Visit try.magellantv.com/SIDEPROJECTS & get an exclusive offer extended to our viewers: an extra month FREE. MagellanTV is a new kind of streaming service run by filmmakers with 3,000 documentaries!
So we have this top secret bunker with hidden entrances all over, I used one of the entrances the other day but couldn't get through the bunker door once inside the hole. There was rubbish everywhere, empty rappers/banana skins/potato peels/bits of wood from the trees surrounding the hole. It was like someone was using it as a dumping ground. Decided best to use another entrance but when heading back to the surface , a dead dog dropped through the opening. Still had the collar on with a phone number.
I tried Magellan. I didn't like it. There is no way to preview what's being offered on the front page. You have to click on each one. The entire front page reloads when you go back and forth. Vexing for a slow connection. I watched some of the stuff there and it was fine, but many are kind of cheesy. And they don't refund at all. A lot of German and French docos with overdubs and subtitles.
Unexplained, a sort of combination of Geographics, Sideprojects, Top Tenz, and Xplored focusing on inexplicable and mysterious places and events from around the world? That would be awesome!
Can you imagine the whining and insults we'd hear from our friends the Brits, French, Germans etc if he had a channel called "Unexplained America!!" ... And for that reason alone I say GREAT DAMN IDEA!!! 👍
"Unexplained America... and neighbors". I wouldn't mind some Canadian weirdness on youtube (🙋♀️ from 🇨🇦). And I'm sure Mexico must have some (🙋♀️🇲🇽 ☺).
I live not too far from Sedona. Used to vacation there semi regularly, as my mother had a business relationship with a resort there, and they would let us stay for a stupidly low price. Walking down their main street, you couldn't go more 15 paces without someone with dreadlocks who smelled like patchouli oil trying to sell you crystals to help you meditate.Some of them with names that seemed like they were taken from a movie making fun of hippies. I met a Moonbeam, Sunray, and Star Child. I sincerely wish I was making those names up
@@sailawaymatey5889 It would have to be a 10 part series of 6 hours each to even touch the surface. One part would have to be those weird ass churches who harass rattlesnakes until someone gets bitten, refuses treatment, everyone watches him die, and then talk about how weak his faith was. Weird, oh yea.
@@Sideprojects Oh I thought it was just Red Elk was actually over 100 years old and that he had been one of the original investigators of the rock wall in Texas and had discovered the secret of eternal life and that was part of the unexplained mysteries!
red elk is his superhero name. you're not supposed to recognize him in his superhero cloths. you blew his cover! a commercial every 3 minutes plus a 2 minute commercial WITHIN the video itself all add up to a completely unwatchable video. i won't purposely watch this channel anymore. screw this crap. START complaining about this mass commercial INSANITY that's inflicted youtube over the last few years. WE WANT THIS CRAP TO END! for god's sake complain!
I can confirm that Sedona is the most New Age-y place I've ever visited. As for vortices: the Airport Mesa vortex is a great place to watch sunrise and it has a wonderful view of the Verde Valley. Maybe that's enough.
I don't know why people need to make up stupid stories or use pseudoscience to justify truelly majestic places and beautiful vista's. That's all it has to be natures natural magnificence is more then enough
Simon trying to tell us he's doing a serious video via the cool lighting: "when I'm lit like this I'm not going to be yelling unhinged improv about Enron, Cocaine, the Nazis and Danny..."
I was listening to Coast to Coast AM once and there was a guy talking about a deep hole. I guess it was Mel talking about Mel’s Hole. Anyway, he said he lowered a box into the hole. When he brought the box out there was a big egg in it. The egg hatched and inside was a dog with the eyes of a man. At that point I had things to do so I never heard what happened to the man-eyed dog hatchling.
What in the actual flying man eyed dog egg fu€k?, that is absolutely crazy I would have had to check to see if I were awake or if I were dreaming even just simply hearing that story on the radio! Not to mention if it actually happened (supposedly) to me! That fool just ain't livin' right! You can't tell me that wasn't some meth head just seeing crazy shit while he is actually just staring at the wall in the crack house he is actually at or something! then calling it in to who he thinks is alien Santa on vacation in Disney world but he actually some how called the show... that's more believable!🤣😂🤣🕳👀🐶🥚
I used to live there, hippies can't afford the rent. Its mostly rich retirees, and unfortunately, more and more Californians. Most of the people that work there have to live in Cottonwood, and Rimrock areas.
