Mentioned Amelia Earhart but not Jimmy Hoffa, who's probably the most notorious missing person next to Earhart, at least in the last fifty years here in America.
Unfortunately some places prove stereotypes true. Mexico is a beautiful country full of beautiful people. But unfortunately a small percentage of that beautiful population is really ruining it for them and the rest of world. You could hand me an all inclusive paid for trip to the nicest resort in Mexico and I'd decline. When you see enough footage of cartels operating and read up on them? You'll immediately shiver with the thought of crossing that border. And I say this as someone who LOVES Mexican cuisine, culture, and especially their ladies 💀
Glenn Miller disappearance springs to mind. Alton Glen "Glenn" Miller (March 1, 1904 - December 15, 1944) was an American big band conductor, arranger, composer, trombone player, and recording artist before and during World War II, when he was an officer in the US Army Air Forces. His civilian band, Glenn Miller and his Orchestra was one of the most popular and successful bands of the 20th century and the big band era. The AAF band completed their pre-recordings and regular broadcasts on Tuesday, December 12, 1944, and prepared for the anticipated move to France. As per Niven's order, Miller was booked on a scheduled Air Transport Command passenger flight from London-Bovingdon to Paris-Orly on Thursday, December 14. Miller was on standby for an earlier flight on December 13, but it was canceled due to bad weather in France. His reservation on December 14 was also canceled. Miller was frustrated and impatient, fearing that arrangements would not be made in time to accommodate the movement of his unit to France. On a telephone call to Haynes, he learned that a mutual acquaintance, Lieutenant colonel Norman Baessell of the Eighth Air Force Service Command at Milton Ernest, was flying to France on December 15. It was to be aboard a Noorduyn UC-64A Norseman assigned to him and piloted by Flight Officer John Stuart Morgan. Baessell invited Miller to join them. Miller's travel orders did not authorize him to board a "casual" flight and he did not report his intentions to his chain of command, so SHAEF was in the dark concerning Miller's whereabouts. Although AAF and RAF combat missions flew that day, as well as numerous transport planes, the RAF Training Unit at RAF Twinwood Farm, near Bedford, had stood down, but the aerodrome was open. At 13:45 Morgan landed at Twinwood, boarded Baessell and Miller, and took off at 13:55. The UC-64 and its occupants were never seen again. The next morning, the Battle of the Bulge began. The Eighth Air Force and SHAEF did not realize that the UC-64 with Miller aboard was missing until three days later, on Monday, December 18, 1944. Upon realizing the airplane and Miller were missing, Major General Orvil Anderson, Deputy Commander for Operations of the Eighth Air Force, who was married to Miller's cousin Maude Miller Anderson, ordered a search and investigation.[11][24] Meanwhile, Miller's unit had flown safely from England to France aboard three C-47 transports and prepared to begin their broadcasting and concert duties. Since they were scheduled for a Christmas Day broadcast from Paris to England and via shortwave to the United States, news of Miller's whereabouts would have to be released. AAF Headquarters in Washington, D.C. notified Miller's wife, Helen, of his disappearance on December 23, 1944, with an in-person visit to their home by two senior officers and a telephone call from Gen. H. H. Arnold. On December 24, 1944, at 18:00 BST, SHAEF announced Miller's disappearance to the press, stressing that no members of his unit were with him aboard the missing airplane. The Major Glenn Miller Army Air Forces Orchestra appeared as scheduled on December 25, 1944, conducted by Jerry Gray. The unit continued to broadcast and appear throughout Europe through V-E Day and until August 1945. It received a Unit Citation from Gen. Eisenhower. Returning home, the unit resumed its “I Sustain the Wings” series over NBC. On November 13, 1945, the AAF Band appeared at the National Press Club for its final concert, which was attended by President Harry Truman and Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. When the band appeared to the strains of Miller's theme "Moonlight Serenade", the president stood and led the audience in a spontaneous round of applause. The band was congratulated for a job "well done" in person by General Eisenhower and General Arnold. Their last performance was the I Sustain the Wings broadcast at Bolling Field, Washington, D.C., on NBC radio on November 17, 1945.[1] Its personnel were gradually discharged, and the unit was disestablished in January 1946.
Bison Dele was known as Brian Williams, his Brother Miles Dabord also was named Williams, said they had a fight and he shot Bison with his own gun. It's believed he threw their bodies overboard in the Pacific Ocean with weights tied to their bodies. Nobody ever found anything but patched up bullet holes in his Catamaran. The whole story was weird, and their father was a singer form the group "The Platters".
I'm wondering if Amelia was shot down by another aircraft or captured and killed. Especially after hearing she went missing in the 30s. I know WWII didn't happen until 1939, but you never know with these things.
