xpstill.blogg.se

X files home banned
X files home banned













x files home banned
  1. X FILES HOME BANNED MOVIE
  2. X FILES HOME BANNED SERIAL

X FILES HOME BANNED MOVIE

Related: Here’s What We Know About the Creepy New Jeffrey Dahmer Movie “My Friend Dahmer” 3. Pfaster was even originally written as a necrophiliac just like Dahmer, but writers had to ditch that element for network TV. In “Irresistible,” Pfaster shape-shifts in front of Scully, and often appears in the shadows, his features undefined. Not only did many of Dahmer’s murders involve the desecration of his victims’ corpses (including necrophilia and cannibalism), some of his surviving victims thought they saw his features changing right in front of them.

x files home banned

X FILES HOME BANNED SERIAL

Sound familiar? The character of Donnie Pfaster, a Minneapolis death fetishist and mortuary worker who collects hair and fingernails from corpses, is said to be based on serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer. This episode features seemingly normal man, from a normal family, who’s secretly a twisted killer. Electric shocks during defibrillation could have converted it into a poisonous gas, possibly explaining the other symptoms the medical staff experienced. When medical staff administered oxygen, it crystallized, leading to the appearance of crystals in Ramirez’s blood. One theory, however, holds that Ramirez, who was suffering from cervical cancer, had been using dimethyl sulfoxide (a solvent used as a degreaser) as a homemade pain remedy. So what, exactly, was wrong with Ramirez and with the hospital staff? That’s a mystery that remains unsolved. Ramirez, meanwhile, was pronounced dead within 35 minutes of arriving in the emergency room. Shortly after these bizarre observations, the hospital staff started dropping like flies-23 people became ill, with some passing out, and five requiring hospitalization. When they attempted to draw blood, there was an ammonia-like smell coming from the tube, and particles floating in the blood.

x files home banned

Suddenly, they noticed an oily sheen covering her body and a garlic-like, fruity aroma coming from her mouth. The hospital staff worked fast, injecting her with medications and attempting to defibrillate her heart. In February 1994, Gloria Ramirez, suffering from confusion, high heart rate, and quickened breathing, was brought into a Riverside, California emergency room. The truth is out there-and here are five times it was stranger, and more chilling, than fiction.ġ. “The Erlenmeyer Flask” – Season 1, Episode 24Ī man with green blood and poisonous gas emitting from his body-sounds unlikely that this one was based on real events, right? Believe it or not, this season 1 episode was inspired by a real woman nicknamed “the toxic lady.” The X-Files division of the FBI may not be real, but some of Mulder and Scully’s cases were actually inspired by real-life events.















X files home banned