The CreepCast “My Property Isn’t Normal” episode is getting attention because it lands in one of the show’s most entertaining danger zones: a long, beloved, messy internet horror story that gives Wendigoon and Papa Meat plenty to read, question, roast, riff on, and slowly lose patience with. This is not the kind of CreepCast episode where the hosts sit in stunned silence because the story is too disturbing to joke about. It is closer to a three-hour endurance test of escalating absurdity, where the central pleasure becomes watching two horror fans try to decide whether they are reading a charming horror-comedy cult favorite or a story that has completely broken their sense of narrative logic.
CreepCast’s episode is listed as the show’s 106th episode and was uploaded on June 21, 2026. In it, Wendigoon and Papa Meat read and narrate u/Murderbird17’s r/nosleep story “My property isn’t normal.” The podcast version runs about 3 hours and 21 minutes, with Apple Podcasts listing Wendigoon and MeatCanyon as hosts.
That length matters. “My Property Isn’t Normal” is not a quick spooky tale with one twist. It is a sprawling supernatural property story built around a man named Cole, a wilderness home, recurring entities, bizarre monster encounters, a mysterious “lady in the tree,” a character named Mark, and a tone that keeps jumping between horror, action, and goofy self-aware comedy. The supplied transcript shows the episode becoming less of a straightforward narration and more of a running debate about why the story works for some fans and drives the hosts into hysterics at the same time.
Episode at a glance
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Podcast | CreepCast |
| Episode | “My Property Isn’t Normal” |
| Hosts | Wendigoon and Papa Meat / MeatCanyon |
| Guest | No traditional guest |
| YouTube channel | CreepCast |
| Published | June 21, 2026 |
| Runtime | About 3 hours, 21 minutes |
| Main topic | Reading and reacting to u/Murderbird17’s r/nosleep horror-comedy series |
| Best for | CreepCast fans, creepypasta listeners, r/nosleep readers, horror-comedy fans |
| Overall verdict | Chaotic, very funny, uneven by design, and memorable mainly because the hosts’ reactions become the real event |
What happens in the episode?
The episode begins with Wendigoon and Papa Meat setting expectations around “My Property Isn’t Normal,” a story the CreepCast audience had apparently requested heavily. The hosts immediately pick up on the story’s unusual tone. Before the reading even fully begins, they are already wondering what kind of experience they are about to enter. Is this meant to be scary? Is it intentionally funny? Is it in the tradition of “Tales from the Gas Station,” where supernatural danger is filtered through a casual, sarcastic narrator? Or is it trying to be a darker wilderness horror story that just happens to contain strange comic beats?
That question becomes the engine of the whole episode.
The story follows Cole, a man who lives alone on a remote property in the wilderness. The original r/nosleep post opens with Cole explaining that he lives in the middle of nowhere — or, as he prefers to call it, the middle of the wilderness — and that despite spending time there, he has never become truly comfortable with the land. From there, the story quickly introduces the first of many strange encounters: a naked, scrawny man in the woods calling out in a baby-like voice, charging at Cole, getting stabbed, and then cartwheeling away while crying like a newborn.
That image more or less tells you what kind of episode this becomes.
Cole’s property is filled with entities. Some lure him with voices. Some imitate people. Some appear to be traps. Some are possibly mythological. Some are introduced with names like Skinny and Camo. Some are threatening, but many of them also behave in ways that make the story feel like an action-horror cartoon. This is exactly where CreepCast thrives. Wendigoon tends to keep the narration moving, while Papa Meat increasingly reacts like a man being forced to watch a story make every possible choice except the one he wants it to make.
A major early section centers on Skinny, a creature Cole suspects may be a skinwalker or something similar. Skinny imitates people, taunts Cole, and eventually pushes him into a violent confrontation. The story presents Skinny as one of the more genuinely dangerous threats on the property. But because Cole narrates everything with a strange mix of toughness, sarcasm, and emotional detachment, the hosts start reading the character not as a grounded survivalist but as a kind of exaggerated internet tough guy.
