PODCAST · fiction
Stuff That Scares Me
by Wallace
Some places feel wrong after dark.Stuff That Scares Me is a horror storytelling podcast focused on Appalachian dread, wilderness encounters, strange folklore, and the kinds of things people whisper about after midnight — things seen in the tree line, heard outside the firelight, or followed home from the mountains.Wallace Cole has been collecting these stories for a long time. Some of them he wishes he hadn't found.Told in a grounded, immersive style that blends supernatural horror, isolation, realism, and oral storytelling traditions, these are stories designed for long drives, dark rooms, and lonely nights.Not every story is about monsters.Some are about realizing the world is stranger than you thought.New stories weekly.
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Four Nights at the Stanley Hotel. The Bathroom Light Was On (I'd Turned It Off). (Ep. 2 of 3)
The bathroom light was on. I had turned it off before I went to bed. I know that the way I know my own name. I've turned off the bathroom light in a thousand hotel rooms across this country. It was on. And it was moving. Night Two at the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, Colorado. Six guests in the entire building. Off-season. The week before partial winter closure. In Episode One, I gave every strange thing that happened a reasonable explanation. The notebook. The shoes. The sound in the hall. Night Two, the explanations started coming harder. In this episode: what a maintenance worker wrote in 1962 and then filed away and never mentioned again. A chef who won't go into his own basement after ten o'clock. A housekeeper who watched someone disappear from a fourth-floor corridor — and finished her shift anyway. A room that had been empty all week. And what happened at 2:17 in the morning when I finally ran out of reasonable things to tell myself. I'm not a ghost hunter. I don't perform fear for an audience. I'm an investigator who goes to places that have things wrong with them and tries to explain what's there. Night Two at the Stanley, I couldn't find the right explanation. Episode Three drops soon. Subscribe so you don't miss it. This episode is a work of narrative horror inspired by the history, folklore, and public reputation of the Stanley Hotel. Certain characters, conversations, events, and experiences have been fictionalized or dramatized for entertainment purposes.
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The Hollow They Left Off The Map (Appalachian Horror Story)
Some land gets sold. Some land gets inherited. Some land gets fought over in court for years.And some land — nobody claims. Not because it's worthless. Because something won't allow it.In Monroe County, West Virginia, a property dispute over an unnamed hollow leads a land surveyor deep into terrain that doesn't appear on any official map. The trail cameras keep losing their SD cards. The soil keeps losing its tracks. And the county records keep losing something far more important.This isn't a ghost story. There's no haunted house. No cursed object.Just a hollow that has been deliberately left off every map, deed, and survey since 1798.And a question that surveyors have been asking — and never answering — for over two centuries:Who owns it? Or... what?Enjoyed this one? ⭐ Leave a rating on Apple Podcasts — it takes 10 seconds and helps more listeners find the show. 🔔 Follow on Spotify so new episodes land automatically. 📩 Share this episode with one person who sleeps with the lights on.We read every review. Every single one.
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I Spent Four Nights at the Stanley Hotel. Here's What Happened. (Ep. 1 of 3)
The Stanley Hotel inspired Stephen King's The Shining. Stephen King stayed in Room 217 and left with a nightmare that became a novel. Jim Carrey stayed in Room 217 and left in the middle of the night — and has never said why.I stayed four nights. Off-season. Mostly alone.This is Episode 1 — Nights One and Two. The staff said things. The hotel said things. Some of it I can explain.Some of it I can't.Stuff That Scares Me is hosted by Wallace Cole — raised in haunted Appalachia, where the old folks knew things they wouldn't say out loud. This episode is a work of narrative horror inspired by the history, folklore, and public reputation of the Stanley Hotel. Certain characters, conversations, events, and experiences have been fictionalized or dramatized for entertainment purposes.
