celebrities
From Hitchcock to Stephen King, a roundup of the who's who in horror; all about celebrities flaunting their loudest screams and most nightmarish scenes.
Of Entropy and Chaos
As the frequency from the tape filled the office, the city outside the 42nd-floor windows underwent a terrifying, high-definition transformation. The "Static" didn't just swirl in chaotic clouds anymore; it organized. It snapped into a rigid, mathematical lattice that mirrored the steel skeletons of the skyscrapers below.
By Nathan McAllisterabout 9 hours ago in Horror
Of Entropy and Chaos
Kael began to ransack the room with a cold, mechanical fury. He didn't toss the furniture like a common thief; he dismantled it like a demolitionist looking for a hidden structural flaw. Blueprints were shredded—the work of my life, my meticulous calculations of wind-load and soil density, turned into white confetti that drifted through the stagnant air. Bottles were smashed against the concrete, the sharp, medicinal smell of gin rising like an incense of failure.
By Nathan McAllisterabout 10 hours ago in Horror
Architecture of the Scythe Pt. 2/5. AI-Generated.
The Chemistry of Silence Grief has a half-life, but in the District of Rust, it also has a chemical signature. My basement apartment smelled of damp concrete, old blueprints, and the sharp, medicinal sting of juniper. I sat at my drafting table—a scarred slab of oak that had once held the designs for the city’s tallest spires—and stared at the bottle of bottom-shelf gin, my "Leveler."
By Nathan McAllister4 days ago in Horror
Architecture of the Scythe Pt. 4/5
The Geometry of a Fugitive Rain in the District of Rust doesn't wash things clean; it just turns the soot into permanent, oily stain. The kind of rain that feels like it’s trying to dissolve pavement, a slow-motion acid bath for a city that has already lost its soul.
By Nathan McAllister4 days ago in Horror
Architecture of the Scythe Pt. 3/5
The Architecture of a Lie The city has a remarkable, almost biological capacity for forgetting. My efforts and warning were all for not; sure enough: the digital scrolls of the *Daily Ledger*, you’ll see the narrative being woven in real-time, smoothed over like fresh concrete. "Maya Vane, 19, Perishes in Canyon Crash; Mechanical Failure Blamed." They’ve already run the op-eds about the "Vane Curse," the "Fragility of Fame," and the "Poetic Symmetry" of a daughter following her mother into the dark. To the three million souls living under the smog of this metropolis, Maya is just another beautiful ghost, a tragic face on a commemorative magazine cover.
By Nathan McAllister4 days ago in Horror
Architecture of the Scythe. AI-Generated.
The Glass King I was a man of cold lines and hard angles. I was Silas Thorne, the "Architect of the New Century," a title bestowed upon me by critics who mistook my arrogance for vision. My face looked back at me from the gloss of Architectural Digest; my hands had drafted the shimmering glass spires that defined this city’s skyline. I didn't just build offices; I built altars to human ego. I believed in structural integrity, in the unshakeable laws of physics, and, most fervently, in my own untouchable prestige.
By Nathan McAllister4 days ago in Horror
A Symbol Linked to Freemasonry and the Illuminati
The Eye of Providence, often referred to as the “All-Seeing Eye,” is one of the most recognized and debated symbols in the modern world. Depicted as a single eye enclosed within a triangle and often surrounded by rays of light, this symbol has appeared in religious art, national emblems, and popular culture for centuries. However, in recent times, it has become strongly associated with secret societies such as the Freemasons and the Illuminati, fueling countless conspiracy theories about hidden power and global control.
By Irshad Abbasi 9 days ago in Horror
The Secret Society That Became a Global Conspiracy Legend
The word “Illuminati” instantly evokes images of shadowy meetings, powerful elites, secret handshakes, and hidden symbols controlling the fate of nations. Over time, the idea of the Illuminati has evolved from a short-lived Enlightenment-era society into one of the most famous conspiracy theories in the world. But what is the truth behind this mysterious name, and how did it grow into a global obsession?
