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What’s in the Feed — Saturday, March 14, 2026

What’s in the Feed — Saturday, March 14, 2026

Saturday morning. The McCasland story is still the gravitational center of the entire fringe community this week, and it’s not letting go. Mainstream television covered it. Skeptics are writing about it. The Daily Grail filed it under Ancient Mysteries. When a missing retired Air Force general pulls together paranormal researchers, UAP investigators, cryptid podcasters, and archaeologists into a single conversation, something unusual is happening — even by fringe standards.

Here’s everything worth reading across the five categories this weekend.


👻 Paranormal: Apparitions, Abductions, and Something Inside 3I/ATLAS

The standout read in the paranormal section this week is Paranormal Daily News on crisis apparitions — the phenomenon where someone sees, hears, or senses a person they’re close to at the precise moment that person is dying or in serious danger, often hundreds or thousands of miles away. The piece walks through the documented case history carefully and doesn’t oversell it. This is one of the most replicable and consistently reported categories in paranormal research, and the evidence base is stronger than most people realize.

Before Its News is circulating the 1993 Kelly Cahill abduction case from the Dandenong Foothills of Australia — a multiple-witness encounter involving Cahill, her husband, three children, and an entirely separate vehicle of strangers stopped on the same road who reported an identical experience. Both groups corroborated each other independently. It remains one of the most credibly documented CE4 events on record.

Unexplained Mysteries is reporting that interstellar object 3I/ATLAS has yielded an unexpected new discovery. The details are still thin but the object — which lit up the astronomy world when it was first detected — appears to contain something nobody anticipated. Watch this one closely as more data comes in.

Spooky Isles delivers a solid weekend long-read: the haunted history of St. James Cemetery in Liverpool — a Victorian quarry carved into the sandstone beneath the city, converted into a burial ground, and the source of some of the most persistent and well-documented ghost accounts in the north of England. Good atmospheric reading for a Saturday.

Brian Dunning at Skeptoid — who is almost always worth reading even when you disagree — has weighed in with Has a Government UFO Figurehead Been Abducted for Knowing Too Much? on the McCasland case. Dunning applies his characteristically skeptical lens. The fringe community is pushing back. Both sides of this conversation are worth following.


🐾 Cryptid: Glacier Goes Quiet, Arkansas Gets Weird, and McCasland Crosses Over

The most compelling cryptid story this week has nothing to do with a creature sighting — it has to do with the absence of creatures. Sasquatch Chronicles has a report on the mass exodus at Glacier National Park that nobody can explain — a documented event in which large numbers of animals abruptly abandoned sections of the park with no identified environmental cause. No fires, no disease outbreak, no seismic activity. Just gone. Mass animal displacement without a clean explanation has appeared alongside cryptid and high-strangeness reports often enough that serious researchers track these events.

Sasquatch Chronicles is also running The Arkansas Wild Man — a 19th-century American mystery that predates the modern Bigfoot category by more than a century. Creature reports from Arkansas forests going back 170 years, treated seriously at the time by the people filing them. Pre-Patterson, pre-cultural Bigfoot — and the accounts are strikingly similar to what witnesses are reporting today.

McCasland has landed here too. Sasquatch Chronicles posted Disappearance of UFO expert Gen. Neil McCasland — a sign that the cryptid and UAP research communities have fully converged on this case as something that matters across the board.

Broadcasting Seeds drops The Seed Report: Assassination Threats and Digital Erasures — tracking political threats, online content removal, and what the fringe community is calling a pattern of targeted erasure against specific researchers and voices. Unverified, but internally consistent with a broader pattern worth watching.


🛸 UFO / UAP: McCasland on TV, Shellenberger on Rogan, and NASA Narrows the Window on Titan

NewsNation — network television — ran UFO experts share theories on Gen. Neil McCasland’s disappearance this week. William Neil McCasland, 68, remains missing after leaving his Albuquerque home. The story is now firmly in mainstream news coverage, which is itself significant. When a UAP-connected disappearance makes network television without being dismissed or mocked, the landscape has shifted.

