All Episodes
Sept. 4, 2023 - MyronGainesX
01:54:03
Fed Explains Serial Killer Edmund Kemper aka The "Co-ed Killer"
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed Reacts.
We're gonna be covering Ed Kemper.
We got a lot to talk about.
I'm here with Angelus.
Get into it.
I'm special agent with Homeland Screw investigations, okay guys?
HS is what Fed Reacts covers.
Defender Jeffrey Williams, an associate of Y SL did commit the felony.
Here's what 6ix9ine actually got.
This attack shifted the whole US government.
This guy got arrested espionage.
Okay, trading secrets with the Russian John Wayne Gacy, aka the killer clown, okay.
One of the most prolific serial killers of all time, killed 33 people.
Zodiac killer is a pseudonym of an unidentified serial killer who operated Northern California.
They really get off on getting attention from the media.
Many years, Jeffrey Epstein sexually exploited and abused dozens of minor girls at his home.
It was OJ working together to get Nicole killed.
We're going to go over his past, the Yangtai, so that this all makes sense.
Hey, we are back.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to FedReacts.
I'm excited to bring you guys this episode.
I'm here with Angie and Mo.
AKA Mo in the back.
Hopefully we're able to uh and Mo L producer.
Um, you there?
Okay, there you go, Mo.
Um so yeah, uh guys, uh this one has been requested for a very long time.
Um you guys have been asking for this guy, Ed Kemper, aka the co-ed killer for a few months now.
Um but yeah, before we get into it, um Angie, you want to introduce yourself to the people and um give some updates on what's going on.
Um hello people.
Uh my name is Angie.
My name is actually Angelika, but you know, I like Angie because you the ring goes game pronounce it.
Well uh very finally um covering Ed Camper.
I was the one who pushed this case because you guys keep asking for it, but it keeps losing on the polls, and I know this case is very interesting.
I personally study it like very well, like deeply.
So this case is very interesting.
I watch all the documentaries there is to watch about this guy and I watch my hunter too, which is a quite interesting um series on Netflix.
You guys should check it out for sure.
And yeah, I mean, where there is to say this guy is insane.
I'm sure you guys are gonna love it because you are Sigos and you like these kind of cases.
So I hope you guys do like it.
Uh don't forget to follow Fed Reacts on Instagram.
Fed Reacts on Instagram at FedReacts.
Um I'll be active there uh posting reels and polls and stuff.
So yeah, make sure you guys check check us out there.
And please don't follow me on Instagram.
Do not I see you guys asking for my Instagram all the time.
You say do not please do not follow me.
Yes.
Okay, and now Mo.
Yo, what's going on?
This is Big Mo or Media Mo.
I'd be seeing y'all in the chat.
I love it either way.
Um I'm happy to be here with you guys.
So uh W you guys in the chat.
Uh shout out to all you guys.
Shout out to the Discord gang.
Oh god.
Um, if you guys wanna follow me, you guys are f you guys can feel free to f you guys can follow me.
Don't follow Angie, but you guys can follow me, right?
So it is Big Mo underscore B-I-T-W.
That is B-I-G M-O underscore B I T W. Don't forget the memo to believe in big mo because that is MO.
Bam.
Um so uh guys, we're live on Rumble and on YouTube right now, as you guys know.
We got um demonetized on YouTube, which kind of sucks.
But we got we are live right now on castle club.tv, guys.
Again, that website is called Castle Club dot TV.
Um Mo, if you can get a chance and bring it up on the screen for the people.
Yeah, if you can bring it up on screen for the people when you get a chance.
Um, yeah, guys, on there, we're gonna be doing um extended live streams.
We're gonna be doing zoom calls on there.
We're gonna bring back the zoom calls that we used to do back in the day on Patreon for all you OG supporters.
You guys used to watch us back in the day.
We used to do Zoom calls with y'all on Patreon.
We're gonna bring those back on um on castle club.tv, which is basically locals.
Um we're gonna be doing uh videos where we answer Q and A's like we used to back in the day.
Uh so you guys are gonna get a lot of content on there, and also fresh, since you guys know he doesn't really do vlogs anymore.
Um so what he's gonna do is he's gonna put his vlogs in his I the IRL streams that we do when we travel, those are all gonna be on Castle Club.tv.
So if you guys want to see all the crazy stuff behind the scenes, check us out over there.