By Irshad Abbasi 9 days ago in Horror
A 12-Year-Old’s Descent from Urban Legend to Attempted Murder
In the quiet suburbs of Waukesha, Wisconsin, in May 2014, a story emerged that seemed more like a horror movie plot than a police report. Three 12-year-old girls went into the woods to play, but only two walked out willingly. The third, Payton Leutner, was left bleeding from 19 stab wounds, the victim of a calculated sacrifice intended to please a fictional internet character known as Slender Man.This case remains one of the most disturbing examples of how the digital world can bleed into reality, blurring the lines between childhood imagination and dangerous delusion.The Myth of Slender ManTo understand why two pre-teens would commit such an atrocity, one must understand the "deity" they served. Slender Man originated in 2009 on the Something Awful forums as a "Creepypasta"—a type of internet horror legend. He is depicted as a tall, faceless man in a black suit with tentacle-like appendages.For most, he was a fun, spooky story. But for Anissa Weier and Morgan Geyser, he was terrifyingly real. They believed that in order to become his "proxies" and protect their families from his wrath, they had to kill someone.The Day of the AttackThe plan was orchestrated over several months. On May 31, 2014, following a birthday sleepover, Morgan and Anissa lured Payton into a local park under the guise of playing hide-and-seek. Once in the woods, the situation turned graphic.Morgan Geyser carried out the physical attack, stabbing Payton 19 times with a five-inch kitchen knife while Anissa encouraged her. The blade missed Payton’s heart by less than a millimeter—a distance described by doctors as the "width of a human hair."After the attackers fled, Payton displayed incredible resilience. Despite her life-threatening injuries, she crawled out of the woods toward a nearby bike path, where a passerby discovered her and called 911.The Legal and Psychological AftermathThe case ignited a global conversation about the impact of the internet on developing minds. Both girls were charged with first-degree intentional homicide, but their defense teams argued they were not monsters, but children suffering from severe mental health issues.The FindingsMorgan Geyser: Diagnosed with early-onset schizophrenia. She truly believed Slender Man would kill her family if she didn't act.Anissa Weier: Diagnosed with shared delusional disorder (folie à deux), meaning she had been drawn into Morgan’s delusions until they became her own reality.Ultimately, both girls were found not guilty by reason of mental disease or defect. Morgan was sentenced to 40 years in a psychiatric institute, while Anissa received 25 years. Anissa was released under strict supervision in 2021, while Morgan remains under institutional care.Lessons from a Digital TragedyThe Slender Man stabbing serves as a grim reminder of the "echo chamber" effect of the internet. For these girls, the more they read about the myth, the more evidence they found to support its existence."I believed that if I didn't do it, Slender Man would come and kill my whole family in three seconds." — Morgan Geyser during police interrogation.This case forced parents and educators to realize that the "monsters" children find online aren't always just digital images; they can become psychological catalysts for real-world harm. It highlighted the desperate need for better mental health screening in schools and a more nuanced understanding of how children process online folklore.Conclusion: Survival and ResilienceWhile the story is often centered on the attackers and the myth, the true hero is Payton Leutner. Her survival was nothing short of miraculous. In later years, Payton spoke out, showing remarkable strength and a refusal to be defined by the 19 scars she carries.The Slender Man case stands as a cautionary tale for the digital age—a reminder that while the internet is a place of infinite creativity, for the vulnerable, it can also be a place where the shadows grow far too long.
By Irshad Abbasi 10 days ago in Horror
"Scream 7" (2026): Running out of Fresh Screams. Top Story - March 2026.
This is the seventh time we’ve had a Ghostface crisis. Scream 7 is the latest edition of the Scream franchise. Sydney Prescott and her family are under attack by another anonymous killer dressed in a Ghostface costume. While having issues with her daughter, Tatum, they run from the bloody murders, trying to determine who is behind it all.
By Marielle Sabbag10 days ago in Horror












