Living
18 Celebrities That Vanished Without a Trace or Explanation
If the best magicians in the world have taught us anything, it’s that we simply cannot vanish without a lot of preparation and planning. As human beings, we crave closure. As a society obsessed with celebrity culture, we also crave constant news and attention regarding these larger-than-life figures. So what do we do when some of the biggest stars in the world up and vanish?
We look closer.
Today, we are going to introduce you to 18 celebrities that vanished without a trace or a concrete explanation. While these stories are sad and tragic in their own right, they are also thrilling insights into how quickly larger-than-life figures can come and go.

Sean Flynn

The son of Errol Flynn, Sean Flynn was always stuck behind his father’s shadow. Despite a successful career as both an actor and a photojournalist during the Vietnam War, Flynn would potentially lose his life trying to set himself apart from what he wasn’t… his father. Flynn would go to Vietnam in 1970 alongside another journalist named Dana Stone. Their goal was simple, to cover a Viet Cong checkpoint, but they never returned and nobody knows what happened to them.
Leading Guess: The Khmer Rouge has killed at least 30 known foreign journalists and Flynn is potentially one of them.
Oscar Zeta Acosta

Born and raised in El Paso Texas, Oscar Acosta would go on to become a prominent attorney, novelist, and activist within the Chicago Movement. Most well known for his work with and characterization by Hunter S. Thompson, Acosta would live up to his larger-than-life reputation by breaking down barriers everywhere that he saw them.
Oscar Zeta Acosta would vanish without a trace in 1974 while on a trip to Mexico and since he vanished, he has been presumed dead. Some fans of Oscar Zeta Acosta believe that he gave up his life of fame and drugs to live quietly in Mexico.
Barbara Newhall Follett

By the age of 13, Barbara Newhall Follett had already published her first novel. Not long after that, her complex and technical work would land her on lists as the next great American author. Follett would release two celebrated novels before the world would fall from beneath her feet as her father abandoned the family. Follett would be forced to quit writing to support her mother. She would never publish a novel again.
At 26-years-old, Follett would vanish after an argument with her husband. Her husband never looked and Follett’s mother didn’t even notice she was gone for over a decade.
Fan Bingbing

Would it shock you to learn that we have celebrities still vanishing in today’s highly publicized world? Fan Bingbing was ready to explode in the West as a talented performer thanks to an appearance in X-Men: Days of Future Past. Unfortunately for Fan, her contractual information would leak revealing that she had been evading taxes. Bingbing would vanish in 2018 without a trace, with many individuals pointing to the Chinese government as responsible.
Thankfully, Bingbing would reappear years later but her disappearance hung like a bomb ready to go off.
Connie Converse

Connie Converse was born and raised in New Hampshire. She would leave home behind to head to New York City to pursue her dreams as a musician. While Connie wasn’t enormously popular during her time in the city, her work would gain new life long after her disappearance.
In 1974 long after leaving music behind, Connie would send her friends a letter. She told them that she had felt like she had failed and that it was time for a fresh start. She was never heard from again.
Rico Harris

How can someone with such explosive talents simply vanish without a trace? As it turns out, the answer is tragically ‘pretty easy’. Harris made his claim to fame as a member of the Harlem Globetrotters during the early 00s. Prior to his work with the Globetrotters he had been a top-level collegiate recruit. Unfortunately, a problem with alcohol would cause Harris to lose his job later in life as a security guard.
Harris would leave his mother’s house in Seattle only to vanish outside of Sacramento. His car was found but Harris was never located.
D.B. Cooper

We suppose that we are cheating by using a figure like D.B. Cooper, but we figure that he still should be on this list. Yet to be unidentified, the name Dan Cooper was handed to the unidentified figure who would go on to hijack a Boeing 727 aircraft in 1971. Cooper had purchased his airline ticket under the name Dan Cooper, this leading to the name we have given him.
Cooper would jump from the airline that he had hijacked while taking nearly $1.26 million dollars in money-adjusted-for-inflation. Nobody knows what happened to Cooper once he left the plane. Some say he survived, others figure that he died upon landing.
Bisone Delle

