the murder. That guy had went missing.
I mean he had been missing for like four years
or something.

Speaker 8 (19:56):
And though I wonder how they found him.

Speaker 7 (19:59):
The little boy too, so he said, this is what
this is what the guy's talking about.

Speaker 8 (20:04):
Well, I mean, I see this.

Speaker 6 (20:06):
I get this.

Speaker 8 (20:07):
So the boy led him to where he lived. That
is what you're saying.

Speaker 3 (20:11):
Yeah, okay, he told him the town and then they say, yes,
I still.

Speaker 8 (20:14):
Got that image in my head. I just can't understand it.

Speaker 7 (20:18):
So the next story we're going to talk about. We're
going to breeze through these, but because there's so many
of them. The next story was five year old Luke Roman.
At the age of two, he would mention Pam. His mom,
Erica was like, who's this PAM person? And he said
from the office, not fairly, this is you're dumb.

Speaker 3 (20:43):
Now, I'm saying.

Speaker 7 (20:46):
So when she started asking more and more about Pam,
she says, who is Pam? And he says, I'm PAM.

Speaker 3 (20:57):
Two years old.

Speaker 7 (20:59):
And she said, I don't understand how you're a PAM.
And he said, well, I was living in Chicago. I
was a black woman. This is a white, little white kid.

Speaker 3 (21:12):
He said.

Speaker 7 (21:13):
He was a black woman living in Chicago and he
died in a fire. She died in a fire, and
she says, we did how did you get here? And
she said when I went to heaven, God pushed me
back down and then I was a baby in your stomach.

Speaker 6 (21:33):
What the heck.

Speaker 7 (21:35):
Obviously this kind of messed with Eric a little bit
because one they had never been to Chicago. She did
some research and she found out that there was a
Pam Robinson who was one of fifteen people who died
in a fire in Chicago in nineteen ninety three.

Speaker 8 (21:53):
That is crazy. Oh my gosh, I got chills. That
is crazy.

Speaker 7 (21:58):
Here's another one for you. This is one where I
probably grew up. The name six year old Taranji Sing
in a village in India from the time he was
two years old.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
These kids all talk at really early ages.

Speaker 8 (22:14):
That's young.

Speaker 7 (22:15):
From a time he was two years old, his father,
whose name was Suiting now Sing and he lived in
a village about forty miles away from a village that
he claimed to have been from. So they're forty miles
away from this village. This two year old is just saying, Hey,
I'm from this village that now would he know he's

(22:38):
two years old? Yeah, But he's just picking a village
that's forty miles And that's another thing you're going to
find out with a lot of these stories, a lot
of these reincarnations or past lives, they're not really very
far from where they were to begin with. Some of
them are, but for the most part, a lot of
them are within you know.

Speaker 3 (22:53):
A couple of hours distance.

Speaker 7 (22:54):
Yeah, So he starts telling this story about when he
was in ninth grade he died, and when he died,
his father was Jeet Singing. He was hit and killed
on September tenth, nineteen ninety two. This kid knows exact

(23:16):
dates and everything. When they asked him how he died,
he said he was riding his bike and a man
on a scooter hit him head on.

Speaker 3 (23:27):
And he died. And he even went as.

Speaker 7 (23:30):
Far to say that his book bag or he had,
you know, his books that he was carrying his books
were soaked in blood.

Speaker 3 (23:38):
In his wallet he had thirty rupees. So because he
was so.

Speaker 7 (23:44):
Insistent about what had happened, they decided to go to
the village and just you know, check cram a little bit,
let's see what's going on. They found a teacher who
verified that they did have a kid by that name
who died from being hit by a scooter. She also

(24:06):
verified that the kid's father.

Speaker 6 (24:09):
Was the.

Speaker 7 (24:11):
Jeet Singh. So this kid has now named the town.
How old he was that he was killed and what
his dad's name was. So they go and they talk
to the family. The family, I mean, we're obviously like,

(24:31):
how do you know all this stuff? Yeah, he was
able to look at pictures, like the family had pictures.
He was able to look at pictures and pick himself
out in the pictures. That's me, that's me, that's me,
and was completely accurate. On top of that, the family

(24:53):
also verified that he had thirty rupees in his wallet
when he was hit and killed, and that his bloods
was in fact soaked into his books.

Speaker 6 (25:05):
Oh my god, I don't.

Speaker 8 (25:08):
Know if that's creepy or I don't know.

Speaker 4 (25:10):
What that is.

Speaker 3 (25:11):
Now here's another thing.

Speaker 7 (25:12):
There was a handwriting analyst who actually had this current
kid write some stuff, which keep in mind, this kid's
like two years old. Yeah, he had him write some stuff,
but they compared it to older handwriting of the kid
that had passed away, and they said it was amazingly
similar in a lot of aspects. So even the handwriting

(25:33):
analysis worked out. This is one of the cooler stories
I think, I thought, I mean, I think they're all cool,
but this was one that just kind of really stood out.
This is the story of Sam when Sam was eighteen
months old. Once again, these young kids speaking. He was

(25:55):
able to speak in complete sentences at eighteen months When
his dad was changing his diaper, he looked at his
dad and said, when I was your age, I used
to change your diapers.

Speaker 8 (26:08):
Only grab what dad did.

Speaker 7 (26:13):
Now, Doctor Jim Tucker, who's uh, he works at the
University of Virginia, but this is what he deals in
his past lives and stuff like that. He started helping
the family out and investigating. And he said that after
making that statement, they started looking at some old photos
because his dad had actually went and got some books,

(26:35):
some old photograph books at is from his mom's house,
and they started looking through the looking at things, and
they find this old black and white picture of this car.
I don't know what kind of car was, but I
mean it was like a nineteen fifty six model somewhere,
and so it was really old car. And the little boy,
keep in mind, eighteen months old, he sees that and
he said, uh, hey, that's my car. And they're like, no,

(27:00):
that's your grandfather's car. He said, he said, no, that's
my car. So now they start pulling out all these
other pictures and they find a picture of this boy's grandfather.
Keep in mind, the kids his dad's dad. So they
find this picture of him when he was young, like
a teenager with some other boys, and they said, does

(27:25):
this picture look familiar. He pointed right to his grandpa
and said that's me. And they said, no, that's your grandpa,
and he says, no, that's me. So they now are
convinced that this little boy is the recreation of his grandpa,

(27:48):
his dad's dad. And that's why he made the comment
of when I was your age, I was changing your diaper.

Speaker 8 (27:57):
But I don't even know what to say to that.
I mean, did his grandpa I guess just that of
an old age or yeah, I mean.

Speaker 7 (28:08):
And he didn't know him obviously, I mean because he
died before him, right, So he didn't know anything about
his grandpa, but he was able to pick him out
of pictures.

Speaker 3 (28:17):
He was able to pick out where his car was. Well,
here's even more so.

Speaker 7 (28:21):
They asked him what he knew about his past life,
and he said that his sister was turned into a
fish by some bad men.

Speaker 3 (28:30):
Now this sounds pretty silly on the surface, but that's
what we do here. We get too silly.

Speaker 8 (28:35):
Yeah, well, I'm like, how do you turn into a fish?

Speaker 3 (28:39):
Well, that's a good question.

Speaker 7 (28:40):
So, like I said, it just sounded silly, and that
his dad didn't even realize this, but he starts checking
with his mom. Come to find out his dad's sister
had been killed by the mob and was thrown into
the walk into the San Francisco Bay. So technically, and

(29:01):
they didn't even they didn't even know that. But he
knew this, This little boy knew this. So technically he
was right. Some bad men made her a fish.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
Oh my god.

