After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal - History's Greatest Ghost Hunters: the Warrens
Episode Date: December 5, 2024Ghost hunting couple Ed and Lorraine Warren transformed twentieth century America into an enchanted land dotted with haunted houses, cursed objects, and portals to hell. Their exploits are the basis f...or the Conjuring movie franchise. They are the originators of the Annabelle doll. They are the most famous demon hunters ever. Who were the Warrens? Did they make it up? Or did they believe it all?Maddy and Anthony's guest today is Professor Joseph Laycock from Texas State University. He was our guest last week on our episode about the Amityville Horror. Joseph is the author of: The Penguin Book of Exorcisms and co-author of The Exorcist Effect: Horror, Religion, and Demonic Belief.Edited & produced by Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here.After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal is a History Hit podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, we're your hosts, Anthony Delaney and Maddie Pelling.
And if you would like after dark myths, misdeeds and the paranormal ad free and get early access,
sign up to History Hit.
With a History Hit subscription, you can also watch hundreds of hours of original documentaries
with top history presenters and enjoy a new release every week.
Sign up now by visiting historyhit.com forward slash subscribe.
This is an ad by BetterHelp. What's your perfect night? Is it curling up on the couch for a cozy, peaceful night in? Therapy can feel a bit like that. Your comfort place where you replenish
your energy. With BetterHelp, get matched with a therapist based on your needs entirely online. It's convenient and suited to your schedule.
Find comfort this season with BetterHelp.
Visit BetterHelp.com today to get 10% off your first month.
That's BetterHelp.com.
The flu remains a serious disease.
Last season, over 102,000 influenza cases have been reported across Canada, which is
nearly double the historic average of 52,000 cases.
What can you do this flu season?
Talk to your pharmacist or doctor about getting a flu shot.
Consider Flu-Celvax Quad and help protect yourself from the flu.
It's the first cell-based flu vaccine authorized in Canada
for ages six months and older,
and it may be available for free in your province.
Side effects and allergic reactions can occur,
and 100% protection is not guaranteed.
Learn more at flucellvax.ca.
It's February, 1976.
A few weeks ago, George and Kathy Lutz
abandoned their new home
at 112 Ocean Avenue, Amityville, in horror.
They began desperately seeking help, or rather, but we know them better now,
desperately seeking for people to amplify and authenticate the tales they would tell.
It's a crisp winter morning and now, standing at the bottom of the drive of that same 112
Ocean Avenue, are a middle-aged couple, Ed and Lorraine Warren. Ed is a heavy-set man
with sunken eyes and a white jacket. Lorraine holds herself very straight, although there's
a hint of nervous energy about her.
At first glance they seem ordinary, predictable even, respectable certainly. You would never guess that they will become some of America's most famous demon hunters. Despite their somewhat
bland appearance, the Warrens are master storytellers who understand well the power of their trade.
Beside them now is a local news crew along for the ride. In the decades that follow,
cameras will continue to document the Warrens and their strange shared occupation. And they welcome
it, acting out their made-for-TV lives under the scrutiny of the lens.
Over the course of their careers, they will unearth untold numbers of so-called demons
and cases of alleged possession, catch supposed ghosts on camera, and testify in court to
the presence of the devil.
Their la masse, a museum's worth of haunted memorabilia, helped launch a multi-billion dollar film franchise
and answer thousands of cries for help from families across America.
But who were the Warrens? Were they cynical con artists? Or did they, in fact, believe it all. Hello and welcome back to After Dark.
My name's Anthony.
And I'm Maddie.
And guys, before I do my proper actual job and introduce this topic and our guest, this
is wild to me because I would count myself as a horror film fan.
And I think I know the odd thing or two
about horror films, but actually what I'm learning is that these all feed into one another.
All these American big 70s movies that have so shaped how we understand horror today,
they all inherit from one another and they're all kind of part of the same moment. But anyway,
look, I need to get off my job and then we can talk about all of those things.
So last week, you know, we spoke about the story of Amityville, the most haunted house in America.
We talked about the murders that took place in that house and how those murders then went on to secure a legacy of haunting for the location.
