Will you be watching 1899 when it releases on Netflix? Also, are there any other sea mysteries you'd like us to cover in a future episode? Thanks again for watching!
Excellent video! Loved every story and would definitely love to know a bit more about the Ourang Medan. Thank you Paul and Well, I Never crew for always bringing us great tales!! ❤
I would love for you to do a deep dive on the Ourang Medan. I recently finished my first playthrough of a game called The Man of Medan, a horror video game. To discover the game is based on an actual ship and uses some of the facts and speculations about what happened to it, is a real thrill. Then to hear you say the captain of the Mary Celeste, Benjamin Briggs, was from Massachusetts added to the fun because I grew up in Massachusetts. Thanks for this very enjoyable video.
When I was a little kid in the 1990's my grandfather would take me out on his boat to go fishing. One day as were were sailing out of the marina we were beholden to a most amazing sight. A three masted barquentine in full sail was making her way into our marina. It would be the last time this ship would ever sail. When we returned from our trip the barquentine had been docked but was taking on water. We watched as water poured out the sides from the pumps working below. A few days later we returned to marina and went out on another fishing trip. We sailed past the sunken barquentine, its three masts the only parts visible above the waterline. When we returned the tide had gone out and the wheelhouse and deck cabins were exposed above the waterline. I watched as the wake from our boat lapped up against the wheelhouse door, its hinges creaking as it swung open and closed with the action of the waves. And so the massive wooden ship languished there sunken at its dock slowly deteriorating until the wreckers came and broke her up, the pieces taken away leaving not a trace but in my memory. For me it was the first and last time I would see a ship so elegant from the age of sail arrive and then part from this world. It must have truly been a magical time when these ships ruled the waves.
Wow! You have a knack for storytelling. I could almost see the massive wooden hull of the forlorn ship as you were describing it, half sunken into the sea, with her creaking wheelhouse door opening and closing to the ebb and flow of the waves made by your grandfather’s boat. If only she could have talked. The stories that grand old vessel could have told! Like a wisened old person describing their youth and the ways of yesteryear. What once was a gloriously grand handcrafted ship that took a great many months, or years even, of back breaking labor and craftsmanship, that bore sailors across the mighty seas to lands unimaginable by what was considered “polite society” of its day, now hauled out of the mighty waters that bore her, reduced to a mere pile of scrap wood and iron to be burned up, melted down or tossed in a dump to rot. Such is the way of things. Old and outdated, deteriorated and irrelevant, and all but forgotten in a world of speed boats and ships with gas powered engines. I’m glad you saw her final moments. Now she’ll live on in your memory.
I simply love the way you present your tales. Your voice inflections as you relate your stories give life to them. I could listen to you, my favorite Scotsman, all day!! You could do in depth stories on any and all of these ships. I'm sure you ad your research team could bring enough details that still have not been previously widely prsented that we would be sitting at the edge of our seats during your presentation. Thank you for doing such a wonderful job!
As you hear the cracking of bones and a chill run down your spine. Howling wind rushes past...you hear a splash... you journey to the side to see what it is to hear another splash but from the otherside. As you turn to investigate, more splashing happens, always opposing your gaze. You stop moving, standing still your eyes jutt back and forth as you hear the floor boards creak behind you as another tingle hits your spine. A cold but light grasp upon your shoulders as fog rolls over them, engulfing you. You see not but fog. Hear nothing but ill silence. You take a single step which creaks the floor and stop before completion. Silence. Fog. A tingle in your spine.
@@myTERAexperience A Nice description, good enough to make a creepy thing much more so. I think that our imaginations at work is sometimes more scary than anything else. You managed to capture that pretty good.
The story about the "ghost ship" being seen every 48 years was the most fascinating one, in my opinion! All were really interesting. Thank you, James 😊!
I would LOVE to hear more about the Ourang Medan. It makes me wonder if there was some sort of gas leak that killed the crew. Maybe chemicals they had on board but weren't aware could react with each other?
@@runlarryrun77 The story is from the 1940s, so way before the era of the creepy pasta, but it is most likely an urban legend. But there isn’t enough evidence for or against the incidents existence to definitely say either way. We’ll probably never know for sure unless someone comes across the wreck of the Medan.
The best theory I’ve heard is that they were carrying some kind of Japanese nerve agent to the US for testing and it got out. There are some chemicals (I forget their names, this is all from memory) that they could have been carrying that would have accounted for both the crews conditions and the explosion that sank her. It would also account for the Medan never appearing in any registries as they would have been using either an unregistered freighter or one that was renamed at sea.
I love the ocean - so powerful and unpredictable! We recently moved to a little house by the sea and I find it fascinating how so little of the ocean floor has actually been mapped. What lurks down there in the abyss? It is so intriguing and also very scary.. love to have a swim but who knows what is living below the water.. 😱 I just love these mysteries..
Depending on where you live, the water at the shoreline likely won't have any dangerous creatures lurking within. So go for a swim! Swimming in the ocean is unlike swimming anywhere else. As someone now living in landlocked Ohio, I miss it terribly.
