Last Warning Broadcast

LWB 1713 AM

This is LWB 1713 AM — Last Warning Broadcast. You are tuned to an active transmission that does not confirm its origin and does not require acknowledgment. Each signal records unusual activity as it occurs — emergency alerts without source, distorted messages, and patterns that do not repeat the same way twice. Details may be missing. Sequences may break. What you hear may not align with what came before. There is no indication of a live audience. Time within these transmissions is inconsistent. Events unfold without warning. Some broadcasts stop without conclusion.

  1. Then the Entire World Went Silent | Emergency Radio Broadcast

    3d ago

    Then the Entire World Went Silent | Emergency Radio Broadcast

    Then the Entire World Went Silent. The broadcasts didn't stop. The people did. At 8:42 PM UTC, emergency communication centers across the globe noticed something impossible. Television stations remained active. Satellites continued transmitting. Automated weather systems reported normal conditions. But every civilian radio call, emergency hotline, and public frequency suddenly fell silent. Then the entire world went silent. Recovered transmission archives document the first hours after the unexplained event as governments struggled to determine why billions of people had simply stopped responding. Air traffic controllers lost contact with pilots. Coast Guard operators received no distress calls. Police dispatch centers found their lines completely empty. The infrastructure survived. Humanity did not answer. And somewhere beyond the static, a single unidentified transmission continued broadcasting. This immersive analog horror story combines emergency radio broadcasts, atmospheric horror, existential mystery, psychological suspense, and realistic transmission-style storytelling. Story: Then the Entire World Went Silent | Emergency Radio Broadcast Genre: Analog Horror, Emergency Broadcast Horror, Psychological Horror, Atmospheric Horror Follow for future transmissions while the network remains active. #AnalogHorror #EmergencyBroadcast #RadioHorror #PsychologicalHorror #AtmosphericHorror #ApocalypticHorror

    59 min
  2. The Black Rain Over Chicago Was Calling Their Names | Emergency Broadcast

    Jun 4

    The Black Rain Over Chicago Was Calling Their Names | Emergency Broadcast

    The Black Rain Over Chicago Was Calling Their Names. The storm appeared on weather radar shortly before midnight. Forecasters predicted heavy rainfall moving inland from Lake Michigan. What followed could not be explained by any meteorological model. Residents throughout the city reported hearing voices coming from the rain itself. Within hours, emergency dispatch centers were flooded with calls claiming the black rain over Chicago was calling their names. Then people started disappearing. Recovered transmission archives document the days following an unexplained weather event that transformed Chicago into the center of a growing emergency. Witnesses described hearing personal information whispered through the rainfall. Some heard childhood nicknames. Others heard the voices of missing relatives, deceased loved ones, or people who should not have known their names. The storm continued for seven nights. The voices became louder. And those who followed them into the rain rarely returned. This immersive analog horror story combines emergency broadcasts, atmospheric horror, psychological suspense, weather anomalies, and realistic transmission-style storytelling. Story: The Black Rain Over Chicago Was Calling Their Names | Emergency Broadcast Genre: Analog Horror, Emergency Broadcast Horror, Psychological Horror, Atmospheric Horror Follow for future transmissions while the network remains active. #AnalogHorror #EmergencyBroadcast #BlackRain #ChicagoHorror #AtmosphericHorror #PsychologicalHorror

    56 min

About

This is LWB 1713 AM — Last Warning Broadcast. You are tuned to an active transmission that does not confirm its origin and does not require acknowledgment. Each signal records unusual activity as it occurs — emergency alerts without source, distorted messages, and patterns that do not repeat the same way twice. Details may be missing. Sequences may break. What you hear may not align with what came before. There is no indication of a live audience. Time within these transmissions is inconsistent. Events unfold without warning. Some broadcasts stop without conclusion.