But in today's episode, we are going to be talking about a story that's connected to that, but by two names in particular,
and they are husband and wife, ghost-busting duo Ed and Lorraine Warren. Now we learned
in our Amityville episode about how the exorcist had such a huge impact on American paranormal
beliefs. And when we're looking at the progression of those beliefs, the Warrens are the very next step in that story. And I'd like to give you a quote here, and then I'll introduce the
person who's written that quote, but I just think it's so interesting. And it's not it's not something
I was aware of. So let's let's go with this first. So the quote says, to understand how a new American
mythology formed in the decades following the exorcist, it is important to know
as much as possible about who the Warrens were. They transformed 20th century America into an
enchanted land dotted with haunted houses, cursed objects, and portals to hell. Now that is from
our guest today and our guest in the previous episode, Dr. Joseph Lacock, who is the Associate
Professor of Religious Studies at Texas State University and author of, as we've said in our
last episode, the most well titled books, The Penguin Book of Exorcisms and co-author of The
Exorcist Effect, Horror, Religion and Demonic Belief. Joseph, thank you so much for joining us once
again. Thanks so much for having me back. So excited to get into the Warrens because as
Anthony said, I do think they are absolutely
fascinating. I'm looking at an image and I think this kind of sets the tone. So I'm going to
describe it and it is from a case that we're going to get into later on in the episode,
but I just want to give listeners a flavour of what to expect.
This is wild.
Yeah. So I'm looking at a photo of what looks like the interior of a large,
maybe a church, maybe a museum space in America. And
there are people lined up in a cube, most of them are just looking at their phones and there are
barriers, metal barriers to keep them in place. And there's a table that's draped in cloth. And
on that table is, well, what I can only really describe as the stable from your grandma's
nativity kit. It's got a crucifix below these
little wooden eaves and it's probably, I don't know, about half a meter high, half a meter wide,
something like that. And there's another crucifix inside. And inside there's electric light that's
kind of pinky purpley. And the surprise object, wait for us, drum roll, not a baby Jesus, but
a very large, very plastic dinosaur. It's the tone, that's where we're
going in. I'm absolutely gripped already. So Joe, not only welcome back to After Dark,
but what on earth is happening?
So I've seen that plastic dinosaur with my own eyes and it was at the Mohegan Sun Casino in Connecticut at the Ed and Lorraine Warren Paracon. So this was an
all day event, sort of celebrating the Warrens put on by their son-in-law. It was attended by
about 5000 people. And the main attraction were these supposedly cursed objects from the Warrens
cases that had been brought out from their Museum of Cursed and Haunted
Objects in Connecticut.
Absolutely phenomenal. I'm very jealous that we didn't go to that.
I know!
We need to do something like this, ace up. So Joe, if we met Ed and Lorraine Warren at
the height of their fame, at the height of their powers, who were they? What kind of
people would we come across?
So they presented as this ideal American couple, you know, a devoted Catholic husband and wife.
Ed presented himself as a demonologist with this sort of advanced training and expertise on the nature of demons and ghosts and other types of supernatural creatures.
And Lorraine presented herself as a psychic. She actually claimed that she had been tested for psychic abilities at the University of California in Los Angeles,
and that she was sort of an off the charts psychic. And so the division of labor is she
would come in and get impressions about the types of history and entities going on in
your house. And then Ed would apply his expertise and say, ah, Lorraine detected this, therefore, this is the
nature of your problem. And this is how we're going to fix it together.
Do we know exactly how many cases they were involved with? Because it seems that the scale of
this is pretty phenomenal.
Yeah, they were very, very busy. We don't know. And I'm sure they exaggerated. So by 1972, they
were already claiming that they had had 2000 cases. And in a tabloid column that they 1972, they were already claiming that they had had 2000 cases.
And in a tabloid column that they had, they even said, send us your cases and we have a cash prize if we like your case the best.
So currently, the Conjuring franchise has been taking their cases and making them into movies.
This is currently a billion dollar franchise, a billion with a B.
And they have no danger of running out of stories about the Warrens anytime soon. So I think it's
going to continue to be lucrative for a very long time.
So Joe, tell us who the Warrens are, because they don't start off their careers, their careers
together as paranormal investigators, do they? They have a slightly
different artistic bent, let's say.
So the Warrens are from Bridgeport, Connecticut. They actually met at a movie theater where
Ed Warren was working as an usher. Ed went off to go fight in World War Two. They got
married while he was still enlisted. And then in the 1950s, they tried to make a career as artists.
