The woman at the Hollywood sign is something we have heard about here in California. There was a scary story about it on TV years ago where some show interviewed these people that went up at the HW sign at night and claimed they were chased by this apparition. Wish I could remember the name of the show. It was pretty creepy what they claimed happened to them. Seemed genuine.
@@jahnj2523 Very. Being a shapeshifter is one thing, but in order to shape shift into another human form, don't you need to murder a blood family member?
@@jahnj2523 I had a Navajo friend and I brought up skin walkers with her. It was if her blood turned cold and she said do not talk about them. I think she was a believer.
I'm not saying that Area 51 doesn't exist and I'm not saying there is nothing going on in that facility.. I am saying that the stories around Area 51 is more of a conspiracy theory than an urban legend..
The ones from Louisiana are really creepy 😱. Check out the legend of Julia Brown who sang a curse from her front porch that destroyed an entire town. "One day, I will die and I will take the whole town with me." A hurricane decimated that town during her funeral and they never successfully built it back. She and the townspeople were put in a mass grave in Manchac Swamp that goes by her house and they haunt it with albino alligators and her chanting her curse from her porch. Yikes!!!
@@kzizzles8329 yes I guess I should have specified that North American history not actual American that is thought of today. Since wendigos can be traced to Canada as well.
It comes from having so much land that you can just pretend things live out in the wilderness and people will just believe it because they can't check everywhere. Like bigfoot.
I am American im 33, And I've never heard of any of these but I Would love to see you do a video on North American cryptids. like bigfoot, Skinwalkers, the Jersey devil, Windegos, mothman and thunder birds.!!
British urban legends are so old ... they have become "folklore" and "mythology", lol. Peg Entwhistle really did jump off the Hollywood sign though. That's not a myth or legend, she really did die. There are chain link fences and gates blocking the way to the sign now to stop people from investigating the haunting or emulating her. You should read the forward for The Mothman Prophecies by John Keel. He actually talks about how myths and urban legends begin in small towns.
@Not Me Not to be rude but that doesn't explain anything at all. We don't have these crazy ideas of bigfoots and dwarves from thousands of years ago. Usually we can pinpoint when cultures adopt these ideas. Many times when different cultures have similar ideas they were developed independently much more recently than you think. For example europeans have idea of goblins. Japanese have sort of a goblin creature called tengu. Does that mean they kept that idea of goblin things from their ancestors thousands of years ago? No it's just a coincidence. These ideas develop independently.
@Not Me No stories don't last thousands of years orally. Simply untrue. An extreme game of telephone. Yes they do pop up out of "nowhere". Dragons don't exist either. People weren't fighting flying lizards 20 thousand years ago. It's a product of a collective fear that humans share. From the dragons of Europe and asia the the feathered serpents of the americas. They were never real.
@@BenJover @Not Me You both make good points. However, it's important to note that human imagination also factors into myth making. It's reasonable to believe that humans of the past made up stories in the past the same way we make them now - taking some inspiration from the past or ideas of the day and extrapolating further to make something new and entertaining. In regard to Bigfoot, I honestly suspect this is a real animal that has yet to be classified. Native peoples in North America and Asia have experienced these creatures over centuries and have pervasive stories about them.
@@illibrium4590 There is no evidence. All the hair samples are human, dog even doll hair. No unidentified primates. No bones. No real tracks. Not even an understanding of what these massive things would be eating to maintain their mass. They obviously aren't taking advantage of salmon runs like bears do lol. People literally try to explain away the lack of any real evidence as a product of bigfoots being aliens or supernatural beings.
A Native American legend is the Skinwalkers and in Tennessee we have the legend of the Bell Witch. I read the legend of the Bell Witch when I was younger and it scared the bejewels out of me.
South Carolina is pretty boring when you think about it. Best I got is my town Indian Land. It was built on well, Indian's land. Surprised its not haunted.
@@lonelyronin2428 It would only be haunted if it was a burial site. At least, that's what the legend is in Montana. If you find tipi circles and stones laid out in an orderly fashion, you're supposed to stay away if you're not Native American
I've always heard the goat man was a demon, which are capable of mimicking other people's voices. I've had experiences with no one being in my grandmother's house and the voice of someone that wasn't there would call my name, I never answered yes tho. I always would say "is there somebody there?" or that "they aren't here right now"
You need to looks at Mexico’s folklore! Edit(To the people mentioning folklore from other countries, please leave some recommendations I can look at! You have peaked my interest and now I’m invested.😂)
I can handle American legends. Everyone else's, I freak out. Nearly all of Japan's monsters will kill you in some way, Mexico's got a a salty woman who drowns kids, alongside a whistling guy who steals bones. Chinese myths, lots of dying. Norse myths, battles, death and some form of being gutted. Greece myths, just copious rape and incest. What can I say, im kind of a wuss.
