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  2. Oct 9, 2024 · Urban legends often come with a dose of skepticism. (No, a killer with a hook hand has never terrorized necking couples.) But sometimes, these stories turn out to be true.

    • Sutton Travis
    • The Story of Charlie No-Face. The tale of Charlie No-Face is an example of one of those true stories that gets wildly twisted in each retelling. Here are the facts: In the early 1900s, a Pennsylvania boy named Ray Robinson was electrocuted by a trolley wire, resulting in lifelong disfigurement—specifically, most of his facial features melted away.
    • Colonel Buck's Recurring Tombstone Stain. Passersby are often keen to point out the oddly-shaped mark, resembling a leg, that stains the tomb of this former Justice of the Peace.
    • Reptiles Living in City Sewers.
    • Neil Armstrong Bungling the Moon Landing Speech.
  3. Apr 22, 2024 · This list delves into crazy true stories that are the obvious catalysts for real-life urban legends and modern myths. After you check out these urban legends that are (mostly) true, leave us a comment about your local legend that’s totally true and not made up at all.

    • Woman was Buried Alive and Mangled Her Fingers While Trying to Escape. I think most of us have probably heard the story of someone being buried alive: some person was proclaimed dead and was buried but later woke up, alive in their casket.
    • Man Actually Makes Himself Fly with Balloons. Many of us have dreamed of flying as children. With movies like Up and Mary Poppins it seems to be a fairly easy task—just get a lot of balloons, or maybe jump down the stairs with an umbrella.
    • Mysterious Gas Mask Man of Switzerland, “Le Loyon” photographed. Cryptids are a common thing. Some of them are extremely famous, like Bigfoot or the Loch Ness Monster.
    • Missing Woman’s Corpse Found in Hotel’s Water Tank. Have you ever gotten a glass of tap water and thought it tasted a bit funny? Well, this exact thing happened to guests of LA’s Cecil Hotel but with a gruesome twist.
    • Candyman. In 2021, director Nia DaCosta’s new vision of Candyman—the popular 1992 horror hit about a vengeful spirit who is summoned to reality by saying his name five times—arrived in theaters.
    • The Killer Calling From Inside the House. For decades, stories have circulated about a babysitter home alone who receives harassing phone calls. When the call is finally traced by police, the babysitter is horrified to discover it’s coming from inside the house.
    • The Goatman. The Goatman was a purported half-man, half-goat fond of devouring dogs and attacking people in Prince George’s County in Maryland. While the Goatman had been whispered about for years, he got an explosion of publicity in 1971 after a reporter named Karen Hosler delivered a one-two punch lending credibility to his existence.
    • The Mothman. No urban legend rundown is complete without mention of the Mothman, a strange creature who purportedly terrorized West Virginia in the 1960s.
  4. Explore 25 Urban Legends that Turned out to be True, from Vanishing hotel to spine-chilling accounts of a faceless man in the night🍿 WATCH OUR OTHER VIDEOS:...

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  5. Jul 5, 2022 · Urban legends exist because communicators attach risk to them not being retold by recipients, thus exploiting fear. They continually resurface in different iterations, a phenomenon now...