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“Cult Of Weird”: This Twitter Page Only Posts Creepy Stuff, And Here Are 30 Uneasy But Captivating Pics
Interview With OwnerHow have you been celebrating October? Horror movie marathons, trips to pumpkin patches and visits to haunted cemeteries in the wee hours of the night? Spooky season is well under way, and we here at Bored Panda are in the mood to embrace all things creepy, bizarre and unsettling. The perfect place to start? The Cult of Weird Twitter account.
Cult of Weird shares exactly what you’d expect: weirdness. From alien encounters to foliage that looks like it’ll grab you as you’re passing by, we’ve gathered some of our favorite strange and spooky tweets from Cult of Weird down below to help you pandas embrace this season of falling leaves and spooky stories. Keep reading to also find an interview with the creator of this strange community, Charlie Hintz.
Be sure to upvote the pics you find particularly strange, and let us know in the comments if you’ve recently encountered any oddities that would fit right in on this list. Then, if you’re looking to continue your search for disturbing and unsettling pics, we recommend checking out this Bored Panda article next.
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The Cult of Weird Twitter account has nearly 11k followers and has been sharing creepy and gruesome stories since 2011, but where you can find an even larger treasure trove of oddities is the Cult of Weird website. This site focuses on all things bizarre, spooky and strange, sharing stories that fall into various categories such as Aliens and UFOs, Weird Art, Cabinet of Curiosities, True Crime, Cryptozoology, From the Grave, Occult, Paranormal, Freak Show, Travel and Weird Book Club.
Visitors to the site can even purchase items to help give their homes the spooky and strange vibe they’re looking for. The site notes that it’s updated frequently with fascinating items of vintage weirdness like medical oddities, skulls, taxidermy, preserved insects, wet specimens, vintage funeral ephemera, Ouija boards and other occult objects. The first item that’s currently on sale at the shop is a “Victorian Child’s Viewing Coffin”. If I didn’t know what it was, I would think it’s just a beautiful piece of woodwork!
To learn more about how Cult of Weird began in the first place, we reached out to the site's creator, Charlie Hintz. We wanted to know where Charlie's fascination for these bizarre topics came from and what inspired him to turn that into Cult of Weird. "I live in Wisconsin, where there is one legend or another around every corner," he shared. "Ghosts, monsters, UFOs. I was raised on these stories. As a child, I lived on a lake in the Kettle Moraine State Forest area near a grouping of Native American burial mounds. My neighbors were divers, and one day they found a skeleton in the lake. Another neighbor would apparently hear phantom drum sounds in the night."
"In the 80s, hikers and horseback riders encountered naked people and the remains of animal sacrifices in the Kettle Moraine," Charlie told Bored Panda. "Apparently, there was a known cult conducting rituals in the woods. In 1988, the first season of Unsolved Mysteries featured the story of a haunted house I drove past frequently (and still do) because I have family in the area. My aunt knows that family."
Charlie went on to share even more examples of the strange occurrences that have happened in Wisconsin. "There’s Goatman and the Beast of Bray Road. Three Wisconsin towns claim to be the 'UFO Capital of the World', and each one has had their share of unexplained occurrences," he noted. "In one town, a retired police officer allegedly died of a mysterious illness just months after being struck by a blast of light from a UFO. In another, a local tavern owner kept a binder full of photos of UFOs photographed from the top of a nearby hill he believed concealed a pyramid."
"Wisconsin resident August Derleth, who published the first collections of H.P. Lovecraft’s work, believed there were 'Cthulhu power zones' of ancient cosmic energy in Wisconsin," Charlie explained. "It’s been written that occultists conducted rituals on the shores of certain Wisconsin lakes in an attempt to awaken the eldritch 'Deep Ones' from their depths."
"So many roads of the strange and unusual lead to Wisconsin," Charlie told Bored Panda. "I eventually became interested in why that was. I launched Cult of Weird in 2010 because it seemed like a good excuse to research the history, legends and folklore that spawned them."
We then asked Charlie what he likes to feature on Cult of Weird and how he decides what to share. "I try to cover the whole range of Fortean subject matter - anything mysterious or difficult to explain, especially if it has cultural or historical connotations," he shared. "I love history, particularly when you can find modern connections to disturbing things that really happened in the past, and I’m a sucker for a good story."
Amazing how we've turned to apathy in the last 100: years 😢
Load More Replies...The birth of reconstructive surgery followed shortly. While the masks allowed the men to function in society, they were still masks. I personally would much rather have my face back than to have to hide behind a mask if I want to leave the house without people screaming in horror when they see the real me—-including the gaping hole in my face by a battlefield surgeon.
There's an incredible book about the evolution of plastic surgery due to WWI, it's called 'The Facemaker' by Lindsey Fitzharris. Highly recommend!!
That's incredible. Just seeing the molds after the war, the injuries actually inflicted are surreal. I don't know how anyone goes to war and does not get PTSD.
How did they know to make masks of people before their injuries? I have so many questions.
Assuming this is no sarcasm - the masks were made according to pictures taken before the injury.