Bison Dele was known as Brian Williams as a collegiate basketball player. Talented and athletic, Dele would find his way to the NBA only to quit the game by the age of 30. Dele would travel across the world, enjoying nomadic travel throughout Asia and the Middle East. Dele would live this vagabond lifestyle while setting sail with his brothers and girlfriend for a trip to Hawaii.
Only Miles Dabord, Dele’s eldest brother, would ever be heard from again while trying to cash his brother’s checkbook. Dabord is considered the prime suspect in the disappearance of Dele, but he has since passed away from an insulin overdose.
Richey Edwards

Richey Edwards was Sid Vicious before Sid Vicious was Sid Vicious, ya dig? Edwards was a rock star in every sense of the word, and he was renowned, revered, and repudiated for his larger than life actions. Edwards was known to be unstable, and he often did ‘out there’ things for attention. When he vanished in 1995, many assumed Edwards had simply chosen to vanish. Edwards would never be heard from again, though his car was found abandoned beneath the Severn Bridge.
Jimmy Hoffa

No conversation regarding vanishing celebrities can be complete without mentioning Jimmy Hoffa. Once in charge of the Teamsters union in the ’60s, Hoffa would turn away from his position in the ’70s due to a potential passion for crime. Ultimately, Hoffa would end up vanishing in 1975 while visiting Detroit. He has since been presumed dead and no body has ever been recovered.
Harold Holt

Harold Holt had been serving as Australia’s 17th Prime Minister when he vanished on an otherwise normal December day. Holt had been visiting the Cheviot Beach located in Victoria where he had fostered a love for swimming. The weather was purportedly bad with waves higher than most surfers were willing to handle.
Holt was never found and the general consensus is that he drowned while swimming, or had an incursion with some aquatic life. Imagine if JFK had simply vanished at sea and you’ll get why this was such a big deal at the time.
Solomon Northup

Solomon Northup is the author behind the famous novel and cinematic adaptation, Twelve Years a Slave. Northup had been kidnaped in 1841 by two men, Merrill Brown and Abram Hamilton. Northup would end up in the slave markets where he was sold to James H. Birch as a ‘fugitive’. Solomon would eventually reclaim his freedom only to tragically vanish in 1857 while working in Canada.
Nobody knows what happened to Northup, but his story continues to live on to this day.
‘Sweet’ Jimmy Robinson

Imagine if you will the opportunity to compete one on one with the greatest name your favorite sport has ever seen. That is what happened to Sweet Jimmy Robinson in 1961 when he stepped into the ring with Muhammad Ali. Robinson had been brought in as a last-minute replacement, and he would be knocked out in short order, lasting just 94 seconds in the ring.
Robinson would go on to vanish in 1979 shortly after a photographer had found him broke, potentially homeless, and addicted to alcohol. If Sweet Jimmy is still alive today, he is embracing his privacy.
Jim Sullivan

Jim Sullivan wasn’t your average guitarist. He was a folk singer who had gained a cult following after releasing just two records. Sullivan wouldn’t go out like most rock stars typically do, instead simply vanishing from thin air during a visit to Santa Rosa in New Mexico. Sullivan’s clothing, wallet, and guitar were all found abandoned at a local motel.
Sullivan’s friends claim that he would never have abandoned his guitar and some conspiracy theorists believe that UFOs might have been involved. Sullivan had once written about driving into the desert only to be abducted by aliens.
Amelia Earhart

Celebrities vanishing and historical figures go hand in hand when discussing Amelia Earhart. Perhaps most famous FOR going missing, Earhart had accomplished more than enough in life to put that idea to bed. Earhart was an established pilot, designer, and author with the kind of ambition that would lead someone to try and fly across the globe.
Unfortunately for Earhart and Fred Noonan, the pilots would simply vanish once over the Pacific Ocean. Some say the plane crashed. Others say that Amelia and Fred went to Japan. Simply put, nobody knows.
Hale Boggs

Close your eyes and imagine the most famous politician in America outside the President of the United States. Now imagine that they had vanished without a trace. That is the perspective we need to have when discussing Hale Boggs. Boggs had sat opposite many prominent figures during his time in office, doubting the JFK shooting publicly while also going to verbal war with J. Edgar Hoover, a pretty bad fella.
In 1972, Boggs was expected to arrive in Juneau to help fellow party members hold their seat for the upcoming election. With bad weather and more than 325,000 sq/miles of area, Boggs and his vehicle would simply vanish without a trace. No plane wreckage or body was ever found.
Michael Rockefeller

