I have always been drawn to what lingers. Before the work, before the screen, before the stories—there were experiences I could not explain. Quiet moments. Persistent presences. The sense that something remained when it should have passed on.
As a producer and creator, I spent years developing paranormal television projects, earning the nickname “the ghost girl.” As an actor, audiences may recognize my work in horror and genre storytelling. But my connection to the unseen was never just performance.
This work begins with listening—to the dead who remain unheard, and to the living left searching for answers when something unsettles their homes, their businesses, or their sense of peace. I believe some spirits linger not to frighten, but because something remains unresolved—and that being seen and acknowledged can matter on both sides.
But when what lingers intends harm—when it seeks to haunt, disrupt, or instill fear—that is where the line is drawn. In those moments, my responsibility is clear: to protect those affected and confront what should not remain.
Echoes of the South is the continuation of that calling.
A place where stories surface, truths are sought, and what refuses to rest is finally allowed to speak.
— Carrie Genzel