Rebekah turned one on October 14th
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@walkingdeadlightsimmer
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Scene: @mel-bennett
Rebekahâs solo poses, Woody doll: @annaebibi

seen from Czechia
seen from Colombia
seen from Netherlands

seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from T1

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from Sweden
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from South Africa
seen from United States
Rebekah turned one on October 14th
-
@walkingdeadlightsimmer
-
Scene: @mel-bennett
Rebekahâs solo poses, Woody doll: @annaebibi

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Or Black Eyed Kids who show up at your door when it's not Halloween - perhaps the child is the mask worn by a far more malevolent creature?
This month I have been telling Urban Legends (next month weâll get back to talking about other topics).
Ora The Molecule returns with her new video 'Helicopter'. 'Helicopter' pulses with melodic flair, while the lyrics - inherently personal - dissect mental health, and feelings of restraint. Tanmay Chowdhary links up once more with Ora The Molecule on the video, resulting in something dazzling. Ora The Molecule comments: "The concept of the video is derived from the lyrics of the song 'Helicopter'. It's very much about mental illness and the feeling of being trapped in a system. It also draws inspiration from seventeenth-century Dutch philosopher Spinoza who says to look at life like 'sub specie aeternitatis' â under the aspect of eternity. 'Take me to the helicopter...' is a call for perspective and a call for clarity and a call for help to widen my view... The video is inspired by the idea of helicopters dropping in for rescue and evacuations. This film is set in the concrete jungle of a housing complex in India and explores the mental implications of living in a world that is increasingly cut off from nature. In the film, the protagonist is stuck in this concrete maze, trying to escape from themselves. Shedding light on the mental health crises of our time, the film is a call for a helicopter to take us away from the concrete jungle of our own minds." She continues: "The video for âHelicopterâ was shot in the outskirts of New Delhi, India. We were visiting Tanmayâs uncle who lived in this crazy post-apocalyptic building. It gave me associations of Franz Kafkaâs The Trial. We were both so fascinated by the concept of these building complexes that functioned like mini cities. The place was so impersonal and strange looking, but at the same time we understood that the people living there felt very privileged." Tanmay adds: "We shot the video in one day, just running around the building. It reminded me of a communist aesthetic, but these were built in the capitalistic spirit. It really did feel like a visualisation of the âmind trapâ that the song âHelicopterâ is about - like a big labyrinth, where it's impossible to get perspective because itâs so massive and the individual feels so small in it..." [via Clash]
'Devoted' came out last week as the first taste of Beks' new era. Sonically, it's a sound-clashing delight that brings together genres and textures from the furthest corners of each other, contrasting something like its 80s-indebted guitar riff with the more synthetic and electronic side of its production. Then, on top of all of that, comes the reflective and intelligent lyricism that's often focal in Beks' work, as she dissects power through the song's two-minute-something duration: "Itâs about power recall; reclaiming the power you've placed on someone who's exploited that power and giving it back to yourself." It's a single that if nothing else, highlights the versatility of Beks as a multi-faceted creative. It's also something that's shown in the video clip for 'Devoted'. The video clip takes references of iconic films - Titanic, Dirty Dancing, Love Actually, The Notebook, Spiderman 2, Ghost - and replaces them in the context of the song's theme, giving them new backstories as she adds a further dimension to the single through its visual accompaniment. Directed by Bread Productions and heavily featuring Beks behind-the-scenes, something worth mentioning about 'Devoted's video clip is also how they manage to bring these stories to life, tapping into the creative spirit of Brisbane through its use of back-up dancers and fashion designer Kimbra Lou, who built the costuming and setting of the video through thrifted materials. [via Pilerats]
