Skip to main content

Can Charles Brandon talk to the dead?

A photo of Charles' TV screen appears to show a ghostly hand.


"I am Charles Mark Brandon, duly authorized representative of the dead, and I am going to prove it!"
These are the words of a man who, from his nondescript modern apartment in Brooklyn, has produced scores of videos and photographs purporting to show evidence of the supernatural. Hundreds of these videos appear on his YouTube channel, "A Brooklyn Haunting", where the viewer comments run the gamut from "Wow, that's really weird" to the "Dude, what are you smoking?" variety.

In most of Charles' videos, the camera is fixated upon bathroom mirrors which allegedly reflect the faces of the dead, although some may speculate the faces are nothing more than a simple case of pareidolia caused by the combination of reflections of textured bathroom tiles, foggy glass and camera angles. Charles refutes this explanation, of course. "If I see faces, you see faces, someone else see faces, a bunch of people see faces, then how can it be this?" he says. "Its like two people having the same exact dream. Impossible!"

If you tilt your head to the right, you do see something that looks like a female face.


But the faces in the mirrors are just part of the strange things that Charles records. There are the usual orbs, marks and handprints on the walls which may or may not have been put there by phantasmagoric hands and, perhaps weirdest of all, a video entitled, "Ghosts showing me the galaxy in my mirror." It's just as the title suggests-- a bathroom mirror that reflects the cosmos (or, at least, something sparkly and colorful). Some might be tempted to ask why the spirits of the departed would decide to bestow an image of the Milky Way upon a bathroom mirror in some guy's apartment in Brooklyn, but, then again, there are people who claim to see the face of Jesus on a piece of toast in Milwaukee or the likeness of the Virgin Mary in a potato chip in Georgia. Much like the Lord Almighty, the spirit world works in mysterious ways. Who are we to question the celestial mechanics of the supernatural?

One thing is certain-- Charles Brandon doesn't question the strange things he claims to see on the mirrors, windows, walls and ceilings of his New York apartment. He simply records them. Dutifully. Religiously. Daily. Like a man on a mission.



While some may argue about what these videos and photographs really depict (a floating orb or a speck of dust? Handprints of the dead or greasy fingerprints from the ghost of Kentucky Fried Chicken past?), nobody can argue with Charles Brandon's passion. He doesn't care if you see what he sees. He doesn't care if you believe him. And he doesn't care if one of his numerous YouTube videos garners dozens of thumbs-down and multitudes of snarky, sarcastic comments. He'll go right on believing that he is what he claims to be-- the duly authorized representative of the dead.

And, oddly enough, that's all part of his charm. When you talk to Charles Brandon you can't help but admire his tenacity, his unwavering passion and devotion. Some have accused him of being a hoaxer, but anyone hellbent on pulling off a scam would have given up long ago. After all, there are far more productive ways to spend time than by aiming a camera at a bathroom mirror for hours on end, day after day, month after month, waiting for a disembodied face to appear.

You can also rule out financial reward as his motive. Yes, it is true that his "A Brooklyn Haunting" YouTube channel does ask viewers to leave a PayPal donation, but we seriously doubt that the channel's creator is rolling through Greenpoint or Flatbush in a tricked out Rolls-Royce. There's really not much money to be made in this business unless you're a sexy 20-something with a Travel Channel show and a night-vison camera, who claims to feel cold spots when walking into a tourist-trap haunted bed and breakfast (We ought to know. In spite of JOTB's immense popularity and worldwide acclaim, our staff earns roughly enough each month to pay for a Grand Slam breakfast at Denny's [gratuity excluded].)

Charles, it seems, believes that his mission in life is to prove the existence of these spirits. He speaks for them, since they can't speak for themselves. "Imagine you are doing everything you can to be seen," he told us. "Do you have any idea how much energy it takes for them to do these things?"

This is perhaps true. Noted psychical researchers have, for decades, theorized that it requires an immense amount of energy for a spirit to communicate with the living. That's why they only seem to manifest themselves in fleeting apparitions, in faint EVP whisperings, in the occasional upsetting of a physical object on a shelf or a table. It is far easier for us, the living, to reach out to them. And, if this is true, Charles Brandon proudly welcomes the dearly and not-so-dearly departed with open arms. He is a one man welcome wagon for all ghosts, good and bad alike. For instance, while some of the faces that appear on his mirrors are peaceful and serene, others come across as angry, evil and demonic. That is, of course, if they are truly faces of the dead in the first place.

