Prozak "The Seekers: Vol. 1"

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L.D.S.

The Bakersman
Aug 14, 2006
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Mizzourah
#1
Film crew investigates the haunts of Hamilton Street in Old Saginaw City

by Sue White | For The Saginaw News Sunday August 30, 2009, 4:01 AM




Paranormal investigators Prozak, also known as Steve T. Shippy, and Adam W. Eugenio and Tim T. Rooney, all of Saginaw, stand near The Stable, an outdoor outfitter in Old Saginaw City, during an overnight film session. The Seekers plan to show their documentary around Halloween.

Prozak is the first to admit his ghost-hunting partners, the Seekers, probably won't convince skeptics of paranormal activity along Old Saginaw City's Hamilton Street.

It's not as if a ghost welcomed the rapper who bills himself as the Hitchcock of Hip Hop and fellow seekers Andy Rooney and Adam W. Eugenio to The Stable with a "Hello, I'm Mrs. Benjamin. I lived here 100 years ago."
But when the team's documentary, "Seekers: Vol. One," premieres around Halloween in a Saginaw theater, the eerie "Why?" recorded at the former Moose Lodge, the singing specter at the Schuch Hotel and the swinging light fixture on The Stable's second floor promise to raise a few goosebumps.

Use this link to see more photos of Prozak and Seekers.
"This has always been a hobby for me, and I included a trailer on the bonus DVD with my last album," said Prozac, a Saginaw musician-turned-filmmaker also known as Steve T. Shippy. "When we decided to shoot a series, Hamilton Street was a natural with the lawlessness, and the violence and death it experienced in the past. A lot of stuff has gone down around here."

Footsteps in The Stable

The Seekers' investigations have come up with "some pretty amazing" findings, Prozak said.
"Some paranormal groups want things so bad, they take it all at face value," he said. "We go for the evidence; we try to be over-the-top objective."



The Stable, 300 S. Hamilton, once was a city stable and mortuary. Workers there have heard unexplained sounds, among other odd happenings.
On a recent weekend, that meant spending "the bewitching hours," from 2 a.m. until daybreak, at The Stable, 300 S. Hamilton near Adams with digital infrared cameras, electro-magnetic field sensors, pocket recorders and fellow ghost-hunters from Bay City and Detroit. Eugenio had worked with Prozak on his DVD, and Rooney, one of the filmmakers behind the zombie film "Locked Away," became acquainted through that project.

The Stable offers an interesting history of its own. The north portion was the former city stable, where the horses that pulled the police and fire wagons were housed, and the southern quarters was a mortuary. The faint traces of an ad on a brick wall promote "Governor Bliss," the Saginaw politician who led the state from 1901 to 1904, and a room away, ornate wooden display cases stand empty of the caskets that used to fold out of the wall like Murphy beds.

"We'll hear footsteps up there, and doors opening, though we haven't seen any ghosts," said Chad R. Stoney, the ski and bike shop's assistant manager. "The incident that stands out the most happened about six or seven years ago. I was here alone, watching a football game, when I felt someone grab my shoulder. I did a quick 360, and nobody was there."

A 'boom' in an empty room

A photograph has made the rounds, he said, of a ghostly Mrs. Benjamin standing on a staircase. And many report an uneasy feeling around the third floor bedroom where the stable boy once lived.
"That's up by our layaway area now, and you want to get up there and back down quick," Stoney said.



Prozac prepares cameras and audio equipment. The team uses infrared cameras and audio equipment to explore sights and sounds in the 127-year-old building.

That's where Detroit ghost-hunters Rose Dakroub, Celia Fucay and Casey Dietrich headed on the overnight exploration, waiting for the nearby Hamilton Street Pub crowd to leave the block in silence.

"It's a mix of emotions when something happens, fascinating and scary at the same time," Fucay said. "Sitting here, we could feel something was in the room. We tried to communicate, to ask for some noise, and it really responded when we asked about Mrs. Benjamin.

"That's when the tapping started."

Prozak's electro-magnetic field sensor went wild, rapidly beeping as the red lights flashed. A couch was pulled a few feet from the wall. A huge boom, as if something fell to the floor, was heard from an empty room.

And the light started swaying, a phenomenon caught on camera. The team jumped to action, shaking the rafters, trying to make the lamp sway again. They couldn't replicate it.

"We'll correlate the data we've gathered and investigate it again," Prozak said. "There's a lot of chaos; there's a lot of 100-year-old dust flying around, making it hard to breathe.

"But maybe it's a bat loose. We have the cameras set up around the rooms, and we'll go through everything it recorded."

Caught on camera?
Post-fright-night review of the footage is how the Seekers say they heard the EVP -- electronic voice phenomenon -- that showed up on recordings while not caught at the time at the old Moose Lodge, 220 N. Hamilton, and the Schuch, now known as Perry's Schuch Hotel, 303 N. Hamilton.

