I'm a new subscriber, love all your videos! Just two quick questions. Have you ever been shot at? What kind of car are you driving out there? Be safe out there
As someone who lives in AZ I wouldn’t visit these places at night. Especially if your car breaks down there’s usually no reception out there. It gives you hills have eyes vibes.
@@Menaceblue3 To be honest I'm not even sure if people live there. I see modern cars, freshly painted new pavements and some clean houses, some with new fences. But I never saw a single souls walking or moving around lol
Arizona natives know not to venture into these places unless really necessary. The people in these extremely isolated and harsh places live there by choice - they want to be as far away from everyone as possible. Sometimes there are illegal things going on out in the desert but more often it's just a collection of people who are sick of government, corporations, urbanites, etc and want a place where if they shoot and kill a trespasser, the sheriffs come out to help bury the guy.
It looks like almost any small town in the west. Normal people live there. There's a school. It looks deserted because it is middle of Summer middle of the day, probably hot as hell.
Seems a nice town to get away from literally everything; what allures me more i s how vast the sky seems to be. totally diferent from where i live. Cheers from Mexico City
@@MIMI88998899 Little old ladies, old men who like to play cards and have a coffee with their buddies in the morning, a couple meth heads with 20 stolen TVs in their house wired up to one old computer and a digital camera, a few guys that work construction. All these small town are the same. Boring, slow, safe (Don't go on anyone's property without asking.), and slowly dying. I know exactly the type of folk who live there. They're usually nice, but mind their own business. Go up in the Appalachian mountains or Ozarks if you want creepy small towns.
I lived there for 28 years had some really good times there went to school and graduated from BUSD #14 , will always love my hometown still own 2 properties there and have many friends there nice video thanks for sharing Bowie has alot of history besides RAMBO , history with the Chiricahua Apaches and Ft Bowie , Bowie also known for agriculture mainly pistachios , pecans , cotton and chili back in the day Bowie was a booming small town off the I10 now its just getting old but still a great place to get away from the city at 10:25 you'll see my pink grandparents house we now own and maintain.
People ‘bout racist as hell, they’ll see Charlie and be all like “now your kind ain’t welcomed here, boy, betta scram and go over yonder” dead ass, though. No way I’d interview ANY of them.
lmfao, look in the streets. aint nobody out there. and if charlie go knocking on they door he gonna get shot. lots of places to interview people, out there aint one of em tho.
Exactly. Lots of places on Earth get up above 110 degrees in the middle of the day and they look abandoned, too. You go inside till it cools off somewhat...
@Shuik: Agree, yeah, Colorado City is creepy... eyes on you feeling... large homes with very high walls.... Also, very scenic Park in outskirts. Creepy, indeed!!
Gday from Australia. Thanks for the video. I've always wanted to go to America and check out weird and unusual places. Keep up the good work. I just subscribed.
This does not look so rough really. I see some signs of fairly recent new construction. Newer cars/trucks in some driveways. Fresh asphalt and paint stripes on the paving. I have seen much worse in Appalachia, rural southeast, places where almost all the roads are still dirt or gravel...
As a Western Maryland resident, I can confirm that Appalachia can get pretty bad, but the road condition depends on the state. For example, Garrett County, Maryland is culturally West Virginia but legally Maryland so the roads are taken care of by Maryland. Since Maryland is much richer than West Virginia, the roads in the county are nice but right across the state line they are not.
@@timbo6734 The enemy of asphalt paving is water, especially when it freezes/thaws. That's a bigger problem in the east, compared to the arid southwest.
I road tripped to Compton California years ago and hit Arizona during the daytime and my heater coil went out which resulted in water dripping on the front passenger floor. It was 110 degrees outside. Houston gets hot and humid, but Arizona really brought it! If we went over 60 mph, our A/C was like "I gotta take a nap until get back to 60. It's got a bug infested town out there where they cake up your windshield. In that area, there's a stop full of squeegees and you have to use one to take that film off your windshield. Rattlesnake warnings at rest stops to no hospital for miles, but in the middle of nowhere where it seems like you won't run into anyone for the noxt hundred miles, there's a jammin' radio station! Then at night, them yellow glow in the dark eyes with the vertical black pupil slits alongside I-10 ain't nice. They seem like they can drive fear into anyone's heart.
That's similar to what my brother told me when was coming back from Los Angeles, California. He and his family went on a trip from California to Los Angeles, California for his wife's family reunion by charter bus that they had rented. On the way back from Los Angeles the charter bus broke down in the middle of the Arizona desert because the environment was so hot. Before they left Los Angeles my brother had already warned the rest of the family to leave early enough so they would go through the desert at the time of day were it wouldn't be so hot. Instead, they ignored him and left at a time where once they had reached the desert, temperatures were soaring hot. Besides the charter bus they had rented being broken in the desert, he told me how there were a whole line of cars that had stalled or either had broken down parked on the side of the road due to the extreme high heat.