Also, we do pre-shows with the girls where I see interviews them and you know shows you guys the behind the scenes of setting up and everything else like that.
So castle club.tv guys is gonna be the main place to be.
And we're running a promo, guys.
Um go ahead and get in there now.
Uh it's only a hundred bucks uh for the year if you type in the uh um the code Castle um at the checkout.
Again, that code is Castle at checkout, and you'll basically instantly get it's only a hundred bucks for the year versus paying twenty bucks a month.
And uh yeah, man, we hope to see you guys in there.
It's gonna be late.
We got a bunch of y'all in there.
It's it's uh it's a good time.
So uh yeah.
Um Mo, anything you got else?
Uh that's all you know.
I'm just oh do you got the screen up by chance?
Um I don't I don't have the file.
No, not the the website, dude.
The castle club.tv website.
Ah, got it.
That's what I meant.
Stupid.
Uh and uh, you know, guys, Mo is doing a million things at once.
He's dealing with the chat and everything, because we don't got Bills.
Bill's obviously the uh pro when it comes to uh Streamlabs, but um you know I try to conserve him for the main show.
Uh bam, there you guys go.
It's uh castle club.tv.
There's a website.
Um you just put in uh the promo code Castle at checkout.
It's only a hundred bucks, and you get it for the year, man.
And you're gonna get all the exclusive stuff behind the scenes because like I said before, YouTube demonetizes.
So we're gonna give y'all some more exclusive content over there, man.
It is what it is.
We can't put everything on YouTube anymore.
Um, especially since they censor the crap out of us nowadays, you know.
So it is what it is, man.
We can't certain guests and certain interviews, so we can't put them on YouTube anymore.
I mean, we did an interview with Jackson Hinkle.
We had to pretty much put that on Rumble.
We couldn't even put the keep that on YouTube, man.
So um if you guys want exclusive content like that, man, uh check it out over there at Castle Club dot TV.
Um and yeah.
Other than that, um guys, make sure to also follow us on Rumble.
We also we have finally Fed Reacts on Rumble.
Uh so yeah, make sure to check us out there.
You you just gotta follow us.
You don't gotta do much.
Do we have crime scene photos for this one?
What?
Do we have crime scene photos for this one?
I found some.
I found uh Ed Kemper's mom.
Hit.
Oh.
Uh I do not want to show it though.
Yeah, yeah.
No, well, we can do it on Rumble.
Okay.
Yeah, well now that we're on Rumble, because as you guys know, longtime watchers of Fed Reacts, you guys know that a lot of the time crime scene photos, we can't show you guys.
We just have to give you like links a lot of the times.
Um, but now that we're on Rumble, we can go ahead and show you guys those crime scene photos.
So uh we'll probably go ahead and uh show you guys some of them on this one.
Angie will pull them up because for some odd reason she's really good at finding these crime scene photos that are graphic.
Sick.
Six six sick.
But anyway, uh, you like to research, yeah.
Yeah, okay.
That's what they all say.
Uh so yeah, we're gonna go ahead and I know, right?
Yeah, right.
Yeah, it does like the research.
But yeah, we're gonna have those uh photos over on the rumble side, guys.
You guys know we you know we'll cut over to Rumble towards the end.
Um, but we want to stay up on on YouTube as long as possible.
Because we know that a lot of you guys might not find the channel um any other way.
So um, so yeah, man.
It is what it is, man.
Like I said, we're demonetized, but that doesn't change anything.
The train keeps going, you know, at the end of the day, the show goes on and...
I'm not fucking leaving!
My hair is back, aka...
Look at that.
Oh yeah, the three sixties is you can see, batteries going crazy with this wave.
There are like brushes everywhere.
Mo, put your camera real quick.
Can they see?
Oh, yeah, there's one back.
I got a couple of brushes.
I got I got them at uh I got them in uh strategical places all over the spot.
Just the hood.
You guys see that?
For all the people that were saying, Myron, you're bald.
Oh yeah?
Well, look at me now.
Look at that.
We see that luscious hair.
Woo!
We've spinning now, baby.
And you about to get the chat.
C sick up in this all this waves going on.
Y'all see that?
Oh, yeah.
People were seeing that we're swimming and I could have just been away.
Yeah, boy.
For other people that say Myron, you ain't black.
What is this?
What is this curly hair that you see?
I thought it was supposed to be long and straight like Jesus.
Yeah.
