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Scariest Places on Earth (Derby England)

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Uploaded by on Dec 10, 2009

Paranormal researchers investigate another haunting

  • likes, 3 dislikes

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  • I wish they would call it "The Old Bell Inn" instead of hotel, when the name rymes with itself it kinda ruins the whole "scary feeling" lol

  • i don't know if this is real or not...but it's worth watching ^_^ A+

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All Comments (53)

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  • I experienced something REALLY freaky watching this! The video was running normally, when at 3:12 , the sound started going all weird, then cut out. I tried starting the video from the start, but the same thing happened. Then at 4:26 , the video started playing up, and went straight back to the start, but his time, the video was all messed up. I refreshed, but exactly the same... Thumbs if this happened to you

  • Hate it when programmes use a silly voice to narrate as it just only helps discredit the programme on an issue which barely retains any believability for most people anyway.

  • I live here! Never seen anything though ;)

  • @fourbabies1 lol so niave...

  • Scariest Places on Earth: Detroit, U.S.A.

    Scariest Places on Earth: Michelle Bachman's Brain

    Scariest Places on Earth: North Korea

  • @tantawi1992 @crazzii

    I know these comments were from a long time ago, but Derby (as in the county spoken of in this video) is pronounced with an 'A' where the 'E' is.

  • wow... those were some gruesome stories.

  • i'm from derby !!

  • Basically it's pronounced "darby" because of invaders who settled here:

    1: Romans set up a camp/ small town called 'Derventio.

    2: The name Derby derived from the Danish words deor by meaning "deer settlement.

    3: Anglo Saxons recorded it as Deoraby which means "village of the deer"

    But it did appear on maps as "Darby" or "Darbye" around the 1600's, which arguably to an american point of view, how it should be spelt, i'm guessing over time the spelling changed but the way it's said hasn't.

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