I know right?!Mountain_King wrote: ↑Sat Oct 24, 2020 2:15 pm I'm mostly a lurker on these forums, but I must step out of the shadows for one moment.
Ghostwatch? Chuck's going to review Ghostwatch?
This thing is legendary here in the UK, but I'm not sure how big it is over there in the US. It's right up there in the urban legend stakes with the Orson Wells War of the Worlds broadcast and the Goodie's "Ecky Thump sketch (in which a demonstration of the "ancient" Lancastrian martial art of hitting people with black puddings actually killed a man resulted in one of the viewers dying of laughter)
It's going to be interesting to see Chuck's response to this.
I was about 11 when it aired, so while I had my parents say it wasn't real as we were watching it, I did have that nagging feeling at the start that it might be-because you've got all these familiar faces that I knew weren't actors- especially Sarah Greene because all I knew her from was Going Live. (A Children's magazine show on Saturday mornings).
When it started to go over the top with the ghostly stuff happening later on- that was when it got less believable.
I remember the backlash reported on the news- particularly because of Sarah Greenes involvement- it meant a lot more kids were watching it despite airing after the watershed.
Also, a young man with mental health issues supposedly committed suicide over it, which I can imagine added to its urban legend status, and was a factor in it not really being aired again, at least on terrestrial TV.