I thought I was supposed to have that straight, weird, straggly hair, guys.
But look at me.
I'm a nigga just like the rest of y'all.
It's supposed to go long and down like Angie's hair.
We ain't done.
Y'all see Oh, you see that connected.
Woo hoo!
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Woo!
But he doesn't want to put up that rack.
I'm gonna change my name from Myron to Byron.
I'm officially black.
Feels good, man.
Feels good for all the people out there that don't want to acknowledge me as a part of the team.
You gotta wear their doctor.
Ooh, boy.
This a hood, ain't it?
Yeah, this is a hood, ain't it?
Yeah.
Yeah, where are you guys at now for all you guys?
Alright.
Okay.
I gotta stop it.
Nah, chill, man.
Y'all will never see Durag Myron.
But you will see wavy Myron.
Hey, no, I want to see Durag Myron.
What are you talking about?
Nah, chill, man.
Yeah, yeah.
Y'all will never see that.
Not that black.
Alright, alright, Myron.
Okay.
Um all natural too, guys.
No product in this.
No, no product in my hair at all.
Like literally just brushing like a wild man the past uh few weeks.
So yeah, no product, no Dax.
I know some of y'all know what I'm talking about with the Mo, you remember the Dax back in the day?
The what?
Dax Dax.
Dax.
Show the chat.
I know some people in the chat are gonna know what this is.
Dax.
D-A-X.
It comes in like an orange can.
Right?
And you put that joint like this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Show the YouTube chat, bro.
I will have it.
I know in the chat they know what I'm talking about, man.
What happened, Mo.
I'm I'm just doing the um, you know, the rumble chat, just screening the rumble chat.
That's right.
No, no, no, no.
Show the restream chat.
Yeah, I know.
Ninja?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Gotcha, gotcha.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
E-A.
Interact with the people.
Huh?
D-A-A-D-A-X, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Way back in the day.
Like, well, like it came in an orange or red can back when I got it.
I don't know how it looks now.
Oh, okay, I see.
It's like kind of like a the small, it's like a small circle cans pomade.
Kind of like how those altoids on Amazon.
You guys just fade right here.
Yeah!
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's it right there.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, Lord.
Yeah, man.
When I got him when I got my waves back in like 07, 08.
Oh, seven.
I used I used Dax back then, man, but never again, bro.
This is all natural, man.
Nothing.
Just crazy brushing, bro.
It's it's a lot of work, I ain't gonna lie.
Yo, you had the double-sided brush.
Yeah, double-sided brush, brushing like crazy.
You know, so and you gotta wolf it for a little bit too.
I mean, I I could do a video for you guys on how to get waves.
Yeah, you guys uh you gotta you gotta appreciate Myron's uh effort for these waves because I did buy him like a texture.
I said, and he doesn't want to use it.
I refuse to use this.
I was like, no, Angie, I appreciate you buying me this, but I'm not using it, goddamn it.
I'm gonna do this naturally, alright?
Natural natural, all natural.
Okay.
Um so how did we even get on that topic?
We're supposed to talk about serial killers, not hair.
Yeah, well, um, you love your waves too way too much now.
Welcome, welcome to the to the least professional true crime channel on YouTube, but the best true crime channel on YouTube.
We're the best.
Um we're gonna be talking about Ed Cumper today.
So um let's go ahead and uh pull up oh uh yeah let's pull up the Ed Cumper wiki real fast.
Yes you two have said it just like uh radio host.
Well, somebody that doesn't have waves too much.
Ed Kemper, you guys yeah, yeah, he doesn't have spinning waves.
But he was spinning on the chicks, though I'll tell you that.
Y'all about to see about this guy.
Um Edmund Emile Kemper, the third, born uh December 18th, 1948, is an American serial killer who murdered eight people, including a 15 year old girl, his own mother, and her best friend from May nineteen seventy two to April nineteen seventy-three.
Years earlier, at the age of fifteen, Kemper had murdered his paternal grandparents.
Kemper was nicknamed the co-ed killer, as most of his non familiar victims were female cow students hitchhacking in the vicinity of Santa Cruz County, California.
Most of his murders include a necrophilia.
Uh yeah.
Uh okay.
Uh decapitation and dismemberment.
Found sane and guilty at his trial in nineteen seventy three.
Kemper requested death penalty for his crimes.
Capital punishment was suspended in California at the time, and he has said received eight concurrent life sentences.
