For the Lagina brothers, the search for Oak Island's mysterious treasure began back in 1965, when Rick Lagina read all about the Oak Island treasure in a copy of Readers Digest. , Spoiler alert, the Rick and MortyVagina brothers dont find anything, hope nobody wasted 6 years of your life watching this, not even real explorers just paid actors. The season finale, i.e., 'The Curse of Oak Island' season 8 episode 25 is scheduled to premiere on May 4, 2021, at 9 pm ET on the History Channel. I just knew the swamps held the true key to Oak Island. Recently the island has been showcased on both the discovery channel, and the history channel. [74] Leary's "The Second Cryptographic Shakespeare", published in 1990, identified ciphers in Shakespeare's plays and poems which pointed to Bacon's authorship. On this week's episode of The Curse of Oak Island, the team discovered more gold buried in the Money Pit area. Lagina connects it to the Knights Templar, as the design is reminiscent of a carving he saw at a Templar prison he visited in Domme, France in Season 5, Episode 8 "Dan's Breakthrough. Various items have surfaced over the years that were found on the island, some of which have since been carbon-dated and found to be hundreds of years old. Word on the street is that the island plays host to some buried treasure, the kind that would make you a one-percenter overnight. While Peter Lawford might the least well-known member of the Rat Pack, he is sometimes referred to as the "Man Who Kept The Secrets" due to his secretive efforts to connect Marilyn Monroe and his brother-in-law JFK. Not only have the brothers found their niche in digging, but reality television and the dramatics as well. I don't know. "[66], Templars, Masons, or Incas seeking to squirrel their treasure away from Spanish conquistadors may have created the money pit, according to William S. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. I live in Nova Scotia and can attest to the mic mac flag being similar to the Templar battle flag. [80][self-published source], Author Joy Steele suggests that the money pit is actually a tar kiln dating to the historical period when "Oak Island served as a tar-making location as part of the British naval stores industry". An account of an excavation of the pit was published in the January 1965 issue of Reader's Digest.