Brian Harnois Interview

brian-harnois-5If you love watching the Sci-Fi channel, or now shown as SyFy channel, you probably saw the hit series Ghost Hunters with Jason and Grant as they lead their team of paranormal investigators across New England and the rest of the United States searching for some scientific evidence, or evidence of reasonable acceptance that ghosts do exist.  For many they set the bar on how to investigate, and we got to speak to their original tech manager Brian Harnois, best known for his “DUDE, RUN!” incident at Eastern State Penetentary in Philadelphia, PA.

Brian has been with the group for years, and has since moved on to other paranormal ventures like his new paranormal radio show, which is set to debut in October of 2009.  We had the esteem privilege to sit and talk with him, about his journey in the paranormal, his time on Ghost Hunters and see where he’s headed in the future.  We also have the podcast of the interview if you would like to listen on our podcast link.

Did you ever have a real paranormal experience before you started to investigate it?

Yeah, that’s how I started out in my paranormal career. I was eleven at my friend’s house. I was sleeping over there. He always said his house was haunted. So that night I was on the top bunk, he was on the bottom, and it was then I saw a full bodied apparition walking through his room. It freaked me out enough that I wanted to know more about the stuff. That’s where I started.

What do you love most about the paranormal, what is so fascinating about it to you?

The whole point of knowing do they actually really exist. There is no real proof, no scientific proof ghosts exist. It seems like the more you go investigate the less you find. If there are ghosts they are so diligent on not being found out. That’s one thing I am fascinated about, trying to find that one good piece of evidence, the one that blows everyones mind.. still haven’t found it yet.

What made you say… TODAY I am going to be a paranormal investigator?

After the experience when I was younger, I started reading and doing research. Then when I was old enough to go out by myself at night and drive, when I was around 16 to 17 years old, I started to go into different buildings and places to find another ghost. The passion grew so I wanted to find more places to investigate.

Did you ever have a group of your own prior to TAPS, or do your own private investigations?

TAPS was my first group. I did it by myself for two years prior, but in 1999 I joined TAPS. That was my first real experience with a group.

When did you join TAPS and why?

It was a fluke actually. In 1999 I wanted to join a group so I Googled “Rhode Island” and the word “paranormal,” and the first one that came up was TAPS. I clicked on their site. I saw Jason Hawes was one of the co-founders of the group, so I emailed him. Then like five minutes later the phone rang. He must have been online at the time. I did leave my phone number, and he asked me to meet him at Bess Eat’n Donuts in Warwick, Rhode Island and I joined… it was a fluke.

From your experience, what is the most common mistake paranormal investigators make on evidence?

Orbs. Someone will take a picture of a room with tons of dust particles in the air. They see the picture and they’re like, “Look, look, orbs!” They really have to realize a lot of it’s nothing but dust. That’s one of the common mistakes with groups on their websites. It’s a big mistake. That is just now being realized.

How important is it to keep your heart and emotions out of the research when you investigate?

On a technical standpoint, I never do, but it’s hard not to. If I were someone doing an investigation, I never would because when dealing with some entities they feed off your emotions, and if you come in with your emotions ablaze, they can pick those things up and use it against you. The only emotion I show is when I find something. You should be calm, cool and collective. It can also distort what you see. If you want to see something bad enough, your imagination can take over and you will see a ghost that’s not there. So the best thing to do is investigate the way you should. If you find something, you find something, if you don’t, you don’t… just let it be the way it is.

What advice do you have for amateur or independent paranormal investigators?

Best thing is don’t go in there thinking you need 10k dollars of equipment. You need knowledge more than anything. You go into an investigation you make sure you have knowledge and book smarts. On the equipment, you don’t need that much money in it, if you think you do, then your not ghost hunting the right way. When I go in, I have my EMF detector, flash light, digital recorder and camera, that’s it. You don’t need a DVR, you don’t need a thermal camera. Just go in and have some fun, but make sure you bring knowledge. If you go in without any concept of what your doing, that could get you in some serious trouble.

I know you’ve investigated graveyards. Many people say they are not haunted, and why would they be? The person’s body is there and they’re not connected to it anymore. Do you believe that? Any proof that the statement is wrong?

I have been to many cemeteries, that’s where I started. I saw some things and caught some things. I have seen some apparitions and shadows. Why are they there? Maybe they want to be with their body. I never really found out why they stay with their body, but some of them do, and heck it works for me because I get to investigate them.

What was the most frightening experience you had as a paranormal investigator?