Amsterdam four-piece Pip Blom are releasing a new album, Welcome Break, on October 8 via Heavenly. Now they have shared its third single, âYou Donât Want This,â via an amusing and colorful video for the song. Sara Elzinga directed the âYou Donât Want Thisâ video and had this to say in a press release: âWhen I first heard âYou Donât Want This,â I recognized the feeling of self-consciousness; knowing that people have a certain way of looking at you, that does not necessarily comply with the image you have of yourself. The concept of a Matryoshka doll then stuck in my head, having these multiple versions of yourself that are hidden at first. The set reminds us of a dollhouse, of someone who is so comfortable in their own scenery, they forget to look at the world outside of the room. Though rather than making a music video about anxiety, I wanted the video to be about self-acceptance. Smiling back at yourself, instead of constantly criticizing which is something people tend to do.â [via Under the Radar Mag]
Laura Greaves has unveiled the video for her single 'Psychopath', featuring Khwezi & Lhotse. "We started 'Psychopath' off with just a rough instrumental and then the idea was that we were going to make something cool but upbeat," explains Laura. "I listened and immediately thought that it sounded kind of dark with the distorted âPurgeâ style alarm at the beginning, I then ran with that theme. I also am obsessed with true crime and so once I came up with that first line, âIâve met the devil heâs handsome, heâs never heard of The Manson'sâ it was essentially going to be an homage to everything creepy and twisted that I love. I wanted it to be from the point of view of a psychopath who is chatting about how much they just donât want to be alone inside their heads anymore, and that essentially theyâre about to carry out something quite sinister, but itâs framed in the way theyâre thinking about it, almost in a love story way."
Delivering a fiery cocktail of grunge dynamics and punk rock attitude with double-shots of romance and decadence, Cruel Hearts Club have unleashed their debut EP Trash Love alongside a charismatic performance video for its lead single âSink This Lowâ. If youâre considering signing up to the Cruel Hearts Club, âSink This Lowâ is the perfect introduction. Instantly commanding your attention with its vitriolic Distillers-meets-Bikini Kill attack, âSink This Lowâ boasts a barbed bubblegum pop hook from sisters Edie (vocals, guitar) and Gita Langley (vocals, guitar, bass, synths), with a T-Rex stomp and a bluesy undercurrent. As with the rest of the Trash Love EP, the track was recorded during hasty and hedonistic sessions at The Albion Rooms, Margate with producer Carl BarĂąt. âItâs about people fucking you over, but now the tables have turned,â says Edie. âWeâve been playing it live for ages, but it took on a new energy when we re-recorded it at The Albion Rooms.â
Singer-songwriter Zola Simone has just released her new album, Now You See Me with an accompanying music video for her single, 'Sideways.' The release is a canorous assembly of some of the artistâs finest work to date. Flowing throughout the entire project is a story of maturation and self-acceptance that resonates with listeners long after the last note has been sung.
Beloved K-pop girl group Red Velvet release their brand-new mini album, Queendom alongside the video for the title track. 'Queendom' is a refreshing pop dance song featuring catchy hooks and the membersâ cheerful vocals. The lyrics relay the positive message that we are all âqueensâ of our lives and that we shine more beautifully together.
