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  • 4 - The Last Transmission From The SS Ourang Medan
    Apr 28 2026

    In February 1948, two American ships in the Strait of Malacca picked up a fractured Morse code distress signal from a Dutch vessel: All officers including the captain are dead. Possibly the whole crew dead. Then, simply: I die.

    When a rescue team boarded the SS Ourang Medan, they found dozens of crewmen dead — no wounds, no obvious cause, their bodies frozen mid-motion with expressions of raw terror on their faces. The ship's dog was snarling at nothing. Arms were outstretched toward the sky. Before investigators could make sense of any of it, a fire broke out in the cargo hold, and the ship exploded.

    The vessel's registration can't be confirmed. Key witnesses couldn't be located. The official inquiry went nowhere. And the rescue crew who boarded that ship — experienced merchant sailors with no particular interest in the strange — spent the rest of their lives unable to explain what they saw on those men's faces.

    This episode walks through what we actually know, what the most credible theories say, and the one detail at the end that resists all of them.

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    24 Min.
  • 3 - The Superstition Mountains
    Apr 14 2026

    The Apache called it the home of a thunder deity and declared it off-limits for centuries. The Spanish sent expeditions in looking for gold and some of them didn't come back. Since the 1870s, a German prospector named Jacob Waltz — the original "Lost Dutchman" — has been pulling people into the Superstition Mountains of Arizona with stories of a gold mine so rich it defied description. And since then, dozens of people searching for it have gone missing, turned up dead under circumstances that official records classify as accidents, or simply vanished into terrain that experienced searchers describe as almost deliberately disorienting.

    This episode: the history of the Superstitions, the documented disappearances, the geological strangeness, and the question nobody has satisfactorily answered — why do people keep dying in there, and why has no one ever found the mine?

    The Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine has never been officially located. The search continues. So does the body count.

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    35 Min.
  • 2 - The Michigan Triangle
    Apr 14 2026

    On the night of June 23rd, 1950, Northwest Airlines Flight 2501 vanished into a storm over Lake Michigan with 58 souls on board. It was the deadliest aviation disaster in American history at the time. By dawn, the water was littered with debris no larger than a human hand, but the plane itself—a 93-foot steel airliner—was gone.

    Seven decades later, despite twenty years of systematic searching using state-of-the-art sonar and oceanographic modeling, the wreck has never been found. It is the only large commercial aircraft in U.S. history to completely disappear without a trace of the fuselage.

    But Flight 2501 isn’t an isolated incident. It’s part of a century-long pattern of impossibility within the Michigan Triangle.

    In this episode, we investigate the "locked-room" disappearance of Captain George Donner, who vanished from a cabin bolted from the inside; the 345-year hunt for the Griffin; and the 9,000-year-old prehistoric structures resting on the lake bed. We look at the science of seiches and magnetic anomalies to see if they can explain the residue of the unexplained.

    How does a man vanish from a locked room in the middle of a lake? Why can we map the surface of Mars, but not find a massive airliner in a freshwater basin? And why has this specific stretch of water been claiming people since before recorded history?

    The official record lists the cause as "Unknown." The lake isn't talking.

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    36 Min.
  • 1 - The Pilot Who Wasn't Flying
    Apr 14 2026

    On the morning of June 21st, 1976, a 23-year-old student pilot named Rafael Pacheco Perez took off from a flight school in Mexico City for his first solo flight. The route was routine — a short hop to some practice fields near Lake Texcoco, maybe an hour round trip.

    At 900 feet, he disappeared from radar.

    One hour later, a small aircraft appeared over Acapulco — 250 miles away, across a mountain range, on the Pacific coast. The aircraft shouldn't have had the fuel to get there. The pilot shouldn't have had the skills to navigate there. And the time it took — one hour, for a three-hour flight — shouldn't have been possible at all.

    But it's what the Acapulco air traffic controller heard before Rafael's panicked voice came through that has kept this case alive for fifty years. A calm, deliberate transmission on a live frequency. A voice that said: we are using him as a microphone.

    This episode digs into the full documented story of the Rafael Pacheco Perez incident — the radar records, the fuel data, the medical evaluation, and the transmission that no one has ever been able to explain. The physics don't work. The timeline doesn't work. And the pilot, who passed every test and earned every mark, never flew again.

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    29 Min.
  • First Contact - Fringe Signal Podcast Trailer
    Apr 9 2026

    Some things don’t quite make sense.

    A story that doesn’t add up.
    A pattern you can’t ignore.
    A question that lingers longer than it should.

    Fringe Signal is a podcast for those moments.

    In this short preview, you’ll get a glimpse into the kind of stories we explore—where strange science, hidden history, and the unexplained intersect. Not everything has answers. But some questions are worth following anyway.

    If you’ve ever felt like there’s more going on beneath the surface…

    You’re not alone.

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    1 Min.