Episode 14 joins Psychic Lee Barron on a late night road trip as he travels down historic Highway 99 as he does his best to sense the ghastly presence of the elusive haunted low-rider that eternally cruises the San Fernando Valley.
In a feat never before attempted by any psychic, Lee will attempt to sense these paranormal entities from a moving vehicle. Episode 14 also introduces the new and improved Psychic Lee Barron cam.
Episode 13 brings Psychic Lee Barron to the foot of an old Sycamore tree, the last remaining in a row of trees that were used to hang vagrants and ne'er do well's that were kicking up too much dust. Sycamore Ave. eventually repaced this grusome grove, leaving only one troubled tree behind to tell the tale.
The craggy branches still sway in their slow and menacing dance of death, yet instead of overlooking a rag-tag crowd of blood thirsty ranchers and prospectors, the Sycamore tree now casts a shadow upon wealthy Hollywood neighborhood known as the "Outpost Estates." (The area photographed below in 1928, same area photographed above in 1853)
WATER LEVEL: LOW (POSSIBLE WATER LINES AND SEWER UNDER STREET)
Triggered by overwhelming response to our "haunted statue" of Carthay Circle episode, Ghosts Wanted has received information from a loyal viewer whose aunt used to work at the Fox Carthay Circle Theatre before it was demolished and replaced by a contemporary nondescript office building. The woman claimed that the popular theatre was haunted by the ghost of a vaudeville actor who died on stage. GW takes Psychic Lee Barron on a midnight journey to see if that ghost remains, despite his new surroundings.
The GW research department is currently trying to confirm the validity of this death claim. Recent developments suggest that a woman perished during a performance sometime during the fifties when the Fox Theatre was still host to both live drama alongside its cinema. If anyone has any information regarding the vaudeville history of the Fox Carthay Theatre, please contact GW immediately.
Welcome to Pasadena. Familiar home of quaint antique shops, the Rose Bowl Flea Market, and the bustle of corporate shops and gourmet restaurants of the revitalized Old Town. Yet the beautiful historic Colorado street bridge that welcomes college football fans and Art Center freshman each year, is in fact, swamped with death. This bridge is one of the most famous suicide spots in the world, earning it the most appropriate title of "Suicide Bridge".In perhaps the scariest Ghost Wanted Episode to date, Lee Barron walks the path of the forlorn and revisits the memories of their last moments...some intentional...others accidental. Journey with GW underneath the bridge where the crew experiences a rise in paranormal activity, and witness the near death of an all to daring cyclist who breaks the rules of the road. See it...and believe!
For years, rumors have circulated about the spirit of Orson Welles lingering at his favorite restaurant, Ma Maison, which is now home to the well known gourmet bakery Sweet Lady Jane, a place which resonates with a sort of "tea and crumpets" kind of atmosphere. Small, quaint and crowded as it is, there is always room for ghosts...but does this little cafe truly entertain such great company as the hungry ghost of Orson Welles?
The Ghosts Wanted Crew begs to differ. Research has led GW to the discovery that this cafe is NOT on the original spot of the famed Ma Maison restaurant, whose original glory has faded. There is a contemporary version of Ma Maison located across the street from Cedars-Sinai Hospital, but this is approximately one mile away from the scene of the ghost. Watch Episode 10 now to find out where Mr. Welles spirit is eating now!
In one of the last video rental stores in the United States, nestled deep in the Valley, there is a dark and strange presence ... without a face, without a name. Amid the dusty shelves of video cassettes and glossy dvds there lingers a "strange energy", making the employees and clients unreasonably uncomfortable. Something has always been off kilter, but what?
In Episode 10, Ghosts Wanted makes an after-hours midnight journey to confront this evil energy. What Psychic Lee Barron discovers is that there are infact two different sources of evil, which is not uncommon in highly negative energy zones that can act as a magnet for dark energy.