And Ed's favorite subject to paint was haunted houses. So they would drive around New England
and find spooky looking houses. And Ed would paint it. And then Lorraine would sort of charm
the owners and try to sell them a painting of their own house. And also see if there were any
sort of spooky stories or phenomenon associated with
the house. They formed the New England Society for Psychical Research, which I'm not really sure
it did much, but it sounded kind of scientific. And then after the exorcist came out, there was
this huge demand of people who wanted an exorcism, who thought they were fighting something demonic
in their house, but the Catholic Church was not in a place to help and would sort of direct them to therapists or mental health services instead.
So this really created the marketplace for the Warrens to thrive. So they became, as lay Catholics, not priests, the people that you could go to if you thought you needed help with the supernatural.
that you could go to if you thought you needed help with the supernatural. STUART And I'm looking at one of their early paintings. Now, I will say this painting is
quite evocative in one sense. It's relatively rudimentary. If you know the Red Barn Murder
Mystery, think of a building like that. It's red, it's wooden, it's quite peaked, it's covered in
snow and there's some mud on the roads. It's not a bad painting, I wouldn't say by any stretch of
the imagination it's a masterpiece, but it's a very big leap from a plastic dinosaur in a case.
There's something in this that says storytelling, whereas the other thing seems exploitative.
What I'm interested in, I suppose, Joseph, is what's the context that they go from these painters of houses to demon hunters? What's the context
for this in the 1960s?
BD Yeah, so we should talk a bit about Vatican II, but Vatican II from 1963 to 1965 totally
changes the Catholic Church. So prior to that, all Catholic masses would have been in Latin, and they also probably
would have begun with a prayer to St. Michael to cast out Satan. And after that, they changed
a lot of things. So mass is now done in whatever language the community speaks, and a lot of
the things that were deemed superstitious by the public, so things like rosaries, cult
of the saints, and so forth. This was all toned down,
and they said everybody is probably going to go to heaven even if they're not Catholic. So for
progressive Catholics, this was great. For more traditionalist Catholics, which included the
Warrens, they really felt that their religion and their way of life was under attack, and especially
on the issue of the devil and demons. So Ed Warren was one of the Catholics under attack, and especially on the issue of the devil and demons.
So, Ed Warren was one of the Catholics who said, I can't believe that I went to a Catholic
priest, the person charged with protecting us from evil, and he told me Satan isn't real.
He told me Satan is a metaphor.
So we have to get everybody to believe in the devil again.
And when I saw that plastic dinosaur at the Mohegan Sun
Casino, the enclosure said, accept the existence of the devil. Those words were written above
the plastic dinosaur. So a big part of what the Warrens were doing was this kind of pushback
from lay Catholics that no, no, no, the devil is very real. And it's the job of the church
to protect us from the devil.
It's really interesting that what we're seeing with the Warrens is in some way similar to the Amityville horror story that we have discussed in our previous episode, Jo,
in that there is religious belief, there's superstition mixed in with that, separate and overlapping. And then there's popular culture.
And it's what we see again with the Warrens and when they become involved in Amityville, that they
are, as you say, kind of part of this traditional Catholic faith, but they utilize television and
modernity in order to get that message out. So can you tell us a little bit about how they become involved in that case and what they do and because they take a TV crew around with them, don't they? This seems like a pretty bold step forward from just itinerantly painting haunted houses and attempting to sell them to the owners.
painting haunted houses and attempting to sell them to the owners.
So the Warrens absolutely wanted to be famous, they wanted everyone to know who they were and about all their cases and so forth. And they got involved with the
Amityville horror, because they were already in contact with a journalist who
thought, you know, what would make this an even better news story, is if I could
invite the Warrens out here and they could perform
a seance inside the Amityville house. So that's what happened. They came out and they did a seance
in front of news cameras. And Lorraine Warren said that she was not only a Catholic, but that she was
a psychic. And so she could kind of use her psychic abilities to learn something about the nature of
the disturbances in the house. So that really
became one of their biggest cases. And when they made the Amityville Horror 2, the Warrens were
consultants on that film. And I really think they spent a lot of the rest of their careers
looking for a similar sort of media event, right? What could be the next Amityville Horror?
And by the end of their careers, you know, they had flyers
if they were going to come give a lecture.
