Zozo Demon: The Evil Spirit Allegedly Conjured By Ouija Boards Denver Post via Getty ImagesThe story of the Zozo Demon went viral in 2009 after someone described their experience with a Ouija board, but this story may be much older.
Some people buy Ouija boards in hopes of communicating with spirits. But Darren Evans allegedly got more than he bargained for when he used one in 2009 — and allegedly found himself communicating with a demon.
The Lives Of Real Vampires In Our Modern World Maven LoreMaven Lore identifies as a vampire and is king of the New Orleans’ vampire court.
While it’s not all that shocking that the past is full of stories of vampires, it may surprise some that at least 5,000 people identify as vampires in the United States (at least as of 2015).
These people are not undead or particularly violent, but they do have vampiristic tendencies.
Found dead in his Munich apartment on September 18, 1931, Geli Raubal was Adolf Hitler's niece who many historians believe had a romantic relationship with the Führer.On September 19, 1931, a woman named Geli Raubal was found dead in Munich, Germany. She was discovered in her bedroom in a pool of her own blood with a gunshot wound to the chest, the pistol that did it lying on the ground beside her.
Failed Products: Heinz EZ Squirt Colored Ketchup Image Source: imgarcade.com
In 2000, Heinz decided that the red color of ketchup was too boring and introduced colored ketchup in the EZ Squirt bottle. The ketchup came in Blastin’ Green, Funky Purple, Stellar Blue, Passion Pink, and Mystery Color. Heinz first came out with green ketchup. Kids were excited by it and Heinz had initial success. But in the end, children aren’t the ones buying products.
The skeletons showed signs of osteomyelitis variolosa, a bone infection that is triggered by the smallpox virus, which was brought to the region by Spanish colonizers.Gabriel Prieto/Huanchaco Archaeological ProgramArchaeologists exhume remains from the early colonial cemetery in Huanchaco, Peru.
Researchers studying human remains at a 16th-century cemetery in Huanchaco, Peru, recently stumbled upon the skeletons of two Inca toddlers who seemingly died from smallpox.
The children’s bones showed evidence of osteomyelitis variolosa, a bone infection triggered by the smallpox virus, which was brought to the region by Spanish colonizers.