TV Is A ‘Portal’ To Something ‘Demonic’

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Candace Cameron Bure, is best known for playing the role of D.J. Tanner on the sitcoms Full House and its sequel series Fuller House and being married to former NHL hockey player Valeri Bure. This week, however, she is making news for sharing some of her thoughts about TV that are raising eyebrows.

During the June 10 episode of The Candace Cameron Bure Podcast, the 49-year-old Hallmark Channel regular dropped several nuggets of her wisdom on viewers and listeners. The big one is that she won’t let anyone in her house, including herself, watch a scary movie and her reasons why are causing her to be mocked by many on the internet.

“Sometimes, honestly, though, in our house as a mom, like, I feel like you guys make fun of me when I talk about, you know, they make fun of me all the time, but but particularly when I’m serious about a spiritual thing happening. And then they’re rolling their eyes at me like, ‘the portal,’ and I’m like, they laugh at me because the portal, ‘I’m like, you’re opening up a portal.’ Like, if you’re watching this or you’re playing this video game or whatever, like that’s a portal that could let stuff inside our home.

Like, I don’t even want someone watching a scary movie in our house on the TV, because to me, that’s just a portal. Listen, I’m in the film industry. I understand how it all works. I know that movie specifically has a crew of 200 people, and they’re lighting it and they’re adding the sound effects and it’s makeup and camera people and actors. However, there’s still something that can be incredibly demonic.

“And I feel like it’s a portal that gets opened up and let in. And that just reminded me, like you posted something a while back about Liquid Death. And you’re like, so do you want to buy a product that is literally being cursed as it’s going out into distribution?”

Wow. But wait, there’s more. Candace Cameron Bure’s co-host on this episode, Jonathan Pokluda, then went off on a tangent about actors casting spells through the TV, or something, and Bure was in full agreement.

“I’ve heard of, you know, actors, actors and actresses like learning witchcraft to better understand, a role,” Pokluda said.

“Yep,” Bure interjected.

“Actually casting spells through the TV,” he continued.

“Yeah,” Bure wholeheartedly agreed.

“They’re like real spells. They actually read the things. I’ve heard witches actually sound the alarm…” he added.

“Yeah, me too,” said Bure.

“Saying, ‘hey, this is not okay, guys.’ You’re messing around with stuff. You don’t know what you’re messing around with,” he concluded.

“Yeah, and you’re speaking it into all these homes. If you’re watching it on TV. Like, those are real witchcraft words,” Bure claimed, proving that not only does she believe scary movies on TV are some sort of demonic portal, she also believes that witchcraft is real.

Good stuff.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wBtuM9tylC4


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