If you travel through Arizona in the summer, make sure your A/C is good and your engine has been serviced. You don't want to get stranded there. It's common for engines to overheat when you're driving extended periods in the desert.
@@DIVISIONINCISION more important than your engine being serviced is your radiator and coolant system. Also it’s a good idea to shut off your A/C when driving up steep inclines when it’s really hot. Better to get a little warm yourself than to overheat your engine miles away from any services. Oh… and as a native Phoenician, one thing I can’t stress enough: bring extra water and stay hydrated.
"I've been everywhere, man. I've been everywhere, man. Crossed the desert's bare, man. I've breathed the mountain air, man. Of travel I've had my share, man. I've been everywhere." Johnny Cash 🤠🏜️🏞️🛣️
You should do this more often. Going through small remote towns or ghost towns. Different than doing the hood videos. It's good to step out of your comfort zone every once and a while.
@@kwood55981 These places are far more dangerous than Chicago. In Chicago if something happens to you there are usually some witnesses who heard or saw something. In these kind of places there are no people who will admit to seeing or hearing anything. Far more dangerous than any big city.
These areas were always by far the scariest to me. Ill choose living in a dangerous city than in the middle of nowhere where ANYTHING can happen to you...can you imagine breaking down here? Daylight or midnight I'd still panic. Drug cartels/mafia or just creepy people who live there...eek!😨
Yeah, that's a scary idea.... I too am creeped TF out of places such as this.... Love those types of movie where people actually break down in the middle of nowhere.....
@@dinauchiha3924 Im from the city but I've noticed a lot of people look down on small towns like the way rich snobbish nobles used to look down on peasants in the olden days. Lol
Bowie is not dangerous at all. My buddy and I have stopped here multiple times on road trips. There’s a school, post office and a courthouse. Only 300 people live there, but as an AZ native I’d much rather be stranded here than a Phoenix neighborhood. We always just parked wherever and explored on foot. Never felt unsafe.
@@MikeIzzle_ Several years ago, we drove from Albuquerque to Roswell, and I loved the tiny towns we saw along the way, Encino, Vaughn, Ramon, and Mesa.
This doesn’t seem so creepy to me. Sure it’s a little run down, obviously lots of unsophisticated, probably low income folks but it’s a far cry from your usual content on Detroit and Chicago and the like. I would guess most of these folks here just like to be left alone. But still, a great video nonetheless. By the way, I would love to see you do a tour of Slab City if you ever make your way down to that area. Keep up the good work!
He’s just trying to clickbait this boring video. Ain’t nothing creepy about this. Especially not creepy compared the gang infested, zombie at night hoods he goes to
Imagine if you grew up into a full grown adult in a city like Detroit or Chicago, you’re gonna learn to take comfort in that setting, to a degree. So when you leave your element & wind up in some sleepy desert town, all of your instincts are gonna at the very least creep you out. I wouldn’t say he was “click-baiting” at all.
Home of Dwayne's Fresh Brisket Jerky & Many Other Dwayne's Amazing Products 2 months ago The dry foods are great. The butterscotch pecans sounded good, but the coating was too thick & didn't have a butterscotch taste. EVERYTHING else was great. The pecans, dried pineapple, dried cantaloupe, dried ginger & dried kiwi are terrific. Dwayne did a great job.
How? It's a small town with a small population. I don't see anything creepy about this. This is what most of my home states small towns look like, and the people keep to themselves or are super kind. I have no clue how driving though a small town requires bravery.
I live here I lived here my whole life and all you guys got it all wrong I promise that this town is a very friendly town with good people that work hard and provide for there families I have a lot of family that work here in this town and live here but this town really thrives off the agriculture and the pistachios that we produce in our pistachio fields it’s a really diverse town it don’t got much to offer we have afew gas stations one mini mart in town but that’s all but it’s home to a lot of my close family and has always been a place I call home and feel safe .
Wow… feels like you followed me from L.A. to Arizona. If you want an interesting route to film in Phoenix, let me know. I’ve been a cab driver here since 1992 and know where all the extra sketchy places are.
@@robertwhall Yep. I live in Arcadia, and just to the north of me is Camelback Mountain which has mansions, literal castles, and top notch resorts. But a few miles to the South is East Van Buren, which has hookers and crackheads.
I was just wondering was it Parker, Arizona before I read your comment. That's why I was scrolling through the comment section to see was it Parker. My sister in law is from Parker, Arizona.
I live here bro town isn’t much but sure isn’t dead most people work in the pistachio plant or pistachio tree fields and is known for producing the best pistachios this guy comes from the big city to make the lower living feel bad should feel ashamed s lot of great families and people live in this town and provide a great and safe area for what we have to work with
@@vincewoodcox4735 Sounds nice....people get all creeped out, because if you seen a place that looks like that in Michigan, good chance you will get messed up...cheers
I mean bro they stay to them selves but we have sheriffs around here which are all pretty well known threw out the community and even grew up here or surrounding areas
Quite fancy going here & drinking a cold beer in a dusty bar with someone who's got 2 first names like Edward Edwards or Chadley Bradley junior or Wayne Jerry or Jerry Wayne or something 🤔
I remember watching this channel a good while back when I wanted to see Detroit. Now I'm watching it to see towns in my own home state that I didn't even know existed. Didn't see that one coming.
