He Blew His Life Savings on a Ghost Town. Then the Ghosts Showed Up.

Brent Underwood didn't just buy a house. He bought an entire abandoned mining town on the edge of Death Valley — 22 buildings, 360 acres, zero people. Price tag: $1.4 million. Every cent he had. He got snowed in on week one. There's no running water. Then things got weird. A face staring back from a window — in a building no one had entered for weeks. Lights flickering on behind locked doors. Four years later, he's still there. Still filming. Still not sure what's in there with him. See the whole ordeal on YouTube here.

Twelve Inmates Escaped Prison Using Not But Peanut Butter.

Alabama, 2017. A new prison guard hit a button to open what he thought was a cell door. It wasn't. Inmates had smeared peanut butter over the exit sign, changing the number. The door swung open. Twelve men sprinted out and scaled a 12-foot razor wire fence using nothing but blankets and jumpsuits. One made it all the way to Florida before getting caught. The sheriff's response? "Very smart thinking on their part." The prison is still trying to figure out a numbering system peanut butter can't defeat.

Every Year, Thousands of Fish Fall From the Sky in This Town.

In Yoro, Honduras, it happens every spring. A violent storm rolls in. The sky turns black. When the clouds clear, the streets are littered with small, silver, blind fish — species that don't exist anywhere in local waters. Locals say it began in the 1850s when a priest prayed for three days straight. God's answer? Seafood. Scientists think underground caves flood them to the surface. But the fish have been found over 100 miles from the nearest ocean. Nobody has ever photographed them falling. The town crowns a "Miss Fish Rain" every year anyway.

Touch Grass

📍Eduardo Avaroa Reserve, Bolivia.
@braybraywoowoo

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