This show has caught many bad guys, solved crimes, reunited lost loved ones, siblings and so much more. A big part of my childhood that I will always cherish. Thank you Robert Stack, the Legend and his team.
As much as I like Dennis Farina, Robert Stack was the best choice for Unsolved Mysteries. Mr. Farina's soft tone, demeanor and having more light about him made it feel it was a Grandfather telling the little ones stories. Mr. Stack's trench clothes, suits, dark atmosphere, a face that showed little emotion, and deep voice made him out as a mysterious informant, one you meet in back-alleys. One that seemed to know everything and everyone.
If you see and hear him in some of his old roles you'll notice that his voice was the result of smoking and drinking. Watch here: ruclips.net/video/aJ07Pf6KLv4/видео.html
My upstairs neighbor just called me and asked if I would turn down the volume on my phone because the Unsolved Mysteries theme was "scaring the shit" out of her. Ha!
Omg I’m a 38 year old male and it still sends shivers up my spine , probably cause it use to scare the crap out of me when my parents watched it and I’d get up out of my bed and stare out the crack of my door and watch almost every episode. Now 30 years later I’m rewatching all the episodes!
I miss the 90's. We have everything now at the click of a button, so why was life so much more fun when all we had was Nintendo and Unsolved Mysteries?
I miss the 90's too. I love the time era which is why I think it was fun. I feel like technology has turned everyone, especially youngsters into zombies. It's like the innocence of the 90's is gone. I don't even know what this world has come to...
@@Mrd9960 Yeah, but the feel and aesthetics of UM is a product of the '80s; right down to the analog motion graphics, snuff-style filming and slasher/thriller style music. All the '80s hallmarks stayed with the show well into the '90s. UM is pure, distilled '80s goodness.
SO GLAD they finally uploaded these legit! A chilling stroll down memory lane! To this day I’ve yet to watch a program that sends chills down my spine the same way this show sure as hell did! Now excuse me while I binge...!!
The very first thing I did when I gained access to RUclips back in 2009, was binge watch Unsolved Mysteries lol At that time I had to watch episodes in parts..
21:20 "He looked to me like a nice, little old man that found a lovely place to give up the ghost." What an amusing euphemism for, "He died of a heart attack all alone in the desert." I like that guy's accent too.
Listen to what's being said. It's an intentional mondegreen. If you walk through the mountains of superstition for long enough as the sun sets in the west look towards the east and you will see the gold shimmer on the dutchman's lost mine Mountains of superstition: the actual superstitious mountains/being superstitious in life and following wild tales Sun sets in the west: old age (west is the land of the dead) Look to the east: life/look back upon life The gold: the creative legend/the beauty of life that makes you crazy Lost mine: lost mind (that's the mondegreen, that's the key) ...so, in short 'follow superstitious legends like me, and before you die, youll see what I see because you'll be crazy like me' Ironically I only got this after I lost it and got a mental illness disability
AL T if you research the case online you’ll see that she was abducted, raped and tortured for at least 6 days. The case featured here says she was killed just a few hours after she was given the ticket. That is false.
His daughter was in the comments on a reddit post for Amy bechtel case. Her dad has since passed and she said all her life ppl who got to know her would come up to her to ask if that was her dad on UM who found the poor girl. It really bothered him she said
@OneManArmy The Louisiana swamp accent sounds a lot like a cross between New York ebonics and southern racist vernacular. There's a woman on RUclips from New Orleans that sounds like she's from New York City.
@@Ariel692769 dodak cam would be meaningless the big issue is the date- most eye witnesses are iether bullshit or forgetting. they are the worst evidence
@@yappydog8m I know I didn't have a smartphone until my work switched to them around 2013. Before then it was just a flip phone and before that it was a Nextel PTT. In the mid 90s, I had my grandparents old car that had a carphone(They had one put in around 1986, they always had early tech), but it was disconnected. It was good for calling 911. I remember buying me first cell phone at a Circle K around 1998, it costs like $100 and I lost it after about 3 days. I didn't have another phone until the Nextel that I got at work around 2003-4.
I love Robert stacks voice! Ever since I was a kid and it was chilling to me! He has a smooth vibration in his voice! I especially love the supernatural episodes ghosts!! Thanks for this!
The Lost Dutchman Gold Mine is the best produced episode of the entire series. The episode plays out almost like someone tells a legend. All the actors were great and the interviewees did a great job telling the story.
It is a legend. It's an intentional mondegreen. If you walk through the mountains of superstition for long enough as the sun sets in the west look towards the east and you will see the gold shimmer on the dutchman's lost mine Mountains of superstition: the actual superstitious mountains/being superstitious in life and following wild tales Sun sets in the west: old age Look to the east: life/look back upon life The gold: the creative legend/the beauty of life that makes you crazy Lost mine: lost mind (that's the mondegreen, that's the key) ...so, in short 'follow superstitious legends like me, and before you die, youll see what I see because you'll be crazy like me' Ironically I only got this after I lost it and got a mental illness disability
the melody that played at the beginning of the lost Dutchman's mine is so mystical sounding, I could almost picture walking through those mountains and hearing that melody playing.
I know this is an old comment, but this tune is the theme from the movie 'Picnic at Hanging Rock' by Peter Weir. Here you go: ruclips.net/video/8m-6bU4x7us/видео.html
36:35-37:36 As a Louisianan, I have to say I found those accents amusing but authentic. Dat’s how we really sound down in Looziana. The daughter spoke with our unique accent (pronouncing “th” words as though they have a “d”-for instance, “them” sounds like “dem” and “that” sounds like “dat”). Even that/dat female actor and male actor (playing wife and husband) perfectly captured our accent. 😂😂😂😂😂
Update on the update. Unfortunately, POS murderer Dale Wayne Eaton death sentence has been commuted to life in prison with no parole. If anyone should get the chair, it should be him.
