So Supernatural - DARK WEB: Dear David
Episode Date: February 7, 2025In 2017, cartoonist Adam Ellis began posting a Twitter thread that terrified his followers. He claimed that after a series of horrifying dreams, the ghost of a boy named Dear David was haunting his Ne...w York City apartment. What he captured on film convinced people his experience was genuine. But one final tweet made them wonder if Dear David may have possessed Adam, too. For a full list of sources, please visit: sosupernaturalpodcast.com/dark-web-dear-david So Supernatural is an audiochuck and Crime House production. Find us on social!Instagram: @sosupernatualpodTwitter: @_sosupernaturalFacebook: /sosupernaturalpod
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So I have something I want to get off my chest.
Because while I'm a die-hard believer through and through, there is one thing that really
gets me questioning some supernatural phenomena.
Particularly ghosts in the digital age.
Like, we have so many ways of capturing things.
Cameras, social media, ring door cameras, even our private moments aren't
really that private anymore.
Which if that's the case, wouldn't you think that we'd be catching ghostly phenomena all
the time?
Like for the whole world to see?
Wouldn't we have some concrete validation by now on whether or not this stuff really
exists?
Well, if you ask reporter Adam Ellis, he'd probably say, good point, Ashley,
and lucky for you, I've got it covered.
Because on August 7th, 2017,
Adam posted the tweet of all tweets,
back when they were called tweets.
It read, quote,
so my apartment is currently being haunted
by the ghost of a dead child,
and he's trying to kill me.
End quote.
For weeks, Adam kept the public updated with every little detail about his experience,
including photos, audio files, even videos of his cats going nuts at the door every night
around midnight. It made a lot of people wonder,
did Adam just invent a very ingenious method
of storytelling a horror story for the digital age?
Or was there something really going on in that apartment?
One that the entire internet had a front row seat for?
I'm Ashley Flowers, and this is Sew Supernatural.
MUSIC
Hello and welcome back to Sew Supernatural.
I'm Yvette Gentile.
And I'm her sister, Rasha Pecorero.
And like Ashley, I also have a confession to make.
I am obsessed with all things Beetlejuice.
Even though I'm a big scaredy cat,
I cannot get that demon out of my head.
I love Beetlejuice.
But regardless of whether you've seen the films or not,
you probably know one famous
detail about it.
That if you say Beetlejuice three times, you summon this chaotic demon.
It is comforting to know that these movies that Tim Burton did are a work of fiction.
But when you hear about things like this happening in real life,, that's a whole other story. Because something similar
happened to a Buzzfeed writer named Adam Ellis in 2017. He seemed to conjure a clingy little
demon of his own after asking him three little questions.
And if you believe Adam's story, it sounds like that ghost wasn't going to stop tormenting
him until he was actually dead.
As a kid, I was a brownie girl scout, and whenever we went on camping trips,
I loved sitting around the campfire listening to ghost
stories.
That said, I do love the suspense and thrill of a good creepy story.
I have never been and will never be a camper, but surprisingly, I've always loved stories
about spirits and hauntings.
And I think that's because mom believed in all of that stuff, you know, in psychics,
in mediums and everything supernatural
In fact, I remember one particular sleepover where mom was with me and all of my friends and we did the Ouija board
and we ended up conjuring the spirit of George Hodel and of course we freaked out and
If you don't know who that is
Small plug go check out the podcast Yvette and
I did a few years back called Root of Evil.
But these days, instead of sleepovers or camping trips, people seem to be getting a lot of
ghost stories from online forums, social media, and TikTok.
It all started on what was known as Twitter back on August 7th, 2017, when a New York-based
Buzzfeed writer and satirical cartoonist named Adam Ellis put this tweet out into the world.
So, my apartment is currently being haunted by the ghost of a dead child, and he's trying
to kill me.
That's a wild way to start a thread. And it's
especially weird when you look at Adam's background. Because Adam is a 31-year-old cartoonist,
his bread and butter is making funny cartoons. He's never dabbled in horror or anything like it.
