Tag: featured

  • Perhaps we can call this longer legs

    Perhaps we can call this longer legs

    Nicolas Cage And Osgood Perkins Are Officially Making A New LONGLEGS Movie: The LONGLEGS universe is set to expand, with Osgood Perkins and Nicolas Cage officially in production on a follow-up to the 2024 horror hit…

    It was a good movie and the sequel have done right could be more of a prequel, and let’s be honest, Nick Cage was unrecognizable and frightening.

  • Faces of a box office dud

    Faces of a box office dud

    Faces of Death cost about $7 million dollars to make and made under $2 million dollars in his opening weekend it’s about 1600 theaters. Probably safe to consider the Flop but a modest flop, but with some very bad reviews..

    But thanks to the Super Mario Brothers with some more huge numbers the American box office is rocking and rolling early that year..

    It was never expected to soar high but horror fans not liking it much sure didn’t help.

    It solidifies for good that when people hear about Faces of Death they’ll think about the 1970s and 80s macabre version as opposed to this new incarnation train wreck..

  • FACE OF DEATH WEEKEND

    FACE OF DEATH WEEKEND

    The Super Mario Galaxy Movie which is posting $18.7 million Friday on its way to a $71M three-day total at 4,284 theaters, off 46% week over week, will end up being the number 1 film for the weekend again..

    FACES OF DEATH doesn’t stand a chance to get that big..

    As a matter of fact, FACES OF DEATH has received little media attention.. little advertising.. little notoriety besides on horror sites or genre forums..

    And those horror sites have not been too nice..

    Bloody Disgusting wrote:

    Smart commentary and a clever approach get Faces of Death off to a strong start, but it lacks the conviction to see its bolder ideas through to its forgettable and far too conventional end. Whereas watching the 1978 film felt like a rite of passage, this update superficially wades into ideas already covered more chillingly in films like Red Rooms.

    Others have not been nicer..

    It is getting a less than stellar opening reception on ROTTEN TOMATOES..

    Faces of Death opens in 1,600 movie houses…

  • The endless NONdisclosure

    The endless NONdisclosure

    You know, we’ve been talking for a long time about alien disclosure… ever since the David Grusch hearings in Congress a couple of years ago, and all of the subsequent big reveals that never quite got revealed. And here we are.


    A former member of Congress Matt Gaetz last week saying publicly that there is a program to breed aliens and humans together… and a current Congressman this week saying that if we knew the truth of what was going on, we wouldn’t sleep at night.

    Couple that with all of the interesting players that George Knapp has assembled behind the scenes to publicly speak out about alien life, and here we are… constant non-disclosure disclosure.


    A steady flow of it all or a pile of innuendo, half-answers, and semantic games over what is really happening.
    Alien hybrid programs? It sounds fanciful… but we are living in a modern era of true high strangeness, where even a sitting Vice President like J. D. Vance can publicly say that if alien life exists, it might be something more like demons. That alone should tell you how far off the rails the conversation has gone.
    And yet… we never actually get to disclosure despite the high ranking officials saying they all know something we don’t..

    Maybe this is the smartest disclosure.. Make it the steady drip so by the time aliens land on the White House lawn, we will yawn and look for something else on to watch..?


    An odd charade of spectacle. Endless talk behind the scenes with former presidents hinting at something massive and secretive… but they “just can’t tell us.” No one can tell us. It almost feels like at this point everyone in D.C. knows everything the alphabet agencies have kept hidden… except us.
    And that’s where it starts to twist.


    Because now you begin to wonder… what if disclosure itself is the conspiracy?


    For a long time, people believed the government was hiding alien secrets. Roswell. Crashes. Abductions. The whole mythology. But now, as politicians openly speculate about interdimensional warfare, alien intentions, and world-altering truths… we’re left questioning whether there’s even anything there at all.
    It’s a strange evolution.


    We went from firmly believing alien life is out there… to now instinctively doubting it the moment the government starts talking about it.


    Maybe that says more about us than it does about aliens.


    What is probably true is simpler, and somehow less satisfying… that there are countless forms of life scattered across the universe. Organisms. Civilizations, maybe. But whether they can get here… or whether we’ll ever meet them… that’s still a mystery.


    Of course, if real disclosure ever does happen, maybe it all spills out at once. Maybe we are the ant farm. Maybe that’s the truth that keeps people up at night… the kind that hits at 3:00 a.m. during those quiet, restless witching hours.
    But until that day comes, we’ll keep doing what we’ve been doing.


    Taking little bites at the edges without ever eating the whole thing.
    Because in the end, disclosure has become whatever you want it to be… and right now, what we really have isn’t disclosure at all.


    It’s the endless disclosure of non-disclosure.

  • The fallen Angel(fire)

    The fallen Angel(fire)

    A lot of people dabbled in early internet by using places like Angelfire to express themselves. And until just a few weeks ago, those early internet sites were still there for everyone to enjoy..

    They are now gone.

    People who didn’t live through it won’t get it. ICQ numbers and AOL names as a contact? People saying “welcome to my page” At the top like you were entering some type of business meeting.. Awkward family photos.. Guestbooks you are being asked to sign!? My ICQ was ICQ NUMBER: 29085260..

