A History of 911 Mysteries

The show went to Hollywood!

What started as an evidence buffet for a roomful of people in Southern California grew into a show that got worldwide attention. Tested and tweaked over nine months in front of large and small audiences, "9/11 Mysteries" was then transformed into a full-length DVD.  New evidence kept pouring in, personal archives were donated, hearts and heads contributing from all over the country. We were astonished by and deeply grateful for all of this.   –The 9/11 Roadies

"When you have ruled out the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth."  –Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (creator of "Sherlock Holmes")

JULY 17th, 2005 Opening Show Draws Raves

Tears and laughter filled a packed house at The MET Theatre on opening day as "9/11 Mysteries: Legend or Logic?" began its 6-week Hollywood stage run.

Demand has been strong for the show since it was first announced, and reservations filled half the seats in advance. The Roadies' July 15th interview on KPFK (90.7 Los Angeles) produced a torrent of incoming calls, jamming the station's phone lines.

The highlight of the blockbuster opening was Willie Rodriguez, last survivor to exit the WTC, whose first-hand eyewitness story about the real facts of what happened on September 11th, 2001 irrefutably backed up the content of the show. Willie brought the house down with his heartfelt memories of that day, as well as his anger at having his testimony suppressed by both the 9/11 Commission and by the major media networks.

Willie presented first-hand testimony of bombs in the building's basements which detonated seconds before the plane hit the top of the tower, blowing a hole in the upper stories and burning employees. As Willie rushed to help firemen rescue hundreds of trapped victims, opening stairwell doors on every floor with his master key, he heard more explosions throughout the building. Lucky to be on the ground itself when the building began to collapse, Willie rushed under a fire truck as the tower came down on top of it. He remained there for hours until he was found.

Willie met with the members of the audience and let them touch the precious master key which saved so many lives on that fateful day. The 9/11 Roadies will include Willie Rodriguez's powerful testimony in all future presentations by way of videotape.

Also in attendance was brilliant filmmaker Dylan Avery, whose DVD "Loose Change" was included in the price of admission to "9/11 Mysteries". Journalist Greg Szymanski introduced the show with his own testimony of media suppression.

9/11 Mysteries: Legend or Logic? is a 2-hour audiovisual presentation by two people who call themselves the "9/11 Roadies." Why? Because after pasting together a collage of video footage on 9/11 to show to a small gathering of friends back in February, a show was born and they were asked to take it on the road. The fact is, ANYONE can be a 9/11 Roadie. We are not special, we are not performers -- we are just two ordinary people who decided to show others what we had looked at ourselves.

The show is panoramic -- an overview of what happened that day, seen in slow motion and taken apart. The real show was ON September 11th -- theatrics that millions, even billions, fell for. Why we all believed it is the mystery. Perhaps because it was easier to do so and simply move on.

Consisting of 4 segments, "Demolitions," "Hijackers and Planes," "War Games" and "Who Benefits?", audiences do not fail to connect the dots. Yet the Roadies point no fingers, remaining neutral, letting viewers draw their own conclusions. The hardest part is the question that follows: "What do we do?"

Become a Narrowcaster!

Here's where YOU play a part. Become a narrowcaster. What does that mean? Broadcasting has been the way we have received information for almost a century. Radio, television, magazines, newspapers. But with broadcasting selling out to corporate interests and dulling us with sanitized news, a new trend has emerged. But it isn't that new. Narrowcasting -- the one-to-one passing of information -- was what started the American Revolution and got women the right to vote. Leaflets were handed out on the street. People talked, drew in others. That's exactly what you can do.

One person connects to another, to another.  See our "Be a Narrocaster" section on this site to learn more.