I love when you do reactions like this. We get to learn along with you! I'm in Alaska, and we have our share of urban legends, including the lake my grandparents lived across from my entire life. And, YES! Please do the creepiest urban legends from each state!
The bus to nowhere sounds more benevolent than evil, you get to sit there and recover from your problems till you're ready to face the world again. Sign me up.
Omg yess especially in the hill countryside of Texas I used to always go to flyingL ranch as a kid and they’d take all the little kids to the ghost town and we’d just hang around the old 18th century ghost town and wen it got dark we often told story’s from all sides of Texas😭I miss it not the part Wer my friends locked me in an old jail cell in that town tho😭😭too scarryyyy
Well, you guys do have the free gun carry law, and the most executions of any state. Explains why my mom dislikes the state, besides the racism and really bad heat. Her cds melted in her car.
@@lonelyronin2428 I don't there currently..I do plan on getting back by next month. I have experienced racism as a blk man in south Texas....Oh yeah all my CD's melted in my car from the heat.
Drowning the kids because they didn’t want to see them starve makes me feel things because ofc they didn’t do with mal intent and they want to stop their future suffering. Idk it just makes me feel weird 💀
I agree. At first, it sounds horrific and you wonder how anyone could do something like that. Once you think about it, it makes sense. Drowning is much better than starving to death. It's still horrible but it makes it a little bit easier to stomach. For me anyway...
We got tons of Urban legends man. Loads to get into. If you going down this spooky/supernatural path, i recommend some CreepyPasta stuff, it's both urban legend along with horror.
Hi I recently became a fan of your channel. I recommend trying the most amazing top 10. They have a bunch of creepy stories including urban legends from different countries.
This one is pretty local, but there's a spot in NC called "The devil's trampin' grounds". It's this weird circle in the middle of the woods, where no plants grow and the ground seems permanently scorched (like literally burned). Supposedly if you leave something or someone in the circle overnight it'll disappear, and it's said to be the place where the portal from hell opens whenever Satan needs to visit earth. So naturally, it's a great place for NC teens to go get drunk. Edit: spelling
My Town is known for the Clinton Road ghost truck. A mysterious Truck follows vehicles for the entirety of the Road until you reach the end, then it disappears.
Definitely should watch another one of these I recommend a video about urban legends from each state They didn’t even mention the top legends like the wendigo, Bigfoot, moth man, jersey devil, jackalope, skunk ape, etc
Another Urban Legend that is worth noting is The Dog Boy of Arkansas. The legend is about a man named Gerald Floyd Bettis who had a life full of violence. As a kid, he was a loner who didn’t have many friends. At home, he was a bit of a trickster and a brat. These small incidents began to get bigger as Gerald got older. Gerald grew a fascination in dogs. What he would do is kidnap dogs and experiment them in his parents’ basement. These experiments then began to get more violent as time went on. As a teenager, Gerald began to get into fights with his parents. Gerald would begin to win those fights as he got older. As an adult, Gerald weighed 300lbs and was 6’4” tall, dwarfing his elderly parents. This domination led to Gerald treating his parents like dogs. He trapped them in his parent’s attic and would rarely feed them. After years of this treatment, Gerald’s father then passed away. The death of his father is unknown, but many claim that he broke his neck when Gerald threw him down the stairs. Eventually, Gerald’s mother was able to seek help which eventually got her freedom from her son. Gerald then went into hiding, before being arrested by selling drugs. In 1989, Gerald died in prison from an overdose. Since his death, many claim that Gerald’s ghost haunts his parents’ house with many claiming his ghost to be in the form of a Dog-Human hybrid.
I used to live in Hollywood in the late 80's and worked at Sunset Ranch taking people on trail rides (horseback) past the Hollywood sign (on the far right of the sign near the D). Never saw any woman in white, but I have heard the story before. There's a creepy TV version of that story some young adults went up there at night and had an experience. I forget the name of the show, but if you find it watch it. Scary!
Heres a urban legend for yeah, this one is true. The Blue People of Troublesome Creek. It's more of a Kentucky legend but its decently popular in Indiana where I am from as well. Theres also the mellon heads but I am not aware of that being true.
I live in New Jersey. I've heard both. Then again, some news stands here do carry magazines that speak of "haunted locations" and various lore. Mellon Heads was spoken if on a TV show. I think it was called Monsters and Mysteries.
The petrified forest is interesting I'm glad people are not taking pieces away anymore. The book in the visitor center with the letters of people returning the rocks is creepy but pretty neat too. There are fences up and cameras around some of the trees to stop vandal's. At least when I went in 2007 there were.