I mean it’s normal to label a parent that’s pretty calm and not showing any visible emotion about their missing child as suspicious Doesn’t mean she was involved. But that’s a red flag for most people
It's not that uncommon to not find a body when somebody disappears in the woods or in the water because marine life will quite literally eat anything and so will land scavengers like turtles rats all kinds of rodents and stuff like that and not to mention once you are deceased the vultures and the crows start to come and eat you.
John Bennett Ramsey, the father of JonBenet Ramsey, owned Access Graphics, a company that gained significant government contracts after being acquired by Lockheed Martin in 1991. This acquisition allowed Access Graphics to leverage its expertise in computer services for defense and intelligence systems. Supposedly, John was initially against making deals with the government or allowing them access to computer graphics for use in warfare. However, after the tragic death of his daughter, conspiracy theories emerged suggesting that JonBenet's brother had killed her and the family tried to cover it up by bribing the police. While John was grieving, Access Graphics proceeded with another contract with the U.S. military and, by 1997, sold the company to General Electric. During the court proceedings, hidden evidence supporting claims that the family, police, and judges had concealed crucial information was not presented to the jury. John didn't have the funds to resolve the situation, but it is speculated that agreeing to a contract with the U.S. military allowed the issue to be "swept under the rug."
I used to really like watch mojo until they got a really really far left bias and I'm not saying it's this video in particular because this one seems to be pretty straightforward but every other political video seems to have a very far left bias.
Mentioned Amelia Earhart but not Jimmy Hoffa, who's probably the most notorious missing person next to Earhart, at least in the last fifty years here in America.
When the narrator said he went to Mexico you saw Daz shoot a look at the camera like "Mexico?" 🙁 LMAO
Unfortunately some places prove stereotypes true. Mexico is a beautiful country full of beautiful people. But unfortunately a small percentage of that beautiful population is really ruining it for them and the rest of world.
You could hand me an all inclusive paid for trip to the nicest resort in Mexico and I'd decline.
When you see enough footage of cartels operating and read up on them? You'll immediately shiver with the thought of crossing that border. And I say this as someone who LOVES Mexican cuisine, culture, and especially their ladies 💀
@@Jimbow-sz9kh well Trump declared the cartels as terrorists.
@@johnzubil2875the president with a record and mugshot?
Glenn Miller disappearance springs to mind.
Alton Glen "Glenn" Miller (March 1, 1904 - December 15, 1944) was an American big band conductor, arranger, composer, trombone player, and recording artist before and during World War II, when he was an officer in the US Army Air Forces. His civilian band, Glenn Miller and his Orchestra was one of the most popular and successful bands of the 20th century and the big band era.
The AAF band completed their pre-recordings and regular broadcasts on Tuesday, December 12, 1944, and prepared for the anticipated move to France. As per Niven's order, Miller was booked on a scheduled Air Transport Command passenger flight from London-Bovingdon to Paris-Orly on Thursday, December 14.
Miller was on standby for an earlier flight on December 13, but it was canceled due to bad weather in France. His reservation on December 14 was also canceled. Miller was frustrated and impatient, fearing that arrangements would not be made in time to accommodate the movement of his unit to France. On a telephone call to Haynes, he learned that a mutual acquaintance, Lieutenant colonel Norman Baessell of the Eighth Air Force Service Command at Milton Ernest, was flying to France on December 15. It was to be aboard a Noorduyn UC-64A Norseman assigned to him and piloted by Flight Officer John Stuart Morgan. Baessell invited Miller to join them.
Miller's travel orders did not authorize him to board a "casual" flight and he did not report his intentions to his chain of command, so SHAEF was in the dark concerning Miller's whereabouts. Although AAF and RAF combat missions flew that day, as well as numerous transport planes, the RAF Training Unit at RAF Twinwood Farm, near Bedford, had stood down, but the aerodrome was open. At 13:45 Morgan landed at Twinwood, boarded Baessell and Miller, and took off at 13:55. The UC-64 and its occupants were never seen again. The next morning, the Battle of the Bulge began. The Eighth Air Force and SHAEF did not realize that the UC-64 with Miller aboard was missing until three days later, on Monday, December 18, 1944.
