"From one to ten" revealed 10 mystery cases that shook the world, giving viewers goosebumps.

On the 1st episode of T-cast E Channel's "From one to ten," knowledge lecture MCs Jang Seong-gyu and Kang Ji-young dug into 10 strange and shocking cases from around the world under the theme "warning: creepy! mystery cases more brutal than fiction," following unresolved questions, various conspiracy theories and pieces of hidden truth to deliver chilling tension and intense pull to viewers.

Ranked No. 1 was the "Nepal royal family mass shooting" that led to the fall of 240 years of monarchy. In 2001, Crown Prince Dipendra, who was first in the line of succession, opened fire, massacring King Birendra and members of the royal family and then took his own life in a tragic incident. Afterward, public anger over King Gyanendra's corruption and malfeasance exploded, and the Nepalese monarchy ended after 240 years. However, only several hypotheses exist about the background, such as "a tragedy caused by opposition to the crown prince's marriage" or "Gyanendra's instigation," and the truth remains shrouded in fog.

Ranked No. 2 was the "Shinjuku BJ murder in Japan," which occurred during a live broadcast watched by 6,500 people. It was the case in which popular Japanese internet broadcaster Sato Airi was killed live by a fan, Tagano Kenichi. It later emerged that Airi had borrowed about 25 million won from Kenichi using excuses such as "I lost my wallet" and "my phone is suspended," and when Kenichi, who was suffering financial hardship, demanded repayment, she cut off contact and disappeared, causing public opinion to reverse sharply. Jang Seong-gyu could not hide his bitterness, saying it was "using fandom to extort money."

The "Miami zombie incident," which shook the world as a cannibalistic crime, was also reexamined. It was a horrific case in which 31-year-old car wash attendant Rudy Eugene ran naked through the streets and attacked a homeless man. In particular, because he reportedly tore the victim's face with his mouth and did not collapse even after being shot three times by police, a new drug was pointed to as the cause. But the autopsy found no such drug components in his body, deepening the fear with the comment that "if not a zombie, it cannot be explained." Also inflaming viewers' anger was the disappearance of Susan Powell, which left only suspicious circumstances such as a father-in-law secretly peeping at his daughter-in-law, stealing her underwear, and a large life insurance payout of 3.3 billion won, before vanishing without a trace.

Other unimaginable stories were revealed in detail, including the "Mike Mansholt case," in which a 65 kg son was found as a 16 kg corpse; the Jonestown massacre in Guyana, where a leader who cried out for salvation carried out the slaughter of 918 people; the "Cookie Monster theft case," a Hong Gil-dong figure who appeared in Germany; the cursed haunted house "Myrtle's Farm legend"; the Italian version of the Gonjiam case, the "Poveglia Island legend"; and the Dyatlov Pass incident in Russia, where bodies were found in underwear on a mountain with temperatures as low as minus 30 degrees, all of which sent shivers through living rooms.

The bite-and-tear trivia chart show From one to ten, by Jang Seong-gyu & Kang Ji-young, which reveals 10 tasty and intriguing bits of trivia each week, airs every Monday at 8 p.m. on T-cast E Channel.

[Photo] E Channel

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