Episode
The Real Stranger Things?
- Podcast
- Disturbing History
- Published
- May 4, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 4531
- Processing state
not_requested
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Summary
What if Stranger Things wasn't science fiction? What if the show that became one of the biggest cultural phenomena of the last decade started as a real story, set in a real place, about a real abandoned military base on the eastern tip of Long Island. In this episode, we walk the full length of one of the strangest legends in modern American folklore. The Montauk Project. A claimed black operation hidden beneath a decommissioned Air Force radar station, involving mind control, time travel, psychic experimentation, kidnapped children, and a creature that supposedly tore through reality on August 12th, 1993. We start where the story actually begins, with the documented history of Camp Hero. A coastal defense base built in nineteen forty-two and disguised as a quiet New England fishing village, complete with fake churches, fake gables, and concrete bunkers buried in the bluff. We trace its life from sixteen-inch naval rifles aimed at German U-boats, to its rebirth as a Cold War radar station, to the giant AN/FPS-35 antenna that still stands rusting on the Montauk skyline today. We talk about why that antenna kept turning long after the base was officially shut down on the thirty-first of January, nineteen eighty-one, and how the gap between the official record and the lived experience of the locals became the soil that grew the Montauk Project legend.From there, we walk back to the alleged Philadelphia Experiment of October 1943. The story of the USS Eldridge, the green fog, the sailors fused into the steel, and the strange letter writer named Carlos Allende whose handwritten annotations ended up reprinted by the United States Navy in the so-called Varo Edition. We talk about Morris K. Jessup, the researcher whose suspicious 1959 death gave the legend its first martyr. We…