Kat Von D unveils the self directed cathartic new video for âFear Youâ, the latest single from her debut LP, Love Made Me Do It, out August 27. âI wanted to create a storyline that exemplifies violence in a way that was therapeutic and not self destructive. I wrote and directed this video to tell the story of not only the pain of heartbreak, but the power of the support from the friends around you,â Kat Von D says. The visuals perfectly depict the songâs lyrical content; trust, self-exploration and the concept of overcoming your inner fears when it comes to fully committing your heart to a loved one. âThe video starts off with me picking up my bandmates for band practice, but quickly discovering that Sammi and Gregg are experiencing turmoil within their relationships,â Kat says. âIt inspires me to throw band practice on the back burner, and take my mates on a journey to a mystery destination.â Describing the video Kat says: âWe all pile in to an immaculately restored black 1957 Chevy convertible, and embark on our journey down a desolate highway, passing a hitchhiker (special cameo of Prayers), and finally exit and park in an abandoned ghost town where I finally reveal my surprise plan to my mates after I open the truck of the car to reveal an Arsenal of weapons for each of them to choose from. This leads us to a beautiful display of all red glass objects all perfectly arranged for us to take out our frustrations on together. Thereâs nothing more satisfying to watch than slow motion shots of the destruction of something so delicate and beautiful. After channeling all our frustrations out into the glass, we all feel a sense of relief and return to the car to drive off into the night. One step closer to healing.â
Lorde has dropped 'Mood Ring,' the latest song off her third studio album, Solar Power. The song comes alongside an epic music video featuring LORDE as youâve never seen her before. Of the song Lorde says, âThis is a song I am very excited about, itâs so much fun to me. Obviously when making this album I did a deep-dive into 60s, Flower Child culture. I wanted to understand the commune life, dropping out from society and trying to start again. That really resonated to me when writing this album. One thing that occurred to me as a major parallel between that time and our time is our wellness culture and our culture of spirituality, pseudo-spirituality, wellness, pseudo-wellness. Things like eating a macro-biotic vegan diet or burning sage, keeping crystals, reading tarot cards or your horoscope. These were all things that they were dabbling in back then, and that me and my girlfriends are dabbling in today. I was like âI think thereâs a pop song in hereâ. So this is kind of my extremely satirical look at all of those vibes.â
Liz Lawrence shares arresting and Lynchian visuals for her latest single âDriveâ taken from her upcoming third studio album The Avalanche, due digitally on September 17. âDriveâ is a rhythmically dynamic and 90s tinged analysis of the sometimes romantic, often fractious connection between people and their devices. Speaking about the video, directed by Rebecca Nicholson, Liz adds: âIt's an analogue fable about the digital age. I'm consuming the promise of information but becoming more and more confused by it, while something strange and menacing is lurking outside. We wanted it to be as absurd as it is creepy and I never want to eat jelly again.â
Electro-pop cabaret trash queen Scarlett Lashes aka Jess Haugh tackles the hot topic of wellness with full force in her single and video 'Culture and Wellbeing Committee'. Conjuring a nightmarish vision of so-called personal improvement, corporate office culture rampages wild through the suburbs in Haugh's self-directed clip â declaring "smile motherfucker" while performing lobotomies for the greater good of team-building. You'll be waving that resting bitch face goodbye when the Culture and Wellbeing Committee knock on your door. [via Under the Radar]
Impossibly exciting top-level popster in waiting Willow Kayne has debuted a new video for her most recent single âI Donât Wanna Knowâ. The follow-up to Mayâs debut offering âTwo Seaterâ, âI Donât Wanna Knowâ was made with fellow popster of note Oscar Scheller, and comes along with a Bedroom (Beabadoobee, Arlo Parks, Sports Team) directed video which skewers ridiculous online trolls. [via Dork]
