Page 1 of 3

Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:35 pm
by 82_28
My girlfriend is sooooo not into woooooo. She does happen to be sick with something now. But I just got home and she has relayed to me a story that happened to her while I was at work. She is on no medication. She hasn't had any alcohol for the last two days. She also insists she was wide awake.

Here's what she JUST told me and I am currently asking her questions basically as I type this.

She picked up a number of television stations in her head this morning. A news show and some infomercial. She didn't "see" it, but she knew what it was -- could hear it, but could "tell" what it was and "what was going on on screen". She has details of the news show and the infomercial only. There were a few other channels but those were the only ones she was "able to focus on".

The news show was "near the top of her forehead" and the infomercial featuring a little girl "selling something" to other kids was "a little to the right".

She isn't scared or freaked out. The voices were not talking to her. But she swears she picked up TV signals in her head briefly today.

Another thing: she said the news shows and the infomercial were both seemingly from the 90's "due to the quality of the broadcasts".

What say you all? Jesus, this freaking me out.

She has never read any PKD either -- that's always been my job. She is also not that interested in any of the topics I spend my time here for or the high weird shit that fascinates me so.

I think she's just sick as in "fluish" symptoms, personally.

However, anybody heard of this before?

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:40 pm
by Peregrine
Hmmm, interesting. I know there is a thread on here somewhere, older, about how advertisers are using technology to transmit advertisment into the brain. Can't remember where, though. Also, I've heard of people picking up radio stations from the fillings in their teeth. Dunno if there is any credence in that or not, or if it's an urban legend. Made me think of that.

Re:

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:51 pm
by 82_28
Peregrine wrote:Hmmm, interesting. I know there is a thread on here somewhere, older, about how advertisers are using technology to transmit advertisment into the brain. Can't remember where, though. Also, I've heard of people picking up radio stations from the fillings in their teeth. Dunno if there is any credence in that or not, or if it's an urban legend. Made me think of that.


What's weird too, is that when I was driving home, yes, yes, listening to NPR, they were talking about the G8whatever summits in Ontario. The dude they were interviewing brought up the "sonic devices" that were to be deployed in the billion or so dollars Canada supposedly is paying for security for the 3 or 4 day event. Then she tells me this a few minutes later.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:52 pm
by Simulist
I remembered reading an article a couple of years ago about a billboard that used "Voice to Skull Technology," so I Googled it, and here it is:

http://cryptogon.com/?p=1713

Voice to Skull Technology in New York
December 12th, 2007

Via: AdAge:

New Yorker Alison Wilson was walking down Prince Street in SoHo last week when she heard a woman’s voice right in her ear asking, “Who’s there? Who’s there?” She looked around to find no one in her immediate surroundings. Then the voice said, “It’s not your imagination.”

Indeed it isn’t. It’s an ad for “Paranormal State,” a ghost-themed series premiering on A&E this week. The billboard uses technology manufactured by Holosonic that transmits an “audio spotlight” from a rooftop speaker so that the sound is contained within your cranium. The technology, ideal for museums and libraries or environments that require a quiet atmosphere for isolated audio slideshows, has rarely been used on such a scale before. For random passersby and residents who have to walk unwittingly through the area where the voice will penetrate their inner peace, it’s another story.

Ms. Wilson, a New York-based stylist, said she expected the voice inside her head to be some type of creative project but could see how others might perceive it differently, particularly on a late-night stroll home. “I might be a little freaked out, and I wouldn’t necessarily think it’s coming from that billboard,” she said.

Joe Pompei, president and founder of Holosonics, said the creepy approach is key to drawing attention to A&E’s show. But, he noted, the technology was designed to avoid adding to noise pollution. “If you really want to annoy a lot of people, a loudspeaker is the best way to do it,” he said. “If you set up a loudspeaker on the top of a building, everybody’s going to hear that noise. But if you’re only directing that sound to a specific viewer, you’re never going to hear a neighbor complaint from street vendors or pedestrians. The whole idea is to spare other people.”

Holosonics has partnered with a cable network once before, when Court TV implemented the technology to promote its “Mystery Whisperer” in the mystery sections of select bookstores. Mr. Pompei said the company also has tested retail deployments in grocery stores with Procter & Gamble and Kraft for customized audio messaging. So a customer, for example, looking to buy laundry detergent could suddenly hear the sound of gurgling water and thus feel compelled to buy Tide as a result of the sonic experience.