We visited Phoenix from Philadelphia 2 years ago, we went to scope it out as a potential place to move. We will never for any reason in our lives go back there.
I love all your videos! I'm a new subscriber. Just two questions. Have you ever been shot at? And what kind of car are you driving? Thanks be safe out there
Pretty typical old railroad town along I-10 being largely kept alive by the truck stop and the fact it’s a ways to the next exit with any real services.
Imagine driving there and all of a sudden you hear the loudest honk coming out of nowhere. You look into your back-view mirror and see the Jeepers Creepers truck.
I'm originally from Connecticut I live in Nevada now specifically the Las Vegas. I've lived here for about 10 years I didn't like it at 1st. However I've come to really love it out here. If you drive a few miles outside of Vegas and you're in the middle of nowhere. These little towns are actually really cool. At night I would be careful, you hear stories you know lol. My favorite is the stars, thst are beautiful. These are sparsely inhabited places, they have very little light pollution. The stars are just gorgeous at night
Arizona is full of little towns like this. The places seem to have a certain quality that you won't find anywhere else. I've only travelled in Mojave, La Paz and Yavapai counties. Yavapai seems to be less "weird" and interesting than La Paz or Mojave. Beautiful scenery with backdrops of eerie little towns that seem abandoned, see no people but yet, cars and trailers parked here and there....or just literally out in the desert.
@@АлександрКузнецов-ю8б7б Good question, hard to answer. My guess is because of the lore of the "old west" and the booms and busts of many towns that sprang up due to the gold, copper and ore mines that allowed towns to flourish and then die as the mines went dry. It could be partly due to the old U.S. route 66 (the mother road) as well which had towns see the similar fate. Also, the desert climate preserves the past longer than the moist, humid areas of the southern and eastern states.
@@navyguyhm3 That relates to complete ghost towns. But people call regular desert towns 'creepy' (as Bowie AZ). Of course Charlie personally does it for the views, as he calls every hood 'worst'. I don't think small desert towns are creepier than the ones with similar population and income anywhere in the country.
@@АлександрКузнецов-ю8б7б Towns like Bowie, I would call them "different" for lack of a better word. I wouldn't say they're creepy, but they do have a weird ominous and foreboding feel because while they are populated, albeit, lightly they have an air of abandonment. You see cars in driveways of what appears to be a rundown or abandoned house, a lonely diner with no one in it and a gas station that is empty, yet, you feel as if all the eyes of unseen people are focused on you.
@@navyguyhm3 I really wish to find the one that is truly 'ominous' and 'foreboding' for me (thank you for the new english words I've just learned). People here wrote Hayden, AZ is the town of that kind. But when I walked there on Google maps, I've seen some old ugly homes (surprise!) mixed with pretty modern and liveable. The main street was clean with some houses in use. Again, everything you described the next (empty streets, ugly houses etc) you can find in every 2nd small town in the US I believe. Excluding so much sand.
It does seem creepy, but it's just a small isolated rural town. I wouldn't be out there at night though. Rural towns usually have poor street lighting. Besides, you don't know the type of people who live out there. They may not be so welcoming to outsiders.
Charlie knows. Most street smart YT'r there is. Somethin' wasn't right in that alley and he cranked his car into a huge branch to keep going. That's dedication bro. Charlie knows he was being watched and followed.
I grew up in this town. There’s nothing creepy about it. I walked this town at all hours of the day nd nothing ever happened to me lol. I have the greatest memories here. Thanks for the walk down memory lane!
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Do Tulsa Oklahoma
Pls go to the foxview apts in carpentersville illinois.
Charliebo When yuo go community white
I'm a new subscriber, love all your videos! Just two quick questions. Have you ever been shot at? What kind of car are you driving out there? Be safe out there
@@Madnais78 Yes he has, look up charliebo313 shot at
As someone who lives in AZ I wouldn’t visit these places at night. Especially if your car breaks down there’s usually no reception out there. It gives you hills have eyes vibes.
Lmao I barely like going through buckeye at night 😂
Makes me wonder how people ever put up houses in such secluded areas.
@@jaydave1246 people live there? I would've thought it was a safe house for border coyotes.
@@Menaceblue3
To be honest I'm not even sure if people live there. I see modern cars, freshly painted new pavements and some clean houses, some with new fences. But I never saw a single souls walking or moving around lol
Same in Texas it's a few towns where you see nobody but they all see you though lol
Charlie is covering more ground than Google Maps
He should be a volunteer Google Maps courier then☺ He may as well do it since he's traveling anyway. I wish I could afford to do this.