Speaker 7 (29:17):
I mean, how can you hear stories like this and
start and have any doubt at all that there's probably
something to this. I mean, these are stories from we've
heard about a kid talking about a you know, from Chicago,
We've already talked about you know, this one was in
the United States, and then we've got them over in.

Speaker 3 (29:35):
You know, the Middle East.

Speaker 8 (29:36):
This is totally amazing. This is this is like really exciting.

Speaker 7 (29:40):
Actually, So here's another one. Poor Maud Sharma in India
nineteen forty four. When he was two years old, he
told his mom that his wife and Moradabad would cook
for him.

Speaker 3 (29:54):
She didn't have to.

Speaker 7 (29:56):
Here's two you don't have to cook for me, my
wife and you know, a couple of sounds over a
cook for me. It's about ninety miles away is where
this Moradabad is ninety miles away.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
It's a two year old just naming towns that he
has no clue exists. So this goes on for a while.
This isn't something they just quickly rectified.

Speaker 7 (30:17):
So when he was between the ages and three and four,
he starts talking about that he worked for a company
with family in Muhamma Bad or Marama Bad, Moradabad.

Speaker 3 (30:33):
Jesus Christ, the kids be here. I can say Pittsburgh,
I know, but these are so cool.

Speaker 8 (30:41):
Keep going.

Speaker 7 (30:41):
So he says that he worked for his family with
a bunch of family members in a place that sold
cookies and water. And he said it was called the
Mohan Brothers. That was the name of the place. They
decide that that, you know, they want to start checking

(31:03):
some of this out, but then even more weird stuff
starts to happen. He advises them against eating curd, which
I think i'd advise people against curd. Curd is kind
of like it's almost like a porridge slash, like a
cottage cheese type type deal.

Speaker 8 (31:20):
That'd be all down for that.

Speaker 3 (31:21):
Yeah, that's disgusting.

Speaker 8 (31:22):
Cottage cheese is the ball, but salt and pepper.

Speaker 7 (31:27):
So he's he's talking about. He advises people to not
do it, and then he wouldn't touch it. He said
it made him sick in his old life.

Speaker 8 (31:35):
Oh maybe he was lack toast intolerant.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Maybe that was good.

Speaker 7 (31:41):
Right, that's about like the time when I was talking
about I had a foot fetish, but I couldn't get
anywhere with you because you were lictose intolerant. Ew, can
we can we get through this story? He also wouldn't
take baths. He said he died in a bath.

Speaker 6 (32:01):
Really.

Speaker 7 (32:01):
Yeah, So what happens is they decide that they're going
to go up to this Moradabad and check stuff out.
So it took literally two years of him telling these
stories before they decide check it out. They go up
there and they found out there was a family called Mira,
that was their last name, who owned a soda and

(32:23):
cookie shop.

Speaker 3 (32:25):
Would you like to guess what.

Speaker 4 (32:26):
The name of it is?

Speaker 8 (32:27):
I thought you said it was cookies and water.

Speaker 7 (32:29):
That's what he said he sold. Oh the SODA's water
could be soda water.

Speaker 8 (32:34):
Oh well, that's true. That's true.

Speaker 3 (32:35):
It was called the Mohan Brothers, exactly what he said.

Speaker 4 (32:39):
It was called.

Speaker 7 (32:41):
And they said the manager died in nineteen forty three.
When was this little boy born nineteen forty four?

Speaker 3 (32:48):
A year later.

Speaker 7 (32:51):
They said that Parmada Mira was the name of the
guy that died. He died from an intestine no illness
due from eating gorgeen is what they said on curd.

Speaker 8 (33:05):
Oh gosh.

Speaker 3 (33:07):
And one of the cures that he.

Speaker 7 (33:08):
Tried before he died medicinal bats. So everything that this
little boy had said completely accurate.

Speaker 8 (33:18):
My goodness, Wow, this is so interesting.

Speaker 3 (33:22):
I ain't this fun.

Speaker 7 (33:23):
Yes, it's actually going quicker than I thought it was,
so we actually could have done the Queen Mary.

Speaker 8 (33:28):
But oh well, well that's okay, that's okay. Let's go
here some more stuff, all right?

Speaker 7 (33:33):
Ten year old Ryan Hemmons, he says that he was
a Hollywood extra. Now, I don't know how all this
came about, but somehow another his family is like, okay,
you're full of shit.

Speaker 3 (33:46):
Where are you getting this from? Yeah, but he was
dead up convinced. I guess dead up is probably a
bad term for.

Speaker 8 (33:52):
Bast but he was convinced.

Speaker 3 (33:55):
He was convinced that he was an extra in a movie.

Speaker 7 (33:58):
Somehow another they still they found a picture from Maywest's
first movie called Night after Night. In this little black
and white picture, there's like four people and he points
to one of them and says, that's me. And when
they did some research, this guy didn't have any lines
in the movie.

Speaker 3 (34:17):
Yeah, he just stood her.

Speaker 7 (34:19):
Basically, his name was Marty Martin and he basically wasn't nobody.
I mean I say nobody in the sense of as
far as movie stars. So he's nobody that this boy
would have any clue who he was. He wouldn't somebody
you could google or anything or figure out. I mean,

(34:41):
it was just it just you know what I'm saying.
It's just so anyway, this kid, though Ryan Hemmons, he
somehow was able to correctly identify fifty five details of
this guy's life. This was even on I think that
Today's was one of them. That was this wasn't that

(35:02):
long ago. I mean, this was probably in the last
fifteen years.

Speaker 4 (35:04):
Cool.

Speaker 7 (35:05):
Uh, some of the some of the details he had
so he said he often talked about he had two sisters,
his five marriages, trips to Paris, and living on a
street with rock in it. These are the things that
this kid came up. So, I mean, let's say hypothetically
that the kid.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
Was finding out stuff on the internet.

Speaker 7 (35:25):
He wouldn't be able to find out what street he
lived on and all that stuff.

Speaker 3 (35:27):
That's that stuff.

Speaker 7 (35:28):
Hell yeah, I can't even barely look and find out
what street I lived on an internet, you know, a
little one somebody from yeah.

Speaker 3 (35:33):
Years and years ago.

Speaker 7 (35:36):
So then he starts talking about how much he missed
an orange soda named true aidid True Aid. So you
remember the same doctor Tucker we talked about earlier from
Virginia that specializes in this He decided that he wanted
to try to.

Speaker 3 (35:53):
Get involved in this case.

Speaker 7 (35:55):
He confirmed that most of the details were curate, and
he started talking about what some of them were, and
like you said, he confirmed that most of these weren't
on the internet.

Speaker 3 (36:09):
He found on the internet.

Speaker 7 (36:11):
For example, he lived on Roxbury Drive. When he said that,
remember the voiceaid he lived on the street that had
rock in it. Oh, this guy lived on Rocksbury Drive. Okay,
so many sisters he had too exactly what he said.
I also found out that he spent time in Paris
on his honeymoon with his fifth wife, his fifth wife. So,

(36:32):
I mean, this kid literally just picked somebody who nobody
would even know, and knew fifty five details about his
life and everything from the street he lived on to
the fact he was married five times and where even
spent his honeymoon at in Paris.

Speaker 8 (36:45):
You're cute, Sure, you are cute. Oh well, honestly, if
you if you knew somebody and personally and was telling
you all that stuff, I mean, how would you react
to that?

Speaker 7 (37:06):
I mean, I mean I would almost immediately think they
were lying, right, But if it was a little bitty kid,
I think that's why I was more drawn to the
kid once.

Speaker 8 (37:14):
Yeah, I mean have the kids, I mean, especially that
young age. That's just amazing to me. So it wouldn't
creepy out, I guess no, I.