That interpretation becomes one of the funniest running threads of the episode.
Another key section introduces Camo, an entity in full hunting gear who sets elaborate traps. The original Part 2 post introduces Camo as a “nuisance” and describes him appearing in Cole’s deer stand during hunting season. What could be an eerie image — a camouflaged figure silently occupying a hunting stand deep in private woods — turns into something much stranger when the traps become cartoonish and Cole’s responses become increasingly over-the-top.
The episode also deals with the “lady in the tree,” an entity who appears to help Cole, heal him, and later becomes central to the mythology of the property. This is one of the story’s more fantasy-leaning elements. It gives the series a larger lore structure, but it also opens the door to exactly the kind of exposition-heavy supernatural explanation that CreepCast often loves to pick apart.
By the later stretches, the story has expanded beyond isolated monster encounters into a broader mythology involving the property, magical rules, curses, organizations, Mark, the Chosen, and a final confrontation with Skinny. The more the plot tries to explain itself, the more the hosts seem to enjoy exposing the seams.
That is the real shape of the episode: not just “here is a scary story,” but “here is what happens when a podcast famous for reading internet horror meets a story that keeps daring them to take it seriously.”
The biggest talking points from the episode
1. The story’s tone is the entire debate
The central discussion point is tone. “My Property Isn’t Normal” lives somewhere between r/nosleep horror, monster-of-the-week fantasy, action comedy, and forum-era creepypasta. The story is not simply trying to terrify the reader. It gives Cole a voice that is casual, flippant, and frequently proud of his own absurd survival instincts.
That tone has fans. The original Reddit comment section shows readers responding positively to the mixture of comedy and terror, with one commenter describing the mood as comical yet terrifying. The CreepCast subreddit also had users asking for the show to cover the series long before the episode, with some noting that it was silly but fun and that the hosts’ reaction would be part of the appeal.
For Wendigoon and Papa Meat, though, that same tone becomes the issue. The hosts are not confused by the fact that horror can be funny. They have covered stories where comedy and dread work together. Their problem is that the narration often undercuts the threat before the scene can build real suspense. A monster appears, Cole acts strangely casual, the entity does something bizarre, and the story moves on. Instead of fear accumulating, absurdity accumulates.
That makes the episode fascinating as a podcast review subject because the source material is not merely “bad” or “good.” It is divisive. Fans who love internet horror comedy may see its loose, episodic, overpowered-monster-hunter energy as the point. Listeners who want tension, character development, and consistent stakes may understand exactly why Papa Meat starts to unravel.
2. Cole is either the hero, the joke, or both
The hosts spend much of the episode reacting to Cole’s persona. He is written as someone who has seen so much supernatural danger that he no longer responds normally to fear. He fights, stabs, shoots, investigates, camps, and wanders back into the woods even after repeated near-death experiences.
On paper, that could make him a hardened survivor. In practice, the way he narrates his own actions makes the hosts imagine a very different character: not a stoic wilderness badass, but a socially strange, comically inflated narrator who sees himself as tougher and cooler than the story can support.
This tension is where many of the episode’s best jokes come from. Every time Cole shrugs off another impossible encounter, the hosts add another layer to their imagined version of him. The story gives them a protagonist who says he is not trying to sound cool while repeatedly describing himself surviving monsters, outsmarting entities, and taking supernatural punishment. That gap between self-description and narrative reality becomes irresistible.
The episode works because Wendigoon and Papa Meat do not simply say, “This protagonist is unbelievable.” They build an entire comic reading of him. They turn Cole into an archetype: the internet horror narrator who has a tragic secret, owns a very specific handgun, knows the woods, claims not to fear death, and keeps walking directly into danger because otherwise there would be no next installment.