Skin walkers, the Ozark howler, the Ozark yeti , thunder bird and so many others that weren't mentioned so yes you should do more of these. There's one from where I grew up war eagle and it's what war eagle mill was named after and it's a sad one for sure
Haven’t watched the vid yet, but some spooky legends from my portions of America: 1. In NJ there’s this thing commonly known as the Jersey Devil, not exactly scary anymore lol, but I think they say they live in like some.. pine woods or something lol don’t remember 2. There’s that handprint in the Jim Thorpe jail in PA
I grew up in Capitol Heights, MD (about 30 miles from Fairfax, VA) and definitely grew up on the Bunnyman story. I lived 2 blocks from a large wooded area that contained a long creek. As most urban legends are usually just ways to keep kids from going into dangerous areas the Bunnyman did its job a least until we were early teens. Depending on who was telling the story it was either the Bunnyman or the Chicken man.
Peg Entwhistle's story has an even more tragic twist. She was suicidal not just because of the bad review, but she was having trouble finding work. The day after she jumped, her letter arrived with a job offer. I've heard of half of these. The bus to nowhere was always a worrying one. Bunnyman Bridge and the Goatman were scarier. But if he wanted to go for the creepiest urban legends, he missed the Jersey Devil, the Rake, La Llorona, Mothman, and the school bus crash in Texas which resulted in the death of numerous children who now push your car over the railroad tracks.
Went to the overholser mansion in Oklahoma City today. It’s basically one of the first houses in the downtown Oklahoma City area. Still has the original furniture which was pretty cool. Sat in a chair that was made in 1670
There's still a ton more. The Snallyghaster. The Jersey Devil. Big Red. Wumpus Cat. Creek Wraith. Even a few that seem to come from lore in other countries. Otter, cat, spider, mantis, and wolf humanoids. Faceless ghosts, sirens, possessed dolls, and Hell hounds. I am curious to see your reaction to those.
If you're into narrated spooky stories with cool visuals, I'd recommend the Bedtime Stories youtube. They tend to be on the longer side, but definitely worth the time.
The bunny man was often told us all as kids. There are different forms of the story through different parts of the county but they all have the same basic version of a person dressed in a bunny suit and either an axe or a rope
I live right next to Fairfax county in Virginia and I only heard about the Bunny Man thing from a friend who doesn’t live in the area at all, after living here for more than 10 years. She want to visit the tunnel sometime when she’s here.🤦🏻♀️
You should check out missing 411. It's about the people who disappear in the national parks in America and are never found or are found in places that would be almost impossible for them to have gotten to. It is so bizarre. But they are real stories, not legends.
The first time I heard about water babies was when I went camping with friends on one of our large lakes on a reservation... I was creeped out all night and could barely sleep.. ha I’m in Reno, NV and it’s called pyramid lake about 40 min outside Reno.
I grew up in Fairfax County, that was NOT the Bunnyman Bridge. You have to go a couple hours west to get mountains like that. But everything else they said about the Bunnyman legend is accurate--a man wearing bunny ears really did throw a hatchet at a couple in a car, and the local legend really is how they described it.
We used to go to bunny man all the time in high school being on the train tracks at 3am is freaky as hell lol they actually have cops they’re on Halloween cause of all the people who go there & it’s in a residential neighborhood
3:08 In Cuba, during their dictatorship, entire families would drown themselves to escape from it. And now in Venezuela people are doing all kinds of sad and horrible things to deal with the situation (joining gangs, child prostitution, etc.)
Water babies? Knock knock road? The Grunch? The bunnyman? Shamans portal? The candy lady? I’m reacting with you. Guess I never heard of these because I’m not from nor ever lived in any of these states🤷♀️ Although, I’ve heard of the bus to nowhere. In the south suburbs of Chicago, we grew up with the legend of axeman’s (ax-man’s) bridge.
One of my friend’s room was built over a Native American burial site (was an added room) and he sees things all the time. Also try searching up American cryptids! Urban legends aren’t as scary
Hah! The Grunch creepy urban legend (5:13) is supposed to take place in New Orleans. The scenery begins with a raging Oregon river and then moves onto grasslands. Not a bayou in sight!😛
I was expecting to see Bigfoot or the Mothman. There are a few legends not tied to a specific place too, like the escaped homicidal maniac or the ghost girl hitchhiker. I’d only heard of about 3 of those on the list of 10 but maybe the others are more local legends like the bus to nowhere being a Phily legend. Interesting though. Do a reaction to the list of 25 by state please.
I’ve noticed that a lot of Urban Legends deal with drowning 😂 Also -my dad lives in Fairfax with my stepmom and stepsister :) -my cousins and aunts and uncles live in Dallas
Where's all the classics? Jersey Devil, Wendigos, Big Foot, the Mothman, etc
🤷🏻♀️ Right, I was waiting to hear one I’ve actually heard of
& the Rougarou.. i'm from Louisiana & i have never heard of the Grunch...
