10 Mind-Blowing Pics About the 1980s Max Headroom TV Hijacking Mystery

In the 1980s, the Max Headroom TV signal hijacking took over the airwaves with a bizarre interruption that no one could explain. These 10 photos capture the haunting moments of a mystery that still has people scratching their heads. Imagine watching your favorite show, only to have the screen hijacked by a weird, masked figure and distorted visuals that left millions confused. Was it a prank? A secret message? The world may never know, but these pics keep the legend alive, offering an eerie glimpse into one of the most unsettling TV moments in history.

1. 3… 2… 1…

We interrupt this regularly scheduled programming to bring you the mystery of the Max Headroom signal hijacking, an unsolved on-air pirate broadcast that horrified the broader Chicagoland area in November 1987.

2. Here’s Headroom!

Long before he became the face of one of the most notorious hijackings in television history, Max Headroom was a UK television phenomenon. Dubbed the world’s first AI TV host, Headroom’s satirical presence first graced screens in 1985’s British cyberpunk television film, ‘Max Headroom: 20 Minutes into the Future’.

3. An (Almost) Overnight Sensation

Courtesy of andymerv on YouTube
Two days after the flick hit the small screen, Headroom began his ascent to TV stardom, serving as the digital VJ of ‘The Max Headroom Show,’ and later, the star of an eponymous sci-fi drama on ABC.

4. Prime Time Ready

On the night of November 22, 1987, Headroom found a new way to break into the Chicago market (well, sort of), after at least three folks hijacked local TV stations WGN-TV and WTTW with an equally creepy and scandalous pirate broadcast themed after the virtual TV host.

5. Take One

The first hijacking went down during WGN-TV’s ‘Nine O’Clock News,’ when at roughly 9:14 p.m., the hackers took over the news program’s sports segment. Donning a Headroom mask and a suit similar to the ones the AI presenter sported onscreen, the hacker silently rocked in front of a striped background for about 20 seconds before network engineers were able to regain control of the signal.

6. Laughing It Off

“Well, if you’re wondering what’s happened, so am I,” joked sports anchor Dan Roan, whose segment was interrupted by the hijacking.

7. Take Two

A few hours later, the hijackers gave their hack another go, this time taking aim at Chicago PBS affiliate, WTTW, which was airing a re-run of ‘Doctor Who’s’ ‘Horror of Fang Rock’ at the time.

8. Swatting Away

Lasting roughly 90 seconds this time around, the pirate broadcast was a whole lot more scandalous than its first iteration. The masked hacker mocked Headroom’s New Coke advertisements, flipped the bird to the camera, pulled out what some believed to be an adult toy, and most infamously, had their bare backside smacked with what appeared to be a fly swatter.

9. Control Room Chaos

“All of a sudden we don’t have ‘Doctor Who’ on the air — we have this Max Headroom mask,” Paul Rizzo, WTTW’s air director, recalled of that frantic evening. “And as the content got weirder we got increasingly stressed out about our inability to do anything about it.”

10. A Lingering Mystery

Though an FCC investigation into the pirate broadcast was unsuccessful, several speculated that either a former WGN employee or a member of Chicago’s hacking scene was responsible for the incident. But even with these theories, as of 2025, the identities of the signal hijackers — and the actor behind this iteration of Headroom — remain a Windy City mystery.

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