I can see that line printed on some t shirts and other merch
Lol
Arizona natives know not to venture into these places unless really necessary. The people in these extremely isolated and harsh places live there by choice - they want to be as far away from everyone as possible. Sometimes there are illegal things going on out in the desert but more often it's just a collection of people who are sick of government, corporations, urbanites, etc and want a place where if they shoot and kill a trespasser, the sheriffs come out to help bury the guy.
It looks like almost any small town in the west. Normal people live there. There's a school. It looks deserted because it is middle of Summer middle of the day, probably hot as hell.
So, basically cousin Eddie from national lampoon's Vegas vacation?
@// You mean the "Toybox killer " in Truth or Consequences NM ? . David Parker Ray.
@wheeshnaw…….
That’s nice!
Arizona Natives know this town is on I-10, has a busy truck stop, and really isn’t all that isolated.
“Creepy, quiet, and remote Arizona desert town”
The people who live there watching this:
👁️ 👄 👁️
LMAOOOOO
More like:-
👁 👄
@@stbu9709 oh man 😭😂😂
Just a clickbait for a boring place. All the places he’s been he calls this place creepy lolll
@@Eman1900O I mean, thugs and hos standing on street corners is totally normal at this point. Quiet and run down though? Totally creepy.
Charlie pulled up to courage the cowardly dog hood
Lol real talk, and we ALL (early 90’s kids) saw what happened at Courage’s house. 😂😂😂
Omg, boutta see Eustice bitch ass standing there with big ass feet lol
Lmfao
🤣😆😆😆
BRUH
👉Fun Fact: John Rambo's hometown was Bowie Arizona and Last Blood was set in Bowie even though it wasn't filmed there.
They breed them bullet proof in Bowie.
The movie faked his death. Rambo is still there
That’s a place where no trespassing means I shoot.
That’s pretty much all of Arizona, though
This is a change of pace from your usual videos. Nice work.
Some of the oddest places in US are desert towns. Especially Nevada.
There's some eerie towns in new Jersey too.
@@hstone39 facts! There’s a lot of that here in Jersey
@@hstone39 wow really in nj? which towns?
@@Daddiice what’s the names of the eerie towns in NJ? I would love to see them
In Georgia, too, Bruh. Especially on the way to Florida you’d see towns just like these.
Seems a nice town to get away from literally everything; what allures me more i s how vast the sky seems to be. totally diferent from where i live.
Cheers from Mexico City
That’s because Mexico City is like NYC lived in Mexico for almost a year lol. Headed back to the U.S next week.
Had a layover in Mexico City. Very modern huge metropolis.
@@dennishough3709 exactly lol
Bowie, Arizona gained attention when it was revealed that it was fictional action icon John Rambo's hometown.
Sometimes I watch these videos and can’t believe that I live in the same country. This is such a far cry from my corner of the US.
But at least these are peaceful people. Unlike the normal places he makes videos.
@@Danlovestrivium We don't know that there are peaceful people living there because there were no people shown. We don't know who or what lives there.
@@MIMI88998899 Little old ladies, old men who like to play cards and have a coffee with their buddies in the morning, a couple meth heads with 20 stolen TVs in their house wired up to one old computer and a digital camera, a few guys that work construction. All these small town are the same. Boring, slow, safe (Don't go on anyone's property without asking.), and slowly dying. I know exactly the type of folk who live there. They're usually nice, but mind their own business. Go up in the Appalachian mountains or Ozarks if you want creepy small towns.
@@OhPhuckYou I don't believe these towns would die out unless the younger generation gets bored and want to move out.
@@golgo2888 these flintstonians are dying off
I lived there for 28 years had some really good times there went to school and graduated from BUSD #14 , will always love my hometown still own 2 properties there and have many friends there nice video thanks for sharing Bowie has alot of history besides RAMBO , history with the Chiricahua Apaches and Ft Bowie , Bowie also known for agriculture mainly pistachios , pecans , cotton and chili back in the day Bowie was a booming small town off the I10 now its just getting old but still a great place to get away from the city at 10:25 you'll see my pink grandparents house we now own and maintain.
U need to interview some people from here, that would be interesting.
If there are any, aliens done beamed 'em up! 👽🛸🤣
I bet aint nobdy got no teeth 🤣
People ‘bout racist as hell, they’ll see Charlie and be all like “now your kind ain’t welcomed here, boy, betta scram and go over yonder” dead ass, though. No way I’d interview ANY of them.
@@arnarnie6844 yeah bruh lol
lmfao, look in the streets. aint nobody out there. and if charlie go knocking on they door he gonna get shot. lots of places to interview people, out there aint one of em tho.
I think i feel much safer on the Chicago streets than on them Jeepers Creepers roads 🤣 😂🤣
Lol
😂😂
WHAT'S "creepy" about it???Just a small town in AZ.Nobody is outside because it is hot outside during the day
Exactly. Lots of places on Earth get up above 110 degrees in the middle of the day and they look abandoned, too. You go inside till it cools off somewhat...