And that said that they were chief investigators
in the Amityville horror case.
So they really, really hitched their wagon to that story.
And of course, we've done an episode previously
on the Enfield poltergeist.
And they were momentarily, I suppose,
not very involved in that case, but they did show up.
They did a day, I believe it was, at Enfield, but came away with very little.
But in one sense, you could say, Joe, that all of this is a little bit harmless, that they're turning up, they're claiming to be whatever.
But there is a darker, more exploitative side to this.
is a darker, more exploitative side to this. And it feeds back to, as everything does eventually, that haunted dinosaur in the case that Maddie described at the top of this episode. Can you
tell us a little bit about this? It's the case of David Glatzel. Am I saying that correctly?
Yeah, the Glatzels. Yeah, it's a complicated case. But you have these brothers called the Glatzels, and the
whole family had just watched the exorcist on cable.
This is in the 1980s.
And the youngest, David, begins to act strange, and his mother interprets that this is a sign
of demonic possession.
And the mother and her daughter had also attended a talk recently by the Warrens. So they start
to try to get the Catholic Church to perform an exorcism. And by the 80s, the Catholic
Church is sort of in this transitional period where they're saying, well, okay, we're starting
to do exorcisms, but it's still very kind of embarrassing and we don't want to, you
know, overdo it. And you need the permission of a bishop to perform a true exorcism,
but there are loopholes to this.
And so they began performing what they called minor exorcisms.
So they said, I don't have the permission of my bishop.
So I can't do a proper one.
Like you see in the movie, the exorcist, but I can really strongly pray for you
and bless you and try to protect you from evil.
So they start doing these kinds of off-brand
exorcisms over David. And what skeptics have said is if you tell a small child there's
a demon inside of you over and over again, you are psychologically priming them to behave
in very strange ways. So it's almost a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy.
Now, the other thing that makes this case very complicated is there is a
young man named Arnie Johnson, who is living with the family and who is dating the Glatzels' daughter,
and is very much in love with her. And she gets into an altercation with her boss. And Arnie Johnson
ends up stabbing the boss in this kind of argument where the boss is very drunk. And so he goes
to the Warrens and the Warrens sort of come up with the story that the demon has jumped
out of David Glatzel and into Arnie Johnson. And that's what made him commit this murder.
And that this happened because Arnie Johnson challenged the demon that while David was
thrashing told the demon, leave that David was thrashing, told the demon,
leave that boy alone, come into me.
If you have seen the exorcist,
this is literally what happens at the end of the exorcist.
And now it was happening in real life.
So the Warrens try to go to Arne Johnson's murder trial,
and they actually find a lawyer who tries to say,
my client is not guilty by reason of demonic
possession. And a judge says, you cannot plead that in American law. And the warrants begin saying,
well, we have all these Catholic priests who can come in and testify. And the judge says,
you don't understand. You could have the actual demon here on the witness stand.
There is no mechanism in our court for this. And so they finally decide to plea
insanity instead. And actually, Arne Johnson turned out to be a model prisoner, and I think only
served five years of his sentence, married his fiance, and has been a model citizen ever since.
It's fascinating, isn't it, that again, that intersection of now we've not only got popular culture and real life interplaying in that way, but now we've got the law as well and
the discussion around whether you can claim demonic possession in legal terms. In terms
of the Warrens turning up at that trial, Joe, do you see that as a publicity stunt? Do you
think they had genuine interest in the case and wanted Arnie to be let off for the murder? Did they see him as genuinely
having been possessed by a devil and therefore innocent of a crime? Or was their presence
just a way of bolstering their own popularity and their own profile?
Well, I don't think it has to be one or the other. You can't see beliefs, but I have no
evidence to think that they didn't really believe Arnie Johnson was demonically possessed.
But certainly, Ed Warren expressed being very excited that this is it. We're finally going
to get to prove in the court of law this is all real. And I think for him, this was very
personal, right? Because lots of people said, you know, the Warrens were just con artists
and that this was all sort of silly and they were tricking people. And
even people from Ed Warren's own church, right, said there isn't really a devil.
So I think he saw this as an opportunity to really prove all of these people
wrong in the most sort of authoritative way that he could. I'll have to keep my voice down because right now I'm between the actual bedsheets of some
of history's most famous figures. Want to know more about what Hitler might have been like in the sack? Or Julius Caesar?
