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July 21, 2025 91 mins
Mark, Pam, and Jess

The "HUM" 

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Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Maybe.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Have you ever wondered what was out there in the
night sky, stared up at the stars in the hopes
of seeing something out of the ordinary.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
Have you heard unexplainable noises coming from a.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Vacant room or watched the shadow across the wall in
front of you. Have you asked yourself if there is
life after this one or if you had life before?
What about strange creatures that are mythical and elusive? Have
you experienced dejeuvu or felt a prompting to leave because
you felt you were in danger. If you have, you

(00:38):
were on the Fringe.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
Welcome to another episode of On the Fringe. I'm Mark,
I'm Jess, and together We're the wonder super Friends. We're
We're super flame. Oh yeah, well tonight, thank you's going

(01:26):
hmm yeah, tonight. We are talking about the worldwide hum.
The hum UH is a phenomenon. We've talked about the
Taos hum before UH, but it it occurs regularly in

(01:48):
other places around the world. Windsor, Ontario, Bristol, UK, Large Scotland, Auckland,
New Zealand, Cocomo, Indiana, and Vancouver and British Columbia and
other places. Those are just the more well known ones,
and it's it's really kind of interesting. About two to

(02:14):
four percent of people in the affected areas have reported
hearing it, and they're called hearers. And the symptoms include headaches, insomnia, nausea, anxiety, irritability,
and anybody who's head to nightis has probably experienced that.

(02:37):
And it's more of a high pitched wine, trust me,
I know. So it's it's really interesting phenomenon. So oh
inzos is their powers combined keep Sonic in business. They're
They're not wrong.

Speaker 3 (02:58):
Their iced teas are delicious.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
And so are their vanilla sprites.

Speaker 4 (03:05):
Never had a vanilla's frite.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
Oh, it's kind of like a poor man's cream soda,
no choke. H Yeah, it's not quite as strong, it's
not quite as sweet. Uh. So you know, hey, free
plug for Sonic. We're not we're not getting anything for that.

Speaker 3 (03:26):
We should we should.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
We're very big, very big customers. On with the hum
hum and there's our red robin plug.

Speaker 3 (03:39):
Are we gonna make bad hum jokes all night? Is
this scutty like one hum dinger of a show? Yeah, well, jeez,
I tried.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
I'll have to go out for a ride in my humer.
Oh my goodness. All right, so let's talk about the hump.
I think most of our listeners and and folks that
frequent are fantastic.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
I beat the Master of the Dad jokes to it.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
You did, baha. I think most of our listeners are
And so it begins, So it begins. It's going to
evolve into madness. I'm telling you madness.

Speaker 3 (04:42):
I hope end doesn't hop on here, because if he does,
they're gonna those two are gonna go to town.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
I am sure. But we've all heard of the touse
hum uh, and it's been attributed to all sorts of
technological things. And people say, oh, maybe it's tectonic plates.
Some people say it's aliens. I don't have any crazy

(05:08):
hair aliens.

Speaker 4 (05:11):
You got the crazy eyes?

Speaker 1 (05:13):
Do you have the crazy eyes? I do? There might
be something to that.

Speaker 4 (05:19):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
I've heard oto coastal emissions, which may occur in the
ear itself. And then there's all of the military conspiracy theories.

Speaker 3 (05:33):
I actually made a master list of everything they've ever
blamed it on.

Speaker 4 (05:38):
Would you like let.

Speaker 3 (05:42):
Yeah, Now, this is like all things, like all well,
all of the hums from across the world. Speaking of which,
if you want to go and see where all these are.
There's an actual page you can too that you can
go to. They have the World Hum Map and Database
No ship. Yeah, there's a gentleman who has been studying

(06:02):
it for years since the like the mid seventies, and
he's created an online database and you can go and
you can if you've experienced it, put your experience down.
And there's a huge map in fact, if you want
to go to it, it's just called the World Home
Map and Database Project.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Well we'll try that.

Speaker 3 (06:22):
So go check that out, because then you can pull
up the map. It's clustered, it's cur razing.

Speaker 1 (06:29):
No idea such a thing existed. And now I'm.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
You're a welcome sir. Yeah, okay, So while he's looking
that up, I'm going to go down through my listing
of reasons why the hum happens. So they say, so,
we've got, of course, the mating call of the midshipman
fish or I love it if you if you look

(06:54):
it up on the internet, a lot of the places
just say horny fish. It's because of cornyfish. Yes, broken
warehouse fans jet stream shearing against slower moving air, causing
a low frequency sound that could be amplified by electric pylons.
Holy cow, just to get through the whole thing. French

(07:18):
scientists blame it on ocean waves shaking the earth as
they collide with ridges and continental shelves. Vibrations from volcanic
eruptions and earthquakes lightning strikes build up a massive electromagnetic charge,
which causes the ionosphere to resonate water pumps and lines,
power lines, faulty generators, old air conditioners, radio signals, underground aquifers,

(07:47):
government experiences experiments, aliens, lay lines, and of course with
the government experience experiments goes the Havana syndrome stuff a lot.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Yes, this is just the United States and Canada. Here,
there's a lot of there's a lot of spots here.

Speaker 4 (08:09):
There's a report of one very close to us. Actually,
it's from Times stamp June nineteenth to twenty nineteen. Very
low based. Sounds like a really good car just running up,
but there's no change in the tone, just low.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
Oh hell that's out there by tyro.

Speaker 4 (08:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (08:33):
Actually, yeah, it's probably just somebody's trailer generator.

Speaker 4 (08:38):
Probably.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Yeah, they're not far from there. Yeah, no, oh you know,
I bet I bet it is, And.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Says according to the map, there's a helm at Phil's house.

Speaker 4 (08:54):
That's very close to it.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
Very close. Yeah, that's not far.

Speaker 4 (09:02):
It's like really close to Phil's, isn't it.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Actually, I'll have to ask him about it.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
It's probably the generator for his secret underground base he's
making for when the apocalypse happens.

Speaker 4 (09:15):
Maybe it's Billy the Bug Guy. Ooh, maybe there's a
Billy the Bug Guy.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
Yeah, that's not too far from it.

Speaker 4 (09:28):
Oh, it's very close to the Dalton Treasure too. Wow,
that's it in purple right there.

Speaker 3 (09:36):
Yeah. Wow. We do actually have a consistent one kind
of near us. There is one out of Saint Louis, Missouri. Yeah, yes,
so let me pull it up here. I have a
little bit on it. So it has been heard since

(09:57):
early two thy twenty t near the Missouri River on
the south side of Saint Louis. It's a low frequency
at fifty eight hurts. It begins in the evening just
after eight pm and lasts for hours, and they've seemed
to fix its. It has a fixed location, they found,

(10:20):
but there's nothing there. It's just open land and it's
a little different than some of the other ones. It
has a consistent wave pattern, so it flows in and
out and in and out starts right after eight.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
There's several of them that have several of them that
they have caught, and several of them that they can't
seem to catch on recordings. So yeah, that's.

Speaker 4 (10:49):
A big cluster of them around Chicago. There's a deeper
cluster around Kansas City.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
Actually, yeah, yeah, Kansas City, Missouri has got a bunch
of them.

Speaker 3 (11:04):
Now, just uh, putting this out there as we're going
over all of these, I'm sure a good handful of
these are literally just regular machine you know. Some of
the things that I listed are actually what they are.

Speaker 4 (11:21):
Not.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
Every person is diligent and hunting down and trying to
figure out exactly what it is they're hearing, and some
people just like to be part of a map.

Speaker 1 (11:32):
That's true, that's true. There there there is a lot
of that. Oh I heard it. Uh huh, let me go.
You can look at it online. Mm hmm, yeah, yeah,
I can see that.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
So well, since we're since we're going here, let's go
over Taos just a little bit. For those of you
listening who may not know all about it. I think
this came up because it came up in the note
Games on the other show a few weeks back.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Actually, we've been talking about this before it came up
on the Notebook game.

Speaker 3 (12:08):
Yeah, but it came up because I'd forgotten. I had
a funny aside afterwards. When the scientists were trying to
figure out where the hum came from. What popped up?
Do you all remember about what? Okay, So I'll just
go over it again because it's a funny story. So

(12:29):
they were getting such consistent complaints about this hum that
the city of Taos ended up choosing a team of
scientists from the nearby Los Alamos Labs to come in
and use their ground penetrating radar and to use their

(12:49):
seismographs and any kind of audio type of machinery. They
had to figure out what the heck this thing was
and where it was coming from. And they spent months
just research and looking and using all those different kinds
of equipment. But the only thing that they discovered was
a gigantic quality of gophers that were tunneling underneath towels.