    This was a great time to be alive during the old internet era. We were like pioneers in the wild west. Sure, by comparison to the wild west and the Oregon Trail game, it’s a much safer environment, and the biggest danger we had was not cholera or smallpox, but instead dial-up connections. However, we were charting new ground. Back then, people didn’t quite know what to make of it. Were things real? Were people real? You couldn’t really tell but chances are in the early net, people exploring online were actually the real thing.

    A lot of people were on various pages like Angelfire and GeoCities. And when these pages go away, it creates some sort of a strange void.

    It’s almost like thinking your local mall is still open, and then you show up just to see it got knocked down.

    There is no Angelfire anymore. And if you had, from the late 1990s to the very early 2000s, anything with family-related events or photographs or stories or blogs, it’s gone. It may still exist on Archive.org, thankfully for that, but for the most part, the real pages of what existed are all gone. Depending on how you felt about yourself 26 years ago, you may or may not like that an archive still exists …

    It’s interesting because a lot of people most likely had family websites on Angelfire, and they don’t even know that those pages are gone now. By the time Angelfire told its users that the pages were shutting down, most people had already tuned out. Many didn’t even assume their pages were still working. I, for one, knew mine were still up all these 27 years later. I would go back to them now and then, maybe three or four times per year, just for the fun of it. It was when I went back recently that I discovered it was gone. Then I did some more research and realized they are all gone.

    It is like corporate fast food chains. Everyone decries how now they all look the same.. same color, same design, modern. All the colors from the past are gone. The same thing happened with Angelfire and GeoCities. Think about those moving GIF backgrounds. They were horrible to read. You couldn’t tell what the font looked like. The horror sites had blood dripping down. Other sites had sports GIFs all over the place. It was chaotic and even at times ridiculous.

    But they were the days.

    Let me just picture it. You go to some Angelfire website, and the first thing you see is a GIF of a dancing Tigger from Winnie the Pooh. It has nothing to do with the page. But that’s because the person who made the page loved Tigger from Winnie the Pooh. That’s what Angelfire was like, just a big, giant collection of junk and gunk with words in between. Like AI slop now, but just edited and created by real humans to express their own personal slop.. emblematic of the person who created it.

    Angelfire is actually what led me to learn HTML coding. Now listen, my coding is not really as necessary these days as it once was because of AI or structured websites that are already created for people in a box, but back then, you had to learn the old-fashioned way. Not only were you on Angelfire and your mom was telling you to get off the internet so she could make a phone call, but you were in the middle of saving your index with HTML coding, which might have broken the entire thing, and you just couldn’t find out until mom was done with that call.

    No calls cut us off now, but internet outages still happen, and when they happen, now they’re bigger.

    I think in a way people will look back and romanticize things like Angelfire a lot more than what they deserve. Let’s face it, it wasn’t the easiest time, and the websites were clearly not the nicest. But it was something. It was almost like your little space on the internet—somewhat like what MySpace was. Literally the term “MySpace.” Then Facebook came around and changed the game. Things always come around and change the game. That’s okay, it’s the natural progression of how these things work.

    But what seems to be painful is that with all the changes, we’re running out of space for the old stuff. The old internet was extremely important, and people who didn’t live through it will never quite understand or appreciate the daily happenings online. There was no social media and had to learn how to find things yourself instead of things being sent to you because of an algorithm. You sought out websites and found your favorite writers or bloggers and communicated with people in a personal way.

    Social media is constant now. So much so that it’s overwhelming. This is not natural for our minds, folks.

    But back then, you were slower about this. You were more methodical and could carve your path on the internet the way you wanted to, not the way a corporation would feed it to you.

    There are people out there who have done their best at preserving the internet. Some have preserved GeoCities. I don’t know if Angelfire was ever really preserved the same way. GeoCities felt like one of the first real blog-style platforms where people kept updating things, and eventually that morphed into Blogger and everything else that followed. Angelfire felt different because it was more static. More like a personal statement. A website before websites became what they are now.

    Angelfire didn’t collapse because of some dramatic scandal. It just… faded. Lycos, its parent company, quietly shut down the free hosting after years of decline. The internet moved on. People moved on. The infrastructure got old and the demand disappeared. And one day, something that existed for decades just didn’t anymore.

    Because people say the internet is forever.

    It’s not.

  • The White House releases horror movie teasers

    The White House releases horror movie teasers

    The White House just posted something… weird.
    Two very strange and cryptic videos hit their official social media, and neither of them felt like anything close to normal government communication. One of them was deleted almost immediately, which of course only makes it more interesting.


    The deleted clip looked sloppy, almost accidental. It showed a woman’s shoes… metallic heels… and a voice saying, “it’s launching soon, right?” Then it was gone. No explanation and no follow-up.

    That’s a way to get a citizenry riled up right?


    The second video is still up, and somehow even stranger. It feels like an intro to a horror movie. Static. A drooping American flag. A notification ding. The whole thing has this eerie, Texas Chainsaw Massacre-type energy where you’re not sure what you’re looking at, but you know it’s off.
    Now here’s where it gets even more interesting.
    According to reports, the first video was posted early Thursday and quickly deleted. A second clip followed showing that static-filled scene with the American flag, and that one has racked up millions of views. Both posts spread across platforms like X and Instagram, and naturally the theories started flying.


