Let's Talk Spooky

Shauna Taylor

Obsessed with ghost stories, eerie folklore, and real-life paranormal encounters? Join us each week as we uncover chilling legends, haunted histories, and spine-tingling mysteries. From ancient curses to modern hauntings and reincarnation, this podcast is your gateway to the dark and unexplained. If you crave supernatural stories and strange tales that stay with you... press play and Let’s Talk Spooky!

  1. 11H AGO

    45: When the Legend Was Real — True Stories Behind History’s Scariest Urban Legends

    Send us Fan Mail What if the scariest urban legends were real? Not metaphors. Not campfire exaggerations. Actually, verifiably, documentable real — and the communities telling them knew something terrible was happening long before anyone with authority chose to listen? In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky — a solo-narrated folklore and haunted history podcast — we follow four true horror stories hidden within four legends you thought you already knew. Visit letstalkspooky.com  to connect with our socials and see what's new!!  Connect with us:  If this episode got under your skin — share it. The best way to help Let’s Talk Spooky grow is to leave a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, and to send it to one person you know who loves a good dark story. Word of mouth is still the most powerful algorithm there is. Sources & Further Reading The Pied Piper of Hamelin • Lüneburg Manuscript (c. 1440–50); Hamelin Town Chronicle (1384); Stained glass window, Marktkirche Hameln (c. 1300); Rattenfängerhaus inscription, Hameln, Germany. • Mieder, Wolfgang. The Pied Piper: A Handbook. Greenwood Press, 2007. • Udolph, Jürgen. Linguistic surname research linking Hamelin to Polish & Pomeranian records. • Kadushin, Raphael. “The Grim Truth Behind the Pied Piper.” BBC Travel, 2020. The Greenbrier Ghost • The Greenbrier Independent & The Monroe Watchman, 1897 (archived, WV Division of Culture and History). • Baltimore American. “Mother-in-Law’s Vision as Evidence.” July 5, 1897. • Greenbrier County Courthouse — trial records and autopsy report, 1897. • Lyle, Katie Letcher. The Man Who Wanted Seven Wives. Quarrier Press, 1999. • e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia. “Greenbrier Ghost.” wvencyclopedia.org. Cropsey & Andre Rand • Zeman & Brancaccio, dirs. Cropsey. Antidote Films, 2009 (Tribeca Film Festival). • Rivera, Geraldo. Willowbrook: The Last Disgrace. WABC-TV, 1972. • The New York Times — coverage by Todd Purdum (Aug. 6, 1987) and Elizabeth Neuffer (Aug. 14, 1987). • The Charley Project — case files for all confirmed and suspected victims. charleyproject.org. The Black Volga • Czubala, D. Wspónczesne Legendy Miejskie. Uniwersytet nlnski, 1993. • Brunvand, J.H. Encyclopedia of Urban Legends. ABC-CLIO, 2001. • Kunicki, M. “The Red and the Brown.” East European Politics and Societies, 2005. • Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), Warsaw — Piasecki case archival materials.

    39 min
  2. APR 16

    44: Wendigo and Skinwalker: The Warnings Hidden in the Woods

    Send us Fan Mail In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore the chilling lore, cultural warnings, and unsettling history behind the Wendigo and the Skinwalker. These are two of the most searched and most misunderstood figures in Indigenous folklore, Canadian legend, and North American supernatural storytelling. We begin with the Wendigo, a terrifying figure found in the traditions of Ojibwe, Anishinaabe, Cree, Algonquin, Innu, and other Algonquian-speaking Nations. Often connected to winter, starvation, greed, isolation, and transformation, the Wendigo has become one of the most haunting presences in Canadian folklore, forest legends, and Indigenous oral tradition. We also explore real historical cases from Canada, including Swift Runner in Alberta and Jack Fiddler in Ontario, and examine how Wendigo stories were shaped, misunderstood, and reinterpreted through colonial history. From there, we move into the deeply feared and widely misunderstood figure of the Skinwalker, known in Diné (Navajo Nation) tradition as yee naaldlooshii. Unlike pop culture versions of shapeshifters and monsters, the Skinwalker belongs to a specific cultural framework and should not be treated as generic paranormal folklore. In this episode, we discuss the Skinwalker carefully, focusing on public knowledge, cultural context, and the reason these stories continue to inspire fear across discussions of forest spirits, dark folklore, paranormal legends, and unexplained creatures in the woods. This episode is for listeners interested in Wendigo stories, Skinwalker lore, Indigenous legends, Canadian supernatural tales, creepy forest creatures, dark folklore podcast episodes, and unexplained cryptid stories. As always, we approach these traditions with care and deliberately avoid sacred ceremonial or ritual details. If you’re drawn to stories about haunted forests, forest spirits, ancient warnings, cryptids, supernatural creatures, and the darker side of folklore, this episode is one you won’t want to miss.  A Note on Consent and Representation This episode deliberately omits ritual and procedural details from both traditions. No sacred ceremonial knowledge has been reproduced. The accounts included are drawn from publicly shared oral histories, published journalism, and documented community storytelling. The producers of this podcast encourage listeners to seek out Indigenous voices directly. Sources and Further Reading Cultural attributions: Wendigo tradition: Ojibwe (Anishinaabe), Cree, Algonquin, Innu, and related Algonquian-speaking NationsSkinwalker (yee naaldlooshii) tradition: Diné (Navajo Nation)Recommended reading: Louise Erdrich — The Night Watchman, LaRose, and essays on Ojibwe traditionTomson Highway — The Rez Sisters and interviews on Cree spiritual lifeAdrienne Keene — Native Appropriations blog and academic writing on Indigenous representationNavajo Times — navajotimes.comBasil Johnston — Ojibway Heritage

