Urban Legends: You won't be able to believe these are true stories!

What are the Metropolitan legends? Truth or popular fantasy? Real events or just inventions and advertising stunts?

There are so many fictional stories that come to our ears from a friend's friend, credible enough to get attention and so strange as to deserve word of mouth.

In reality some of these are not only the result of fervent minds, we have found 8 - but surely there will be others - which in reality are absolutely true and proven.

The green man

A legend in vogue in Transylvania tells of a "green-colored entity that wanders around scaring those it meets. In reality it is a real man, Raymond Robinson who, due to a serious electrical accident, was disfigured in the face and assumed a Because of these problems, he only went out at night, when the city was deserted and people could not point at him or look at him insistently.

The boogeyman

When you want to playfully scare children, you often tell them "Look, I'm sending you to the" black man ". But this phantom figure seems to have really existed. Between the 1970s and 1980s, many children disappeared in Cropsey, Staten Island. The legend revolved around a particular and classic figure at the same time: the black man, who has always taken children with him. In the late 1980s, the police actually identified a man - drug addict and dweller - accusing him of making the children disappear from Crospey. Although the evidence was never enough, the man is still serving 50 years in prison for kidnapping and murder.

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Spiders in the head

An urban legend tells of a woman who accused severe headaches that forced her to go to the hospital for checks. Here they discovered that inside the woman's head was full of spiders: one of them had entered her ear, had laid eggs, and so many had been born that they had literally colonized her head. A hoax? Not really: in the summer of 2012 the news told of a Chinese woman who ended up in Changsha hospital, complaining of an itch inside her left ear. Here the doctors discovered that the cause was a spider that had entered her ear canal for five days. To remove it, they filled her ear with a saline solution, and it was only at that point that the animal decided to go out instead of going even deeper.

Human vampires

About 400 years ago a gruesome urban legend spread in Peru that wanted the presence of real vampires sucking the fat of tourists, leaving their bloodless bodies on the street. It took many years but it was later discovered that it was not a legend but a real gang of human fat traffickers, then vanquished in 2009 with the help of General Eusebio Felix Murga.

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Buried alive

Well known is the legend according to which a young girl buried alive returns to earth in the form of a zombie to take revenge. This story is so well known that it has even inspired many films. Not many know, however, that in reality it derives from a story that really happened in Poland where a young man rejected in love decided to stun his beloved, seal her inside a pressed cardboard box and bury her in a Yorkshire wood. Incredibly, the girl succeeded. to free himself, cutting the cardboard with the engagement ring he had given her. Arrested a few days later, Marcin was sentenced to 20 years. The girl instead looked like this one in the video, who organized a terrifying joke!

The tunnel of fear (real)

Another classic urban legend tells of an amusement park, inside which the police discover that the mummy of the classic horror tunnel or castle is not the usual puppet made of cloth and papier-mâché, but a corpse in flesh (little) and bone.
In reality, in 1976, in the Nu-pike Luna Park, in California, a television crew was shooting the last episode of a well-known program "Six Million Dollar Man". During the scene of the chase in the horror tunnel, an operator bumped into the puppet of a mummy, which was dangling from the ceiling, detaching her arm and revealing the terrible truth: it was a corpse. The body was later discovered to be that of Elmer McCurdy, an outlaw reported missing in 1911, who was mummified and sold by the gravedigger of the time at the then nascent Luna Park.

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The snakes come out of the toilets

One of the most feared and widespread urban legends tells of long and frightening snakes that come out of the toilet. To give truth to the story, in November 1998, an employee from Reading, Debbie Smart, thought about it, who actually found a five-foot African python in the toilet in the office. He was thinking of a joke, but instead the animal really moved. It was never clear how he got there.

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Kidney thieves

Famous, as much feared, the story of someone who wakes up in a bathtub full of ice with a note that warns him to run to the hospital, if he wants to survive, because he lacks a kidney. While the bathtub with the pieces of ice and the written notice may be fictional, this kind of nasty surprise usually happened in India, where there was a thriving black market for organs. In 1998, three surgeons and seven accomplices were arrested after being accused of stealing kidneys from patients who were unaware and convinced they needed a minor surgery ...

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