Leti’s move-in is met with immediate hostility. Neighbors park cars outside her home and lean on their horns 24/7 to harass the new residents. Leti eventually retaliates in a standout scene, smashing their cars with a baseball bat while gospel music plays.
"Holy Ghost" uses the classic haunted house trope to illustrate that for Black Americans in the 1950s, the "ghosts" of past racial violence were often as dangerous as the living neighbors outside their front doors. [S1E3] Holy Ghost
Rather than banishing the spirits, Leti manages to banish Epstein’s ghost, allowing the Black spirits to find peace and remain as protectors of the house. Thematic Significance Leti’s move-in is met with immediate hostility
In an attempt to establish a safe haven for Black residents, uses her newfound inheritance to purchase a dilapidated Victorian mansion in the all-white North Side neighborhood of Chicago. The episode explores themes of "white flight" and systemic racism, intertwined with supernatural hauntings. Key Plot Points "Holy Ghost" uses the classic haunted house trope
To cleanse the home, Leti enlists a "conjure woman." The ritual becomes a high-stakes battle between the living, the dead, and the racist intruders who break in during the ceremony.