Speaker 7 (37:21):
Don't think it would freak me out at all. I
guess we could take a little break here and remind
people that we've actually got T shirts for selling our website,
hippily horror stories dot com. Paula Brooks actually ordered t
shirt and got it and liked it so much that
she turned around and ordered another one, So thank you
appreciate that and Julie Gilder also ordered another one, so

(37:42):
that's the She's the Those are the two people this week.
Both actually have ordered one before, so it's her first
multi T shirt buyers.

Speaker 8 (37:49):
I know, and I would love to see the pictures
of you guys in a T shirts. It's so fun.
We look so forward to that to see what you
guys look like and all that fun stuff. So keep
doing that.

Speaker 7 (37:59):
Yeah, and some of you out there have gotten shirts
and haven't sent us any pictures, which you're not obligated to.
But if you do have your shirt, haven't sent us
a picture. We really appreciate it actually helps us sell shirts.
When people see that, other people will actually buying them.
And we're not just making it up.

Speaker 3 (38:12):
Yeah, make it up. We're just making up names.

Speaker 8 (38:15):
Yeah, we want to see your beautiful faces.

Speaker 7 (38:17):
President Trump, your T shirts on the way. You know
it didn't happen, but you know we got that and
then on the same website. Also keep in mind that
we have the donate button. If you want to make
a donation to the show. You can also get our
Patreon page there. And like I said, I'm not going
to keep passion this every single week, but you do

(38:39):
for the three dollars of the five dollars and a
ten dollars monthly donation. You do get extra shows out
of it. We're going to do a listeners show, which be,
like I said, at least an hour long, and it's
going to be basically me and Tracy sit around and
chatting with you guys. You guys are just going to
tell us your ghost stories and we'll interact with you
and have some fun. And I think you guys are
going to a big kick it out. Like I said,

(39:00):
We've already recorded some of these, so I'm excited. The
first one will come out June first, and we're gonna
put that one out on the first of every month,
and then the second show will be much like our
regular show.

Speaker 3 (39:12):
We will probably throw some true crime in there.

Speaker 7 (39:14):
I know we're going to do some Jim Jones the Coach,
probably do some like Jack the Ripper. I want to
try to keep it the kind of creepy true crime.
And then sometimes we're just gonna do a regular paranormal show,
so it won't it'll be the same as what you get.
But the reality of it is you're gonna end up
getting two extra shows a month instead of four shows,
you get six, or we.

Speaker 8 (39:31):
May do true crime stories in Lexington get no kidding.

Speaker 7 (39:37):
But uh and then, like I said, someone like thet
we've got actually a lot more people do the ten
dollars a month thing than I thought we were going to.
And those people also get a fifteen minute skype session
every month with me and Tracy where we can just
talk about whatever you want to talk about. Yeah, so
all right, let's move on to some more of these stories.
And well before I move on, because I already forgot
and I just determined I wasn't gonna do this.

Speaker 3 (39:59):
Thank you.

Speaker 7 (40:00):
Thank you. Thank you to all of our military and
civil servants out there all over the world, no matter
what country in, no matter who you are serving for.

Speaker 3 (40:09):
Thank you for what you do. We love you guys.
All right now, let's go on.

Speaker 7 (40:14):
This story is about a six year old by the
name of James Lynger. Now, as a little boy, he
would only play with toy planes, and then when he
was two years old, he started having nightmares and when
his family would wake him up and ask him what

(40:34):
the nightmares are about, he would say, airplane crash on fire,
A little man can't get out.

Speaker 8 (40:41):
Oh that's terrible.

Speaker 7 (40:44):
So over time he started giving more and more details
that really were like beyond belief. He said, he flew
a Corsair that would always get flat tires. Why that's weird, Well,
I mean, they have landing tires. It's not like he's

(41:04):
riding along gets a flat Well.

Speaker 8 (41:05):
No, I know, but don't you think it's weird though,
I mean, well, man.

Speaker 3 (41:08):
It's a very specific detail. I guess that's the whole point. Yes,
he said that his plane was hit by a Japanese
plane during World War Two. Oh my gosh.

Speaker 7 (41:18):
He went into really major details. He said that he
took off from Natoma and flew with Jack Larson name
the name. Now, what they found out was both of
them those things were real. The Natoma Bay was an
aircraft small aircraft carrier in the Pacific, and Jack Larson

(41:40):
actually did fly out of that unit.

Speaker 3 (41:42):
And he said that he did actually have.

Speaker 7 (41:47):
A James that he flew next to and he witnessed
the plane get hit and he got hit head on
right where the motor was and it went down. And
this matched up because the little boy actually said that the.

Speaker 3 (42:03):
Plane was shot down in the in the.

Speaker 7 (42:06):
Bullet of the bomb actually hit where the motor was,
and so that was very specific.

Speaker 3 (42:14):
He said.

Speaker 7 (42:15):
He started the little boy actually started signing his name
on like drawings and stuff, James three, James three. So
he was he was James Junior, James Langer Junior. But
the gentleman who had passed away his name was James
Houston Junior, which would kind of make him James the third.

(42:42):
So they went ahead and they started doing some research
about what happened.

Speaker 3 (42:47):
This was in the EWO gema.

Speaker 7 (42:48):
Actually it is what this has happened at And for
just the fact that that a six year old boy
is talking about EWEO gema. I mean, you know, who,
how's he gonna know anything about EEO gema? Yeah, you know,
I didn't know anything but when I was six years old, right,
So they started doing some research and then they found
out that there was only one pilot killed at that.

Speaker 3 (43:08):
Attack on Iwo Jima, and it was James Houston Jr.

Speaker 8 (43:11):
That's crazy, you know, and what else is crazy? And
I'm glad he didn't die, but not kind of weird
that the other guy didn't die.

Speaker 3 (43:18):
Well, he was in a plane. Next time he wouldn't
end the same plane.

Speaker 8 (43:21):
Oh, because it was like a single Oh, I got you.

Speaker 7 (43:25):
But they were all flying in unison each other, you know,
several planes man man. So Ralph Claiborne actually says that
he was the rear gunner.

Speaker 3 (43:35):
And he was next to Houston.

Speaker 7 (43:36):
That's the guy that they talked to. Yeah, it wouldn't
I said it was Jack Larson earlier. But Jack Larson
was a guy who was in that unit. But the
Ralph Claiburn is the guy who actually said he saw
him get hit. So I was wrong on that witness
comes a negative review.

Speaker 3 (43:52):
Either.

Speaker 7 (43:53):
Even more, they went and talked to Houston's sister and
they told him that were telling her all the details. Yeah,
and she confirmed almost every detail that he said. And
she said that she was convinced that this kid was
the reincarnation of her brother because there was just so much,

(44:17):
too many there was just too many things that he could.

Speaker 3 (44:19):
Not have known.

Speaker 8 (44:20):
Wow, I just that would be cool, though, I mean,
I just don't understand how this works. It's just mind
boggling to me. I mean, it's just it's so amazing.

Speaker 3 (44:32):
But you are still amazed at how calculator works.

Speaker 8 (44:35):
Also, I am amazed about how Fax machine works. I
will say that I just this is just amazing.

Speaker 7 (44:41):
This is so cool, all right, everybody just wanted to
We ran into some guys at a function that we
were doing on Sunday, a benefit me and Tracy were doing,
and I told him I would give them a mention.

Speaker 8 (44:55):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (44:55):
These guys all work at the Ford Plant in Louisville, Kentucky.
And I say, guys, but it's guys. I ain't but
they said there's about twelve to fifteen of them that
listened to the show and then they go out on
breaks and then they discussed the show. They said, this
is like three or four episodes and then they go
and break and discuss it and go back and do
it again.

Speaker 3 (45:11):
That amazing, which is pretty cool.