    Some people think it was a pocket dial situation. Others think it was some kind of internal error. And then there are those who believe it’s something more intentional… maybe even tied to the rising tension between the U.S. and Iran, especially after reports that President Trump delayed strikes on Iranian power plants.
    As of now, there’s no official explanation from the White House.


    So what are we looking at here?


    A simple mistake that just happens to look like the opening of a horror film… or something a little more deliberate dressed up as chaos?
    You pick the door.


    Either way, it’s not every day that the White House drops something that feels like it belongs on a VHS tape found in the woods.

  • Thousands of crows swarm Tel Aviv skyline in ‘harbinger of doom’ omen

    Thousands of crows swarm Tel Aviv skyline in ‘harbinger of doom’ omen

    This is considered by many to be a ‘harbinger of doom’ as it is often followed by total catastrophe,’ one user on X shared, while others linked it to a biblical prophecy.

    They cited the Book of Revelation 19:17, which describes an angel standing in the sun, shouting to birds flying in midair to gather for ‘the great supper of God.’

    The swirling flock created dark, shifting clouds over the skyline, leaving residents and viewers stunned by the sheer scale of the migration. 

    However, scientists who study birds said the phenomenon is not supernatural but part of a routine seasonal migration along one of the world’s busiest bird flyways. 

    This is probably all natural and this happens on an annual basis across israel. But with the war going on and Global tensions it leads to headlines like this: Thousands of crows swarm Tel Aviv skyline in ‘harbinger of doom’ omen

    And thanks to the UK Daily Mail it’s playing up the bad Omen Supernatural angle to the story..

  • Rocket scientist with professional ties to missing Gen. William McCasland disappeared under similar circumstances

    Rocket scientist with professional ties to missing Gen. William McCasland disappeared under similar circumstances

    You can read the full report here ..

    An excerpt:

    A US rocket scientist vanished without a trace on a Los Angeles hike eight months before retired Air Force Gen. William McCasland disappeared under eerily similar circumstances — and the two had a close professional connection.

    Monica Reza went missing on the morning of June 22, 2025, in the Angeles National Forest while hiking with two experienced companions who were exploring the popular Mount Waterman Trail, according to a Facebook page dedicated to finding her.

    Developing..

  • Disclosure day coming… aliens got their dot gov!

    Disclosure day coming… aliens got their dot gov!

    No not the Steven Spielberg movie but instead the long rumored government disclosure. Back in the ’90s we were told disclosure would never occur because it would rock Society but now if it does occur we’re most likely going to be told by many people who believed in UFOs back then that it’s fake now.

     White House has registered the domain ‘aliens.gov,’ sparking fresh speculation that President Donald Trump’s long-awaited UFO disclosure may be imminent.

    The domain, linked to the Executive Office of the President, was flagged on Wednesday by an automated tracker of federal websites.

    However, it is also listed in the government’s official .gov registry maintained by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

    Registry records show it was recently added under the White House Office alongside other official government sites, confirming it as a legitimate federal web address, though its purpose has not been publicly disclosed.

    The website is not currently live, but the domain has been reserved.

    Developing…

  • Conan does Gladys at the Academy Awards

    Conan does Gladys at the Academy Awards

    The Oscars broadcast this year has been getting some criticism for being a bit of a snooze. Long stretches of polite applause, safe speeches, and not a whole lot of memorable moments. But then Conan O’Brien showed up and briefly woke the entire room up.


    In one of the few genuinely funny moments of the night, Conan popped up in a surprise bit playing Aunt Gladys. The gag was pure Conan. A ridiculous wig, exaggerated mannerisms, and that perfectly awkward delivery that only he can pull off. It was weird, unexpected, and for a few minutes the Oscars actually felt alive again.


    The bit worked even better because it tied directly into the award that followed. The actress behind the character of Gladys ended up winning, which made the entire setup feel even more absurd in the best possible way. Conan leaned into the joke and milked it for everything it was worth, and the audience clearly appreciated finally getting something that didn’t feel overly scripted.

    It was funny.. very very Conan..


    Meanwhile, one of the big stories of the night was Sinners, which showed up again and again as envelopes were opened.

    The film picked up several wins throughout the evening, including a major acting victory for Michael B. Jordan and multiple technical awards, making it one of the most talked about films of the ceremony.


    But when it came time for the final award of the night, Sinners didn’t take home the big one. The Oscar for Best Picture ultimately went to Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another, which ended up being the night’s biggest winner overall.


    That’s the strange math of the Academy Awards. A movie can dominate the conversation all night and still watch the biggest prize go somewhere else.


    But if people are being honest about what they’ll remember from this broadcast, it probably won’t be the Best Picture announcement. Of all the moments from the night, Conan O’Brien’s bizarre Aunt Gladys intro skit might end up being the most memorable thing that happened. In a ceremony that sometimes felt like it was drifting along, that was the moment that actually woke the room up.