The Lil Miss case would have been a good one for Forensic Files. It is such a very alarming and unusual story and the end result of the car being found buried on the killer's property just makes the case even more unusual.
If anybody needs clarification feel free to message me on Facebook - My dad: (Special Agent Donald Flickinger) was on this case for more years and I can count and DNA did indeed solve it because in 2002 Dale Wayne Eaton was found to match the DNA found on Lisa, our families were very close because I went to high school with her younger sister and that’s how it came to be that my dad was involved, that Sheriff Ron catch them in this interview is a piece of work - he hated my dad so much because he was relentless I think he took so much blood at one point they called him a vampire end catch them ended up killing himself about a year after this interview. Lisa was held and raped inside they got it out school bus at his house and you wanna know where the car was? That ass buried at right next to his house - ultimately he was tried and convicted and sent to death he’s still in Wyoming and he’s still a piece of crap one good closure example is that when convicted Lisa Kimmell‘s mom and dad became owners of his property and they went out there and burned everything to the ground
@@britnyhardy100 Dale Wayne Eaton buried it behind his house. He lives in the middle of nowhere outside of Casper Wyoming - he used a backhoe and dropped the car in. When they pulled it out - it still had her luggage - license plates (Lil miss) and a necklace on the rear view mirror
I’m 41 I remember my mom watching this when I was a kid and the theme scared me and it still does I watch this all day at work well listen while on my computer and it makes me realize crazy people aren’t just starting to get crazy they been crazy smdh I won’t watch this if I’m alone at the house….
Damn. Lisa Kimmell was only about a year and a half older than me. All the live I have lived since 1988.. :( I'm so glad they found her car and locked up her killer.
I remember saw this episode when I was 11, 30 years ago. The lighter data was in my mind all this years. Even the voice actors for translation to spanish version were carefully selected. Respect and greetings from Mexico.
This is about the 5th video I've ever seen about a murderer with 3 names and the middle name is always Wayne ! - p.s.- Robert Stack, coolest guy ever !
@@karentucker2161 Karen, why are you even bothering to reply to my comment if you're so above it all to suggest I'm not normal. Is it because you're trying to deflect? Maybe the authorities should start digging around the area where you live.
yeah sad. this is why eye witnesses are always the last piece of evidence you should use. they think they see what they see, and can be really convincing
It amazes me how long ago this series was on. It didn't seem so long ago, but now most of the criminals/survivors in this series are either dead or are 60+. Watched several of these where the criminal committed a horrible crime, was convicted, served his 10-20 years and is now a free man.
@@the_gilded_age_phoenix8717 That's what I was thinking. The system has always been broken. If I were a judge, and it wasn't self-defense, I would never let a child molester or murder out. It's either death or rot in high security prison with no beds just a sleeping bag with the top half cut off. Lol
Todd Autry Satanic Grandma!!! I totally remember that one! WOW! I remember the kid sitting close to the TV while he watched a pentagram and other symbols on the screen with the grandma standing behind him in the reenactment!
Satanic Grandma was Season 4, episode 106. It was gold. The grandma kidnapped the grandson because the parents were getting a divorce. Also in that episode, the sad case of Debbie Race. The lady who froze to death in a lake. That one caught headlines in the early 90's.
@@wotgM316 I think the producers received an offer from Amazon that they couldn't refuse, so a deal was made to stream all the classic seasons on Amazon several months ago. Now that the show has been available on that platform for a while, Filmrise decided to stream them here as well, hoping it's gonna generate more views for this channel. Very good initiative on their part, everybody gain from it, and now maybe we can all help solve more cases together. 😊👍
I live in a 1-bedroom apt & it's bc of this show that I go out of the way to make sure my door is always locked & that my windows are always locked & bc of my paranoia I now have...I check my bathroom, bedroom & closet just to make sure nothing or nobody is hiding in these places...That's how bad is getting w/ me watching this series! ...Thanks, UM ;-) 🤣🤣
@@kateyoung7929 ...Yeah, I know, I decided to get a few cameras set up at my front door, my bedroom window & one in the kitchen just to have better piece of mind ...way too many crazys out there
I miss Robert stack I really couldn't get into Dennis . He was good but he cannot replace Robert no one can. Robret was the better choice for unsolved mysteries. I miss Robert today 😞😞😞😞😞
Jacob: Here is the gold I have. I will give you clues to find the rest. Julia: Why don't you just tell me exactly where it is or maybe show me on a map? Jacob: No I do not have time for that! Let me just tell you all these crazy clues instead. Julia: 😑
My grandpa was the highway patrolman who pulled lil miss over, he regrets not giving her a ticket as it may have saved her life. It still haunts him today.
The 'Hotard segment' on here eerily reminded me of the 1976 film 'The Town That Dreaded Sundown' about the unsolved serial killer murders in Texarkana back in 1946.
She was an 18 year old girl making a multi-state road trip by herself, at night. I'd be worried and concerned about that. My grandmother seemed much more concerned when my niece was driving from Houston to our hometown in Louisiana, which was a 2 1/2 hour drive than when I did basically a cross country trip from Virginia to Louisiana by myself. I asked her why and she said because I'm a boy. This was in the early 2000s.
Since her case has always intrigued me, I read up on it more. Lisa was working as a manager at an Arby's in Denver at the time, and presumably lived on her own there. Her age probably gives people pause now, but the 80s were a different time.
@@cheesecake134 I know. In the 80s many people in their 20s lived on their own and could while working a minimum wage job. Damn things seemed so much better back then in those respects. Now young adults in their 20s and even 30s are still living at home! It's just too costly
Definitely different time era. I was 17 living in Baton Rouge by myself working 2 jobs and playing in the streets at night. Did some sketchy stuff with sketchy people thank god I survived! I was a couple hours from my hometown and drove back and forth on weekends middle of the night with no cell phones, nothing. I still think back to a lot of it and I'm thankful to be alive. We had a lot of serial killers bc they could get away with it.
