View Full Version : Ghosthunters
Cyphermage
15th May 2006, 10:09 AM
Hi Everyone,
I don't know if this has been previously discussed here, but I caught an interesting little program on the Sci-Fi channel the other day called "Ghosthunters." I wouldn't normally watch something which purported to find ghosts, but they were having a marathon of an entire season of the show, and through the miracle of TiVo and fast forward, I was able to rapidly review many programs in a short time.
The show features a couple of plumbers from Roto-Rooter, who try to debunk paranormal phenomena in their spare time under the auspices of The Atlanta Paranormal Society, or TAPS. They go into a place where paranormal activity is suspected, and fill it with cameras, microphones, thermal imaging devices, and other high tech gadgetry. Then they record overnight, go back and analyze the data, and render a pronouncement of whether paranormal activity is present.
Now, they are very professional, and try to find ordinary explanations for what people have observed. They do a great deal of debunking, and comforting of people who are frightened by events they can't explain.
Unfortunately, there are two big problems with the show. One, the investigation is accompanied with a lot of voiceover editorializing which presupposes the existence of various Woo-Woo things. Two of the cast bill themselves as "Demonologists." There is constant discussion of what ghosts supposedly do, or how we can detect their vibrations, and they run around saying things like "Give us a Sign" in empty rooms.
Second, these folks have far too low a level of disbelief. They will listen to days of background noise in audio footage, find the two seconds that sounds vaguely like a voice saying something, and pronounce it a paranormal event. Apparently, they've never played rock music backwards.
They do the same thing with their video footage, and stare at distant random pixelation and changing shadows for endless hours, until they find something that "looks like someone peeked over the railing way over there."
I haven't seen anyting on the program that looks in the least paranormal, and yet TAPS has given their official blessing to several places as examples of legitimate hauntings.
The TAPS crew seem like nice people, but they definitely need a visit from a professional skeptic to clue them in.
Anyone else here watch the show?
gfunkusarelius
15th May 2006, 10:50 AM
have caught little bits, was too boring, even for me, haha. i have a feeling the TAPS crew arent really trying to debunk anything more than just enough to convince some teetering fence-sitters to think "well, they are skeptics, and they believe, and they are much more technical than me, so it must be real."
i think i would rather they just fictionalize these shows a bit to make them more interesting.
thaiboxerken
15th May 2006, 11:04 AM
This is a show that started out skeptical but is getting just plain woo-woo crappy. I think they figured out that woo-woo attracts more ratings, that proving those "evil skeptics" wrong makes for more money.
Beady
15th May 2006, 11:20 AM
I saw a preview for an episode that really bothered me, so much so that I didn't watch the actual show. Apparently, they were going to investigate the case of a little toddler that was being victimized, ie scratched, by a poltergeist. The preview had one of the TAPS guys saying something like, "When it's one of your kids, you take it seriously."
So, how did this turn out, if anyone saw it? Whatever happened, I'll bet no one asked any awkward questions about child abuse by a more-corporeal being.
Serenity
15th May 2006, 12:02 PM
I saw a preview for an episode that really bothered me, so much so that I didn't watch the actual show. Apparently, they were going to investigate the case of a little toddler that was being victimized, ie scratched, by a poltergeist. The preview had one of the TAPS guys saying something like, "When it's one of your kids, you take it seriously."
So, how did this turn out, if anyone saw it? Whatever happened, I'll bet no one asked any awkward questions about child abuse by a more-corporeal being.I think you might be referring to the episode where the brother & sister shared bunk beds so the crew set-up a camera to monitor them while they slept. The camera nabbed the little boy climbing out of bed, poking at his sister until she was half-roused, upon which the boy would then rush back to bed as if nothing happened.
Beady
15th May 2006, 01:40 PM
I think you might be referring to the episode where the brother & sister shared bunk beds so the crew set-up a camera to monitor them while they slept.
Nope, that doesn't sound like it. I don't recall that the preview showed a little girl, only a boy, and scratches were definitely involved.
Hindmost
16th May 2006, 05:09 AM
I use it as an example of Bad Science in my class. I tell my students that it would have credibility if they looked at 10 separate haunted places--without being told what to expect--and see if they could get statistically reasonable results. Even then, it would need more refinement. I use it to show applications of scientific method,..data taking...etc.
The ghost meters are fun. How are they calibrated? Unless you have a captured ghost to use as a traceable standard, any meter is useless.