Or our very own Billy Shakespeare? You wouldn't believe the details I'm able to uncover here on
Betwixt the Sheets, a podcast by history hit. Because sexuality explored through a historical
lens can reveal a surprising amount about the human experience. What's and all, if you'll excuse the pun.
And we don't just stop at sex.
Expect outrageous scandals throughout the centuries,
as well as probing into everyday issues,
the nitty gritty of human life that really connects us
to all people throughout history.
Join me, Kate Lister, every Tuesday and Friday
on Betwixt the Sheets to find out more.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts.
Right, time to slide out here and avoid the bedpan.
This is an ad by BetterHelp.
What's your perfect night?
Is it curling up on the couch for a cozy, peaceful night in?
Therapy can feel a bit like that,
your comfort place where you replenish your energy. With BetterHelp, get matched with a therapist based on your needs entirely
online. It's convenient and suited to your schedule. Find comfort this season
with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com today to get 10% off your first month.
That's BetterHelp.com. The flu remains a serious disease.
Last season, over 102,000 influenza cases have been reported across Canada, which has
nearly doubled the historic average of 52,000 cases.
What can you do this flu season?
Talk to your pharmacist or doctor about getting a flu shot.
Consider Flu-Silvax-Quad and help protect yourself from the flu.
It's the first cell-based flu vaccine authorized in Canada for ages 6 months and older and it may be available for free in your province. Side effects and allergic
reactions can occur and 100% protection is not guaranteed. Learn more at flucellvax.ca.
There were loud voices who were very much saying that they were manipulative and that they were abusive. And I have another quote here from horror author Grady Hendrix. And
it's quite interesting. Grady Hendrix says, for the record, I could not have a lower opinion
of a human being than I have of Ed and Lorraine.
I don't think they were well-intentioned. I don't think they were good people.
I think they saw situations and exploited them. And I think they did untold harm to people.
You can't go into a place where people are undergoing the kind of emotional and psychological and even physical trauma that people who are in some of these situations are and say, oh, yeah, well, I know the answer. These are demons.
It's quite a damning, it's quite a damning insight, you know,
depending on what side of this argument you were to take.
Yeah, Greg Hendricks was not a fan of the Warrens and a lot of people that we spoke to who knew them
personally kind of regarded them as being cynical con artists. The Glatzel brothers had a plan to
write a book basically saying that the Warrens kind of ruined our lives, right? You know, one of us
had sort of minor mental health crisis and the Warrens made that exponentially worse and it kind
of tore our family apart all so that they could make a buck. Now recently, there was a Netflix
documentary about the Glatzels, and I think that they decided not to publish their book
and that they had kind of better sort of financial opportunities working with Netflix. So that's
one example of this. There was also a book written about the Warren's cases called Satan's
Harvest about a very disturbed individual that they were trying to treat for demonic possession,
who ended up actually murdering his wife and was arrested for basically sexually molesting his
daughter. And Ed Warren tried to say, well, but that was not really this man. That was an incubus
demon in his shape. To me, that really seemed like a smoking gun, that they were kind of sometimes using a belief
in demons to excuse pretty inexcusable behavior. So that line was certainly crossed in a few
cases at least.
Yeah, I mean, their ethics seem at best very questionable. Jo, I want to ask you about
evidence because we've seen the presentation of the haunted dinosaur, and we know that they took film crews with them. Did they
ever fake evidence? Or did they simply put forward the idea that something invisible that you couldn't
tangibly prove was happening? I'm thinking in particular about a photograph of a ghost that they
are associated with.
Yeah, they did fake evidence, right? So Ed's first book that he put out, it came out in 1973,
the year the exorcist came out, and he said, because I am such a highly respected demonologist,
the church has shown me secret documents about the actual true story that the exorcist is based on,
and begins to say, and I know who this girl actually was and so forth.
Well, we now know it wasn't a girl.
It was a boy.
Right.
So there's no charitable interpretation of that.
He was simply lying and saying that he had access to things that he did not have.
One of the sort of trophy photos that the Warrens really were proud of and felt
proved that their investigations were uncovering something is a photo from a science at the Amityville
Horror House of what looks like a sort of pale child's face
poking out. And they say that this is a ghost that they've
sort of captured on on camera. What skeptics say is this is
probably a neighbor's child who has ventured into the into the
science because there were a bunch of news vans parked out front.