FYI - the witness in the Lisa Marie (Lil Miss) case described the man's face as small featured, "aquiline, as I think the poets call it." "Aquiline" actually means hook-nosed (aka "Roman" nose), which indicates large features, the opposite of what he said (or meant). No harm, no foul. Just for everyone's edification.
There's something so chilling about the Lisa Kimmell case. All these sightings of her car and a girl driving it...it's pretty haunting, very strange case.
@@LynxStarAuto Yep very true, as the update say at the end of the segment. However it doesn't entirely explain some of the sightings or timeline of when her recognizable car was seen. The monster was caught, and that's what matter of course, but I still find the sightings strange.
@@jonathanturbide2232 Eaton could have been forcing Lisa to drive around at gunpoint from the backseat. He could also have had a female accomplice (or relative) who was driving Lisa's car.
@@jonathanturbide2232 I think they simply saw another car with a personalized plate. Lil Miss is a very popular saying for license plates. I don't believe that these people are lying; they're simply mistaken. It could have been another car or they could have actually seen Lisa but were mistaken about the day. I've seen witnesses right on unsolved mysteries who swore up and down that they saw missing people, turns out those people were dead the entire time.
The fisherman that had the bad feeling, I wonder if subconsciously he had smelled her body first, before seeing her. They say we have many things left over from the caveman days, when danger lurked everywhere.
That was my thought too. Smelled the decomp or heard something (scavengers) that didn't quite register consciously but he still knew something was "off".
I wish Unsolved Mysteries had done a story on a distant Family Member of mine who disappeared from Lexington, Ky in 1977 and hasn't been seen or heard from since.
@@4thcoming Anyone who has tried looking into it is met with resistance and death threats. I do know that in the 1970's, Lexington was the hottest spot for drugs, specifically cocaine and it's been proven the Police were involved in getting it in and out of the City and this relative of mine was supposedly dating a Lexington Police Officer at the time of her disappearance. This Officer was later arrested in 1993 on Federal Drug charges and was released recently. This relative's name is Melanie Flynn and she was the Daughter of a Kentucky State Senator. There's book about the whole thing called the Bluegrass Conspiracy. A lot of Major Players were involved from the Police to Attorneys and even people associated with then Kentucky Governor, John Y. Brown.
Emperor Palpatine I hope you and your family find some answers some day. I’ve been through a Missing Person’s case with my family as well. It’s really difficult to process emotionally when there are no answers or leads.
That sort of report would be best suited for the Netflix revival. But even if they would be blacklisted from picking it up, perhaps the podcast might be able to do it!
I have the unsolved mysteries DVD set and the lost Dutchman’s treasure I seen a lot of times It kind of upsets me that I’m seeing extra footage that I never seen before.
Robert Stack is the best 👌 !!!!! Everyday I love watching the videos and every night they haunt me so much. But I still can't stop watching the videos!!!!
I like the music in the Lost Dutchman mine. I don't quite think an 81 year old man would have gone through all that work to hide the entrance to the mine. I realize that the man died not long after, but still, that's a lot of work for a single man to do.
@@Ijustinsultedyou What a remarkably ignorant and arrogant comment to make Iceboy. Let me know when you get to be 81, then we can meet up and see if you can do what Waltz was said to have accomplished and come out in top form. I doubt few can.
Thanks fotfor another great episode of unsolved mysteries The lisa kimmel case was very tragic and sad dale Wayne eaton was a evil Pathetic MF😡 who preyed on lisa and took the opportunity he Brutally murdered her buried her car on his property he was tried convicted and sentenced to death but I was really glad when her parents watched as his property burned to the ground I pray he's dead now and went straight to Hell🤬👿 R.I.P. LISA KIMMEL💙🙏😥💜💜
I has nightmares of this show as a kid. Creepy music with a creppt voiced old man telling stories of unsolved murders. Not the best show to watch at 6 but I liked it until bedtime lol. What an amazing show!. Robert Stack was and is 1 of the best narrators I'm crime show history.
I remember as a teenager in the late 80's, my dad not letting my sister get a personalized license plate that said, "Lil Princess". Because he said it would be unsafe for her driving at night, and people knowing it's a female driving, especially on rural roads.
This show has caught many bad guys, solved crimes, reunited lost loved ones, siblings and so much more. A big part of my childhood that I will always cherish. Thank you Robert Stack, the Legend and his team.
Childhood? Your childhood was creepy 😂
😂❤
@@te4bag_k1ngp1n It definitely was.... But it was well worth it.
As much as I like Dennis Farina, Robert Stack was the best choice for Unsolved Mysteries. Mr. Farina's soft tone, demeanor and having more light about him made it feel it was a Grandfather telling the little ones stories. Mr. Stack's trench clothes, suits, dark atmosphere, a face that showed little emotion, and deep voice made him out as a mysterious informant, one you meet in back-alleys. One that seemed to know everything and everyone.
😂😂 I agree 💯💯💯
Robert Stack a legend.... Made the show worth watching.
Dennis Fear-Ina says: "hold my fear"
The quality of Robert Stack's voice is the biggest unsolved mystery of all!!!! What a legend!!!
Agree only he could host that show with that voice
If you see and hear him in some of his old roles you'll notice that his voice was the result of smoking and drinking. Watch here: ruclips.net/video/aJ07Pf6KLv4/видео.html
Creepy voice ...
I want a full cavity search " roto rooter" don't stop till you get the back of their teeth..
@@Andy-yo3hd wow quite different
Nobody did, does, or ever will, do it like Robert Stack. RIP a legend with the perfect voice
My thoughts exactly! The show will never be the same without Robert Stack!