Speaker 5 (45:13):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (45:13):
And I think Tabitha Brown, who actually no longer works
at the plant, was responsible for most of this, because
we talked a while back and she said she was
telling everybody and she still listens to the show, but
she lives in Texas.

Speaker 3 (45:24):
So hey, Tabitha.

Speaker 5 (45:25):
Hey.

Speaker 7 (45:26):
But I talked to a couple of the guys on
The guy we ran into, obviously was Rob Blevin's super
nice guy.

Speaker 3 (45:33):
He made Tracy feel like a rock star with how
excited he.

Speaker 8 (45:36):
Was to see us, and I know, I was like,
what's happening here?

Speaker 7 (45:39):
It's so great, but he couldn't wait to get a
picture and he was all excited to post it on Facebook.

Speaker 8 (45:45):
And uh, it's super super nice guy and very talented
as well.

Speaker 7 (45:49):
Yeah, hell of a drummer. Yes, and then Denny Atkins.
I talked to Denny all the time on Facebook. Haven't
had a chance to meet him in person yet, but
kudos to all you guys, thank you for listening so much.

Speaker 3 (46:00):
So a big shout out to the four Plant Louisville.

Speaker 8 (46:02):
Absolutely, thank you guys.

Speaker 7 (46:05):
This episode, as I've said, is one I thought was
going to be very special because we're talking about past
lives and I kind of look at all these that
we've always getten people send in their stories, and one
of the stories that was sent in just oddly enough
this week just really fit this episode. And I talked

(46:27):
to the young lady and asked her could she come
on the air and tell the story and she agreed to.
So please welcome to the show a special guest. This
is Paula from Missouri. Paula, how are you doing tonight?

Speaker 6 (46:39):
Oh I'm still a vers letter.

Speaker 5 (46:41):
So I just got called a young lady.

Speaker 8 (46:45):
Welcome to.

Speaker 3 (46:47):
Well, compared to Tracy, everybody's a young lady.

Speaker 8 (46:53):
Where you are?

Speaker 7 (46:55):
So, Paula, you'd written me a story and uh, I'll
let you go into the details. But it's a very
sensitive subject for a lot of people. But it does
tie into what we're talking about tonight. Do you want
to explain to the audience a situation that happened in

(47:15):
your personal life a while back and how it may
have turned into a positive.

Speaker 5 (47:21):
Yeah, yeah, it's kind of funny. I've got two kids
and they're just joys. You know, kids are kind of special.
And it wasn't long after my dad had passed away
back in two thousand and six that I found out
I was pregnant and my daughter, who is about seven

(47:46):
at the time, was just very excited to get to
be a big sister. And my husband, my second husband,
so I traded up and was very excited to get
the you know, a father from the very beginning, rather
than picking up a.

Speaker 6 (48:00):
Year three, so our year five. So he was we
were very excited, very happy.

Speaker 5 (48:05):
You know, we lost one life, but we're about to
bring another one in. And then, uh, just about three
months in, something went very wrong, and it was, uh,
it was very sad.

Speaker 6 (48:18):
We we lost the baby, and uh, we're just kind
of just kind of devastated. You know, we already lost
my dad. Now we lost a little bit of a
little bit of toy we thought was coming into our lives.

Speaker 5 (48:36):
But I got pregnant again about six months later, and
and my son was born, Uh, my Alan, who actually
is named after my dad. My husband suggested it. Now
my mom likes him better than me, but that's okay. Uh,
but Alan was just a little pumpkin, and uh, when

(48:59):
he was about three years old. He's nine now, But
when he was about three and still listened to me,
we were getting ready for bed, and I was having
him pick up his toys in.

Speaker 6 (49:07):
His room, and he just kind of stopped and.

Speaker 5 (49:12):
Kind of looked at me and said, you know, I
was good to come to you and Daddy earlier, but
I just wasn't ready yet. They said I wasn't ready yet,
so I had to leave. But then I came back
and now I get to stay with you. And I'm
just sitting there looking at.

Speaker 6 (49:23):
Him, going what so.

Speaker 5 (49:27):
And I tried to question him about it, and he
was just like, oh, you know, I get to stay
with you now, but I wasn't ready before or something
like that.

Speaker 6 (49:34):
It was kind of interesting.

Speaker 5 (49:36):
But I'm sitting there going he had no idea obviously
at the Asian three that I had a miscarriage before,
so I just couldn't help.

Speaker 6 (49:44):
But wonder, is that what he's trying to tell me
that you know, it just wasn't time yet.

Speaker 5 (49:47):
I had to wait six months so he could be
born on leap day or something because I can't have
a normal birthday in my family.

Speaker 6 (49:53):
So but it was just fun. It was very it
was it just lit up, kind of lit us all
up when he did that.

Speaker 8 (50:02):
So, yeah, I don't know how you would react to that.
That is just amazing. I mean, does that is that
really the first thing that you thought? When he said that?

Speaker 5 (50:14):
That was that was the first thing that ran through
my head, and I'm like, that has to be And
when I tried to question him about it, he just said,
you know, I wasn't ready yet, and then he just
went back to his trains.

Speaker 6 (50:26):
But he was just it was just kind of interesting.

Speaker 5 (50:30):
I'm like, oh, you know what, I'm gonna take him
for what he said that he tried to come earlier
and couldn't sit there.

Speaker 8 (50:36):
He is so special. What a blessing.

Speaker 1 (50:41):
It really was, and.

Speaker 5 (50:44):
It was quite an experience, and he's just been a
pure joy ever since. A little annoying joy sometimes.

Speaker 6 (50:50):
Put a joy.

Speaker 3 (50:52):
So looking back at the situation, now, do you feel
like that's what happened?

Speaker 6 (50:57):
I do think that is what happened, you know, because
I think with dead passing and everything, I don't think that.

Speaker 5 (51:08):
We were necessarily in the mindset. I don't know that
we're ready. I don't know necessarily that he was ready.
And but the way things ended up happening, I mean,
like I said, it was the minute we heard is
due date was March tenth.

Speaker 6 (51:22):
We knew he was going to be a February twenty
ninth baby, just because that's where our family rolls. Oh cool,
we can hit something highly inconvenient. Let's go for that.

Speaker 3 (51:32):
I've got I've got a niece. Her birthdays February twenty ninth.

Speaker 5 (51:36):
So do you do the uh?

Speaker 6 (51:38):
Oh you know, great, you're sad your second birthday? He
hated the year I did that. His money. I don't
care it's over your second birthday. I don't care for
your eight.

Speaker 7 (51:51):
Yeah, they just celebrated whatever the closest convenient day is.

Speaker 3 (51:55):
I think twenty sixth Saturday gues today's your birthday.

Speaker 5 (52:01):
We picked February because I didn't want to get confusing
with the Burstone jewelry.

Speaker 6 (52:05):
I'm like, yeah, I forget it. You're an amethist.

Speaker 7 (52:11):
We're so sorry that you had to endure the tragedy
to get to the point in life to where the
happiness finally came. And we're glad that you did get
that happiness and that bundle of joy that you and
your husband so desperately needed at that time. And we
definitely thank you so much for being a supporter of
the show. You're actually one of our Patreon members.

Speaker 3 (52:33):
Thank you for that.

Speaker 8 (52:33):
Yes, thank you, honey.

Speaker 7 (52:35):
And you got to you've turned your daughter on the
Listening to Us, which she has some fascinating stories of
her own that we're going to get her on one
of the listener episodes. But you know, you've done a
wonder for us as far as coming on and sharing
that story on the perfect episode and at the same
time supporting the show by telling all your friends and
family and financially supporting show.

Speaker 3 (52:56):
We can't thank you enough.

Speaker 8 (52:57):
And not only that, we've gained another great friend or
family as we call you, and that means more to
us than anything.

Speaker 6 (53:07):
I appreciate it.