So to those that know him or follow his work, this post is out of character for Adam.
That's probably why so many people take this thread at face value when they see it.
As wild as it sounds, they think there's no reason for Adam to lie.
So Adam begins the thread by explaining that at some point earlier that year, he was sleeping
in his New York apartment when he had a dream.
Well, sort of had a dream.
He says he was actually half awake at the time.
Adam gets sleep paralysis sometimes, so this isn't totally out of the norm for him.
Sleep paralysis can cause people to feel like they are awake in bed, only they can't move
or speak.
It's a creepy experience for sure, and if you haven't already, you guys gotta check
out Ashley's earlier episode on sleep paralysis.
It's so fascinating and also, it's so terrifying at the same time.
Adam claims that night, while he's having this episode, he looks over at this green
rocking chair that's next to his bed.
Only there's a young boy sitting in the chair.
He doesn't offer up an age, but from what I can tell, he's anywhere from 3 to 7 years
old and there's something wrong with his head.
As in there's a huge chunk missing from it, almost like his skull was smashed in.
Adam later draws a sketch of what he sees and he includes it in the Twitter thread.
And y'all, it is freaky.
You should check it out on our socials.
Yeah, even though it's just a drawing, it is really creepy and really, really disturbing.
But things get even creepier because Adam says the boy just sits there staring at him.
And while Adam wants to scream and run, all he can do is stare back because of that half-dream,
half-awake sleep paralysis state he was in.
Then it gets worse.
The little boy gets up and starts walking towards Adam's bed.
He gets closer and closer.
But no matter how hard Adam tries, he can't just snap himself out of the paralysis.
The boy is now almost close enough to touch him.
And that's when Adam finally wakes up.
He's so scared he's screaming out loud.
But when he looks around the room, the boy is gone.
He thinks, okay, it was just a dream after all.
He tells himself there's nothing to worry about.
All of this is unfortunately common with sleep paralysis,
this confusion between being awake and being asleep.
He's convinced it was just another episode.
A few days go by and I don't know the exact date, but according to his Twitter thread,
Adam has another dream. This time, the little boy isn't actually there, but the nightmare
is still about him. You see, Adam dreams that he meets a girl in a library, and he doesn't recognize her,
but she walks right up to him and asks,
You've seen Dear David, haven't you?
At first, Adam has no idea what she's talking about, but after a little bit of back and
forth, he realizes Dear David is the boy with the dented skull, the one that he saw the
other night.
And that's when the girl adds that Dear David is a ghost, one who visits people in
their dreams, always at the stroke of midnight.
According to her, if you see this spirit, you can ask him whatever you want.
Just start by saying, Dear David, and he'll answer your question.
But you only get to do this twice.
If you ask Dear David a third question, he'll kill you.
As soon as the girl finishes explaining all of this, Adam wakes up again.
Once more, he tells himself, it's just a dream.
I don't have nightmares like this,
ones that are so specific and so bone chilling
that you're just still thinking about it the next morning.
I mean, not to this extent.
Rasha, I know that you do suffer from nightmares,
and I know that it's terrifying to you because I get the text messages in the morning from you.
I do.
And I have recurring nightmares a lot,
but they're always a little different each time.
And that started happening after mom died.
And it's hard.
It's hard to recover from nightmares
that shake you to your core.
I can only imagine what Adam
was going through.
And just like you're saying, Adam wonders if his latest dream, nightmare, premonition,
whatever you want to call it, has meaning somehow. Maybe there's even some truth to
what the girl said.
Sure enough, a few weeks later, Dear David appears to Adam in another dream.
As soon as Adam sees the boy in the rocking chair, he asks a question.
Dear David, how did you die?
Dear David replies, an accident in a store.
Not the most detailed answer, but it's something.
So Adam decides to ask a follow-up for his second question.
He says, Dear David, what happened in the store?
And again the ghost answers, This time he says, a shelf was pushed on my head.
Now that phrasing really gets Adam's attention.
Because Dear David doesn't say a shelf fell, he says it was pushed.
Which shocks Adam so much, he can't stop himself from blurting out a third question.