(13:13):
They found their sound, but it wasn't it. It wasn't
that sound. They were their own sound.

Speaker 4 (13:18):
Yeah, maybe they're in a little cave and they all stand.

Speaker 3 (13:24):
They have a little barber shop. It wouldn't be a quartet.
What's a thousand or I don't know, hundreds of thousands.

Speaker 4 (13:33):
Maybe it's a thousand quartets maybe.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Well, I mean bright Oggs gophers they're quite the nuisance.

Speaker 3 (13:46):
Yeah, that's what they found was hundreds of thousands of
gophers instead. But it would be funny if they had
their own little like choir group there that was causing it.

Speaker 4 (13:56):
The little straw hats yea, my baby. Oh yeah, that's Jefferson.
What's his name, Jefferson?

Speaker 3 (14:09):
Oh frog?

Speaker 4 (14:12):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (14:12):
What is it?

Speaker 4 (14:13):
That doesn't sound right?

Speaker 3 (14:15):
Something like Michigan j Frog.

Speaker 4 (14:17):
Michigan, Jefferson, Michigan j Frog said Jefferson.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
B Jefferson. Jefferson is his weird cousin.

Speaker 4 (14:29):
That was the case, the wal martin Hutchison would be
vibrated apart. That's the truth. When we were up there
for geneseos, we should have I'm sure somebody has him somewhere.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
Just look at you when you go by.

Speaker 4 (14:45):
On both sides of the road too. They were over
in the center of the other parts of crazy. Super
cute little dudes.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
They're cute.

Speaker 3 (14:54):
They are destructive though, okay, So I they went ahead
and like gathered some information on some of the bigger
known ones around the world, the ones that I thought
were a little interesting because I had something a little
different to them. I found one in uh, let me

(15:15):
see if I can pronounce this correctly, Alma. I think
it is Alma North in Northern Ireland. This one is
almost always heard just at night, and it's a low
frequency hum keeps people awake for hours. It started happening
in September twenty twenty three, and locals claim that it

(15:37):
feels paranormal. It actually scares people, which is an oddity.
Usually it's just an annoyance. This one apparently scares people.
The scientists there say it's power lines and air conditioners.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
They almost yeah, in the UK, almost nobody has an
air conditioner.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
I know, That's what I'm saying. This one I found
was interesting and I went and double checked it to
see if the story was true or not. And it is.
It's true, it said. In twenty twenty four, town officials
claimed to find the source, but refused to say what
it was or where it was coming from, only that
the town should expect that it will restart again soon.

(16:23):
So they spent all this money trying to track down
where it was coming from. They claimed they did find it,
but refused to tell anybody where it was or what
it was, and said when it stops, it'll start again later.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
Now that sounds like a Doctor Who episode, It does?
It does?

Speaker 3 (16:41):
But I like there was there was a couple of
people in that area trying to track down where the
sound was coming from. Like actual, I think a couple
of university guys were looking for it, and they had
pinpointed it to like five different areas around this town,
so it wasn't coming from one place. And they said
that the p places where it was coming from was empty.

(17:02):
There was no buildings or interesting.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
You remember when I told you my printer was probably
going to print out all that stuff all at once.

Speaker 4 (17:11):
Is the printing copies of it so far?

Speaker 1 (17:21):
Just one, but.

Speaker 4 (17:24):
It's just getting all fired up now it is, do
you guys.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Want to hear it again? And getting canceled, canceled, cancel,
and all of a sudden just started.

Speaker 4 (17:36):
I went down a little bit of a rabbit hole here,
or should we say, a prairie dog hole, and the
prairie dogs in hutcheson they are actually somewhat protected. They've
been there by lows for at least thirty years, so
they kind of treat that. Somebody said, they have their
part of town and we have ours. Always their habitat

(18:01):
and else.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
They're a food source for yeah, pet pythons.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
It's become an attraction, so the city doesn't see any
reason to try and move them. As long as they
aren't bothering any of the infrastructure, might as well let
them stay.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
So yeah, well it makes mowing fun right now.

Speaker 4 (18:21):
That's probably why they just have clover planet out there
so it doesn't get real weedy.

Speaker 1 (18:29):
Well, and they dig so much it's hard for anything
to grow out there.

Speaker 4 (18:32):
Oh yeah, there's huge mounds out there everywhere, so there's
no way you could mow it. Sorry you say, prairie dog. Now,
well sorry, pray dog.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Well, they are rodents, so true. M hmm, you're just
trading one rodent for another. But these are cute, Well
are squirrels. I want a pet squirrel.

Speaker 4 (19:00):
Squirrels are cute. I will give him that. I'm so
down a rabbit hole here. Have you seen the video
of the little squirrel? They have a camera set up
on a squirrel box and he's sleeping in there, and
the hay and it the lightning strikes and it scares me.
When he grabs his little heart.

Speaker 3 (19:18):
He's almost as cute as the squirrel, this flying squirrel
that feigned his death underneath the broom handle. Yes, I
love it. Somebody put dramatic like soundtrack music underneath of it,
of like a you know, a death. It's so good.

Speaker 4 (19:39):
Oh, Enzo, he said, maybe a pop up Pruvian restaurant
will open nearby.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Oh no, yes, let's get back to the home.

Speaker 3 (19:57):
Let's get back to the home. Okay, So I dug up.
Some of the original ones came from the Bristol, UK
area in the mid nineteen seventies, and I thought this
one was really interesting. It's one of the longest running
ones that's ever happened. This The sound has actually been

(20:18):
linked to two suicides. It's so consistent and annoying that
two people have unalived because of it.

Speaker 4 (20:28):
That is.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
Terrible.

Speaker 3 (20:31):
Yeah. The local authorities claimed it was due to two
large industrial fans used at a nearby warehouse. However, the
hum is still being heard today, despite the warehouse having
long been closed down. Yeah, and they're still saying yeah. Crazy.

Speaker 4 (20:50):
That is wild.

Speaker 1 (20:52):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (20:53):
A lot of these are linked to weird symptoms that
are almost I don't know. I'd found one where it
was causing horrible nosebleeds and migraines.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
A headaches.

Speaker 4 (21:12):
That's hard. How do you argue with someone who's getting
those bleeds from it? You know?

Speaker 1 (21:16):
Yeah, that's the physical manifestation. Yeah, so, I mean, I
guess if it is bothering you enough to run your
blood pressure up, you could get a nose bleed. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (21:30):
The one out of hythe sounth Southampton, I thought was
really interesting. It started back in twenty thirteen. This is
the one that they blamed on the mating call of
the male midshipman fish, which apparently emits a droning sound
when they're you know, out on the town.

Speaker 4 (21:51):
You know.

Speaker 3 (21:54):
The locals claim that this one sounds like an airplane
going overhead, although there's no airplanes above them. It has
a pulsing, vibrating sound like a turbine engine. They said.
It gets softer and then louder, and when it's at
its loudest, ear plugs actually make it worse. If you
put earplugs in, or if you go inside your house

(22:15):
or if you go inside your car and roll up
the windows to get away from it, it actually magnifies
it somehow.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
Well, I mean, if it's low frequency, low frequency tends
to travel better through a solid.

Speaker 4 (22:29):
So could you imagine that as a mating call coming?

Speaker 3 (22:35):
I mean, I thought the interesting thing was. I mean,
they kept saying, oh, yeah, it's just the fish, it's
just the fish, But the fish aren't mating year round,
but the sound is happening year round.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
Those fish are getting busy.

Speaker 3 (22:49):
The interesting thing about this one is is they've had
people in to study it and they said it feels
as if the sound here is like bouncing around inside
your head. And they said it comes out as a
perfect e flat Oh interesting, Oh wow mm hmm. And
if if anybody at home is interested, if you go

(23:11):
to the BBC News and look a mystery humming noise. Uh,
they have a little short on there that you can
listen to. A lady is talking about exactly what it's
like to hear it, and you get to hear a
little bit of the hum at the end. So super interesting.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (23:31):
Yeah. Another one that I found was called the windsor Home.
They also they also plan to have to have solved
the issue with this one. But I don't think they have. Windsor,
Canada is where that's at. It's actually on the border
with Michigan. For decades, the people of Windsor reported an

(23:53):
irritating home with a low frequency component that would often
ramp up and shake houses and windows. That's how loud
it god, oh wow, that's yeah. They said it suddenly
stopped in May twenty twenty when a nearby US steel
facility shut down. Scientists blamed it on the underground blast furnaces. However,

(24:16):
about four percent of the population of Windsor is still
hearing the hom which is, you know, the correct percentage
for the worldwide, right, So maybe the shaking part has stopped,
because maybe that's what those blast furnaces were causing that shaking.
But I don't think the home is gone.