@@mattobermiller5041 No serious doctor, or scientist says "pot cures cancer".. However, it sure helps alleviate stomach pains, and induces an appetite when chemo leaves you not able to stomach food. This I have personally witnessed after my mom went through breast cancer. She was very much against pot for any reason, until I practically made her try it. Before she even realised it, she was digging in the fridge, offering to cook anything, and everything. So, you can mock the scientists that know a lot more than you do about it, and those that swear by it from experience.
As someone who lives in Arizona, I know exactly what's going on in Sedona: they live in the desert where there's next to nothing to do and subsequently lost their minds. It's happened to the best of us.
You should do a Art Bell video on it's own . Millions listened to him for years on their way into the night shift . His voice and the content of subjects warmed us as we worked or drove the highways in America . We all ( most of us ) knew it was entertainment and he got us through our dark shift as the rest of the world slept peacefully . RIP Art .
Sailing rocks, the Devil's racetrack, etc... They have figured out why the rocks slide across the dry lake bed in Death Valley. I've been there many times since we live 90 minutes away.
I live about 90 mins from Mel’s hole but never have seen nor heard of it. He almost said kittatas correctly. It’s west of the center of Washington Ellensburg is a small town off I-90. Nice place but boring.
He gives out quite a bit of old and/or out-dated information, on top of mispronouncing a LOT of names and words. His writers need to step up their game. There's some people in this thread that seen to think Simon researches all this stuff, which is ridiculous.
I am an American and even I have no idea what is going on here anymore. But what do i know I'm in Virginia. We are all like "Not my problem. Let Maryland freak out about it." 😆
Hi Simon. I love your channels and have been binge watching for some weeks. You really, really need to do a show on the American Mound Building culture. It's a fascinating bit of history very few are familiar with. Thank you.
Literally camping at lake ray hubbard as I watch this. Had to rewind and make sure I heard you right! Grew up in dfw my whole life, seen the wall and nobody ever told me it was a controversy or the history!
Unexplained would be a great new Simon Whistler channel! A sort of combination of Geographics, Sideprojects, Top Tenz, and Xplored focusing on unexplained, inexplicable, and mysterious places and events from around the world? That would be super awesome!
I'd be interested in an unexplained video of other countries, I'm enjoying this one and would be happy to watch something about France,for example,or Australia
I grew up about 20 min north of Rockwall and never knew about the wall. But the adjacent Lake Ray Hubbard also has things buried beneath its depths. In the middle of building the lake, heavy rains forced construction workers to abandon clearing the area, leaving behind loads of construction vehicles and massive areas of uncleared forest. They never returned to finish the job, allowing the lake to fill up, burying the construction equipment and making Lake Ray Hubbard a flooded forest.
I’ve knows about the rock wall for about 22 years. My 10th grade teacher was from there and she assured the whole class that everyone from Rockwall Texas knew about the wall. Now I kinda feel like she lied to us🤷♂️
pet theory: someone made the Kensington Runestone as a troll job, possibly over a winter of nothing to do, then Olof found it some number of years later
Hey, Simon, I know you don't care (because I'm an OG BB legend) but playa is a Spanish word and is pronounced "PLY-ah." Just thought you should know. That being said, the Racetrack Playa is so neat! And the ice theory you put forth is exactly what my geology professors thought it was way back in 1997 when I took a class about the geology of Death Valley.
I've lived 15min from Rockwall for 35 yrs and have just heard of the actual rock wall just in the last year. In fact very few locals seem to be aware of it in my experience. Still awesome to see it covered here.
I can say the same thing about the earthen pyramid outside of Cairo Illinois. Despite the famous Egyptian name, most locals don't have a clue as to why it was actually named that.
@@georgemcintyre3508 Oh, it's right in Sedona! It's next to the Brooklyn Bridge. Do you want to buy it? I think we could work a deal for your purchase of London Bridge. But first, let me consult your horoscope to see if now is a good time for you to be making such a large, important purchase from a random person on the Internet.
Yeah, I'd really like more 'Unsolved Mysteries with Simon.' As a new channel or otherwise, I could see it being a pretty fun BB topic for a vid (or a few.) Especially those he could really take the piss out of. Huh, you lost a like in the like two seconds between me seeing your comment, liking it to an even 30, and then opening the full thread. Not that it really makes much difference just caught my attention.
I live about 15 miles south of where the Kensington stone was found. I was on display for many years at a local museum and I got to see it. Most locals believe its real and that it is proof the Vikings went far inland. Intricate ancient ruins by a farmer would be tough but who knows. There is still a county park where it was found.