3. The monster-of-the-week structure both helps and hurts
“My Property Isn’t Normal” is built around recurring encounters. The property contains many threats, and each installment adds another piece of the supernatural ecosystem. That structure makes the story easy to binge. Every new creature gives the reader something fresh: a baby-voiced naked man, a banshee-like creek entity, Skinny, Camo, the lady in the tree, Mark, the Chosen, and more.
The benefit is momentum. There is almost always a new weird image arriving. The drawback is that the hosts begin to notice a pattern. A creature appears. It is creepy for a moment. Cole reacts in a sarcastic or action-ready way. The creature either fails to kill him, flees, or becomes part of a larger lore dump. The result can feel less like escalating horror and more like a supernatural obstacle course.
The original r/nosleep structure explains part of this. The first post ends by promising more experiences and linking to later parts. Part 2 opens by acknowledging that readers enjoyed the first set of experiences and that Cole now feels obligated to tell more. That serial format rewards episodic escalation. But when CreepCast reads a large chunk of it in one long podcast episode, the repetitions become much more obvious.
This is one of the useful things CreepCast does as a format. A story that works in Reddit installments can feel very different when consumed as a full episode with two hosts stopping to analyze every turn. The show turns serialized pacing into a subject of criticism.
4. Papa Meat’s “crash out” becomes a feature, not a flaw
One reason this episode is already being discussed is that Papa Meat’s reaction becomes part of the entertainment. The CreepCast Wiki’s episode page even lists notable bits such as Papa Meat beginning to “crash out” around 42 minutes, jokes about “fatly singing,” “fleshgaits,” and later moments where he breaks into laughter.
That kind of documentation tells you what fans are actually watching for. They are not only interested in whether “My Property Isn’t Normal” is a strong horror story. They are interested in what the story does to the hosts.
Papa Meat’s frustration is not just negativity. It gives the episode shape. Without his escalating disbelief, a three-hour reading of a loose horror-comedy series might feel repetitive. His reactions provide a pressure gauge. Every new narrative choice pushes him closer to either laughter or despair, and that emotional arc becomes the episode’s substitute for traditional suspense.
Wendigoon, meanwhile, functions as the balancing force. He keeps the reading alive, follows the plot, and often gives the story enough room to reveal where it is going. That contrast — one host steering, the other combusting — is classic CreepCast.
5. The story has a real afterlife beyond Reddit
“My Property Isn’t Normal” is not just a random one-off creepypasta. It has a small but persistent internet afterlife. The original story was posted on r/nosleep by u/Murderbird17 about eight years ago. It later inspired other narrations and even a WEBTOON Canvas adaptation by Sona Sierra, where the page describes the series as a thriller/supernatural comic about Cole and his strange property.
That context matters because it explains why the episode arrived with expectations. Fans did not ask CreepCast to read this story because it was universally considered a polished literary masterpiece. They asked because it is memorable, strange, meme-friendly, and built for reaction. It belongs to a category of internet horror that is less about perfect craft and more about personality, momentum, quotable weirdness, and community attachment.
CreepCast is especially good at exposing that difference.
The most memorable moments
The first unforgettable image is the naked man in the woods crying “momma,” attacking Cole, getting stabbed, and cartwheeling away. It is the kind of scene that instantly divides listeners. Some will think it is creepy because it is so strange. Others will think it is too ridiculous to be scary. Wendigoon and Papa Meat land in the second camp quickly, but the very fact that they cannot stop talking about it proves the image works on some level.
The second major moment is Skinny’s introduction as a serious threat. The story wants Skinny to feel different from the other entities: smarter, crueler, more psychologically manipulative. The hosts, however, latch onto the specific way Skinny provokes Cole, especially around military imagery and stolen valor jokes. That becomes one of the episode’s funniest interpretive detours.
The third is Camo. A camouflaged trapper in the woods could be genuinely frightening. Instead, the traps become so elaborate and cartoonish that the hosts begin treating the whole sequence like a Looney Tunes hunting sketch. The original Part 2 text even describes Cole hanging upside down “like a damn cartoon,” which basically invites that reading.