Speaker 4 (24:38):
Was that around Detroit? Is that where you said it was.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
It's Windsor, Canada. It's right on the border of with Michigan.
I don't know where. I didn't go and look it up, though.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Well, Michigan, Detroit, Michigan.

Speaker 4 (24:54):
That's why.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
Well that's interesting. Yeah, I bet the vibration probably was
as blast furnaces because they're very wary. Uh, and it
is fairly low frequency. But if the hum is still going,
that wasn't all of it?

Speaker 3 (25:12):
Yeah yeah. So the next one I found actually has
a Facebook group to go with. It actually has three
Facebook's groups. If you want to go check it out,
they'll quite readily let you join. It's the hip the
Hybridean Hum out of the Isle of Lewis and Scotland.

(25:36):
This one started in February twenty twenty five, so it's
actually very recent. Mysterious low frequency hum has been heard
day and night sitting right at fifty hurts and this
one causes a fluttering in their ears, dizziness and severe
headaches and it's still going along going today. They have
three Facebook groups. The one that I went to is

(26:04):
called the Mystery Hebridean Home h E B R I
D E A N and you can go and just it.
They had posts today about it. Oh wow, yeah, really interesting. Yeah,
there comes there's comes with a lot of ailments and

(26:26):
people are trying to tell them it's the fish again
and they were like, the fish were not mating in February,
nobody was. There's actually a number of them in the
Scotland area. There is many areas.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
There's a largs Scott Scotland home mm hmm, snow. Yeah,
there's Cocomo, Indiana where they decided it was a cooling
on the roof of the Daimoner Chrysler's casting plant.

Speaker 4 (27:05):
It's been really loud, do you know for people to
actually complain, right, Yeah. Tell Us is the most famous though, honestly.

Speaker 1 (27:18):
And one of the it's got some of the weirder stories.

Speaker 4 (27:21):
It does, it really does. I think it was first
first reported like in the early nineties.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
Maybe ninety two. I thought, is that what it is?

Speaker 4 (27:33):
The nineteen ninety one ninety one an a noise similar
to a distant engine, which some people can hear, others cannot.
Roughly two to five percent of the population can perceive
the home and that's about average for worldwide.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
I as interesting as I find that, I'm thinking I
would find it annoying and I don't really want to
hear it.

Speaker 4 (27:58):
It's typically in the thirty two days eighty hertz range.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
That's low.

Speaker 4 (28:04):
Yeah, that's like bone rattling low.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
You know, that's like elephants communicating low. Yeah, well, actually
that's even lower. I can't remember how low that goes
that's infrasonic.

Speaker 4 (28:18):
Yeah, and despite there's been tons and tons of investigations
on this and they still don't know what causes it
at all, which is really fascinating.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
Yeah, the ones that are still ongoing are fascinating. If
you want to hear you at home, want to hear
what it sounds like. I found a really great one
when I was looking up. There's also the Auckland Hum Auckland,
New Zealand. It started back in two thousand and six.
It's still going. This one says that fifty six hurts,
so it's a little tiny bit more audible. If you

(28:52):
go to SoundCloud dot com and go to the Auckland
Hum real recording, there's an entire like thirty second section
where you can listen to it. You do have to
listen to it with your headphones on and sit there
and listen to it two or three times and you'll

(29:14):
start to pick it up because even with it magnified
the way they have it, it's really hard to hear
because most people can't hear that frequency, so you're gonna
have to really turn it up and really listen a
few times. Auckland one is really interesting too. It actually
has changed over the years. It started in two thousand

(29:35):
and six, and over the years it's changed from this
droning hum they had to a pulse. Now it pulses
all day long. Interesting, and the scientists that have been
working on that one for years have not come up
with anything except for the fact that they realize that
it actually gets louder when the barometer drops.

Speaker 4 (29:58):
Huh. I'm going to play it on my I'm gonna
mute my sound and play it on my phone and
see if I can.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
Okay, it's very low. You really have to have headphones on.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
But yeah, except for the fact that I am having
terrible look with technology, I could probably stream that through
my tam panel, but the show will be over by
the time I got it to work.

Speaker 4 (30:28):
I'll put it up on my mic. See if you
guys can hear it.

Speaker 3 (30:44):
I'm having I can barely pick it up, but you
have to really pay attention. It feels like something's kind
of fading in and out a little bit. Yeah, like
I said, like, go to it, put your headphones on,
turn it up as loud as you can, and then
sit there and look listen to it about three times.
By the second time, you'll really start to pick it up.

(31:04):
By the third time you'll learn kind of how it
you'll pick it up better.

Speaker 4 (31:10):
And so if that was like happening, you know, if
it was equipment, wouldn't all the workers there be deaf
by now?

Speaker 3 (31:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (31:19):
Yeah, maybe geological or they near a fault line.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
Could be that's one of the common UH theories about
what causes it geological, And it is known that fault
lines do often cause a low frequency noise heard by
dogs and other animals well before a fault line moves. Yes, So.

Speaker 3 (31:50):
My guess is that this is caused by all sorts
of different things, and there are earth related, mechanical related,
or a pairing of the two in some way.

Speaker 4 (32:03):
And we've got our famous, our favorite, I should say
blue in the Ocean. It was detected in nineteen ninety seven.
It was so loud it was heard over five thousand kilometers.
Initially thought to be a sea creature, it's now linked
to ice quakes.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
Yeah, I would think maybe natural gas release. Well seriously,
I mean, we had natural gas releases off the coast
of the United States big enough to sink ships.

Speaker 4 (32:36):
What they talk about that maybe being you know, part
of the Bermuda triangle phenomena, right, the release of gas
which causes chips to.

Speaker 1 (32:46):
Because the ocean loves the surface temperature or tension and tension.

Speaker 4 (32:52):
Yeah, yeah, like pulling the rug out from under it.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
That's like the blue I think we talked about that.
We had a whole show about that.

Speaker 4 (33:03):
I think we've talked about the blop a few times. Yeah, yeah,
anytime we can bring it up, we do for sure.
It's also the up suite. Did you run across the
up sweep?

Speaker 1 (33:13):
I did so.

Speaker 3 (33:16):
I found like a whole list of like just like
ocean sounds and things like that. We were talking about
the bioduc mystery backstage. I thought this one was really interesting.
I'd actually never heard of it before. So they originally
recorded it back in nineteen eighty two and it's only

(33:37):
found in the South Fiji basin in the Pacific Ocean.
They were recording and they were picking up the stuff
that sounded like mechanical or industrial speech, like it had
like a word type pattern to it, but they couldn't
pick up quite what it was. And over the years,
as there, like their equipment got better, they started realizing

(33:59):
they were hearing different aquatic animals. But the interesting thing
was is that they were like taking turns talking to
each other. And they still do this to this day.
They'll hear whales and they'll talk for a little bit
and then they'll stop, and then dolphins or something else
will come in and they'll talk, and they each take

(34:20):
turns like chattering to each other as if they can
all understand. I just thought it that was super interesting.
But they've only found this in just the Fiji basin.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
So hey syl Sylvain, good to see you again. Ready, Yeah, I.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
Thought that one was really interesting and also a lot
of weird.

Speaker 1 (34:43):
Thing that goes on in Fiji anyway.

Speaker 3 (34:45):
Yeah, the Julia sound. Did you find that? That happened
back in nineteen ninety nine. Nuaa's underwater microphones recorded fifteen
seconds of this strang sound, and it was so loud
it was heard across the entire Pacific. They still don't
know what it was.

Speaker 4 (35:06):
They call it the Mysterious Moan of the Deep. Yeah,
was caused by a large light a large iceberg grounding
near Antarctica, but they're not sure.

Speaker 3 (35:16):
Yeah, see, I don't I wouldn't look like all the
ocean ones besides the animal one deck there, they always
blame it on an iceberg. Oh, it was an iceberg
hitting land. It was an iceberg, you know, hitting another iceberg.
I wonder if that's like their swamp gas of the ocean, the.