    31 min
  3. 01: REMASTERED - Beltane: Fire Festivals, Fairy Folklore, and the Dark History of May Eve

    APR 13

    01: REMASTERED - Beltane: Fire Festivals, Fairy Folklore, and the Dark History of May Eve

    Send us Fan Mail Step into the firelight and into one of the most fascinating festivals of the ancient Celtic calendar. In this remastered episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore Beltane, the ancient Celtic fire festival that marked the beginning of summer and the thinning of the line between the human world and the spirit world. From ancient pagan rituals and sacred bonfires to fertility traditions, protection rites, fairy folklore, and the darker side of May Day legends, this episode digs into the history, mystery, and magic behind one of the most powerful seasonal celebrations in folklore. We’ll talk about the origins of Beltane in Celtic tradition, why fire played such a central role in cleansing and protection, how people believed the fae were especially active, and how old customs surrounding witches, spirits, and supernatural forces shaped the night. Whether you’re interested in pagan holidays, European folklore, the history of witchcraft, seasonal traditions, or the eerie folklore tied to May Eve, this episode brings together the beautiful and unsettling sides of Beltane. If you love stories about ancient festivals, folklore and superstition, Celtic mythology, fairy beliefs, witch lore, and the haunted edge of old-world tradition, this episode is for you. Sources:  Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Beltane” — strong overview of Beltane’s meaning, timing, and pastoral/fire customs.  Encyclopaedia Britannica, “Belenus” — helpful for the older connection between Beltane and fire symbolism.  Historic Environment Scotland, “Behind the Fire – the Symbolism of Beltane Fire Festival” — useful for Scottish fire symbolism, cleansing, and community ritual.  Dúchas.ie, “May Day Customs and Beliefs” — excellent folklore source for beliefs about fairies, witches, fire, cattle, milk, and protection.  Dúchas.ie, “Bealtaine Eve” — great source for May Eve customs, dew washing, may boughs, and fairy beliefs.  Dúchas.ie, “Béasaí agus Nósanna Lae Bealtaine” — useful for household luck, primroses, ashes, and May Day prohibitions.  Historic UK, “May Day Celebrations” — broader context for Beltane within May Day tradition.

    21 min
  4. APR 10

    43: Canada’s Most Haunted Locations - Morgue's

    Send us Fan Mail In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore two of Canada’s most unsettling locations—places where history didn’t just happen… it stayed behind. We begin in Halifax at The Five Fishermen, a historic building that once operated as a funeral home. This site played a role in the aftermath of the RMS Titanic disaster and the devastating Halifax Explosion, where victims were brought, identified, and prepared. Today, staff and visitors report eerie encounters—reflections that don’t match reality, unexplained movement, and a lingering presence that refuses to fade. From there, we travel west to Vancouver and step inside the Vancouver Police Museum—once the city’s morgue, autopsy room, and coroner’s court. A place where death was not only witnessed but examined repeatedly over decades. Connected to real cases, including the “Babes in the Woods” and early violent crimes in Vancouver, the building now houses reports of unexplained sounds, shifting objects, and an unsettling sense of being watched. Two locations.Two very different kinds of hauntings. One question remains— Do these places hold onto the people who passed through them…or the weight of what happened inside? If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to follow Let’s Talk Spooky wherever you listen to podcasts. And if you’ve ever experienced something you couldn’t explain—a place that didn’t feel quite right… We want to hear your story. @letstalkspookypod - TikTok  @letstalkspooky - Instagram  letstalkspookypodcast@gmail.com

    32 min
  5. MAR 27

    41: Doppelgängers: The Double Across Cultures

    Send us Fan Mail Follow & Support If you enjoyed this episode, don’t forget to follow Let’s Talk Spooky, leave a review, and share it with your fellow spooky souls 👻 Got a story of your own? We’d love to hear it. Description:  What if someone saw you… Somewhere you’ve never been? In this episode of Let’s Talk Spooky, we explore the unsettling idea of the doppelgänger—an identical double said to exist alongside you, ahead of you, or even completely separate from you. From ancient beliefs to modern encounters, the idea of a second self has appeared across cultures for centuries. In ancient Egypt, the Ka was believed to be a spiritual double tied to one's existence. In Norse folklore, the Vardøger was said to arrive before you—your presence echoing forward in time. And in Celtic traditions, seeing your double was often considered a warning… something not meant to be witnessed. But these stories didn’t stay in the past. We move into real documented accounts, including the chilling case of Émilie Sagée—a teacher reportedly seen in two places at once by dozens of witnesses—and modern experiences where people have been seen, spoken to, or encountered… without ever being there. Because sometimes, the most unsettling stories aren’t the ones that feel impossible— They’re the ones that feel almost normal… until they aren’t. 📚 Sources & Further Reading  Émilie Sagée case⁠https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89milie_Sag%C3%A9e⁠Doppelgänger folklore overview⁠https://www.britannica.com/art/doppelganger⁠Norse Vardøger⁠https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vard%C3%B8ger⁠Egyptian Ka⁠https://www.britannica.com/topic/ka-Egyptian-religion⁠Chinese hun and po⁠https://www.britannica.com/topic/hun-and-po⁠Reddit (modern experiences)⁠https://www.reddit.com/r/Glitch_in_the_Matrix/⁠⁠https://www.reddit.com/r/Paranormal/⁠

    33 min

About

Obsessed with ghost stories, eerie folklore, and real-life paranormal encounters? Join us each week as we uncover chilling legends, haunted histories, and spine-tingling mysteries. From ancient curses to modern hauntings and reincarnation, this podcast is your gateway to the dark and unexplained. If you crave supernatural stories and strange tales that stay with you... press play and Let’s Talk Spooky!

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