Wolfman
@@Asiandramafan043 yessss the rougarou!!! I’ve heard of the grunch, but that’s only a New Orleans urban legend. The rougarou is all of Louisiana
Because they're all real, duh.😏
I thought they'd mention Skinwalkers
What a scam
@DIEGO PEREZ GENIS Whats this in reference to? Sounds like a funny clip
@DIEGO PEREZ GENIS which
they're a folklore creature, not an urban legend.
nvm, I said this before I saw the first one, which was also native american folklore, not an urban legend.
I love how in this video they have no concept of geography.
Them: "In Virginia..."
Me: That's Mississippi
Hah! And the Grunch scenery 5:25 looks like a raging PNW river and he’s talking about New Orleans!😛
Kind of a shame he didn't mention the Jersey Devil, that one is pretty cool.
I thought that’d be in the top 5...
That gave me nightmares as a child.
The story of how the Jersey Devil came into being and the Devil's Pond where the Jersey Devil is said to have dived in.
Top 10 cryptids of USA sounds like a great idea for a video.
I’d expect the Blair witch, big foot, the moth man, skin walkers, wendigo, the crocodile in the sewers, even coyote. But none of these made it.😒
These are so wack lmao, I’ve never heard of any of these. The US has a lot of good urban legends but not a single one was mentioned
Skinwalkers
The woman at the Hollywood sign is something we have heard about here in California. There was a scary story about it on TV years ago where some show interviewed these people that went up at the HW sign at night and claimed they were chased by this apparition. Wish I could remember the name of the show. It was pretty creepy what they claimed happened to them. Seemed genuine.
My thoughts exactly loll...I was waiting for some of the good ones, then it ended
facts, skin walker ranch, sasquatch, Jersy devil, moth man, Chupacabra, ect. all definitely missed out on
@@elijahcreedon365
Whaaa? Such bs
U should react to skin walker ranch that shits crazy
It is
I was going to suggest that as well and the legend of the Bell Witch.
@@jahnj2523 Very. Being a shapeshifter is one thing, but in order to shape shift into another human form, don't you need to murder a blood family member?
@@Bob-jm8kl yes
@@jahnj2523 I had a Navajo friend and I brought up skin walkers with her. It was if her blood turned cold and she said do not talk about them. I think she was a believer.
im an American and I've never heard of any of these crazy but America is filled with urban legends, surprised they didn't mention area 51 though
Technically Area 51 is a conspiracy theory, i believe..
A51, Groom Lake exists. It's just the average person has no idea doesn't know what goes there.
I'm not saying that Area 51 doesn't exist and I'm not saying there is nothing going on in that facility.. I am saying that the stories around Area 51 is more of a conspiracy theory than an urban legend..
@Ashton Diring I can't remember, I watched some documentaries about Area 51, but i don't remember..
@Ashton Diring I figured, just poking a little fun at the wording. : )
The ghost part may be a legend, but Peg Enwhistle’s suicide is real.
More urban legends for America pls
The ones from Louisiana are really creepy 😱. Check out the legend of Julia Brown who sang a curse from her front porch that destroyed an entire town. "One day, I will die and I will take the whole town with me." A hurricane decimated that town during her funeral and they never successfully built it back. She and the townspeople were put in a mass grave in Manchac Swamp that goes by her house and they haunt it with albino alligators and her chanting her curse from her porch. Yikes!!!
Not sure I am a big fan of the urban legends but it would be cool to see a video on North American cryptids.
Highly recommend looking up wendigos and skin walkers the two scariest creatures/ urban legends in American history
Agreed, wendigos are beyond terrifying!
Those are both examples of pre-American folklore
@@kzizzles8329 yes I guess I should have specified that North American history not actual American that is thought of today. Since wendigos can be traced to Canada as well.
One of the only things I'm truly afraid of. Both scare me but are so interesting!
careful, american cryptids and legends are quite a deep rabbit hole indeed. love your work, its genuine
It comes from having so much land that you can just pretend things live out in the wilderness and people will just believe it because they can't check everywhere. Like bigfoot.
@@BenJover down south you don’t go too deep in the woods because of creatures and most importantly the forest people
@@eliezercohengoldberg1381 Creatures being real animals not bigfoots.
@@BenJover the only ones i believe are the ghost ones lol
@@wiztiny9910 Why believe ghosts? Those aren't real either. I blame religion for making people so comfortable with magical thinking lol
I am American im 33, And I've never heard of any of these but I Would love to see you do a video on North American cryptids. like bigfoot, Skinwalkers, the Jersey devil, Windegos, mothman and thunder birds.!!
