Episodes

  • From Nob Hill to Hill House - The Mysterious Murder of an San Francisco Heiress And The Birth of American Horror
    Nov 4 2025

    Hello Seekers!

    Well, I'm still rockin' that Shirley Jackson podcast angle this week!

    After last week's podcast, I ended up falling into quite a deep Shirley Jackson internet history hole and discovered that Mrs. Jackson is connected (however tenuously) to an infamous and unsolved murder case of one of the most important American heiresses within the U.S.'s Gilded Age "royalty."

    Jane Stanford was the wife of prominent robber baron/ railroad tycoon and founder of Stanford University, Leland Stanford. She was also the victim of a notorious case of murder by poison!

    This week's podcast is a twisted game of "six degrees of Kevin Bacon," but with Shirley Jackson swapping places with the ol' Footlooser, her famous great-great-grandfather inspiring The Haunting of Hill House and Mrs. Jane Stanford of San Francisco's horrific and untimely demise.

    Thanks for getting weird with me!

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins
  • The Haunting Mind of Shirley Jackson
    Oct 28 2025

    Hello Seekers!

    This week, we take a look at the author who inspired modern day horror writers such as Stephen King and Guillermo Del Toro by turning her ordinary suburban American life into quiet horror.

    Shirley Jackson lived in a house full of noise - four children, a controlling and flandering husband and a typerwrite on a kitchen table within the middle of it all.

    From that chaos she wrote fantastic short stories and novels revolving around the seemingly calm surface of the suburbs and the evil truth bubbling just underneath, such as is, The Lottery, The Haunting of Hill House and We Have Always Lived in the Castle.

    This episode unpacks her marriage, her fascination with magic and the occult and how the control she tried to manifest within her writing became her personal spell for survival.

    I hope you enjoy today's episode and I also hope you go and read some of her works - they're EXCELLENT psychological horror and thanks for getting weird with us!

    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
  • The Hot Mess Romantics
    Oct 21 2025

    Hello Seekers!

    Last week we went into the connections between the top 3 Romantic writers of their era: Mary (Godwin) Shelley, Percy Shelley and Lord Byron.

    But that just SCRATCHES at the surface of these lunatics (and their friends).

    This week's episode goes more "behind-the-scenes" of what famously went down at that villa in Switzerland (hint: It wasn't all writing. There was also a fair bit of sex, drugs and rock n' roll), as well as, everyone's messy personal lives and Percy's creepy and slightly paranormal death at a very young age.

    I hope you enjoy today's more personal episode regarding the illustrious 3 and thanks for getting weird with us!

    **Thumbnail image: "The Funeral of Shelley (1889) by Louis Édouard Fournier**

    Show More Show Less
    19 mins
  • Reason's Monster: Frankenstein, the Illuminati & the Birth of Fear
    Oct 14 2025

    In 1816, under a sunless sky, 18 year old Mary Godwin dreamnt of a man who could re-animate the dead. But the story of Frankenstein: Or the Modern Prometheus wasn't born out of superstition, it was born out of the Ennlightenment itself.

    This episode unravels how a secret Bavarian order, a volcanic winter and one radical family's obsession with reason combined to create the world's first modern monster.

    From the real Illuminati in Ingolstadt to the electric horros of Galvanisim, discover how humanity's pursuit of perfection became its own cautionary tale.

    Thank you for getting weird with us,

    -The Occulture Shock Podcast

    Show More Show Less
    20 mins
  • FLUSHED: The Unique History Behind Japan's Hi-Tech Toilets
    Oct 7 2025

    Hello Seekers!

    Welcome to an episode that I've done inn combination with: A). Just getting back from a weeks long vacation in Japan and B). Popular demand for this particular subject matter.

    What is that subject matter, you ask?

    It's actually about one of my favorite things in Japan - their toilets! Specifically, their high-tech Toto ones.

    Because the Japanese didn't just re-invent the toilet into something spectcacular, they actually turned it into a cultural icon!

    Today on the Occulture Shock podcast, we're talking about "night soil" and its ties to farming, French courtesans with their first bidets and how Japan took that tech and turned it into a point of pride.

    Thanks for getting weird with us!

    -Jessica

    PS: For those interested inn early and ad-free episodes, you can join the Occculture Shock Patreon at Patreon.com/OccultureShockPodcast. Their bare Tier groups for every type of listener.

    Enjoy the show!

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • Burn The Devil Out: Assassin's Creed Hexe & The Real German Witch Trials
    Oct 1 2025

    Hello Seekers!

    Jess here - I'm back from Japan (expect that love-letter podcast to Toto toilets coming your way very soon :)

    In the meanie, Here is my latest deep dive into videogames and their real-life counterparts. This week, we're loking at: Assassin's Creed Hexe (as currently titled) and the real German witch trials it world-builds around.

    Plus, it's the first day of October, so it's a rather apropo subject matter.

    When people think of witch trials, they almost always think of Salem but that's just one chapter in a buck longer, much darker book. Long before New England's panic, the German lands and people of the Holy Roman Empire were already in flames. Not from superstition alone but from politics, corruption and fear turned into law.

    Continuing with my Occult In Videogames series, I'm delving into Ubisoft's Assassin's Creed IP and their latest annoucement of HEXE (working title).

    HEXE's in-game locations have real world counterparts. A place and time where a single bishop coould (and did) sentence hundreads to a horrific fate. Where owning the wrong book of symbols could mean death. And where demons like Mephisto weren't just legends, they were written into confessions under brutal torture.

    Did you like this episode and are craving more?

    Remember: You can always get early and ad-free episodes when you sign up for a tier over on the Occulture Shock Patreon.

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • The Jersey Devil + a Bonaparte = The Weirdest Story Out Of N. Jersey I've Ever Heard.
    Sep 16 2025

    Seekers!

    This week we're heading deep into the Pine Barrens of New Jersey. A million acres of twisted pitch pines, bogs and legends that refuse to die.

    For over 250 years, locals have whispered about a winged, hoofed creature living within the wilderness: The Jersey Devil.

    But here's the plot twist: one of the most famous supposed eyewitnesses wasn't a farmer or a trapper. It was Joseph Bonaparte, Napolean Bonaparte's older brother and a king in exile in his own right and living on a palatial estate in Jersey after fleeing Europe.

    In this episode I trace how a colonial family feud, Benjamin Franklin's b*tchiness, a cursed thirteenth child and a monarch in exxile all collided to give America one of its most enduring monster legends of all time.

    Get ad-free and early episiodes by becoming a member of our Patreon at Patreon.com/OccultureShockPodcast - Enjoy the show!

    Thank you for getting weird with us :)

    -Jessica

    Show More Show Less
    15 mins
  • Dowsing Rods: Water Wands, Witching Tools and Wandering Wires
    Sep 9 2025

    Hello Seekers!

    Step into the world of the unseen as we explore the strange history of dowsing rods in this episode of: Do You KNow Where Your Ghost Hunting Techniques Come From?

    From their origins in Germanic medieval mines to their controversial use in modern warfare, this episode uncovers the folklore and the alleged science behind this mysterious practice.

    Join me as I ask the question: Is dowsing a functional skill or a testament to the power of human belief?

    Thanks for getting weird with us!

    Show More Show Less
    17 mins