Skip to Content
The Daily Dot home
The Daily Dot home
Advertisement
Unclick

CNN will play this eerie video when the world ends

Marching Band on TV Set

When the world ends, CNN thinks it'll get the last word.

Featured Video

During CNN's launch 34 years ago, founder Ted Turner promised that the network would, barring satellite interruptions, broadcast until the world ends.

We'll be on, and we will cover the end of the world, live, and that will be our last event. We'll play the National Anthem only one time, on the first of June [the day CNN launched], and when the end of the world comes, we'll play 'Nearer My God To Thee' before we sign off.

It sounded like a joke, but Turner wasn't kidding. At the very least, he'd prepped for an apocalyptic event—filing a video that features a band playing the 19th Century Christian hymn, the same one the band supposedly played when the Titanic went down, ready to be deployed whenever the world ceased to be.

Advertisement
(Sorry, this embed was not found.)

Michael Ballaban, a Jalopnik writer who served as a CNN intern in 2009, found the video handily after hearing about it form a co-worker and seeing it for himself. The video lives on CNN's intranet, with the title, "TURNER DOOMSDAY VIDEO." The video is in standard 4:3 aspect ratio, and seemingly hasn't been updated since Turner made his decree in 1980. Back then, CNN was revolutionizing how news would be delivered. Instead of during prescribed times allotted by networks, it would be 24/7. Of course, now news comes even faster than television journalism can respond. The notion that a broadcast network would be the last holdout in a modern apocalypse instead of Twitter, YouTube, or some yet-to-be-invented news medium seems archaic, but in 1980 the idea that CNN would have the news upper hand wasn't out of the question.

For anyone who finds the video on CNN's video database, there's a bold note. "HFR till end of the world confirmed." (HFR means "hold for release.") It of course begs the question, exactly how does CNN's one remaining employee in midst of an apocalypse get confirmation of the official end of the world?  

Probably a Tweet.

Advertisement

H/T JalopnikPhoto via Wikipedia (CC BY SA 3.0) | Remix by Fernando Alfonso III

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from The Daily Dot

See all posts

Anti-ICE protests pop up outside of Roblox’s digital HQ after chat function disappears

This isn't the first time ICE protests have taken place on Roblox.

January 20, 2026

“MAGA now stands for Make America Go Away”: Greenlanders protest the USA with red hats of their own

"People in Greenland are wearing these hats and honestly… I’m stealing it."

January 19, 2026

“I’m flying to the cottage”: SNL’s “Heated Wizardry” parody split the fandom between laughs and backlash

"But in a heated rivalry, they were rivals... you missed a great opportunity to show us the drarry."

January 19, 2026

A Minecraft team is rebuilding New York City at scale. It’s been over five years of work so far

"I can hear the pained cries of 10,000 GPUs at the prospect of running this map."

January 19, 2026