Upon realizing the airplane and Miller were missing, Major General Orvil Anderson, Deputy Commander for Operations of the Eighth Air Force, who was married to Miller's cousin Maude Miller Anderson, ordered a search and investigation.[11][24] Meanwhile, Miller's unit had flown safely from England to France aboard three C-47 transports and prepared to begin their broadcasting and concert duties. Since they were scheduled for a Christmas Day broadcast from Paris to England and via shortwave to the United States, news of Miller's whereabouts would have to be released. AAF Headquarters in Washington, D.C. notified Miller's wife, Helen, of his disappearance on December 23, 1944, with an in-person visit to their home by two senior officers and a telephone call from Gen. H. H. Arnold. On December 24, 1944, at 18:00 BST, SHAEF announced Miller's disappearance to the press, stressing that no members of his unit were with him aboard the missing airplane.
The Major Glenn Miller Army Air Forces Orchestra appeared as scheduled on December 25, 1944, conducted by Jerry Gray. The unit continued to broadcast and appear throughout Europe through V-E Day and until August 1945. It received a Unit Citation from Gen. Eisenhower. Returning home, the unit resumed its “I Sustain the Wings” series over NBC.
On November 13, 1945, the AAF Band appeared at the National Press Club for its final concert, which was attended by President Harry Truman and Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. When the band appeared to the strains of Miller's theme "Moonlight Serenade", the president stood and led the audience in a spontaneous round of applause. The band was congratulated for a job "well done" in person by General Eisenhower and General Arnold.
Their last performance was the I Sustain the Wings broadcast at Bolling Field, Washington, D.C., on NBC radio on November 17, 1945.[1] Its personnel were gradually discharged, and the unit was disestablished in January 1946.
The bass player for Loverboy, "Everybody's working for the weekend", fell off his boat in the ocean and never found.
wow, that's something I never knew.
Bison Dele was known as Brian Williams, his Brother Miles Dabord also was named Williams, said they had a fight and he shot Bison with his own gun. It's believed he threw their bodies overboard in the Pacific Ocean with weights tied to their bodies. Nobody ever found anything but patched up bullet holes in his Catamaran. The whole story was weird, and their father was a singer form the group "The Platters".
My wife's great-grandad drove for Amelia Earhart. We have a couple of pictures on our wall of them together 😊❤
I think DB Cooper should be on here.
I love unsolved mysteries
I'm wondering if Amelia was shot down by another aircraft or captured and killed. Especially after hearing she went missing in the 30s. I know WWII didn't happen until 1939, but you never know with these things.
7:51 why would you assume the mom had something to do with her disappearance?
I mean it’s normal to label a parent that’s pretty calm and not showing any visible emotion about their missing child as suspicious
Doesn’t mean she was involved. But that’s a red flag for most people
I can look out my front door,and see Ali's childhood neighborhood 😊
Sullivan's "UFO" is a great record
Mr. Ballen did a video on what probably happened to Amelia Earhart
Mr. Ballen has a well documented history of mis-stating known facts in his material. Accepting his "probably" answers is even less reliable.
*Norm MacDonald voice*
"Turns out she was a woman pilot"
@@Jimbow-sz9kh😂
I wonder if they ever found Julian sands after he went hiking up in the California mountains.
Yes...hikers did find him.... unfortunately deceased.
Some of these people weren't what I consider celebrities. If no one had ever heard of you then you ain't a celebrity
It's not that uncommon to not find a body when somebody disappears in the woods or in the water because marine life will quite literally eat anything and so will land scavengers like turtles rats all kinds of rodents and stuff like that and not to mention once you are deceased the vultures and the crows start to come and eat you.
Natalie Wood? Oh wait, everyone knows it was Wagner. Walken knows.
Also Natalie Wood's body was found. I agree it was a suspicious death.
I've never heard of any of these "celebrities", except Amelia Earhart.
You never watched Varsity Blues? Its a fn cult classic.
John Bennett Ramsey, the father of JonBenet Ramsey, owned Access Graphics, a company that gained significant government contracts after being acquired by Lockheed Martin in 1991. This acquisition allowed Access Graphics to leverage its expertise in computer services for defense and intelligence systems. Supposedly, John was initially against making deals with the government or allowing them access to computer graphics for use in warfare. However, after the tragic death of his daughter, conspiracy theories emerged suggesting that JonBenet's brother had killed her and the family tried to cover it up by bribing the police.
While John was grieving, Access Graphics proceeded with another contract with the U.S. military and, by 1997, sold the company to General Electric. During the court proceedings, hidden evidence supporting claims that the family, police, and judges had concealed crucial information was not presented to the jury. John didn't have the funds to resolve the situation, but it is speculated that agreeing to a contract with the U.S. military allowed the issue to be "swept under the rug."
I used to really like watch mojo until they got a really really far left bias and I'm not saying it's this video in particular because this one seems to be pretty straightforward but every other political video seems to have a very far left bias.
Very sad but these are celebrities??
😁First! 😜