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  • The Vela Incident: The Signal No One Claimed
    Apr 22 2026

    High above the ocean, a satellite registered a flash.

    Then another.

    The signal matched something very specific, something it had been designed to detect.

    But what it saw was never fully explained.

    No confirmation.
    No acknowledgment.

    Just a record of something that may have happened.

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    26 Min.
  • The Smiler: It Shouldn’t Have Happened
    Apr 19 2026

    At a busy theme park, a roller coaster stopped itself.

    For a moment, everything held in place exactly the way it was supposed to.

    And then the ride was allowed to continue.

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    28 Min.
  • Number Stations : Signals Meant for Someone Else
    Apr 18 2026

    Late at night, on frequencies most people never think to check, voices still repeat the same numbers over and over again.

    They don’t explain what they mean.
    They don’t say who they’re for.

    And they don’t stop.

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    27 Min.
  • Max Headroom: When the Signal Changed Hands
    Apr 13 2026

    On a quiet Sunday night in 1987, something interrupted a live television broadcast in Chicago.

    Not static.
    Not a glitch.

    Something else.

    For just over a minute, the signal was replaced by a masked figure—distorted, fragmented, and completely untraceable. It spoke, moved, and existed inside a system that wasn’t designed to let anything in.

    And then it was gone.

    No one was ever identified.
    No one was ever caught.

    In this episode of Signal Lost, we explore the Max Headroom signal hijacking, not as a prank, but as a moment where a system kept working… while carrying something it was never supposed to.

    Because sometimes the signal doesn’t fail.

    Sometimes

    something else takes its place.

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    24 Min.
  • Titan : It Was Always Going to End This Way
    Apr 13 2026

    Five people went down.

    The signal lasted less than two hours.

    Then it was gone.

    In the days that followed, the world watched a countdown, waiting for something to be found, hoping for something to return.

    But the deeper the story went, the clearer something became:

    This wasn’t a mystery.

    It was a pattern.

    In this episode of Signal Lost, we explore the Titan submersible disaster,and the decisions that led to a silence no one could reverse.

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    31 Min.
  • The Wow! Signal : We Heard Something… Once
    Apr 13 2026

    In August of 1977, we heard something.

    It lasted 72 seconds.

    It never came back.

    No source was confirmed.
    No explanation held.
    No pattern followed.

    In this episode of Signal Lost, we sit inside the moment the Wow! Signal was recorded, and the silence that followed.

    Because not every signal becomes a discovery.

    Some just… disappear.

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    22 Min.
  • Air France 447 : 4 Minutes That Changed Aviation
    Mar 19 2026

    On June 1st, 2009, Air France Flight 447 disappeared over the Atlantic Ocean without a distress call.

    The aircraft was still flying. The systems were still active. The pilots were still responding.

    But something had already begun to fail.

    In this episode of Signal Lost, we reconstruct the final four minutes inside the cockpit and the quiet descent inside the cabin, where nothing felt clearly wrong, until it was too late. Through cockpit recordings, investigation findings, and human factors analysis, this is the story of how a modern aircraft remained intact while understanding itself began to break down.

    This is not a story about a sudden disaster.

    It’s a story about uncertainty, misinterpretation, and the moment a system continues functioning… after it stops being understood.

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    37 Min.
  • Chernobyl: The Six Minutes That Changed Everything
    Mar 18 2026

    Chernobyl is often remembered as a nuclear disaster.

    But it was also something else.

    A system failure.

    In this episode, we explore the six minutes that led to the explosion inside Reactor Number Four, and the deeper forces behind it: authority bias, institutional denial, and the fear of contradicting leadership.

    Because when systems stop listening to their own warnings, failure becomes inevitable.

    And by the time anyone realizes it…

    …it’s already too late.

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    30 Min.