The Myrtle’s
When I stayed at the Myrtle’s about six weeks ago now. Amanda APS #amandaaps #hauntedoldandbeautifulbyamandaaps
When I stayed at The Myrtle’s I hope you enjoy. Amanda APS 💜💜💜
New Orleans airport
It’s poring down in New Orleans we are on our way to Chicago then onto NY woohoo
The Myrtles
We have recorded the Myrtles from the entrance to the main house we hope you enjoy. Amanda x The Myrtles Plantation is a historic home and former antebellum plantation in St. Francisville, Louisiana, United States built in 1796 by General David Bradford. In the early history of the property, it was worked by enslaved people. It is reportedly a haunted place, and has been featured in television. The Myrtles Plantation has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1978. The blue paint is called haint blue. The tradition of painting porch ceilings blue was originally started in the Southern United States by the Gullah people who believed that ghosts (known as “haints”, pronounced ‘haunts’) were not able to cross water and by painting one’s ceiling blue, they would be able to keep the haints away from the house (there are even colors in certain paint manufacturer palettes called ‘haint blue’!).
San Francisco Alcatraz
Good morning from my hotel overlooking Alcatraz. Have an incredible day my followers. Amanda
San Francisco
The most beautiful city I’ve ever seen. I’m in ♥️ I want to live here. Thank you San Francisco for an incredible time I’m off to Alcatraz tomorrow for a spooky time. Love Amanda x
The ‘Poltergeist’ Curse: Uncovering the Haunting Mysteries Behind the Classic Horror Franchise. The tragic legacy attached to the classic horror series has led some to believe there might be a supernatural element at work. By Marah Eakin |Mar 30, 2024. Entertainment it makes sense that there would be something haunting the set of a horror movie. After all, isn’t the act of telling ghost stories simply paying tribute to the unknown, or to the paranormal? If you’re making a scary movie about ghosts, you’ve simply got to believe they exist—and they might want to curse you a bit, just so you’re absolutely sure. The original Poltergeist quickly became a horror classic after it was released in 1982. The spooky tale focuses on a suburban, middle-class family whose life and home become a living hell following some vicious paranormal events, including the abduction of their youngest daughter, Carol Anne (played by Heather O’Rourke). The film introduced the world to a monster demon called “The Beast” and found massive success at the box office, becoming one of the highest grossing movies of 1982. A couple sequels (1986’s Poltergeist II: The Other Side, 1988’s Poltergeist III) and a remake (2015’s Poltergeist) followed, but they couldn’t capture the pounding hearts of scared moviegoers as much as the original. The so-called origins of the Poltergeist curse are often linked to one climactic scene where mom Diane Freeling (JoBeth Williams) falls into an unfinished pool filled with human remains. Williams has long claimed she didn’t know during the shoot that real human skeletons were used as props. “I always assumed that the skeletons were made by the prop department,” Williams told Vanity Fair in 2022. “A few years later, I ran into one of the special effects guys, and I said, ‘You guys making all those skeletons, that must have been really amazing.’ He said, ‘Oh, we didn’t make them, those were real.’ I said, ‘What?’ He said,