"We never heard a thing while it was happening, but it was caught on the cameras and the recorders," Prozak said.
Then there's the flashlight that at the Moose Lodge turned itself off, caught on camera, and then turned itself back on seconds before Prozak and his team returned to the room, Rooney said.

"You don't know how to take it," he said. "But it's right there in the picture."
Next on the Seekers' radar is Savannah, Ga. After selecting the location, they'll begin researching the history, narrowing their focus to a handful of spots and contacting owners.

"We do our homework," Prozak said. "We correlate everything and sort through what's myth and what's real. If you're not a believer, if you find this objectionable, don't watch.
"But we'll give everyone else something to think about."
::
 

MysticOracle

si vis pacem para bellum
May 4, 2006
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707- VALLEJO
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ive been on ghost hunts. one of the strangest was an abandoned military asylum for the insane. talk about hearing and possibly seeing some shit you cant replicate. then there was this other time a few years ago when i conjured up a 500 foot tall marshmallow man.

 

L.D.S.

The Bakersman
Aug 14, 2006
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Mizzourah
#5
When I saw him in Little Rock earlier this year, he said this was a fool proof version of the ghost shows on tv, meaning it was just him and two dudes with cameras.
 
Nov 14, 2002
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#6
When I saw him in Little Rock earlier this year, he said this was a fool proof version of the ghost shows on tv, meaning it was just him and two dudes with cameras.
What makes that so different from the TV shit? I doubt he can claim that having EVP and heat sensing equipment is detrimental to a paranormal investigation.

Just walking around with a camera going.. "Look! That light fixture is shaking!" doesn't really make something "foolproof" to me. It just means that a dude in one room bumped into it or the place is rickety and the fuckin' light shakes when you walk through the room.

And why does it say this;
The team uses infrared cameras and audio equipment to explore sights and sounds in the 127-year-old building.
 

L.D.S.

The Bakersman
Aug 14, 2006
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Mizzourah
#7
I have no idea, bro. I'm just repeating what he said to me. He talked about it for a long time, and was pretty excited about it.
 

L.D.S.

The Bakersman
Aug 14, 2006
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Mizzourah
#9
Nah. He was personable to me. We talked for over an hour at the SS Meet & Greet last year, and he invited us to hang out on the bus afterward. At the end of the night, he gave me two copies of his cd and took my info for promo.

Fast forward to this past June and he was on tour with Twiztid. I went to the Little Rock show, and he came up to me before the venue opened and asked me if I was from Springfield. I said yes, and he greeted me again and we hung out for a little while before he went to prepare for his set.

He ended up giving me an entire box of hand outs and a bunch of t-shirts for helping. He gave me his number and told me to call when I saw he was coming to a town I was near.

He's overly political and I'm not, so it's kinda difficult to hang in conversation if it goes that direction, but he's a nice person.
 
Nov 14, 2002
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#10
Some of his politics are sketchy to me, but that's never bothered me really. He just looks like a dude that thinks he's the shit. I wonder how he is around people that aren't superhuman Scottish-Irish-Nordic-cavemen-apes from the future.
 

L.D.S.

The Bakersman
Aug 14, 2006
19,934
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Mizzourah
#11
He's nice to his fans. He stood at his merch booth and talked to fans about how great Twiztid is during the show.

He looks like an arrogant asshole, but so does every other 6 foot tall bald guy with weird facial hair.

People usually are extremely nice to me, even after they know I'm harmless.
 
Jun 9, 2007
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#13
Good for him. I'd be interested to see it.

I'm an amateur paranormal investigator myself. Fuck what anybody thinks about it. When you've seen shit with your own two eyes (with no drugs in your system) and hear shit you can't explain away, your mind opens up to all possibilities.
 
Oct 11, 2008
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www.nastynullities.com
#16
Is he as much of a cocky asshole as I think he is?
I went to Strange Noize last year with about 7 or 8 people, and about half of us had purchased VIP passes. I hadn't. We all showed up hella early, and I waited with a couple friends outside while the others were inside meeting everyone.

We were all waiting and talking outside, and Prozak comes outside and said, "fuck that $150 bullshit." He signed some stuff for us, kicked it with us and just bullshit with us for about 20 minutes.

He tipped us off about the 2nd collabos album, I think it was. And he also talked about his Ghost Hunters show, handed us a few flyers n went back in.

He seemed like a pretty cool dude, didn't act snobbish or cocky at all.
 
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#20
I'm very surprised... I know Bill was a cool dude, and he's a big ass bald muhfucker. Prozak just comes off like a dick and a half. It's cool that he hangs with fans and shit. I kinda like his music too. I don't like the rapping so much as the production, but he isn't the worst rapper I've ever heard.