Imagine how boring it must've been before the internet 😵
Siesta are a way of life in hot climates.
A lot of creepy happen in Arizona desert search up skin walker ranch
Because it looks run down and abandoned in some parts, that’s what makes it look creepy.
If you're looking for creepy, quiet and remote arizona desert towns, go to Colorado City
True.. basically any town in way northern az is remote and close to vacant
@Shuik: Agree, yeah, Colorado City is creepy... eyes on you feeling... large homes with very high walls.... Also, very scenic Park in outskirts.
Creepy, indeed!!
Look like where Trevor on GTA live
Gday from Australia. Thanks for the video. I've always wanted to go to America and check out weird and unusual places. Keep up the good work. I just subscribed.
This does not look so rough really. I see some signs of fairly recent new construction. Newer cars/trucks in some driveways. Fresh asphalt and paint stripes on the paving. I have seen much worse in Appalachia, rural southeast, places where almost all the roads are still dirt or gravel...
As a Western Maryland resident, I can confirm that Appalachia can get pretty bad, but the road condition depends on the state. For example, Garrett County, Maryland is culturally West Virginia but legally Maryland so the roads are taken care of by Maryland. Since Maryland is much richer than West Virginia, the roads in the county are nice but right across the state line they are not.
@@timbo6734 The enemy of asphalt paving is water, especially when it freezes/thaws. That's a bigger problem in the east, compared to the arid southwest.
The title didn't say its the worst
@@fuzzyboomboom9742 yep
It's the type of crimes that happen there that makes it creepy... Burning bodies beyond recognition etc.
Some of these random desert/ghost towns are the scariest places. Weird people who actually choose to live there...
Poor people.
@@DiamondSoul and weird people
Smart people actually. Your ignorance is showing
@@alaskanwhiskey huh
@@alaskanwhiskey AND WEIRD PEOPLE he said what he said. Strange as F! And borderline ferile inbreds
I road tripped to Compton California years ago and hit Arizona during the daytime and my heater coil went out which resulted in water dripping on the front passenger floor. It was 110 degrees outside. Houston gets hot and humid, but Arizona really brought it! If we went over 60 mph, our A/C was like "I gotta take a nap until get back to 60. It's got a bug infested town out there where they cake up your windshield. In that area, there's a stop full of squeegees and you have to use one to take that film off your windshield. Rattlesnake warnings at rest stops to no hospital for miles, but in the middle of nowhere where it seems like you won't run into anyone for the noxt hundred miles, there's a jammin' radio station! Then at night, them yellow glow in the dark eyes with the vertical black pupil slits alongside I-10 ain't nice. They seem like they can drive fear into anyone's heart.
The classic rock station is Quartzite, Arizona is really good!
That's similar to what my brother told me when was coming back from Los Angeles, California. He and his family went on a trip from California to Los Angeles, California for his wife's family reunion by charter bus that they had rented. On the way back from Los Angeles the charter bus broke down in the middle of the Arizona desert because the environment was so hot. Before they left Los Angeles my brother had already warned the rest of the family to leave early enough so they would go through the desert at the time of day were it wouldn't be so hot. Instead, they ignored him and left at a time where once they had reached the desert, temperatures were soaring hot. Besides the charter bus they had rented being broken in the desert, he told me how there were a whole line of cars that had stalled or either had broken down parked on the side of the road due to the extreme high heat.
@@shawnwomack3446 both stories are fascinating thanks guys
If you travel through Arizona in the summer, make sure your A/C is good and your engine has been serviced. You don't want to get stranded there. It's common for engines to overheat when you're driving extended periods in the desert.
@@DIVISIONINCISION more important than your engine being serviced is your radiator and coolant system. Also it’s a good idea to shut off your A/C when driving up steep inclines when it’s really hot. Better to get a little warm yourself than to overheat your engine miles away from any services. Oh… and as a native Phoenician, one thing I can’t stress enough: bring extra water and stay hydrated.
I live here and it’s not all that bad..quiet and growing up here as a child, great memories
Love the videos you post. Be careful out there. Respect from Cleveland Ohio
WoW!!!! You go everywhere. 💯
"I've been everywhere, man.
I've been everywhere, man.
Crossed the desert's bare, man.
I've breathed the mountain air, man.
Of travel I've had my share, man.
I've been everywhere."
Johnny Cash 🤠🏜️🏞️🛣️
You should do this more often. Going through small remote towns or ghost towns. Different than doing the hood videos. It's good to step out of your comfort zone every once and a while.
Well this is a change of pace
I love to go to Arizona always excited me from the photos and things. I like to go to Arizona see the desert and then go downtown and see the city
That the area where cousins date cousins
Lmaoo
@@Adrian-so8ib LIKE EVERYWHERE ELSE!
You should do more places like this.