The racetrack playa lol, got a kick out of that, sounds like your talking about some smooth talking racecar driver lmao. We pronounce it like "ply-uh" :-)
I'm Soo glad I'm not the only one! 🤣....my only correction (no disrespect).... Simon.... 'ply-ya , [ or ] ply-yah' Music man....No Diggity, No Doubt, Black street, Dr. Dre😜💕💕. It's spanish for 'the beach'. (Playa)
Worth mentioning about the runestone is that in the last couple of decades it has become essentially proven that literacy in Scandinavia was high throughout history, they just used runes on perishable materials and made no attempts to keep the writings(so that when literacy was recorded officially, it was minimal because it only counted latin literacy). So, runescript didn't die out here in Sweden until sometime mid/late 19th century, maybe even very early 20th century(my grandparents were all born in the 1910s and had no knowledge of runic script BUT, mentioned it a few times as something older people did, i just wish i had known then what i do know and asked properly about it), when it was finally replaced completely with latin script for the majority of people. Meaning, that if the runestone is a fake, it may very well have been written with the runescript that was normal in Sweden in the 19th century. Meaning that the supposedly partially abnormal script/language itself is NOT fake in any way. And when i read up on the stone, well, it seems to fail in many ways, but at the same time the excuses made for the fails are at least halfdecent and the fails are not severe and there is some small backgrounds and support to be found for more travels across the sea. Don't forget that at the time the stone was "found", knowledge about vikings in N. America and the fact that it was what was called Vinland? It was myths known to few people. Öhman was more likely to know about runic script than he was about Vinland being in N.America. Also, there IS an Icelandic document from 1347 about a ship that got off course while returning home from Markland with a cargo of timber. This at the very minimum suggests that travel there was relatively common, as otherwise a low priority cargo like timber wouldn't be taken from there, you just don't go to unknown lands for timber, when they could go to Scandinavia for it. So, overall, it's really hard to tell if the runestone is real or not. There's enough evidence to suggest that it could be, while there's also enough evidence suggesting it's fake. Although looking at how it was dealt with when found suggests it is less likely to be fake. Yes they became somehat famous for finding it and... Not much else, they did not seriously try to exploit the fame or make serious money from it. Which they easily could have done, far far more. They treated it more like what they said it was, something cool they found that they liked to show off but it wasn't their life.
About 20 years ago or so Coast to Coast AM also had a guy on that invented a time travel device. He talked to Art for hours. It fit in the palm of his hand. When he found himself waiting in a line or something he would take it out of his pocket and move it around in his hand. Time then sped up and he was transported forward in time. What he was describing was basically a type of fidget spinner & poor Art Bell had never heard the phrase "Time flies when you're having fun".
I'm reading your comment on a time travel device, lol! I look down, enjoy some vids or w/e... then I look up, & what do you know? A couple of hours have disappeared into the ether!
A day in the life of Simon: -Make lots of coffee -Open email -Print scrips -Turn on camera -Record a minimum of 23 hours of raw footage -Check the stats and comments in each of his 38 RU-vid channels -Repeat Notice something missing? Well there’s nothing missing. Simon does not sleep.
Lived in arizona, prescott valley, I was upside and back down just about every single butte in Sedona and I gotta say I never felt seen or experienced any vortex there.
Lived in Sedona and same. There are people there that believe a UFO is under one of the mountains as well and I am like what are you smoking and why aren't you sharing?
"General Weirdness"? I love the title! I'd like to see his life story in the biographics channel. General Weirdness, leading the fight against the ordinary, one quirk at a time...
So much America(USA) stuff.. we're not the only people around... at least you labelled this video with USA often they are labelled simply America. We have over 50 countries in America. I thank you for all your videos.
I've heard of all of these except Mel's Hole. And Simon explained why, because there is zero evidence it even exists, and no one has ever seen it. Not even sure how that one made the list. The others are all iffy, but at least there is something to argue about depending on how gullible vs logical that you happen to be. As a kid (ages ago) I was most smitten by the mystery of the Kensington Runestone. But even as a kid, the thing that bothered me the most, was how extremely unlikely it was that a group of Norwegian/Swedish Viking adventurers would document their adventures in 1362, and here comes the part I could never get over....536 years later, what are the odds that this Viking Runestone would be found and dug up, by a Swedish immigrant? That was just a little too convenient and coincidental, for me, even though I really wanted to believe in amazing Viking stuff. LOL
The rune slab is currently in Alexandria, MN. I live near Kensington, and there is so much Runestone stuff in this area. Roads, building projects, businesses, etc. Everything is Vikings and runes.