Ellevator know how to pay homage to their influences in the very best way possible. 'Easy' is a track that offers plenty of different paths on which to embark, whether one favors the slinky, dark guitar rock of Spoon or the ever-changing sonic landscape of Arcade Fire. The track, the first off the trio's upcoming 2022 album on Canadian label Arts & Crafts chronicles lead singer Nabi Sue Berscheâs shape-shifting upbringing, heavily influenced by religion in ways that go beyond typical Sunday church outings. âAs a child, I spoke in tongues and prayed until my body swayed with a gentle force like wind knocking me backward,â Nabi Sue says. âA deep and abiding love of the natural world took hold of me. I witnessed firsthand the wild power of music â how it could uplift, ensnare, console, inspire. When I was 17 I moved to the other side of the world and joined what would most accurately be described as a cult. I prayed for strangers I met in parking lots. I shut my eyes and read the dappled light between my lashes like tea leaves that could divine the future. Vulnerability was a badge in that community so I learned to overshare. Teachings were given in the language of freedom while the stiff hand of purity reduced my body to a shameful temptation. Growing up like that gave me a love of music, a nose for bullshit, and a lot to unravel. This song is about the good and evil things we are raised to believe. I was held captive by an ideology that severely limited my life and my perspective of the world around me. Itâs a process Iâm still in the middle of, this work of extraction." The band have certainly translated Nabi Sueâs emotional upbringing into diverse and complex work that keeps the listener guessing. 'Easy' has pulsing synths, crashing drums and intricate guitar, all weaving in and out of each other. The equally striking music video features the band and Nabi Sue performing under both a setting sun and the spare fluorescent lights of a parking garage in their hometown; Hamilton, Ontario. As she repeats the refrain âEasy does it,â close-up zooms overlap in a dizzying array. [via Line Of Best Fit]
Alice Longyu Gao is back with a glittery and frenetic new single called 'Kanpai,' whose chorus is some silly nonsense: âMy name on your lips like liquor lipstick.â Itâs good fun! Hereâs Gao on the track: "My best friend Madison Emiko Love and I wrote this song three years ago. Her grandma is a Japanese immigrant and we always want to champion & plug our culture everywhere we go. Weâve been waiting to put this song out, cuz back then no one with power in western music realized the power of Asian pop culture, no one really cared to put Asian talents on the table. The material world was asleep cuz they didnât see the money-benefits. âKanpaiâ means cheers in Chinese, Japanese and Korean; the joyful vibe translates perfectly throughout the song. The braggy-docious, rap-y bridge part in the song is what I wish for, itâs not my reality yet. Last year was dark for me, and for everyone. But now it is time to regroup and restart, this song wakes me up in the morning, it reminds me that I came to this earth with a mission. I aspire to inspire and benefit other peopleâs lives. I do that through my art." [via Stereogum]
Sydney-based three-piece Middle Kids have shared a new video for 'Stacking Chairs', the surging album highlight which encapsulates the extraordinary intimacy and creativity that gave rise to their critically acclaimed second album Today Weâre The Greatest, released earlier this year. 'Stacking Chairsâ reveals a band at full-flight, imbued with mellotron and great peels of electric guitar - itâs one of the most immediate songs on an album full of astonishing hooks and textures. Directed by collaborator W.A.M. Bleakley, the video mixes offbeat humour with a stylised but literal interpretation of the songâs lyrics.
Australia-born artist AViVA makes her Capitol Records debut with 'Melancholy' â a new single and video spotlighting her immersive and electrifying brand of alt-pop. An unfiltered look at the downward pull of depression, 'Melancholy' also showcases the uncompromising originality thatâs earned AViVA a passionate global following in recent years. With its moody backdrop of minimalist beats, 'Melancholy' sets its emotionally vivid lyrics to an infectious sing-song melody (âOne, two, three, four/Vicious, knocking at my door/Seven, eight, nine, ten/Burn the candle at both endsâ). Throughout the track, AViVA delivers a captivating vocal performance, flaunting her effortless flow and fierce yet vulnerable presence. On the single, AViVA says, âSeemingly cheerful and upbeat from the outside, it doesnât matter what makes you feel that way, sometimes feeling down is the only way you can feel, but the power of the last line âit will never be the sameâ is where the core message of the song lies. Even though after negative experiences things often arenât the same, we are always free to learn and grow from our experiences. Feeling melancholy, like so many feelings, is just a temporary state. Things will, as they always do, get better.â The video for 'Melancholy,' co-directed by AViVA and long-time collaborator Jeffeton James, amplifies the songâs raw and powerful intimacy. To that end, the wildly colorful visual places AViVA in a series of isolated situations: lying in a hospital bed, trapped behind a school desk, singing to her own reflection inside the room of an abandoned and decaying home. As the song unfolds, the 27-year-old artist reveals her unapologetically punk spirit, inhabiting each frame with a feverish intensity.