I'm surprise the mothman wasn't on here
Me too - but Mothman may need his own video. A lot of stuff went down before the bridge did.
Me too.
You should check out the Goatman’s bridge Urban Legend , nice video btw 😃
Oh, I would love him to do the buzzfeed unsolved video of the Goatmans bridge.. they are hilarious..
Is that south of Denton? I went there with my sister.
@@Bob-jm8kl yes
British urban legends are so old ... they have become "folklore" and "mythology", lol. Peg Entwhistle really did jump off the Hollywood sign though. That's not a myth or legend, she really did die. There are chain link fences and gates blocking the way to the sign now to stop people from investigating the haunting or emulating her.
You should read the forward for The Mothman Prophecies by John Keel. He actually talks about how myths and urban legends begin in small towns.
@Not Me Not to be rude but that doesn't explain anything at all. We don't have these crazy ideas of bigfoots and dwarves from thousands of years ago. Usually we can pinpoint when cultures adopt these ideas. Many times when different cultures have similar ideas they were developed independently much more recently than you think. For example europeans have idea of goblins. Japanese have sort of a goblin creature called tengu. Does that mean they kept that idea of goblin things from their ancestors thousands of years ago? No it's just a coincidence. These ideas develop independently.
@Not Me No stories don't last thousands of years orally. Simply untrue. An extreme game of telephone. Yes they do pop up out of "nowhere". Dragons don't exist either. People weren't fighting flying lizards 20 thousand years ago. It's a product of a collective fear that humans share. From the dragons of Europe and asia the the feathered serpents of the americas. They were never real.
@Not Me Well I gave a reply but it looks youtube must have deleted it because I can't see it. Well that's annoying.
@@BenJover @Not Me You both make good points. However, it's important to note that human imagination also factors into myth making. It's reasonable to believe that humans of the past made up stories in the past the same way we make them now - taking some inspiration from the past or ideas of the day and extrapolating further to make something new and entertaining. In regard to Bigfoot, I honestly suspect this is a real animal that has yet to be classified. Native peoples in North America and Asia have experienced these creatures over centuries and have pervasive stories about them.
@@illibrium4590 There is no evidence. All the hair samples are human, dog even doll hair. No unidentified primates. No bones. No real tracks. Not even an understanding of what these massive things would be eating to maintain their mass. They obviously aren't taking advantage of salmon runs like bears do lol. People literally try to explain away the lack of any real evidence as a product of bigfoots being aliens or supernatural beings.
A Native American legend is the Skinwalkers and in Tennessee we have the legend of the Bell Witch. I read the legend of the Bell Witch when I was younger and it scared the bejewels out of me.
Sees creepy road:
Luca: “Ohhhhhh- this reminds me of shrek”
SoMeBoDy ONcE tOlD mE The WoRlD wAS goNnA r0lL mE
@@YESSIR-wy1fj i aint the sharpest tool in the shed
I think Spring-heeled Jack could be considered a British urban legend.
That's what I thought of too.
Yeah, check out creepiest urban legends from each state. That would be pretty cool honestly.
My states would probably be the Skinwalkers
South Carolina is pretty boring when you think about it. Best I got is my town Indian Land. It was built on well, Indian's land. Surprised its not haunted.
@@lonelyronin2428 It would only be haunted if it was a burial site. At least, that's what the legend is in Montana. If you find tipi circles and stones laid out in an orderly fashion, you're supposed to stay away if you're not Native American
I haven’t heard of any of these and I live in America
Nor have I.
Same
I've always heard the goat man was a demon, which are capable of mimicking other people's voices. I've had experiences with no one being in my grandmother's house and the voice of someone that wasn't there would call my name, I never answered yes tho. I always would say "is there somebody there?" or that "they aren't here right now"
Smart. Never answer yes. That applies to many situations.
Cropsey: The urban legend that turned out to be true. There is a documentary about it. Scary stuff. 😱
Also the Greenman of Pennsylvania, an urban legend that turned out to be real, as well. Just like Cropsey was for Staten Island, NY.
You can rent the documentary on Amazon Video.
@BlackSH0veldeath You will have to tell us what you think. It is free with commercials if you have Prime.
Surprised Skinwalker Ranch wasn’t on here. Guess that’s more of a conspiracy than an urban legend though.
The ranch, yes, but the legend of skinwalkers has been around for centuries.
@@bar5radass
People in Arizona have experienced them. They are utterly terrifying
@@fanamatakecick97 nah, they haven't
@@beardedbard6308
Skin walkers? Yea they do
@@fanamatakecick97 proof?
You need to looks at Mexico’s folklore!
