On April 21, 1986, Geraldo Rivera hosted a two-hour live television event to open Al Capone’s so-called vault, conducting the entire show in front of a sealed underground room inside Chicago’s Lexington Hotel.
Behind him was what had long been rumored to be a hidden space tied to Capone himself. And for two full hours, he built it up like buried treasure waiting to be uncovered. Crews chipped away at the wall live on air while Rivera narrated every step, stretching the suspense as millions of viewers, myself included, tuned in to watch it happen in real time.
An estimated 30 million people watched that night, making it one of the biggest syndicated specials ever aired. And then, when they finally broke through, the “vault” revealed almost nothing. A couple of dusty, empty bottles. That was it.
Forty years later, it still might be one of the most perfectly overhyped reveals ever put on television.
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