I spoke with Matt Baxter who accompanied Ed Warren
for the show Sightings in the nineties.
They were an allegedly haunted house and they were saying,
can you hear things on the roof?
I think the demons are dropping things on the roof.
And he sees this rock roll off the roof.
And then Ed Warren comes around
from the other side of the building.
He finally says, Ed,
this is not a proper investigation.
I think people are faking evidence.
I think he threw a rock on the roof.
Matt says that Ed took him aside and said,
listen, all these people are crazy.
They would never have called us in the first place unless they were crazy,
so just play along.
There are lots of cases like this where I think they
probably faked evidence. They may have also actually believed that supernatural things were
happening. This could be a case of what's sometimes called a pious fraud, where they said, well,
it's so important that people know the truth about the supernatural and about demons,
that it's actually worth it to occasionally fake evidence if that is the lie that will help them see the truth.
There seems to be, and also in popular culture, Joe, there seems to be a never-ending array
of cases that are linked to the Warrens somehow. We talked about Enfield, we talked about the
Amateur Villain, like they're all coming back to the Warrens somehow. Is there a particular
case that you find sticks out a bit for you?
Ben raggedy and all. And it's in another one of these enclosures like the plastic dinosaur. It has a devil tarot card taped to the glass for some reason and it says
you know warning never ever open this. So Annabelle was brought to the Mohegan
Sun Casino and that was what everybody wanted to see. It was sort of throngs of
people trying to get as close as possible to Annabelle and they were
actually selling Annabelle vodka,
which was vodka that had been put in the basement
with Annabelle and the door that says never ever open,
they opened that up so that these bottles could sort of
absorb as much evil energy from Annabelle as possible.
And it was selling for $200 a bottle.
The bottle came with gloves to protect yourself from the evil,
but then if you proceed to drink it, that would seem to defeat the purpose of the gloves, but
people were purchasing them. The story of Annabelle is that these nursing students were
experiencing kind of haunting phenomena, and they came to believe that this was a sort of lost spirit
of a child living in their house.
The spirit asked them using a Ouija board
if it could live inside this doll,
if it could live inside Annabelle.
And then things only continued to get worse
and people were reporting scratch marks
when they visited the home and Annabelle was moving
by itself.
And when the Warrens were called in, they said,
this was never a dead little girl. This was always a demon. It tricked you. You use the Ouija board.
You violated the law of invitation because it asked permission to live in a doll and you gave
it that permission. So now we're going to have to come and we're going to have to take this doll
to our museum where we can house things like this and sort of get all the evil out of your
house. This was the only case that we looked at by the Warrens where we simply could not confirm
that any of this ever happens. All of the other cases, these are at least real people, they're
real locations. But with Annabelle, you know, we looked at different versions of the story and the
names are inconsistent. There's no locations. There's
nothing to anchor this to reality. So we were forced to at least suspect that they maybe just
went to a toy shop and bought a doll and invented this entire story from from whole cloth. But you
know, there are other dolls in Ed Warren's museum. We even found an old article from 1980s,
in Ed Warren's museum. We even found an old article from 1980s
where he is talking about cabbage patch dolls,
which were a big fad toy in the 1980s,
and saying that these are conduits for evil
and that he's had to exercise
and bury numerous cabbage patch dolls.
So, but in a way I think that Ed Warren as an artist
kind of saw potential here, right?
That I can't be the only one who thinks dolls are creepy.
And he was quite right about that.
It really is fascinating because we come to a lot of these histories from,
you know, middle ages up to relatively modern histories and stories.
And, you know, the podcast is called After Dark, and there's always this dark
element to the history that we look at but sometimes the darkness lies in places that we don't necessarily start out looking so for instance in this case we talk about demons we talk about and we think that's the darkness we think what are you know the Amityville horror ghosts and slime coming through the walls that's that that's the dark.
ghosts and slime coming through the walls, that's the dark. But when you drill down into it, sometimes it's the human actions and interactions and exploitative elements
to people's nature and sometimes that's the actual real dark underlying some of these
human histories. But keeping that in mind, Joe, I'd love to know what you think the
Warren's legacy is because it's really profound, actually.