Speaker 4 (35:42):
Ocean that's exceptionally loud, loud enough to be detected across
and until the entire array lasting about two minutes forty
three seconds.

Speaker 1 (35:51):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 4 (35:51):
That's pretty long lived.

Speaker 1 (35:54):
Yes, it's kind of weird. Hey, is my my signal
looking all right? I've got a collection unstable.

Speaker 4 (36:07):
Yeah, you're freezing every once in a while. But your
sound a little bit.

Speaker 3 (36:11):
It's not bad. It's just a little glitchy once in
a while, all right.

Speaker 1 (36:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (36:17):
While we were looking up, we looked up some other sounds.
Of course, there's the sky trumpets and the skyquakes that
everybody knows so much about. You know, they've been going
on since Biblical times. They're listed in they're shown in
art and all sorts of crazy things. And then I

(36:37):
found something i'd never heard of, the Galileo mystery boom,
which happened back in twenty twenty three.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
That's when I had not heard of.

Speaker 3 (36:47):
Yeahyrofoam, and so says, why do I imagine it? Sounds
like squeaky styrofoam.

Speaker 4 (36:52):
Oh I don't like that. Cringe.

Speaker 3 (36:56):
Yeah, okay. The galile Mystery Boom. This happened Friday, October twentieth,
twenty twenty three, at seven forty three pm Eastern, and
it lasted for twelve seconds. It was recorded at the
Galileo Project Observatory at Harvard. It was heard and felt

(37:16):
across New England. It shook houses, cars, buildings, and uprooted
animals and birds. It had a pressure wave measured at
two point four kill a ton of T and T.
A scientist later assumed it must have been a meteor,
although if a meteor came into the atmosphere that hard,

(37:36):
you think it would have broke up and we would
have seen something of it.

Speaker 4 (37:41):
Yeah, somebody would have cut something on it.

Speaker 3 (37:43):
Yeah, But otherwise that's the minute it happened. People were calling,
you know, in and I'd never actually even heard of this,
which was interesting, and.

Speaker 4 (37:54):
So said, we had some sky booms here in Wichita
a few years ago. It turns out to be some
yahoos and a lot of right.

Speaker 1 (38:06):
I mean, I know guys areround here.

Speaker 4 (38:12):
That there's a lot of I don't want to say always,
but frequently in Independence, because I'm on their page. Independence
Kansas is down next to us. It's not the one.
Independence Missouri is up by Kansas City. This is on
down south. But there's always did you hear? Did anybody

(38:34):
else hear that boom? Where was that at? Did anybody
else hear that?

Speaker 3 (38:38):
It's usually a meth lab blowing up around here?

Speaker 5 (38:43):
That ain't why hey, but I'll tell you we've got
the politest meth heads I have ever seen around here,
only inky Kansas.

Speaker 1 (38:58):
Will they stop and help you change.

Speaker 3 (38:59):
A tire while they twitch out?

Speaker 1 (39:06):
I mean, yeah, but they're very polite. You should not
knock them. Some of them are quite nice. They I
feel bad for them, actually, all right.

Speaker 3 (39:21):
The last one that I have is the forest Grove sound,
which is kind of famous. It's out of Oregon throughout
the month of February in twenty sixteen. Intermittently lasting several
seconds to a few minutes at a time, this sound
would screech over that forested area. And I actually wrote

(39:45):
down what people said it sounded like because it was funny.
So one guy said it sounded like a giant flute
playing off pitch. Another person said car breaks. Another person
said a steam whistle, and NBC News said it sounded
like a bad one note violin solo broadcast over a

(40:07):
microphone with a NonStop with NonStop feedback.

Speaker 4 (40:11):
Ew.

Speaker 3 (40:13):
It was pretty violent sounding.

Speaker 1 (40:15):
That's painful sounding.

Speaker 3 (40:18):
Yeah, And it was incredibly loud too. It was screeching, irritating,
just chalk you know, like nails on a chalkboard type
of a sound cracking. It was so bad. They had
everybody working on where it was coming from, like it
was out in the forested area. So the first person

(40:39):
people they went to was the local forestry division because
they had some you know, big buildings and equipment out there.
They were like, it ain't us. They started going through
everything and they finally traced it down to the Gale's
Creek Road area. And just like before, like I said,
they end up in the area and there's nothing there.

(41:00):
It was just forest, but they pinpointed it to this
one stretch of road. The last time it played was
February twenty seventh, twenty sixteen, in the evening. It played
like one more time and then it has never ever
happened again.

Speaker 4 (41:15):
Interesting, huh. I'm as curious as to know why they stop,
as to why they start.

Speaker 1 (41:22):
Yeah, Enzo says, no dimensions, no dimensions. Cracking sounds like
a slamming car door or a dropped dumpster bong. Thank you, Inzo,
I have not been present when one actually happened. I'll
be listening, Jess.

Speaker 4 (41:40):
You were talking about the forest noises. There's also one
that I ran across called the forest drawer, which is
deep lion like growls that echo through forests with no
large predators around. Wind and seismic activity are suspected but
not proven. We were kind of talking about that one
back stage two and yes, in Zo, well that's exactly
what we said. It's a big fit thing. That's funny.

Speaker 1 (42:11):
Oh, this one, this one is just full of all
kinds of bad jokes.

Speaker 4 (42:17):
They're right. There's Aurora borealis crackles too. Have you guys
heard of that one.

Speaker 3 (42:23):
I haven't heard of that one.

Speaker 4 (42:24):
That's pretty cool. It's like faint hissing and popping noises
recorded during the northern lights specstatic electricity, but it's rarely recorded.
That doesn't mean just because the recordings are rare doesn't
mean that it's not happening though, because look at ball lightning.
It's rarely recorded. But it's a thing.

Speaker 1 (42:44):
Yeah, many people have seen it. It's been been recorded
several times now though.

Speaker 4 (42:50):
So there's a really wicked video of some ball lightning
going through a parking lot and it's just from this
past year, I want to say, two or three months ago.
It's really cool. I've seen the aurora many times, never
heard anything. It is pretty I've only actually with the

(43:10):
naked eye seen it once. Pretty cool.

Speaker 1 (43:14):
Yeah, yeah, I've got some pretty good, pretty good pictures
on my phone from that. Really turned out good on
the camera. I was able to see it just barely
with the naked eye, but it was magnificent on camera.

Speaker 4 (43:29):
I have another phone. Have you guys heard of the
fifty two Hurts whale?

Speaker 3 (43:36):
I saw a little bit on something of that.

Speaker 1 (43:38):
See it.

Speaker 3 (43:39):
I did go ahead and talk about it.

Speaker 4 (43:41):
It's a solitary whale and it's call doesn't match any
other whales call, any other known species out there. But
it's been tracked for decades only they've never seen it.
Nobody's ever put eyes on it, so they can't confirm
that it's still alive because no one's ever visually sighted it.
And it's its existence. It's only known because of the

(44:02):
unique fifty two herds. Frequency of its vocalizations first heard
in like the late eighties by the US Navy, and
it's been tracked by scientists using underwater micro phones. But
based on the life span of similar whale species, which
is like seventy to ninety years, it's likely that it's
still alive, although potentially getting towards the end of its life.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
Well, I mean, have you ever have you ever heard oh,
deaf dog or a deaf cat try to mew or park?

Speaker 4 (44:36):
That's why I just went oh right when you said that,
because one of the one of the speculations is that
it's possibly a deaf whale.

Speaker 1 (44:44):
Oh doesn't know what it's supposed to sound like, but
it wants to seem yeah.

Speaker 4 (44:51):
So it's it's significantly higher pitch than other known weale species,
making it difficult for other whales to understand it. So
it's like US whales.

Speaker 3 (45:01):
Title sounds like Dory from Finding Nemo when she tries
to speak whale. Okay, I found one. I found another one.
The Bell Island boom.

Speaker 1 (45:13):
Have you guys held island boom?

Speaker 3 (45:15):
Yeah? On Sunday, April second, nineteen seventy eight, a huge
bang was heard at Bell Island just before noon. The
bang was so loud that people reported hearing it as
far as one hundred kilometers away. The blasts and a
shock wave that shook buildings on the island and killed
some animals. The energy release was so powerful that the

(45:36):
Vella satellites, which the US government used to detect nuclear
tests by other powers, noticed the phenomenon known as the
Bell Island Boom. There were multiple reports of damaged electrical
wiring and destroyed electrical appliances. The epicenter was around the
Bickford family farm in the hamlet or hamlet of Bickfordville

(45:56):
near lance Cove. They claimed to have seen a gigantic,
bluish flo and both their television set and fuse box exploded.
The chicken coop was completely destroyed and all the chickens
had died. Neighbors soon discovered three large pits in the
snow behind the farm, which were considered epicenter. The son,
who was cycling nearby at the time, also stated that
he saw two luminous sphears flying by. They're saying that they, yeah,

(46:23):
they had. The hypothesis is that it was some kind
of a super bowlt a rare very powerful type of lightning.

