True Monsters: The Evil Walking Among Us (S1, E2) | Full Episode



Real monsters are behind our greatest legends. This episode takes us into the belly of the beast to find the surprising truths behind history’s most mythic cannibals and killers. See more in Season 1, Episode 2, “Cannibals and Killers”.

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“True Monsters” sorts the fiction from the often-muddled facts about the most terrifying monsters, awe-inspiring myths, and timeless legends in history. From monstrous creatures to wrathful gods, this series tells incredible stories that reveal surprising truths.

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28 thoughts on “True Monsters: The Evil Walking Among Us (S1, E2) | Full Episode”

  1. could you imagine a world like they had just a few centuries ago? they wouldn't have to worry about prosecuting anyone, id slaughter the whole village for condoning the things that are described. because everyone had to know and eccept.

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  2. 👍🤣 The fairytale or Grimm tale of a killer in the castle I almost died laughing when one of the retelling dudes named Haskell is repeating the story about Blue beard asking the new wife was she was in the forbidden 🚫 golden keyed room with all the previous dead wives mutilated hangin’ bods & Haskel just nonchalantly says the new wife …in idk 17th century ish era responds to Bluebeards inquiry 🧐 with a …’UHH NOTHIN’ @ 14:22 …LMAO.

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  3. Oddly enough, the banshee is one of the Good People. They are the fairies, who live (underground?) in Ireland. The banshee was/is one of them.

    The word is an English clerk’s translation of the Gaelic term, Bean Sidhe. Bean (pronounced ban) means woman, sidhe (pronounced she) means hill. Thus, a bean sidhe, or banshee, is a woman of the hills. That is also why banshees are always female.

    And, for the record, bean sidhe comes from Ireland. It moved to Scotland when the Irish kinds settles Scotland.

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  4. As a voracious reader of old fairy tales, I have to admit that 'Bluebeard'–which I did read as a child, actually, and didn't turn a hair at–is probably the tamest of the three 'Evil Bridegroom' tales I've read. In 'Fitcher's Bird', the heroine's two sisters fall prey to the sorcerer and end up in his bloody room as victims. And in 'The Robber Bridegroom', the heroine actually witnesses her husband-to-be and his gang murder and cannibalize a screaming victim.

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