We're left with this very pop culture, you know, ghost-busting duo image of them from the Conjuring movies, let's say,
or from whatever iterations they've also come across in the 21st century.
But what do you think their legacy is in terms of that kind of historio paranormal world?
I think that the Warrens have really changed the way that we think about the folklore of things like haunted houses and demons.
So when Ed Warren said he was a demonologist, he did not do any sort of formal study of theology or history and he admitted that. He said,
my training is from the school of hard knocks, right? But he would sort of come
up with these ideas about how demons work. So one of these is what he called
the law of invitation. So he said, if demons are harassing you, it's always
your fault. You did something to invite them in and often that would be the Ouija board or something like this, right?
That's still a way that a lot of modern Americans think about demons.
The other thing that they would do is if you thought you had a haunted house, there was maybe a spirit of the dead in your house,
Lorraine would say, the spirit here has never walked the earth in human form.
That was how she described demons.
So that actually made your situation much, much scarier
to bring the Warrens in.
It's not grandma is looking for her lost glasses
or something, it's a demon.
It's the worst thing that you can imagine.
And so this kind of image of Ghostbusters sort of crossing the country,
hitting all of these locations where demons are on the loose or there are portals to hell,
and then using this elaborate toolkit of sort of Catholic folk religion and psychic powers
and fringe science to stop them, you know, this is kind of a new folklore. So when I watch shows like Supernatural about two brothers crossing America in a black impala fighting monsters,
I think this is all the legacy of the Warrens.
I think they have sort of created a unique idea of America as a supernatural haunted landscape. The thing that most interests me about the Warrens is how sort of
charismatic I suppose they must have been. And I mean, I'm very
interested in hoaxes anyway, I'm writing a book at the moment
about hoaxes in the 18th century. And in the cases that I'm
looking at, it's very much personality, and individual led,
it's about stepping into the internal logic of the worlds that these people
occupy. They believe are real and often, as you've laid out, Joe, are capable of producing a hoax
and carrying out a hoax, but also believing elements of it. It's not one or the other often.
I just wonder what it was in your mind about the Warrens that drew people to them and that allowed them to
operate in this way? Because as we heard in the opening introduction of this episode, they didn't
look particularly unusual, they looked like many, many other white, middle class, respectable people in America. So what was it about them that allowed them to
step into this role and into this into this I was gonna say light, but it's into the darkness
really?
What everyone who met the Warren said was they remind you of your parents, right? That they are
sort of Rockwellian, sort of American nuclear family. And that's how they presented themselves and
they cultivated that image very, very well. And I mean, literally everybody said this.
So I spoke with people who had worked with the Warrens writing books for them. And even
if they came away with very negative feelings about the Warrens said, you know, when I first
met them, they truly seemed like the perfect
American couple. And I even knew someone from college who met Lorraine Warren near the end of
her life and said the same thing that these were sort of my idealized parents, right? And I'm a
child of divorce, and they seem kind of like, you know, the perfect parents that I that I never had.
So, you know, if you're if you're frightened as a child who comes in and chases the monsters away,
it's your parents.
So there's almost a kind of psychological element
to the way that they were able to help people
who were actually, in many cases, quite scared
and didn't really feel like they had anyone else to turn to.
And therein, I suppose, is the place
to wrap this particular conversation up.
If you've enjoyed this episode, please go back and listen to our previous episode
with Joe, where we talked about the Amityville horror in more detail.
It really feeds into some of the discussion we've had in this episode, too.
Tell your friends about Outra Dark and leave us a five star review
wherever you get your podcasts, because that helps other people to find us.
Until next time, happy listening. place where you replenish your energy. With BetterHelp, get matched with a therapist based on your needs entirely online. It's convenient and suited to your schedule. Find comfort this
season with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com today to get 10% off your first month. That's
BetterHelp.com. The flu remains a serious disease. Last season, over 102,000 influenza cases have been reported
across Canada, which is nearly double the historic average of 52,000 cases. What can you do this flu
season? Talk to your pharmacist or doctor about getting a flu shot. Consider Flu-Silvax-Quad and
help protect yourself from the flu. It's the first cell-based flu vaccine authorized in Canada for
ages six months and older, and it may be available for free in your province.
Side effects and allergic reactions can occur and 100% protection is not guaranteed. Learn more at FluCelvax.ca