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2nd Greatest Player
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Originally Posted by Doomsday Dallas
good video... goes into further detail of the mystery.
Now I'm interested in the book:
Why didn't you join the police academy, fbi, or cia??
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... on a leash
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Just watched the first, immense...
Am I the only one who got a kind of detached vibe from Ray in the few scenes we saw him in? Like there was something hid away deep beneath his exterior..?
None the less he seemed nice and morally upstanding.
What if something sinister happened, and he was thrown through that roof in a way not theorized on? Probably unlikely.
Probably, he did jump... But why. What was that phone call, that could seemingly change things so drastically one second to the other.
I just got to the note/freemason part.
Honestly, he seems twisted/weird enough for that to be his final note.
It was written on the day he disappeared/died, I mean cmon on! Of course the fact he scurried out the building is weird..
I feel like he was egged on to do this? Some kind of sacrifice? Or legit forced to do it.
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... on a leash
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Stansberry is obviously behind it though... Part of a cult probably.
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NBA Legend
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Originally Posted by ArbitraryWater
Just watched the first, immense...
Am I the only one who got a kind of detached vibe from Ray in the few scenes we saw him in? Like there was something hid away deep beneath his exterior..?
None the less he seemed nice and morally upstanding.
What if something sinister happened, and he was thrown through that roof in a way not theorized on? Probably unlikely.
Probably, he did jump... But why. What was that phone call, that could seemingly change things so drastically one second to the other.
I just got to the note/freemason part.
Honestly, he seems twisted/weird enough for that to be his final note.
It was written on the day he disappeared/died, I mean cmon on! Of course the fact he scurried out the building is weird..
I feel like he was egged on to do this? Some kind of sacrifice? Or legit forced to do it.
Yeah a bit. Something with his demeanor where he was present but maybe not "happy". Ray's reactions seemed somewhat forced but I could be wrong.
Have you ever seen The Game? Its with Michael Douglas and Sean Penn. Ray was a BIG fan of the movie and talked about it inside that note you referenced. The way he died is similar to a scene in the movie. EERILY similar. Ray even mentions 'participants in the game' and wanting everyone close to him to receive their compensations. I think this man was mixing fantasy and reality.
Can't explain the cellphone or glasses not being damaged. He very well could have been coerced into suicide.
The Movie is a great watch BTW. Would recommend. The other episodes on this Unsolved reboot are OK. Not like this story but definitely leaves you with questions.
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... on a leash
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
I actually have seen that movie, yeah...
So its not just one movie among that list which is conspiracy/freemason/cultish... Eyes Wide Shut on there as well.
I mean he used the quotes, listed the movies, friends knew him to be a fan..
But a quote in this thread he was just beginning to read books about Freemasonry and inquiring about joining, so how could he have been so involved already?
Who was he playing with, if he was?
Is Stansberry connected to the Freemason deal? He probably knew of it, given how close they were.
And decided not to speak on it.
Which could have been his own fear for his life, knowing the trouble Ray got into.
Also he definitely seems to be a narcissist, from the videos he makes nowadays.
And while Ray wasn‘t mentally ill or depressed, he does seem detached, not entirely present.. And actually, being interested about Freemasonry is one thing, but writing notes like that in serious manner, does speak of some mental ****ery.
But still baffled as to what could have caused someone wanting him dead.
Perhaps they too saw it as a game. A joke. And he, twisted as he was on the matter, felt he had to go along.
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... on a leash
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Whats weird is....
His wife said he was terrified the night before with the bat.
Yet didnt he write that letter the day he disappeared?
It doesnt really seem like someone in a terrified state would write, unless mentally inconsistent.
Also if he was terrified and trying to fight it, he probably wouldnt go along with some game or task of killing himself, would he?!
Unless he was terrified because he just didnt want his wife to be a part of it.
But I dont think that was only it. If he was terrified, he wouldnt come running to meet maybe his end in the rules of a game he played.
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2011
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Originally Posted by kuniva_dAMiGhTy
Have you ever seen The Game? Its with Michael Douglas and Sean Penn. Ray was a BIG fan of the movie and talked about it inside that note you referenced. The way he died is similar to a scene in the movie. EERILY similar. Ray even mentions 'participants in the game' and wanting everyone close to him to receive their compensations. I think this man was mixing fantasy and reality.
Something I never understood about the movie The Game... is why did the director make the hole in the ceiling so impossible to fall through?
It had to be 100% precise for Michael Douglas to fall on that X... almost ruins the entire movie. One foot to the left or right and he's breaking his back on those steel beams.
So they were able to calculate the exact way Michael Douglas's body would fall to where he wouldn't die? Or did he just get lucky and people at the party were attending his funeral, not his birthday.
Everything could've been pulled off by those elitist game-playing hoaxers,... except that part. Why make that part the only part that is completely unrealistic?
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2011
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Originally Posted by 1987_Lakers
It's impossible. Why did they ruin the movie?
Doesn't make any sense.
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2011
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Originally Posted by ArbitraryWater
I feel like he was egged on to do this? Some kind of sacrifice? Or legit forced to do it.
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Get him a body bag!
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
How does no one hear the impact of his body going through the roof??
And if some of his injuries are not consistent with the fall, then it’s possible he was beat up prior, and was maybe then thrown off to make it seem like a suicide. Either way, his buddy is responsible somehow.
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2011
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
The Game is one of the few movies that touches up on the situation we currently find ourselves in. It does so literally, as Michael Douglas works his way into the cafeteria filled with crisis actors of every kind, all of which who've had some kind of involvement in his life. Those rooms exist. It's a legit society within a society with it's own elected officials and role players. It's the society we are all clueless about. The Truman Show somewhat gives us an analogy of the type of world we live in, Truman would represent society, and how clueless Truman/Society is to the world they think they are living in. Make no mistake about it, It's all carefully controlled and hand crafted by the elites. All of it.