David Wrench and Evangeline Ling, aka audiobooks, have shared the video for their latest single, 'LaLaLa It's the Good Life', crafted by creative team Rottingdean Bazar and photographer Annie Collinge. audiobooks' new album Astro Tough is due for release on October 1 via Heavenly Recordings. Brighton-based Rottingdean Bazar say of the project: "We conceived and made the video with photographer Annie Collinge who we work with a lot, although usually on still fashion photographs. Rephotographing fabric prints of people is something we had already been experimenting with in stills, and whilst doing that we noticed that it lends itself to moving image. We photographed the band in a studio and laid out prints of them and other objects. After that just the three of us spent time in Rottingdean capturing the prints in movement. James (Rottingdean Bazaar) took the lead in the movement and acted as the hand model, as he has the best timing of all of us." [via Broadway World]
Anna Akana shares new single and music video 'Wanted Woman' ft. Macedo following EP No Longer Yours. 'Wanted Woman' is about staying in your power when roaming the badlands of love. Maggie Levin, director of My Valentine and screenwriter of the upcoming Labyrinth reboot, said, "I found the song so unabashedly sexy and fun from the very first listen, and knew in my gut that underlining the lyrical concept (in rhinestones and fringe) was the only way to go. It was a real joy to to build this flamboyant, maximalist Wild West-world together with Anna, Macedo and the entire creative team. If the video looks like a party, thatâs because it was."
JoJo has released new single 'Worst (I Assume)', the lead single from her upcoming "capsule project" Trying Not To Think About It. 'Worst (I Assume)' follows May's 'Creature of Habit' track, and is accompanied by a Alfredo Flores-directed video that features a note from JoJo at the end. In the note, JoJo writes, "You know when you've been through shit in the past and it makes you put up your guard in relationships moving forward? Yeah. Over time, we develop mechanisms that try and protect ourselves from real or perceived pain. We cope with fear of potential hurt or disappointment in different ways, one of which often includes: trying not to think about it. Which may or may not lead to... The desire to stay in bed all day. The tendency to self-medicate. Withdrawal from friends/family. Disassociation. Hurting others before they can hurt you." JoJo's note also ecourages people to "keep going" and to "be kind to yourself". [via Line Of Best Fit]
GRACEY has delivered new break-up anthem 'What A Waste' which is accompanied by news of her upcoming EP Fragile. "I wrote 'What A Waste' in the first raw moments of a recent break-up, when all I felt was the initial loss," explains GRACEY. "Everyone goes through that gut punch of disappointment and frustration at the beginning, when youâre looking back at the time, love and energy you put into something that no longer exists and you feel like you wasted your time. Luckily itâs just a moment that passes and thereâs lots to look forward to on the other side, but those initial emotions are still valid. Hopefully this will help others going through something similar." [via Line Of Best Fit]
Melbourne multi-disciplinary artist Hannah Crofts has signed with ABC Music alongside the launch of her new solo project Baby Velvet. Crofts, who sings and plays ukulele with fellow ABC Music signees All Our Exes Live in Texas, has also shared her first single under the Baby Velvet moniker today with âCall Meâ, a retro-inspired number that showcases her strengths as a vocalist and lyricist alike. The new single is also paired with a Thelma & Louise-inspired clip created by Crofts alongside Lazy Susan and Kewl Studios, and serves as the first taste of Baby Velvetâs debut album, set for release in 2022. [via The Music Network]
Polly Scattergood has announced a new EP, In the Absence of Light, out on September 15, made with collaborators Jim Sclavunos (Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, Grinderman) and Glenn Kerrigan. The title of new single 'Saturn 9' is a play on the word saturnine. âSaturnine means gloomy and so we decided to write a song about emerging from this kind of darkness, this kind of gloomy heaviness, looking forward into a bright, hopeful positive space,â Scattergood explains. âI wanted the video to represent the music in a way that everyone would understand and there were a couple of key lines that jumped out to me,â says Scattergood. One was âThe hieroglyphics of our soul/We keep on moving/Time evolves.â The lyrics stuck with Scattergood as she tried to figure out how to represent them visually. Â She found inspiration in an emoji. âThe smiley face emoji came into my head,â she says. âThat represents the modern day hieroglyphic. Itâs what we all send to each other.â Scattergood also wanted to incorporate dancing into the video because it was a song written during the lockdown. âI liked the idea of a group of friends being out, having fun, dancing together and looking to the future,â she says. âThatâs where I went with it.â The clip, which she also directed, interjects the smiley face emoji, a symbol that could also serve as a reference to the rave heyday of the early â90s, between scenes of aerobics dancers cutting loose to the bouncy, synthpunk track outside in â80s workout garb. [via Audiofemme]