Young, rich, and exorbitantly handsome. Michael Rockefeller had everything going for him when he simply went missing. Michael could have been referred to as just another spoiled socialite who vanished while on vacation, but that would be doing his story a disservice. Instead, Michael would vanish while visiting Papua New Guinea to visit the local people and embrace their culture.
Rockefeller would see his boat overturned around the Asmat area of Papua New Guinea and his body was never recovered. Some local tribes are said to have seen Rockefeller reach the shore, only to be killed and dismembered as a trophy. Nobody knows for sure.
Don Lewis

Let’s close out our exploration of celebrities that vanished without a trace by pointing to Don Lewis, a self-made millionaire with an eye for automobiles and real estate. Lewis would rise to fame thanks to his mentions in the Tiger King reality series on Netflix. Lewis would vanish in 2002 after developing a history of visiting sketchy places throughout South America. His wife, Carole Baskin, was often pointed at as a potential reason for his disappearance. Carole and Lewis had married in 1991 and had a notably rocky relationship.
Despite all the theories surrounding Don Lewis and his disappearance, no solid or concrete evidence has ever presented itself. Some say that he was fed to big cats after being murdered while others assume he went missing in South America. There have been no charges levied nor any arrests made in connection with his disappearance. Carole Baskin has since used her fame to try and find his remains.
Living
New Osprey Couple Lay First Eggs at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve
A young osprey pair has laid their first eggs at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve in South Cumbria, bringing new excitement to the reserve’s thriving birdwatching scene.
The pair, male Blue 476 and female Blue 717, first paired up in late April at a second nest on the reserve, near Grange-over-Sands. According to Cumbria Wildlife Trust, which manages the site, Blue 476 is a “local lad,” hatched in 2021 at a private site in the Lake District. Blue 717, meanwhile, is thought to be from Fife, having hatched in 2022.
Young and Hopeful Parents
This is the pair’s first nesting attempt, and they’ve laid two eggs so far. The Trust noted the eggs came a bit late in the season, and since the parents are inexperienced, hatching success isn’t guaranteed. Still, staff remain hopeful and are closely monitoring their progress.
Ospreys typically share incubation duties, which last around 37 days. During this time, the adults take turns incubating the eggs, maintaining the nest, fishing, and defending their territory from potential intruders.
Nest Rivalry
Foulshaw Moss is already home to a well-established osprey pair, Blue 35 and White YW, who have nested at the site for over a decade. The long-time residents are also incubating eggs, expected to hatch around May 23. Some interaction has been observed between the two pairs: in late April, Blue 476 approached the original nest, only to be swiftly chased off by Blue 35.
Visiting the Reserve
Visitors are welcome at the reserve to try and spot the ospreys, though they’re reminded to plan ahead. The car park is small and fills up quickly, and the access road is narrow with no passing places. Bike racks are available, and the site is reachable via public transport.
While the second nest doesn’t yet have a live webcam, the Trust has installed a new viewing hide on the eastern side of the reserve, offering improved opportunities for osprey watching. A volunteer is often on site with a telescope and may be able to help visitors spot the birds. For those viewing from a distance, binoculars are strongly recommended.
The original nest, home to Blue 35 and White YW, is viewable through the Foulshaw Osprey Webcam, funded by public donations.
Osprey Fast Facts
- Ospreys (Pandion haliaetus) are large fish-eating raptors with a wingspan of about 5 to 6 feet.
- They migrate thousands of miles each year, wintering in West Africa or southern Europe and returning to the UK in spring to breed.
- The same nesting sites are often reused year after year, with some osprey pairs returning to the same nest for over a decade.
- Chicks are ringed before fledging so their movements and survival can be monitored as part of ongoing conservation efforts.
- Ospreys became extinct in England by 1916 due to egg-collecting and persecution but have made a steady comeback thanks to reintroduction efforts and legal protections.
Despite a few heartbreaks over the years—such as unhatched eggs and lost chicks—the success of Foulshaw Moss as a breeding site underscores the resilience and return of this iconic bird to the region.
Living
Teen Trio Builds Salt-Powered Fridge to Deliver Lifesaving Vaccines Without Electricity
Three teens from Indore, India, have created a salt-powered mini refrigerator that works without electricity—an innovation that could transform how medical supplies reach remote communities.
Their invention, called Thermavault, uses a chemical process where salts absorb heat as they dissolve in water, effectively cooling the surrounding area. It’s designed to maintain safe storage temperatures for vaccines, medications, and even transplant organs—all without needing to plug in.