Since then he has been incarcerated at the California Medical Facility in Um Vacanville.
Uh you're still alive, you guys.
Yeah, he's still alive.
He's still alive to this day.
Yeah.
He yeah, uh born nineteen forty-eight, seventy-four years old, and he's in Burbank, California.
So, um one of the few serial killers that's still alive.
Yeah.
All the most famous ones are are gone now.
Um and just so you guys know, what did I tell you about the nineteen seventies?
They're going crazy in the 70s, man, with these serial killers, man.
Um he will be able to ask for parole next year, 2024.
Oh, really?
Again, because he being up being applying for per parole a few times now, and he's been denied, of course, and he's gonna be a good one.
You think he's gonna get it?
He's gonna try again next year.
How many times has he tried this point at this point?
I think three or four times, pretty much, because yeah, he got in like Yeah.
Yeah, he got incarcerated in the seventy-five, I think it was seventy-three, I can remember.
And he's tried a million times until now.
He's old.
He's old now.
He's like, I don't know.
Oh, well, there you go.
Yeah, 74.
Well, he's he's uh they let out um what's that chick's name?
I forget her name, but she was a part of the Charles Manson?
From the she's a part of the Charles Manson crew that killed uh people violently and she they let her out.
Yeah.
I saw I saw it coming very interesting because this guy has an IQ of 136.
Which is way above average.
So it's crazy that he just decided to be...
Double the IQ with some of the girls that come on this podcast.
What's your IQ?
Uh last time I checked it was like one eighteen, one twenty.
Okay.
When I did my last IQ test.
Yeah, my new thing.
Oh no, though.
I suck at math, so I don't know.
Oh no, that's just accurate, man.
Like I I failed algebra.
Uh um my freshman year high school.
But again, I was like not trying like that, but whatever.
I mean I don't I genuinely don't think I'm like the smartest guy.
Just like have common sense.
I would say that's what I got.
Like I I have an ability to be like, oh yeah, okay.
I don't think this is gonna work.
All right.
So go ahead.
Well, crazy fuck for you.
The person with the highest IQ in the world is somebody from I think it's Missouri, and it's a woman.
So fifty five.
Wait, a woman?
Yeah, man.
Stop the cap.
She probably cheated.
380 or something.
Stop the cap.
Yeah.
She probably cheated.
Yeah, she probably cheated, bro.
Stop the cap.
No such thing.
Blasphemy.
Stop the cap.
Uh anyways.
Uh all right.
So yeah, it was like 118, 120, somewhere around around there last time I took it.
But um, yo, y'all are uh you you ready to um oh okay.
So we got a documentary that we're gonna play.
Yeah.
And we got uh we got the audience split.
We got about 800, 900, y'all over on Rumble, and then we got another uh 700 plus y'all on YouTube, but we're really splitting the audience here.
It's fine though.
Well, whatever you got, however you guys want to watch us, you know, whether you want to watch us on YouTube, you want to watch us on Rumble, it's cool.
Just don't forget to like the video.
And and for you guys that are watching on Rumble, can you guys do me a huge favor?
I would really, really appreciate this just to get the engagement up because I noticed that we're splitting the audience and it hurts with the outgo a bit.
If you're watching on Rumble, open up a tab and on on YouTube and watch it on YouTube as well, and just like the video.
Like it means a lot to me if you guys could do that.
Because like I said before, videos demon channels demonetized.
You don't gotta donate a dollar.
If you want to join Castle Club.tv, awesome.
But if you don't, um and you want to just support for free, totally cool.
Just open up another tab, open up YouTube, type in Fed Reacts, and um have the window open on YouTube and well, continue to watch on Rumble.
Just like the video and have it run in there so that we can um get the viewership up.
Because when you split the audience, guys, a little YouTube truck for you guys that um want a live stream or whatever.
Um, any time you split the audience, it kind of sucks because what ends up happening is like YouTube doesn't recommend the stream as hard when you have less viewers.
So um you will like the more viewers you have on YouTube, that's why we killed the streams on the other ones.
The more viewers you have, the more pushes you in the YouTube algorithm.
So um, you know, you kind of split the audience when you're on Rumble and on YouTube at the same time.
But hey man, Rumble is home.
Uh, but yeah, just open up another tab.
I'd really appreciate it.
I like the video.
Let's get the engagement up.
And um, yeah.
