Eerie movie CNN will play in event of apocalypse re-emerges in wake of founder Ted Turner's death

Eerie movie CNN will play in event of apocalypse re-emerges in wake of founder Ted Turner's death
By: dailymail Posted On: May 07, 2026 View: 36

A chilling video meant to play on CNN in case of the end of the world has resurfaced in the wake of the death of the cable network's creator, Ted Turner.

Turner died at the age of 87 Wednesday, according to the network. 

The 53-second clip was originally unearthed in 2015, as Turner vowed that the station would broadcast the news 24 hours a day until the end of the world. 

It returned to the internet, as the clip appeared all over social media as news of Turner's passing spread.  

Therefore, anticipating that at one point the apocalypse would come, he is believed to have created a segment that would be shown as the cable channel signed off for the final time.

The clip that would supposedly be played to the last people watching the station is a minute-long version of the 19th century hymn 'Nearer my God to thee' performed by the Armed Forces marching bands.

It is said to be stored in the network's MIRA archives, having initially been made in the 1980s. 

The file is believed to be kept alongside bold red letters which read: 'HFR (hold for release' till end of the world confirmed.'

A chilling video meant to play on CNN in case of the end of the world has resurfaced in the wake of the death of the cable network's creator, Ted Turner

Turner died at the age of 87 Wednesday, according to the network

Michael Ballaban, who was an intern in 2009 for Wolf Blizter's program Situation Room, said back in 2015 he was first told about the video by a college professor who had worked at CNN for 20 years. 

According to an article he wrote in Jalopnik in 2015, the clip turned up on a database when he searched for 'Turner Doomsday Video'. 

He since managed to get hold of the footage and posted it online.  

Rumors of the doomsday tape's existence have been reported many times over the last 25 years.

In 1988, it was included in an article published in the New Yorker, and as late as 2001, in the New York Daily News

He told the New Yorker: Normally, when a TV station begins & ends the broadcast day, it signs on & off by playing the National Anthem. 

'But with CNN - a 24-hour-a day channel - we would only sign off once and I knew what that would mean. So we got the combined Armed Forces marching bands together –the Army, Navy, Marine & Air Force bands–& took them out to the old CNN headquarters & we had them practice the National Anthem for a videotaping. 

'Then, as things cranked up, I asked if they'd play "Nearer My God, to Thee" to put on videotape just in case the world ever came to an end. That would be the last thing CNN played before we–before we signed off.

The clip that would supposedly be played to the last people watching the station is a minute-long version of the 19th century hymn 'Nearer my God to thee' performed by the Armed Forces marching bands

It is said to be stored in the network's MIRA archives, having initially been made in the 1980s. The file is believed to be kept alongside bold red letters which read: 'HFR (hold for release' till end of the world confirmed'

'I can't watch this without getting tears in my eyes. 

'I keep this tape around because when the world ends it'll be over before we can say what we wanted to say. Before we can leave any final messages.' 

Born as part of Ted Turner's Turner Broadcasting System, in 1996 it became a part of Time Warner.

In 2000 America Online bought Time Warner for $164 billion, and in 2006 Ted Turner himself left the Time Warner board. 

In 2009, AOL was spun off from the company it once attempted to dominate. 

The billionaire died on Wednesday, according to the cable news network he founded.

Turner had four children and was famously married to Hollywood star Jane Fonda between 1991 and 2001.

Nicknamed the Mouth of the South for his outspokenness, Turner built a media empire that spanned several cable and satellite sports stations. For decades, he also owned the Atlanta Braves.

The billionaire died on Wednesday, according to the cable news network he founded

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in November 1938, Turner took over a faltering family billboard business after his father's suicide and transformed it into a sprawling media empire

Turner founded CNN, the first 24-hour cable news channel, in 1980. 

He was named Time's Man of the Year eleven years later for the station's live coverage of current events.

CNN Worldwide CEO Mark Thompson acknowledged his death in a statement.

A cause was not given, but Turner was known to have had Lewy body dementia.

'He was and always will be the presiding spirit of CNN,' Thompson wrote of Turner.

'Ted is the giant on whose shoulders we stand, and we will all take a moment today to recognize him and his impact on our lives and the world.'

Thompson further touted the TNT founder as an 'intensely involved and committed leader, intrepid, fearless and always willing to back a hunch and trust his own judgment.'

Turner officially resigned from Turner Broadcasting System - which includes CNN - in 2006. 

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in November 1938, took over a faltering family billboard business after his father's suicide before launching his television career with purchases of several radio stations and a struggling Atlanta station in 1970.

Within ten years, Turner managed to turn the channel around. He used the profits to help launch CNN, which quickly gained traction in the United States and later internationally.   

The launch came as viewers were shifting from broadcast to cable, with CNN subsequently surfacing as a key source of news during the Persian Gulf War in the early 90s.

The channel's success inspired the creation of several other 24-hour news channels since, including Fox News. 

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