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Something Tried to Get In | Wilderness Horror in West Virginia
A search team spent the night in an abandoned fire-watch cabin above Cranberry Wilderness — West Virginia, December 1987. (Based on a True Story)Something circled that cabin for hours.It hit the door twice, hard enough to bow the wood inward. It breathed through the gaps. It dragged something slowly along the outside wall, from one end to the other, the way you drag something when you want the sound to carry. Feel the cold. Feel the dark. Feel the walls shaking. In this episode Wallace Cole presents the account of Eddie Mercer — experienced tracker, seasoned back-country man — who spent a night in an abandoned West Virginia fire-watch cabin that he has never been able to fully leave behind. A blizzard. A search team. Something outside that circled for hours, hit the door hard enough to bow the wood, and its frosty, stinking breath came through the gaps when the hitting stopped. They never found the hunter they went in for. He was recovered the following spring, two ridges over. The official cause of death was "exposure." If you enjoy Appalachian horror, wilderness encounters, dark folklore, and immersive narrated storytelling — follow Stuff That Scares Me for new episodes weekly. Listen on your favorite podcast platform and follow the channel on YouTube: @StuffThatScaresMe
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DYATLOV PASS — The Horrifying Theory That Remains (Episode 3)
Nine experienced hikers fled their tent barefoot into the snow.In Episode Three of Stuff That Scares Me, Wallace Cole reconstructs the final hours of the DYATLOV PASS incident and presents the conclusion he believes the evidence requires.This episode explores:What likely happened inside the tent on the night of February 1st, 1959Why the hikers cut through the walls instead of using the doorThe meaning of the footprints leading into the tree lineThe significance of the cedar tree and the ravineThe forensic reality of compressive crush injuries without external traumaThe Mansee accounts of the Menk and why similar descriptions appear across cultures worldwideThe unexplained radiation found on specific garmentsWhy the official investigation may have reached a conclusion they dared not openly stateBy the end of this episode, Wallace Cole presents the only explanation that holds up under all of the evidence. Something came to the tent.If you enjoy wilderness horror, unexplained encounters, dark folklore, cryptid mysteries, and immersive narrated storytelling, be sure to follow Stuff That Scares Me for new episodes weekly.Listen on your favorite podcast platform and follow the channel on YouTube:@StuffThatScaresMe
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DYATLOV PASS — They Ran From... Something (Episode 2 of 3)
What could make nine experienced mountaineers cut their way out of a tent and run barefoot into the snow? In Episode Two of Stuff That Scares Me, Wallace Cole examines the competing explanations behind the DYATLOV PASS incident — avalanche, military testing, infrasound, radiation exposure, and more — and tests each theory against the actual evidence left behind on Dead Mountain. This episode explores:Why the avalanche theory breaks down under the footprint evidenceThe strange injury patterns that forensic examiners said could not have been caused by another human beingThe unexplained radiation found on specific garmentsWhy the hikers’ behavior does not fit panic aloneThe Mansee accounts of something living in the mountainsThe possibility that the official explanation failed because investigators ran out of categories By the end of this episode, the conventional explanations are gone. The one that remains will haunt you.🎧 Follow Stuff That Scares Me for new episodes weekly.📺 Watch and listen on YouTube: @StuffThatScaresMe
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DYATLOV PASS — What Chased Them Into the Frozen Night? (Episode 1 of 3)
Nine experienced hikers entered the northern Ural Mountains in February of 1959. None of them came back. Their tent was cut open from the inside. Their bodies were found scattered across the snow — some barefoot, some with catastrophic internal injuries, and all under circumstances that investigators could never fully explain. In Episode One of Stuff That Scares Me, Wallace Cole begins a deep investigation into the DYATLOV PASS incident — one of the most disturbing wilderness mysteries ever recorded. This episode examines:The hikers themselves and why they were highly unlikely to panic The decision to camp on the exposed slope of “Dead Mountain” The strange condition of the tent and the footprints leading into the dark The unexplained injuries, radiation findings, and missing evidence Why the official explanation still leaves major questions unansweredThis is Episode One: The Event. Episode Two will examine the competing explanations — avalanche, military testing, infrasound, and more — and test them against the actual evidence. (Spoiler alert: Only one theory holds.)Follow Stuff That Scares Me for new episodes weekly (or more often). 📺 Watch and listen on YouTube: @StuffThatScaresMe
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Some places feel wrong after dark.Stuff That Scares Me is a horror storytelling podcast focused on Appalachian dread, wilderness encounters, strange folklore, and the kinds of things people whisper about after midnight — things seen in the tree line, heard outside the firelight, or followed home from the mountains.Wallace Cole has been collecting these stories for a long time. Some of them he wishes he hadn't found.Told in a grounded, immersive style that blends supernatural horror, isolation, realism, and oral storytelling traditions, these are stories designed for long drives, dark rooms, and lonely nights.Not every story is about monsters.Some are about realizing the world is stranger than you thought.New stories weekly.
HOSTED BY
Wallace
CATEGORIES
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