Edit(To the people mentioning folklore from other countries, please leave some recommendations I can look at! You have peaked my interest and now I’m invested.😂)
And Japans...
@DIEGO PEREZ GENIS I know Just read/watch the ones from the Philippines
La llorona
@@arb7733 We got told that one as kids.
I can handle American legends. Everyone else's, I freak out. Nearly all of Japan's monsters will kill you in some way, Mexico's got a a salty woman who drowns kids, alongside a whistling guy who steals bones. Chinese myths, lots of dying. Norse myths, battles, death and some form of being gutted. Greece myths, just copious rape and incest. What can I say, im kind of a wuss.
You may not be an urban legend, Luca but, you are definitely a legend.
Awwwww
He will be one day.
Simp lol jk
WOW! I was not expecting Bunny Man Bridge to be on here! I'm from Manassas and live just a few miles from it.
I love when you do reactions like this. We get to learn along with you! I'm in Alaska, and we have our share of urban legends, including the lake my grandparents lived across from my entire life. And, YES! Please do the creepiest urban legends from each state!
Am I the only one bothered by the fact they focus on the wrong part of the map every time he introduces the next legend?
I think we all were and definitely annoying. I mean just get it right like I'm sure it's not that hard to look up which state is where on a map 🤔
The Peggy Entwhistle story was the only one I had heard before... out of those 10..... Mothman is a well known one and even has a movie about it....
I wanna see you do the urban legends of each state
I'm sorry but the way he pronounced Shoshone had me dead. It took me ten seconds to figure out who he was referring to 😂😂😂
The bus to nowhere sounds more benevolent than evil, you get to sit there and recover from your problems till you're ready to face the world again. Sign me up.
Yess I've been hoping for this.
Maybe some creepy sightings videos, too? I enjoy them a lot. Not ghost or paranormal, but cryptid or human.
San Antonio,Texas it's so many ghost stories there.
Omg yess especially in the hill countryside of Texas I used to always go to flyingL ranch as a kid and they’d take all the little kids to the ghost town and we’d just hang around the old 18th century ghost town and wen it got dark we often told story’s from all sides of Texas😭I miss it not the part Wer my friends locked me in an old jail cell in that town tho😭😭too scarryyyy
Well, you guys do have the free gun carry law, and the most executions of any state. Explains why my mom dislikes the state, besides the racism and really bad heat. Her cds melted in her car.
@@lonelyronin2428 I don't there currently..I do plan on getting back by next month. I have experienced racism as a blk man in south Texas....Oh yeah all my CD's melted in my car from the heat.
Drowning the kids because they didn’t want to see them starve makes me feel things because ofc they didn’t do with mal intent and they want to stop their future suffering. Idk it just makes me feel weird 💀
I agree. At first, it sounds horrific and you wonder how anyone could do something like that. Once you think about it, it makes sense. Drowning is much better than starving to death. It's still horrible but it makes it a little bit easier to stomach. For me anyway...
We got tons of Urban legends man. Loads to get into. If you going down this spooky/supernatural path, i recommend some CreepyPasta stuff, it's both urban legend along with horror.
You should find a video with an American narrating British urban legends.
Hi I recently became a fan of your channel. I recommend trying the most amazing top 10. They have a bunch of creepy stories including urban legends from different countries.
I've watched a lot of your videos, but this one made me subscribe. Keep it up!
This one is pretty local, but there's a spot in NC called "The devil's trampin' grounds". It's this weird circle in the middle of the woods, where no plants grow and the ground seems permanently scorched (like literally burned). Supposedly if you leave something or someone in the circle overnight it'll disappear, and it's said to be the place where the portal from hell opens whenever Satan needs to visit earth. So naturally, it's a great place for NC teens to go get drunk.
Edit: spelling
My Town is known for the Clinton Road ghost truck. A mysterious Truck follows vehicles for the entirety of the Road until you reach the end, then it disappears.
The Jersey Devil is one that freaks me out a lot
I saw the video suggested and was waiting for you to cover it
We had a goatman’s bridge in Denton, TX, where I went to university. Ghost adventures did an episode there.
Definitely should watch another one of these
I recommend a video about urban legends from each state
They didn’t even mention the top legends like the wendigo, Bigfoot, moth man, jersey devil, jackalope, skunk ape, etc
I live near the bunny man bridge and have visit it a few times. There is a new brewery opening soon called the bunny man brewery here in Fairfax.
Another Urban Legend that is worth noting is The Dog Boy of Arkansas.
The legend is about a man named Gerald Floyd Bettis who had a life full of violence. As a kid, he was a loner who didn’t have many friends. At home, he was a bit of a trickster and a brat. These small incidents began to get bigger as Gerald got older.
Gerald grew a fascination in dogs. What he would do is kidnap dogs and experiment them in his parents’ basement. These experiments then began to get more violent as time went on.