Speaker 4 (46:35):
And said it's the taco bell Island boom sounds delicious.

Speaker 1 (46:44):
You guys wouldn't let me have taco.

Speaker 4 (46:46):
Bell on No, you wanted to get the car and
ride with us for how long.

Speaker 3 (46:54):
We love you?

Speaker 1 (46:55):
No?

Speaker 4 (46:57):
We want to continue loving you, so know.

Speaker 1 (47:01):
Yes, that's all right. I had taco bell last week.

Speaker 4 (47:07):
Oh, Chris, Oh, there's a whistle from the captured in
the Pacific. Have you heard of it?

Speaker 1 (47:19):
Huh?

Speaker 4 (47:20):
Dubbed the whistle and Noah's Pacific Marine Environmental Lab reported it,
and it exhibits characteristic similar to sounds that are produced
by under water volcanic activity. However, the exact source remains
unverified because it was only recorded by one hydrophone, which

(47:43):
is interesting because there's hydrophones everywhere and locating the source
of it, that underwater sound, you know, you have to
have at least three instruments reported, but it's only getting
picked up on this one. So that single detection. It
could mean that it had a rich donated a long
ways away from where it was heard. And but it's

(48:06):
interesting because it's important to note that the term the
whistle is also used to describe a different phenomenon in
the Caribbean Sea known as the Rossby Whistle Whistle, which
is caused by the interaction of ocean currents with the seafloor,
totally unrelated to volcanic activity. So there's all kinds of
funky noises under underwater.

Speaker 1 (48:27):
Under the sea.

Speaker 4 (48:30):
Hand Pan Dan.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
Yeah, anybody gets a chance to listen to hand Pan Dan,
he's there and check it out. He's he's good.

Speaker 4 (48:47):
He's pretty talented.

Speaker 1 (48:49):
He's pretty good. It's very soothing, it is.

Speaker 4 (48:52):
It's very it's almost got a heart quality to it.
But it's called a hand pan.

Speaker 1 (49:01):
Let's get it. Even the cats loved him, which is true.
The cats were taking me out, yes.

Speaker 4 (49:10):
Ends, I got the cutest picture of this kiddy cat
just standing there listening.

Speaker 1 (49:15):
H So, yeah, that Pacific whistle. Let's see if I've
got he thought I had something on that, but I
I don't hang it.

Speaker 3 (49:32):
I found a singing a singing statue. Oh does that count?

Speaker 4 (49:37):
Yeah, go for it.

Speaker 3 (49:39):
It is the Colossus of menon Memnon.

Speaker 1 (49:49):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (49:50):
It's one of the two massive stone statues of Pharaoh
Emma tap oh.

Speaker 1 (49:55):
Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (49:57):
So apparently every time there's an earthquake, the one on
the right will sing. It sounds like the strings of
a lot of a leer or a lire breaking, or
the sounds of striking brass or whistling. Apparently it's been

(50:18):
happening since ancient times, and if you are one of
the people that get to hear it when it happens,
you're deemed lucky for life.

Speaker 4 (50:26):
So you better run, shouldn't you.

Speaker 3 (50:29):
Well it happens after Oh okay, I's.

Speaker 1 (50:32):
Gonna say, that's probably some kind of weird harmonic. But
that's kind of cool because you know, we yeah, the
ancients were tuned into harmonics and stuff. We discussed that
during our episode on harmonics, and uh, some of these
really sound like they might be something like a harmonic.

Speaker 3 (50:57):
Oh oh oh, I miss that. Okay, so what okay,
this is what happened. I messed that up a little bit.

Speaker 1 (51:04):
So.

Speaker 3 (51:05):
In twenty seven BCE, there was a very large earthquake
that shattered the Northern Colossus, collapsing it from the waist
up and cracking the lower half. Following its rupture, the
remaining lower half of this statue was reputed to sing
on various occasions, always within an hour or two of sunrise,

(51:25):
usually right at dawn. The sound was most often reported
in February or March, but this is probably more a
reflection of the tourist season rather than any actual pattern.
They called it the vocal memnon and the luck that
hearing it was reputed to bring, and the reputation of
the statue's ocular powers ur aurra keeler powers, holy cow,

(51:49):
this is all hard to say. Became known outside of Egypt,
and a constant stream of visitors, including several Roman emperors,
came to marvel at the statues and see if they
could hear it.

Speaker 4 (52:02):
Interesting.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
That is pretty interesting.

Speaker 3 (52:06):
Yeah, And I apologize for all the words. I just
murdered and massacred. It was terrible.

Speaker 1 (52:12):
Well, you know we have a saying here on this show.

Speaker 3 (52:15):
Words are hard.

Speaker 4 (52:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (52:19):
I've got a permanent ticker that I run across the bottom.
I'm thinking about getting it on a T shirt.

Speaker 4 (52:25):
Actually, before we go on, I got a little bit
of handpanned and pulled up. Are we ready?

Speaker 6 (52:30):
And it's underto it under the sea too, No Barbie girl,

(53:00):
pretty cool?

Speaker 4 (53:01):
Huh yep yep. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (53:04):
And so when I were over, I was working, I
was finishing up the U the chalk drawing, and he
started playing Barbie Girl. He did, Yeah, is that Barbie Girl?

Speaker 1 (53:15):
We were all like, we.

Speaker 4 (53:18):
Were all, you know, jamming under this switches to that.
We were all like huh because when you guys, we
were like, did you hear him play Barbie Girl?

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Huh?

Speaker 3 (53:28):
I thought, even though it's an island, it's an island instrument.
I thought it was quite appropriate because they look like
giant UFOs, so I mean, little.

Speaker 4 (53:37):
Us very talented dude. It was. It was really cool
to hear.

Speaker 1 (53:43):
Yeah, it's a type of steel drum. It is pretty cool,
very neat. So, yeah, they're there are these sound and
I have a personal experience. I don't hear it anymore,
partially because I'm probably because I'm going deaf. I'm having

(54:03):
a lot of problems. Do really good with headphones on,
but if there's any background noise, I have trouble understanding
people or or focusing on sounds. But throughout my life,
until I was probably in my forties, there would be

(54:24):
days where I would hear this I pitched. I guess
I would call it a hum, but it was really
high pitched, and no matter where I was, it always
and I could be one hundred miles away, it always
seemed to be from the same direction. Huh.

Speaker 4 (54:47):
So you know when I was little, do you guys
remember TG and why it's kind of like a wal
Mart or Gibson's. Yea, When I was little, Mom couldn't
take me into one because the second we walked in
the front doors, I would start screaming and crying because
my head hurt that the noise, and I can remember
the really high pitched squeal, but it would just kill

(55:09):
my ears. And we never did figure out what it was.
It was mostly right when you walked in the store,
so we didn't know if it had something to do
with the registers that were right there, but yeah, I
don't know, but yeah, she you'll have to ask her
if she'll tell you that they couldn't take me in
because I would freak out and only that, Yeah, it

(55:32):
was only that store.

Speaker 3 (55:33):
We were guessing. Maybe it was the lighting, maybe the
old maybe can.

Speaker 1 (55:40):
Make some pretty strange sounds.

Speaker 4 (55:44):
I don't know. And it didn't matter why it was.

Speaker 1 (55:47):
You have sensitive hearing, so yeah, it could have been
something with their intercom system.

Speaker 3 (55:54):
Intercom system, it could have been their electronic uh cash registers.

Speaker 4 (56:02):
Yeah, that's what could have been redisolers you know.

Speaker 3 (56:07):
Yeah, sometimes they have the coolers towards the front that
have the ice and stuff in them. Maybe it was
a particular kind that they used.

Speaker 4 (56:13):
I don't know, but yeah, it killed my ears.

Speaker 1 (56:15):
Maybe the blue light on the blue light special.

Speaker 4 (56:19):
No, that was Mark wrong, Mart wrong, Mark forgot and
why yeah, I.

Speaker 1 (56:28):
Don't t g And why has been gone.