Speaker 5 (53:07):
You guys are wonderful and I still enjoy listening to
my daughter. It's really she binged listened once she uh
once I got her turned Ondia, and we're just happy
to be a part of it anyway we can.

Speaker 6 (53:20):
So I appreciate it and never and all the work
you guys put into this. It's it's awesome.

Speaker 8 (53:25):
Thank you so much.

Speaker 3 (53:27):
Yeah, thank you so much, Paula. And I'll be talking
to you soon.

Speaker 6 (53:31):
All right, sounds great, thank you, by.

Speaker 7 (53:35):
All right, let's talk about our eighth story. There was
a little boy born in Turkey whose name was Samede Tusma.
But as soon as he could start talking, he wanted
to be called Selene Fesley, and he said that he
was the reincarnation of Selene Feesley. He just flat up,

(54:01):
not I think he's this boy, was just flat up.
This is who I am.

Speaker 8 (54:06):
Is that a boy or a girl. It's a boy,
the Sealanda boy.

Speaker 7 (54:10):
Okay, So the family they found out that in a
neighboring village there was a man named Fesley who was
accidentally killed by a gunshot to the face and the
ear where eerily enough, I said, eerily, I got you.
I heard that samde actually had a birthmark. He had

(54:33):
a birthmark on his ear.

Speaker 3 (54:35):
In his face. Was it a bullet? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (54:39):
No, No.

Speaker 7 (54:44):
He was very clear on his memory of his family,
and he actually walked from his village to the next village,
walked straight into his old house, walked right up to
the woman and told her of his widow, told her,

(55:05):
I'm Selene, you're.

Speaker 3 (55:07):
My wife, Cette.

Speaker 8 (55:09):
Oh my gosh.

Speaker 7 (55:10):
He gave details of their life together and of their kids,
and he also said that his murder or his dying,
it was not an accident, that he was shot and
killed over a dispute.

Speaker 8 (55:23):
Are you kidding me?

Speaker 6 (55:24):
So?

Speaker 8 (55:24):
I wonder what she did. I wonder what she's like
saying it. I mean, I wonder what she said.

Speaker 7 (55:29):
She confirmed to the family that everything that that little
boy had just said was one hundred percent accurate, from
the kids to how old they were, where they were born,
details about them, details about their life together.

Speaker 8 (55:44):
How could you even handle that? I mean how, I
don't know how she would even handle that, knowing that
that was her husband. But he's a kid I don't know,
it's like big, yeah said right, it is like big,
A little bit big. I mean, I I guess I'm

(56:10):
trying to put myself in their in their position. I
don't even know. I mean, I mean, I guess they
became best friends after all that. I guess maybe, And
he's just making shit.

Speaker 6 (56:22):
I know.

Speaker 8 (56:23):
I'm trying to make a really heavy ending to this story.

Speaker 7 (56:26):
This is the last story that I've got, and this
one's actually a really cool story too.

Speaker 3 (56:31):
Cameron McCully.

Speaker 7 (56:33):
Now, there's there's actually a documentary that the BBC did
on this.

Speaker 3 (56:38):
I can't remember. It's like the Boy Who've Lived Before
or something. I can't remember the name of it. So
I'm really doing you no surface at all. They even
mentioned it.

Speaker 7 (56:45):
But his name was Cameron McCully. He was in Glasgow,
Scotland when he was two years old. He said he
was from an island called Bora, which is not the
same as Bora Bora. That's a different island. This is
this is one hundred and sixty miles away off the
coast of Scotland. That now he's also saying that he

(57:09):
used to sit in his room of this big white
house and watch planes land on the beach, and as
they were talking about it, and he starts talking about, well,
he had a black and white dog. He talked about
his family. His dad's name was Shane Robertson, but he
died because he didn't look both ways when he crossed

(57:32):
the street.

Speaker 8 (57:32):
Oh Jesus, people look both ways for you across the street.

Speaker 3 (57:37):
Yes, public service announcement. So the mom asked.

Speaker 7 (57:43):
How he came to be her kid, and he said, well,
I fell down from the sky and landed in your stomach.
And his name was Cam now and he said his
name was Cameron before in his past life.

Speaker 3 (58:06):
Kind of weird.

Speaker 8 (58:07):
That is weird.

Speaker 3 (58:10):
So you know they're thinking initially.

Speaker 7 (58:12):
You know, this kid's just got an active imagination. But
he was so persistent that they got in contact with
doctor Tucker, the same gentleman from Nevers, Virginia, and they
went to Bora in two thousand and five. When they
got there, it was just as he described.

Speaker 3 (58:30):
They found the old white house.

Speaker 7 (58:36):
Unfortunately, the family that had lived there had died and
passed away, but the family's name who used to live
there was Robertson, exactly as he said. They verified that
the dad's name was Shane and that he did die
in an automobile accident as a pedestrian, which is exactly

(58:58):
what the little boy said, not why both ways went
across the street. The funny thing about all this is
nobody could let him in the house because the family
had been seased, but the caretaker led him in the house.
The little boy went in and he knew the exact
layout of the house. He knew where every room was,
what you know, where the windows were. He he had

(59:21):
already beforehand told them how the house was. Yea, And
when they went there, it was like he'd been there,
you know, a thousand times before. That's a freaky story.

Speaker 5 (59:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (59:34):
And like I said, naked, stay went out, looked out
his bedroom window and you could actually see the planes landing.

Speaker 3 (59:40):
On the beach.

Speaker 8 (59:43):
That's so cool.

Speaker 7 (59:45):
So how about that for nine really cool stories.

Speaker 8 (59:48):
I mean I could listen to those all day. There's interesting.

Speaker 3 (59:52):
And there's a bunch of other ones.

Speaker 7 (59:53):
I mean I don't have all the complete details, but
there was one of this little boy he was like four,
that said that he was an eighteen year old soldier
in the war, and he kept talking about he started
having his throat pains and he kept saying, that's where
he got shot. That's where he got shot. And they
took him to the doctor and looked and he had

(01:00:17):
some kind of like a cyst or tumor or something
inside his throat.

Speaker 8 (01:00:23):
No kidding, and you mean as a little boy.

Speaker 7 (01:00:25):
As a little boy, but he kept saying the pain
was where he got shot. Now, once he told people,
after telling them that he was a soldier in the
war and he got shot and all that stuff. After
he told that, the cyst or the tumor or whatever
it was went away, and then he quit talking about
it anymore. So he just kind of mentioned it. There

(01:00:45):
it was, and it went away. And then there was
there was another little kid that said he was a
famous screenwriter back in the golden day of television, and
they were asking who he was, and he said, they
were naming off movies.

Speaker 3 (01:01:01):
Well what did you write?

Speaker 7 (01:01:02):
And they started naming off movies and they read off
Gone with the Wind and he's like, yes, get out
of He's like, yeah, I wrote that.

Speaker 3 (01:01:11):
And they said what was your name?

Speaker 7 (01:01:14):
And like I said, I can't remember all the details,
but the bottom line was he said that his name
was like Alan, I'll just say Alan for the No Cole.
His name was Cole and he died when he was
forty eight years old. We'll come to find out. The
guy who was a screenwriter for God with to Win.
His middle name was Cole, and he had died when

(01:01:35):
he was forty years old. And his birthday was he
said when his birthday was, it was like June twenty second,
and his birthday was June twenty second, And this little
boy's birthday was like two.

Speaker 3 (01:01:44):
Days later, like June twenty fourth.

Speaker 8 (01:01:48):
That's incredible.

Speaker 3 (01:01:48):
And I mean, like I said, these are just kids.