Agreed! It’s quite telling that the reboot doesn’t even try to replace him or Dennis Farina with another host!
Exactly!
Agree…the new unsolved sucks
He did this job goodman
My upstairs neighbor just called me and asked if I would turn down the volume on my phone because the Unsolved Mysteries theme was "scaring the shit" out of her. Ha!
Hope she was joking
You need your hearing checked if she can hear it 😂😂😂
Hilarious
It's never scared me.
They do play that theme for like 3 minutes straight
After all these years the intro still gives me chills!!
Indeed. Scared as a kid.
Omg I’m a 38 year old male and it still sends shivers up my spine , probably cause it use to scare the crap out of me when my parents watched it and I’d get up out of my bed and stare out the crack of my door and watch almost every episode. Now 30 years later I’m rewatching all the episodes!
I'm 41 and I still cant watch this without having a cover to hide under from time to time. Go ahead and laugh idc. 😁
@@jeffreyloskoskill4901 also 41 lol
June of 80
My eyes water when I hear it. I remember being scared as a child when my Dad would watch it. Great memories.
Who all gets really excited when you hear the UPDATE music come on during the videos of UMs ??
The Update music kind of scared me when I was little, and still kind of does lol
I miss the 90's. We have everything now at the click of a button, so why was life so much more fun when all we had was Nintendo and Unsolved Mysteries?
its because we were younger back then. every generation says the same thing, in the 90s our parents were talking about how great the 60s-70s were
I miss the 90's too. I love the time era which is why I think it was fun. I feel like technology has turned everyone, especially youngsters into zombies. It's like the innocence of the 90's is gone. I don't even know what this world has come to...
@
pappagetti 2009
Unsolved Mysteries is a production from the '80s.
I don't know why so many people think it's from the '90s.
@@JanetStarChild Well it began in the late 80s, but the majority of it was in the 90s, 1987-2000, don't fake the funk on the nasty dunk!😂😂😂
@@Mrd9960
Yeah, but the feel and aesthetics of UM is a product of the '80s; right down to the analog motion graphics, snuff-style filming and slasher/thriller style music. All the '80s hallmarks stayed with the show well into the '90s.
UM is pure, distilled '80s goodness.
SO GLAD they finally uploaded these legit! A chilling stroll down memory lane! To this day I’ve yet to watch a program that sends chills down my spine the same way this show sure as hell did! Now excuse me while I binge...!!
The very first thing I did when I gained access to RUclips back in 2009, was binge watch Unsolved Mysteries lol At that time I had to watch episodes in parts..
21:20 "He looked to me like a nice, little old man that found a lovely place to give up the ghost." What an amusing euphemism for, "He died of a heart attack all alone in the desert." I like that guy's accent too.
I loved his phrasing & accent as well &
I bet he tells great stories, too.
Absolutely charming! ☺️
Listen to what's being said. It's an intentional mondegreen.
If you walk through the mountains of superstition for long enough as the sun sets in the west look towards the east and you will see the gold shimmer on the dutchman's lost mine
Mountains of superstition: the actual superstitious mountains/being superstitious in life and following wild tales
Sun sets in the west: old age (west is the land of the dead)
Look to the east: life/look back upon life
The gold: the creative legend/the beauty of life that makes you crazy
Lost mine: lost mind (that's the mondegreen, that's the key)
...so, in short 'follow superstitious legends like me, and before you die, youll see what I see because you'll be crazy like me'
Ironically I only got this after I lost it and got a mental illness disability
You can only see the gold shimmer as the sun sets in the west if you are facing east, or else the light is blocked by shadow
Great show! I really miss it. Bob Stack was great!
Poor Lil Miss! A terrible end for an innocent girl.
Really sad
Id have gone to pieces if she had been my daughter :(
I don't get it so who was the other blonde female driving her vehicle with the little man?
Are you sure she was totally innocent?
AL T if you research the case online you’ll see that she was abducted, raped and tortured for at least 6 days. The case featured here says she was killed just a few hours after she was given the ticket. That is false.
Yes! Thanks so much. I miss this show and Robert Stack.
Me too. Those were the days. RIP to both of them.
U love R. Stack
@@treyharrison2330 ok “trey who’s looking so gay” haha
100th like
I felt bad for that cowboy they interviewed who found Lisa's body. You could tell by his eyes he was one of those tough guys with a good heart.
Ikr
🙏😭
His daughter was in the comments on a reddit post for Amy bechtel case. Her dad has since passed and she said all her life ppl who got to know her would come up to her to ask if that was her dad on UM who found the poor girl. It really bothered him she said
38:04 "whatchu wont here Hotard"
"Got nothin' to talk about boy"
"You better watch your manners and don't you talk that trash talk in my house" 😂
I wouldn't have went in.
@@niterida380 Me either. That woman was off her rocker. 😂
This was one of those cases that stuck with me for years. I remember watching it originally when I was 11.
@OneManArmy The Louisiana swamp accent sounds a lot like a cross between New York ebonics and southern racist vernacular. There's a woman on RUclips from New Orleans that sounds like she's from New York City.
🤣🤣lol
"He looked to me like a nice lil old man that found a lovely place to give up the ghost" 😄
Aw, I thought that was a sweet observance!
@@jenniferryersejones9876 Me too😁
sounds better than murdered by the CIA doesnt it - fake son was CIA
I'm going to haunt you when I die. 👻
@@mcfcguvnors
You seriously don't get it man.
darn, i always think 'take a picture of the car and the plate' then remember; no cell phones with cameras
Honestly, up until the very early 200's, even the most basic cell phones were a rarity.
Maybe 80's Polaroid or Kodak camera but you would probably have to be up close.