I would have to say back in 2003 when I did an exorcism with my mentor Keith Johnson. She was 87 years old, and turned into a demon. Her eyes turned black, she talked in all different kind of languages and it took four to five people to hold her down. That was really scary and the most frightening thing because it wasn’t just a spirit, but demonic and attached to a human, and a human can hurt you. It wasn’t just dealing with a ghost but dealing with a live person and that is sometimes scarier than dealing with a ghost. That was one of the most frightening experiences of my life.

While working with TAPS, what was your most memorable experience?

I would have to say the St. Augustine Lighthouse down in Florida. It was amazing. We were shooting that part of the show, Jason and Grant went in, then said there was something in there they wanted us to investigate. So, me and Dustin went in there, and all hell broke loose. The things were talking to us, we said hello and it said hello back, we saw full body apparitions walking up stairs, full battery drains on everyone in the whole crew in the lighthouse. Everything you could possibly get while dealing with a ghost you got in that St. Augustine Lighthouse that night. I was totally flabbergasted; it was the Holy Grail of ghost hunting. Funny thing is, they didn’t want us to investigate the lighthouse, they said nothing ever happens in there.

Who were you closest with on the team and why?

Keith Johnson was my mentor, he kept me going and taught me everything I need to know. It was like a big brother/little brother, father/son situation. I started getting close with Steve Gonslaves. I knew him a few years before the show started. I urged Jason and Grant to get him on the show; I wanted him by my side. I shared a hotel room with him, and investigated with him constantly. The first episodes of Ghost Hunters, they didn’t know what to do with us because we didn’t talk. The producers wanted them to make us talk. The reason why we didn’t was because we were so in sync with each other with ghost hunting, so we didn’t need to talk. We just would go into a room and we knew what each other was doing; you were supposed to be quiet anyway on a ghost hunt.

Does your paranormal side venture into UFOs, legends and what have you?

Well, I think I saw a UFO when I was 16 -years-old here in Warwick, Rhode Island. It was a scary situation, creepy actually. I saw a triangle in the sky with yellow, red and blue dots on it. I believe in stuff like UFOS; we can’t be the only intelligent life form in this solar system. Cryptozoology, like Bigfoot maybe, the Chupacabra, I don’t know. The Jersey Devil, Moth Man, no, I don’t think so. The Moth Man was just a gimmick. I have never seen anything like a huge moth. Voodoo, zombies… yeah, I believe in those. Vampires and werewolves, do I believe in them, even though they are in the limelight now? Probably not, but ghosts can’t be the only thing. I do believe in other things in the paranormal but I never ventured into those areas but one day I might.

Lets move on to your current gig… paranormal radio. Tell us how you got involved with paranormal radio?

I haven’t started it yet because of the baby, but when I talked to Fred Angel, he wanted me to do a paranormal radio show and I had done one a year ago with Donna LaCroix called Demon Radio and it got a huge reception. People wanted to hear us on the radio, Blog Talk Radio. We crashed Blog Talk Radio twice. For Blog Talk Radio you don’t get much of a following, and the last show we had, had 35k people. So Fred Angel asked me if I would do a radio show, and I said, “Alright, I can do it.” It’s under a business I started called Beware Promotions, probably called the Brian Harnois Hour. It’s not your mother’s paranormal radio show. I am going to get down to the nitty gritty of things. I am going to take the drama and bring it to the forefront; there is just too much drama in the field now and I am sick of it. I want to call attention to it so the drama dies out and we can get back to investigating before Ghost Hunters started. We aren’t a community anymore, and that is why I want to do this. I hope it kicks off and becomes a success. We can do a lot more things in the future. It should start in October, at night, around Halloween. I am not going to be nice to the guests. I am going to do the hard hitting questions like Larry King and Don Irmus.

If people want to get a hold of you, see what your doing… how can they?

Very easy, I have a bunch of websites: www.brianharnois.net, www.wicks.com/brainharnois/brainharnois, and www.bewarepromotions.com. This {last} one connects different para-celebs, and para-events… you know, be like an agent for the people in the paranormal fields. We connect groups with groups. We are going to be like the the TAPS family and get other groups where they can all communicate on cases and help them to get the case done. Right now it’s got a good review; lots of groups and radio stations that want to be represented. I want to bring the whole paranormal community together and it’s growing fast. The other websites are www.facebook.com/brianharnois or www.myspace.com/wheezy.

Before we finish up, let’s do a quick drill to find out more about you.

1.Favorite Food – Pizza

2.Favorite Horror Flick – Night of the Living Dead

3.Favorite All Time Movie – Star Wars

4.Favorite Song – “Summer Breeze,” by Temp Negative

5.Favorite TV Show – Scrubs

6.Favorite Hobby – ghost hunting

7.Most memorable childhood moment – The haunting at my friend’s house.

