All posts by Patti PaulterGeist

Owner, operator, and fuzzy retro feelers giver at NightmareNostalgia.com. Worshipper of our Lord and savior Boo Berry, Patti is a seasoned pro having written for the top horror websites and magazines over the past few years until she decided to go balls to the wall and make her own focusing on pure feel-good nostalgia. Mom to two humans and three furballs.

Conjure Up Some Deliciously Deadly Recipes With “The Horror Movie Night Cookbook”!

I’m an introvert by default and, duh, obviously a horror fan, so that means a lot of nights in watching Silver Bullet or Halloween IV for the 300th time while rustling up some grub for me and the rest of my fam from the comforts of home. Also, me, serving as the main person cooking for the house since everyone else can cook about as well as Charlie Brown only burning toast half the time, that leaves me with a lot of pressure to come up with a variety of meals that are easy and fast enough to pull off so as not to bore everyone to death on a weekly basis. Personally, I could live off cold Pizza and Grilled Cheese but with me being a mom, I guess I have to do the responsible thing here. Thankfully, a new cookbook is now available for horror fans that love to cook, or like me, forced by default, with deliciously deadly recipes that are easy enough to follow for even the most culinary-handicapped person. And what’s better, there’s a cocktail menu too!

To answer your question, YES. There’s a Shaun of the Dead inspired dish AND cocktail called The Winchester in the book because THANK GOD.

Per the Press Release:

The Horror Movie Night Cookbook: 60 Deliciously Deadly Recipes Inspired by Iconic Slashers, Zombie Films, Psychological Thrillers, Sci-Fi Spooks, and More by Richard S. Sargent is a killer new cookbook offering thoughtful and tasty food and cocktail pairings inspired by the actual content of chilling classics like Jaws, Psycho, Scream, The Conjuring, The Evil Dead, Halloween, and more!

If you’re looking for kitschy Pinterest recipes like coffin-shaped cookies or zombie finger sandwiches, look elsewhere. With The Horror Movie Night Cookbook, you’ll find recipes inspired by horror’s most frightening favorites, including:

  • Crawling Steak (Poltergeist)
  • Campfire Sour (The Blair Witch Project)
  • Zombie Baby Kale Salad (Dawn of the Dead)
  • Bloody Floaties (Jaws)
  • Alligator Bites (Crawl)
  • The Mama’s Boy Martini (Psycho
  • And more!

Unlike other movie-themed cookbooks, The Horror Movie Night Cookbook takes you inside the films. “Inspired by the film itself, the recipes are built around food that is being eaten in the films or iconic lines or characters within. It’s not just a cookbook to pull out in October,” Sargent says. “My recipes are thoughtful and creative meals that can be served any time of the year.”

Now because I’m sure some of you would love a sneak peek at what exactly some of the recipes look like or entail, I’ve taken the liberty of attaching a few of my personal favorite excerpts from the book for a bit of a looky-loo.

JAWS

SCREAM

POLTERGEIST

STIR OF ECHOES

HALLOWEEN

EVIL DEAD

The Horror Movie Cookbook by Richard S. Sargent and is published by Ulysses Press with distribution by Simon & Schuster. You can pick up your copy and get it tomorrow from Amazon by clicking here!

The Real-Life Incident That Inspired “The Blob” Movie

Yep. You read that headline right. When we see “based on true events”, I always take that with a mighty grain of salt and throw it over my shoulder like a silly superstition. Film inspiration is almost ALWAYS taken from somewhere: a newspaper clipping, a weird memory, or even a lucid dream from the creator. However, did you know the legacy of the gelatinous Sci-Fi national treasure, THE BLOB, is based on a “supposedly” actual event based on a police report taken in Philadelphia back in 1950?

Suck it, Roswell.

In the September 27th, 1950 edition of the Philadelphia Inquirer, readers were exposed to a pre-Bat Boy-like headline that simply read, “Flying ‘Saucer’ Just Dissolves.” Take that with your cup of coffee on your way to the office, Philly folks.

The piece stated that two veteran police officers, Joe Keenan, and John Collins, both spotted a mysterious object falling from the sky while the pair were making their nightly rounds. Of course (and who wouldn’t be curious), the patrolmen duo followed the strange object’s descent to the corner of Vare and 26th Street, where they were met with a rather large, glittery mass of something that they later described as a pulsating, “purple jelly”; six feet in diameter, filled with a crystal like-substance, and letting off a mist.

According to both officers – and possibly the coolest detail – the globby substance seemed to vibrate and move on its own, with one other report claiming this thing crept up a nearby telephone pool. Regardless of whether it actually did or not, the fact that Aunt Fannie’s jello mold from hell was moving at all is, clearly, kind of terrifying and indicative of some type of living organism.

