

They put it aside and leave it open, and then the family takes over. Suspects can lie, and the police only have so much money and time to dedicate to each case. “Very often, the pivot point comes from within the family itself. “It’s about giving survivors a sense of justice and closure,” Kurtis shares. After the case went cold, his mother Cheryl Williams never gave up hope that her son would be found and the mystery would be solved. How many of us get to go back 20 years later, after a show began, and look at it again with all of the experience that you’ve gained in the interim? It’s great.”įriday’s season premiere takes a closer look at the case of Mike Williams, a duck hunter in the Florida Panhandle who disappeared in 2000. They want to interview me, and I love it. “All these years later, and I’m their hero.

“They were kids watching Cold Case Files back when I was doing it,” Kurtis says of his average fan. For them, Kurtis propagated the genre long before the sexy advent of podcasting. But it’s the true-crime nerds who show him the most love. Kurtis, a retired CBS anchor and broadcast journalist, also hosted the A&E series American Justice and Investigative Reports and executive-produces Cold Case Files and CNBC’s American Greed. There are also those who love him for his cohosting work on NPR’s news quiz show Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me and his narration work on 2004’s Anchorman. (The show enjoyed a standalone Season 6 on Netflix in 2017, but actor Danny Glover hosted and narrated that incarnation.)Īside from that year, Kurtis has delivered the authoritative voiceovers behind every installment and has accrued quite the following as a result.

The true-crime series will air Fridays at 9/8c and continue to highlight the 1 percent of the nation’s 100,000 unsolved cases that eventually get solved. Perhaps this level of recognition is one of the reasons Kurtis is returning this week as the host and voice of A&E’s Cold Case Files after a 15-year hiatus.

Wild Kratts Recasts Black Role With Black Voice Actress Ahead of Season 7Ĭops, Live PD Episodes Pulled From Schedule Amid George Floyd Protests Death: Grade the Premiere of Peacock's True-Crime Miniseries That was chilling,’ just to keep things moving. “So I nod my head and say, ‘That’s Episode 79. “They walk up to me and say, ‘Whatever happened to that 18-year-old whose body was found?’ and I swear to God, I can’t remember all 137 episodes,” Kurtis confesses to TVLine. Bill Kurtis can’t go on vacation without strangers recognizing him and inquiring about old Cold Case Filesepisodes that still haunt them.
