Danny Robins' latest podcast series, The Witch Farm, is spooking listeners just as both The Battersea Poltergeist and Uncanny have over the past two years. For Halloween, he chatted about its appeal:
Someone suggested this case. I went and spoke to Liz, the woman at the heart of it, and I had that same feeling that I got when I spoke to Shirley [Hitchings]. It's not even what they say, it's how they say it. It's that little frisson of fear that you feel in their voice, and if somebody is still scared about something, thirty years after it happened, then I want to know about that. That's profound, that's life changing.
And the stuff that was described, the events that happened, ranged from apparitions to poltergeist activity to alleged possession. People were being physically injured. There was so much; it felt certainly as rich as Battersea and with a greater array of phenomena
I instantly felt that this was something I could tell in this way, across eight episodes.
Click here to read our full interview, and for our other coverage, click here.
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