@@Ariel692769 dodak cam would be meaningless the big issue is the date- most eye witnesses are iether bullshit or forgetting. they are the worst evidence
@@yappydog8m I know I didn't have a smartphone until my work switched to them around 2013. Before then it was just a flip phone and before that it was a Nextel PTT. In the mid 90s, I had my grandparents old car that had a carphone(They had one put in around 1986, they always had early tech), but it was disconnected. It was good for calling 911.
I remember buying me first cell phone at a Circle K around 1998, it costs like $100 and I lost it after about 3 days. I didn't have another phone until the Nextel that I got at work around 2003-4.
Yappydog8m yep...by about 2001-2 they were very common. But late 90’s not so much.
I love Robert stacks voice! Ever since I was a kid and it was chilling to me! He has a smooth vibration in his voice! I especially love the supernatural episodes ghosts!! Thanks for this!
Same. I was 12 in 1988 when I first started watching it and it still scares me.
The Lost Dutchman Gold Mine is the best produced episode of the entire series. The episode plays out almost like someone tells a legend. All the actors were great and the interviewees did a great job telling the story.
It is a legend. It's an intentional mondegreen.
If you walk through the mountains of superstition for long enough as the sun sets in the west look towards the east and you will see the gold shimmer on the dutchman's lost mine
Mountains of superstition: the actual superstitious mountains/being superstitious in life and following wild tales
Sun sets in the west: old age
Look to the east: life/look back upon life
The gold: the creative legend/the beauty of life that makes you crazy
Lost mine: lost mind (that's the mondegreen, that's the key)
...so, in short 'follow superstitious legends like me, and before you die, youll see what I see because you'll be crazy like me'
Ironically I only got this after I lost it and got a mental illness disability
@@whatabouttheearth lol
Wtf
Wow. I love your observations and commentary my friend. You are deeply insightful.
@@whatabouttheearthstupid c. reply
@@uncasunga1800lol
the melody that played at the beginning of the lost Dutchman's mine is so mystical sounding, I could almost picture walking through those mountains and hearing that melody playing.
S. Taylor yes! They used the same flute tune in a few other stories I’ve seen. I find it really pretty!
@@JediBunny you wouldn't happen to know what the name of the tune is?
I know this is an old comment, but this tune is the theme from the movie 'Picnic at Hanging Rock' by Peter Weir. Here you go: ruclips.net/video/8m-6bU4x7us/видео.html
This show was the best back in the day !!! A true classic 👏🏼
Whoever put these episodes on is a legend!
For sure dude. I’m so grateful.🤘
The ones that owns the rights. :)
The channel is Filmrise...who own the rights...
No doubt, very nice unloads. Robert's voice just pulls you right in too the story......
Indeed.
36:35-37:36
As a Louisianan, I have to say I found those accents amusing but authentic. Dat’s how we really sound down in Looziana. The daughter spoke with our unique accent (pronouncing “th” words as though they have a “d”-for instance, “them” sounds like “dem” and “that” sounds like “dat”). Even that/dat female actor and male actor (playing wife and husband) perfectly captured our accent. 😂😂😂😂😂
I grew up in Laplace, the river parishes have a distinct sound. Once you hit Manchac the accent has a country sound. Excellent actors.
I used to watch these on TV. It's so weird to see Robert Stack out during the day. I remember he was always in the same place at night.
If I saw Robert Stack wearing a trenchcoat in a dark alley at night, I'm turning the F around.
@@jeremyheintz1479😂
Wonder what he did for Halloween. Can u imagine going trick-or-treating and a door opening and he'd be there?!? I'd pro drop all my candy and RUN!!😂
Update on the update. Unfortunately, POS murderer Dale Wayne Eaton death sentence has been commuted to life in prison with no parole. If anyone should get the chair, it should be him.
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
The Lil Miss case would have been a good one for Forensic Files. It is such a very alarming and unusual story and the end result of the car being found buried on the killer's property just makes the case even more unusual.
That's so wild, I could have sworn it had been...
Edit: I think I was thinking of A&E's _Cold Case Files_.
If anybody needs clarification feel free to message me on Facebook - My dad: (Special Agent Donald Flickinger) was on this case for more years and I can count and DNA did indeed solve it because in 2002 Dale Wayne Eaton was found to match the DNA found on Lisa, our families were very close because I went to high school with her younger sister and that’s how it came to be that my dad was involved, that Sheriff Ron catch them in this interview is a piece of work - he hated my dad so much because he was relentless I think he took so much blood at one point they called him a vampire end catch them ended up killing himself about a year after this interview. Lisa was held and raped inside they got it out school bus at his house and you wanna know where the car was? That ass buried at right next to his house - ultimately he was tried and convicted and sent to death he’s still in Wyoming and he’s still a piece of crap one good closure example is that when convicted Lisa Kimmell‘s mom and dad became owners of his property and they went out there and burned everything to the ground
@@britnyhardy100 Dale Wayne Eaton buried it behind his house. He lives in the middle of nowhere outside of Casper Wyoming - he used a backhoe and dropped the car in. When they pulled it out - it still had her luggage - license plates (Lil miss) and a necklace on the rear view mirror
@@kamelaraines How sad.
So SAD , RAPE AND SEXUAL ASSAULT ABUSE ARE THE SAME THING AND PROVEN AS SUCH.... MAY THE LITTLE MISS GIRL RIP WITH JESUS 😥❤🙏 POOR SOUL
Join me.................Only Stack could deliver that in a bone chilling way.
1:10
Dennis Fear-Ina says: "hold my fear"
Robert Stack would make the intro sound scarier than what it was
I’m 41 I remember my mom watching this when I was a kid and the theme scared me and it still does I watch this all day at work well listen while on my computer and it makes me realize crazy people aren’t just starting to get crazy they been crazy smdh I won’t watch this if I’m alone at the house….
