You best start believin’ in uncanny valleys, Miss Alexa. You’re in one!

WEIRD
Since its original opening in 1884, the Hotel Chelsea has made headlines for its celebrity residents, bizarre deaths, purported paranormal activity, and beyond.
We’re all familiar with the phrase “raining cats and dogs,” but what about fish and frogs and raw meat?
Project Blue Book's questionnaire had sections for describing UFOs and even sketching pictures.
In Paris, what’s beneath the sidewalks is as exciting as the monuments that tower above them.
“Self-help seminars” that consisted of psychological torture and physical abuse were just one of William Penn Patrick’s schemes.
From the time the White House had a close run-in with unidentified flying objects (a.k.a. UFOs) to the truth behind what happened at Roswell, New Mexico, these are UFO facts you need to know.
Mike was supposed to be dinner. Instead, he became a national treasure.
For Christmas dinner in 1870, Paris restaurant Voisin publicized a menu that featured kangaroo stew, elephant stock, stuffed donkey head, and bear chops.
It’s the 125th anniversary of Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula.’ Celebrate by partaking in the largest-ever gathering of people dressed as vampires.
So many gnomes have been collected in a roundabout that it's become known as Gnomesville.
John Harvey Kellogg, one of the minds behind Kellogg’s Corn Flakes, spent much of his life devising ways to improve human health and vitality.
The world’s heaviest potato just took a DNA test. Turns out, he’s 100 percent not a potato.
The human heads were being taken back to headquarters after being used for a medical training session.
Software developer Karly Sindy thought it would be funny to have a 'FART' license plate. It turns out the DMV lacks a sense of humor.
Like Stonehenge, the rocking horse graveyard in Lincoln, Massachusetts, known as Ponyhenge is shrouded in mystery.
What *really* happened at Roswell? And what did Project Blue Book actually uncover? All that and more on this episode of The List Show.
Trap-jaw ants have more tricks up their figurative sleeves than just trap jaws. And odorous house ants aren’t called that for nothing.
The music might be silly, but it's kind of catchy—and all for an excellent cause.