The fourth is the expanding lore around the lady in the tree and magical rules. Here the episode shifts from “monster encounters” to “supernatural explanation,” and the hosts become increasingly sensitive to how much the story is trying to justify. The more rules appear, the more they question whether those rules clarify the story or make it more absurd.
The fifth is the hosts’ own collapse into laughter. Fan discussion after the episode has already centered on Hunter losing his mind, with one Reddit post calling that a favorite part and another commenter describing the episode as legitimately one of the funniest.
About the podcast
CreepCast is a horror reading and reaction podcast hosted by Wendigoon and Papa Meat, also known as MeatCanyon. The official YouTube channel description frames the show around the two creators sharing scary, occult, and creepy stories from around the internet.
The show’s appeal comes from a combination of narration, commentary, and chemistry. Wendigoon often brings a sincere enthusiasm for internet horror, urban legends, analog horror, and creepypasta history. Papa Meat brings a darker comedic energy, voice performance, and a willingness to say when a story is losing him. Together, they occupy a sweet spot between audiobook, comedy podcast, horror criticism, and internet culture time capsule.
CreepCast is not just reading stories. It is revisiting the mythology of online horror: r/nosleep classics, creepypasta staples, long-form internet fiction, ARG-style projects, and stories that may have been terrifying to readers when they first found them at 13 but feel very different under adult scrutiny.
That is why “My Property Isn’t Normal” fits the show so well. It is a fan-requested story with enough lore to fill a long episode, enough flaws to spark criticism, enough weirdness to fuel jokes, and enough nostalgia to keep listeners invested even when the hosts are tearing into it.
About the central subject: “My Property Isn’t Normal”
“My Property Isn’t Normal” is a horror-comedy r/nosleep series by u/Murderbird17. The story follows Cole, a man living on a strange wilderness property where supernatural incidents are not rare interruptions but part of everyday life. The first Reddit post introduces the setting as isolated, uncomfortable, and filled with “weird” events.
The series belongs to a recognizable corner of internet horror: first-person survival journals about places where reality does not behave properly. These stories often work because the narrator becomes a guide to a bizarre ecosystem. Instead of one monster, there are rules. Instead of one haunting, there is a geography. The land itself becomes a character.
“My Property Isn’t Normal” adds comedy to that formula. Cole’s voice is not literary or elegant. It is blunt, sarcastic, and sometimes intentionally stupid. That is both the charm and the problem. His casual delivery makes the property feel lived-in, but it also makes danger feel weightless. When every terrifying encounter ends with a joke, a fight, or a “maybe I’ll tell you later,” the horror can start to evaporate.
Still, the story has endured. Its presence on Reddit, podcast narrations, fan requests, and WEBTOON adaptation shows that it found an audience. For CreepCast, that makes it ideal material. It is not just a story to enjoy or reject; it is a story to argue with.
The larger context behind the conversation
This episode sits inside a larger conversation about internet horror aging in public.
Many creepypastas and r/nosleep stories were written for a specific era of online reading: late-night scrolling, serialized posts, comment interaction, and the thrill of discovering something that felt half-confession and half-fiction. In that environment, a story did not need to be perfectly paced. It needed to be sticky. It needed a hook, a voice, a few unforgettable monsters, and the promise that the next post would reveal more.
Podcast consumption changes that. When Wendigoon and Papa Meat read a story aloud for more than three hours, the structure is exposed. Repeated phrases stand out. Lore dumps become heavier. Running jokes become more obvious. What felt charming in weekly Reddit installments can feel exhausting in a single sitting.
That does not mean the story fails. It means the format changes the experience.
CreepCast has become a kind of stress test for internet horror. Stories that rely on atmosphere often benefit from the hosts’ narration. Stories that rely on shock can be softened by jokes. Stories that rely on lore can either blossom or collapse depending on how much the hosts buy in. “My Property Isn’t Normal” is fascinating because it does all three: atmosphere, shock, and lore, but with a comedic narrator who keeps flattening the danger.