Although he lives in a Georgetown apartment built during the Reagan Era, the land itself is steeped in history. Known to local tribes as "The Broken Land" for its swamps and streams, this section of Brooklyn was first inhabited by Europeans in 1664 and eventually became a thriving hub of industry. It only takes a mildly active imagination to envision the spirits of long-departed Indian chieftains hovering over the grounds, plagued by an extreme case of buyer's remorse over the sale of their land. Had they known that, one day, Brooklyn would become a mecca for bearded hipsters willing to plunk down 8.50 for a can of Pabst Blue Ribbon, they might have held on to what they had.

And let's not forget that Brooklyn has more than its fair share of spectacular spooks, including the victims of the Great Brooklyn Theatre Fire of 1876.

But in spite of Charles Brandon's passion, paranormal researchers have not yet taken him up on his invitation to check out his haunted apartment. Actually, it's not so much an invitation as it is a challenge, something along the lines of "if you think I'm joking, come and see if for yourself".

"I have not had one paranormalist treat me with kindness," he says. "Not one scientist, medium, none of 'em, and I have talked to them all. The vitriol that they give me!"

Brandon says that he has even reached out to the inimitable paranormal skeptic, Penn Jillette, but to no avail. "He begged me to stop sending him my pictures," he added.

"It's just a matter of time until someone has the balls to come here and see it for themselves," he says. "I am more than prepared and able to prove my case, but no one will give me that chance."

So, if you're a paranormal researcher in New York, Charles Brandon cordially invites you to his home to have a look around. There's a chance that you might find some foggy mirrors reflecting pareideolic faces or maybe some handprints left on the walls by a housepainter long forgotten. But who knows-- you might also find a portal to another dimension and an eccentric man from Brooklyn who really can communicate with the dead.

Popular posts from this blog

The Hunt for the Osage River Monster

It's spring of 1844 in St. Clair County, Missouri. A mile or so from the banks of the muddy Osage River a pioneer settler named Matthew Arbuckle is plowing his field when he hears a banshee-like wail in the distance, coming from the direction of the river. Shrill and unearthly, the demonic howl fills the farmer with terror. Wasting no time, he unhitches his plow, jumps on the back of his horse and heads for the hills.

One hour later Arbuckle arrives in Papinville, a town fifteen miles from his farm. The exhausted horse is white with foam; its rider white with terror. In a gasping voice he tells of making an escape from an awful monster. Although he had not seen the beast, he had heard its voice, from which he could tell that it was a monster of immense proportions.

Those who heard Arbuckle's story were bewildered, and those who did not know the pioneer personally could tell, just by the bloodless pallor of his trembling skin, that the man was not telling a lie. Whatever terrify…

The Ticking Tombstone of Landenberg

If you look closely at a map of Pennsylvania, you'll see an anomalous semi-circular border at the extreme southeastern part of the state. This circle, known officially as the "Twelve Mile Circle", serves as the border between the Keystone State and Delaware. Much of the strange circle is surrounded by Chester County, one of the three original Pennsylvania counties created by William Penn in 1682. While there are many historical points of interest in Chester County, few are strange or as steeped in legend as the Ticking Tombstone.

Near the London Tract Meeting House in Landenberg is an old graveyard which contains a tombstone which is said to make eerie ticking noises, much like the ticking of a pocketwatch. Landenberg locals claim that the ticking is the result of two very famous surveyors who arrived in town during the 1760s- Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon.  A young child supposedly swallowed a valuable pocketwatch owned by Mason and later died, and the boy's head…

The Incest Capital of the World?

At the far eastern edge of Kentucky, nestled in Appalachia, resides Letcher County. In spite of its isolation and poverty (approximately 30% of the county's population lives below the poverty line), Letcher County has managed to grow at an impressive rate, from a population of just 9,172 in 1900 to a present-day population of nearly 25,000. However, even if Letcher County tripled or quadrupled its present population, there's still a pretty good chance that virtually all of the county's inhabitants would be related to each other-- thanks to one particularly fertile family whose astounding rate of reproduction can put even the friskiest rabbit to shame.

Around the year 1900, Letcher County was the home of a man by the name of Jason L. Webb, who made national headlines for having the one of the largest families in the world. According to newspaper reports of the era, Jason had 19 children, 175 grandchildren, and 100 great-grandchildren. Perhaps even more impressive was his b…