The greater question to ask: Long after the shelves have been cleared of these cumbersome cinematic remnants, and we sit safe in our homes with cinema downloaded comfortably into our home computers, will the poltergeist remain a lonely ghost or leave this locale in search of darker pastures? WATER LEVEL: LOW (OVERHEAD SPRINKLERS)
A strange force drew me to the graveyard...I stood in the dark...I saw the shadows wave...And then I looked and saw my sweater...Lying there upon her grave...Strange things happen in this world. So closes the song, "Strange Things Happen" by Dickey Lee, recorded in 1965 for the album Laurie and the Girl from Peyton Place. This popular ghost ballad has become a part of the folklore tradition of the Vanishing Hitchhiker, the tale of a young woman at the side of the road forever trying to catch a ride home. In most versions, the demure and quiet passenger disappears before arriving at her destination.
This mythic moll has been spotted in San Fernando Valley (on the "Camino Real") just beyond the doors of the old mission, and Ghosts Wanted is on the scene to put the legend to test. Neighborhood gossip circulates tales of a woman in white as well as an apparition of a cat lady with a host of feline followers. Add a splash of neighborhood mortuary and we have a recipe for Ghosts! Watch Episode 8 to see if our fearless Psyhic Lee Barron gets more than he bargained for.
Amid the bustling touristas and grimy costumed hustlers that create the evening frenzy in front of Grauman's Chinese Theater walks a troubled ghost, the lost spirit of murdered actor Victor Killian, who travels his path of death each night on the Walk of Fame. At the time of his death on March 11, 1979, the Chinese Theatre had most recently honored George Burns with a hand and footprints ceremony, and the biggest film opening that year would be Star Trek.
Active in Hollywood since 1932, this spectacled bald man was most recently famed for his role as the Fernwood Flasher on the seventies television series Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. But earlier in his life he mastered macabre roles such as Dr. Cyclops (1940) and Esmerelda's hangman in The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939).
A life in Hollywood often leads to a death in Hollywood, and in Victor's case, it was literal. He was murdered in his residence at 6500 Yucca Street in the Lido Apartments, steps away from his beloved Hollywood Boulevard. Kilian was known to enjoy cocktails nightly at a local bar and then walk home in a tipsy reverie. Unfortunately, one night he made the wrong kind of friends, and now, for Victor, the dream never ends. WATER LEVEL: LOW (POSSIBLE WATER MAIN OR SEWER UNDER STREET)
In our first residential investigation, the GW crew feels the presence of a very active apartment ghost in the hipster enclave known as Los Feliz. Tucked away in a first floor unit in a mid-century modern building, Jackie and her roommate(s) have been sharing a desirable two bedroom, two bathroom charmer.
Unfortunately, the primary restroom is hopping with unrest, and Jackie is ready to confront this unlikely invasion of privacy. Watch as Psychic Lee Barron uncovers the mystery behind...THE HAUNTED BATHROOM.
WATER LEVEL: HIGH (SURROUNDED BY WATER PIPES AND NEAR RESERVOIR)
Psychic Lee Barron investigates the ghosts of Miracle mile in Episode 5: The La Brea Tar Pits of Death. Since the dawn of time, this Hancock Park natural pool of viscous tar has led to the demise of many a prehistoric mammal, including large and threatening beasts such as saber-tooth tigresses and wooly mammoths. The tar reaches the surface at several locations in the park, forming pools. Methane gas also seeps up, causing bubbles which makes the asphalt appear to boil like a witch's cauldron.
Because the Ghost Wanted crew only investigates after sundown, Psychic Lee Barron was unable to legally gain access to the park grounds, so the reading was performed at the gated entrance, adjacent to Koo Koo Roo's and the Craft & Folk Art Museum.
Fortunately, Lee was still able to uncover a number of significant human death imprints in the foliage surrounding the park, as well as the strong energy of a recent crime scene shooting and a fatal car accident.
WATER LEVEL: HIGH (NEXT TO LAKE OF WATER?TAR MIXTURE)
UPDATE 3/5/09
A docent form Pit 91 has informed GHOSTS WANTED that the pool of tar that Psychic Lee Barron is standing in front of in this video is a man-made reservoir (and not actually a "pit").