The result is less a terrifying episode than a revealing one. It shows how much horror depends on tone, pacing, and trust. If the listener trusts Cole, the property becomes scary. If the listener starts laughing at Cole, the property becomes a haunted playground.
What the episode gets right
The episode’s biggest strength is honesty. Wendigoon and Papa Meat do not pretend to be scared when they are not. They also do not dismiss the story in a lazy way. They keep reading, keep analyzing, and keep asking what the story is trying to do. That creates a more valuable podcast discussion than a simple “this is bad” reaction.
The second strength is chemistry. This is a host dynamic episode more than a story episode. Wendigoon’s patience and Papa Meat’s escalating disbelief create a rhythm that keeps the long runtime alive. One host tries to stay with the text; the other keeps turning the text into comedy. That push-pull is why CreepCast works.
The third strength is that the episode understands fan culture. The hosts know people requested this story. They know some listeners love this type of horror-comedy. They also know that some fans requested it specifically because they wanted to see the hosts react badly. That awareness gives the episode a fun meta-layer.
The fourth strength is the comedy. Even when the story itself is not landing as horror, the podcast lands as entertainment. The best moments come from the hosts expanding on the absurd implications of Cole’s narration, imagining what kind of person would behave this way, and turning repeated story beats into running jokes.
The fifth strength is that the episode highlights a real writing lesson: horror-comedy needs control. You can make monsters funny. You can make protagonists sarcastic. You can make supernatural rules ridiculous. But once the audience stops believing anyone is truly in danger, the story has to replace fear with something equally compelling. Sometimes “My Property Isn’t Normal” does that through momentum. Sometimes CreepCast has to do it for the story.
What could have been better
The main weakness is pacing. At 3 hours and 21 minutes, this is a long episode built around a story that already has repetition baked into its format. Some listeners will love the endurance-test quality. Others may feel the episode drags, especially when similar beats repeat: new entity, Cole reacts, hosts object, joke escalates, story continues.
The second issue is that the episode sometimes becomes more about the hosts’ frustration than the story’s actual appeal. That is funny, but it can also make it harder to understand why fans love the original. A little more time spent explaining the story’s cult status, its Reddit-era context, and why horror-comedy readers connect with Cole might have made the critique feel even more balanced.
The third issue is unavoidable: the story’s own structure gives the hosts too much ammunition. Cole’s mysterious past, the repeated “I’ll explain later” energy, the named entities, the magical rules, and the action-heavy survival scenes all invite mockery. If a listener is deeply attached to the source material, parts of the episode may feel harsh.
Still, the criticism rarely feels mean-spirited. It feels like two horror fans trapped in a story they cannot stop trying to understand.
How listeners are reacting
Public reaction appears to be exactly what you would expect: amused, divided, and heavily focused on Hunter / Papa Meat’s breakdown. The CreepCast subreddit created an official discussion thread for the episode, and the community page showed the thread drawing hundreds of comments shortly after release.
There were also separate fan posts highlighting Hunter “losing his mind,” with commenters calling the episode one of the funniest. Earlier recommendation threads show that fans had been asking for “My Property Isn’t Normal” for a long time, often because they believed it would be a good fit for the hosts’ reaction style.
That reaction is important. This episode is not trending only because the story is scary. It is circulating because the combination of source material and host reaction creates a memorable podcast event.
Is this episode worth listening to?
Yes, especially if you listen to CreepCast for the hosts as much as for the stories.
This is not the best entry point for someone who wants the scariest possible CreepCast episode. It is also not ideal for listeners who dislike long tangents, crude humor, or hosts openly criticizing the writing. But for existing fans, it is a strong comedy-heavy episode. It captures the show’s ability to turn an uneven story into a full podcast experience.
New listeners who want polished horror may be better served by a darker or more atmospheric CreepCast installment. Fans of r/nosleep history, internet horror culture, and chaotic host chemistry should absolutely check it out.