The creators—Dhruv Chaudhary, Mithran Ladhania, and Mridul Jain—were inspired by challenges their parents, all in the medical field, experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Getting vaccines to rural areas without reliable electricity was an uphill battle. So, the three teens got to work.
After experimenting with nearly 150 different salts and hitting several dead ends, a teacher’s suggestion led them to two that worked: ammonium chloride and barium hydroxide octahydrate. Ammonium chloride kept temperatures between 2°C and 6°C—ideal for many vaccines—while the second salt combo could bring temps below freezing, suitable for more sensitive materials.
Their salt-based cooling system is housed in a compact insulated box lined with copper. The solution is poured into the walls, which then pull heat away from the contents inside. Better still, the system is reusable: simply boil off the water in the field to reclaim the salt for future use, no freezer or power supply needed.
Their innovation earned them the 2025 Earth Prize for Asia and a $12,500 award. The trio plans to use the funds to build 200 Thermavault units for 120 hospitals. They’re also working toward World Health Organization certification so they can partner with organizations like Gavi, which delivers vaccines around the globe.
Dr. Pritesh Vyas, an orthopedic surgeon who tested Thermavault in a local hospital, confirmed that it kept vaccines stable for up to 12 hours. With further upgrades like a built-in temperature monitor, he believes it could become a critical tool for rural healthcare.
For now, the teens are focused on refining their device and taking it to the global stage. As voting opens for the Earth Prize’s global winner on April 22, Thermavault has a chance to gain even more attention—and potentially save countless lives.
Living
Texas Mom Welcomes Third Baby at 51 — and Says She Might Not Be Done Yet
Grace Collins, a mom from Texas, isn’t letting age define her motherhood journey. At 51, she recently welcomed her third child — a baby boy named A.J. — and says she’s not sure she’s finished growing her family just yet.
Collins first gained attention in 2024 when she went viral on TikTok for sharing her story of becoming a mom later in life through IVF. Her journey began at age 44 with the birth of her first daughter, Maggie. Two years later came her second daughter, Goldie. And in 2024, at age 50, she became pregnant again — this time with her first son.
“It’s hard being pregnant no matter what age you’re at,” Collins told TODAY.com. “And I don’t know if I’m done either!”
Though being pregnant in her 50s might seem daunting, Collins says it’s actually gotten easier over time. “I felt like I was more tired when I was pregnant at 44 than I was when I was 50,” she previously told PEOPLE. “Maybe my body just figured out how to cope, or maybe having children keeps me young.”
That sense of energy seems to carry into her everyday life as a mom of three little ones. “I’m a pretty on-the-go kind of girl,” she said. “I’ve been in the little kid daily grind since I was 44, so I don’t know any different.”
Collins also shared that age has brought some unexpected advantages. With more life experience under her belt, she feels more aware of her body and committed to her health. Before her last pregnancy, she took proactive steps to ensure she was in good shape, including a full slate of medical screenings and maintaining an active lifestyle.
“I made sure I had a healthy baseline,” she told PEOPLE. “All my pregnancies have had their hurdles — but overall, I can honestly say it’s become easier with each one.”
Despite being older than many of the parents she meets at playdates or school events, Collins says age isn’t a barrier when it comes to connecting. “The things we have in common outweigh our age differences,” she said. “If anything, having kids has honestly kept me younger.”
As for whether baby A.J. will be her last? Collins isn’t closing that door just yet. For now, she’s savoring life as a busy mom and embracing every moment. “I’m going to do everything I can to stay young and present — not just for my kids but for myself.”
Living
Friendship Benches Come to Sussex, Offering Free Mental Health Support Inspired by Zimbabwe
A simple wooden bench may seem unremarkable, but in Sussex, it’s about to become a powerful tool for tackling mental health challenges.
A pilot scheme called the Friendship Bench, originally developed in Zimbabwe, is launching in Sussex to provide free, low-barrier support for people dealing with depression, anxiety, and loneliness. The initiative places trained lay counsellors—affectionately called “grandmothers” and “grandfathers”—on benches in public indoor spaces like libraries and community centers, where they offer compassionate, non-judgmental conversation to anyone who stops by.
Founded in 2006 by psychiatrist Professor Dixon Chibanda, the Friendship Bench model was born from the idea that everyday people, especially older members of the community, can offer meaningful support. Despite receiving just two weeks of training, the lay counsellors have made a global impact. Studies, including one published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, show the program led to an 80% reduction in depression and suicidal thoughts, and a 60% improvement in quality of life among participants.