After introducing her new solo project Flossing earlier this year, Bodegaâs Heather Elle is now gearing up to share her debut Flossing EP Queen Of The Mall on September 10 on Brace Yourself Records, and now sheâs sharing her latest single âAdd To Cartâ. Written while on a solo trip in London between tours in the summer of 2019 âafter microdosing magic mushroomsâ in Abney Park, a dishevelled graveyard established in 1840, she began to think about âmodern day internet nauseaâ. In her own words: âAmerican statistician Edward Tufte once said, âThere are only two industries that refer to their customers as users: illegal drugs and software.ââ [via DIY]
St. Vincent (aka Annie Clark) has shared a music video for the title track from her latest album Daddyâs Home. In the Bill Benz-directed clip, Clark rides on the back of a truck down a street, singing and playing guitar. Towards the end of the video, a newspaper flashes onscreen with the headline âDADDY HOME: Singer alleges daddyâs home from back of truckâ. [via NME]
TikTokâs favorite girl group Boys World is breaking new ground. The quintet â made up of members and close friends Olivia, Elana, Queenie, Lillian, and Makhyli â has released their new single 'Something In The Water,' a smooth and danceable pop anthem about budding crushes that arrives with a colorful music video. With no true lead singer â each member takes a turn occupying that role â Boys World is carving their own path to stardom while upending traditional girl group expectations along the way. The lyrical content of their songs reflects the reality of their lives and the bandâs commitment to authenticity pushes back against any claims of a manufactured friendship. [via NYLON]
Thai-Italian singer SILVY has released her debut single âXLâ. âXLâ is a personal manifesto of sorts for SILVY â real name Silvy Pavida â and an unabashed body positivity anthem. The celebratory track is driven by a propulsive bass beat with pounding percussion. âXLâ also chronicles â per a press release â the artistâs past experiences with being forced to conform to her prior record labelsâ ideal image, flesh out through lyrics like âPeople used to put me in a box / They made me something that Iâm notâ. SILVY said of the track via a press release: âI wanted to make a track about my story so far, and include [the] main theme of my life (body positivity). I had the time of my life working on this song.â In a voice snippet shared on Spotify prior to the release of âXLâ, SILVY spoke about the trackâs themes: âThis song âXLâ is all about confidence. I wanted to write a song that people can sing, dance, shake their booties to with pride â no matter what shape or size they are. I really share my personal story in this one, about the time I overcame my deepest insecurityâ. [via NME]
Electropop musician Kilo Kish has just released a new single titled 'Bloody Future.' Itâs a retro number fit for the â80s with Halloween-style synths, tiny harpsichord riffs, and deadpan singing verging on spoken rap. In a press release, Kilo Kish explained that she wanted 'Bloody Future' to be a âhot and sweaty dance clubâ song that explores global warming, cultural changes, and an onslaught of media. âIâve noticed myself not paying attention to critical information when the music or surrounding visual elements are alluring, beautiful, or fun,â she said. âOur society often operates in the same way, concealing insidious issues like environmental decline while satisfying with entertainment and distraction. When it all boils over, weâre left shocked and dazed. My lyrics explore this blissfully unaware feeling of still being entranced before coming to our senses.â Those themes are further drawn out in the music video accompanying 'Bloody Future.' In the clip, Kilo Kish can be seen dancing by a piano, doing garden work, and hanging out with a lifesize robot whoâs fascinated by everything she experiences. The whole time, Kilo Kish is bleeding from her nose and striking poses. The casual gruffness brings to mind the work of M.I.A. â of course, it helps that the song sounds like an early cut by the rapper, too. [via Consequence]
Lynds can we know a little bit more about beks. Like whatâs her personality like, her fav food etc.