If he has a fucking death wish
@@Adrian-so8ib don't think these places are anymore dangerous then Chicago.
The gangs here be having a standoff like, "This hood ain't big enough for the two of us."
@@kwood55981 These places are far more dangerous than Chicago. In Chicago if something happens to you there are usually some witnesses who heard or saw something. In these kind of places there are no people who will admit to seeing or hearing anything. Far more dangerous than any big city.
@@MIMI88998899 you're logic is horrible Lmao
These areas were always by far the scariest to me. Ill choose living in a dangerous city than in the middle of nowhere where ANYTHING can happen to you...can you imagine breaking down here? Daylight or midnight I'd still panic. Drug cartels/mafia or just creepy people who live there...eek!😨
Yeah, that's a scary idea.... I too am creeped TF out of places such as this.... Love those types of movie where people actually break down in the middle of nowhere.....
Cities are by far more dangerous but still stay there please.
@@wut3358 dude chill. Its just my opinion.
@@dinauchiha3924 Im from the city but I've noticed a lot of people look down on small towns like the way rich snobbish nobles used to look down on peasants in the olden days. Lol
@@wut3358 City over deserted shit hole country town
Everyday of the week
Looks like a typical south indian Village area. Only thing is There's no human walking...not even One.
Bowie is not dangerous at all. My buddy and I have stopped here multiple times on road trips. There’s a school, post office and a courthouse. Only 300 people live there, but as an AZ native I’d much rather be stranded here than a Phoenix neighborhood. We always just parked wherever and explored on foot. Never felt unsafe.
Can you do more videos like this I like seeing empty desert towns
I have an Instagram dedicated to towns like that @abandoned.southwest if you’re cool with pictures instead of dash cam lol
@@MikeIzzle_ Several years ago, we drove from Albuquerque to Roswell, and I loved the tiny towns we saw along the way, Encino, Vaughn, Ramon, and Mesa.
A/C on full blast
Mandatory in AZ
I used to live in Bowie.. right across the street from the school, people were kind but there is absolutely nothing there.
This doesn’t seem so creepy to me. Sure it’s a little run down, obviously lots of unsophisticated, probably low income folks but it’s a far cry from your usual content on Detroit and Chicago and the like. I would guess most of these folks here just like to be left alone.
But still, a great video nonetheless.
By the way, I would love to see you do a tour of Slab City if you ever make your way down to that area. Keep up the good work!
He’s just trying to clickbait this boring video. Ain’t nothing creepy about this. Especially not creepy compared the gang infested, zombie at night hoods he goes to
Imagine if you grew up into a full grown adult in a city like Detroit or Chicago, you’re gonna learn to take comfort in that setting, to a degree. So when you leave your element & wind up in some sleepy desert town, all of your instincts are gonna at the very least creep you out. I wouldn’t say he was “click-baiting” at all.
Sounds like you’re scared of the hood 😂 most people are afraid of ghosts and supernatural shut
funny that you mention that Ik a guy who sells his technology for millions in that very town 😂😂
Plenty of parking, rush hour is a breeze, cheap real estate. Give it a chance.
Yeah but then you have a hellish commute to go to work. Screw that
“Creepy, quiet, and remote Arizona town”
The people who live there watching this video:
👁️ 👄 👁️ xd
Home of Dwayne's Fresh Brisket Jerky
&
Many Other Dwayne's Amazing Products 2 months ago
The dry foods are great. The butterscotch pecans sounded good, but the coating was too thick & didn't have a butterscotch taste. EVERYTHING else was great. The pecans, dried pineapple, dried cantaloupe, dried ginger & dried kiwi are terrific. Dwayne did a great job.
Charlie needs a raise
You have to be either the bravest or the craziest guy on the planet. I was getting anxious just watching this. Thanks for the great video.
How? It's a small town with a small population. I don't see anything creepy about this. This is what most of my home states small towns look like, and the people keep to themselves or are super kind. I have no clue how driving though a small town requires bravery.
@@OhPhuckYou Because people watch too many movies and think all these small towns are filled with super crazy serial killers.
These are the types of places that you will disappear and never be found.
BULL...IT IS A NICE LITTLE TOWN AND YOU COULD NEVER GET LOST...TURNED AROUND MAYBE, BUT NOT LOST!
Outstanding content CharlieBo313
Missing 411 and the Navajo skinwalkers
you better chill befor them mfs from wrong turn get yo ass😭😭💀
I live here I lived here my whole life and all you guys got it all wrong I promise that this town is a very friendly town with good people that work hard and provide for there families I have a lot of family that work here in this town and live here but this town really thrives off the agriculture and the pistachios that we produce in our pistachio fields it’s a really diverse town it don’t got much to offer we have afew gas stations one mini mart in town but that’s all but it’s home to a lot of my close family and has always been a place I call home and feel safe .
that’s wassup, represent my guy!
Love watching these
It feels like TWD season 1 episode 1. I was waiting for the walkers to come out.