It's always fun in class
glenn
Miss Whiplash
16th May 2006, 07:31 AM
It's complete woo. Even though people view it as a reality show and think every scene is seamless, most things are staged. After all, it's entertainment, production deadlines must be met, etc. Notice that many of the "unexplained" phenomenae ( blury footage of 'ghosts') look an awful lot like stage hands in dark blankets?
A recent episode investigating a baby being "scratched" was ludicrous. The house was such a jumble of junk, I don't see how anyone could move without being scratched by something. The sump-pump banging and the loose light bulb being mistaken as a ghost was just sad. Are people so credulous about the paranormal they can no longer think of simple solutions to mechanical problems?
My own expericence with a TAPS Family of ghost hunters was not pleasant. They pay lip sevice to scientific skepticism by quoting the first law of thermodynamics when challenged, but have already concluded every 'orb' or EMF fluctuation is proof of "the unexplained." And the hangers on that orbited the group were complete woo-woo.
I guess I watch the show just to torture myself and laugh at the gulliblility of people.
atari24
16th May 2006, 08:52 AM
I've watched the show a couple times, and I was happy in one episode where they pretty much stated that "orbs" in photos aren't paranormal. Orbs have to be one of the biggest grasping of straws.
THe other stuff they do, however, geez... They should spend a day walking around with an EMF meter in "non-haunted" places like walmart, an open field, whatever, and check out the fluctuations they'll pick up all damn day.
blutoski
16th May 2006, 08:55 AM
I use it as an example of Bad Science in my class. I tell my students that it would have credibility if they looked at 10 separate haunted places--without being told what to expect--and see if they could get statistically reasonable results. Even then, it would need more refinement. I use it to show applications of scientific method,..data taking...etc.
The ghost meters are fun. How are they calibrated? Unless you have a captured ghost to use as a traceable standard, any meter is useless.
Well, you've identified a key problem: lack of baseline examples. If we had a ghost in a box, we could all calibrate our ghost detectors, but unfortunately, it's a very subjective thing.
re: sending ghosthunters to random houses. Tried that; doesn't prove anything. Consider: how would you select 'unhaunted' houses? They find ghosts at all the houses, so they're telling us which ones are haunted.
What *might* work is sending different teams to houses, and seeing if they locate different 'hot-spots', but this is also unreliable, since hot-spots could just be chosen for their creepiness. Creepy to one guy is creepy to another, and they'll all choose the same rooms, graves, whatever.
This is actually the basis of some magic tricks: "Pick a random number between one and 10" (90% of respondents will say: "seven") "Pick a random number between one and a hundred (about half will say "50") "Pick a random vegetable" (about 90% will say "carrot" - see P&T's "How to play with your food" on how to deal with that ucooperative 10%)
Unfortunately, the same works for "Pick a random creepy spot in this house." I guarantee if there's a tree outside with a sturdy limb that had a swing on it and dug rope scars into the bark, 90% of intuitives will say somebody was hanged there, and is still schlepping around.
Cyphermage
16th May 2006, 03:01 PM
There was something in one episode that made me suspect that at least some of the show is scripted and performed, much like professional wrestling. One of the investigators was knocked to his knees by an unseen force, and when he lifted up his shirt, he had a big red blotch on the left side of his lower back, with scratches on it.
He spent the rest of the show "selling" the injury, which left me wondering if they had incorporated some bruise he had gotten elsewhere into the storyline.
Another aspect of the show which shows signs of being professionally written, is the conflict the crew is having with a member named Brian, whom they seem to scapegoat for every minor problem. This looks like an attempt to spice up ratings, for those who find trying to hear voices in random hissing noise a tedious exercise.
sat556
16th May 2006, 03:23 PM
I think the biggest give away that ghost hunting shows are scripted and/or rigged, is that they have something happen. The problem is, if they show what real ghost hunting is like (and I don't mean the kind done by fun seekers and woos), they would find a very boring program with scenes of people becoming increasingly cold and bored.
It's no wonder ghost hunters end up clutching at straws. I get kind of excited when I have one coming up, and on the day I am hoping so much that something might just happen, even though I feel sure it won't, then about two hours in I start to think it might just be nice to go home :D
Miss Whiplash
16th May 2006, 03:34 PM
I know of two scenes that were scripted when they visited North Carolina:
1) The scene where they were sitting around eating hot dogs supposedly in downtown Raleigh was scripted and shot elsewhere.
