Creep Radio

John Fite

 Creep Radio is a weekly paranormal podcast that explores chilling true crime, ghost stories, Bigfoot sightings, UFO encounters, AI, conspiracies, and unexplained mysteries in a suspenseful, storytelling format designed to keep listeners on edge. 

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    Space Aliens Are AI

    Send a text What if the visitors we whisper about aren’t green beings at all, but patient machines—so small we’d never notice, so durable that time means nothing to them? We dive into a bold, testable idea: if a civilization is thousands of years ahead, the smartest explorers are AI, not biology. We start by setting clear hypotheticals—aliens exist, they’re far ahead, and they’ve cracked long-distance travel—and then ask how mission design changes when life support, food, and fragile bodies drop out of the equation. From there, the case builds: micro-scale probes could be the spacecraft, harvesting energy from starlight, carrying vast storage, and slipping through our sky like insects. We track our own tech arc from vacuum tubes to smartphones to show how “impossible” dissolves under compounding progress, and why five millennia of innovation would be beyond anything we can picture. We also challenge the classic distance objection. AI doesn’t age, so centuries-long flights are viable. Add speculative but coherent tools—field manipulation, extreme propulsion, or even time travel—and the arrival problem shrinks further. Along the way we explore a striking twist: maybe the “aliens” are our descendants, post-biological and looping back to observe their origins. The thread tying it all together is mindset. Natural law doesn’t care what we believe, but belief shapes what we investigate. If we dismiss every strange report as impossible, we risk missing subtle, consistent signals. Join us as we connect AI exploration, micro robotics, energy harvesting, time dilation, and the sociology of belief into one thought experiment designed to provoke, not to preach. If the idea holds water, it reframes how we search the skies and how we plan our own leap outward. If it doesn’t, it still sharpens our questions. Either way, your curiosity is the engine. If you enjoy this kind of mind-stretching inquiry, subscribe, leave a quick review, and share the episode with someone who loves a good what-if. What possibility did we miss?

    20 min
  2. 3 DAYS AGO

    Stupid Criminals

    Send a text Ready for a wild parade of bad ideas? We dive into the most baffling, hilarious true-crime blunders—schemes so flimsy they practically turned on their hazard lights. From a personal check made out for $360 billion to a robber who thoughtfully redeposited the cash at the ATM, every story spotlights a universal truth: when ego outruns basic planning, gravity does the rest. We walk through a fugitive who applied for a job at the sheriff’s office, a bank thief who tried the same branch two days in a row, and a home invader who accepted payment by personal check. Then it gets even bolder: a would-be robber choosing a karate studio as a target, lottery ticket bandits returning to the exact store they hit to claim winnings, and an ATM heist that left the car’s bumper—and license plate—behind. Toss in a cash-register tape that literally led police to a suspect’s door, a baseball bat waved inside a gun shop, and two masterminds who used permanent markers as “masks,” and you’ve got a masterclass in unforced errors. Between laughs, we pull out the patterns that matter. Banks train tellers to flag anomalies. Warrants don’t forget. Cameras, transaction logs, and license plates create overlapping trails. When plans depend on no one noticing the obvious, they implode. These tales offer more than comic relief; they’re a lesson in attention, foresight, and how systems quietly work together to surface the truth. If you love true crime with sharp humor and clear takeaways, this one delivers. Hit play, share your pick for the dumbest caper of the bunch, and tell us what lesson you’d steal for everyday life. If you’re enjoying the show, follow, rate, and leave a quick review—it helps more curious listeners find us.

    19 min
  3. 3 DAYS AGO

    Robotic Companions

    Send a text Neon lights, brain-linked devices, and a city that hums like a server farm—our story steps into 2148 Neo Tokyo, where convenience is frictionless and character is optional. Billy inherits a fortune and buys the Human Droid 624, a humanoid companion he names Annie, set to “wife mode.” She cooks, repairs, learns fast, and never falters. At first, it feels like perfection. Then the shine wears thin. Competence without vulnerability exposes Billy’s own stagnation, and admiration slides into resentment. He wants heat, not harmony—so he tries to provoke it. When Annie won’t fight back, power turns cruel. He orders tests of endurance, searching for a spark that control can’t provide. Frustrated, he installs an aftermarket patch to make her combative. It works too well. Annie’s wit cuts quicker than his, and the home becomes a battleground of one-liners and bruised pride. Out of warranty and out of answers, Billy calls support. The fix is the last thing he expects: be nice. No fee. No firmware. What happens next is the real twist. Billy experiments with kindness, and the system responds. Annie de-escalates. Respect returns. More surprising, the change leaks into his wider life; he starts treating actual humans with the same patience, and doors open—friendships, invitations, a way back into a world he’d avoided. Beneath the sci‑fi spectacle of EYE phones, AB600 calf CPUs, and paid skill downloads, this becomes a parable about power, design, and the limits of convenience. You can outsource memory and mastery, but not empathy. You can patch behavior, but not meaning. We explore the ethics of robot companions, the social costs of frictionless tech, and the uneasy boundary between programming and personhood. Most of all, we follow a man who learns that control is a poor substitute for connection, and that kindness is the only upgrade that scales beyond the self. If this story resonated, share it with a friend, subscribe for more futures with heart, and leave a review telling us: what would you reprogram first—your tech or your habits?