8.Favorite Sport – Football

9.Favorite Team NFL – Bills, MLB – Red Sox, NBA – Celtics, NHL – Bruins

10.Most Used Quote – “Dude, Run!”

11.Favorite Book – World War Z,  by Max Brooks

“Dude, Run!” with Brian Harnois

Brian_Harnois_in_Ghost_Hunters_TV_Series_Wallpaper_9_1024If you love watching the Sci-Fi channel, or now known as SyFy channel, you probably have seen the hit series Ghost Hunters with Jason and Grant as they lead their team of paranormal investigators across New England and the rest of the United States searching for some scientific evidence, or evidence of reasonable acceptance that ghosts do exist.

Ghost Hunters became one of the first shows on television that actually took you around to these different places and showed you a real ghost investigation. The investigators come out to each location and set up some amazing high tech and oh so expensive equipment which makes viewers sit in awe to see what they can capture.

The group featured on Ghost Hunters is actually TAPS, and TAPS has really set the bar on the standards for investigation groups across America in terms of how to investigate and how to call a place based on evidence. TAPS also has a huge network of ghost hunting teams across the globe; to be one of their teams in their network you must apply and accept their basic beliefs.

However, for one of their former members, Brian Harnois, his humble roots in ghost hunting began by a personal experience, and living both sides of the spectrum he truly believes that ghost hunting should remain simple and fun.

Brian’s love of ghost hunting and the paranormal started back when he was very young, around 11 years old. He spent the night over at one of his friend’s houses, and his friend told him that the place was haunted. That didn’t deter Brian from coming over and having a fun sleep over with his friend. However, this particular night he would see first hand that his friend wasn’t joking. Brian remembers settling into bed that night; his friend had the bottom bunk, and Brian took the top. He laid there about to shut his eyes, when out of nowhere a full bodied apparition appears and walks through the room only to disappear as fast as it came. Only a true ghost hunter could fall asleep after seeing something like that.

From this point on, Brian’s fascination for the paranormal blossomed. He started reading up on ghosts with books that told of ghostly tales to more scientific books that focused on topics such as demonology for instance. Finally around the age of 16 to 17, he was able to drive himself around at night and that’s when he started his life of investigating. He would stay out till the wee hours of the morning, or whenever his curfew brought him home, gathering evidence and trying to find another spirit like the one in his friend’s house.  No matter where that took him, he didn’t care if it was a cemetery or a house, he was going to find one.

So, what keeps Brian coming back for more?  It’s the idea that there is no real or scientific proof that ghosts exist. It’s his mission in life to capture that one piece of indisputable great piece of evidence that wows everyone. He is also bugged by the fact, and any real investigator will understand, that the more you investigate the less you find.  If there are ghosts around, they are diligent on not being found.  If they are out there, Brian is diligent on making them known; they can’t hide forever with him on the job.

l_77bf5391211c450c9f16249a68798ea1In 1999, Brian was interested in joining a paranormal group and his first and only group came by a fluke as he says. One day he sat at his computer with a mission, to find a paranormal group, so he Googled “Rhode Island” and “paranormal” as keywords, and the first listing was TAPS. Brian started from the top of the list, and clicked TAPS. He found that the group was located right in his home city of Warwick, and Jason Hawes was one of the co-founders.  He e-mailed them his name and request, along with a phone number and upon clicking the send button, hoped they would respond. Ironically, within a few minutes, he got a phone call from Jason who asked to meet him at Bess Eaten Donuts in Warwick, and from that point on he came on as tech-manager for TAPS.

While on the TAPS group Brian got the chance to visit some pretty impressive places.  Some were truly haunted and some were not; they were able to debunk all the claims the owner experienced. It was at Eastern State Penitentiary where he coined the phrase, “Dude, run!”  This happened when something spooked the camera man, which spooked Brian in a rare occurrence.  He never really got to live that one down. However, one of his most memorable cases was here in Florida at the St. Augustine Lighthouse.

“It was amazing. We were shooting that part of the show and Jason and Grant went in, then said there was something in there they wanted us to investigate. So, me and Dustin went in there, and all hell broke loose. The things were talking to us, we said hello and it said hello back. We saw full body apparitions walking up stairs, full battery drains on everyone in the whole crew in the lighthouse. Everything you could possibly get while dealing with a ghost you got in that St. Augustine Lighthouse that night. I was totally flabbergasted; it was the Holy Grail of ghost hunting. Funny thing is, they didn’t want us to investigate the lighthouse. They said nothing ever happens in there.”

