Kim and Lark, the gals from Kudzu Killers: Homicide and Sweet Tea, bring you an all new podcast about ghosts, aliens, cryptozoology, and all other things that go bump in the night, with their usual Southern flair and a fair bit of skepticism.
Have you seen those Tik-Tok videos claiming the snow in Texas was fake? Well, this episode tells you exactly why you weren't seeing drips from the melting snow, and why there were what appeared to be char marks on the snowballs. It's science, y'all!
What started out as a fun story about a woman raising a Bigfoot went downhill as research uncovered a whole new genre of erotic "literature." You have to listen to understand...
H.A.A.R.P, the High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program in Gakona, Alaska was developed by the US Air Force, Navy, and the Defense Advanced Research Research Projects Agency (DARPA) for enhanced communication with submarines as well as other studies of Earth's ionosphere. But conspiracy theories abound regarding this project. We discuss a couple and give our two cents, as usual.
Harry Houdini, master of escapology, magician, and debunker of fake psychic mediums. Harry knew the ins and outs of illusions, they were his bread and butter, and he wasn't afraid to expose him in people he felt were taking advantage of the grieving. But he met his match in Mina "Margery" Crandon.
For decades, Loretta Lynn lived in a house she knew was haunted. Have a listen as Lark tells about the house in Hurrican Mills, TN, and it's various hauntings. One correction: Lorreta's son was 34 when he died, not 44. Oops!?
The Jersey Devil is a 250-year-old legend from the Pine Barrens of New Jersey. But was it real, or something the Quaker community invented when they ostracized one of their members. And Ben Franklin; not the affable old kite flyer we all thought. He was kinda mean.
It's a Southwestern ghost story about a woman scorned. Who was La Llorona?
On December 15, 1967, a suspension bridge over the Ohio River collapsed, killing 46 people. For the previous year, there had been various sightings of a giant creature resembling a feathery winged man around the town of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, where the bridge connected the small town to Ohio. Could the mothman have been responsible? Was he the harbinger of the disaster. Or was he the result of a super secret governmental experiment at the nearby munitions factory or vacant nuclear power plant? We discuss this and more theories, and Richard-yummy-Gere on this episode of Two Chicks and a Crucifix.
The crop circle phenomenon reached it's peak in the 1990s. Thousands were reported. Organizations were formed to study them. Were they really alien spacecraft landing sites, the result of willy willies or lightning strikes, or an elaborate hoax perpetrated by two men? You be the judge.
In this episode we're telling the story of a 73-year-old man who dresses like an alien to probe unsuspecting humanoids. We're also touching on the Betty and Barney Hill alien abduction story, and the US Air Force's Project Blue Book. This is the first of what may be several episodes over the coming weeks about the likelihood of aliens on earth.
In the very first episode of Two Chicks and a Crucifix, Lark discusses the conspiracy theory of the Lizard Illuminati. Space aliens who inhabit the bodies of our highest level world leaders and control us by blocking our senses. Included is a checklist to see if you or someone you love is a really a lizard. Come on by, have fun with the gals.
PROMO. Kim and Lark, the gals from Kudzu Killers: Homicide and Sweet Tea, bring you a brand new podcast, all about ghosts, vampires, aliens, and all those other things that go bump in the night.