Dear David, who pushed the shelf?
Dear David doesn't answer.
In fact, right then and there, Adam wakes up with his heart racing and sweat soaking
the sheets.
Immediately Adam knows he's made a huge mistake.
He just asked Dear David a third question.
He's basically doomed himself.
That is, assuming he really is talking
to the ghost of a dead boy.
Adam still isn't sure.
Maybe these are just some really weird dreams
and nothing more.
So he tries not to worry about it too much.
He also doesn't tell anyone about the dreams yet.
Remember, this is months before his Twitter thread.
And at first, Adam does what any reasonable person living
in the 21st century might do.
He Googles children's deaths in New York department stores.
He's looking for a news article, an obituary, anything that can confirm what Dear David told him and prove that he's real after all.
But he finds nothing.
He even tries searching other D names in case he misunderstood the girl in his dream.
But there's no record of a Devon or a Dylan or anyone else dying in a department store either.
This reassures Adam that these are just dreams. But there's no record of a Devin or a Dylan or anyone else dying in a department store either.
This reassures Adam that these are just dreams.
They're not real.
So he just tries to go on about his life.
Thankfully, he's got plenty going on to distract him.
You see, he's moving from the downstairs unit
of his duplex to the upstairs one.
The upstairs apartment is a little bit bigger
and it's nicer and it
just became vacant so Adam wants to upgrade while he can. And for the first
few months in his new place, Adam actually has some peace and quiet. No
more dreams about dear David, nothing to worry about. That is until the summer of
2017. It's the first week of August when Adam notices his two cats are doing this weird thing.
At the stroke of midnight, every night, they go sit by the front door like there's something
or someone out there, and they're just waiting for them to come in.
Of course, there's no reason for anybody to be outside of Adam's apartment in the middle
of the night, especially if his unit takes up the entire second floor of the two-story
building.
There's no through traffic or neighbors on that floor.
Well Adam looks out the peephole one night, just to see if there's someone creeping upstairs
after all, and he sees some kind of movement.
Only it's too quick for him to know what he's actually looking at. And that's when
he gets creeped out enough to hop on Twitter and tell his story. That day in August, he
posts a long thread covering everything that we just told you so far.
And the next day on August 8th, he posts an update.
He says the cats are still staring at the door.
So he takes a photo through the peephole
to see if his camera can capture something, anything.
And it does.
He gets a picture of a weird shadow by the stairs
leading up to his unit.
It looks like something might be lurking just out of sight.
Either way, Adam is terrified. He double checks that the door is locked and bolted so nothing can
get inside. And he tries to go to sleep. But how do you sleep when you're scared out of your damn
mind? I mean, Rasha, you know me, I would not be sleeping at all. No. I would be up and out of that apartment so fast, calling all my friends, like, come and
get me.
Especially because this continues.
We're not talking just one time.
This is like night after night.
The moment that midnight hits, his cats walk over to the door, sit there, and wait.
And by the way, this is completely new behavior for his cats.
They've never did anything like this before at Adam's old unit.
As days pass, Adam tries to get more pictures, but he can never capture anything definitive.
So he changes his focus from trying to record images to trying to record sounds.
He downloads an app that's supposed to tape people talking in their sleep, and he lets
it run all night long.
In the morning, Adam checks that sleep-talking app, and there are three clips that make his
hair stand on end.
Spoiler alert, they're not of him talking.
One of the clips is just 16 seconds
of a weird staticky buzz.
He doesn't know what to make of it,
especially because that static
isn't audible in any other clip.
It's almost like something is interfering with the app,
but just for those 16 seconds.
The other two videos are snapping or cracking sounds
as though something is moving around inside his apartment.
Freaky as all this is, the cats, the sounds, the nightmares,
it sort of just becomes Adam's new normal.
But on the night of August 11th, things take a turn.
It's a Friday and Adam can barely keep his eyes open. He's not sure why, but he's exhausted. He
goes to bed early. And then he has another one of those nightmares about dear David.
Except in this one, the boy is holding Adam by his arm and dragging him around.