Speaker 4 (56:32):
For a long, very long time? Dating myself there, Yeah,
it's been gone a hot minute.

Speaker 1 (56:38):
I I think I was sixteen or seventeen last yime
I saw one.

Speaker 4 (56:45):
There was one in in Coffeeville and there was one
in Bartlesville. I don't think Independence had one. I think
they had a Gibson. I could be well, no, maybe
Coffee was Gibsons too.

Speaker 1 (56:56):
We had a TGY T G and Y and a
Gibson in Windfield. We were we were big time.

Speaker 4 (57:03):
You were.

Speaker 1 (57:07):
Ye too fun? Yeah? Yeah, h so away from the
old timer crap.

Speaker 4 (57:20):
Back in my day.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
I remember Pepperridge Farm remembers.

Speaker 4 (57:29):
Constant smell and sound of fresh popped corn. Yeah so uh.

Speaker 1 (57:37):
I mean, I know several people who have heard strange
sounds throughout their lives in their locations. I don't know
what causes them. I really don't. It could be a
lot of things. Mine was a high pitched, uh, it's
hard to describe it. It was almost like a dog

(58:00):
whistle type sound. It wasn't painful to me, it was
just annoying. Sometimes I would hear it all day long
and I could turn, you know, I thought maybe it
was just one ear, because I got one ear. That's
does weird things. But I would turn and I could

(58:20):
hear it from the other ear and from my folks's house.
It always sounded like it was coming from north northeast,
which I thought it was coming from, Like, you know,
if I was there and facing Kansas City, that would
be about where it was. And then even when I

(58:43):
lived in Windfield, and even for a little while before
I got so bad that I couldn't hear anymore, I
heard it sometimes from here, and it always seemed to
be coming from that that same area.

Speaker 3 (59:00):
So that's weird.

Speaker 1 (59:02):
Who knows, well, you know, I'm pretty weird.

Speaker 3 (59:05):
So no, we're not weird at all, No, not at all. Yeah,
but the worldwide home, Like I said, I really think
it's probably a multitude of different circumstances and things happening.

Speaker 1 (59:26):
I sure some of.

Speaker 3 (59:26):
Them are natural some of them are probably mechanical, and
some of them are people just wanting to be like,
I want some attention.

Speaker 1 (59:34):
And I think there's a lot of truth to that.
And actually, when we get down to it, a lot
of the phenomenon we discover or we discuss on the show,
a lot of them fall into that. A lot of
them I think are natural phenomenon. A lot of them
I think are man made phenomenon that people are misidentifying.
And some people are imagining things because they want to believe,

(01:00:00):
and then some of them are exactly what they think
they are. When I go through this list of, you know,
ideas of what could be causing it, you know, I
can see the possibility that every one of them is correct.

Speaker 3 (01:00:21):
Yeah, So.

Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
What is the sound that you hear wherever you're at?
You know, it might be different from the sound we
hear in Taos, from the sound we hear up by
Kansas City and Saint Louis. It may sound similar but
may have a totally different origin. But I think a

(01:00:51):
lot of the ones that they can that they can
record but they can't track down, it just seems to
come from everywhere. I'm going to say those are probably
geologic or possibly electromagnetic in origin, because an electromagnetic field

(01:01:13):
could vibrate something at that frequency if it is running
at that frequency. So, and as we learned in our
study of simatics, these sounds have meanings. Some of these
sounds that we've talked to were on the simatic scale,

(01:01:37):
so are they were the ancient keyed into things the
sounds that the Earth actually made. Sometimes I think, yes,
you know, and we've heard the resonance. What is Schumann?

(01:02:04):
I mean, that's the Earth. So the Earth does make.

Speaker 4 (01:02:10):
A sound so almost like a heartbeat. The Earth's heartbeat,
I think, is what I've heard it referred to as.

Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
And speaking of that, for all of yell at home,
the Shuman residence has gone off the charts for the
last two weeks. It's been spiking over and over again.
They're not quite sure why. So interesting, what's going on?
They've kicked on the collider again. They might be at fault.

(01:02:38):
The collider has been kicked on again.

Speaker 1 (01:02:40):
So well, I mean, we did have a rather large
incident recently where you know, something that happened that we
should have all known about. None of us had ever
heard about.

Speaker 3 (01:02:56):
So oh, yes, a handful of other things have for
me since then, of things that have, we're not we're
to pre geneseo, right.

Speaker 1 (01:03:13):
So I feel like our timeline might have shifted a
little bit that day.

Speaker 3 (01:03:18):
I'm thinking it did, but that's our own little weird
working theory.

Speaker 1 (01:03:23):
But I mean it could be. It could be. I mean,
it's no weirder than some of the other things that
I've I've encountered. It's not really even that's strange that
science completely discounts it.

Speaker 3 (01:03:41):
So in fact many there she goes, I didn't do
that thing. Pam has a tendency to try to like.

Speaker 4 (01:03:53):
Work through her young mouth shut.

Speaker 3 (01:03:56):
And she just looks like she's in pain. I was like, girl,
just let it rip. Just cover your mouth if you
don't want.

Speaker 4 (01:04:02):
To Like everybody, that's my problem on so much.

Speaker 3 (01:04:07):
Well, I do too, but it's because we're sitting completely
still and we're focusing on our topic and it.

Speaker 4 (01:04:12):
Makes you yell all day. And then I sat down
to do a podcast and I'm like, and then.

Speaker 3 (01:04:16):
You're so just let it go, let it rip, just
cover your mouth. She fights through it.

Speaker 4 (01:04:22):
She's like, I know, my mouth shut, and.

Speaker 3 (01:04:29):
She looks like somebody stomped her toe or something and
so says it was our detour. But that was an
other odd coincidence. Something was pointing us in the right direction.

Speaker 1 (01:04:44):
We did realized we have had some interesting stuff going
on recently, So there'll be more in that later. Yeah,
always uh yeah, but recently the the yeah, my brain

(01:05:06):
just went blank. Sorry, I am slightly confused. Let's go on,
because that word had left the building. It is somewhere
with Elvis.

Speaker 3 (01:05:25):
And Graceland.

Speaker 4 (01:05:27):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:05:28):
I don't know, guys, I have been so bad with
remembering words lately. I'm starting to scare myself. I really am.

Speaker 4 (01:05:41):
I feel it. I feel you for sure, You're not alone.

Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
Synchronicities. It came back there you go. I told you least.

Speaker 4 (01:05:54):
At three o'clock in the morning, and you didn't scare Chris?

Speaker 3 (01:06:00):
What your yelp? In the background? Watch a shoe fly
past Mark's head.

Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
Oh no, I've got a big head. This shoe is
going to hit.

Speaker 3 (01:06:21):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (01:06:30):
So has anybody in our audience today, I only don't
have very many people right now. Has anybody heard something
like that? I mean, I had an experience that lasted
a good portion of my life. Excuse me, which if
it had gone on the whole time, I would have

(01:06:51):
thought it was something wrong with my hearing. But the
fact that it came and went and I could turn
my body and tune in on it made me think.
So it wasn't very often. I would be sitting there
reading a book or watching a TV show and I'd

(01:07:11):
hear it. It's like, is that sound again? Mom would
look at.

Speaker 4 (01:07:16):
Me, like, makes me think of, you know, Pildrick West
when she goes through the room, you know, like just
went by us, Carol Anne. That's her name, Caroline.

Speaker 1 (01:07:29):
Yeah, I don't.

Speaker 3 (01:07:31):
I don't have anything smaller. The closest thing I have
is my grandparents had like a pantry room and they
had an old refrigerator that they kept on in there
and they kept they had dog food that you had
to keep cool. So they would keep that old refrigerator
in there because it would keep it just cool enough.

(01:07:52):
And it was really old, and I remember it made
the sound that would I could feel in the back
of my teeth, like it raised the hair up on
my neck and would make my teeth feel weird. So
I always hated having to go through the pantry, but
you had to to get to their living room. You
went through the pantry area to get in there, so
I would run. That's the closest thing I have. But

(01:08:15):
I never asked if anybody else could hear it, So
it probably was just a loud refrigerator. So that's about it.

Speaker 1 (01:08:24):
Enzo says, I've never experienced a hum. When I was
a kid, I could hear a high pitched wine before
a bulb would blow. Interesting, Enzo, aren't you glad that
you've gotten older and your hearing is not so good
as it was when you were a kid?