Mr. Pompei contends that the technology will take time for consumers to get used to, much like the lights on digital signage and illuminated billboards did when they were first used. The website Gawker posted an item about the billboard last week with the headline “Schizophrenia is the new ad gimmick,” and asked “How soon will it be until in addition to the do-not-call list, we’ll have a ‘do not beam commercial messages into my head’ list?”

“There’s going to be a certain population sensitive to it. But once people see what it does and hear for themselves, they’ll see it’s effective for getting attention,” Mr. Pompei said.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:54 pm
by elfismiles
The threads on advertisers (and parapolitical-perps) Peregrine is thinking of include:

Paranormal experiences vs. targeted individual psyops
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=26077

Pentagon Report Investigated Lasers that put Voices in Head
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=20199

Nonlethal Weapons Could Target Brain, Mimic Schizophenia
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=16278

However, the only verifiable versions of said tech operate in audio only, afaik.

I also know someone personally who claimed to hear a radio station NOT with their fillings but seemingly their ear-ring. This is a male friend of mine, in the para-publishing field at the time, who claimed to have been lying in bed on his side one morning, and could turn his head and "tune" in or out the channel he was hearing. I believe this happened only once.

So, someone experiencing television "images" in their "minds-eye" would be a new one on me.

Well, unless one also accepts the words of "Dr." Fred Bell whom I once saw a video lecture of during which one of his less sensational claims was that people on acid tune into tv-stations. Actually, I think John C. Lilly may have also claimed that.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:55 pm
by Laodicean
You better cook that girl some dinner, 82_28.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:56 pm
by Elvis
Strange!

The tooth-filling radio reception thing has happened.
82_28, are you pretty close to Queen Anne Hill? There are some TV broadcast transmission/relay towers on Queen Anne Hill, right? Those things emit a pretty powerful signal. Although with the new digital signals things could be different.
In any case, Queen Anne Hill has been, and still is, as far as I know, the site of many broadcast towers, and might be the source?.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 7:56 pm
by undead
Is she running a fever? Because high fever can cause that sort of thing sometimes. When I was a kid I had hallucinations from a fever once. My little sister also had a dead people / DMT entity visitation dream one time when she was running a high fever.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 8:01 pm
by 82_28
Laodicean wrote:You better cook that girl some dinner, 82_28.


I was actually bringing her pho at the time. So she's good. I don't think she'd be down with anything solid at this point.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 8:04 pm
by 82_28
Voice to Skull Technology in New York
December 12th, 2007


Hey, thats my birthday that kinda freaks me out so!

:jumping:

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 8:15 pm
by Peregrine
Yes Elfi, that was what I was thinking of. It was the voice to skull technology I was reading up on a while back.

82_28 wrote:
Voice to Skull Technology in New York
December 12th, 2007


Hey, thats my birthday that kinda freaks me out so!

:jumping:


Hey, you're only a couple months younger than my kid, she was born October 2007! :lol:

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 8:36 pm
by justdrew
well, it sounds like a memory of a hypnagogic experience. A person can feel wide awake, yet if their attention isn't focus, they're tired, a brief micro-sleep can generate this kind of thing. often the experience if remembered at all, can feel very real. time typically passes at a different rate, a few seconds can seem like much longer. How long did the experience last? What was the activity before the event?

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 8:59 pm
by jingofever
In cases like this, once you rule out drugs and schizophrenia you suggest temporal lobe epilepsy. I know that because I just saw a movie where Johnny Dark (aka Johnny Twain) tested Christopher Walken for temporal lobe epilepsy. It came back negative. A lot of people have hallucinations with no seeming cause. Of course it might not be a hallucination.

82_28 wrote:She has never read any PKD either -- that's always been my job. She is also not that interested in any of the topics I spend my time here for or the high weird shit that fascinates me so.

Be sure to tell us if she sees a commercial for Food King followed by Felix the Cat.

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 11:05 pm
by freemason9
"sane girlfriend"

they all say that, at first

Re: Sane girlfriend reports picking up TV signals in her head

PostPosted: Wed Jun 09, 2010 11:16 pm
by 82_28
freemason9 wrote:"sane girlfriend"

they all say that, at first


Ha! Indeed.