Adam is much bigger than this child and he feels that he should be able to fight him
off, but he can't make his body move.
It's like he's experiencing sleep paralysis again, except this time he's fully aware
that he's dreaming.
When he wakes up, Adam sort of shrugs it off.
Nightmares about Dear David are routine by now. But then, he steps into the shower,
he looks down, and that's when he sees a bruise on his arm right where Dear David was holding him
in his dream. This solidifies it for Adam. Whatever is haunting him is real.
It's physical.
And it can harm him.
Since early 2017 or so, Adam Ellis has been having nightmares about a ghost named Dear
David. Throughout
August of that year, he posts almost daily updates on Twitter. Adam even makes a few changes to his
apartment in hopes of feng shui-ing it all away. He moves that green rocking chair from his bedroom
into the living room, and he ends up buying a new Polaroid camera that he plays around with
for fun.
He walks all around his unit snapping photos, and the pictures inside his apartment are
all very normal and boring looking.
Until he tries to snap a picture of the hallway outside his unit.
It comes out pitch black.
Adam is sure that he didn't cover the lens with his finger.
It's also not an issue with the lighting in the hallway because he tries taking pictures
with his phone and they all come out normal.
The problem is only with the Polaroid and only when he's trying to photograph the hall.
So he takes a few more pictures from a bunch of different angles. And each time when he presses the shutter, the hallway is well lit. But every
photo shows this inky blackness where the hallway should be. I mean, it is wild.
By that September, Adam wants to spend as little time in his apartment as possible,
which can you really blame him?
I know, we'd both be like, uh, get us out of here, let's move.
So Adam plans a few different trips, some are long vacations, some are brief sleepovers
with friends.
Every time he's gone though, Adam leaves a pet cam on in the living room so he can
keep an eye on
the cats. This camera has a motion detector in it, so it only records when the cats are actually
in frame and moving, and it pings Adam's phone each time it's activated. One weekend when Adam's
gone, he keeps getting notifications, except when he checks the camera, there's nothing in the living room.
His cats aren't in frame, so he doesn't know what's setting off the motion detectors.
Until he notices something impossible, the old green rocking chair is swaying on its own.
He even tweets a video of the empty chair swaying back and forth.
Adam shares another video too. It shows a turtle shell hanging on the wall in the
same room and later that same night the shell goes plummeting to the ground.
Nothing touched it, nothing bumped it, there was no reason for it to fall, but it did.
Even when Adam returns home, he leaves the pet camera on.
He wants to know if there's anything else going on while he's asleep.
Sure enough, he gets clip after clip of his cats staring at the same empty space.
This always happens late at night after he's gone to bed.
Sometimes they stare for hours. Occasionally
the cats swat at something, only there's nothing there. About two weeks go by before Adam posts
another update. He says that since he's gotten back, the electronics in his unit have been acting
up. In fact, weird things are happening throughout the building.
Remember the hallway outside his door, the one that always shows up black on the Polaroid film?
Well, the light bulbs in it keep burning out. They only last a few days before they need to
be replaced. Then, one morning in October, not too long after he wakes up,
Adam hears these scratching noises at his door.
It sounds like something is trying to get in.
Hoping to catch whatever it is, Adam puts what I think is his cell phone camera up against
the peephole and he snaps a picture.
When he looks at the result, he sees what appears to be a misshapen dented human face
pressed right up against the door.
I had to stare at this photo for quite a while to see what Adam saw,
but when it finally clicked, I couldn't unsee it.
Needless to say, after that things quiet down for a while. Adam tweets about bad dreams he's been
having, but he goes a couple weeks without giving a Dear David update at all.
Until one night in late October,
Adam is home when he happens to glance out his window.
It's pretty late,
I mean, it's somewhere between 11 p.m. and midnight.
The building next to his is only one story tall.
So Adam's second floor unit
looks out over that building's roof. And to be clear, this isn't a roof with a deck or anything.
People don't usually hang out or go up there.
Except Adam sees someone standing there.
It's dark so he can't make out much.