@@christine4223 I live in central Italy, Christine. This autumn has been crazy warm here and we have been swimming most days until just a few days ago.. I don't like the idea of being so far out that you have no idea what might be lurking beneath you.. 😱 but I certainly make the most of living by the ocean and enjoy swimming 🤗
@@pimpozza Thanks for responding and letting me know you do swim in the ocean. I did get to swim one time in the deep ocean off the coast of Massachusetts. It was strange to be in the water and not be able to see land. Knowing there was so much water below me was strangely exhilarating. Of course I was a teenager then and I may feel a little differently now 😄
@@christine4223 Wow! Swimming off the coast of Massachusetts in deepwater was so brave of you, Christina! I admit I have a fear of exremely deep bodies of water and there is actually a name for it. It's called _"thalassophobia"_ .. I kid you not! I haven't lived far from the ocean for the past two decades but now we are right on the seashore and I have to say it is lovely just to walk out the gate and wade into the sea. We had a large earthquake here 2 days ago.. it was the strongest on the Adriatica coast for nearly 100 years - measuring 5.7 on the Richter Scale. Luckily the epicentre was 20 miles out in the ocean, otherwise the devastation and destruction would have been bad. So we count our lucky stars. No real damage, no deaths but oh... did the house shake! The sea helped us this time... but our beautiful planet is rebelling.. 🌍❤🙋🏻♀️
@@pimpozza I've heard of that phobia. Good to hear it doesn't keep you out of the water altogether. You are a brave person. Goodness! The earthquake must have been terrifying. I'm glad to hear you weren't hurt and I hope there was no damage to your house and belongings. Our beautiful planet may indeed be rebelling.
@@WellINever More? YES PLEASE! My love of shipwrecked began with Titanic when I was a child - then it was discovered in 1985! My next fixation was the Edmund Fitzgerald - and yesterday was the anniversary i never forget those 2 dates.
Best theory of the Mary Celeste is they abandoned it due to a storm. Many sailors back then assumed ownership rights to abandoned but still seaworthy vessels...not all of them granted due to not knowing if there was criminal conduct involved.
My favourite theory is that they abandoned it because they thought there was risk of explosion of alcohol fumes They were transporting alcohol as cargo. So they left the hatch open to let the fumes out and decided to wait it out in the lifeboat. But something went wrong and the lifeboat got lost at sea, whereas Mary Seleste was fine after all.
I'd love to hear deep dives on any of these stories, but the Ourang Medan is particularly intriguing! The origins of ghost stories is one of my favorite subjects in general, and one I'd love to hear you do more of!
When 'Bedtime Stories' first did a vid on the Ourang Medan, there was a very knowedgeable and chilling comment made by someone detailing how sure they were that the people on board were killed by a nerve agent. And really, in spite of al the mystery, confusion, and legend built up around the possibly non-existant Ourang Medan, I think the most chilling part is really that nerve agents actually exist - and what they do. Mysteries and histories may intrigue us, but the true horror is always in reality.
It was rather interesting to hear about the Joyita, but I was genuinely surprised that there wasn't a reference to the *other* very well known mystery surrounding Roland West. Usually he's remembered as one of the prime suspects in the death of Thelma Todd. I am honestly curious if the oversight was intentional in order to keep the theme of the video intact, or if the writers were unaware of the connection.
What about the amazing survival story of the SS Minnow. It was only through the ability of Professor Roy Hinkley to improvise almost any material from coconut shells and bamboo that they survived 3 years on that desert island..
I know that I’m very late in responding to this video, but I haven’t been receiving any notifications from you. I do have the notifications on, but I don’t understand why this is happening. Maybe RUclips doesn’t want me to learn a few things ( I’m joking, of course). I’d love to learn more about each story from this video. It reaffirms my decision to never, ever go on any cruise ships, or boats on any oceans. Mr. Brodie, you definitely deserve to have millions of subscribers. The way you tell each story is riveting, educational, and inspiring. I can’t wait to catch up on the videos, that I had missed due to not receiving any notifications, with a cup of coffee and a half of a cream cheese danish. Yes…this is my life!
First off, good job at narrating the stories. I would really like to know more about 'Ourang Medan'. I heard this story before, but I never go into full detail or check for any updates. And someone need to remember to check for the ghost ship on 2048.
Thank you, Paul! You are always such a wonderful storyteller and ghost ships are one of my favourite things - so I would say this is a perfect combination 😁🙏🏻
I loved this video as I am a huge fan of maritime history, ghost ship stories/conspiracies/mysterious unknown events (also love your true crime videos and hearing about ones from other countries and from earlier times). Some believe the Ourang Medan was a completely made up story, others like you mentioned think it was a cover up by the US military (which definitely wouldn't be the first cover up done by my military and certainly would be easy to change its name/list of cargo it was carrying, as well as sinking the ship to cover up evidence) ....either way it's always been an intriguing mystery.
Great video, thanks! My „favourite theory“ about the Mary Celest is the one the Doctor Who writers came up with in the 60s: the crew was afraid of the Daleks so the jumped off board.
Agreed! I don't see how his lust and hatred (and frankly, entitlement) to the woman of his Captain and best friend could have driven him to not only kill a crew member but to steer the entire ship into the rocks...crazy...
Hmm, If everyone on board was killed, how do we know all this? Such a detailed account, yet no one survived to relate it How did they tell us? Ouija Board?
@@ItsJustLisa A bit of a stretch. Because it doesn't explain how they "know" the events on ship that led to the wreck. how do they "know" he attacked the guy at the wheel for example. Or who was where?
I'd love a deep dive by you on the Medan! I'd be really curious to find out what your investigations would dig up. It seems like a case of a tale spun out of control from something perfectly rational and mundane, but even with fictional stories, I love finding out how and why they might have gained such traction over the years. I find humanity's history of folktales just as interesting as factual history.
I only found this channel last night. I've binged watched while I've been up with my sick puppy. The stories I've heard so far are very interesting, and many I've not heard before. Plus it's good to listen to a familiar accent!! I sub to a few channels and they're mostlu all American. Thankyou!!
Yes please do a deep dive into that ship if you can. Ever since hearing about it, I've always wanted to know more because of the way the crew was found.
