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Live Stream — Topics expected to include the Conjuring House (Harrisville, Rhode Island), the real-life location that inspired the 2013 film 'The Conjuring,' and one of the most investigated properties in the paranormal world.
June 23, 2026
Inconclusive — No field investigation conducted. This is a community Q&A session. Individual case verdicts discussed during the stream vary by location and evidence.

Got Questions About the Paranormal? Jason Hawes Is Answering Them Live Tonight

6.8K views on YouTube

I walk into every location as a skeptic — my job is to disprove the haunting first. But then there are the cases that don't wrap up neatly, and those are the ones worth talking about.

— Jason Hawes
The Investigation

There's no script, no agenda, and no filter — just me, you, and every question you've ever wanted to ask about the paranormal, ghost hunting, or what really goes on behind the scenes of an investigation. Tonight at 8:30 PM EST, I'm going live and opening the floor to whatever is on your mind. Whether you're a longtime member of the TAPS community or someone who just stumbled onto Ghost Hunters for the first time, this one is for you.

Findings

I've been doing this for a long time. Decades of crawling through dark basements, sitting in allegedly haunted rooms, and trying — genuinely trying — to find the most rational explanation for what people are experiencing before I ever consider pointing a finger at something paranormal. And in all that time, the one thing that has never gotten old is the conversation. The questions people bring to the table are sometimes the most valuable part of this entire field.

That's exactly why I love doing these live sessions. You bring your questions, your theories, your personal experiences, and your skepticism — and we dig into it together. Tonight is wide open. Want to know how I approach a location like the Conjuring House in Rhode Island, one of the most talked-about properties in the paranormal world? Ask me. Want to know what piece of equipment I actually trust versus what I think is mostly noise? Ask me that too. Want to challenge my methodology or push back on something I've said in the past? I genuinely welcome it. That kind of critical thinking is exactly what this field needs more of.

Here's something I want people to understand about how I approach this work: I walk into every single location as a skeptic. My job — the way I've always seen it — is to disprove the haunting first. If I can find a rational, measurable, repeatable explanation for what's happening, then that's the answer. A drafty hallway creates cold spots. Infrasound from an old HVAC system can make you feel uneasy or even cause visual disturbances. Carbon monoxide, EMF spikes from old wiring, psychological suggestion — these are all real factors that can make a perfectly normal building feel terrifying. I owe it to the people who live and work in these locations to rule all of that out before I say anything else. And honestly, most of the time, that's exactly where the investigation ends.

But then there are the cases that don't wrap up neatly. The ones where you've checked everything, ruled out every conventional explanation you can think of, and something still doesn't add up. Those are the cases I keep coming back to. Those are the ones worth talking about. Tonight, I want to hear what you've experienced, what you believe, and what you're still trying to make sense of. Bring your best theories. Bring your toughest questions. Bring your healthy dose of doubt — because that's what keeps all of us honest in this field.

Verdict

Tonight's live stream is less about me and more about this community — the people who have followed this work, asked the hard questions, and kept the conversation going for years. Drop your questions in the chat starting at 8:30 PM EST, and let's see where the night takes us. I'll be there, and I'm not dodging anything.

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