Speaker 4 (01:08:41):
You know, back in the day, I don't remember what
year it was, but loose still ball she had gotten
a filling teeth. They were the metal feelings, and she
kept hearing like she was. You know, some people would
say if they had metal fillings, they were in a
particular spot they could like hear the radio play through radio.
And she was going to work and there was this

(01:09:02):
one spot where she would pick up like Morse code,
and you know, and I can't remember if it was
German or Russian it was. It was a different language though,
whatever it was, and she instead of blowing it off,
she reported it and they found maybe it was Japanese,
I can't remember. It was it was a foreign country,
though I do remember that. But she told them she

(01:09:25):
reported where it was picking up at because it was
consistent every time she passed this one spot. And they
went and rated it and found a under underground operation
of where information was being transmitted back to the to
the other country.

Speaker 1 (01:09:41):
And you can and I still got a few of
those little metal feelings. Unfortunately, I'm running out of teeth
that had them. It sucks getting old folks. When I
was younger that eighteen nineteen years old, I had a

(01:10:03):
buddy who had his family had the contract to replace
light bulbs on some of these radio towers. And that
was back before digital cell phone, the old mobile phones.
A lot of them used eight hundred megaherts trunking. And

(01:10:25):
so he talked me into climbing up and changing light
bulb and somebody keyed the repeater and I could be
I couldn't tell you what they were saying, but I
could feel the words in my teeth. Oh wow. And
I never went up again.

Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
That's wild.

Speaker 1 (01:10:47):
I wouldn't either, but I was. I would say, a
good four feet away from that high power, high trans
enough that I felt the antenna get warm.

Speaker 3 (01:11:00):
Oh we know why Mark's so weird now.

Speaker 1 (01:11:06):
Radio here it is.

Speaker 4 (01:11:09):
I looked it up on the still ball. It was
the early nineteen forties and they were temporary feelings, which
at the time were made up of lead. She had
several of them, putting her upper and lower jaw. She
was driving home one morning about one fifteen am, and
while driving along, all of a sudden she heard music
with a great beat down to turn off a radio
and it wasn't on, and then she realized it was

(01:11:30):
in her mouth, and she reckoned. She heard a tune
and then it started to fade away, and she was like,
what could that possibly be. The next day she tells
someone and they said, uh, what street were you on
and she said more Park and he said, well, you
went by the radio station you picked it up. Do
you have any feelings? And she said yes. So she
had to wait for a couple of weeks for the

(01:11:51):
temporary feelings to be removed. But she was driving through
again when they were still in. She passed four vacant
lots where the Birmingham General Army Hospital was to be built.
She drove by the lot she heard a code through
her feelings, like Morse code. She stopped her car to
check out the area. It continued, so she sought out
the signal by backing her car up, and it kept
getting stronger to the point where her whole jaw was vibrating.

(01:12:15):
So she got back to MGM and told that the
security office. They passed the information on and they found
an underground transmitting Japanese radio station.

Speaker 3 (01:12:24):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:12:26):
Yeah, she was in a spy. So while she was
working in Hollywood, state side, she helped foil the access
powers and their plans via her temporary feelings and late
night trips around La kind of cool, very.

Speaker 1 (01:12:41):
Good cool now, And that brings up something that I've
not seen on the reasons for people hearing these hunts.
I wonder how many people of that two to four
percent have some of those old metal fillings in their mouth,
could be and are picking something up maybe or whatever.

Speaker 4 (01:13:06):
You know, maybe they're just tuning in to the right frequency,
whatever something in the man.

Speaker 1 (01:13:15):
They just may be sensitive to that that set of frequencies.

Speaker 4 (01:13:18):
Yeah, that's like, you know, I have clear audience where
we can when we're out somewhere, and it doesn't happen
all the time. That's what's strange about it. And it's
not like I can focus and make it happen. Either
it just happens when it happens, but I can hear sometimes,
like especially if we're doing EVP recordings, I can tell
you guys what's being said before you.

Speaker 1 (01:13:37):
Hear it day back, and sure.

Speaker 4 (01:13:40):
Enough, Yeah, it's pretty wild. But it doesn't happen all
the time, but it's cool when it does.

Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
So I think that that's right. I think some of
these are exactly what they've tracked down. Some of those
were obviously they didn't want to tell us anybody, so
they just made something up. And I really do think
some of it is just natural phenomenon that that people
are sensitive to. It's the ones that aren't that are

(01:14:10):
really fascinating.

Speaker 4 (01:14:14):
Look at all the you know, weather balloons when UFOs
are reported, they're not all weather balloons. There's no way
they're all weather balloons.

Speaker 1 (01:14:24):
And not that many groups use weather balloons anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:14:29):
Yeah, really, I mean it's interesting.

Speaker 1 (01:14:34):
They're still useful. Yeah, but I don't know, maybe I
should research that. I don't know how many groups are
using weather balloons.

Speaker 4 (01:14:43):
I still send them up, I know that, but I
don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:14:46):
I know some of the universities use them, so that.

Speaker 3 (01:14:54):
I don't know if there was an entire Kansas city
flap a few years ago that was nothing but weather balloons, And.

Speaker 4 (01:15:02):
So I said, not all of them. Some of them
are Chinese spy balloons.

Speaker 1 (01:15:06):
You're and I know at least one time that a
whole roll of industrial aluminum foil went up on thirty
two helium balloons. Oh, don't ask me. I saw nothing.

(01:15:26):
I heard nothing.

Speaker 4 (01:15:29):
Oh oh were you?

Speaker 3 (01:15:30):
Oh you're gonna have to tell implicate us.

Speaker 1 (01:15:33):
In something business was fifty years.

Speaker 3 (01:15:35):
Ago, so him, I was never here.

Speaker 1 (01:15:42):
I was never here. It was fifty years ago. If
it was illegal, the statute of limitations is long over.

Speaker 4 (01:15:52):
So thirty six helium balloons, huh yeah, and a roll
of aluminum foot what was the purpose? Are you making
a UFO?

Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
We were dumb, that's it. Oh and half a roll
of Scotch tape.

Speaker 4 (01:16:13):
This is what we did when we were young. We
didn't have computers, have social media.

Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
We did dumb things with our friends.

Speaker 4 (01:16:22):
The big UFO flap of you do all Kansas?

Speaker 1 (01:16:25):
What year with that? Fifty years ago? Maybe fifty two
years ago. So I mean that that's also an explanation
for many things.

Speaker 4 (01:16:47):
Kids. Kids, it's funny. I love it, and so said
a little bit ago. He said, I discovered by accident
yesterday the blythe Intaglios are right along my path I
take to contact and stopping there next time. That's interesting.

Speaker 1 (01:17:07):
Oh yeah, that is interesting.

Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
Yeah. We were talking about the blythe Intaglios on our
last show for a little bit on a border town Strange.
And hopefully if we can find another time to slip
in another Mysteries of the Ancients, we'll continue with the Antaglios,
because we didn't even really get to them.

Speaker 4 (01:17:30):
We didn't get to the Kansas ones at all.

Speaker 1 (01:17:33):
Yeah, yep, yep.

Speaker 4 (01:17:35):
I think I was worried that we were going too long,
especially that I was going too long with Heaven or Runestone.
And then I found out later from a couple of
different people they were fascinated by it. They loved the whole,
the whole.

Speaker 3 (01:17:49):
Well, yeah, or we would have continued on for so long.

Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
Absolutely do. I enjoyed that series when we had it
on our show. I'd like to continue it. Maybe we
should get together and plan. I'm sure our listeners would
love it. We planned we could each take a well.

Speaker 4 (01:18:06):
We could switch back and forth between shows.

Speaker 1 (01:18:09):
Or we could each take a segment of that. You know, yeah,
I want one show, could you know We're going to
talk and taglios and blah blah, and then another show
is going to tackle other things. Yeah, that would be fun.
I enjoy that. And on that note, and uh, for

(01:18:32):
those of you on YouTube, this might be interesting. I
have finally bit the bullet and ordered a drone. It
will be here next week.

Speaker 4 (01:18:46):
We're sorry, Chris.

Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
It does not go super high, but it could go high.
Not so high that I can I need a license
for it, but it should get high enough. We should
be able to get some good aerial shots of some
of these, So yes, full h D. I made sure
to get one that would return to me when it's

(01:19:08):
battery went down so that we don't have to go
chasing Chris.

Speaker 4 (01:19:20):
Yeah, we have a really humorous story of one of
our friends here in town wanted a drone so bad
and he got one for Christmas, and so he's standing
out in the front yard with his whole family and
he takes it up in the air and they all
watched it fly, and they just fly off and it
never came back, never came back.