But he can tell that they're watching him, staring right into his home through his window.
Adam immediately freaks out. I mean, rightfully so,
but he still thinks, I've got to document this.
So he grabs a camera,
and even though he snaps two pictures,
neither one clearly shows the figure.
The first is blurry,
so there could be someone on the roof,
but you really can't tell.
And the second picture just shows an empty rooftop, like that mysterious person just
vanished.
And it gets worse, because over the next few nights, Adam begins hearing noises from above
his unit, thumps and thuds, like someone is walking around right over his head.
And remember, Adam's living in the top apartment, he doesn't have upstairs neighbors.
From what I can tell, he doesn't have a roof deck either.
But he feels like there isn't much else to do besides keep sharing his story.
Then, on the night of November 5th, Adam has another nightmare about Dear David, and it's just
like the first one.
The ghost appears in a chair and watches Adam lie there.
Now Adam has been obsessing about this boy for over three months, looking at pet cam
footage, taking pictures, recording sounds.
It's second nature for him to document everything that happens to him.
So the moment Dear David shows up, Adam picks up his phone and takes a picture of him. And to be
clear, this is all happening in his dream. Then Dear David gets up out of his chair
and walks towards Adam's bed. Each time he takes a step closer, Adam gets another
picture. It goes on like that until Dear David is right at Adam's side.
And then Adam wakes up. But the next day, when Adam is looking through the photos on his phone,
he doesn't expect to see pictures from the night before. After all,
he thinks that he didn't actually take any photos, he just dreamed he did.
Except right at the top of the gallery, with his most recent images, he sees a
bunch of photos of his bedroom at night, including one with a very distinct human figure sitting in a
chair. It's hard to make out much because the room is so dark, but if you turn up the brightness on
whatever device you're using, you can see it very clearly. It looks like a boy who's no taller than the back of the chair.
He seems to be wearing a striped shirt.
And one side of his head is completely caved in.
Oh, hell no.
I mean, you know, you know me so well.
If I am put into this scenario, it would be, it's time to move.
Thank you, landlord.
I need to look for another place, like get me out of this apartment.
But Adam? No.
Adam sees this as an opportunity to double down
and prove this thing exists once and for all.
Beginning in mid-December, he sets up a camera
to photograph his room every few seconds.
So he's not recording a video to photograph his room every few seconds.
So he's not recording a video exactly, more like a time lapse.
He ends up with thousands of pictures.
And after one long, restless night of tossing and turning, combing through all the photos,
sure enough, he sees Dear David.
A lot.
The first image shows him standing at the foot of Adam's bed, just watching him sleep.
There's a bunch of pictures like that, like he's just standing there for a while.
Another image shows Dear David in the chair.
And then he vanishes.
Later that same night he reappears, except this time, Dear David is right next to Adam's
head. Then he climbs onto the bed, stands on Adam's chest, and he turns his face to look right
at the camera lens.
It's like Dear David knows he's being recorded.
The last picture shows Dear David's dented head in an extreme close-up.
It looks like he's charging toward the camera to try and grab it or stop
it from filming.
This guy is very courageous for, again, staying in this apartment because I could not handle
this. This is just too creepy for me, so. Luckily for Adam, it's almost Christmas and
he's planning to visit some family out of state in Montana, so he's putting some serious distance between himself and dear David.
Except, when he gets to Montana, weird things keep happening.
Sometimes Adam wakes up early in the morning to find human footprints in the snow outside
of the house.
Now, no one else is awake yet and the prints weren't there
the night before. It makes him think someone is walking around casing the
house while everyone is asleep. And worst of all these footprints are small, like
child-sized small. When Adam gets back home to New York he keeps photographing
himself in his sleep. Even though most of the pictures are of him alone in bed, he still has the uneasy feeling
that he's being watched.
He also starts hearing things when he's awake, like someone is talking to him when
no one's there.
Now for context, Adam posted the first tweet about Dear David in early August 2017, but he's still having bad dreams and
feels haunted by the end of January 2018.
So we're talking about nearly six months of escalating weirdness.
