CC & NJ Guy

From Dorm Room Whispers To America’s Most Haunted Sites


Listen Later

Send us a text

The room goes quiet when your name echoes from a hallway that should be empty. We wanted to know why some places feel charged and why certain people become targets, so we unpack a layered haunting that begins with a college runner hearing his name in the woods and escalates to typed messages, sleepless nights, and a boundary even Lorraine Warren wouldn’t cross. The story isn’t just scares; it’s a blueprint for how hauntings unfold, how interventions help or shift activity, and why the energy you bring matters.

We open with personal accounts—from a heavy trunk that moved in a Boston attic to a basement bike shop that felt safe only in sunlight—before stepping into the Erie Hall case now featured on Netflix. Along the way, we break down the difference between residual and intelligent hauntings, the Estes Method’s eerie alignments, and the ethics of not provoking what you don’t understand. We also look at high-charge locations like Eastern State Penitentiary and old asylums, where sorrow imprints on stone, and we revisit folklore touchstones like Amityville and the Bell Witch to show how myth and memory braid together.

Haunted objects, follow-home risks, and houses that seem to “call” round out the conversation. Whether you’re a believer or a skeptic, you’ll leave with practical guardrails: how to set boundaries, when to seek help, and why closing a session matters. This is a grounded, human take on the paranormal—more about empathy and method than jump scares—told with curiosity and hard-won caution from years of stories and a few too-close encounters.

If this resonated, tap follow, share it with a friend who loves a good ghost story, and leave a review with your most believable encounter—we might feature it next.

Hosted by: Cottman, Crawford & The Jersey Guy
Contact us: [email protected]
Links & socials: https://linktr.ee/ccandnjguy

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

CC & NJ GuyBy Keny, Louis, Tom