Speaker 1 (01:19:41):
That actually makes me a little sad. That's actually one
of the reasons why it balloons, because I would almost
always lose them and they be sad. I never get
balloons anymore because they make me sad.

Speaker 3 (01:19:58):
Balloons make me sad, poor little Mark.

Speaker 1 (01:20:06):
Seeing seeing blooms fly through the air and get caught
in electric lines and all that stuff. That just makes
me sad. It really hurts my heart. I know it.
I know it's all up here in my head. So
everybody says whole balloons are so gay and happy blah
blah blah blah blah blah. Oh it's so joyous, man,

(01:20:27):
it hurts.

Speaker 4 (01:20:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
Yeah, you think I am being funny, but it is true.
Balloons just make me sad.

Speaker 3 (01:20:41):
That's terrible.

Speaker 1 (01:20:42):
Even the ones that don't fly away, they get smaller
and smaller and smaller and lower and lower and lower,
and they start leaning and then they're dead buried.

Speaker 4 (01:20:56):
That makes you feel any better. I'm highly allergic to them,
so I say it.

Speaker 1 (01:21:00):
There you go.

Speaker 3 (01:21:06):
I've never seen a balloon slapped out of somebody's hands
so fast. We were at Pam's house. It was a
long time ago. The kids were young, and I think
we were getting ready for like Eric's birthday party or something,
and Dana Ferrell was there helping us, and her and
I were blowing up the balloons and Pam came in

(01:21:26):
and picked one off the table and went to go
put it to her lips, and Dana excuse my language,
but bitch slapped that thing out of her hands. And
Pam's like, what is going on? And Dana was like,
have you lost your ever loving mind? And she was like,
your allergy? And then Pam was like, oh, I forgot.

Speaker 4 (01:21:47):
I haven't always been allergy. It was an acquired allergy.

Speaker 3 (01:21:51):
Yeah, but yeah, Pam puts that balloon to her lips.
She looked like one of the Kardashians, just saying, like.

Speaker 4 (01:22:00):
Found out the hard way, too good. Yeah, yeah, found
that out. And we were blowing. We had cubicles that
we worked in and we were blowing these balloons up
and we got done, and I was like, yeah, my
hand itches, you know, and everywhere right in here it

(01:22:21):
was starting to get raised and blistered. And I was like,
oh crap, that was latex And I'm like, oh no, immediately,
just like yeah, I had to go home. Yeah duck.

Speaker 1 (01:22:36):
So we've got that to look forward to. I'm looking
forward to a couple of research trips sometime in the
hopefully near future, uh to take advantage of some of
the new recording equipment that we've required, and maybe do
some just YouTube videos for everybody to enjoy.

Speaker 4 (01:22:56):
Yeah, yeah, just look at some stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
I know Brian Arrell gets a lot of mileage out
of his drone, he does, you know.

Speaker 4 (01:23:09):
So there's that that's really handy for those places that
you can't quite get back into that you want to
go investigate.

Speaker 1 (01:23:15):
Right right, Well, you don't want to transpas trespass, but
if you can get high enough, you can get a
video shot of someplace that's of interest.

Speaker 4 (01:23:26):
I'm thinking like the fort that's supposed to be out
you know, in the sand Hills. That would be a
really cool way to find it general area.

Speaker 1 (01:23:36):
We don't have it on but we have Google Earth.
We can zoom in on it from there, yeap, and
without even have to having to infringe on their airspace.
So all right, cool, cool, Well, guys, I'm sure we

(01:23:56):
could talk about the hum for a long time, but uh,
I really don't have a whole lot more myself. How
about how about you ladies? All right, So I'm thinking
for our next show. For those of you who are
watching Lives or listening, I'm thinking we might start talking

(01:24:17):
about maybe famous haunted cemeteries in the world. If not,
well we can do that. Yeah, that would be fun.
Pick pick a few. We might make a little serious
of that. I don't know, so for those of you

(01:24:39):
who are interested, we can do that, But I do
I think I do feels like soon we are probably
going to get back into the lost history and hidden
history stuff. Yeah. I love talking about o parts, which,
for those of you who don't know what the word
is is out of place objects. So it's always fun.

(01:25:08):
Those are always fun, and you know, those things had
to get there somehow. Yeah, and there's just too many
of them to ignore.

Speaker 4 (01:25:22):
Yeah, those especially those that are found embedded and coal,
I mean, it's been there a hot minute. That doesn't
happen in a year or one hundred years.

Speaker 1 (01:25:33):
Even Well, and I've read some interesting theories about that
before we go. I'll just I was reading a gentleman
who was talking about the term fossil fuel, and that
was coined, and everybody after that just assumed that the

(01:25:56):
oil and the coal and stuff was all from tremendously
ancient times. But he seems to be of the opinion
that sometimes it does not take nearly that long to form,

(01:26:19):
so we're talking instead of millions of years, possibly just
thousands maybe I don't know, you know, depending on conditions.
So that would be actually something interesting to explore on
one of our shows too, because that's that's kind of
a fringe theory. Yeah, that would be fun to explore.

(01:26:43):
So maybe some of these things aren't millions of years old.
Maybe they're just from before the Ice.

Speaker 4 (01:26:52):
Age, especially if the timeline has been messed with, meaning
some historians elude the fact that you know, a thousand
years or so has been taken away or added to,
depending on which theory you believe, making it sound like
you know and.

Speaker 1 (01:27:14):
Whener is writing the history books is a thing that
has gone back, and we have depended on these histories
for a long time for our own history because that's
how they were recorded. But there is some proof, at
least some of the time, these timelines were changed to

(01:27:38):
be politically convenient for those in power, because this is
a time when nobody could read, so they could just
make up whatever they wanted to and the generation nobody
knew the difference.

Speaker 4 (01:27:51):
Yeah, it doesn't take long, for it doesn't take long
history to be absolutely changed to whoever you know wants
to whatever was power.

Speaker 1 (01:28:01):
Oh my family has been in power for fifty years.
But we're going to say five hundred yes, and the
masses will just believe us because they're in literate. They
won't know.

Speaker 4 (01:28:11):
Yeah, they have no idea how long five hundred rs is.

Speaker 1 (01:28:16):
Exactly. So I mean that's something something else we should
have a show on just that too. Yeah, So I'm
gonna have to go back through here and write some
of these show ideas now.

Speaker 4 (01:28:29):
Oh, we're throwing them out there.

Speaker 1 (01:28:31):
We're just throwing them out there, and that should be
something we should do on our own time. But I mean,
possibly some of our listeners will have some feedback for us,
So feel free to get on the comments. Feel free
to go to what if Tomorrow a podcast group. If

(01:28:52):
you have comments on some of the ideas I've thrown out,
please say yay or nay, or throw out your own suggestions.
This is your show as much as it is ours,
and I do have a list that I will dig
up here before too long and talk to you girls

(01:29:13):
about how we're going to schedule them. But cool, all
right with that said, I hope that everybody has a
wonderful evening and a good week. I'm not sure how wonderful.
It's going to be supposed to be the hottest week
of the year so far. We are under an extreme

(01:29:34):
heat warning here in our section of Kansas. So do hydrate,
Do try to stay in the cool if possible, and
if you start showing symptoms of dehydration, please see someone
about it.

Speaker 4 (01:29:49):
Yeah for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:29:52):
Yeah. Yeah, So that said, everybody, I hope you all
have a good night, and we will see you in
two weeks on the Fringe and a week from Wednesday,
we're going to have border Town Strange and what are
you guys talking about.

Speaker 3 (01:30:13):
We've got a special guest coming on we do.

Speaker 4 (01:30:16):
We're super excited. Our friend Brian Arrell is going to
be with us to talk about Sierra sounds.

Speaker 1 (01:30:25):
I have to check that one out.

Speaker 4 (01:30:28):
That's sure fascinating, pretty exciting.

Speaker 1 (01:30:32):
It's a kind of creepy sound.

Speaker 4 (01:30:34):
It is very creepy. It's like the closest to language
of a bigfoot that has been recorded.

Speaker 1 (01:30:41):
Yeah, I've heard that. It almost sounds Asian.

Speaker 4 (01:30:45):
It's wild.

Speaker 1 (01:30:46):
Yeah, so it is pretty wild. All right, good night everybody,
and we'll see you next time on the Fringe.

Speaker 4 (01:30:56):
Good Night, good night,
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