Unsolved Mysteries
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Unsolved Mysteries was an American TV show starring the late Robert Stack. The show also featured, in many of its later episodes, journalist Keely Shaye Smith and television host Lu Hanessian as correspondents in the show's telecenter, where they provided information on updated stories, and actress Virginia Madsen as Robert Stack's co-host. It documents real-life homicides and/or abductions and other crime. It is sometimes credited as one of the first television programs to endorse the documentation of real-life crime scene investigating, which resulted in a thriving genre with top shows such as still getting large audiences. The show aired on NBC from 1987 – 1997, however, by then the show started to lose the popularity it once had, and from 1997 – 1999 it ran as The New Unsolved Mysteries on CBS. Despite the network switch, the ratings continued to fall. Unsolved Mysteries slowly faded, but in 2001, the program regained some popularity with a somewhat new audience, when it was revived on the Lifetime cable television network, where new episodes aired sporadically until Robert Stack's death in 2003. It still runs in syndication on Lifetime, among other television stations today, including ones in U.S., Canada, and Australia.
Unsolved Mysteries segments, all of which involved actual events, fell into one of four categories:
- criminal activity — accounts of abductions, suspicious deaths, murders, robberies and other miscellaneous unsolved cases, where either the suspects were unknown or could not be located. The viewer was invited to call or write (later episodes also featured an Internet address) if they had information concerning the cases shown. According to the show, about 40 percent of the stories shown involving fugitives generated tips leading to the capture of those individuals.
- lost loves — accounts of individuals trying to reunite with someone from their past, usually involving children given up for adoption where either the child or the parent was searching for the other. The same address and phone number used to report fugitives was used for reunions.
- unexplained history — accounts of paranormal activity and other mysterious events, purported miracles, and "alternative" theories of history (among them the theories that outlaws such asBilly the Kid and Butch Cassidy did not die as history recorded it, that the Russian Grand Duchess Anastasia Romanov survived the 1918 regicide that killed her entire family, that the assassination of Louisiana senator Huey Long may have been an accident, and that the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr was in fact a conspiracy ).
- paranormal matters - accounts of miracles, UFO/alien encounters, the Roswell UFO Incident, the Phoenix UFO Incident, ghosts, Bigfoot, other inexplicable phenomena.
The show would also feature updates on success stories, where criminals were brought to justice and loved ones reunited.
Viewers were invited to call in tips to a toll free number. The number, 1-800-876-5353 (U.S.), and website (shown below) are still active today although the show is long out of production.
Before an episode begins, the following message is used: "This program is about unsolved mysteries. Whenever possible, the actual family members and police officials have participated in recreating the events. What you are about to see is not a news broadcast."
DVD
Six 4-disc DVD sets have been released, each with a different theme.- UFOs (September 7, 2004)
- Ghosts (September 14, 2004)
- Miracles (October 26, 2004)
- Psychics (January 25, 2005)
- Bizarre Murders (January 25, 2005)
- Strange Legends (February 15, 2005)
Actor Matthew McConaughey appears on the Bizarre Murders set as a victim in a murder re-enactment, dating from the days when he was an unknown actor.
Popularity
When it first appeared on television, Unsolved Mysteries was a smash hit for several reasons. For example, many people recognized host Robert Stack as Eliot Ness from the 60's television hit The Untouchables. The show is also famous for its eerie theme song. However, by the late 90's the show started to lose the popularity it once had. Many viewers blamed the decline on the addition of co-hosts Keely Shaye Smith and Virginia Madsen. Others blamed the shows new 'makeover', which invloved the 'watering down' of the shows theme song and putting its telephone center on camera. Ratings also declined when the program moved from its original Wednesday evening to Friday evening (which is less popular for television viewing. See: Friday night death slot) beginning in the Fall 1994 season. Despite these changes, Unsolved Mysteries still remains a favourite amongst its audiences, and is rerun regularly on cable.External links
- [Unsolved Mysteries official site]
- [link] Unsolved Mysteries on Lifetime (TV network)
- [Unsolved Mysteries Online fan site]
- [Community website about the unknown]
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