Before the archeological value of these naturally ocurring pits was realized, people used to buy this tar to patch roofs and roads. So, a reservoir was dug next to Whilshire Blvd. to hold the black goo, and make it more accessable for trucks.
Thus, there are no pre-historic remains in this lake of tar shown in the video, which means that once again Psychic Lee Barron was correct when he could not "feel" any animals in that "tar pit."
In this exciting GHOSTS WANTED episode, Lee Barron meets the guardians at the gate...the legendary "Indian" at the door...plus five more souls! Our crew also discovers mysterious small blue spirits at the second gate, possibly the souls of children who have found peace and comfort among the walls of the oldest mission in Los Angeles.
The Mission San Fernando, Rey de Espana, was established in 1797 as one of a chain of missions which were built to convert the native peoples (Tongva) to Christianity and to consolidate Spanish power along the coast of California. The establishment of the missions in California was traumatic for the Native Indians, as they were forced to change their lifestyle, beliefs and culture. The Mission was utilized in a number of ways during the late 1800s; it was a station for the Butterfield Stage Lines; it served as a warehouse for the Porter Land and Water Company; and in 1896, the quadrangle was used as a hog farm. San Fernando's church became a working church again in 1923 when the Oblate priests arrived.
WATER LEVEL: HIGH (ACTIVE FOUNTAIN)
UPDATE 5/21/08
GHOSTS WANTED returned to this location to follow up on another ghost.
Sadly, this historic bronze was witness to the deaths of two young children who played, perhaps too adventurously, amongst the rocks and water at its feet. Psychic Lee Barron was able to sense the death imprint of two separate incidents where young boys met their last day by receiving fatal concussions on the boulders while playing in the fountain. Lee senses that the incidents are twenty five years apart, due to the varying strengths of the "signals".
Here is a photograph from 1927 depicting the statue in its original state as the centerpiece for a peaceful fountain in front of the Fox Carthay Circle theater. The popular cinema palace no longer stands, but was on par with Grauman's Chinese Theater in reputation, and hosted grand premieres and celebrities of the day. Click here to read the amazing history of this cinema palace and to see photos of the modern monstrosity which now takes its place.
WATER LEVEL: MEDIUM (FORMER POIND, PIPES UNDERNEATH)
Article reprinted in full from Los Angeles Times, February 16, 2006: Police strike pay dirt in hunt for stolen statue of miner The bronze miner who stood for 80 years in a Mid-City park suffered the height of indignities.
He was ripped from his pedestal in the park two blocks from Beverly Hills, cut in half above the knees and trucked to a scrap yard on Alameda Street south of downtown. There he was thrown amid the lumpen metal masses -- common copper plumbing, old radiators, transmissions and beer kegs.
Fortunately, police found the miner before he was crushed in the bailer, sent to China and melted in a foundry forge. And they may have ended a peculiar crime spree as well.
Residents of Carthay Circle were delighted to learn the old miner survived, albeit with amputated legs.
"I'm glad he's only cut in half and not melted down," said Judy Moore, president of the Carthay Circle Neighborhood Assn. "At least he didn't go into the witch's brew to become God knows what." Moore said the neighborhood association is willing to help pay to fix the miner.
UPDATE 7/6/08
GHOSTS WANTED returned to this location to follow up on another ghost.
The "cursed" statue returns home! ...But, for how long?
UPDATE 1/8/09
According to an L.A.Times article dated Feb.19, 1939, the intersection where the "cursed" statue resides was infamous for the numerous "terrible smash-ups" that occurred as a result of ten lanes of traffic (and two trolley lines) that at that time converged around the statue's island. (The "accident problem" was later solved by converting some of the streets to "one-way" traffic.)
UPDATE 5/13/09
The "miner of misfortune" has once again been attacked. This time he may have been the target of a hate crime. The word "Jew" was spray-painted across his mining pan.