making this my official meet beks post
Full name: Bekah Nicole Dolan
Nicknames: Beks, B, Bug (only ethan calls her bug tho)
Birthday: October 3rd
Personality: Beks is fiercely independent, and smart, just like her mom. She takes care of other people even when sheâs small. She wants to make her own choices, which come back to bite her sometimes but she always puts people before her, to a fault as she gets older. Sheâs a daddyâs girl through and through, but she admires Indy more than anyone else and wants to be like her in every single way. Sheâs also hilarious haha
Favorite:
Foods: vegan mac and cheese but only when grayson makes it (she doesnât know itâs from a box she thinks itâs his special recipe), strawberries, potatoes of any kind, her aunt edenâs halo-halo
Places: the beach, and in an airplane
Things: spending time with her cousins, playing in the ocean, snorkeling, drawing/painting, and school
Some pictures đ

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Favorite Monsters and Cryptids
1) Black-Eyed Children: What these beings are no one knows. Some cite them as being demons or vampires who require permission to be allowed in. Some say they're alien-human hybrids or tulpas (thought beings). Even interdimensional entities or the ghosts of deceased children. They are described as either wearing old-timey clothing or dark-colored hoodies. They have extremely pale, oftentimes peachy skin tones and speak in a monotonous, adult-like fashion. They approach their target's home or car to knock or their door or window saying that they needed to get in because of bizarre reasons. If they are further denied entry, they become increasingly enraged and reveal their dark, turquoise eyes. In some cases, the witness almost considers opening the door...at least until they catch a glimpse of their eyes.Â
2) Mothman: A large, red-eyed creature that was described as stalking Point Pleasant from 1966-1967 in West Virginia. Typical descriptions depict the Mothman as bat-like in appearance that had a deafening screech. On December 15, 1967, the Silver Bridge collapsed killing 46 civilians. Strangely enough, Mothman seemingly disappeared after the tragedy, many believing that the Mothman was a harbinger of the bad omen.Â
3) Reptilians: Crazy conspiracy theory aside, Reptilians are shapeshifting extraterrestrials said to hail from the Alpha Draconis star system. David Icke, in particular, believes that they infiltrated the Earth to take over each of the world's governing bodies. Some also say that they terrorize humanity because they feed on negative emotions and what better way than to stoke the flames of anger and fearmongering than with propaganda?Â
4) Shadow People: Ever thing you catch something moving from the corner of your eye? Shadow People are believed to be different things ranging from guardian angels; demons; interdimensional beings, etc. The Hatman is often considered to be the leader of the Shadow People and is considered as being the most dangerous out of his wicked kind, but many say that he is an entirely different being.Â
5) Kuchisake-Onna: A Japanese urban legend, it is said that Kuchisake was once a beautiful woman married to a samurai. When the samurai felt that she was being unfaithful, he cut her mouth and killed her. Since then, she had become a vengeful spirit wearing a trench coat with a surgical mask. Carrying a pair of scissors, if she approaches a victim, she would ask them if they thought she was pretty. If they say no, she kills them. If yes, she would remove her mask to reveal her Glasgow grin and asks the question again. If the victim said yes again, she would make their mouth like hers.Â
6) Teke Teke: Another ghost from Japanese folklore, Teke Teke was a woman or schoolgirl who was bisected by a train. One take of the legends have her ask her victims if they knew where her legs were. If they said no, she would rip their legs off. Another variation has Teke Teke go after the listener if they heard the story.Â
7) Eight Foot Tall: A demon disguising itself as an 8-ft tall woman wearing a sundress and straw hat. She targets children and is recognizable by her demonic droning.Â
8) Machine Elves: They are extradimensional entities often described as being sighted by those taking DMT. They claim to be the architects of different planes of existence but have unstable forms that continually contort. Everything happens at a fast pace in their world with all of them having high-pitched voices.