Throughout his tenure with TAPS, he left once and returned, but in his return he was no longer the Tech-Manager.  That title went to one of his best friends, Steve Gonslaves.  That didn’t bother him at all; he knew Steve earned it. Despite leaving TAPS and coming back, Steve and Brian remained close.  It was Brian, after all, who convinced Jason and Grant to bring Steve on board. The pair was magical when they investigated because they knew what each other was doing. There was no need for talking, which Brian laughed at because it really got the producers of Ghost Hunters irritated. They wanted them to talk and didn’t know what to do with the pair, so they compromised and talked more. Brian was also taught by one of the best, Keith Johnson, who he credits as his mentor and today still shares a tight bond with beyond the Ghost Hunters realm.

Today Brian is a happily married man, a role he takes very seriously. He is also the proud daddy of two beautiful children whom he loves spending time with. Brian has also left the TAPS team and is currently pursuing new ventures in the paranormal realm. He has a new website that is coming out soon, and has a paranormal talk radio show called “The Brian Harnois Hour” which is set to take the airwaves in October, close to Halloween.

The Brian Harnois Hour is a project by his company, Beware Promotions. “ It’s not your mother’s paranormal radio show. I am going to get down to the nitty gritty of things. I am going to take the drama and bring it to the forefront; there is just too much drama in the field now and I am sick of it. I want to call attention to it so the drama dies out and we can get back to investigating before Ghost Hunters started. We aren’t a community anymore, and that is why I want to do this. I hope it kicks off and becomes a success, so we can do a lot more things in the future with it,” explains Brian.

Beware Promotions is Brian’s “baby,” something he is trying to put together quickly so it can benefit ghost hunting groups and paranormal affiliates everywhere. It will even benefit those who need the services of these groups.

“Beware Promotions will connect different para-celebs, para-events. You know, be like an agent for the people in the paranormal fields. We connect groups with groups; I call it a big umbrella. We are going to be like the the TAPS family, and get other groups where they can all communicate on cases and help get groups to get the case done. Right now it’s got a good review; lots of groups that want to be represented, radio stations, and a bunch of people that want to be represented. I want to bring the whole paranormal community together and it’s growing fast,” states Brian.

Brian has had the opportunity that not many ghost hunters will ever get, and still he prefers the old fashioned way. He was on television, radio, and now he brings his experiences and connections to ghost hunting groups across the world. His ambition to find the invisible is unmeasurable; it’s what makes him so good in the field. Like many investigators in any field, Brian’s ways are based on knowledge and truth.  He reports only what he finds and what is true, leaving his emotions aside to give us cold hard facts. There isn’t anything that makes one more true in life, making his words credible. I look to see some great things for this amazing individual in the future. Believe it or not, with all he’s done already his career is just beginning.

If you want to contact Brian or know what he’s up to, check out these sites and look for his radio station set to air in October 2009. These sites will have the details:

www.facebook.com/brianharnois

www.myspace.com/wheezy

www.wicks.com/brianharnois/brianharnois

www.bewarepromotions.com

www.brianharnois.net

Click here to read the actual transcribed interview with Brian and The Expressionist Magazine, or listen to it on our podcast. It can also be found at our paranormal magazine, Beyond The Limits.

Brian Harnois – TAPS Ghost Hunters Podcast

Brian Harnois, known from his days on SyFi Channel’s hit TV show Ghost Hunters with TAPS, sits down with The Expressionist Magazine for Artist One on One, and tells about his time on TAPS/Ghost Hunters, his past and how he got here and his future. Brian’s new paranormal radio show is about to air in October 2009… DON’T MISS IT.

31 Days Of Horror On Sci-Fi

If you are a horror film buff who enjoys the essence of the older low budget horror films or today’s gory bloody thrillers, then the Sci-Fi channel has something for you to enjoy.  In the spirit of the Halloween holiday rapidly approaching us, they dedicated most of their daytime and nighttime syndication to the horror film industry showing movies such as:

 

 

  • Wicked Little Things
  • Dark Ride
  • Mortuary
  • Man-Thing
  • Swamp Devil
  • Friday The 13th
  • Hellraiser
  • Twilight Zone
  • Vincent Price films
  • Alfred Hitchcock films
  • and so many more…..

If the movies don’t peak your interest, then maybe their ghost hunting syndications like T.A.P.S. Ghost Hunters based out of Rhode Island will.  T.A.P.S. takes you through real ghost hunting investigations using top of the line scientific gear to prove the dead lives beyond the grave.

The Sci-Fi channel has many other great shows till Halloween to peak your interest, so find the station on your local cable or satellite provider and tune in to make the hair stand up on your neck.