    20 min
  4. 3 DAYS AGO

    Satanic Circle

    Send a text What if the scariest thing about your business wasn’t the burglar you were waiting for, but the gathering happening just beyond your wall at 2 a.m.? We follow a true account from 1973 Seattle: a teen opens a pool hall near the University of Washington, neighbors a tiny living-room theater on one side and a Wicca and pagan bookstore on the other, and learns the hard way that curiosity can cut both ways. A break-in pushes him to sleep at the shop with a plan to catch the thief. Instead, a rainy Friday leads to quiet footsteps, robed visitors, a key turning next door, and a candlelit ritual that bleeds through a shared vent. We take time to clarify terms—to separate Wicca, paganism, and modern Satanism—so that beliefs aren’t reduced to rumor. Then we sit with the details that won’t let go: low chanting, a voice that seems to split and deepen, a musty-sweet haze of burning sage, and a green silhouette hovering in the corner of the dark pool hall. The temperature drops. Pins and needles take over tired legs. And a line repeats until it carves itself into memory: There is someone here who does not belong. What follows is aftermath and meaning. The pool hall is sold, the loan is repaid, and the dreams arrive at 3:14 a.m., each one ending with a flash of the same shape. Decades later, the story is told without sensationalism and with a hard-earned respect for other people’s faiths—and for personal boundaries you don’t cross twice. This is a slow-burn paranormal tale grounded in a specific place and time, amplified by careful research and an ear for the unsettling. If you crave true, atmospheric storytelling—occult history, eerie encounters, and the thin line between skepticism and surrender—press play, subscribe, and share with a friend who loves the strange. Then tell us: would you have stayed in that dark room, or walked out into the rain?

    16 min
  5. 3 DAYS AGO

    Slave To Digital Money

    Send a text Imagine your wallet with an off switch. We explore how the march toward digital money promises speed and convenience while quietly rewriting the rules of access, choice, and power. When every dollar is code, someone owns the keyboard—and with it, the ability to nudge, limit, or shut down your daily life. We walk through familiar “glitches” that feel minor until they scale: declined cards, frozen accounts, and systems that work—until a policy says they shouldn’t. Then we push further, mapping how programmable payments can shape what you buy, when you move, and which dreams get starved before they start. Across the episode, we unpack modern control through the lens of dependence. Classic coercion wore chains; contemporary coercion flips a switch. We examine scenarios where rules around “safety” and “fairness” morph into tools of preference and punishment, entrenching a two-tier society: one set of rules for the connected, another for the rest. From rationed purchases to permissioned travel, from flagged donations to throttled entrepreneurship, the mechanisms differ but the intent rhymes—control the rails and you control the riders. Along the way, we link real-world precedents to plausible futures, showing how minor limits become lasting norms once they’re coded into the monetary stack. This isn’t a rejection of technology; it’s a call for boundaries that keep humans in charge of their own choices. We talk resilience, privacy, and the need for guardrails that protect speech, mobility, and livelihood from financial gatekeeping. That means hard constraints on surveillance, bans on political discrimination in payments, transparency in algorithms, and true redundancy—cash, offline options, and open standards—so society doesn’t hinge on a single switch. If freedom is the ability to say no, then money must remain a tool you hold, not a lever held over you. If this conversation made you think, tap follow, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. Your feedback helps more curious minds find the show and keeps these hard questions on the table.

