A Horror Anthology Podcast
Welcome to Subliminal, a narrative horror anthology that drifts along the cold shorelines of the Great Lakes, a place where fog rolls in without warning, shadows linger a little too long, and the line between the natural and the impossible wears thin.
In Season 1 each episode uncovers a new anomaly in and around the isolated town of Kilcarrig, told through recovered recordings, personal accounts, and the remnants of stories that were never meant to be heard. Strange signals. Vanishing landmarks. Voices where no voices should be. Every tale stands on its own… yet something deeper hums beneath them all.
This is horror in the key of static and shoreline wind — grounded, atmospheric, and unsettling in the way only small towns and old secrets can be. Inspired by the analog era of the 1990s, Sub‑Liminal blends found‑audio storytelling with creeping cosmic dread, weaving a world where the unknown doesn’t just lurk in the dark. It listens.
Whether you’re a seasoned horror fan or someone who enjoys a slow‑burn mystery with teeth, Subliminal invites you to step into the fog, press play, and follow the signal wherever it leads.
Just remember: When you shout into the void, something may echo back.
Subliminal is created by a small team of storytellers, sound designers, and world‑builders who share a deep love for atmospheric horror, analog artifacts, and the strange beauty of the unexplained. We grew up on late‑night radio, grainy VHS tapes, and the kind of campfire stories that stay with you long after the flames die down — and we wanted to build a show that captures that same feeling of intimate, creeping dread.
Our approach blends narrative fiction, immersive soundscapes, and a distinctly 1990s sensibility. Every episode is crafted to feel like a recovered artifact: a tape someone shouldn’t have found, a broadcast that wasn’t meant to air, a voice that shouldn’t be speaking. We’re fascinated by the spaces between signals, the stories that hide in static, and the idea that sometimes the world is stranger — and more alive — than it appears.

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