Yes there WAS a sighting of the Lady Lovibond in 1998!!! I was at the end of Deal pier overlooking the Goodwin Sands with hundreds of other people and at around 6.30pm a shout went up. What looked like the rigging of the ship showed up clearly against the light of the moon rising. Myself and the other ghost watchers can’t all be wrong!! A good film, by the way . Thank you! PS: I hope to be on Deal pier again in 2048 !
Well, what a collection of intriguing mysteries! I love stories to make you ponder. Especially when they involve the oceans. I'd love you to a deep-dive(!) into the Ourang Medan 😊
I adore this channel. You have no idea how many panic attacks you have talked me through. You are a rare bird indeed. Thank you for that and many other things... Also..I introduced my mom to this channel, and now she is kinda in love with you.. not sure if I should be sorry or amused.. You don't have to worry, tho. She has issues with traveling so I'm pretty sure you're ok.. lol..
One thing I didn't hear mentioned about the Mary Celeste is that the Captain's wife and a newborn infant were on board. It is speculated they left the ship temporarily for some reason and the lifeboat disengaged. My bet is piracy, but if nothing was missing from the rig, that moots that theory. Chemical emissions are possible as seems factual with the Ourang Medan. These mysteries are perpetual. We will never know.
Many believe Ourang Medan is just an urban legend as there was no registry for any ship under that name,the supposed rescue ship had no mention of it in their records nor was there mention in Lloyd's Shipping Register.
I was so excited for 1899 because I love maritime horror and survival stories like “The Terror” based on the lost Franklin expedition or Shackleton’s expedition to Antarctica. But people have told me that I might be disappointed with 1899 because it’s not what it seems. Still gonna watch it. The MV Joyita is defeinitely a strange mystery. So is the Kaz II and the Patanela. They still don’t know what happened to the crews.
Thank you for another awesome video, especially on a niche' topic as this. Could you cover the Urang Medane (pardon if i misspelled it). Or maybe a part two to this as a general topic. I spent many years in Michigan (as a teen/adult) and local stories (ae well ss historical ones like those listed here) have always fascinated me.
Thanks so much for that. I'd love to hear more re the Ourang Medan & Mary Celeste (+ other ghost ships). I grew up on these types of stories (along with Dreamtime stories) & can't get enough of them 🙂
I love mysteries of all kinds. I just found this channel. I am so excited bc the unknown is fantastic and always keeps me wanting more. Thx so very much.
A very informative programme, with so much content; loved it. The Joyita business having a connection to the death of Thelma "Hot Toddy" Todd is a new angle; that, itself is one of Hollywood's more curious scandalous mysteries. As for the Ourang Medan, this reminds me a little of the enduring mystery of the 'Flying Enterprise', lost near Plymouth a few years later. Her captain stayed aboard until forced to leave before it broke up, which is why it is still remembered, but there are rumours about its cargo - something special that the US didn't want known about. And the last I personally saw regarding the Marie Celeste suggested that her cargo was the cause - it was claimed she was carrying barrelled alcohol or petrol, causing a serious vapour build up in the hold. Her crew took to the boat, having loosened the hatch covers to allow the vapour to disperse, their line broke and the boat drifted away to be lost forever.
I’m extremely fascinated by mysteries of all kinds, but particularly those that take place on the sea. Also, I watched a few videos the other day about missing people in Alaska. They interviewed scientists, whom some are of the belief the high amount of missing persons is to do with the expansiveness and weather, but also possible magnetic vortexes. People who have survived their experiences witnessed their compasses going crazy. Some also had hallucinations, which can lead to a change in one’s behavior and their going missing. They call this the Alaska Triangle as it’s similar to the Bermuda and other triangles. I would love if you could do an episode about this someday.
These stories give me a chill. Truth is stranger than fiction. I love these type of stories about ghost. I am a coward because if I listen to them at night I keep every light on and afraid to go to sleep.
Would love to see this channel do an informative deep-dive into the Ourang Medan. I’ve read up on many of the bizarre facts, and I personally believe that it was carrying chemicals without appropriate permits and safety measures, chemicals being disposed of by the US or Japanese governments after WW2. Chemicals which reacted with seawater the ship took on, resulting in gases which killed all of the crew, ultimately resulting in an explosion.
A few of my "Subscribed+Notifications turned on" favorite channels. My anglophile soul get almost an overdose of happy vibes, from everything from the narrator, his clothes (is there a name for that style?), the voice (what kind of accent is that? I think it's the most elegant type of them all!), the beard, and the cozy "scary" stories. You are only missing a pipe in the corner of the mouth, a huge armchair, to puff the pipe in, with a fireplace in a corner, and an enormous library in the background with all sorts of strange apparatuses on tables, telescopes, microscopes, alchemy lab with bubbling vials of green oozing mystery fluids inside, a huge, yellowed globe or map, with the British Empire marked on it, busts of the Duke of Wellington or Nelson, portraits on the walls of the late Queen, also the kings and queens back several centuries, a St. George flag etc. etc. ad infinitum! 🙂
My person favorite bit of the decor on the set is that single blue-white light glowing behind his head, surrounding him with a glowing halo. It pulls all attention to his face as he speaks. The soft warm lighting on the rest of the set draws you in and makes you comfortable and that halo light centers your attention on him and then his voice hooks you on the tale he has to tell today. Very well crafted set!