Marfa Lights is not a recent occurrence: there are well documented statements of people seeing them in the 1800's. Not a lotta cars back then. So the source of the lights is only part of what has people confounded. The bigger question: exactly WHY any visible light would behave the way Marfa lights do.
If Mel owned property about 10 miles west of Ellensberg, WA, with a hole possibly 18 miles deep, I really don't think I'd advise anyone going anywhere near that hole. Keeping in mind that "about 10 miles west of Ellensberg, WA', puts the property about 25 miles east (and a little north, of the peak of Mount Rainier, an active volcano. As I understand the techtonic process, 18 miles deep would be really close to the subducted pacific plate, which would tend to cause problems.
Sedona, and particularly the Bell Rock/Oak Creek area is absolutely gorgeous. Even if you don't believe in "vortices" and such it's a great little hike. *Words cannot express* the feeling of sitting on an intact stone seat in what was once the home of people who lived over 6000 years ago. Like really, go or don't, but don't let some hippie-dippy nonsense keep you from experiencing first-hand something many never do.
My father often took his RV to Death Valley for a few days. He said that occasionally flash storms would hit the playa, making a thin slurry of mud, and the rocks did slide, but only a few inches at a time. He figured it had been happening for millions of years. He said he often did see strange things, in different areas, but he wouldn't tell us what, probably worried he'd be made fun of.
Damnit Simon, I'm in Texas and we only get 4 hours of electricity a day if we're lucky. Your numerous mid reels and ad reads are using up precious time with power!
Recently a geological historian did samples of the stones and found that it's a naturally occurring structure because the rocks have no fractures that aren't symmetrical from rock to rock. If it was man made the fractures wouldn't be symmetrical.
I have lived in the USA 63 years and so it is a strang place. As a local High School District retired employee I can say without a doubt that more often than not America history is INCORRECT or missecorded. HMMMM!!!
Taking a break from binge watching ThatChapter crime vids (Mike the Irishman rivals Englishman Simon for pronunciations!) seeing Simon has a . . .mysteries vids! Woo Hoo! Snow Day BONANZA!
@@HexenProzess Yes. In those days, things didn't change overnight, especially with language and culture. There were still many isolated communities, where it took a long time before they transitioned to Roman letters. This was before the vast influence of telecommunications, radio, television, and the Internet.
The first thing that came to my mind with Ohman's runestone is that the text is way too long. Real Scandinavian runestones consist only of very short texts: names, short mentions of someones death or victory and the like.
We have one in my town it talks about who erected the stone who kisled it and who converted the region and it also mentions who built a bridge in the town it is quite cool.
@@Bearodon Well that's a nice list of achievements. Well worth commamorating in stone. Btw, one thing that made me think also were the straight lines in the Ohman's stone. All the pictures I've seen of real runestones have a bit of art weaved with the text. I don't know if this was the norm at that time.
As an Arizonan, hearing Simon's pronunciations of those tribes' names was pretty funny. Can't really complain considering how much content this dude pumps out 😂
Rocks rolling across the desert: California's greatest enduring mystery. As a side note, fighter jets chase UFO's down the coast and there's a hotel that just might murder you
The rock mystery has been broadly explained, im at work so I dont have the url handy. Im sure you can find the peer reviewed results on somewhere like LiveScience. The other two fall into the sort of "WOO" category. Its incredibly infinitesimally unlikely (IN THE MOST ABSOLUTE EXTREME SENSE OF THAT EXPRESSION, REAL TALK) that any human has or ever will run into an alien. The geological time frame, relative infancy of the observable universe, and various other cosmological factors (cosmological constants, i.e. the speed of light, etc) basically make it really clear that, while possible. The chances are so hilariously slim as to be virtually nonexistant. Consider this; if they were even relatively near us (which means light years away) they would literally take so many thousands of years depending on the distance that anything they observed prior to arriving would be star dust and other constituent elements. TLDR; theres so, so many things that make aliens having been to earth, or EVER EVEN GIVING A PASSING THOUGHT TO TRYING TO COME HERE (let alone actually doing it), the chances of that happening would be akin to winning the national lottery 100x times consecutively. And then when you walk out Batman falls directly on your face. That is a somewhat accurate analogy. Haha.
There is another runestone in Heavener Oklahoma, about 40 miles south of Fort Smith Arkansas. A visit to the runestone is highly recommended. The Kensington stone is on display in a museum in Alexandria, Minnesota, and a visit to it is also highly recommended