Someone got a contract to do the roads.
I noticed that too, the roads look better THERE than here in Prescott.
Even the wildlife there is non existence. No dog, cats, crows freaking pigeon even. Beyond creepy 😳
@@DanielHernandez-gb2kz it does look like a place they could bury someone never to be found.
🙄, I have a body , that I need to dispose off and I was thinking the same👍.
No homeless people either? 😕
this give me very much rust creek the movie vibes on Netflix, It’s giving like small town vibes with scary ppl
Just passed through there a few days ago omw from WA to AZ, saw hella places just like that. Creepy as hell.
Sheesh, how long was the ride? Know that was one hell of a trip.
@@arnarnie6844 it should have only been two days, but my car broke down in Burns so it ended up being 6.
[If Charlie is still posting videos and riding thru hoods, al is well with the world.]
I feel like I've seen this place in a fever dream.
You better follow the Stop signs b4 Quick Draw McGraw run up on you. Lol 😂💯
You forgot about Barbalouie.
Like this ghost town content.
Wow… feels like you followed me from L.A. to Arizona. If you want an interesting route to film in Phoenix, let me know. I’ve been a cab driver here since 1992 and know where all the extra sketchy places are.
We visited Phoenix 2 years ago and didn’t like it at all
I lived in Phoenix for 10 years. Like any large city, has some nice areas, some not-so-nice.
@@robertwhall Yep. I live in Arcadia, and just to the north of me is Camelback Mountain which has mansions, literal castles, and top notch resorts. But a few miles to the South is East Van Buren, which has hookers and crackheads.
@@danieldaniels7571 yes, nice area. I lived just west of the Biltmore, 24th and Missouri area.
What places in Phoenix would you suggest?
I can smell the meth cooking from here.
I gotta admit even though it's too quiet it looks more safer than the hoods u visit
Love your videos!
I lived in Bowie while growing up. and I return there to get away from the city noise.
Hi Elda,
It's Jim. Guess it's only been 45 years or so?
This makes Parker, AZ look like a major city by comparison. This is literally just a few shacks in the middle of nowhere.
I was just wondering was it Parker, Arizona before I read your comment. That's why I was scrolling through the comment section to see was it Parker. My sister in law is from Parker, Arizona.
Great place for a dirtbike.
I live here bro town isn’t much but sure isn’t dead most people work in the pistachio plant or pistachio tree fields and is known for producing the best pistachios this guy comes from the big city to make the lower living feel bad should feel ashamed s lot of great families and people live in this town and provide a great and safe area for what we have to work with
@@vincewoodcox4735 Sounds nice....people get all creeped out, because if you seen a place that looks like that in Michigan, good chance you will get messed up...cheers
@@vincewoodcox4735 How are the cops down there?
@@vincewoodcox4735 I live in Maine.
I mean bro they stay to them selves but we have sheriffs around here which are all pretty well known threw out the community and even grew up here or surrounding areas
Probably just too hot to go outside.. Come back around midnight....
Right out of a Tarantino flick.
Saw the ‘Fresh Jerky” sign. Isn’t that a contradiction of terms?
As a huge Texas Chainsaw Massacre fan I would fine any jerky from there highly suspicious. 😉
Quite fancy going here & drinking a cold beer in a dusty bar with someone who's got 2 first names like Edward Edwards or Chadley Bradley junior or Wayne Jerry or Jerry Wayne or something 🤔
Little tavern at 3:56
Looks dusty and quaint. 😃🍻😁
or Toby Jack
@@SpookyG666 🙄🤣
😆
The old towel trick - loving it haha
This makes Ajo, AZ look like a party city.
I’m always fascinated by these kinds of places, brings me on the edge.
I grew up in Arizona and this isn’t really that creepy. It’s just one of many little desert towns. 🤷🏻♀️
A place where mama boys can't get oussy
@@TheLatinoRedneckCowboy kinda like you?
Shit, If there were fiber lines run through there, I'd call it paradise.
I remember watching this channel a good while back when I wanted to see Detroit.
Now I'm watching it to see towns in my own home state that I didn't even know existed.
Didn't see that one coming.
If you in AZ come to Phoenix I’ll be your guide 💯
Phoenix is such an ugly city
We visited Phoenix from Philadelphia 2 years ago, we went to scope it out as a potential place to move. We will never for any reason in our lives go back there.
@@jeff7764 lol Philly is way worse than Phoenix
be my guide im trying to move..
@@strictlydolo6915 agreed lol
I love all your videos! I'm a new subscriber. Just two questions. Have you ever been shot at? And what kind of car are you driving? Thanks be safe out there
Totally no milk carton kids in any of those sketchy looking houses…creepy.
The Hills have Eyes ass town ......Im good take me back tuh da hood my boy..🤟
I drove past there today because I drive trucks, looks crazy out there man.
Pretty typical old railroad town along I-10 being largely kept alive by the truck stop and the fact it’s a ways to the next exit with any real services.