Being told tragic and horrible stories, but in my favourite accent and a really nice voice is a confusing experience, but as usual with me, the Scottish accent outweighs the nightmare material. 😌
An Interesting fact: A few years ago there was a story in one of the American News Papers, think it was either the New York Post or the Wall Street Journal, but some one sailing from Bermuda to Spain, SAW the Celest lingering around the Azores. They reported it to the Coast Guard and sailed on. The report from the Coast Guard stated no ship found but not an unlikely sighting as the Celest wasn't where she was last seen, where she was ran aground. SO THERE IS GOOD POSSIBILITY that she is STILL ghost shipping around the planet... And she's not the only supposed MISSING SHIP to be spotted sailing unmanned. Apparently Ghost Ships Sightings were on a rise a few years back. Now what I would love to know more about is the Ghost Planes... It's highly understandable about Ghost Ships, the current carries them everywhere... But what makes planes that do not have autopilot functions, asides from a rope holding the controls, land at the proper airports with no crew... THOSE ARE THE STORIES THAT REALLY SEND SHIVERS DOWN ANYONES SPINE as they scratch their heads in curiosity of, WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CREW and HOW THE HELL DID A PLANE LAND WITH NO PILOT OR AUTOPILOT? Far as I have researched it's happened a few times with small planes and twice that I know of with Bombers, once in England and once in the U.S. I believe England was WW1 and the U.S. was WW2... True creepy situations.
Only discovered this wonderful compilation now....too short, I loved it! In light of the recent Titan submersible incident, perhaps more sea disaster stories please, as it links so closely to human arrogance.
Red flag statements that strike fear into the heart of any life long Mariner: 1: "She's practically unsinkable!" 2: "Let's take the North West Passage today." 3: "I think I'll bring my wife." If you're ever on a ship and you hear any of the above quotes, the vessel is cursed, and you should abandon ship immediately. 😆
Please go more into Mary Celeste!! I am fascinated, obsessed with that ship. I heard that it had alcohol in barrels in its cargo and that there may have been fumes given off and there was bad weather for a number of days so they could not vent the cargo holds and they might have feared the ship would explode so they got in the life boat because the wife and child were screaming and then the rope tethering the life boat to the ship was cut off in bad weather they encountered later that day. I heard too a life boat with dead unidentified people washed up on shore and the people were buried and may have been the captain and his family and the crew.
Will you be watching 1899 when it releases on Netflix? Also, are there any other sea mysteries you'd like us to cover in a future episode?
Thanks again for watching!
I just added it to my watch list! Thanks for making this video.
If it's even half as good as Dark was, certainly!
The Emmy Rose sinking would be a great one to cover. It happened not too long ago in 2020 and mysteriously sunk without any radio distress call.
Excellent video! Loved every story and would definitely love to know a bit more about the Ourang Medan. Thank you Paul and Well, I Never crew for always bringing us great tales!! ❤
I would love for you to do a deep dive on the Ourang Medan. I recently finished my first playthrough of a game called The Man of Medan, a horror video game. To discover the game is based on an actual ship and uses some of the facts and speculations about what happened to it, is a real thrill. Then to hear you say the captain of the Mary Celeste, Benjamin Briggs, was from Massachusetts added to the fun because I grew up in Massachusetts.
Thanks for this very enjoyable video.
I'd love to hear a deep dive on the Orang Medan case!
I was just thinking this! It’s so, so interesting
I asked for one as well in my reply to his pinned comment.
Yes, please!
I second that, I had not heard of that one before.
Me too 🙋♀️it seems like a really interesting story
When I was a little kid in the 1990's my grandfather would take me out on his boat to go fishing. One day as were were sailing out of the marina we were beholden to a most amazing sight. A three masted barquentine in full sail was making her way into our marina. It would be the last time this ship would ever sail.
When we returned from our trip the barquentine had been docked but was taking on water. We watched as water poured out the sides from the pumps working below. A few days later we returned to marina and went out on another fishing trip. We sailed past the sunken barquentine, its three masts the only parts visible above the waterline. When we returned the tide had gone out and the wheelhouse and deck cabins were exposed above the waterline. I watched as the wake from our boat lapped up against the wheelhouse door, its hinges creaking as it swung open and closed with the action of the waves.
And so the massive wooden ship languished there sunken at its dock slowly deteriorating until the wreckers came and broke her up, the pieces taken away leaving not a trace but in my memory. For me it was the first and last time I would see a ship so elegant from the age of sail arrive and then part from this world. It must have truly been a magical time when these ships ruled the waves.
That is a very cool story. I bet it was a sight to behold!
So well written!!
Thank You
@Rebecca N
I love this!!
Thanks for Sharing your memories and your gift
Oh what an amazing story. I have been in a boat or abroad a ship.
Wow! You have a knack for storytelling. I could almost see the massive wooden hull of the forlorn ship as you were describing it, half sunken into the sea, with her creaking wheelhouse door opening and closing to the ebb and flow of the waves made by your grandfather’s boat. If only she could have talked. The stories that grand old vessel could have told! Like a wisened old person describing their youth and the ways of yesteryear. What once was a gloriously grand handcrafted ship that took a great many months, or years even, of back breaking labor and craftsmanship, that bore sailors across the mighty seas to lands unimaginable by what was considered “polite society” of its day, now hauled out of the mighty waters that bore her, reduced to a mere pile of scrap wood and iron to be burned up, melted down or tossed in a dump to rot. Such is the way of things. Old and outdated, deteriorated and irrelevant, and all but forgotten in a world of speed boats and ships with gas powered engines. I’m glad you saw her final moments. Now she’ll live on in your memory.
I simply love the way you present your tales. Your voice inflections as you relate your stories give life to them. I could listen to you, my favorite Scotsman, all day!!
You could do in depth stories on any and all of these ships. I'm sure you ad your research team could bring enough details that still have not been previously widely prsented that we would be sitting at the edge of our seats during your presentation.