Damn. Lisa Kimmell was only about a year and a half older than me. All the live I have lived since 1988.. :( I'm so glad they found her car and locked up her killer.
In 1988 I was four. The man found her body on my birthday April 2nd
@@dimepiecetiaand I was 8 years old back in 88
The opening intro never gets old.
You know it was probably made on one of them Casio-boards from the 80's 😆
I'm 37 years old and it still scares the living hell out of me.
Never.
He’s bomb total I looove Robert stack
Sounds a little old school and overdramatic I love it!🤣👍
I remember saw this episode when I was 11, 30 years ago. The lighter data was in my mind all this years. Even the voice actors for translation to spanish version were carefully selected. Respect and greetings from Mexico.
This is about the 5th video I've ever seen about a murderer with 3 names and the middle name is always Wayne ! - p.s.- Robert Stack, coolest guy ever !
Most of us normal people have three names, a first, middle and last. Completely normal.
@@karentucker2161 Karen, why are you even bothering to reply to my comment if you're so above it all to suggest I'm not normal. Is it because you're trying to deflect? Maybe the authorities should start digging around the area where you live.
@Lasagna Boy omg, it's whinny, ugly Karen's limp boyfriend. LOL
@@karentucker2161 why be such a bitch ? Defo suit your name
@@rubynoire7015 she’s just being a tw@! John Wayne gracy is another theres more but can’t think off hand
Nothing like unsolved mysteries. This show scared me like crazy as a kid....and still does today as a fully grown man lol
It still scares me at 44 years old 😂😂
I'm 39years old and The sound of Robert Stacks voice and the creepy music still makes me turn the light on in the room.
Oh thank God they caught the scumbag who killed Lisa. He had buried the LIL MISS car in his backyard.
yeah sad. this is why eye witnesses are always the last piece of evidence you should use. they think they see what they see, and can be really convincing
I’m 31... and still turning down the volume (on my phone) when that creepy ass intro comes on. Lol. This shit Is scary as hell! Lol
Wow this brings back memories
It amazes me how long ago this series was on. It didn't seem so long ago, but now most of the criminals/survivors in this series are either dead or are 60+. Watched several of these where the criminal committed a horrible crime, was convicted, served his 10-20 years and is now a free man.
Right!! I can almost feel the carpet I sat on, petting while watching this bc I was soo scared. It was a good scared feeling though!!
@@the_gilded_age_phoenix8717 That's what I was thinking. The system has always been broken. If I were a judge, and it wasn't self-defense, I would never let a child molester or murder out. It's either death or rot in high security prison with no beds just a sleeping bag with the top half cut off. Lol
Me too from back in the day
So so glad that the Stack episodes are out. I really wish that you could get Satanic Grandma and George Owens cases out.
Todd Autry Satanic Grandma!!! I totally remember that one! WOW! I remember the kid sitting close to the TV while he watched a pentagram and other symbols on the screen with the grandma standing behind him in the reenactment!
What season is satanic grandma on
Satanic Grandma was Season 4, episode 106. It was gold. The grandma kidnapped the grandson because the parents were getting a divorce. Also in that episode, the sad case of Debbie Race. The lady who froze to death in a lake. That one caught headlines in the early 90's.
Why are the Stack episodes on youtube for free after being hidden in DVD releases for 15 years?? Does anyone know what changed?
@@wotgM316 I think the producers received an offer from Amazon that they couldn't refuse, so a deal was made to stream all the classic seasons on Amazon several months ago. Now that the show has been available on that platform for a while, Filmrise decided to stream them here as well, hoping it's gonna generate more views for this channel. Very good initiative on their part, everybody gain from it, and now maybe we can all help solve more cases together. 😊👍
Thanks for the share, I really miss these shows.
Date. 3/13/19 Wednesday
Time 2:12pm
FAITHFUL SaviOUR
Friday 5/3/19
5:59am
Missouri
5/06/19
18.04 pm
Ireland
Tuesday,October 15th,2019.
11:20pm
BAHAMAS
Tuesday, October 22nd, 2019.
8:40AM
Colorado
Thursday, July 9, 2020
8:30pm
New Orleans, Louisiana USA
I live in a 1-bedroom apt & it's bc of this show that I go out of the way to make sure my door is always locked & that my windows are always locked & bc of my paranoia I now have...I check my bathroom, bedroom & closet just to make sure nothing or nobody is hiding in these places...That's how bad is getting w/ me watching this series! ...Thanks, UM ;-) 🤣🤣
You always should. Especially living alone. Having a dog helps too they'll alert you if anything is different.
@@kateyoung7929 ...Yeah, I know, I decided to get a few cameras set up at my front door, my bedroom window & one in the kitchen just to have better piece of mind ...way too many crazys out there
I remember watching unsolved mysteries when i was a kid. The music and Robert Stack definitely scared the sh!t out of me.
Thank you for the uploads i love this show
I miss Robert stack I really couldn't get into Dennis . He was good but he cannot replace Robert no one can. Robret was the better choice for unsolved mysteries. I miss Robert today 😞😞😞😞😞
Jacob: Here is the gold I have. I will give you clues to find the rest.
Julia: Why don't you just tell me exactly where it is or maybe show me on a map?
Jacob: No I do not have time for that! Let me just tell you all these crazy clues instead.
Julia: 😑
I'm going to find the treasure guys wish me luck
I found it several years ago. I turned it into gold chains and grills.
Lynx Star Automotive Ben Forman, is that you?
rip
Famous last words....
I call dibs.
My grandpa was the highway patrolman who pulled lil miss over, he regrets not giving her a ticket as it may have saved her life. It still haunts him today.
@Josh Kolbo He died back in 2021, he was 75
@@bigwhiteduckproductions1965 sorry for your loss.
WTF are you talking about he gave her a citation!!! 🥴🤡
@@AnastasiaBeaverhousncitation isn't always a ticket. Could have just been a warning
Why did he give her the pussycat pass?