Speaker 7 (01:01:50):
There's tons of adult stories out there too where they
remember past lives and I don't know. This is kind
of going back to one of my favorite podcasts, but Unexplained.
One of the very first episodes that I listened to
Unexplained which got me hooked, was kind of on past lives,
and it was a story about a couple in England
who had two little girls.

Speaker 3 (01:02:11):
I think, I want to say one was like eleven
and the other one was eight, and they were walking
to church with a little boy, oh I remember, and
a lady that.

Speaker 7 (01:02:19):
Was having depression problems had taken a bunch of pills
and she was driving down the road and she saw
them and she'd veered off the road purposely hit and
killed all three.

Speaker 3 (01:02:28):
Of these kids.

Speaker 7 (01:02:29):
Yeah, and when this happened, she ended up going to
jail because she confessed to it. Yeah, and she ended
up going to jail. And I think a year later,
two years later, the couple got pregnant and for some reason,
the dad just knew that she was pregnant with twins,
and the doctor kept saying, no, it's just one kid,
it's just one kid.

Speaker 3 (01:02:50):
But when when they were born, it actually was twins.

Speaker 8 (01:02:53):
Now, so the sisters before were twins.

Speaker 3 (01:02:55):
No, the sister one was like eleven and one was
like eight.

Speaker 7 (01:02:57):
Oh, okay, okay, But these these girls were born were twins,
but they weren't identical twins. They didn't look alike. And
then as they started getting older, two three years older,
they started having these memories of stuff that was very
similar to their sisters who had passed away. And I remember,

(01:03:18):
you know, one time they were the mother had pulled
out toys that she had put away from the other girls.
And when she pulled them out, the girls knew all
the nicknames for the toys.

Speaker 3 (01:03:30):
It was like, oh, this is so and so, and
that's so and so.

Speaker 7 (01:03:32):
But she said one time they were walking to the
next town over they were like, oh, that's right over
the hill is our favorite playground. And they hadn't been
to this playground and you couldn't see it because of
the trees and everything, but they knew that playground was
over there and they had never been there before. And
then there was an instance to where they had birthmarks.

(01:03:53):
One of them had a birthmark exactly where the other
one had a birthmark. And they said, even though they
were the same age, one of them deaf, they took
like the older sister role and she would kind of
give guidance to the other sister, just like the older
sister did to the younger one before.

Speaker 3 (01:04:08):
They were killed.

Speaker 8 (01:04:09):
Did they know, did they point out where they were
killed in anything like that.

Speaker 7 (01:04:13):
Well, what they did at one point was the mom
said she walked in because the mom was real religious
in a Christian way, and a lot of Christians don't
believe in in the reincarnation.

Speaker 3 (01:04:23):
That's just that's just out of their belief.

Speaker 7 (01:04:25):
But she said she walked in on them one day
and the one little girl was laying down and the
other little girl was over top of her and she
said something like see this is where uh, this is
where you were bleeding from the car wreck or something
of that nature. But when the mom heard that, she
just instantly was like, okay, maybe this is something going on.

(01:04:46):
But they were actually describing the car wreck they were
in and there the fact that there was blood and
wow and all that.

Speaker 8 (01:04:52):
So so that was sort of like a blessing. Then
for her it's like she got her two little gray.

Speaker 7 (01:04:58):
It's almost like because they said the two had the
same personalities, each one had the personalities of the other one.

Speaker 3 (01:05:04):
So but I would advise anybody to go back.

Speaker 7 (01:05:07):
I said, that's Richard McLain Smith's Unexplained podcast, and we've
had Richard on the show. Go back and listen to that.
That's actually from season one. That's probably one of the
first three or four episodes. I don't remember exactly which one,
but go back and listen to that. It's an awesome,
awesome show.

Speaker 3 (01:05:22):
So what we're gonna do.

Speaker 7 (01:05:24):
We're gonna wrap this show up. We appreciate you guys listening.
Thank you so very much. We love each and every
one of you. And like I said to Hoover wrote
that review, earlier. We've had some fun with you this show,
but it's all out of love, you know. It's We've
got complete respect for everybody's opinion.

Speaker 8 (01:05:38):
Absolutely, And listen you guys this Memorial Day weekend and
y'all just be safe, have a good weekend with your
families and everything, and just remember our loved ones that's
gone on and all that fun stuff and just you know,
like I always say, love one another and just have
a good, safe weekend.

Speaker 7 (01:05:59):
Yep, and get ready for play you the interview from
bok Easter. You're gonna love this guy. Check out his show,
He'll Billy Horror Show. It's on YouTube. You can see
all those shows on there.

Speaker 8 (01:06:08):
I love his name Bolster.

Speaker 7 (01:06:10):
He's funny as hell, dude. When he's just talking regular,
he's like he's a character. It's almost like the character
he plays is him.

Speaker 3 (01:06:17):
He's not really doing.

Speaker 7 (01:06:18):
Much acting, but he really is a pretty good actor.
So give a listen to that, see what you think,
and keep in mind, go back and listen to the
Alistair Crowley episode because Monday night, I'm gonna put a
question up on Facebook and whoever can answer that question
from that episode, we'll get one of these free DVDs.

(01:06:39):
I've moled out to you, so we'll catch you guys
next week. All right, everybody, welcome back to Hillbilly Horror Stories.
And we have got a special guest on the phone.
I've actually got this set up a couple of weeks ago,
and I've been excited ever since I found out.

Speaker 3 (01:06:54):
But we've actually got bou Keaster.

Speaker 7 (01:06:55):
He's a really established actor out there and he is
one of the hosts of Hillbilly Horror Show. And if
you've actually had a chance to seeing that, you know
what a cool aspect that is. Because they do some satire,
some some he'll billy type comedy. It's it's him and uh,
Scott and Rachel and they play Lulu and Sifha's on

(01:07:17):
the show, along with Bow playing Bowl.

Speaker 3 (01:07:18):
That's quite a stretch there, Bow, Yeah, but.

Speaker 4 (01:07:24):
It was just it was natural. It was very natural
for me.

Speaker 3 (01:07:28):
But you guys are funny as hell. I'll be honest
with you.

Speaker 7 (01:07:30):
I don't pay a lot of attention to what you
say because my eyes are fixed on Lulu the whole
time I'm watching, and I think y'all playing it that way.

Speaker 3 (01:07:38):
Yeah, there's some some nifty camera work, is all.

Speaker 4 (01:07:41):
I'll say, no, it's not played at all, would.

Speaker 3 (01:07:48):
Do that absolutely well.

Speaker 7 (01:07:50):
Bo You guys, there's a lot of people out there
that may not write off know who you are by name,
but I guarantee if they saw you, they would know that.

Speaker 3 (01:07:58):
Some of the movies you've been in. And then what
I liked.

Speaker 7 (01:08:01):
About looking at your catalog is you've actually got a
wide arrange. I mean, you've done some stuff that's definitely
in the horror genre, like a movie called The Taking
of Deborah Logan, which is an awesome film. If you
guys haven't seen it, it's on Netflix. And you also
did The House of Good and Evil, which is those
two movies there's nothing comical about them. They're just straight

(01:08:23):
up good horror movies. But you also did some movies
away from the genre. I'm sure most people have seen.
Remember The Titans you were in that and Killing Kennedy,
which has got Rob Low in it. But then you
also can do the comedy type horror movies. And we
were talking off air, I go back to things like

(01:08:43):
Bruce Campbell's movies where he's always had a little comedy
and they're like the original Evil Dead, not the remake
they did, but you were in Vampires Anonymous in the Cabining,
which gets awesome reviews, and you actually take a huge
lead in the Cabining. Tell me a little bit of
about your background is acting, What got you into acting,

(01:09:03):
and what you prefer to do if you have a
preference at all acting wise?