Thank you for doing such a wonderful job!
Thank you for such kind comments, Ginger! You're too kind 🙏🙇😊
I feel quite the same
I can't imagine how creepy it would be to set foot on a ship that was clearly "adrift."
As you hear the cracking of bones and a chill run down your spine. Howling wind rushes past...you hear a splash... you journey to the side to see what it is to hear another splash but from the otherside. As you turn to investigate, more splashing happens, always opposing your gaze. You stop moving, standing still your eyes jutt back and forth as you hear the floor boards creak behind you as another tingle hits your spine. A cold but light grasp upon your shoulders as fog rolls over them, engulfing you. You see not but fog. Hear nothing but ill silence. You take a single step which creaks the floor and stop before completion. Silence. Fog. A tingle in your spine.
@@myTERAexperience A Nice description, good enough to make a creepy thing much more so.
I think that our imaginations at work is sometimes more scary than anything else.
You managed to capture that pretty good.
@@101boertjie thanks. 🤗
The story about the "ghost ship" being seen every 48 years was the most fascinating one, in my opinion! All were really interesting. Thank you, James 😊!
I think it was every 50 years!
I am no sailor, but I love Maritime stories. Anything and everything would be welcome! Keep up the great work!
I would LOVE to hear more about the Ourang Medan. It makes me wonder if there was some sort of gas leak that killed the crew. Maybe chemicals they had on board but weren't aware could react with each other?
It's just a creepypasta.
@@runlarryrun77 Is that what the game Man of Medan is based off from?
@@runlarryrun77 The story is from the 1940s, so way before the era of the creepy pasta, but it is most likely an urban legend. But there isn’t enough evidence for or against the incidents existence to definitely say either way. We’ll probably never know for sure unless someone comes across the wreck of the Medan.
@@NutsItsBerserkinTime Yes
The best theory I’ve heard is that they were carrying some kind of Japanese nerve agent to the US for testing and it got out. There are some chemicals (I forget their names, this is all from memory) that they could have been carrying that would have accounted for both the crews conditions and the explosion that sank her. It would also account for the Medan never appearing in any registries as they would have been using either an unregistered freighter or one that was renamed at sea.
I love the ocean - so powerful and unpredictable! We recently moved to a little house by the sea and I find it fascinating how so little of the ocean floor has actually been mapped. What lurks down there in the abyss? It is so intriguing and also very scary.. love to have a swim but who knows what is living below the water.. 😱 I just love these mysteries..
Depending on where you live, the water at the shoreline likely won't have any dangerous creatures lurking within. So go for a swim! Swimming in the ocean is unlike swimming anywhere else. As someone now living in landlocked Ohio, I miss it terribly.
@@christine4223 I live in central Italy, Christine. This autumn has been crazy warm here and we have been swimming most days until just a few days ago.. I don't like the idea of being so far out that you have no idea what might be lurking beneath you.. 😱 but I certainly make the most of living by the ocean and enjoy swimming 🤗
@@pimpozza Thanks for responding and letting me know you do swim in the ocean. I did get to swim one time in the deep ocean off the coast of Massachusetts. It was strange to be in the water and not be able to see land. Knowing there was so much water below me was strangely exhilarating. Of course I was a teenager then and I may feel a little differently now 😄
@@christine4223 Wow! Swimming off the coast of Massachusetts in deepwater was so brave of you, Christina! I admit I have a fear of exremely deep bodies of water and there is actually a name for it. It's called _"thalassophobia"_ .. I kid you not! I haven't lived far from the ocean for the past two decades but now we are right on the seashore and I have to say it is lovely just to walk out the gate and wade into the sea.
We had a large earthquake here 2 days ago.. it was the strongest on the Adriatica coast for nearly 100 years - measuring 5.7 on the Richter Scale. Luckily the epicentre was 20 miles out in the ocean, otherwise the devastation and destruction would have been bad. So we count our lucky stars. No real damage, no deaths but oh... did the house shake! The sea helped us this time... but our beautiful planet is rebelling.. 🌍❤🙋🏻♀️
@@pimpozza I've heard of that phobia. Good to hear it doesn't keep you out of the water altogether. You are a brave person. Goodness! The earthquake must have been terrifying. I'm glad to hear you weren't hurt and I hope there was no damage to your house and belongings. Our beautiful planet may indeed be rebelling.
I adore creepy tales of the sea!! Thank you, Paul 👍
Hey Pimpozza! If people enjoy this one there are certainly many more we can cover 😁⛵
@@WellINever This is a fascinating vid, Paul - really enjoying it! Yes, more please! 👏👏
@@WellINever
More? YES PLEASE! My love of shipwrecked began with Titanic when I was a child - then it was discovered in 1985! My next fixation was the Edmund Fitzgerald - and yesterday was the anniversary i never forget those 2 dates.
@@WellINever Please more! Captivating stories very well presented.
Me 2, lol 😂
Best theory of the Mary Celeste is they abandoned it due to a storm. Many sailors back then assumed ownership rights to abandoned but still seaworthy vessels...not all of them granted due to not knowing if there was criminal conduct involved.
Why abandon a big ship for a tiny life boat in a storm? Seems more dangerous...
My favourite theory is that they abandoned it because they thought there was risk of explosion of alcohol fumes They were transporting alcohol as cargo. So they left the hatch open to let the fumes out and decided to wait it out in the lifeboat. But something went wrong and the lifeboat got lost at sea, whereas Mary Seleste was fine after all.
Definitely would like to hear more about the Ourang Medan. That sounds mysterious!
It's just a creepypasta, it never happened.