Now brought to the UK by Dr. Nina Lockwood of Brighton and Sussex Medical School, the Sussex pilot will involve ten lay mental-health workers offering six-to-eight-week support sessions. Unlike the original Zimbabwe benches that are placed outdoors, the UK’s version will adapt to the British climate with indoor seating areas.
“There is an unintended novelty to the west taking a model founded in Africa,” Lockwood said. “But just like in Zimbabwe, the UK has a massive shortfall in mental health resources compared to the demand of our population’s mental health problems. We urgently need to adopt agile, alternative ways of working.”
Trained volunteer Mebrak Ghebreweldi, from Diversity Resource International, said the approach allows time to uncover root issues, like housing insecurity or unemployment—problems that can be missed in rushed GP visits.
“GPs don’t have time for those long conversations,” Ghebreweldi explained. “They’ll just prescribe something. But when we listen, we often find that what seems like depression may actually stem from practical, solvable problems.”
Chibanda’s vision for the Friendship Bench grew from a recognition that medication and diagnoses alone can’t fix a growing global mental health crisis. “Not everyone can see a mental health professional,” he said. “But most people have access to the care, compassion, and wisdom of grandmothers—the unsung heroines of the world.”
In the UK, mental health needs are urgent. One in six adults reported moderate to severe depressive symptoms in 2022, and NHS wait times for therapy can stretch over four months. The Friendship Bench offers a hopeful alternative—one built on human connection and community.
With over half a million people already helped worldwide, the scheme’s expansion into Sussex could be a quiet revolution in how we approach mental wellness—one chat at a time.
Living
New Coral Feeding Device Offers Hope for Reef Restoration
A team of scientists from The Ohio State University has unveiled a groundbreaking device designed to enhance food sources for coral reefs, offering a potential boost to restoration efforts. The device, called the Underwater Zooplankton Enhancement Light Array (UZELA), works by attracting zooplankton to coral habitats, increasing their availability as a food source.
UZELA is a submersible, programmable light capable of operating for up to six months on a single battery. When maintenance is needed, trained divers can perform simple servicing. The device activates for roughly an hour each night, emitting a specific type of light that encourages zooplankton accumulation without disturbing other marine species. This process enhances the feeding opportunities for corals, improving their chances of survival and growth.
Encouraging Results from Initial Tests
Researchers tested UZELA near two native Hawaiian coral species, Montipora capitata and Porites compressa. Their observations showed a seven-fold increase in local zooplankton populations and a dramatic improvement in coral feeding rates—ranging from 10 to 50 times higher than usual. These findings were published in Limnology and Oceanography: Methods.
According to study lead Andréa Grottoli, a professor of earth sciences at The Ohio State University, coral reefs play a disproportionately important role in marine ecosystems. “Although reefs make up less than 1% of the ocean, they support a third of all marine life,” she explained. “With increasing threats, we must find ways to protect them.”
The Growing Threat of Coral Bleaching
Extreme ocean temperatures continue to endanger coral reefs. The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) recently reported that from February 2023 to April 2024, nearly 60.5% of the world’s coral experienced bleaching. This occurs when corals expel the algae that provide them with essential nutrients, making them more susceptible to disease and die-off.
While corals can recover if water conditions stabilize, many struggle due to a lack of available food. The presence of concentrated zooplankton, as facilitated by UZELA, could help mitigate some of the negative effects and provide corals with the nutrition they need to survive.
A Short-Term Solution with Long-Term Potential
Although UZELA is not a permanent fix for coral degradation, researchers see it as a valuable tool for temporary relief. Grottoli compared it to “a band-aid that could help buy us time” while broader solutions, like reducing carbon emissions, are pursued.
Currently, UZELA devices are assembled by hand, but researchers are working with a local engineering firm to refine the design for mass production. If successful, an improved version could be ready within the next few years, allowing for expanded deployment in vulnerable coral reef regions.
“Addressing climate change is the only way to truly save coral reefs,” Grottoli emphasized. “But tools like UZELA give us a fighting chance to protect some reefs while we work toward a more sustainable future.”
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