I feel sorry for Hotard’s wife. Imagine finding out about your husband’s affair the way she did.
The 'Hotard segment' on here eerily reminded me of the 1976 film 'The Town That Dreaded Sundown' about the unsolved serial killer murders in Texarkana back in 1946.
Me too
Did some research, and it appears Howard and Audrey had a kid together. A little girl Audrey tried to pass off as her adopted daughter.
I’m not so sure about that I personally think his wife would be a suspect
Yeah, her and the little girl and family. I have a real hard time feeling bad for an adulteror and a home wrecker.
Lol I would be SO pissed if a guy on his death bed was giving me "clues". Either tell me or don't tell me.
🤣😂🤣
I can watch these over and over. I pretty much know these story's by heart🙂
I still get the chills listening to this music
I was watching these on Tubi, but I switched to RUclips because the comments are gold.
RUclips’s comments can be gold hu? 😂
Would that be gold from the Superstition Mountains?!? Are u saying u finally found the Lost Dutchman's Mine?!?
They need to put Robert Stack's narration voice into Tiktok/RUclips/Instagram so we can make videos with him narrating them. That would be epic
Ai voice my man netflix should get to that
This is the best channel I have found.
I remember Lisa The mother wrote a book about her murder I believe
Here we go again with that name "Wayne". Isnt it scary that so many killers seem to share that name?
Yup.
Wayne Ellington? Wayne Gretzky? Wayne Newton? Wayne Rooney? LOL Generalizing much.
Mr. Sinjin-Smyth he didn’t say all people named Wayne are killers you dope. He said it’s funny that aloof of people that are killers are named Wayne.
I've noticed it as a common middle name of notorious criminals.
@@stingraybeach9710 John WAYNE gacy for example
Best show of all time... Robert Stack, that voice!
What made this show great is the public could help solve the mysteries.
The Lost Dutchman Mine is one of the best produced Unsolved Mysteries segment. i even took my screen name from it!
Do you have any idea where the Mine is?
Couldn't agree more. So many segments in the first few seasons were especially well done and this is right in that group.
It’s always stories of hidden treasure buried in folklore that always captivates everyone’s interest
She was an 18 year old girl making a multi-state road trip by herself, at night. I'd be worried and concerned about that.
My grandmother seemed much more concerned when my niece was driving from Houston to our hometown in Louisiana, which was a 2 1/2 hour drive than when I did basically a cross country trip from Virginia to Louisiana by myself. I asked her why and she said because I'm a boy. This was in the early 2000s.
@TXzombiekiller LOL!!!!! OMG. 😂😂😂 Exactly the same situation as me! Hehe! When I did the VA/LA trip, I was 20.
Since her case has always intrigued me, I read up on it more. Lisa was working as a manager at an Arby's in Denver at the time, and presumably lived on her own there. Her age probably gives people pause now, but the 80s were a different time.
@@cheesecake134
I know. In the 80s many people in their 20s lived on their own and could while working a minimum wage job. Damn things seemed so much better back then in those respects. Now young adults in their 20s and even 30s are still living at home! It's just too costly
Definitely different time era. I was 17 living in Baton Rouge by myself working 2 jobs and playing in the streets at night. Did some sketchy stuff with sketchy people thank god I survived! I was a couple hours from my hometown and drove back and forth on weekends middle of the night with no cell phones, nothing. I still think back to a lot of it and I'm thankful to be alive. We had a lot of serial killers bc they could get away with it.
What I never figured out was how Dale Eaton even connected with Lisa Kimmel. Was he hitchhiking?
So these two people lived only a mile away from the murder scene and they were both known to be violent, did the police ever even question them?
Prob were afraid to...just listen to what the daughter said about them!!
Man alive - This show found the best actors in these re-enactments.
Some of these mysteries were already 30 plus years old at the time of airing. Now, they’re 60 plus years old.
"What are they doing, daddy?" "Never you mind, let's go!" AWESOME.
FYI - the witness in the Lisa Marie (Lil Miss) case described the man's face as small featured, "aquiline, as I think the poets call it." "Aquiline" actually means hook-nosed (aka "Roman" nose), which indicates large features, the opposite of what he said (or meant). No harm, no foul. Just for everyone's edification.
Lol I know, I was like what’s this guy talking about
That’s what I was wondering too. I had to replay that part a couple of times cause I didn’t get it. Thanks for the clarification.
The older I get the more teh parents reactions get to me. Especially the mothers. I didnt think of that when I was a kid.
Unsolved Mysteries was literally the first interactive, real time, series.
Your first is always the best! 🤣
Always looked forward to watching this, back in the days. 👍
There's something so chilling about the Lisa Kimmell case. All these sightings of her car and a girl driving it...it's pretty haunting, very strange case.
It has been solved over a decade ago thankfully. The miscreant, and sexual deviant is on death row.
@@LynxStarAuto Yep very true, as the update say at the end of the segment. However it doesn't entirely explain some of the sightings or timeline of when her recognizable car was seen. The monster was caught, and that's what matter of course, but I still find the sightings strange.
Jonathan Turbide Eyewitnesses can be very, very, unreliable, and inconsistent.
@@jonathanturbide2232 Eaton could have been forcing Lisa to drive around at gunpoint from the backseat. He could also have had a female accomplice (or relative) who was driving Lisa's car.
@@jonathanturbide2232 I think they simply saw another car with a personalized plate. Lil Miss is a very popular saying for license plates. I don't believe that these people are lying; they're simply mistaken. It could have been another car or they could have actually seen Lisa but were mistaken about the day. I've seen witnesses right on unsolved mysteries who swore up and down that they saw missing people, turns out those people were dead the entire time.
Yup that's always why you should ask for identification .