After the pair called for backup, James Cooper and Sergeant Joe Cook arrived at the chaotic scene, making it a total of four officers in the presence of the wondrous blob. At this point, Collins decided it was a good idea to touch the thing, tiny globules stuck to his hand and evaporated rather quickly, leaving behind an odorless scum of a residue.

Well, at least it didn’t latch on and slowly eat away at his body like this poor dude.

As with the goo retrieved by Collins, the rest of the blob seemed to disappear entirely about 30 minutes after the cops’ first sighting. The following day, the men in blue addressed the local media, claiming what they saw was, indeed, a living thing… possibly from outer space. And behold, a story was born that has endured two cinematic versions throughout the past sixty years.

The story sounds like a common episode of THE TWILIGHT ZONE or something Scully and Mulder would have encountered on one of their many X-FILES adventures. But before Rod Serling could get his hands on the idea, it became the inspiration for the 1958 creature feature starring Steve McQueen, and then, 30 years later, reignited in Chuck Russell’s fantastic and gory vision. Whether you think the article itself holds any substance or chalk it off as pure tabloid garbage, this wasn’t the only report that has surfaced containing gleaming purple goo falling from the sky; albeit this IS THE ONE that inspired the first film.

Reports go as far back as 1846 wherein Loweville, New York residents claimed to have witnessed an object in the sky crash to the ground. The object in question was described as a “heap of foul-smelling luminous jelly” about four feet in diameter that also evaporated within minutes after hitting the ground. The most fascinating occurrence, however, seems to come from Australia back in 1969, when scientists managed to collect and study over 200 pounds of jelly-like material following a meteor shower in the area. These samples were found to contain amino acids – you know, the chemical building blocks of life.

Fortunately, nobody got sucked down a garbage disposal or overtaken by the putrid pink goo in a phone booth. But according to reports, one of the officers ended up tiny, pulsating globules stuck to his skin that later evaporated completely. In any case, if you’ve ever touched old, wet food clinging to dirty plates in your kitchen sink, I can imagine that would be just as disgustingly horrifying.

That One Time “Unsolved Mysteries” Performed An Exorcism On Air

Remember that time Unsolved Mysteries filmed and aired a real-life exorcism? Join me, and let’s get weird with Robert Stack!

I don’t think I’m alone here when I claim there was nothing scarier on Prime-time TV than the glorious sounds and visuals of Unsolved Mysteries. Tuesday nights were always reserved for Robert Stack with me and my grandmother and it was around the age of 7 when I had first laid my peelers on the majestic stance of the Stack and felt such excitement along with being scared shitless. Upon each week’s new episode of thrills, murder, and the paranormal after a fresh viewing, I would feel a sense of paranoia thinking escaped murderers were lurking in my backyard bushes. But, that was the magic of Unsolved Mysteries, and watching it again with adult eyes thanks to the likes of FilmRise and other streaming apps, only validates it’s just as creepy now as it was over 30 years ago.

Each featured case was substantially creepy on its own, however, one, in particular, stood out to me in memory apart from the 1987 Kurt Sova segment that literally gave me nightmares for a week; And that was the time Unsolved Mysteries scratched the infamous re-enactments regarding a supposedly possessed 29-year-old woman only known to the world as “Kathie”. Running almost like a mini-documentary, the crew filmed an actual exorcism performed on the woman, who claims to have been taunted by demons since her teenage years.

Kathie- “MYAHHHH!! I HATE YOUR PRAYERSSS!!”

Exorcist- “Shut up, Devil!”

I can totally laugh at the absurdity of it now but back then when it aired that shit was wildly weird and slightly terrifying.

The episode that first aired on June 11th, 1999, had Unsolved Mysteries pairing up with HOPE, (Hartford Office of Paranormal Exploration), who were initially contacted by Kathie herself. After years of both medical and psychological treatments failing her, her last hope (ironically) for relief was the seven-member group of HOPE. With over 100 prior cases of exorcisms performed under the team that includes a social worker, a psychic, a registered nurse, and the director of Hartford Hospital in Connecticut, the group visited Kathie’s home and conducted an interview with the woman before a decision was made that would warrant an exorcism. During the group consultation with Kathie, she seemed to slip into one of her possessive spells and began to curl and cringe her hands along with jolting her head violently. After the very strange interview, the group seemed to believe Kathie’s story and felt an exorcism was the right way to go. And Unsolved Mysteries was there to film the very controversial ritual. 

Bless this damn program. Pun intended. 

According to the official Unsolved Mysteries fandom page, Kathie provided an update after filming that she did not require any further exorcisms and was able to find a job for the first time in several years.

I can only hope she’s a waitress somewhere, serving someone some pea soup right about now.