
February 8, 2002: Electronic Voice Phenomena - Brendan Cook & Barbara McBeath
The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III
February 28, 20252h 50m
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Show Notes
Art Bell hosts Brendan Cook and Barbara McBeath of the Ghost Investigators Society for a chilling evening of electronic voice phenomena recordings captured at cemeteries, mausoleums, hotels, and private residences. The nonprofit group uses brand-new tapes in micro cassette recorders with external microphones, visiting reportedly haunted locations to document voices that appear to originate from the deceased.
The pair plays numerous EVP recordings throughout the broadcast, including a child's voice saying "bye-bye" at a private residence, a woman identifying herself as "Alma Berg" at a pioneer cemetery matching a nearby headstone, and a disturbing whisper declaring "our death gate" inside a mausoleum. Art reacts with particular unease to a recording of a spirit saying "plastic eyes," which Brendan confirms relates to the mortuary practice of placing plastic forms under a deceased person's eyelids.
Cook and McBeath explain their methods, recommend equipment for listeners who want to try EVP themselves, and discuss how spirits appear aware of the investigators' presence, often responding directly to questions. They note that cold weather tends to yield the clearest recordings and emphasize they accept no money for their work, maintaining credibility through their refusal to commercialize the research.
The pair plays numerous EVP recordings throughout the broadcast, including a child's voice saying "bye-bye" at a private residence, a woman identifying herself as "Alma Berg" at a pioneer cemetery matching a nearby headstone, and a disturbing whisper declaring "our death gate" inside a mausoleum. Art reacts with particular unease to a recording of a spirit saying "plastic eyes," which Brendan confirms relates to the mortuary practice of placing plastic forms under a deceased person's eyelids.
Cook and McBeath explain their methods, recommend equipment for listeners who want to try EVP themselves, and discuss how spirits appear aware of the investigators' presence, often responding directly to questions. They note that cold weather tends to yield the clearest recordings and emphasize they accept no money for their work, maintaining credibility through their refusal to commercialize the research.