Houston Mayor John Whitmire was frustrated as he stood in front of the cameras alongside the police chief last month, trying to dispel the rumors that have cast a veil of anxiety over the vast network of bayous that crisscross his city.
“There is no evidence that there is a serial killer loose on the streets of Houston,” Whitmire said at the news conference..
There’s been a rash of bodies found in the body count actually doubled previous years. People have been speculating that there’s a serial killer on the loose and that’s the reason behind all of this tragedy. Officials are down playing that and saying there’s no evidence of any coordinated or serial killer behavior at this time.
This is developing: MELISSA IS NOW ONE OF THE STRONGEST HURRICANES EVER RECORDED IN THE ATLANTIC BASIN.
The new 2PM update now has sustained winds of 175 mph and gusts approaching 220 mph. Pressure now down to 906 mb.
Catastrophic impacts coming to the Island of Jamaica later tonight.
May God have mercy on Jamaica
More .. updated..
…241 MPH WIND GUST! One of the strongest wind gusts ever recorded in a hurricane was just measured by hurricane hunters who continue to fly through Melissa tonight. This extreme wind gust was recorded approximately 700 feet above the ocean’s surface; this phenomenon is absolutely terrifying…
The White House just posted an AI-generated image of Donald Trump as Master Chief — the armored hero from Halo — standing before the White House with the caption “Power to the Players.”
It’s officially on the White House social media feeds And eagle-eyed viewers noticed something else: the flag behind him is missing ten stars. Forty instead of fifty. A small maybe?
Because here’s the real-world plot twist, the same week that picture dropped, tariffs tied to Trump’s trade policies sent console prices climbing. Xbox, PlayStation, Nintendo, all hit. The “power to the players” message rings a bit hollow when many of those players are suddenly priced out of the game.
What used to be an ongoing console war between gaming giants has now become something bigger: a war over affordability. A digital divide wrapped in a meme.
Now, the White House is sharing AI fan-fiction of the Commander-in-Chief while gamers struggle to afford the very consoles that image celebrates.
Apparently they are despite the fact that we’ve never seen the movies they tell us to..
If Ryan Coogler’s Sinners or Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein make the cut this year, it’ll mark the first time in the Academy Awards’ 97-year history that a horror film has been nominated in consecutive contests.
And honestly—maybe that’s one of the main reasons people have stopped caring about the Oscars.
Sure, we’ll talk about who wins, we’ll share the highlights, we’ll glance at the “Best Picture” list. But let’s be real—most people haven’t even seen these movies. A lot of them are the kind of films critics love and audiences sleep through. Pretentious, overly symbolic, and sometimes just flat-out unwatchable.
Meanwhile, the movies that actually get people talking? They’re the ones with life, adrenaline, and imagination. The action blockbusters of summer. The horror movies that get under your skin.
Take The Black Phone 2 — we just reviewed it, and it was epic. Masterfully done, deeply unsettling, and emotionally sharp. Even Weapons — which wasn’t our pick for the best of the year — had a cinematic energy that felt alive. And yes, Sinners was powerful too. It brought real weight to the horror genre this year.
But that’s the thing: horror has been delivering for decades, and the Academy just refuses to acknowledge it. From Hereditary to The Conjuring, from Get Out to The Black Phone, horror consistently gives us stories that are bold, imaginative, and yes—crowd favorites.
Yet when award season rolls around, horror is treated like the weird cousin who showed up uninvited.
So, if Sinners or Frankenstein manage to claw their way into the Best Picture category, kudos to the Academy for finally giving the genre a little respect.
But don’t hold your breath for the next one. History tells us it might be a long, dark wait before the Oscars dare to honor horror again.
“The Oscars claim to celebrate cinema. But when’s the last time they celebrated fear?”
Enigma, the program that’s quietly been collecting data since its 2022 launch, has now logged over 30,000 UFO sightings — billing itself as the largest verifiable UFO database on the planet.
Remember the movie Signs? In that story, aliens couldn’t stand water. But according to Enigma’s growing database, the truth about anomalous creatures might be far more aquatic than we ever imagined. In fact, if these reports are to be believed, they seem to love water quite a bit.
A recent New York Post article sheds some light on the phenomenon: thousands of mysterious sightings — not in the skies, but underwater — have been reported across U.S. coastlines. These are being called USOs, or Unidentified Submersible Objects, and even some former Navy officials are saying they may pose a national security concern.
One video submitted to the Enigma app shows two bright green lights moving beneath the surface off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Pentagon-reviewed footage has already confirmed similar incidents of craft diving into or emerging from the ocean without so much as a splash.
As of this past August, Enigma had logged:
9,000 mysterious sightings within 10 miles of U.S. shorelines
500 of those within 5 miles
And 150+ reports describing objects hovering over or plunging into the water.
California and Florida lead the list, which makes sense — both have long coastlines and deep UFO lore. But what’s really getting people’s attention are the maps being released that show clusters of activity around major water bodies.
Some members of Congress — those brave enough to even mention it publicly — have hinted that aliens may be using water as a cloaking mechanism, or perhaps even living beneath it.
If true, it flips the Signs script entirely. Maybe they’ve been here all along… just under the surface.