The Watcher: the real story that inspired the Netflix series

Scary letters, hand-delivered
True crime on Netflix
New show without blood: 'The Watcher'
Scary because of psychological tension
A true and recent story
From New York Magazine in 2018
The house of broken dreams
More than 1.3 million dollars
The first letter
Everything changed
Letters were personally delivered
Threatening the children
Should they leave their dream house?
Ryan Murphy turned the story into a series
Fiction mixed with reality
Unsettling details
No leads to discover who the Watcher was
Selling the house wasn't easy
The threats kept on coming
Watched through the windows
The house was an obsession
They never moved into the house
To this day, nobody knows who the Watcher is
The family lost a lot of money
One last letter
Scary letters, hand-delivered

"657 Boulevard is anxious for you to move in. It has been years and years since the young blood ruled the hallways of the house. Have you found all of the secrets it holds yet?" Imagine receiving a letter like that in your new home, written by an anonymous 'Watcher.'

Images: Netflix

True crime on Netflix

Over the past few years, Netflix has specialized in true crime shows. Their programs based on real events and criminal investigations are an absolute hit on the streaming platform.

Image: 'Dahmer - Monster' / Netflix

New show without blood: 'The Watcher'

Curiously, one of the true crime shows on Netflix that has been shaking up the audience doesn't have a psychopath, murderer, or bloody crime scene in its plot.

Scary because of psychological tension

In 'The Watcher', the show created by Ryan Murphy, the protagonists are psychology, secrets, and the fear of the characters as well as the audience. You don't need to have a bloody murder to spook everyone who's watching.

A true and recent story

The story of 'The Watcher' is based on real-life events, which gives it an even darker spin. The story of the Broaddus family is played masterfully by Naomi Watts and Bobby Cannavale.

From New York Magazine in 2018

The journalist Reeves Wideman published an article titled 'The Haunting of a Dream House' in New York Magazine in 2018. It soon went viral.

Image: Naomi Watts and Bobby Cannavale in 'The Watcher'

The house of broken dreams

Everything starts in New York, when Derek and Maria, a happily married couple with three children, buy their dream home in Westfield, New Jersey. It's the summer of 2014.

More than 1.3 million dollars

The exact address of the house is 657 Boulevard in Westfield, a classy neighborhood full of one-million-dollar houses. This particular house cost 1.3 million dollars.

The first letter

Three days after they bought the house, the family's nightmare started. A concerning warning about the house arrived by mail. The shocking letter, sent to 'The New Owner', was signed by 'The Watcher'.

Everything changed

Even before the Broaddus family started renovations in their new home, the letter turned around their world upside down.

Letters were personally delivered

In the first and subsequent letters, there were threats to the children and statements that they were going to be watched 24/7. They arrived without stamps, which meant that they were hand-delivered to the home's mailbox.

Threatening the children

"Will the young blood play in the basement? Or are they too afraid to go down there alone?" one of the letters said. "I would [be] very afraid if I were them. It is far away from the rest of the house. If you were upstairs you would never hear them scream."

Should they leave their dream house?

The letters caused serious anxiety for the family. It seemed like someone wanted them to leave their new home as soon as possible.

 

 

Ryan Murphy turned the story into a series

After the story of 'The Watcher' went viral, Ryan Murphy ('Dahmer - Monster', 'American Crime Story', 'American Horror Story') decided to create a series about it for Netflix.

Fiction mixed with reality

Ryan Murphy's version of 'The Watcher' included a few extra, darker characters, some secret passageways, and even connections to QAnon. In reality, the story is a bit simpler, though equally disturbing.

Unsettling details

At some point in the real story, increasing details about the family were discussed: the family car model, the workers that were doing the renovation, and worst of all, the three children of the family.

No leads to discover who the Watcher was

The Broaddus family went to the police, consulted lawyers, and even spoke with the mayor to try to deal with the problem, but the solution they were given was always the same: To sell the house.

Selling the house wasn't easy

However, once the news about the house was out, selling it became complicated. The Broaddusses were always honest about what was happening in their home and potential buyers were immediately scared off.

The threats kept on coming

In the meantime, more letters were delivered to the house, and the tone and the threats were growing darker and more unsettling.

Watched through the windows

"All of the windows and doors in 657 Boulevard allow me to watch you and track you as you move through the house. Who am I? I am the Watcher and have been in control of 657 Boulevard for the better part of two decades now. The Woods family turned it over to you. It was their time to move on and kindly sold it when I asked them to."

The house was an obsession

"I pass by many times a day. 657 Boulevard is my job, my life, my obsession. And now you are too..."

They never moved into the house

The situation was so worrying that the Broaddus family never got to live at 657 Boulevard in Westfield. In the Netflix series, however, the fictional family does move into the house.

To this day, nobody knows who the Watcher is

Regarding the real Watcher, they have never been caught. A DNA test offered the possibility that it could be a woman, but nothing else came from it.

The family lost a lot of money

In the end, the Broaddus family sold the house for 959.000 dollars, losing more than 400.000 dollars.

One last letter

Before they sold the house, the family received one last letter. "You wonder who The Watcher is? Turn around idiots. Maybe you even spoke to me, one of the so called neighbors who has no idea who The Watcher could be. Or maybe you do know and are too scared to tell anyone. Good move."