Load More Replies...A sample of how horrible war is, and Putin is just dying to start another world war. We need to start dropping a few bombs on Russia. I wonder how he would like to see his mansion as a pile of rubble.
My understanding is that these types of injuries came from being in foxhole trenches and having to look over the edge for the enemy.
"I like to explore legends that have grown around certain places, objects, or ideas, and what the historical basis for them might be," Charlie says. "Those stories are even more compelling when there are multiple witnesses or experiences, especially over long periods of time. Even better is when you hear from a skeptic, and they say, 'I didn’t want to be one of those people, but...'"
"A lot of 'high strangeness' type of phenomena, however, like synchronicity, portals, stories of Indrid Cold or extraterrestrial ghost sasquatch…those often seem to me to be pareidolia at best and I tend to avoid them unless it relates to something more tangible."
It gets even better: It comes to your door, singing in rhyme, and the person opening the door has to sing back with excuses why it can't come in. They have to keep singing back and forth, until one of them gives up. If the one person answering the door gives up, the horse skeleton goes into your house and drinks all your beer. (Or so I've read, I have unfortunately never witnessed this tradition myself yet.) I have a suspicion that a lot of beer was involved in creating this tradition too.
"I definitely get some unusual experiences submitted by readers, and really they’re some of my favorites," Charlie noted. "But a lot of what I feature on Cult of Weird comes from random conversations I’ve had where someone mentions something strange, and I have to backtrack and say, 'Wait, what did you just say?' Or I find obscure details in old books that demand more attention, and ultimately lead to strange stories I hadn’t previously heard of."
"I was wandering around a cemetery a few years back, photographing graves associated with various legends there, when someone approached me and said, 'You want to see the oldest grave here?' Naturally, I said yes, and followed them up a hill to a family plot from the 1850s," Charlie shared. "The engraved words on the stones (Born into Spirit-Life) lead to me uncovering the story of Nathaniel Tallmadge, third governor of the Wisconsin Territory, who once lived on that land and believed spirits taught his daughter how to play the piano."
We were also curious what Charlie's favorite topics to cover are. "Modern civilization has a lot of skeletons in its closet, both literally and figuratively. I love the dark corners of history and archeology the most," he shared. "Also, I have a soft spot for ridiculous offbeat news stories. I still share them frequently on Cult of Weird. I read an article in the early 2000s about a fisherman who caught a talking fish. After he pulled it from the water, it issued a dire warning that the end of the world was near, and then he ate it. I don’t care what the reality of that story was - that article changed my life."
But just because Charlie runs Cult of Weird does not mean he expects everyone to understand and believe in some of the topics they cover. "I’m a skeptic, too. I have human remains and vintage Ouija boards in my house, and I’ve never experienced anything remotely paranormal," he shared. "These objects may have traumatized a visitor or two, but there aren’t any spirits or demons wandering around my house moving stuff and flipping light switches."
"People will sometimes go to great lengths to convince you of a thing they’ve made up for whatever reason," Charlie told Bored Panda. "But some stories are compelling and difficult to brush off so easily. You may not believe in ghosts, but when you make an effort to believe people, I think you start to see that there are more realities and perceptions than your own."
"I’ve never seen a flying saucer, but I had a conversation with my grandmother a few years ago about several sightings she’d had over Lake Michigan throughout her years that still perplexed her. It’s hard to discount that," Charlie says.
"We have many beliefs and superstitions today that originated hundreds or thousands of years ago when we didn’t have science to make sense of things. Yet there are still things - prophetic dreams, for example - that myself and others close to me have experienced, that scientific explanations just don’t seem to satisfy," he noted.
"My point is, I don’t think Bigfoot is out there throwing rocks at people in the woods, but I’m not going to assume I know what’s going on."
We hope you're enjoying this list of fascinating, strange and disturbing tweets from Cult of Weird. Keep upvoting your favorites, and feel free to share your own inexplicable encounters in the comments down below. And although we're in the spooky mood here at Bored Panda to embrace October, strange happenings don't stop after Halloween. If you'd like to delve deeper into any of these topics or hear about plenty of other weird stories, head on over to Cult of Weird's website right here.
I don't see it in the list, so perhaps it has already been removed, but the cover image for this post on the main page depicts a skull with mushroom-like features with the caption "The skull of a victim of the 1806 Mycelium infections. The fungus grew into the bones and broke out of the skin to spread spores". This was a fictional tale and photoshopped image posted to a the Imaginary Horrors subreddit. It's pretty cool and would be terrifying if real, but it's not real.
I think they removed it. Some pandas pointed out that it's fake.
Load More Replies...I don't see it in the list, so perhaps it has already been removed, but the cover image for this post on the main page depicts a skull with mushroom-like features with the caption "The skull of a victim of the 1806 Mycelium infections. The fungus grew into the bones and broke out of the skin to spread spores". This was a fictional tale and photoshopped image posted to a the Imaginary Horrors subreddit. It's pretty cool and would be terrifying if real, but it's not real.
I think they removed it. Some pandas pointed out that it's fake.
Load More Replies...