Season Finale: Field Guide to SPIRITED AWAY, GILLIGAN’S ISLAND Real?, BBC Spaghetti Tree Hoax, EXORCIST-CIA Connection, Hollywood Star Secrets, 13 WOMEN

In this Halloween-week finale, Adam wraps up Season One (or Two… or Three, depending how you count) with a grab-bag of strange stories, lost film history, and fascinating footnotes from past episodes. From forgotten Hollywood tragedies to Cold War psy-ops, and from gullible TV audiences to Miyazaki’s spirit world, this episode is a mix of the eerie, the absurd, and the enlightening.


Highlights & Segments

1. Peg Entwistle & “13 Women” (1932)

  • Discusses 13 Women, tragic early Hollywood actress Peg Entwistle’s only film – a noir-ish thriller about murder by astrology.

  • Explores how the film reflected 1930s racial anxieties, “yellow peril” tropes, and early proto-slasher structure.

  • Commentary on Myrna Loy’s early typecasting as “exotic” before becoming Nora Charles in The Thin Man.

  • Available on DVD and occasionally online; just 59 minutes after heavy studio cuts.

2. The Price of Fame: Secrets of the Hollywood Walk of Fame

  • It’s not free – a star costs about $85,000 today.

  • Celebrities who’ve declined or skipped the ceremony include Clint Eastwood, Julia Roberts, Prince, Madonna, and Oprah.

  • Denzel Washington, Clooney, Pacino, and Springsteen accepted stars but never held ceremonies.

  • Once a star is damaged, it’s destroyed and remade, not repaired.

  • Shout-out: Robert Englund (Freddy Krueger) is getting his star!

3. Believing the Unbelievable: Gilligan’s Island Rescue Requests & the Great Spaghetti Tree Hoax (BBC, 1957)

  • In 1964, the U.S. Coast Guard received real telegrams urging rescue of the “castaways.”

  • Some viewers apparently thought the laugh track was broadcast live from the island – proof that media literacy had a long way to go.

  • BBC’s April Fool’s broadcast showing “spaghetti harvesters” fooled much of Britain.

  • Some viewers called in asking where to buy spaghetti trees.

  • A reminder that Forgotten Silver (Peter Jackson’s 1995 mockumentary) carried on the same tradition – so dryly it fooled its audience too.

5. The Exorcist & the CIA Connection?

  • Draws from a 1974 Ann Arbor Sun article quoting CounterSpy magazine.

  • Claims William Peter Blatty once worked for the CIA and Air Force psychological warfare division.

  • Raises questions about whether The Exorcist’s themes of faith and fear reflected Cold War propaganda techniques.

  • Not proof, but an intriguing historical footnote about Blatty’s pre-Hollywood career.

6. Spirits of Spirited Away: A Field Guide

  • A condensed “bonus segment” exploring the Shinto and folkloric roots behind Miyazaki’s Spirited Away:

    • Haku — river dragon kami symbolizing lost connection to nature.

    • No-Face — derived from Noppera-bō, the faceless ghost of desire and pollution.

    • Yubaba/Zaniba — mountain hags (Yamamba), embodying greed and wisdom.

    • Kamaji — inspired by the underground tsuchigumo spider spirits.

    • Susuwatari (soot sprites)tsukumogami born of forgotten dust.

    • Bathhouse guests — echoes of the Hyakki Yagyō, the “Night Parade of 100 Demons.”

  • Draws parallels to other Japanese mythic creatures, including Hedorah the Smog Monster.


Closing Notes

Adam signs off this Halloween-week finale with thanks to listeners, a short seasonal break, and hints of what’s to come.
Revisit the back catalog or explore Magical Mystery Radio, the earlier conversational series of paranormal and conspiracy discussions with co-host John.

Adam Charles

About the author

Adam Charles has written for Walt Disney Television, Amblin Entertainment, and more. Over the years he has crossed paths with so many media personalities, he’s come to think of himself as the Forrest Gump of the film industry.