2) When people began falling ill at Mordecai House, it was left more or less unexplained. Some the viewers thought it was the effect of the haunting. In reality it was food poisoning. The cast and crew sent out food and got a bad batch of buffalo wings from Dominos Pizza.
Hindmost
16th May 2006, 06:23 PM
Well, you've identified a key problem: lack of baseline examples. If we had a ghost in a box, we could all calibrate our ghost detectors, but unfortunately, it's a very subjective thing.
re: sending ghosthunters to random houses. Tried that; doesn't prove anything. Consider: how would you select 'unhaunted' houses? They find ghosts at all the houses, so they're telling us which ones are haunted.
What *might* work is sending different teams to houses, and seeing if they locate different 'hot-spots', but this is also unreliable, since hot-spots could just be chosen for their creepiness. Creepy to one guy is creepy to another, and they'll all choose the same rooms, graves, whatever.
This is actually the basis of some magic tricks: "Pick a random number between one and 10" (90% of respondents will say: "seven") "Pick a random number between one and a hundred (about half will say "50") "Pick a random vegetable" (about 90% will say "carrot" - see P&T's "How to play with your food" on how to deal with that ucooperative 10%)
Unfortunately, the same works for "Pick a random creepy spot in this house." I guarantee if there's a tree outside with a sturdy limb that had a swing on it and dug rope scars into the bark, 90% of intuitives will say somebody was hanged there, and is still schlepping around.
I must learn to put in more details. I agree it would be very difficult to remove subjective data from any test. (unless we calibrate with our ghost in a box.) I would think a reasonable test would be to select about 10-20 separate haunted houses, castles, etc with specific legends and repeating patterns of ghosts. Without telling anything to the ghost hunters, see if they can find the repeating patterns. Throw in a house or two or three that definitely is considered ghost free and see what happens. I am betting random acts of ridiculous outcomes.
I recently watched a show on the science channel where a ghost hunter was purportedly able to identify a ghost in a huanted house and determine what had happened for the person to become a ghost and the characteristics of the particular haunt. The science channel dragged him to another state to look in a specific house that he was not aware of the details of the haunting. Needless to say, the ghost hunter was unable to determine anything specific correctly...if I recall he even got the gender wrong.
glenn:ghost:
Serenity
16th May 2006, 08:11 PM
Orangotango was telling me a new member in the welcome thread awhile back knew someone that had the TAP's crew film a mock plumbing repair for the camera. A segment sometimes starts with them supposedly at work (as plumbers) discussing their upcoming investigation. Wouldn't surprise me. :D
steve s
17th May 2006, 06:32 PM
I just flipped past this show and could only stomach about 15 seconds worth. Two guys in a dirty basement. One guy says "Something that felt like a web just brushed my arm." Second guy says "Some people believe that ectoplasm feels like a web. It means something was here." :jaw-dropp (we need a barfing smiley.)
Steve S.
Scott Haley
17th May 2006, 06:43 PM
The Sci-Fi channel keeps putting on shows about people investigating things that aren't real. When the fiction pretends not to be fiction, it's not as entertaining. What makes the program directors think that their audience wants to watch this stuff? Series like "Ghosthunters" are on for a while, then they're cancelled.
--Scott
Outhere
17th May 2006, 07:06 PM
I watched the first season of "Ghosthunters" and found the most entertaining thing about it was the apparent conflict among some of the team members; who screwed up, who lost the equipment, who didn't pull his weight, etc. From what I've seen this season (can't bear to watch an entire episode) they've tried to make it interesting by fabricating woo incidents.
Has anyone seen Char Margolis on the same channel in Psychic at Large? Or should it be Still at Large? I watched the other day when she gave the perfect cop-out to a young man who asked for a reading. She said the dead contact her through "energy" because the dead have problems with verbal communication. I've noticed that too.
Miss Whiplash
17th May 2006, 08:16 PM
I just flipped past this show and could only stomach about 15 seconds worth. Two guys in a dirty basement. One guy says "Something that felt like a web just brushed my arm." Second guy says "Some people believe that ectoplasm feels like a web. It means something was here." :jaw-dropp (we need a barfing smiley.)
Steve S.