And during that time, it's worth noting Adam does everything he could think of to get rid
of the spirit.
He sprinkled a line of salt across his doorway, he burned sage, but none of it worked. The haunting went on. But it does sound like he finds a
solution somewhere along the way. I wish I could tell you what the solution is,
but Adam never specifies. All I know is on February 2nd of 2018, he just tweets, everything is fine.
The next update comes almost two weeks later on February 13th.
Adam posts, please don't worry about me.
I'm okay and everything will be like it was before.
He ends the tweet with a smiley face.
And to be clear, I don't mean a smiley face emoji.
He tweets an emoticon, you know,
a colon and a parentheses right next to each other,
which is what people used in the days before emojis.
This is weird for a few different reasons.
First, Adam has been so detailed in all of his posts up until now.
He's shared photos, clips from his pet cams, audio from the sleep tracking app.
The list goes on and on. shared photos, clips from his pet cams, audio from the sleep tracking app.
The list goes on and on.
So for him to now say that everything's fine and drop it there, it's just weird.
Almost like, what changed?
What are you hiding?
Well, also, the tweet doesn't sound like something Adam would write.
Most of his tweets before now have been grammatically correct, with capitalization at the beginning
of each sentence and a period at the end, basic stuff.
But the everything is fine and I'm okay tweets both have little errors in them.
Sentences that begin with lowercase letters, missing punctuation.
Plus, when he types everything is fine, there's an extra space between is and fine.
Then there's the smiley emoticon.
According to his followers, Adam doesn't use emoticons.
That's completely out of character for him.
It's as if someone else has gotten access to more than just his Twitter account.
Like maybe his body.
In February of 2018, Adam Ellis tweets that he's fine after months of strange occurrences and eerie encounters with the ghost of a dead child. Except his followers believe he's anything but fine.
ghost of a dead child, except his followers believe he's anything but fine. There are wild rumors going around that he's been possessed by the spirit of Dear David.
Now look, I have to say, this seems a little far-fetched even for me.
We've covered cases about possessions on this show before, and they are devastating.
You can't live a normal life when something else
has control of your body like that.
But Adam seems to maintain his high profile job
writing and making cartoons for Buzzfeed during this time.
He still sees his friends and coworkers regularly
and nobody who knows him thinks anything is wrong.
People have been taking Adam's tweets at face value
as truth, but what if he wasn't
telling the full story?
At this point, many are starting to wonder if the whole Dear David thread might be a
giant hoax. When Adam talks about his bad dreams, hearing scratching noises at the door
or his lights flickering on and off, he could be making all of that up.
As for the photo and video evidence, it could have been photoshopped.
It's not that hard to snap a picture through a peephole and edit it to look like a face.
Or to add a creepy little boy to a photo of an empty rocking chair.
Or to make that boy stand on top of you while you sleep.
After all, so many of the pictures Adam tweeted were either blurry or very dark.
That makes them look more mysterious and spooky.
But it could hide the signs of photo manipulation, too.
When it comes to motive, consider this.
Adam is a professional writer.
A viral Twitter thread could help his career.
It's evidence he's a good storyteller.
And that Twitter thread, for what it's worth, didn't only go viral. Professional ghost
hunters and mediums were calling Adam non-stop. They all wanted to meet Dear David for themselves.
Adam even sold the rights for a Dear David movie. The horror film came out in 2023 right around Halloween time.
And the title is, logically enough, Dear David.
Okay, but here's what I found interesting.
When Adam promoted the movie, people kept asking him in interviews, how much of what
you posted was real?
And Adam said, I've never been interested in convincing anyone that ghosts are real.
I just wanted to tell my story.
If it was fiction, I probably would have updated more than once every couple weeks.
Which, I gotta say, is a fair point.
It's not like he was tweeting about Dear David every day or even every week.
If this was all made up, you'd think that he'd be adding details on a regular basis,
right? I mean, keeping the momentum going and keeping the audience engaged.
But according to Adam, he only wrote about the haunting when there was a new development to share.