So the movie or trilogy I'd really like to point out... That is 100% about how this society actually operates... is John Wick. Basically the entire trilogy is about the Illuminati. If you watched all three of those movies and didn't come to that conclusion you weren't paying attention.... at all.
1:10 to 1:55, it's a nation full of actors.
The Continental was introduced halfway through John Wick, shortly after our hero recovers his gold coins. Located in lower Manhattan, the hotel is Switzerland for the assassin underworld. There’s just one rule in The Continental: No business can be conducted on the neutral premises. And in a world of assassins, “business” means one thing.
“It’s kind of like in those old vampire movies: You enter the church and you’re safe,” says Kolstad.
With the introduction of The Continental we’re tossed into a bizarre underworld that appears to be hiding in plain sight. This world has its own currency (the aforementioned coins) and its own code of “honor among thieves,” as Kolstad describes it.
We quickly learn that breaking the sole rule of The Continental has fatal consequences. This structure, these rules, imply far more world-building than you’d expect from a vehicle for physical stunts and gun-fu choreography. John Wick raises more questions than delivers answers
https://www.polygon.com/2019/5/16/18...tory-explained
The Belvedere is much like the Continental Hotel in John Wick. Rey Rivera broke some kind of rule and was excommunicado.
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... on a leash
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Spoiler Alert:
Just watched the third.
So, its obvious he did it. No need to discuss that.
But: Thomas leaves Sunday, the rest are killed at night. The next day Xavier tells him to come back, and he does on Tuesday. In those 2 days he has no contact to his siblings or mother, and doesn't notice anything unusual in their online status on Facebook or WhatsApp, nor from anyone else telling him?
He comes back, apparently asks no questions, until he is killed at night.
Blunder on his part. Should have guessed something was off, right? Maybe they didnt have WA but they must have had FB. And when he comes home and no one is there? I dont know..
It also bothers me that they say the family was killed Sunday-Monday and he Tuesday-Wednesday, yet in the timeline the murders are apart only one day: 4th-5th. That's a mistake.
And the investigation is a joke. Going after him SEVEN DAYS after they saw him on CCTV just because they assumed he would kill himself? Cmon now.
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... on a leash
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Spoiler Alert:
Episode 6 damn.
Not much unsolved, but hasn't been legally cleared.
Just horryfing how evil Sandy is.
It was such an ungrateful situation to be born into for Lena, she would have needed to make ALOT of right turns and calculated decisions for it to have worked out for her in the end.
Brandi is amazing. I really admire her.
Also apparently a big clue was left out which only would have made it more obvious in case it wasn't yet:
But one Reddit user claiming to be a family member says there were a lot of incriminating details missing from the segment.
They said, “Sandy randomly showed up there the day Lena disappeared. Sandy told Lena’s boyfriend that she had ran off with another man and left her kid behind. Soon after she “ran off to Florida,” the landlord did complete renovations due to bloodstains on the carpet. The landlord was quoted saying “it looked like a dog had been chopped up” because when the carpet was pulled up, a giant bloodstain was found on the wood below the carpet, as well as in the carpet itself.”
They continued, “The landlord disposed of the old carpet and didn’t notify police, because he was unaware of the circumstances behind Lena’s disappearance, all he knew is that Lena “moved away.” To make things even more interesting, soon thereafter, the entire apartment building burnt to the ground.”
“I felt like the episode hit all the main points, but there are more gruesome details that were left out,” the Redditor concluded. “Overall, it just reignites my hatred for Sandy and her murderous boyfriend. Our family is still broken and we will not rest until justice is served.”
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The Chosen King
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Originally Posted by ArbitraryWater
Spoiler Alert:
Episode 6 damn.
Not much unsolved, but hasn't been legally cleared.
Just horryfing how evil Sandy is.
It was such an ungrateful situation to be born into for Lena, she would have needed to make ALOT of right turns and calculated decisions for it to have worked out for her in the end.
Brandi is amazing. I really admire her.
Also apparently a big clue was left out which only would have made it more obvious in case it wasn't yet:
That one really irritated me. She got away with two premeditated murders and is free today.
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2011
Re: Unsolved Mysteries (netflix reboot)
Unsolved Mysteries has been fairly successful in getting its cases solved over its nearly 35-year history. Of the nearly 1,300 cases featured on the show over the years, co-creator Terry Dunn Meurer has estimated that about 260 of them have been solved, with many of these solutions coming due to tips offered by viewers.
Now, we are one step closer to the first case from the show's Netflix season being solved. In June, just before the first six episodes of Unsolved Mysteries 2020, the FBI announced it was offering a reward in the case of one of the subjects of the true-crime show.
In a press release, the U.S. Attorney's Office in the District of Kansas said: "The FBI is offering a $100,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of anyone responsible for the death of Alonzo Brooks. Brooks' body was found in a creek in La Cygne, Kan., on May 1, 2004."
They later added: "[U.S. Attorney Stephen] McAllister and the FBI reopened the investigation over a year ago. They have reviewed evidence going back 16 years, re-interviewed many witnesses who attended a party at a farmhouse where Brooks was last seen alive, interviewed new witnesses, and collected all available physical and forensic evidence."
Serious hate crime covered up on this one. Would be perfect timing for the FBI to solve this one considering everything going on in the BLM movement today.
https://twitter.com/Unsolved/status/1279520360401076225
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