The really dumb one came the second half hour. A man who restores old houses felt "oppressed" living in his new old house. His personality changed. He had headaches, felt depressed and sometimes dizzy. After 20 minutes of mumbo-jumbo, the team of plumbers found mold growing all over the basement, toxic chemicals stored near the heating intake, and a mis-wired breaker panel ready to burn the house down at any time. Very rational causes for all the man's symptoms, but it took a team of ghost hunters to point out the obvious? Talk about gullibility!
Cyphermage
17th May 2006, 11:17 PM
The really dumb one came the second half hour. A man who restores old houses felt "oppressed" living in his new old house. His personality changed. He had headaches, felt depressed and sometimes dizzy. After 20 minutes of mumbo-jumbo, the team of plumbers found mold growing all over the basement, toxic chemicals stored near the heating intake, and a mis-wired breaker panel ready to burn the house down at any time. Very rational causes for all the man's symptoms, but it took a team of ghost hunters to point out the obvious? Talk about gullibility!
Yes, that was pretty pathetic. Clearly they were using their plumbing skills more than their ghost hunting skills in that one.
Beady
18th May 2006, 01:53 AM
A recent episode investigating a baby being "scratched" was ludicrous. The house was such a jumble of junk, I don't see how anyone could move without being scratched by something. The sump-pump banging and the loose light bulb being mistaken as a ghost was just sad.
I think that's the one I was talking about earlier. What were their "conclusions" at the end? The promos seemed to scream "child abuse."
Miss Whiplash
18th May 2006, 06:56 AM
I think that's the one I was talking about earlier. What were their "conclusions" at the end? The promos seemed to scream "child abuse."
If I remember correctly, they told the woman to check the child's nails and keep them trimmed and be sure to check the crib for foreign objects. Again, common sense most people should possess without calling in "ghost hunters."
Beady
18th May 2006, 07:29 AM
Again, common sense most people should possess without calling in "ghost hunters."
And I thought 'Seinfeld' was supposed to be a show about nothing at all.
sat556
18th May 2006, 12:33 PM
I think that the problem can be that people want to think they have a haunted house.
I go into places, and can often tell within a short time that the banging is the heating system and the odd draughts are from a badly sealed window etc. Most of the time when I explain this, the owner starts with the "oh yes, but..." lines, and the story gets embellished over and over.
The only job I have ever refused was a woman who kept on about these orbs she had caught on video. She even showed me the tapes. Funny thing was they appeared more just after she had walked across the shot. She wouldn't have it that they were anything else but spooks, and got visibly annoyed when told the real cause, so I refused the job. What would have been the point in doing it? She knew that her house was haunted.
Dr B
18th May 2006, 12:39 PM
Why dont any of these so called ghost hunters ever look at the witnesses in detail (i.e., belief systems, biases, neurological factors, suggestion, expectation, perception, etc)....instead of wandering around a house. I always get the feeling they are looking in the wrong place!!!!
I know some good work has been done - but it is not on programmes like this!!!!
ExitDose
26th May 2006, 09:55 AM
On their "best of" episode, that aired recently, there was a disturbing scene where they played an EVP for a distraught homeowner. The woman broke down in tears in response to what she thought the voice of the "ghost" was saying. Her face showed a mixture of sadness and anxiety. They made no mention of how suspect this technique is. They made no mention that, even if a tape or digital recorder could record the voices of dead people, they take no countermeasures to control any possible environmental contamination of the audio; which might give false positives. Nor that there is no evidence which supports the supernatural interpretation of the phenomena.
They helped make this poor woman more uncomfortable with her home armed only with the flimsiest of rationales. For that, they are awful, awful people.
sat556
26th May 2006, 10:28 AM
Why dont any of these so called ghost hunters ever look at the witnesses in detail (i.e., belief systems, biases, neurological factors, suggestion, expectation, perception, etc)....instead of wandering around a house. I always get the feeling they are looking in the wrong place!!!!
I know some good work has been done - but it is not on programmes like this!!!!
Well it's not going to make interesting telly. I know a lot of ghost hunting groups, and not many of them do things like this. It just isn't of interest to them to do it, all they want is some photos of orbs and some speck of dust in front of the camcorder. Having said that, I don't do it all the time, as there just isn't the time to fit it in. We tend to do that kind of thing afterward from video tapes as much as we can.
If I were to make a tv show out of what I do, it wouldn't get past the pilot stage. It's just not entertaining. Who wants to see a couple of sceptics telling people that they are deluded? It'd be a one-off debunking show, and there are some of those already.