As a teenager, Gerald began to get into fights with his parents. Gerald would begin to win those fights as he got older.
As an adult, Gerald weighed 300lbs and was 6’4” tall, dwarfing his elderly parents. This domination led to Gerald treating his parents like dogs. He trapped them in his parent’s attic and would rarely feed them.
After years of this treatment, Gerald’s father then passed away. The death of his father is unknown, but many claim that he broke his neck when Gerald threw him down the stairs.
Eventually, Gerald’s mother was able to seek help which eventually got her freedom from her son. Gerald then went into hiding, before being arrested by selling drugs. In 1989, Gerald died in prison from an overdose.
Since his death, many claim that Gerald’s ghost haunts his parents’ house with many claiming his ghost to be in the form of a Dog-Human hybrid.
Watched a few of your videos and I enjoy your honest reactions and different views. Got a sub!
Yes more urban legends!! These are always interesting to watch.
I used to live in Hollywood in the late 80's and worked at Sunset Ranch taking people on trail rides (horseback) past the Hollywood sign (on the far right of the sign near the D). Never saw any woman in white, but I have heard the story before. There's a creepy TV version of that story some young adults went up there at night and had an experience. I forget the name of the show, but if you find it watch it. Scary!
Heres a urban legend for yeah, this one is true. The Blue People of Troublesome Creek. It's more of a Kentucky legend but its decently popular in Indiana where I am from as well. Theres also the mellon heads but I am not aware of that being true.
I live in New Jersey. I've heard both.
Then again, some news stands here do carry magazines that speak of "haunted locations" and various lore.
Mellon Heads was spoken if on a TV show. I think it was called Monsters and Mysteries.
The legend of the water babies are also referred to as skinwalkers... check out the Mystery of Blind frog ranch it’s 20 miles from skinwalker ranch.
Great content Luka. Love this stuff
The petrified forest is interesting I'm glad people are not taking pieces away anymore. The book in the visitor center with the letters of people returning the rocks is creepy but pretty neat too. There are fences up and cameras around some of the trees to stop vandal's. At least when I went in 2007 there were.
Skin walkers, the Ozark howler, the Ozark yeti , thunder bird and so many others that weren't mentioned so yes you should do more of these. There's one from where I grew up war eagle and it's what war eagle mill was named after and it's a sad one for sure
Haven’t watched the vid yet, but some spooky legends from my portions of America:
1. In NJ there’s this thing commonly known as the Jersey Devil, not exactly scary anymore lol, but I think they say they live in like some.. pine woods or something lol don’t remember
2. There’s that handprint in the Jim Thorpe jail in PA
Yesss! You should definetly do ones from the states
I grew up in Capitol Heights, MD (about 30 miles from Fairfax, VA) and definitely grew up on the Bunnyman story. I lived 2 blocks from a large wooded area that contained a long creek. As most urban legends are usually just ways to keep kids from going into dangerous areas the Bunnyman did its job a least until we were early teens. Depending on who was telling the story it was either the Bunnyman or the Chicken man.
More please I LOVE this type of stuff
Mythbusters is an entire TV series on Urban Legends that mostly aren't creepy.
Rip Grant 😔😔
It isn't about monster type stuff, it's like the science behind things in movies and things like that and if they're legit or not
@@samnickel6654 Yes. My comment was about the video poster wondering if all urban legends were creepy.
that wasn't bunny man bridge , the actual bridge is a small ass tunnel
Peg Entwhistle's story has an even more tragic twist. She was suicidal not just because of the bad review, but she was having trouble finding work. The day after she jumped, her letter arrived with a job offer.
I've heard of half of these. The bus to nowhere was always a worrying one. Bunnyman Bridge and the Goatman were scarier. But if he wanted to go for the creepiest urban legends, he missed the Jersey Devil, the Rake, La Llorona, Mothman, and the school bus crash in Texas which resulted in the death of numerous children who now push your car over the railroad tracks.
There are a LOT of places around LA, Hollywood and Griffith park that have pretty scary stories surrounding them....griffith park especially
Thank you for this Luka 🙇♀️
Went to the overholser mansion in Oklahoma City today. It’s basically one of the first houses in the downtown Oklahoma City area. Still has the original furniture which was pretty cool. Sat in a chair that was made in 1670
I'd like to see you do the urban legends from every state.
There's still a ton more.
The Snallyghaster. The Jersey Devil. Big Red. Wumpus Cat. Creek Wraith.
Even a few that seem to come from lore in other countries. Otter, cat, spider, mantis, and wolf humanoids. Faceless ghosts, sirens, possessed dolls, and Hell hounds.
I am curious to see your reaction to those.