The episode is especially recommended for:
People who enjoy horror-comedy
Listeners who like CreepCast’s more unhinged episodes
Fans of Papa Meat’s reactions
r/nosleep readers curious how the story holds up
Viewers who enjoy podcasts that mix narration with critique
Anyone interested in how internet horror changes when read aloud
Best quotes and ideas from the episode
Because the episode is built on a copyrighted transcript and a long source story, the safest way to discuss the best material is to focus on ideas rather than long quotes.
The strongest recurring idea is that “not normal” becomes an understatement. Cole’s property is not merely haunted. It is an entire supernatural ecosystem with its own threats, allies, rules, and absurd local politics.
Another key idea is that horror depends on how seriously the narrator takes danger. Cole’s strange lack of fear is meant to make him unusual, maybe damaged, maybe heroic. But the hosts’ reading turns that same trait into comedy.
A third memorable idea is that fan-requested episodes can function almost like traps. The audience knew this story would do something to the hosts. The fun is watching the trap spring.
Final verdict
The CreepCast “My Property Isn’t Normal” episode is messy, long, ridiculous, and frequently hilarious. As a pure horror reading, it is uneven. As a CreepCast episode, it is highly memorable.
The story gives Wendigoon and Papa Meat exactly the kind of material that exposes their dynamic: Wendigoon trying to navigate the text in good faith, Papa Meat reacting with mounting disbelief, and both hosts turning questionable story choices into comedy. The original r/nosleep series has enough cult appeal to justify the coverage, and its mixture of wilderness horror, monster-of-the-week structure, and sarcastic narration makes it a perfect case study in internet horror comedy.
It may not be the episode to play for someone who wants CreepCast at its most terrifying. But it is absolutely an episode to play for someone who wants CreepCast at its most entertainingly unstable.
FAQ
What is CreepCast’s “My Property Isn’t Normal” episode about?
It is about Wendigoon and Papa Meat reading and reacting to u/Murderbird17’s r/nosleep story “My property isn’t normal,” a horror-comedy series about a man named Cole living on a wilderness property filled with strange entities.
Who hosts the episode?
The episode is hosted by Wendigoon and Papa Meat, also known as MeatCanyon. Apple Podcasts lists Wendigoon and MeatCanyon as the hosts for the episode.
Is there a guest in this CreepCast episode?
No. There is no traditional guest. The central subject is the r/nosleep story itself.
When was “My Property Isn’t Normal” released?
The CreepCast Wiki lists the episode upload date as June 21, 2026.
How long is the episode?
Apple Podcasts lists the episode length as about 3 hours and 21 minutes.
Who wrote “My Property Isn’t Normal”?
The story was written by Reddit user u/Murderbird17 and posted on r/nosleep.
Is “My Property Isn’t Normal” scary?
It has scary concepts, but it is also heavily comedic and absurd. The CreepCast episode leans into that tension, often treating the story as more funny than frightening.
Why are fans talking about this episode?
Fans are discussing the episode because the story was highly requested and because Papa Meat’s increasingly chaotic reaction became one of the episode’s biggest highlights. Reddit discussion after release focused heavily on the humor and Hunter’s reaction.
Is this a good first CreepCast episode?
It can be, but it is not the cleanest introduction. New listeners who like chaotic comedy will enjoy it. New listeners looking for serious horror may want to start with one of the show’s darker episodes.
Where can you listen to the episode?
The episode is available on YouTube and major podcast platforms including Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Spotify’s listing describes the episode as a story about someone moving to a wilderness property where things immediately get weird.
Does the story have adaptations?
Yes. “My Property Isn’t Normal” also has a WEBTOON Canvas adaptation by Sona Sierra, described as a thriller/supernatural comic written by Murderbird17 and illustrated by Sona Sierra.
What is the best part of the episode?
The best part is the hosts’ reaction to the story’s escalating absurdity, especially Papa Meat’s slow collapse into laughter and disbelief.