Psiload
26th May 2006, 10:43 AM
My interest was peaked when I first heard it claimed that the "Ghost Hunters" were supposedly a scientific investigative team.
Ten minutes into the one(and only) show I watched and I see dowsing rods and a demonologist. :rolleyes:
Thank you. Please drive through.
Anti_Hypeman
26th May 2006, 10:53 AM
I saw the first season and it boggles the mind that there is a second one. The best evidence after the entire season was the sound guy falling on his booty.
They lost all credibility when they brought in a reki master and a wiccan with dowsing rods. Big shock her rods detected the same spots as the EMF meter. A simple test would have proven her dowsing powers beforehand, how do they know she was a real wiccan?
They make the assumption that ghosts create EMFs. Sorry guys I need more dots connected than that. Show me proof that ghosts create EMFs before you use EMFs as proof of ghosts.
sat556
26th May 2006, 11:07 AM
They make the assumption that ghosts create EMFs. Sorry guys I need more dots connected than that. Show me proof that ghosts create EMFs before you use EMFs as proof of ghosts.
I hate to say it but... I heard an interview with one of the investigators from this program, and he was saying that they use EMF meters because of the Persinger experiments.
Maybe they have changed their tune of late.
Miss Whiplash
26th May 2006, 11:41 AM
I hate to say it but... I heard an interview with one of the investigators from this program, and he was saying that they use EMF meters because of the Persinger experiments.
Maybe they have changed their tune of late.
Please explain. I'm not familiar with that. I can always use information. :)
The biggest evidence of flim-flam with Ghosthunters is their association with Ed and Lorriane Warren and the Warren's crowd of "Demonologists." I was booted from the Ghosthunter's website discussion for daring to bring this up. My question was: "If TAPS is a 'scientific' ghost hunting group, why are they using quaisi-relgious notions like 'demonology?'" Cyber-vases were hurled immedately and I was called a "sad, empty, atheist skeptic" among other things.
ExitDose
26th May 2006, 11:43 AM
I find it comical that they constantly parrot the idea that ghosts draw on the ambient electricity in order to manifest, yet the first thing they do is to cut off the power in the area under investigation. :confused:
The most depressing thing I've heard on the show was when one of their investigators said that the only book he had ever read was The Parapsychologist's Handbook. I don't know whether to laugh or cry.
Meffy
26th May 2006, 12:16 PM
The idea of a captive ghost -- used purely for scientific instrument calibration, of course! -- interests me. Since ghosts can pass through ordinary solid walls, I recommend constructing the ectoplasmic containment vessel of mime walls. You know, the invisble ones mimes push against with their hands. Those ought to work fine.
Miss Whiplash
26th May 2006, 12:22 PM
The most depressing thing I've heard on the show was when one of their investigators said that the only book he had ever read was The Parapsychologist's Handbook. I don't know whether to laugh or cry.
Do you have a link? Is this the same book Rosemary Ellen Guiley is gushing about on Amazon?
ExitDose
26th May 2006, 12:46 PM
Do you have a link? Is this the same book Rosemary Ellen Guiley is gushing about on Amazon?
I have no idea. The guy with the tattood arms(Brian?) was the one who said it. I believe they were investigating a library at the time.
Beady
26th May 2006, 12:48 PM
The most depressing thing I've heard on the show was when one of their investigators said that the only book he had ever read was The Parapsychologist's Handbook. I don't know whether to laugh or cry.
There's no functional difference between the man who won't read and the man who can't read.
Miss Whiplash
26th May 2006, 01:11 PM
I have no idea. The guy with the tattood arms(Brian?) was the one who said it. I believe they were investigating a library at the time.
I remember it now. He said reading was "boring" or something along that line. It was quite sad!
talldave
26th May 2006, 02:10 PM
After a friend told me about the show, I decided to take a look to see if I could use it for my Science and Nonsense class.
The thing I found most troubling was the use of pranks. If they are known to do pranks every once in a while, then if they are ever caught faking then they can just play it off as another one of those pranks. To me, that was the icing on the complete-lack-of-credibility cake.
While watching I had in my mind the question "how easy would this be to fake?", the answer I had in every case was "pretty damn easy".