9) Greys: The stock character many think of when the possibility of extraterrestrial life is speculated. They are buglike in depiction with almond-shaped black eyes. Some say they were created by the reptilians as a slave race that deflected. They are commonly associated with alien abductions.
10) Butterfly People of Joplin: In 2011, a devastating tornado hit Joplin, Missouri that killed several people. But from the disaster, many children claimed that they experienced winged beings that saved them by holding back falling debris with their wings. One boy was found miles away in a field claiming that the Butterfly People wrapped him in it to smoothen his fall.Â
11) Chupacabra: Later takes of the cryptid posit the creature as being more canine in its features. They are accredited to draining the blood from livestock such as goats.Â
12) Jersey Devil: its origin story is really unique. The story goes that when a mother of 12 kids was due to have a 13th, she in annoyance, prayed for that child to be a devil. The baby is born and appears to be relatively normal. But then it, of course, transforms into a horrible abomination, escaping into the woods.Â
13) Bigfoot and the Abominable Snowman: Bigfoot or the Sasquatch is an ape-like, humanoid creature believed to have been sighted in several parts of North America. Some believe that the Sasquatch is either an ancient ape species that had escaped extinction, or some even assume that Bigfoot is the missing link that researchers have been searching for. The Abominable Snowman is similar to Sasquatch in some fashion, the exception being that the creature was sighted in the mountains of the Himalayas. There have been some samples of hair believed to have been those of a Yeti's that were analyzed to be the fur of an extinct species of bear from the time of the ice age.Â
14) Mongolian Death Worm: In the Gobi Desert, there is believed to be a large species of worm that is said to have lethal venom that could kill anyone who even slightly touched the creature. It can even generate electricity. The worm was also known to hunt camels, and would then lay its eggs in the intestines.Â
15) The Loch Ness Monster: Probably one of the most famous examples of a cryptid in cryptozoology. Believed to be an ancient creature such as a plesiosaur, the Loch Ness Monster, or Nessie, is believed to inhabit Loch Ness. Described as having a long neck, flippers, and endless humps, accounts of the creature date far back to the time of Saint Columbia. Interest in the creature continued until in the 1930s, an alleged photograph of the monster dubbed the Surgeon's Photograph goes down in history as one of the best cases for the existence of Nessie. Even though the photograph was a hoax, many others had given their accounts of the Loch Ness Monster through the use of sonar and photography.Â
16) Black Stick Men are what happens when you take drawings of simple stick figures and give them sentience. They are believed to be two-dimensional in appearance, and can even generate electrical discharges. Unlike with other paranormal entities, Black Stick Men are not connected to supernatural events. So, they just appear randomly for no real rhyme nor reason. They are believed to feed on negative emotions and their presence incites aggression and uneasiness.Â
17) Wendigo: In Native American myth, a Wendigo is born when a hapless human commits the act of cannibalism in desperation. As punishment, they are transformed into a monster with an insatiable hunger that would never be quenched. They don't have a corporal form, but they are often represented as antlered-humanoids.Â
18) Ningen: These are giant, aquatic humanoid entities that are commonly sighted in the waters of the Arctic. Some species are alleged to grow to great lengths.
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ZDZISĆAW BEKSIĆSKI
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