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PTSD Radio 1 (Vol. 1-2): Omnibus (PTSD Radio 2-in-1)

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Now as for the rumors, this is what really happened with Masaaki Nakayama. According to the extra chapters included in volumes 5 and 6 of PTSD Radio, he indeed started to experience strange occurrences. However, the source of them is not the manga itself, but the office he used as a studio for its production. PTSD Radio is a horror manga anthology surrounding an ancient legend of a being known as Ogushi, or "the God of Hair." Similar to Juji Ito's Uzumaki or Shiver, PTSD Radio focuses on an unexpected source of horror: human hair. Unlike the previous work, Fuan no Tane, many of the stories intertwine at different points.

As mentioned before, PTSD Radio was never on hiatus due to the alleged supernatural tragedies suffered by the author. Nevertheless, the manga was paused at some point after volume 6. The cause of this happening is quite boring in comparison to the rumors. PTSD Radio was published in Nemesis, a bimonthly manga magazine that has been discontinued since 2018. Due to this, now Nakayama’s serialization has been transferred to another digital publication, Comic Days. This change probably stalled a bit the publication of new chapters, but as of December 2022, Nakayama is working on new chapters for PTSD Radio. Funnily enough, he is aware of the rumors about his work, and he believes this is a result of misinformation and limited research. The plot isn’t linear and shows different people and perspectives at different times, but the stories all sort of intertwine at some point. They’re all connected by the God of Hair. What's It About? There exists an entity lurking in the shadows. It will grasp victims by their hair and pull them down, down to their death. You can see it out of the corner of your eye, its grasping hands from the streets below or shadows cast on the street. It's unknown whether its a god, a curse, or a psychosis. NAKAYAMA: This is embarrassing, but I don't, not entirely. I see part of the chronology, and I try to fill in the gaps until I start to get a better sense of what's going on. Then I do that over and over.Prehensile Hair: Hair and its manipulation is a recurring element of the ghosts in the stories, based on the long-forgotten rituals related to the worship of the God of Hair. As PTSD Radio progresses, it becomes clear that Ogushi is stalking and dragging people away such as the two men that were talking about a coworker's suicide being done by Ogushi. No characters for this manga have been added to this title. Help improve our database by adding characters for this manga here. Cursed Item: A table, from which a ghost inexplicably emerges at night. When it is turned over to a monastery for inspection, the head priest immediately has it incinerated, and shows the owners several nails that had been imbedded in the wood. As he explains, it's likely the wood came from a tree used for ushi no toki mairi, turning it into a source of impurity and corruption.

PTSD Radio” หรือชื่อไทย “วิทยุหลังความตาย” ผลงานมังงะสุดขนลุกจากปลายปากกาของ “มาซากิ นากายามะ” ซึ่งขึ้นชื่อเรื่องความหลอนจนเหมือนกับเรื่องที่เกิดขึ้นจริง เพราะเรื่องราวในมังงะชุดนี้ ได้แรงบันดาลใจมาจากประสบการณ์จริงของผู้แต่งนั่นเอง โดยตีพิมพ์ครั้งแรกในปี 2010 และหยุดการอัปเดตไปเมื่อปี 2018 Traumatic Haircut: Done to a young girl in a rural village, though apparently as some kind of ritualistic safety precaution by her family, to stop the "god of hair" from taking it, and threatened towards a strange transfer student by a gang of bullies. Later on, there are indicia that it's a very old tradition, that has something to do with the ultimate source of whatever's happening.

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This included Nakayama himself, as one side of his face suddenly swelled up like a balloon and his temperature dropped...yet when he rewrote his idea to say no more, he suddenly felt fine. Creating viral stories around a piece of media to pump up the audience’s interest is not an uncommon practice. Despite what people might think, this is not the case with PTSD Radio. As a result of careless reporting, readers are more interested in the supposed phenomena surrounding the manga than its content, which is a real shame. It does not really matter if Nakayama experienced the effects of a curse or not because he never intended for this to be the focal point of his work. While it is a disturbing tale that can parallel the likes of Ju-On, PTSD Radio is a real source of horror that you cannot miss if you are into this kind of manga. UFO Sweden (2022) Film Review – A Smart Sci-Fi Thriller From Sweden [Toronto After Dark Film Festival] Anime Senpai ได้ลงบทความเปิดเผยสาเหตุที่ PTSD Radio ไม่ได้เขียนต่อนั้น มาจากเรื่องน่ากลัวที่เกิดขึ้นจากตัวนักเขียนเอง What first got you interested in the horror genre? What was the first work of horror that truly made you feel scared?

Wtf?! My skin is crawling after reading this. It was so bizarre and unsettling, the only thing that came out of my mouth after reading this was, "what in the f**k!" Oct 28 NBA Star Rui Hachimura Gets Animated and Possibly Saves the World in New Crayon Shin-chan Episode

Interest Stacks

Oct 25 Yearning Teens, Frustrated Romance, Pretty Skies — Is There Anything Else to Makoto Shinkai? Like Junji Ito’s Uzumaki, PTSD Radio takes something everyday and weaves it into a series of chilling, cryptic, twisted, repellant, and alluring manga stories that become more than what they first seem. From what they say, his latest manga PTSD Radio is so abhorrent that it has started to affect his health. Reports of Nakayama suffering Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP) all of the sudden during its production are often mentioned to confirm this alleged curse. The fact that PTSD Radio is apparently on hiatus since its sixth volume seems to corroborate the author’s reticence to keep working on this manga.

Until anyone hears anything from Nakayama, PTSD Radio ends with the extra creepy bit of a mysterious ghostly voice breaking the fourth wall in a jumpscare to not talk about the story. It does well to let sleeping dogs lie sometimes, after all. Especially if someone starts hallucinating. I loved the story ideas surrounding body horror and dark imagery. The hair and the dark shadows have stayed particularly vivid in my mind. NAKAYAMA: When I was a kid, my uncle on my father's side got me and a bunch of my cousins together at my grandma's house to tell scary stories, and that's where my interest started. As a matter of fact, though, I'm quite the scaredy-cat! I can't bring myself to watch horror movies or TV horror series. I won't go into haunted houses, and I'm too scared by other horror manga to read anything but my own work! Maybe it's because I'm so readily scared that I'm so full of frightening ideas—it might be exactly what enables me to create these stories. These stories may seem random, but they all begin making sense once the hair totem and Ogushi myth begin to take shape. Long story short, a town in Japan had a shrine to Ogushi that was paid tribute to with human hair. A curse seemed to befall the town after World War II, wherein a Japanese soldier failed to bring one of his deceased comrades' hair to the shrine.What was the genesis of this project, the initial vision? Did you always plan to embed a larger mythos within the story? Surreal Horror: Horrible things happen to people for no discernible reason they can understand... the problem is, those horrors often turn out to have their own logic, which doesn't mesh with human understanding.

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