In the UK there's the urban legend of the Knight Bus for stranded wizards and witches
If you're into narrated spooky stories with cool visuals, I'd recommend the Bedtime Stories youtube. They tend to be on the longer side, but definitely worth the time.
I’m surprised they didn’t mention the skin-walker
Honestly having lived I. Navajo county my whole life. We legit do not talk about that and hey don’t want you to talk about it either.
Why not?
I didn't even know Philly had an urban legend of a bus, maybe I should go out more 😭
The bunny man was often told us all as kids. There are different forms of the story through different parts of the county but they all have the same basic version of a person dressed in a bunny suit and either an axe or a rope
I live right next to Fairfax county in Virginia and I only heard about the Bunny Man thing from a friend who doesn’t live in the area at all, after living here for more than 10 years. She want to visit the tunnel sometime when she’s here.🤦🏻♀️
Day 41 of asking Luka to watch “The Medic Who Fought a War Without a Weapon” by Simple history
You should check out missing 411. It's about the people who disappear in the national parks in America and are never found or are found in places that would be almost impossible for them to have gotten to. It is so bizarre. But they are real stories, not legends.
Probs just because I'm from NJ but the Jersey Devil and the Devil Tree are very interesting ones
I'm a Michigander, and I was expecting the Jersey Devil.
How could he miss that?
@@kellylundy5115 yeah it is pretty high on the list urban legends
I think mothman would be super fun to react to, also pretty lighthearted and fun so i think you'd love it! :D
the one that freaked me out the most was knock knock road. specifically the people being burned alive.
You’d should watch a video on the Shanghai Tunnels in Oregon. Crazy stuff
That bus sounds like any city transit bus I have had the pleasure of surviving in several mid-large US cities.
I can’t believe they didn’t do the chupacabra or skinwalkers! They are by far the most well known. You should do a video about them as well.
The first time I heard about water babies was when I went camping with friends on one of our large lakes on a reservation... I was creeped out all night and could barely sleep.. ha I’m in Reno, NV and it’s called pyramid lake about 40 min outside Reno.
I grew up in Fairfax County, that was NOT the Bunnyman Bridge. You have to go a couple hours west to get mountains like that. But everything else they said about the Bunnyman legend is accurate--a man wearing bunny ears really did throw a hatchet at a couple in a car, and the local legend really is how they described it.
Love urban legends. Thanks Luka!!
U should watch sum abt the suicide bridge in Pasadena, CA, i live by there. It’ll be interesting trust me
Dude what about La llorona? The Wendigo? The Headless Horseman? The Mothman? The Black Dog?
La llorona isn’t American it’s Mexican
Omg the bunny man! I live in fairfax Virginia and was wondering if he would be included!!!
We used to go to bunny man all the time in high school being on the train tracks at 3am is freaky as hell lol they actually have cops they’re on Halloween cause of all the people who go there & it’s in a residential neighborhood
3:08 In Cuba, during their dictatorship, entire families would drown themselves to escape from it. And now in Venezuela people are doing all kinds of sad and horrible things to deal with the situation (joining gangs, child prostitution, etc.)
Water babies? Knock knock road? The Grunch? The bunnyman? Shamans portal? The candy lady? I’m reacting with you.
Guess I never heard of these because I’m not from nor ever lived in any of these states🤷♀️
Although, I’ve heard of the bus to nowhere.
In the south suburbs of Chicago, we grew up with the legend of axeman’s (ax-man’s) bridge.
Thanks for the DayMares.
Amazing top 10 has some good ones to watch
One of my friend’s room was built over a Native American burial site (was an added room) and he sees things all the time. Also try searching up American cryptids! Urban legends aren’t as scary
Dude my house is 2 miles from bunny man bridge.
Donkey Lady is a urban legend from here in San Antonio, Texas.
I’m from Louisiana and never heard of a grunch. But where I’m from we have a thing called the rougarou. It’s basically a ware wolf from hell
Hah! The Grunch creepy urban legend (5:13) is supposed to take place in New Orleans. The scenery begins with a raging Oregon river and then moves onto grasslands. Not a bayou in sight!😛
I live close to Philly and have never heard of the bus legend... Definitely interesting though, I'll have to find out about taking a spin, lol.
I was expecting to see Bigfoot or the Mothman. There are a few legends not tied to a specific place too, like the escaped homicidal maniac or the ghost girl hitchhiker. I’d only heard of about 3 of those on the list of 10 but maybe the others are more local legends like the bus to nowhere being a Phily legend. Interesting though. Do a reaction to the list of 25 by state please.
I’ve noticed that a lot of Urban Legends deal with drowning 😂
Also
-my dad lives in Fairfax with my stepmom and stepsister :)
-my cousins and aunts and uncles live in Dallas