The summary is:
This is a transcript of a video where two hosts discuss the mysterious disappearance of the Sodder children, who were presumed dead in a house fire in 1945, but their parents believed they were kidnapped. The hosts review the evidence and the theories that suggest foul play, such as a life insurance salesman threatening the family, a napalm bomb found in the yard, no bones or smell of burning flesh in the ashes, and various sightings of the children after the fire. The hosts also mention the family's efforts to involve the FBI, hire private investigators, and keep the story alive with a billboard. The hosts conclude that the case is unsolved and hope for answers.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. The text is a transcript of a video from BuzzFeed Unsolved, a series that covers mysteries and crimes.
2. The video is about the disappearance of the Sodder children, who were presumed dead in a house fire in 1945, but their parents believed they were kidnapped.
3. The fire was deemed to be caused by faulty wiring, but there were many suspicious circumstances that contradicted this explanation, such as the lights being on, the missing ladder and trucks, the absence of bones or smell of burning flesh, and the threats from a life insurance salesman who was also on the coroner's jury.
4. The parents hired private investigators and received tips and sightings of their children over the years, but none of them led to conclusive evidence.
5. The parents set up a billboard on Route 16 to advertise their missing children and accuse the law officers of a cover-up.
6. The case was officially closed by the governor in 1949, but the family never gave up hope and continued to search for their children until their deaths.
7. Sylvia Sodder, who was two at the time of the fire, is the last remaining Sodder child alive and still maintains that her siblings did not die in the fire.
8. The case remains unsolved and is one of the most enduring mysteries in American history.