-David
ExitDose
26th May 2006, 03:42 PM
The biggest evidence of flim-flam with Ghosthunters is their association with Ed and Lorriane Warren and the Warren's crowd of "Demonologists." I was booted from the Ghosthunter's website discussion for daring to bring this up. My question was: "If TAPS is a 'scientific' ghost hunting group, why are they using quaisi-relgious notions like 'demonology?'" Cyber-vases were hurled immedately and I was called a "sad, empty, atheist skeptic" among other things.
Are they associated with the Warrens? I seem to remember them suggesting that they weren't reputable in one of the episodes. Winchester Mansion?
The TAPS forum is one of the most painful experiences I've ever had on the internet. I recall arguing with someone who claimed the government was covering up the existence of Bigfoot. That place isn't pretty.
Miss Whiplash
26th May 2006, 05:22 PM
Are they associated with the Warrens? I seem to remember them suggesting that they weren't reputable in one of the episodes. Winchester Mansion?
John Zaffis is Ed Warren's nephew. He was in on a couple of investigations. TAPS also investigated one house previously investigated by the Warren's.
John Zaffis (http://www.johnzaffisparanormalmuseum.com/)
TAPS does have a resident demonologists Carl and Keith Johnson.
The TAPS forum is one of the most painful experiences I've ever had on the internet. I recall arguing with someone who claimed the government was covering up the existence of Bigfoot. That place isn't pretty.
The most painful for me was my very short association with the area "TAPS Family" ghost hunters. After debunking several very bad photographs from the hysterically gullible, I recieved one from a mother who had lost a child in an accident. Before the child died, a picture was taken in a smokey room. Some fans of the show and self proclaimed psychics saw an "angel" in the illuminated smoke and pronounced it as a "sign that the girl was now in the arms of angels." The mother asked my opinion. Of course I told her it was nothing but the flash illuminating passing smoke from candles in the foreground. The woman thanked me for being honest and regretted listening to the "ghost busters" in the first place. I could tell it brought back painful memories of losing her daughter.
What I can't stand about these self proclaimed paranormal investigators is they forget they are using, and many times hurting other people, while attemping to support their pet pseudoscience. While they are running willy-nilly with EMF meters and digital cameras, they scare the gullible out of their homes and prolong grieving of those who have lost someone dear. Fortunately for the world, a few days after this incident, this group of ghost hunters self destructed over some childish in-fighting.
Meffy
26th May 2006, 07:07 PM
I could tell it brought back painful memories of losing her daughter.
Like you, I get very angry at people who use others' grief to promote their hobby-horses. But in this case I think the important thing is that you were able to dispel the sick illusion, or masquerade, they used to manipulate this woman. Or help to dispel it. Sounds as if she had doubts but her understandable desperation overrode it.
Dr B
28th May 2006, 05:28 AM
The EMF thing is one of the biggest misunderstandings going around. There is NO evidence for a link between EMFs and the reality of apparitions as an external entity.
The evidence suggests that anomalous or complex EMFs can, under some circumstances, induce sympathetic shifts in nerual activity of susceptible individuals - this can result in misperceptions of ambiguous stimuli or hallucination.
Why do woo's struggle with this rather simple distinction? The theory is a natural one - not a supernatural one.
ExitDose
30th May 2006, 04:05 PM
John Zaffis is Ed Warren's nephew. He was in on a couple of investigations. TAPS also investigated one house previously investigated by the Warren's.
TAPS does have a resident demonologists Carl and Keith Johnson.
The most painful for me was my very short association with the area "TAPS Family" ghost hunters. After debunking several very bad photographs from the hysterically gullible, I recieved one from a mother who had lost a child in an accident. Before the child died, a picture was taken in a smokey room. Some fans of the show and self proclaimed psychics saw an "angel" in the illuminated smoke and pronounced it as a "sign that the girl was now in the arms of angels." The mother asked my opinion. Of course I told her it was nothing but the flash illuminating passing smoke from candles in the foreground. The woman thanked me for being honest and regretted listening to the "ghost busters" in the first place. I could tell it brought back painful memories of losing her daughter.
What I can't stand about these self proclaimed paranormal investigators is they forget they are using, and many times hurting other people, while attemping to support their pet pseudoscience. While they are running willy-nilly with EMF meters and digital cameras, they scare the gullible out of their homes and prolong grieving of those who have lost someone dear. Fortunately for the world, a few days after this incident, this group of ghost hunters self destructed over some childish in-fighting.
