The Bermuda Triangle is a 'manufactured mystery' where folklore is built one misunderstood radio transmission at a time. We'd rather believe in a 'Devil’s Triangle' than admit that sometimes terrible accidents happen for very boring, technical reasons.
The hosts begin with a greeting on the Real English channel. The podcast is mysterious and long, in English, about mysteries of the Bermuda Triangle


Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

Lena: Welcome back to Real English! You know, Eli, I was looking at a map of the Atlantic earlier—specifically that massive 500,000 square mile patch between Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico—and it just feels so eerie. People call it the "Hoodoo Sea" for a reason, right?
Eli: Exactly. It’s a place where folklore says planes just fall out of the sky and entire ships evaporate. But what’s wild is that it’s actually one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world. Most people fly right through it to get to places like Cancun or Miami and never notice a thing.
Lena: Right, but then you have stories like Flight 571 from back in 1978. A pilot with over 3,000 hours of experience suddenly reports the ocean below is glowing emerald green and the sky is "rippling" before vanishing forever.
Eli: It’s that contrast between the routine and the impossible that makes it so haunting. So, let’s dive into the legendary disappearance of Flight 19 and see if we can find where the myth ends and the truth begins.