The Apocalyptic Sounds Heard Around The World • Mystery Files

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Published 2023-06-16
Sensitive topics: physical/mental distress, aliens

Have you ever found yourself on a Wikipedia deep dive on the weird side of the internet? In this show - weird thing enthusiasts Ryan and Shane take turns presenting their latest fascinations to each other covering everything unusual, unexplained, and unhinged!

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HOSTED BY
Ryan Bergara
WITH
Shane Madej

DIRECTOR
Annie Jeong

PRODUCER
Brittney Lee

EDITOR
Anthony De Vera

MOTION GRAPHICS
Diana Arana

DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Jucel Andrin

RESEARCHER
Penny Hall

WRITER
Alaina Rook

PRODUCTION COORDINATOR
Carter Lau

CAMERA OPERATORS
Luman Kim Jay Tran

GRIP & ELECTRIC
Jay Tran

SOUND MIXER
Ben Forman

PRODUCTION DESIGNER
Billy Jett

SET DRESSER
Arron Haro

PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS
Brendon Ryu Violet Rawlings


POST PRODUCER
SAM YOUNG

ASSISTANT EDITOR
Frank Parker

HEAD OF DEVELOPMENT
Katie LeBlanc
HEAD OF PRODUCTION
Lizzie Lockard
HEAD OF POST PRODUCTION
Sam Young

EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS
Steven Lim, Ryan Bergara, and Shane Madej

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All Comments (21)
  • @samrakita4279
    For anyone wondering why that one woman told the kids to get into the bathroom, it's a common hurricane safety thing here in Florida. Bathrooms usually have very sturdy walls, and few if any windows, making it one of the best rooms to hunker in during extreme weather.
  • @ytknits4892
    Knowing all these episodes were recorded in 3 days, I feel like this was recorded towards the end of the process. Ryan’s patience with Shane is so thin at some points it’s translucent.
  • @Koobird784
    Sorry guys, that was me, I’ll be quieter next time.
  • This is the noise trees make when they fall in the forest and no one’s around they just get louder so people can hear
  • @Phantom9252
    Shane is once again so correct. There's no evidence to link these various sounds together and they all sound so different and are so geographically distant it's reasonable to say they have unique sources.
  • @michaelshannon8046
    I heard the "trumpet" sounds back in 2000,in Davenport,IA. Me and my now ex-fiance were taking a walk when it started. It was the creepiest sound that her and I likened it to the apocalypse. What made it creepier is that we were in a wooded area of the city. The sound kept fading in and out real loudly and we couldn't even pinpoint the direction from the sky where it was coming from because it literally surrounded you.
  • @bobskewer1874
    I feel like cave noises should make an appearance here. Either wind blowing into / out of cave systems or wind blowing across cave entrances. The size/ shape of the cave would change the sound and water level inside could change it further. This would also be dependent on wind speed and direction making it very randomized even in front of the same cave.
  • @danieg1431
    Shane's imitation of the Northern Lights' sounds are actually really accurate
  • @ichmeiner4531
    Had that happen in my region years ago. Some people went a bit nuts. A couple of days after, it was revealed that it was just the sounds from a construction site, perfectly echoed from the stoney mountain surrounding it. They even replicated the exact same sounds as proof. And 99% of the 'trumpets of heaven' noise from around the world sounds exactly like that.
  • For the debrief: I'm from Alberta (where the weird screaming video was recorded,) and I've actually heard a similar loud sound when I was hiking in the mountains. Turns out, there was a quarry not too far from the trail that was making the sound. Just a combination of human activity and nature that ended up sounding really freaky
  • @petrosp4163
    Very interesting & cool. But it was funny when “Sweden” was called out but the arrow was pointing to “Switzerland”…! 😂
  • @sydneyl164
    Im convinced the first one is a tornado siren "it's getting close kids go to the bathroom" is a phrase every Midwest kid is familiar with.
  • @debbiehenri345
    The first time I heard an earthquake, 2005, sounded like a full-sized passenger plane flying through the woods towards us. It was incredibly loud - for a relatively small quake. Didn't even dislodge a roof tile. I think these noises are mainly tectonic.
  • @mookie271
    I appreciate Ryan for taking a minute to pause and smile widely when he first mentions "brontidi". You, sir, are a gift to humanity.
  • @Rat-tea
    You cannot convince me this 7:54 isn't just a clip of my neighors doing construction on our shared wall.
  • @r3znor_x
    All of these occurrences seem to be in or around mountain ranges, my best guess is that it’s the sound of the wind hitting the mountains and reverberating in a feedback loop until it becomes deafening
  • @berilaykut
    For debrief: I agree with Shane on these sounds probably originating from different sources, but as someone who lives in an area where earthquakes happen quite regularly, earthquakes can make very loud noises that is quite similar to some of these. I haven’t experienced any sky trumpets but I did hear terrifyingly loud screeching noises during earthquakes.
  • @kings4300
    I've heard this in Poland maybe 10 years ago or so, it was this deep rumbling noise that lasted for several minutes. My best bet would be 'earth noises' or a mild earthquake because my grandmother, who was profoundly deaf for the last 15 years of her life, had asked me about some vibrations she felt. She was convinced it was the motorbikes because I lived by a popular route for bikers and on summer weekends there would be groups of dozens of bikers passing through the town and it would really feel like the house was vibrating. But there were no motorbikers that day and I felt no vibrations. But it was disturbing enough that to this day, I remember exactly what I was doing the moment that happened
  • @jennings992
    i got hit with an ad the second you said "what you are about to witness see might be disturbing" you were right
  • @periwinkle3556
    So I lived in forest grove for a handful of years and have heard the sound 3-4 times, and not always at night. I was searching up any type of paranormal or folklore about the town when I saw a news article about “The forest grove noise” and thought it was interesting, but I didn’t expect to hear it an hour after once I was moving in. Apparently I lived on the street where the noise was the loudest, each time I heard it it kept me staring out my window hoping I’d see something but I never did.