Speaker 4 (01:09:08):
Uh, well, I mean what got me into it? Most
of the time I just tell people shit, I don't know.
I think I was crazy. It was a childhood dream.
I grew up, you know, in love with movies, and
I was sitting around in college, couldn't figure out what
I wanted to do. None of the majors really seemed
to fit. And Wilmington, North Carolina was the third largest

(01:09:30):
film market in the country at the time. So I
went down and checked it out, packed my stuff, and
moved a week later. And that's how I got started.
I jumped in do an extra work and things like that,
started meeting people, and the next thing, you know, you know,
taking acting classes. Got in with a really great coach

(01:09:51):
who had been into business for you know, thirty plus
years and was able to really give me a head
start that a lot of actors flounder around for two
or three years trying to buy, and uh, I got
an eighth. I started booking the rolls Vampires Domical by
first big role ended up being supporting roles. And then

(01:10:15):
I did remember the Titans and a couple other commercials
and things like that, and packed up and moved to
Los Angeles, and you know, I got to do a
lot of different stuff out there. I trained with some
really great acting coaches, a lot of coaches that have
brained some big, big game in the industry. I also
got to train at the Groundlings, which produced you know,

(01:10:37):
people like Will Ferrell and David Stade and some of
those you know. So I've had a broad range of training,
which gave me the opportunity to play a multitude of roles.
I could play heavy dramatic, I can play ridiculous comic
and just to find anything at the point. But I

(01:10:58):
don't have a role. I don't have a real prep.
I mean, I guess I have a knack for comedy
because I've just always, you know, kind of been one
of those people that relied on incentive humor in most
every situation. But there's something really cool about doing a
dramatic character as well. I mean, you really got a
kind of dig beat down inside yourself and find some

(01:11:20):
things cleared, some elephons out of the walls and on
those characters, and that that's equally as fun as making
people laugh.

Speaker 3 (01:11:29):
I could see that. I can see, and it's funny.

Speaker 7 (01:11:30):
You mentioned Will went to North Carolina being the third
largest film marketing and I would bet most people probably
don't realize that, but that's where Cape Fear was filmed,
if I remember correctly, And that was that was the
first time that I had found out that there was
even you know, movie studios outside of Los Angeles.

Speaker 4 (01:11:49):
Yeah. Well, I mean I didn't know either, and you know,
I just I found out about it and went down
and checked it out, and a week later I was
living there.

Speaker 3 (01:11:58):
It looks like it looks like a fun place to live.

Speaker 7 (01:12:00):
I mean, you know, right there by the ocean, and
I guess probably the winter time it's probably not all
that fun, but.

Speaker 4 (01:12:07):
You know, yeah, it's I mean, it wasn't necessarily warm
in the winter, uh, but compared to where.

Speaker 2 (01:12:17):
It was.

Speaker 7 (01:12:19):
Well, you know, like I said, we're practically neighbors because
we're right here in Kentucky. I'm in Lexington, so we're
not too too far from you I've been to Virginia
a few times.

Speaker 4 (01:12:28):
Yeah, I've been. I've been up around your area a
few times too.

Speaker 7 (01:12:32):
Well, let's talk a little bit about Hillbilly Horror Show.
Now that you guys have been nice enough to uh uh,
you're sending us out a DVD that we're gonna be
able to give to the fans. And like I said,
if you guys, if you haven't seen it, it's it's
worth watching. It's like I said, it's a combination. It
goes back to the old Uh what was the what
was the guy's name? If you remember both that used

(01:12:53):
to do the the shows were the drive in theater?

Speaker 3 (01:12:56):
Was it Joe Bob Briggs? Was that his name?

Speaker 7 (01:12:58):
Yeah, that was back from from my younger days. But
he would come out and do this. It's kind of
along that lines. But I really think it's a lot
better just because of the fact that it's not just
somebody sitting around talking. You guys actually put some put
together some really funny skits and worked well as a team,
and I think that just goes a long way.

Speaker 3 (01:13:17):
And then and then they introduce you.

Speaker 7 (01:13:18):
Guys to some really good horror short films that you
might not have seen you know, if it wouldn't for
the show. It's kind of it's like a showcase for
some of these lesser known shows.

Speaker 3 (01:13:28):
U and I like it.

Speaker 7 (01:13:29):
It's it's just a really well put together and you
guys have been doing it for a while. Tell me
a little bit about the show, how it got started
and how everybody involved in the show, everywhereverybody from Scott
and Rachel Faulkner actually got brought on. Was that something
you guys already had a prior relationship or was it
put together some other way?

Speaker 4 (01:13:47):
Well, Blue Dagoya and I had actually worked together off
his film house people and had bannered ideas around on
something to do next, and he is actually the one
that came up with the idea for the show and
we developed it. He knew Scott and Gott had gotten

(01:14:07):
into acting, and of course you know he was doing
podcasts as well in horror reviews, but he was really
getting into acting and fit Seetus perfectly. And then we
actually held the casting for Rachel for the for the
character Lulu, and through an agent friend of mine, we
found Rachel and the second we saw her on tape,

(01:14:29):
we were like, yep, that's our.

Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
I can see that.

Speaker 4 (01:14:32):
Yeah, I mean, it doesn't take as my dad would say,
it doesn't take a rocket surgeon.

Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:14:39):
So tell people your opinion, because I've babbled a little
bit about it. Tell people what your vision of the
show was as far as when you guys got together
said what do we want to accomplish with this show
and how do you think it's it's went over as
far as what your initial thoughts were as to what
the finished product is.

Speaker 4 (01:14:57):
Well, Blue actually handles the right side of it, and
he gives us a framework to kind of work within.
I mean, we have we do have scripted dialogue, but
once we're on set sometimes that gets a rework. There's
a I mean, there is some improv done and.

Speaker 5 (01:15:16):
Things like that.

Speaker 4 (01:15:17):
If you watch from hill Billy Horror Show one all
the way through volume four, what you'll see is God
and Rachel and I kind of begin to gel and
the chemistry from the outset was really great between the
three of us, and it just kept getting stronger. And
then you know, the show kind of took on his

(01:15:37):
own life when we're it and we evolved it from
what originally was a fifty some minute show to a
full length feature. In the last couple of volumes. So
it just you know, it ended up becoming bigger than
we thought it would be, and people seem to love it,

(01:15:57):
and you know, hopefully they to eat it up.

Speaker 7 (01:16:01):
Tell people out there, what what your thoughts are on
I mean, I'm assuming that you feel like that you're
doing a service. Not to sound egotisticals I don't mean
like that, but you're actually providing a service for some
of these horror films that the shorts, I should say
that that might not be seen by a lot of people,

(01:16:22):
and now you're getting them to a new demographic. Do
you feel like you guys are actually providing a good
benefit for those those writers.

Speaker 4 (01:16:29):
I'd like to think that we are, you know, I mean,
most of these are never going to be seen outside
of the film festival circuit. So to give them a
platform to get their workout to a math audience, I
guess hopefully, you know, hopefully it brings them more opportunity,
and you know, it gives them something to point to

(01:16:49):
as well and say, hey, look, you know we're on
you know, we're on this this series of this Hillbilly
horror show series that's all over Amazon Prime and all
over Voodoo and all over row to and you know,
they can point people to their work, say hey, you

(01:17:10):
want to check out some of my work, check out this,
And you know, I mean, it's great that they're out
there winning awards at festivals and things like that. That
you're talking about a very small, tight knit audience at
each of these festivals, and you know, you might reach
a couple hundred people at one or another, you know,
what have you? But getting it out there to a

(01:17:31):
big crowd, and you know, you know, of course we
do revenue sharing with the filmmakers as well, so they've
gone a chance to even make some money off of it.

Speaker 3 (01:17:39):
How do you, guys choose the shorts that you use?