I'd love to hear deep dives on any of these stories, but the Ourang Medan is particularly intriguing! The origins of ghost stories is one of my favorite subjects in general, and one I'd love to hear you do more of!
"worse things happen at sea" !!
Fab vid Paul - I enjoyed it with my tea and toast before my night shift x
RIP to all x
When 'Bedtime Stories' first did a vid on the Ourang Medan, there was a very knowedgeable and chilling comment made by someone detailing how sure they were that the people on board were killed by a nerve agent. And really, in spite of al the mystery, confusion, and legend built up around the possibly non-existant Ourang Medan, I think the most chilling part is really that nerve agents actually exist - and what they do. Mysteries and histories may intrigue us, but the true horror is always in reality.
It was rather interesting to hear about the Joyita, but I was genuinely surprised that there wasn't a reference to the *other* very well known mystery surrounding Roland West. Usually he's remembered as one of the prime suspects in the death of Thelma Todd. I am honestly curious if the oversight was intentional in order to keep the theme of the video intact, or if the writers were unaware of the connection.
What about the amazing survival story of the SS Minnow. It was only through the ability of Professor Roy Hinkley to improvise almost any material from coconut shells and bamboo that they survived 3 years on that desert island..
Too bad it was only 3 years.
I know that I’m very late in responding to this video, but I haven’t been receiving any notifications from you. I do have the notifications on, but I don’t understand why this is happening. Maybe RUclips doesn’t want me to learn a few things ( I’m joking, of course).
I’d love to learn more about each story from this video. It reaffirms my decision to never, ever go on any cruise ships, or boats on any oceans.
Mr. Brodie, you definitely deserve to have millions of subscribers. The way you tell each story is riveting, educational, and inspiring. I can’t wait to catch up on the videos, that I had missed due to not receiving any notifications, with a cup of coffee and a half of a cream cheese danish. Yes…this is my life!
Wonderful vid. Always love seeing new content from you, looking forward to seeing more in the future.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the episode. We've plenty more to come 😀
First off, good job at narrating the stories.
I would really like to know more about 'Ourang Medan'. I heard this story before, but I never go into full detail or check for any updates.
And someone need to remember to check for the ghost ship on 2048.
I’ve heard of the ‘Ourang Medan.’ But instead of a sailor’s tale, it reads like a creepy pasta story lol.
Thank you, Paul! You are always such a wonderful storyteller and ghost ships are one of my favourite things - so I would say this is a perfect combination 😁🙏🏻
I loved this video as I am a huge fan of maritime history, ghost ship stories/conspiracies/mysterious unknown events (also love your true crime videos and hearing about ones from other countries and from earlier times). Some believe the Ourang Medan was a completely made up story, others like you mentioned think it was a cover up by the US military (which definitely wouldn't be the first cover up done by my military and certainly would be easy to change its name/list of cargo it was carrying, as well as sinking the ship to cover up evidence) ....either way it's always been an intriguing mystery.
Great video, thanks! My „favourite theory“ about the Mary Celest is the one the Doctor Who writers came up with in the 60s: the crew was afraid of the Daleks so the jumped off board.
I’d love to hear more about the Lady Lovibond. The first mate seems like a total psychopath, as if he couldn’t have the new wife, no one would.
Agreed! I don't see how his lust and hatred (and frankly, entitlement) to the woman of his Captain and best friend could have driven him to not only kill a crew member but to steer the entire ship into the rocks...crazy...
Hmm, If everyone on board was killed, how do we know all this? Such a detailed account, yet no one survived to relate it How did they tell us? Ouija Board?
@@shelaghmoore-h4f, diary? They weren’t married on the ship, so he may have stated such to others after the wedding.
@@ItsJustLisa A bit of a stretch. Because it doesn't explain how they "know" the events on ship that led to the wreck. how do they "know" he attacked the guy at the wheel for example. Or who was where?
Im so glad to see another amazing video from you and your crew Paul keep up the sensational job guys I hope you had a wonderful birthday
Thank you, Jasmine! 😃
@@WellINever you're welcome
I'd love a deep dive by you on the Medan! I'd be really curious to find out what your investigations would dig up. It seems like a case of a tale spun out of control from something perfectly rational and mundane, but even with fictional stories, I love finding out how and why they might have gained such traction over the years. I find humanity's history of folktales just as interesting as factual history.
Please do the deep dive of the Ourang Medan! It is very intriguing!
Yes! I would like to know more of the story of the Ourang Medan. I enjoy this channel very much.
Would love a deep dive into the Ourang Medan! Love your videos 😊
I only found this channel last night. I've binged watched while I've been up with my sick puppy. The stories I've heard so far are very interesting, and many I've not heard before. Plus it's good to listen to a familiar accent!! I sub to a few channels and they're mostlu all American. Thankyou!!
Yes please do a deep dive into that ship if you can. Ever since hearing about it, I've always wanted to know more because of the way the crew was found.
I would love a deep dive into all these stories tbh! Really enjoyed this 1 👍
I love your videos so much, I bundle up with tea at bedtime and watch this, it’s my nighttime treat 😊
Would love to hear more about the Ourang Medan. But I always enjoy your videos.
Thank you, Donna. 🙏
@Maritime Horror covers this very well, as well as other maritime disasters.
Hello I love the way you present your stories and I for one would like a whole episode on the Ourang Medan
The Ourang Medan sounds like a mystery worth exploring, so yes please.
I had to sub because you have the perfect voice and accent for these stories. Cheers from 🇨🇦
Yes there WAS a sighting of the Lady Lovibond in 1998!!! I was at the end of Deal pier overlooking the Goodwin Sands with hundreds of other people and at around 6.30pm a shout went up. What looked like the rigging of the ship showed up clearly against the light of the moon rising. Myself and the other ghost watchers can’t all be wrong!!
