Mal12345
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"Ghost Adventures is an American television series about the paranormal that premiered on October 17, 2008, on the Travel Channel. Produced by MY-Tupelo Entertainment, (a merger of MY Entertainment and Tupelo-Honey Productions),[1] the program follows ghost hunters Zak Bagans, Nick Groff, and Aaron Goodwin as they investigate locations that are reported to be haunted. The show is introduced and narrated by Zak Bagans."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_Adventures
I watched a few episodes of Ghost Adventures back in the 2008-2009 era. The show almost failed because Zak Bagans wasn't finding enough ghosts. He would typically use science to disprove the existence of ghostly influences at particular locations. Because of this lack of ghost finding, Ghost Adventures almost failed as a series.
After that time, Bagans began to make a roaring comeback and seemed to be finding ghosts everywhere he went, even places which weren't commonly considered to be haunted. It was then that I considered the show to be fake, and the ghost evidence to be entirely faked. I was also disappointed in the way Bagans and his crew would run away in terror from ghosts. And it seemed like they were rigging objects found in old buildings to move on cue, such as doors and random 2x4s.
But this year I've decided to give Zak Bagans a second chance. Fortunately, the episodes just happen to come on around the same time as The Dead Files on the same cable channel. And I'm a big fan of The Dead Files.
Zak doesn't always find ghosts, and this is comforting to me from the perspective of reality and skepticism. But it is also maddening in that there are so many fake people out there who want 43 minutes of fame. For example, the married couple in this episode is a couple of hoaxers:
Zak and his crew stayed over night and detected nothing supernatural whatsoever. Two days after they left the scene, Zak received a photo of a pair of pants nailed to a wall above a closet door at the location they had just explored, with the claim that a ghost caused this:
For real, people? Do you really think Zak Bagans is going to u-turn his ghost hunter van around in the middle of the highway and hurry back to THAT house again, and over as stupid a picture as that? They least they could is photoshop a picture depicting the alleged "ghost" in the act. Losers.
But for the most part you will see amazing episodes chock full of ghostly eye-candy, such as this one:
Season 10, Episode 10 - Loftus Hall:
Around 38 minutes into this episode, Zak has brought out his biggest weapon: the structured light sensor camera with skeleton image tracking. This has the effect of producing a matrix of infrared laser dots of light in the room which operates along with a motion tracking system. For example:
The hunched over green and grey figures are two of Zak's men sitting at a table. They are taunting a spirit into playing a game of cards with them. Suddenly, a man-like stick figure appears in the grid of dots, above the green-colored guy (Aaron). As he sits there he becomes sicker and sicker until he is forced to go outside and vomit into the grass. He was sick for the next two weeks.
In comparison to The Dead Files, Amy Allen, the star of The Dead Files, would never taunt spirits as Bagans and his crew does. Ghost Adventures would anger her so much that she would probably try to tear Bagans' eyes out of his skull if they ever met. She has too much respect, and even a personal liking, for ghosts. She's a weirdo. But you know, if ghosts are real, and if they are existing in a state of constant torment, then why torture them even more as Bagans does for money and fame?
As for me, I don't care. It's just entertainment. And unlike The Dead Files, Ghost Adventures often brings a shiver down my spine. It really is that spooky.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_Adventures
I watched a few episodes of Ghost Adventures back in the 2008-2009 era. The show almost failed because Zak Bagans wasn't finding enough ghosts. He would typically use science to disprove the existence of ghostly influences at particular locations. Because of this lack of ghost finding, Ghost Adventures almost failed as a series.
After that time, Bagans began to make a roaring comeback and seemed to be finding ghosts everywhere he went, even places which weren't commonly considered to be haunted. It was then that I considered the show to be fake, and the ghost evidence to be entirely faked. I was also disappointed in the way Bagans and his crew would run away in terror from ghosts. And it seemed like they were rigging objects found in old buildings to move on cue, such as doors and random 2x4s.
But this year I've decided to give Zak Bagans a second chance. Fortunately, the episodes just happen to come on around the same time as The Dead Files on the same cable channel. And I'm a big fan of The Dead Files.
Zak doesn't always find ghosts, and this is comforting to me from the perspective of reality and skepticism. But it is also maddening in that there are so many fake people out there who want 43 minutes of fame. For example, the married couple in this episode is a couple of hoaxers:
Zak and his crew stayed over night and detected nothing supernatural whatsoever. Two days after they left the scene, Zak received a photo of a pair of pants nailed to a wall above a closet door at the location they had just explored, with the claim that a ghost caused this:

For real, people? Do you really think Zak Bagans is going to u-turn his ghost hunter van around in the middle of the highway and hurry back to THAT house again, and over as stupid a picture as that? They least they could is photoshop a picture depicting the alleged "ghost" in the act. Losers.
But for the most part you will see amazing episodes chock full of ghostly eye-candy, such as this one:
Season 10, Episode 10 - Loftus Hall:
Around 38 minutes into this episode, Zak has brought out his biggest weapon: the structured light sensor camera with skeleton image tracking. This has the effect of producing a matrix of infrared laser dots of light in the room which operates along with a motion tracking system. For example:

The hunched over green and grey figures are two of Zak's men sitting at a table. They are taunting a spirit into playing a game of cards with them. Suddenly, a man-like stick figure appears in the grid of dots, above the green-colored guy (Aaron). As he sits there he becomes sicker and sicker until he is forced to go outside and vomit into the grass. He was sick for the next two weeks.
In comparison to The Dead Files, Amy Allen, the star of The Dead Files, would never taunt spirits as Bagans and his crew does. Ghost Adventures would anger her so much that she would probably try to tear Bagans' eyes out of his skull if they ever met. She has too much respect, and even a personal liking, for ghosts. She's a weirdo. But you know, if ghosts are real, and if they are existing in a state of constant torment, then why torture them even more as Bagans does for money and fame?
As for me, I don't care. It's just entertainment. And unlike The Dead Files, Ghost Adventures often brings a shiver down my spine. It really is that spooky.