Michael Shellenberger at Public is back on Rogan — covering Iran, Epstein, and the intelligence community overlap that runs through both subjects. Shellenberger has been one of the more disciplined mainstream voices willing to connect UAP disclosure, intelligence agency behavior, and the Epstein network. The conversation is worth an hour of your time.

The Debrief published a significant science piece this week: NASA experiments challenge the idea of life in Titan’s methane lakes. New lab work suggests the chemistry of Saturn’s largest moon may be more hostile to biology than the models assumed. It doesn’t eliminate the possibility — but it narrows it. Also from The Debrief: a new gravitational wave study reveals the unexpected orbital dynamics between black holes and neutron stars in the moments before merger — physics at the edge of what instruments can detect.

Jack Powell’s UAP Probability and Disclosure Analysis Substack is running the Moltbook God Codex Study baseline report for March 2026 — a pre-registered 12-month study testing whether multiple AI systems converge on the same answers when asked foundational theological and cosmological questions. Fringe epistemology at its most rigorous.


🏛️ Ancient Mysteries: Underground Spirits, a Roman Forum Beneath Barcelona, and a Sword From the Sea

Ancient Pages has the week’s most evocative ancient mysteries piece: Vittra — the invisible, elusive, and seductive supernatural spirits said to live underground in close proximity to humans. In Scandinavian tradition the Vittra occupy the space just beneath ordinary reality — not quite the land of the dead, not quite this world. They appear in legends from Sweden and Norway as mirror beings who live in the same landscape as humans but on a frequency slightly out of register. The parallels to the Irish Sidhe, the Icelandic Hidden People, and dozens of similar traditions across unconnected cultures raise questions that folklore alone doesn’t fully answer.

All That’s Interesting covers the 2,000-year-old ruins of a Roman forum uncovered during hotel renovations in downtown Barcelona — an extensive series of stone floor slabs belonging to the ancient Roman city of Barcino that rewrites the known layout of what’s under the modern street grid. Barcelona keeps finding Rome beneath its feet.

Archaeology Magazine reports that a medieval sword has been recovered off Israel’s coast — a Crusader-era find from waters off Haifa that adds to the growing catalog of objects the eastern Mediterranean is giving up as dive technology improves.

The Daily Grail posted both its March 13 news briefs — a reliable weekly sweep of everything strange — and filed the McCasland disappearance under Ancient Mysteries, which may say something about how they’re reading the deeper implications of the case.


🕵️ Conspiracy: The Eye That Never Blinks, a Word Older Than Magic, and the Surveillance Grid You’re Already In

Conspiracy Unearthed is publishing some of its strongest material of the year this week. The All-Seeing Eye — the symbol that watches the world is a serious iconographic history tracing the Eye of Providence from ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian temple contexts through Renaissance hermeticism, Freemasonry, and onto the reverse of the U.S. dollar bill. Whatever you think the symbol means, the history of where it came from and how it ended up on the currency of the world’s most powerful nation is genuinely strange.

Their second piece this week is more unsettling: Abracadabra — the ancient word spell that may explain modern psychological warfare. The piece draws a line from the Aramaic etymology of “abracadabra” — meaning roughly “I will create as I speak” — through linguistic relativity theory, speech-act theory, and into declassified intelligence agency psychological operations manuals. The argument is that language, used precisely and with intent, functions as a technology of reality alteration. Documented history backs more of this up than most people are comfortable admitting.

The third piece from Conspiracy Unearthed worth reading: The Digital Identity Trap — are social media verification systems becoming a global surveillance network? Two years ago this read as speculative. Today, given where AI-powered identity systems are heading, it reads as a reasonable policy concern.

Exopolitics is running JP Update 55 — quantum tunneling and consciousness transfer between bodies for classified projects, reporting that a source known as JP claims to have been transported to a facility near Eglin Air Force Base for classified consciousness-related research. JP reports are unverifiable by design, but they’ve been internally consistent for years in ways that keep serious researchers reading them.


The Fringe Feed aggregates paranormal, cryptid, UFO/UAP, ancient mysteries, and conspiracy news from across the web in real time. Browse all categories at thefringefeed.com.

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