A good film, by the way . Thank you! PS: I hope to be on Deal pier again in 2048 !
Excellent stories! Your videos are always fascinating. Thank you for giving me a mental vacation now and then!
Well, what a collection of intriguing mysteries! I love stories to make you ponder. Especially when they involve the oceans. I'd love you to a deep-dive(!) into the Ourang Medan 😊
I loved this compilation and I'm looking forward to 1899 on Netflix.!🥰
I would LOVE an in depth video on the Ourang Medan!! I hadn't heard of it before and now I need to know more.
Great video! As a third generation sailor I love these stories.
I adore this channel. You have no idea how many panic attacks you have talked me through. You are a rare bird indeed. Thank you for that and many other things... Also..I introduced my mom to this channel, and now she is kinda in love with you.. not sure if I should be sorry or amused.. You don't have to worry, tho. She has issues with traveling so I'm pretty sure you're ok.. lol..
Am I the only one who thinks Paul would make a great Doctor Who?
Haha! There's video of me doing a David Tennant impression somewhere....I'll have to see if I can dig it out. 😂
@@WellINever that would be lovely!
Yes a deep dive on the orang. Thank you for the work you do.
One thing I didn't hear mentioned about the Mary Celeste is that the Captain's wife and a newborn infant were on board. It is speculated they left the ship temporarily for some reason and the lifeboat disengaged. My bet is piracy, but if nothing was missing from the rig, that moots that theory. Chemical emissions are possible as seems factual with the Ourang Medan. These mysteries are perpetual. We will never know.
Many believe Ourang Medan is just an urban legend as there was no registry for any ship under that name,the supposed rescue ship had no mention of it in their records nor was there mention in Lloyd's Shipping Register.
Thanks Paul happy Birthday xx ❤️❤️🇨🇦
This was very interesting, i would love to hear more.
I was so excited for 1899 because I love maritime horror and survival stories like “The Terror” based on the lost Franklin expedition or Shackleton’s expedition to Antarctica. But people have told me that I might be disappointed with 1899 because it’s not what it seems. Still gonna watch it.
The MV Joyita is defeinitely a strange mystery. So is the Kaz II and the Patanela. They still don’t know what happened to the crews.
Me and my PA would love to hear about Medan. We love your videos!
I always enjoy your videos ❤thank you very much
I love these stories about these ships' fates! Thank you! ❤️👍🤗
Yes, definitely a deep dive into the case of the Ourang Medan would be fascinating 😎 Thanks 🙏🏽
I love the stories you bring up and tell, you've a very easy voice to listen to. Thank you for your efforts 🙂
You missed the Baychimo! Longest lasting derelict/ghost ship EVER!
We'll add that to part 2 😁⛵
I just started watching 1899, and your channel! Both are lovely
Enjoyed the video! 👏🏻 thank you.
I think exploring more about the S.S. Ourang Medan would be very interesting.
Yes!! More in-depth dive into the story!!!
A deeper dive into the Orang Medan would be a great episode.
Thank you for another awesome video, especially on a niche' topic as this. Could you cover the Urang Medane (pardon if i misspelled it). Or maybe a part two to this as a general topic. I spent many years in Michigan (as a teen/adult) and local stories (ae well ss historical ones like those listed here) have always fascinated me.
Thanks so much for that. I'd love to hear more re the Ourang Medan & Mary Celeste (+ other ghost ships). I grew up on these types of stories (along with Dreamtime stories) & can't get enough of them 🙂
I love mysteries of all kinds. I just found this channel. I am so excited bc the unknown is fantastic and always keeps me wanting more. Thx so very much.
Can’t wait for 1899 and another wonderful episode ❣️
More about Ourang Medan for sure please!
Another fascinating video as always. I knew there was a reason I was afraid of the ocean lol.
A very informative programme, with so much content; loved it. The Joyita business having a connection to the death of Thelma "Hot Toddy" Todd is a new angle; that, itself is one of Hollywood's more curious scandalous mysteries. As for the Ourang Medan, this reminds me a little of the enduring mystery of the 'Flying Enterprise', lost near Plymouth a few years later.
Her captain stayed aboard until forced to leave before it broke up, which is why it is still remembered, but there are rumours about its cargo - something special that the US didn't want known about. And the last I personally saw regarding the Marie Celeste suggested that her cargo was the cause - it was claimed she was carrying barrelled alcohol or petrol, causing a serious vapour build up in the hold. Her crew took to the boat, having loosened the hatch covers to allow the vapour to disperse, their line broke and the boat drifted away to be lost forever.
You make your stories come alive ..Thank you
I enjoy your videos very much but even if I didn’t like your stories, I would still watch because of your soothing voice! Thanks! ❤
I’m extremely fascinated by mysteries of all kinds, but particularly those that take place on the sea. Also, I watched a few videos the other day about missing people in Alaska. They interviewed scientists, whom some are of the belief the high amount of missing persons is to do with the expansiveness and weather, but also possible magnetic vortexes.
People who have survived their experiences witnessed their compasses going crazy. Some also had hallucinations, which can lead to a change in one’s behavior and their going missing. They call this the Alaska Triangle as it’s similar to the Bermuda and other triangles.
I would love if you could do an episode about this someday.
These stories give me a chill. Truth is stranger than fiction. I love these type of stories about ghost. I am a coward because if I listen to them at night I keep every light on and afraid to go to sleep.