Ghosts Wanted returns to Laurel Canyon to investigate the ruins of the real Houdini mansion. Contrary to standard Houdini mansion investigations, Lee Barron stations his investigation across the street amongst the foundation of the guest house that was once connected to the estate. At the time of filming, Lee was not informed of the history of the grounds, and was only instructed by crew to contact Houdini. Instead, he was only able to perceive strongly the energy of an older woman who lived alone, but received many guests. GHOSTS WANTED believes that he has detected the residual energy of Bess Houdini.
By the time Harry Houdini had moved to Laurel Canyon, he was already a rich and famous celebrity. He had come to California to further his fortune in the Hollywood film industry. In actuality, he had spent little time at his lavish estate on Laurel Canyon Boulevard before he died. His wife, Bess, lived out her days at the estate's guest house, using the mansion to conduct seances with her dead husband.
The date of his death was October 31, 1926 -- Halloween, one of three days (October 31-November 2) of Samhain, the Celtic New Year, when the veil between the living and the dead allegedly is at its thinnest and the living can make contact with the dead.
For the premiere webisode of Ghosts Wanted, Psychic Lee Barron investigates the intersection of Laurel Canyon and Lookout Mountain based on a neighborhood tip that a haunted stagecoach arrives every night at midnight. While Frank Zappa lived here in the 1960's, in the 1860's Los Angeles was only 10 years old and the Spaniards and Mexican "Californios" were fighting for control of the land formerly home to the Tongva Native American Tribes.
Yet, is it possible that the sounds of crackling branches could be the residual energy of the First Trackless Trolley in America? The Laurel Canyon Trackless Trolley (technological ancestor to the electric car) was operating briefly after the turn of the century by the Laurel Canyon Utility Company in order to create real estate interest, but failed because the roads were not paved. Trolley transportation did not return to Los Angeles again until 1947.
WATER LEVEL: HIGH (DIRECTLY OVER UNDERGROUND RIVER)
LEE BARRON is a sketch comedy actor with a special gift. Born into a family with a genetic disposition for psychic receptivity, Lee can consciously small-talk with spirits and uses etheric humor to break the ice and help them along their path through the after-life. His grandfather used to do energy healing on the livestock on their Texas ranch, an ability that has been passed down through the generations.
His first shuddersome experience in tinseltown occurred while working behind the scenes on In Search of Haunted Hollywood with Max Maven and John Davidson. One morning on the Alcatraz set in GMT Studios, he heard tapping on the prison bars when no one was there. Set managers confirmed that they had heard, “strange sh*t, too.” Lee later discovered that the studio lot was built on top of the old Culver City Cemetery.
Since he has accepted his gifts, he has experienced ghosts in many unusual situations, such as haunting an apartment heater, attending a funeral, and possessing a laundry room. Lee’s advice to other ghost hunters; “Keep it Ethe-real, but don’t be a white-light wanker about it.” RICHARD CARRADINE's passion for spooky subject matter was ignited when he came face to face with a “woman in white” that haunts a 19th century mansion in Pasadena, CA. Since that experience, he has had many unexplainable encounters with the other side, from full-bodied apparitions to heavy furniture sliding back and forth across a room.
In almost two decades of hunting, he has investigated ghosts from all over the world, (Canada, Scotland, England, Wales, Austria, Czech Republic, and Slovenia) and throughout the United States (Florida, California, New York, Louisiana, Virginia, and Montana). In California alone, he has investigated over 200 haunted locations (including all 23 missions).
His approach to each case is academic. Proving or disproving the spiritual activity of a certain spot isn’t what motivates this ghost hunter. Instead, he is more interested in collecting the stories and eyewitness accounts, and archiving them, not only as a means of getting a glimpse into that place’s past, but also as a means of recording them for future studies into these unusual phenomena that clearly affect so many seemingly unconnected people.
Request an Investigation
If you live in Los Angeles County and believe you have ghoulish guests, please send your name, location, and detailed description of haunted activity to GHOSTS WANTED. Our staff will contact you as soon as humanly possible. (We are currently backlogged with requests)
Note: We are ghosts purists. Please, no inquiries regarding Chupacabras, the Billywack, or the Anaheim Bigfoot.
Coming Soon!
Dead Man's Curve II Hollywood & Vine The Muffler Man Haunted Apt.