Charlie is in sandy shores 😂
Beautiful state but not a beautiful town.
Some inconsiderate fool is too lazy to trim the tree branches! 😡8:42
I've been subscribe for years now, some how i just love your channel. Just smoking a joint and driving with u all around 👆🏽🥳
👑tbh I wonder about the tires on your ride. seriously.🦁
Me too. Pick up nails in them places. AAA takes hrs out there!
Only thing missing was we didn't get to see some locals haha that's the money shots.
Imagine driving there and all of a sudden you hear the loudest honk coming out of nowhere. You look into your back-view mirror and see the Jeepers Creepers truck.
my god... please.. stop... !!!! LOL
แวะเข้ามาชมครับ
💥😌👌💥 Fabulous....
Cant wait for remote Alaskan towns and wilderness
Can't wait for remote North Korean towns
Bet they will say it’s “creepy” lol people don’t get out much these days
What i like about AZ is you never know who has a gun on them so criminals think twice.
I'm originally from Connecticut I live in Nevada now specifically the Las Vegas. I've lived here for about 10 years I didn't like it at 1st. However I've come to really love it out here. If you drive a few miles outside of Vegas and you're in the middle of nowhere. These little towns are actually really cool. At night I would be careful, you hear stories you know lol. My favorite is the stars, thst are beautiful. These are sparsely inhabited places, they have very little light pollution. The stars are just gorgeous at night
LMAO... I lived there 50 yrs ago... it's just a small town passed by the interstate... like many other towns are just like it... Lordsburg NM
You lived there during the 70's? I graduated from there in '75.
Arizona is full of little towns like this. The places seem to have a certain quality that you won't find anywhere else. I've only travelled in Mojave, La Paz and Yavapai counties. Yavapai seems to be less "weird" and interesting than La Paz or Mojave. Beautiful scenery with backdrops of eerie little towns that seem abandoned, see no people but yet, cars and trailers parked here and there....or just literally out in the desert.
Every state west from Mississippi has towns like this. Why ppl highlight the desert part so often?
@@АлександрКузнецов-ю8б7б Good question, hard to answer. My guess is because of the lore of the "old west" and the booms and busts of many towns that sprang up due to the gold, copper and ore mines that allowed towns to flourish and then die as the mines went dry. It could be partly due to the old U.S. route 66 (the mother road) as well which had towns see the similar fate. Also, the desert climate preserves the past longer than the moist, humid areas of the southern and eastern states.
@@navyguyhm3 That relates to complete ghost towns. But people call regular desert towns 'creepy' (as Bowie AZ). Of course Charlie personally does it for the views, as he calls every hood 'worst'. I don't think small desert towns are creepier than the ones with similar population and income anywhere in the country.
@@АлександрКузнецов-ю8б7б Towns like Bowie, I would call them "different" for lack of a better word. I wouldn't say they're creepy, but they do have a weird ominous and foreboding feel because while they are populated, albeit, lightly they have an air of abandonment. You see cars in driveways of what appears to be a rundown or abandoned house, a lonely diner with no one in it and a gas station that is empty, yet, you feel as if all the eyes of unseen people are focused on you.
@@navyguyhm3 I really wish to find the one that is truly 'ominous' and 'foreboding' for me (thank you for the new english words I've just learned). People here wrote Hayden, AZ is the town of that kind. But when I walked there on Google maps, I've seen some old ugly homes (surprise!) mixed with pretty modern and liveable. The main street was clean with some houses in use. Again, everything you described the next (empty streets, ugly houses etc) you can find in every 2nd small town in the US I believe. Excluding so much sand.
Visit Miami AZ next
It does seem creepy, but it's just a small isolated rural town. I wouldn't be out there at night though. Rural towns usually have poor street lighting. Besides, you don't know the type of people who live out there. They may not be so welcoming to outsiders.
It right on I-10 so it’s really not all that isolated.
@@danieldaniels7571 Oh ok, thank you for that information.
Great Arizona Dessert Town video
Charlie knows. Most street smart YT'r there is. Somethin' wasn't right in that alley and he cranked his car into a huge branch to keep going. That's dedication bro. Charlie knows he was being watched and followed.
Hit up south Phoenix, south Tucson, east off downtown chandler & near downtown Mesa all around
I grew up in this town. There’s nothing creepy about it. I walked this town at all hours of the day nd nothing ever happened to me lol. I have the greatest memories here. Thanks for the walk down memory lane!
How is there NO cars driving in this entire video? And no people outside? That really IS creepy
I guess all of the 326 residents decided to stay indoors today. Yeah, its really creepy
because it gets hot af during the summer of there and I'm sure all the resident are in the house with the ac on lol
Interesting departure from your other videos. I love it!
That place was thriving and full of life. It’s bigger then all eastern Washington towns
Reminds me of rural Australia but with mountains in the distance and slightly different bush and houses