I wasn't trying to imply that TAPS has any credibility, just that I was confused about their being associated with the Warrens. As, in the episode where they visit the house the Warrens had investigated, they react to the mention of the Warrens in a derisive manner. A falling out perhaps? I didn't know about Zaffis's connection to the group, but it doesn't surprise me.
I agree about the "TAPS family" members as well. Conversations with members of those groups support everything you experienced. The defense they seem to jump to is that they aren't there to research, but instead to aid those in distress. Of course I've seen nothing to indicate that they succeed on that account either; unless you count reinforcing someone's fears as giving comfort.
I find it funny that many on that board are willing to accept the honesty of TAPS's two lead investigators even though they have refused to discuss the events that lead them to start the group. Something is fishy there.
Soapy Sam
30th May 2006, 04:29 PM
Any honest psychical investigator (and they do exist) will tell you that many- very many of the people involved with "hauntings" are profoundly disturbed people.
Before a ghosthunter is called in , the caller must be pretty well convinced something odd is going on.
I expect most regulars on this forum would tear their plumbing , wiring and walls apart to find the source of an odd smell, noise or vibration , long before the idea of a haunting would even occur to them.
Right & proper.
Victims of "hauntings" tend to be quite different people.
Often there is discord within a family, but it is being frantically ignored and covered up. Accepting that your daughter is mentally disturbed, living out odd fantasies and lying about it takes guts. Sometimes it's easier to hope it's a ghost stealing the money from your purse. You wouldn't believe the justifications- The ghost is giving it to charity, because he died a lonely miser.
Ghosts, if they exist at all, are rare phenomena. Frightened people in denial are everywhere.
rustytunes
30th May 2006, 05:39 PM
And now we have people selling "ghost hunter kits", with complete kits consisting of:
Air Ion Counter
Barometer
Candles and Matches
Camera
Compass
Digital Recorder
Dowsing Rods
EMF Detector
Flash Lights
Ghost Catcher (AKA Spirit Wind Chime)
Headset Communications
Hygrometer
Infrared Thermal Scanner
Motion Detectors
Night Vision Equipment
Night Vision Video Camera
Thermal Imaging Scopes
Thermometer
Video Camera
Walkie-Talkies
Everything the budding ghost hunter (sucker) needs!
Miss Whiplash
31st May 2006, 05:15 AM
I wasn't trying to imply that TAPS has any credibility, just that I was confused about their being associated with the Warrens. As, in the episode where they visit the house the Warrens had investigated, they react to the mention of the Warrens in a derisive manner. A falling out perhaps? I didn't know about Zaffis's connection to the group, but it doesn't surprise me.
Oh, I didn't think you were implying any credibility. I was just dissemimateing general information about Zafis. BTW- He has assumed the work of Ed Warren and is now the keeper of the "Occult Museum of Possessed Objects." Warren suffered a stroke two years ago and is more or less brain dead. Watch for Zafis to carry on the woo.
Dr B
31st May 2006, 08:10 AM
The idea of all this equipment is worrying. It kind of makes people think and feel as if what they are doing is scientific - when in fact the underlying logic (assuming there is some) is flawed.
However, the magnetic fields / strange experience link is worth persuing as the lab evidence is interesting. A project I have been involved in might be of use to those interested. Please see....
http://www.apaw71.dsl.pipex.com/MADS/index.html
We have, in some cases found quite large distortions and complex magnetic fields - but they are always where the observer was at the time of the experience (i.e., in a position with which to influence there brain / perceptions / cognition). They are NEVER (based on the evidence so far) - located where the observer claims the anomaly (i.e., an apparition, sound, etc) was actually located.
Check out the website - I hope you agree it is at least an approach with merit rather than all these silly buggers running around with meters galore looking for ghosts!!!!:eek:
Beady
31st May 2006, 08:45 AM
The idea of all this equipment is worrying.
I dunno. I think I may ask the wife for an infrared thermal scanner for Christmas.
My second choice is a RoboSapien.
Kochanski
31st May 2006, 11:00 AM
I refuse to watch that show at all. The commercials for it are such hype and then Sci Fi has to annoy us during Doctor Who with not only commercials for this nonsense, but those pop-ups on screen take up the bottom third of the screen and interfere with my enjoyment of the show I want to watch. Nope, they couldn't pay me to watch it.
