If there’s one thing Halloween does better than any other time of year, it’s tell a good story. The kind that makes you lean in closer to the campfire. The kind that lives somewhere between history and nightmare. And these days, there’s no better way to tell those stories than through a podcast.
That’s where Hexed: Stories of Cursed Objects comes in. It’s a show that digs into the legends and mysteries surrounding some of the world’s most haunted artifacts, from paintings that seem to breathe to jewelry that’s said to ruin lives. It’s creepy, historical, sometimes even tragic, but always fascinating.
And this Halloween, Hexed takes over the airwaves. The radio edition will air three times an hour from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on October 31 across five Homeslice Media stations: The Kat 98.7, 93.9 The Mix, Hot 93.1, 100.3 The Fox, and The Cowboy 104.7. Hosted by the Homeslice Cast, the series features twelve stories that explore how ordinary objects became the stuff of supernatural lore.
Podcasts like Hexed prove how powerful audio storytelling can be. There’s something about the human voice, the rhythm, the tension, the pause before a twist, that lets a story crawl under your skin. Unlike a movie, your imagination does the heavy lifting. You picture the shadowy corners yourself.
That’s the beauty of it: podcasts aren’t just background noise anymore. They’re modern campfires. They can educate, entertain, and, if you’re brave enough, give you a good scare on your drive to work.
So whether you’re a true believer in the paranormal or just love a good ghost story, Hexed: Stories of Cursed Objects is worth tuning in for this Halloween. Just don’t listen alone.
How to Listen
When: Halloween, October 31
Where: Three times an hour from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on:
- The Kat 98.7
- 93.9 The Mix
- Hot 93.1
- 100.3 The Fox
- The Cowboy 104.7
Hosted by: The Homeslice Cast
Featuring: Twelve eerie tales of history, mystery, and the haunted unknown
You can also find past episodes of Hexed: Stories of Cursed Objects wherever you get your podcasts.
 
				