So we got a documentary that we're gonna react to.
This one's a pretty good one, man.
It's uh it's not that long, it's only about 37 minutes, so you guys won't have to bear my bad jokes for that long on this one.
Um I think Angie will go ahead and uh have an interview for you guys queued up as well that we can um play.
Uh but this one is titled When Police Realize their friend is a serial killer, they're gonna be reacting to this video.
What channel does this come from, by the way?
Let's give this guy a shout out.
Uh um Crime A to Z. Check him out, man.
Like the video.
You know, let's like and subscribe to his channel.
Show him some love, man.
Because it ain't easy making this type of contest.
So we're gonna react to it, give him some and show him some love, support.
So uh crime A to Z. So uh let's go ahead and enlarge that Mo and uh get cracking on this.
Oh yeah, for the algo.
Yep, comment below.
Yeah, that's what we're talking about, baby, for the algo.
So um, let's go ahead.
It's 1972.
And police are frustrated as a killer is murdering female college students and completely evading their detection.
Meanwhile, one man who would normally stand out in a crowd of thousands is flying under the radar completely undetected.
Pause real quick, Mo.
Um, can we put the um the subtitles in there?
And then I wonder what was going on in 1972 at the time.
Let's uh we wanted to look it up.
Yeah, yeah.
Look up what was going on in 1972, like the notable events, uh, Andrew.
The United States.
Yeah.
Alright, go ahead, Mo, let's keep running it.
That's six feet, nine inches and two hundred and eighty-five pounds at Kemper.
It's impossible to miss.
Pause.
But he's been befriending off duty.
I don't know if y'all have ever met somebody that's six foot nine, but that's literally like the the towers over everyone.
So, fun fact this guy reached the six foot three, which is Myron's hate height.
Height, right?
Yeah, height.
Uh when he was 15 years old.
Damn.
What?
Yeah.
And he reached the 69 when he was 21, which is insane.
Like, you guys.
It's literally myrable like we don't know the person.
Yeah, and as a kid, that's what actually what made him very awkward was his height.
Yeah.
So it kind of ostracizes.
So um all right, let's keep running, and then we'll hit the rumble rants and chats afterwards.
Weighing like 300 pounds.
Oh, by the way, I forgot to mention this, guys.
If you want to go ahead and donate to the show, FNF Super Chat.com.
Um, and you could go ahead and donate to the show, and it ends up being um on the show.
Well, your super chat comes up on screen.
That's how you super chat on the show, or Rumble Rant, either or whichever one you prefer.
Um, and let's uh let's make sure that we put that on the website, Mo at the top of the description as well.
Yes, it is.
Is there?
Okay.
So yeah, if you guys want to go ahead and get involved in the show and have your chat shown, just like I said before.
F and F. So Frank, November, Frank again.
Super chat.com.
Okay, so in 1972, uh the president of the United States was Richard Nixon.
Yep.
Okay, the vice president was Spear Acnew.
Uh there were a few events.
Uh he made the president Richard Nixon made the development of a space shuttle program.
Okay.
In January and February, uh the uh Mariner 9 sends pictures from Mars.
Uh so okay, so you guys made it to Mars in 1970s.
That's insane.
Yeah, you didn't know that.
Um what else was going on?
Um I think inflation was high at that time.
Uh yeah.
Yeah.
Well, there is they're gonna say something in the documentary, I think.
Um Ed Kemper got uh run over.
You saw that?
He got run over and he got injured, and he uh how do you call it when you like somebody does something to you and you like take legal actions?
What's the fun fact?
1972 was also the longest year.
It was a leap year, and um it also included two leap seconds, one added to the clock on June 30th, another added before 7 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on June third on December 31st.
Interesting.
Um, what do you call it when somebody once when you get run over and you have to take legal action to on that person?
Oh, they sued them?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
He sued the person, and uh he sued them and he got reimbursed for like fifty thousand dollars.
Fifty fifteen thousand dollars.
Oh, yeah, and it's now like a hundred thousand, like today.
Back then, yeah.
Yeah.
Um so night uh fun facts about nineteen seventy-two, guys.
So obviously the beginning of the Watergate controversy with Richard Nixon.
Uh we had um the Munich Olympics massacre on September 5th, 1972.
Um, which um uh all I'm gonna say is uh some Palestinians and uh kidnapped some and uh yeah anyway.