Speaker 7 (01:17:42):
Is there people like submitting these to you or are
you guys actually going out and seeking them? How does
how does one get their short onto your show?

Speaker 4 (01:17:50):
A bit of boat. A lot of times we watch
the festival circuits and see if we start seeing a
title that's winning multiple festivals, we'll reach out to the
filmmakers and say, hey, you know, we we'd be interested
in this for our next volume. A lot of times
we get submissions and sometimes, you know, sometimes we get

(01:18:11):
one that just blows us away. And other times we
get one where we have to send a condolence letter,
which we hate to do. But you know, uh not
not all of them are up to the standard that
we need them to feed. And uh, I mean we're
we're trying to pick the krim dela prim so to speak.

(01:18:33):
So you know a lot of times we get some
and we we love them, but we can't use them
because of either lenk the run time can be a problem.
They might be too short or they might be too long.
A lot of times when you're dealing with Roku and
some of these platforms, they won't allow not necessarily too

(01:18:57):
much violent, but you know if something's a little too
glory or there's too much nudity or something like that,
you know, they won't allow it to get to be
real careful with that as well.

Speaker 3 (01:19:11):
That's good to know.

Speaker 7 (01:19:12):
That's a new area for me, is the rokup streaming
and so, I mean, I have a rocup set up
at home, but I've never used it for anything other
than Netflix and YouTube, I don't think. So I didn't
realize all the rules and regulations that went with some
of these rokup channels.

Speaker 4 (01:19:26):
Yeah, I guess if you're Amazon you can get away
with more, and netflicks you can get away with more.
When you're a smaller outfit, you know, if you kind
of got to pick and choose your battles.

Speaker 3 (01:19:36):
So let me ask you this.

Speaker 7 (01:19:36):
On the show, you guys do some awesome skits and
it's obvious that they're really well planned, and I would
advise anybody to uh if they if they don't have
the prime or whatever to be able to check out
the full episodes. There's some cool clips on YouTube that
really give you a taste of what the show is.
But my favorite skit that I've seen is the Kim

(01:19:59):
John noon Uh skit with the bullets.

Speaker 3 (01:20:02):
Who's whose idea was that was?

Speaker 6 (01:20:04):
That?

Speaker 3 (01:20:04):
Was that one of you guys or does it go
back to that?

Speaker 5 (01:20:07):
Well?

Speaker 4 (01:20:07):
That was all Blue. That was all Blues doing and
funny enough. That sparked from when Kim Jongon kind of
went missing a couple of years ago and it was
reported on the New and then he got the idea
to incorporate this into the show. And then after we
had filmed and the show was being edited, was when

(01:20:30):
all of the hubbub and bullshit started about the James
Franco movie where Kim Jong n was raising mortal hell
about it and calling it an act of war and
all this stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:20:44):
Remember the name of the movie that was the one
was that it?

Speaker 7 (01:20:49):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:20:50):
Yeah, And you know, I mean I'm sitting there like
ship man. We we were, we were making fun of
him way before you guy, you know, But yeah, I
guess we didn't have Sony budgets, so goin.

Speaker 7 (01:21:03):
Well, they also didn't hack your email, and so you guys,
I guess you got the advantage there.

Speaker 4 (01:21:08):
What do you have Well, I mean they wouldn't have
found much except probably linked to porn sites. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:21:14):
Do you do you have a favorite skit that you
guys have done that stands out above the other ones?

Speaker 5 (01:21:19):
Oh?

Speaker 4 (01:21:19):
Man, there's uh, there's a skit in volume three where
Rachel is holding a sayot or if she puts it
a sayan say and I'm like, hey, got a singer,
but that one she starts going into convulsion. That that's
a pretty funny skit right there.

Speaker 7 (01:21:40):
Like I said, there there's everything that I've seen I
thought was very well done and uh, super funny, and
I you know, like I said, I I can't.

Speaker 3 (01:21:48):
Wait to dive into it.

Speaker 7 (01:21:49):
A little bit more and and uh be able to
see some of these, but I also can't wait to
see some of your other stuff. I mean, the more
I actually looked into your bio, the more that I
saw these things, it was like, Man, like The Cabining,
for example, just that movie just seems phenomenal.

Speaker 3 (01:22:05):
I watched the extended trailer.

Speaker 7 (01:22:07):
On YouTube and I was like, man, this has got
This is something I was already looking to see if
I could find it, you know, that night.

Speaker 3 (01:22:14):
So it looks like an awesome movie.

Speaker 7 (01:22:16):
I know it won a bunch of awards, So I mean,
that's that's something I would advise people to check out.

Speaker 4 (01:22:21):
And also, yeah, that's that's a fun film. They also
mean had so much fun making that.

Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
You guys also have to check out.

Speaker 7 (01:22:31):
There's a there's Bo's bloopers on all the outtakes, a
bunch of the outtakes from Hillbilly Horror Show that that's
pretty funny in its own right, So you guys got
to check.

Speaker 3 (01:22:40):
That out too.

Speaker 4 (01:22:41):
Yeah, and definitely check out the behind the scenes as well.
We did a series of interviews with the cast and
crew that are very Christopher Guest business. Final Tap a
Mighty Wind style interviews and that just turned out fans
hat bode.

Speaker 7 (01:23:00):
You got anything Do you got anything you're working on
right now that just hasn't been released yet that you
can actually talk about.

Speaker 4 (01:23:06):
Well, I've I've got a pilot that's out there being
stopped around that I'll if it gets picked up, I'll
be a recurrent character. But I can't really say much
beyond that. But uh, it's got some pretty, uh pretty
exciting people attached to it. The pilot turned out really great.

(01:23:27):
I was thrilled to be a part of it, and
hopefully with the heavy hitters that are behind it on
the boosting end, Hulu or Amazon Prime or Netflix one
will pick it up and uh, then I'll be able
to come back and tell you all about it.

Speaker 3 (01:23:43):
Cool.

Speaker 7 (01:23:44):
We'd be glad to have you back on what's the
future of Hibbilly Hornsees show? We got some upcoming episodes
coming to that.

Speaker 4 (01:23:50):
Yeah, that's what we're working on now. We're trying to
get everything ironed out and hammered together so that we
can get get back at it again. In the mean time,
you know, just want to get everybody to you know,
get out there and check it out. It's available on
Amazon Prime Voodoo. Uh, if you've got a road acoustick,

(01:24:11):
you can also download our channel Hillbilly Horror Show Part duh,
and you know watch it there and there's all kinds
of bonus speakers along with that, so uh, you know,
get out there and check it out because it's a
fun show and we're looking to build our audience and
the goal is to eventually pitch it to a network.

Speaker 7 (01:24:33):
Well, like I said, I can't appreciate you, know you
enough for coming on and doing this. I know you're
you're driving today back from from Atlanta, and I know
that's that's not an easy drive, and you still took
the time to talk to us. Like I said, we
greatly appreciate. I know the fans appreciate it. They love
our guests, especially when they're involved in the the horror
genre at all. And like I said, you guys, the

(01:24:55):
show's funny as hell. So anybody hasn't seen it, it's
there on YouTube to builities of clips and and all
the other platforms that bol just mentioned. H both, thank
you so much and and best of luck to you
in the cast of Hillily horseshow and best of luck
on your future, on your endeavors you got coming up.

Speaker 4 (01:25:11):
I appreciate it, brother, and you know, best of luck
with your show man. I love being on and would
love to come back again sometimes.

Speaker 7 (01:25:18):
We'll definitely have you back on anytime you've got something,
and when you guys get some new episodes out you
want to talk about it, we'll have you back on.

Speaker 4 (01:25:25):
Playing to me.

Speaker 3 (01:25:26):
Thank you, bo I appreciate it, brother.

Speaker 4 (01:25:28):
All right, take care,
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