So the fact that the story played out so slowly with so many gaps between posts,
well, some think that's evidence he's telling
the truth.
And then there's the fact that Adam doesn't write horror.
He's a comic writer, and his specialty is satire, so if he's going to make something
up, why would it be something so horrific, so close to home?
Of course, there's always the possibility that Adam was telling the truth.
But maybe he was mistaken about what was really going on.
Because you know, sometimes you hear a scary story and that it gets into your head.
And then suddenly everything seems dangerous and high stakes.
So picture this.
Adam has a creepy dream about this little boy with a dent in his head.
Afterward, he can't get it out of his mind.
And then he notices little things like noises in the wall or lights burning out.
Instead of chalking it up to mice or faulty electrical wiring,
he assumes these are all signs of a ghost.
Okay, but to play devil's advocate, what about when he visited his family in Montana?
He found child-sized footprints in the snow.
That wasn't all in his head.
I mean, he took pictures.
Could some of this stuff be photoshopped or edited?
Of course.
But there's some evidence Adam tweeted that would be kinda hard to fake on your own, particularly the videos.
Like making his rocking chair move on its own, or knocking the turtle shell off the
wall without touching it.
Plus, are we supposed to believe that he trained his cats to stare into space and swat at things
we can't see?
And okay, I know that Adam couldn't find evidence of a boy named David dying in a department
store accident in New York.
But who knows?
Maybe he passed decades before, or even as much as a century ago.
After all, some of the mythology surrounding him turned out to be inaccurate.
For example, Adam learned in a dream that Dear David would kill anyone who asked him
more than two questions.
But Adam is still alive.
Dear David scared him an awful lot, maybe gave him a bruise or two, but he lived to
tell the tale.
And we don't know why that is.
Frankly, we don't know why any of this happened, or why Dear David appeared to Adam in the
first place.
We don't know what he
was hoping to accomplish the whole time he was scaring Adam out of his skin, or why he seemingly
went away just as quickly as he appeared. All of which were problems for the people who adapted
Adam's Twitter thread into a feature film. So it should be no surprise that the writers of the
Dear David movie changed up the story
in some major ways to give it a full narrative.
For example, they added a whole backstory where Dear David hated bullies, and in the
film, Adam was a huge bully.
That's why Dear David chose to torment him.
In the movie, Adam also defeats Dear David by burning his own home to the ground.
But that's something that didn't happen at all in real life.
Except, while the Dear David movie was a work of fiction in a lot of ways, there was one
eerie parallel between the film and real life.
Or two if you count the fact that Adam had a brief cameo in the film.
Anyway, when they shot in an empty house in Toronto,
the set was apparently haunted. On filming days, the stars would get to hair and makeup early,
which means that only a few members of the crew were there. But they said during that time,
the lights would turn themselves on and off. They also had a prop rocking chair on set, which was a replica of Adam's.
And just like with the real version,
this one would sway on its own too.
Which makes me wonder,
was the spirit on the set of Dear David
actually the Dear David?
Did he follow Adam all the way to Toronto?
After all, Adam never publicly said
that he got rid of the little boy's ghost,
just that everything was fine and he was okay. Now, he didn't offer any more context for those
weird tweets or all their typos, but maybe we can read between the lines and speculate.
Did he find a way to get along with the specter that was haunting
him? Or maybe he and Dear David just agreed on a way to co-exist?
I don't know if that's incredibly sweet or incredibly creepy. Maybe both. Which is
often the case with these scary stories. We don't always know what the supernatural wants, or why it chooses
the people it does. But that's part of the intrigue. Maybe the message of this Dear David story is to
stop letting our ignorance make us afraid. Maybe when we encounter the unknown, we should respond
with curiosity and empathy, and find a way to make peace with the things that truly terrify us.
This is Sew Supernatural, an AudioChuck original produced by CrimeHouse.
You can connect with us on Instagram at So SupernaturalPod and visit our website at
SoSupernaturalPodcast.com.
Join Rasha and me next Friday for an all new episode.
So what do you think Chuck?
Do you approve?
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