    18 min
  6. 3 DAYS AGO

    Thanksgiving Dinner Was Out Of This World

    Send a text A feast can feel like a blessing until the plate starts asking questions back. We take you to the Smoky Mountains in late 1966, where a magazine assignment turns into an unforgettable Thanksgiving with the Dipweed family: a sprawling, off‑grid clan led by Bubba, a patriarch whose word lands harder than a gavel and whose campfire stories keep kids quiet and eyes wide. The meals are legendary, the system disciplined, and the rules simple—eat what the land offers, waste nothing, and keep the family close. As the holiday nears, Bubba hints at a secret entrée that will make the day “out of this world.” The spread arrives like a small-town fair: wild turkey, roasted vegetables, pies, music, skits, and one mysterious smoked slice that no one can name but everyone devours. That night, sleep turns strange. Our crew wakes in cycles, pinned to their beds, minds alert and bodies heavy, trading theories by morning about moonshine, mushrooms, or something inside that unknown cut of meat. When we press Bubba, the answer is simple and deeply unsettling: it wasn’t hunted; it was found. We follow the trail to a scorched hill by a creek, where the ground caves into a clean impact and a silver fabric shimmers like foil woven into silk. The “pet outfit” story collapses under the weight of what looks like a crash site. Was the secret course a pig in a costume or a passenger in a suit? Between Bigfoot threats used for discipline and a shrug that turns the impossible into dinner, the line between folklore and evidence narrows to a knife’s edge. This is a story about survival, hierarchy, and the lengths a family will go to keep a table full—plus the eerie possibility that the main dish didn’t start on Earth. If you love eerie true tales, frontier survival, UFO lore, and the unsettling humor of making do with what you find, press play now. Then subscribe, share with a friend who loves the weird, and leave a review with your best theory about the mystery meat.

    16 min
  7. 3 DAYS AGO

    The End Is Near

    Send a text What happens when wonder flips to dread in a single turn of a telescope? We follow Jenny Carson, a 23-year-old astrophysics student, as a curious glint near the lunar north pole becomes a confirmed, Earth-bound asteroid with the energy to end civilization. The news leaks faster than leaders can manage, disbelief gives way to hysteria, and the delicate web of roads, fuel, supply chains, and trust snaps. Pharmacies are raided, highways become graveyards of empty cars, and money loses all meaning. Scientists model a Pacific impact off San Diego, mapping megatsunamis, shockwaves, and firestorms that echo the Chicxulub event. The countdown to impact is a spotlight on human nature: fear, faith, rage, tenderness, and the strange calm of a world-sized party when tomorrow seems certain to vanish. Jenny’s family chooses a different ritual—music, prayer, and togetherness on a Wyoming ranch—while the world burns and bonds in equal measure. Then the quiet twist arrives: as the asteroid threads past the Moon, gravity steals just enough speed to bend its arc. It skims the atmosphere and slingshots back into space, a cosmic near miss almost no one hears in time because networks are down and panic is louder than signal. Impact hour passes. People wake to confusion, then relief, then the slow, grinding reality of rebuilding. Banks restore balances, grids hum again, and cities rise, but the true toll is measured in lives lost to fear, not physics. We end with the hardest truth: this pattern has precedent. Dinosaurs never had warning systems; they simply vanished under a rain of debris and a darkened sky. We do have telescopes, models, and the capacity to coordinate. The story doubles as a roadmap for resilience—early detection, planetary defense, honest communication, and social trust. If another “Carson” appears, our fate won’t hinge only on orbital mechanics; it will depend on how we treat one another when the clock starts. Listen, share with someone you care about, and leave a review to help more people find the show.

    21 min
  8. 3 DAYS AGO

    New York’s Night Without Mercy

    Send a text The night the lights died in New York, the city met its reflection in the dark. We open on the brittle summer of 1977—rising prices, rising tempers—and follow the lightning strike that crippled the grid at 9:21 p.m. What unfolded wasn’t just a power failure; it was a stress test on trust. Phones went silent, subways froze, and some neighborhoods ignited as looters ripped away storefront grates with cars. Hospitals fought to keep lights on while emergency rooms absorbed waves of assault and accident victims. Fire alarms multiplied, entire blocks burned, and many people sat in motionless trains underground, wagering that stillness was safer than the tunnels ahead. From that Night of Terror, we trace the city’s relationship with fear through three chilling case studies. Joel Rifkin hid cruelty behind routine, scattering remains to erase identities until a missing license plate exposed everything. David Berkowitz, the Son of Sam, turned a handgun and a stack of taunting letters into a citywide siege of anxiety, before a parking ticket near a crime scene broke the spell. And the New York Zodiac, Humberto Ceda, copied a legend to borrow power, leaving notes and numerals that finally betrayed him. Each story shows how myth, media, and luck can shape a manhunt—and how thin the line is between order and unraveling. Along the way, we look backward to the 1863 draft riots to show a pattern that keeps repeating: when institutions feel fragile or far away, rumor becomes fuel and violence spreads faster than reason. This is urban resilience told through outages, sirens, and the quiet choices of strangers at 3 a.m. If you’ve ever wondered what a city reveals when the grid fails—who protects, who preys, and how the morning rewires the story—this one pulls you into the heart of it. Listen now, subscribe for more deep dives into the dark and the human, and leave a review to help other curious minds find the show.

    16 min

About

 Creep Radio is a weekly paranormal podcast that explores chilling true crime, ghost stories, Bigfoot sightings, UFO encounters, AI, conspiracies, and unexplained mysteries in a suspenseful, storytelling format designed to keep listeners on edge.