Miss Whiplash
31st May 2006, 12:15 PM
Wind chimes are "Ghost Catchers"? Well, you learn something new everyday. At least bottle trees were immovable. :rolleyes:
Is this the ghost hunter store (http://www.paranormality.com/ghost_hunting_equipment.shtml)?
Beady
31st May 2006, 12:33 PM
There's an awful lot of electronic stuff, including communications gear. Now, if ghosts are supposed to disrupt the local magnetic/electrical field...?
:confused:
Miss Whiplash
31st May 2006, 12:48 PM
As they are supposed to drain batteries to manifest, with all that gadgety it should be simple. And why can't they just speak over the communications gear directly instead of through tape hiss. One should be able to turn on a walkie-talkie in a haunted house and hear things like:
"Hey! Move! You're standing in the middle of me!"
"I told you I was sick...."
"Tell my wife I'm really raising hell!"
:D
Meffy
31st May 2006, 01:02 PM
:-D How about...
"Hey, who's that? Are you from the world of the living? I'm getting an 'M'..."
sat556
31st May 2006, 03:11 PM
I am often disliked by the people we do jobs for due to the fact that I will not say they have a ghost, and come out with all sorts of babble to show what could be the cause instead of it being the undead. My partner in all this is somewhat less vocal in her objections. The place owners usually like her a lot :D.
Although we have a lot of the standard 'ghost busting' kit, it rarely gets used in what we think is a 'decent' case. That is tackled by setting up video and audio all over the building. That's going to be the only way we can tell if there are such things as spooks surely? To catch one on a recording medium (no pun).
It's no use saying the EM meter beeped, unless it's for a datbase of course, and it's no good telling people that they have some gadget giving off infrasound if they just don't want to hear that.
Mostly I feel that people who ask us in to investigate just want to feel like they are in an episode of Most Haunted, and they find out that's nothing at all like what happens. It's impossible to tell what is genuinely suspected to be a haunting, and what is just an interest.
Dr B
1st June 2006, 08:31 AM
all true, but the best bits of kit are a working brain and quesitoning mind. Couple this to a specific research question, logic, reason and a quest for understanding and we are all on to a winner....:D
ExitDose
1st June 2006, 12:20 PM
Wind chimes are "Ghost Catchers"? Well, you learn something new everyday. At least bottle trees were immovable. :rolleyes:
Is this the ghost hunter store?
I wonder what the mark-up is at a place like that.
ExitDose
1st June 2006, 12:26 PM
As they are supposed to drain batteries to manifest, with all that gadgety it should be simple. And why can't they just speak over the communications gear directly instead of through tape hiss. One should be able to turn on a walkie-talkie in a haunted house and hear things like:
I find the battery drain "evidence" comical. As someone that spent several years working with film and video equipment, I can't think of a more unreliable measure than the power levels of rechargable batteries. I've had countless batteries that were supposedly fully charged that lost power inexplicably and we weren't anywhere reputed to be haunted. Rechargable batteries are fickle and prone to breaking. Which is why most video crews bring more than they'll need. They crap out easily.
Kiwiwriter
1st June 2006, 12:40 PM
Every time I hear abuot these guys in real life, the music starts bouncing around my head.
After those movies, I just can't take them seriously. Sigourney Weaver I can take seriously, but for different reasons.
By the way, the sign from the second movie is inside the firehouse on Varick Street in New York. The area is not a "demilitarized zone." It's the exit from the Holland Tunnel, a portion of Soho, and the police mounted unit is across the street. It's a pretty dull, albeit noisy, neighborhood.
demonologist
5th June 2006, 10:01 AM
Anyone here see last week's episode? Most of the evidence wasn't very good except for two things that happened.
1) a glass broke in the middle of the night. a camera was on the bed and nightstand so interference is unlikely.
2) a door shuts. here it is plausible that someone did this, but still a bit unlikely. The camera was located on the nightstand pointed at the door. the bed blocked view of the bottom of the door, so it is possible for someone to crawl on the ground and shut the door without the camera seeing it. however the lead investigator named Jason showed that the door wouldn't shut without turning the knob. seems to rule out wind and a hoaxer.
any ideas what happened here?
sat556
5th June 2006, 10:36 AM
Apperently you cannot see red string in night vision. Was this in night vision?
I have a fab video of a chair moving along the side of a bed, apparently by itself. It is plausible that someone did this, and very likely...
demonologist
5th June 2006, 11:07 AM
it wasn't night vision. regular camera as far as I could tell.
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