The fisherman that had the bad feeling, I wonder if subconsciously he had smelled her body first, before seeing her.
They say we have many things left over from the caveman days, when danger lurked everywhere.
That was my thought too.
Smelled the decomp or heard something (scavengers) that didn't quite register consciously but he still knew something was "off".
Many things....such as...?
I thought exact same
Well the smell of decay is pretty unmistakable...
@@Seek1878 But at that temperature, decomposition would have been minimal. Even the sheriff said there were few if any signs of decomposition.
"Thomas Hotard had been shot to death." *peppy 50s music plays in the background*🤣🤷♀️
That's Some doggone good music 🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣
I wish Unsolved Mysteries had done a story on a distant Family Member of mine who disappeared from Lexington, Ky in 1977 and hasn't been seen or heard from since.
Webslueths post it on
@@4thcoming Anyone who has tried looking into it is met with resistance and death threats. I do know that in the 1970's, Lexington was the hottest spot for drugs, specifically cocaine and it's been proven the Police were involved in getting it in and out of the City and this relative of mine was supposedly dating a Lexington Police Officer at the time of her disappearance. This Officer was later arrested in 1993 on Federal Drug charges and was released recently. This relative's name is Melanie Flynn and she was the Daughter of a Kentucky State Senator. There's book about the whole thing called the Bluegrass Conspiracy. A lot of Major Players were involved from the Police to Attorneys and even people associated with then Kentucky Governor, John Y. Brown.
Wow!
Emperor Palpatine I hope you and your family find some answers some day. I’ve been through a Missing Person’s case with my family as well. It’s really difficult to process emotionally when there are no answers or leads.
That sort of report would be best suited for the Netflix revival. But even if they would be blacklisted from picking it up, perhaps the podcast might be able to do it!
This is one of my favorites and my son falls asleep listening to his voice
Robert stack is a legend, but the way he said "Cafè" had me chuckling a bit.
Seemed a perfect pronunciation of the word.
Ikr. Kuhfay😆 He also said DJ in another episode Dee Jay
too bad they dumped a civil war cannon, those things are worth a lot of money today
Robert Stack makes it scary af
God I love this show
I have the unsolved mysteries DVD set and the lost Dutchman’s treasure I seen a lot of times It kind of upsets me that I’m seeing extra footage that I never seen before.
The writers and reenactments are brilliant, and Robert Stack fits like a glove!
es un lujo ver esta serie en esta calidad. Muchas gracias
This was the best show ever!
Thrown into the swamp tied to a cannon wtf
They're brutal down here!! No regard for human life in New Orleans slums...
Anyway who "loves guns" (as it was stated) is a low-life sack of crap with no respect for life.
One of if not the best television shows ever
As a New Orleans resident I find it crazy how coastal erosion helped the killer of Hotart get away with murder
Robert Stack is the best 👌 !!!!! Everyday I love watching the videos and every night they haunt me so much. But I still can't stop watching the videos!!!!
@36:49 it is like that episode of Family Guy. Kermit The Frog with the shotgun.
2:00 lil Miss
13:37 Lost Mines
25:42 Kiss of Death
I like the music in the Lost Dutchman mine. I don't quite think an 81 year old man would have gone through all that work to hide the entrance to the mine. I realize that the man died not long after, but still, that's a lot of work for a single man to do.
Just because your lazy, doesn’t mean he was
@@Ijustinsultedyou What a remarkably ignorant and arrogant comment to make Iceboy. Let me know when you get to be 81, then we can meet up and see if you can do what Waltz was said to have accomplished and come out in top form.
I doubt few can.
@@tr4480 put the donuts down and get your lazy ass off the couch pops.
Ohhhh man what an amazing TV show.
21:31 "He look to me like a nice little old man that er found a lovely place to give up the ghost" very interesting way to describe someone's death
The treasure’s been found. The founder keeps it secret because why would he want to give it up to the USGOV thief’s.
If he's keeping it a secret how do you know he found it?
@@tekbarrier sorry, but that's a secret.
@@clintonlunn4357 By your logic the government hates America
@@clintonlunn4357 Good for the finder. I hope he shares it with loved ones and enjoys the help he was able to give them.
@@tekbarrier vp
They didn't tell the most interesting part of the Kimmel case...her car was found buried on his property.
Thanks. I kept wondering whatever had happened to her car...
Thanks fotfor another great episode of unsolved mysteries The lisa kimmel case was very tragic and sad dale Wayne eaton was a evil Pathetic MF😡 who preyed on lisa and took the opportunity he Brutally murdered her buried her car on his property he was tried convicted and sentenced to death but I was really glad when her parents watched as his property burned to the ground I pray he's dead now and went straight to Hell🤬👿 R.I.P. LISA KIMMEL💙🙏😥💜💜
@Jewel Clark I hoped this coward would be dead by now thanks for the update
Audrey was stunning. How tragic her last moments must of been. RIP to her, Thomas, and Lisa.
I has nightmares of this show as a kid. Creepy music with a creppt voiced old man telling stories of unsolved murders. Not the best show to watch at 6 but I liked it until bedtime lol. What an amazing show!.
Robert Stack was and is 1 of the best narrators I'm crime show history.
So glad these are on RUclips
“She was the kind of woman who was loving and giving”
Yeahhhhh she was loving alright 🌚
Whenever I hear the intro it takes me back to an easier time a more simpler time
Hearing him say the name of the town I live in, Casper, is great lol.
I lived in casper until 1992 and then moved back to Oklahoma I spent 11 yrs in Casper
My thoughts exactly to when I heard him say “Vancouver” in a previous episode.
I remember as a teenager in the late 80's, my dad not letting my sister get a personalized license plate that said, "Lil Princess". Because he said it would be unsafe for her driving at night, and people knowing it's a female driving, especially on rural roads.