Ship stories like these are my favorite! Excuse me while I go prepare for my trip to go watch for the Loverbond’s return. Only a few years left. 😉
I would love to hear more on the Orange Medan. Thank you Paul for such great stories! ❤
Would love to see this channel do an informative deep-dive into the Ourang Medan.
I’ve read up on many of the bizarre facts, and I personally believe that it was carrying chemicals without appropriate permits and safety measures, chemicals being disposed of by the US or Japanese governments after WW2. Chemicals which reacted with seawater the ship took on, resulting in gases which killed all of the crew, ultimately resulting in an explosion.
Yes, each one of these stories is very interesting. And I would like very much to hear more about them!
Dive deep into ourang medan!! I've heard of it many times and it fascinates me every.single.time.
Very interesting topic! So much history and lots of mistery 🤩🤩
Between the mesmerizing storytelling & the timeless stylings, I’m starting to wonder if this narrator is a faerie in disguise.
A few of my "Subscribed+Notifications turned on" favorite channels. My anglophile soul get almost an overdose of happy vibes, from everything from the narrator, his clothes (is there a name for that style?), the voice (what kind of accent is that? I think it's the most elegant type of them all!), the beard, and the cozy "scary" stories. You are only missing a pipe in the corner of the mouth, a huge armchair, to puff the pipe in, with a fireplace in a corner, and an enormous library in the background with all sorts of strange apparatuses on tables, telescopes, microscopes, alchemy lab with bubbling vials of green oozing mystery fluids inside, a huge, yellowed globe or map, with the British Empire marked on it, busts of the Duke of Wellington or Nelson, portraits on the walls of the late Queen, also the kings and queens back several centuries, a St. George flag etc. etc. ad infinitum! 🙂
Haha! Thank you so much! I'm going to have to increase the studio budget it seems! 😂🙏😊
My person favorite bit of the decor on the set is that single blue-white light glowing behind his head, surrounding him with a glowing halo. It pulls all attention to his face as he speaks. The soft warm lighting on the rest of the set draws you in and makes you comfortable and that halo light centers your attention on him and then his voice hooks you on the tale he has to tell today. Very well crafted set!
I love this channel. Thanks for making this. Ship mysteries have always been interesting. Great work 👏 👍 👌
Well done, I truly enjoyed that!! Thank you.
Being told tragic and horrible stories, but in my favourite accent and a really nice voice is a confusing experience, but as usual with me, the Scottish accent outweighs the nightmare material. 😌
I wouldn't mind hearing the story of the "Unsinkable" Violet Jessop in more detail.
Go for it on the Orang Medan. I would love to hear more about it.
Yes please, more on the Orang Medan.
I'm Indonesian but never heard of the story of Orang Medan until now. Please make it in a single special episode!
An Interesting fact: A few years ago there was a story in one of the American News Papers, think it was either the New York Post or the Wall Street Journal, but some one sailing from Bermuda to Spain, SAW the Celest lingering around the Azores. They reported it to the Coast Guard and sailed on. The report from the Coast Guard stated no ship found but not an unlikely sighting as the Celest wasn't where she was last seen, where she was ran aground. SO THERE IS GOOD POSSIBILITY that she is STILL ghost shipping around the planet...
And she's not the only supposed MISSING SHIP to be spotted sailing unmanned. Apparently Ghost Ships Sightings were on a rise a few years back.
Now what I would love to know more about is the Ghost Planes... It's highly understandable about Ghost Ships, the current carries them everywhere... But what makes planes that do not have autopilot functions, asides from a rope holding the controls, land at the proper airports with no crew... THOSE ARE THE STORIES THAT REALLY SEND SHIVERS DOWN ANYONES SPINE as they scratch their heads in curiosity of, WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CREW and HOW THE HELL DID A PLANE LAND WITH NO PILOT OR AUTOPILOT? Far as I have researched it's happened a few times with small planes and twice that I know of with Bombers, once in England and once in the U.S. I believe England was WW1 and the U.S. was WW2... True creepy situations.
this man is just so good all the stories are so interesting l can't stop watching them every story makes me say " Well l never "
Only discovered this wonderful compilation now....too short, I loved it! In light of the recent Titan submersible incident, perhaps more sea disaster stories please, as it links so closely to human arrogance.
This was really interesting! I've watched 1899 and was sad to see it canceled after only one season!
I very much enjoy listening to your voice. Also, your look and the stories.
Thank you, Susan! 🙏😊
Red flag statements that strike fear into the heart of any life long Mariner:
1: "She's practically unsinkable!"
2: "Let's take the North West Passage today."
3: "I think I'll bring my wife."
If you're ever on a ship and you hear any of the above quotes, the vessel is cursed, and you should abandon ship immediately. 😆
Great video! Thanks for sharing 😎
I just ADORE your channel!!Your accent is beautiful,. I could listen to you all day, so soothing!! And I love the content, never fails to impress 🥰
Thank you, Liz 😊🙏
Please go more into Mary Celeste!! I am fascinated, obsessed with that ship. I heard that it had alcohol in barrels in its cargo and that there may have been fumes given off and there was bad weather for a number of days so they could not vent the cargo holds and they might have feared the ship would explode so they got in the life boat because the wife and child were screaming and then the rope tethering the life boat to the ship was cut off in bad weather they encountered later that day. I heard too a life boat with dead unidentified people washed up on shore and the people were buried and may have been the captain and his family and the crew.
great storyteller, thnx
Thank you, Diane. 😁
the Ourang Medan is urban legend. there are NO ship or port records of this ship.
Oh, the weather was warm lately, let's try the North West Passage! What a genius 🤣
Really well spoken and put forward please do more l am on board well done to all ❤️