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A 25-Year-Old X-Files Mystery Was Solved on Twitter in Less Than 24 Hours

A 25-Year-Old X-Files Mystery Was Solved on Twitter in Less Than 24 Hours

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A 25-Year-Old X-Files Mystery Was Solved on Twitter in Less Than 24 Hours

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Published on December 6, 2023

Since 1998, many people have had questions about various moments in The X-Files. One of those moments happens in the two-part episode “Dreamland,” from the show’s sixth season. A song plays in a bar scene. Seems straightforward enough to find out what song it is, right?

But no one could identify it. Not by using Shazam, not by asking Reddit, not anywhere. Until, 25 years after the episode aired, Twitter solved the mystery in less than a day.

It all began, as it so often does, with a single tweet:

At the time of writing, this post now has almost 14 million views. It begins a thread in which @laurenancona does all the things a person does when trying to find something on the internet: she goes to Reddit; looks at IMDb; finds random YouTube videos on the topic; and still comes up empty. She digs through the credits and pinpoints the music editor. People start making suggestions. Other X-Files fans weigh in.

AND THEN. Then, someone talks to said music editor, a guy named Jeff Charbonneau:

Ultimately, Charbonneau doesn’t have the answer, either. BUT THEN! Someone digs up the dang cue sheet from the episode—which, did I mention, aired in 1998? The internet is full of mysteries and delights.

There are a lot of tangents and ideas and details in the original thread, which you should definitely read if you find this sort of thing enjoyable. People have a lot of good ideas! And then, eventually, they have the answer. At almost the same time yesterday, two different Twitter users posted with the source of the song. One reply came from TV and music supervisor Jonathan Leahy, who clearly had some very good sources:

The other came from Nick Hatch, who has a quote from Glenn Jordan (the quote comes from a post Jordan made in a musicians’ forum in 2004 and is truly an incredible find):

And then, in a grand finale, Dan Marfisi turns up to solve the mystery for once and for all:

The internet, it turns out, is still good sometimes. Here is the scene, for your viewing pleasure:

If you would like to watch the episode in question, The X-Files is currently streaming on Hulu.

 

 

About the Author

Molly Templeton

Author

Molly Templeton has been a bookseller, an alt-weekly editor, and assistant managing editor of Tor.com, among other things. She now lives and writes in Oregon, and spends as much time as possible in the woods.
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