 This episode of Weird But True is brought to you by the Black-Eyed Kids by G. Michael Vasey, narrated by Darren Marlar. There was a knock at the door late at night. You answer it to find two small children standing there. You are suddenly filled with an inexplicable fear. Let us in, they say. We need to use the phone. It's at that point that the fear turns to utter dread as you see that these kids have completely black eyes. The Black-Eyed Kids is an exploration of this terrifying phenomenon using true stories of encounters with Black-Eyed Kids, or BEKs, submitted to the My Haunted Life 2 website. G. Michael Vasey examines the evidence and investigates the terrifying BEK phenomenon coming to some startling and shocking conclusions. Are they demonic soul leaders responsible for the disappearance of some of the 90,000 Americans missing at any point in time? Or is this just another urban legend, another boogeyman designed to keep you awake at night? Listen to the book and find out. The Black-Eyed Kids by G. Michael Vasey, narrated by Weird Darkness host Darren Marlar. Here a free sample by clicking the link on the audiobooks page at WeirdDarkness.com. Some of history's most notable names died in really, really odd ways. There are several coming up that I was pretty surprised to read about myself. From ice picks to toothpicks. Death strikes in strange ways. Welcome, weirdos. I'm Darren Marlar and this is Weird But True, a video companion to Weird Darkness. Harry Houdini The famous magician may have seemed invincible. He could escape just about anything but a punch to the gut from a college student proved to be his undoing. The student had seen one of Houdini's acts where he took punches to the stomach and hit the magician without warning him first. Houdini's appendix ruptured and he died on October 31, 1926. Leon Trotsky, one of the most famous figures of the Russian Revolution of 1917, was later exiled by the USSR by Stalin himself. He was murdered in Mexico in 1940 when an assassin stabbed him in the head with an ice pick. One of the most vicious men in history, Attila the Hun, died of a simple nosebleed while celebrating his marriage in 453, the leader got drunk, got a nosebleed and choked to death on his own blood. Marie Curie This famous physicist and chemist discovered radioactivity and won two Nobel Prizes, one in 1903 and one in 1911. She died in 1934 from a rare bone marrow disease caused by radiation. Ultimately, it was her beloved work that ended up killing her. One of the most famous American playwrights of all time, Tennessee Williams, was drunk and high on amphetamines when he accidentally choked to death on the plastic cap of an eyedrop bottle in 1983. A war hero who served as the ninth American president, William Henry Harrison gave a two-hour inauguration speech in the rain without an overcoat or hat. He caught a nasty cold and died in office a month later. Harrison was the first president to die while still in office. Another war hero who went on to become president of the United States, Zachary Taylor attended an event in July 1850 at which he reportedly consumed a large amount of raw fruit and iced milk. The food and drink gave Taylor dysentery, and he died five days later, only 16 months in to his term as president. King Henry I ruled England for 35 years, but eating lamprey eels on a hunting trip in France in 1135 sickened and killed him. After his death, his entrails were buried at a nearby priory while the rest of his body was transported back to England to be buried at Reading Abbey. This brilliant astronomer and astrologer died in 1601 because he refused to leave a banquet table to use the bathroom because it would have been a sign of bad manners. He hurried home after the banquet and experienced severe pain when he tried to urinate. Brian was dead 11 days later from a bladder ailment. For many years there was speculation that Brian had actually been poisoned, but after a 2010 investigation the bladder disease explanation was finally confirmed. Sir Francis Bacon was an influential scientist and philosopher. He was travelling through bad weather when he decided to investigate whether snow could preserve meat. Bacon left his carriage and walked to the house of a woman who sold him a chicken carcass that he stuffed with snow. The time Bacon spent outside made him ill and he died from pneumonia three days later. Queen Sunanda was the queen of Siam, today known as Thailand. Her boat capsized in 1880 while on the way to the Royal's summer palace. Because touching a queen was a capital offense, dozens of people watched her and her one-year-old daughter drown. The Greek playwright Escalus is known as the father of tragedy. He supposedly died when an eagle picked up a tortoise in its claws and dropped the tortoise onto Escalus' bald head, thinking it was a rock to break the animal's shell. Edolf Frederick, the king of Sweden, died of overeating in 1771 after a gluttonous meal of lobster, caviar, sauerkraut, champagne, and 14 servings of sweet rolls in a bowl of hot cream. Sherwood Anderson was a short story writer in the early part of the 20th century who died a bizarre death in 1941. At the age of 64, he accidentally swallowed a toothpick on a cruise ship while drinking a martini. The toothpick damaged his internal organs and he died of an infection. Gregorio Rasputin This Russian mystic became close to the royal family, but was still viewed as a bizarre enemy by government officials and the general public. He was murdered in December 1916. First, he was given poisoned food and wine, but that didn't kill him. Then his assassins shot him. It's unclear whether one of the three shots was fatal or if the man was finally killed by drowning when he was thrown into a river. Please subscribe and click the bell for notifications so you don't miss future videos, including my daily podcast Weird Darkness. If you liked this video, please give it a thumbs up and find more creepy stories at WeirdDarkness.com. Thanks for watching and I'll see you next time, Weirdos!