Uh the Vietnam War continues.
Yeah we're still on YouTube.
So um let's see here.
The Pioneer 10 spacecraft was launched in the space on March 3rd, 1972.
Um the Equal Rights Amendment passes in the US Congress of March 22nd, 1972.
Uh President Nixon announces further withdrawal of American True Vietnam.
Um let's see, the Apollo 17 mission on uh December 7, 1972.
Uh and then we had The Founding of Atari.
Wow.
The first video shout out to you.
Wait, 10 bucks, Myron.
You have ever covered Henry Lee Lucas.
Um there was a movie made about his case called Henry.
I have not.
But I could look it up.
The Bloody Sunday incident in Northern Ireland on uh January 30th, and then the strategic arm limitations talk, SALT agreement is signed.
Uh somebody asked me to look up the biggest music single in 1972.
It was the first time I ever saw your face.
The first time ever I saw your face by Roberto Black Flack.
That was the hardest song in 1972.
Yeah.
Yeah, the big boy year and uh from the hot a hundred, so it was the top one.
What it was the top one?
What was the name of it?
The first time ever I saw your face by Roberta Flack.
Okay.
For the first time.
It must be like a blue or something.
Ever I saw your face.
Yeah.
Let's see if I ever heard that.
The number two was Alone Again Naturally by Gilbert O. Sulva Sullivan.
The number two was American Pie by Doug McLean.
It's American Pie.
Oh, you know.
There you go.
Mo knows that.
I I don't even know how I remember that song.
I don't know.
From your mom's dad.
No, they they only know they don't know any American songs from back then.
Okay, of course.
Of course.
Uh well, the number four was Without You by Harry Nielsen.
I have no idea who's this who this people is.
And my mom was alive in the 70s, so I have no idea.
Do you know anymore?
Marian, you find it?
Their parents was also in like Sudan, so I don't know.
Oh, that's true.
None of our parents were even in America on some of the people.
Well, my mom, well, my mom was very like big in the American culture, so she loved the Biddles.
She loved Michael Jackson.
She loved uh this gay, this gay singer.
What's the what's the gay singer?
Oh, Elton John.
Elton John.
Yeah.
David Bowie.
Like she was huge in this, like David Bowie.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, these are British people, but you know, you know what I mean.
I didn't even know they were British either.
Uh I think uh I think David Bowie is British.
Elton John, I'm not sure if he's British.
Can you guys put it in the chat?
I have no idea.
But yeah, um, I do love like the 80s, you know, like Cindy Lauper, some of the Madonna song, some of them, not uh I was I was more into like um than I mean because I grew up 90s RB.
That was like my oh no, of course.
Yeah, of course.
Like I love the 90s.
90s and 80s RB.
You know, like all music.
I'm talking about old music.
Yeah, I don't know what you know about old music.
Me, I listen I had listened a lot of like Marv Gay Luther Van Drahl's um voice to men, new edition.
Um I'll tell you the best song in 1972 right now.
Well gone.
What?
Isn't that from the movie?
I'm so scared that you wanted to hell.
That's from the movie that you wanted to okay, okay, okay.
I see.
I see what Wara is doing right now.
Uh-oh.
We're on YouTube, Mario.
We're on YouTube.
Remember we're on YouTube.
Yeah, that came out in 1972.
Stuck in the middle with you.
That's right.
From Reservoir Dogs.
That's why you wanted to Lord.
Man.
Yeah, that's my favorite song right there.
And there's a bunch of reasons why.
Would you guys will see one day once we get out of the band from YouTube?
Oh my god, if you guys will understand this context right now, you will flip in.
Oh, Lord.
I wish I could do it right now for y'all, but we will get canceled instantly if I do what I wanted to do with that song.
We will get instant canceled.
Bro, we're Mo.
We'll start losing his mind.
Bro, we're finished.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
No.
All right.
Um, let's continue with the documentary.
Yeah.
That song came out in 1972, stuck in the middle with you.
Famous song from uh very famous scene from the movie Reservoir Dogs.
I know some of y'all ninjas know what I'm talking about.
Yeah, they know.
They're saying it.
Yeah, they know?
They knew right away.
Yeah.
Good movie.
Good movie.
Police officers at a bar near the courthouse, getting as much inside information on the case as he can.
With his near genius level IQ, he's gaming the entire trade.
They buy me a beer, I'd buy them a beer.
Uh casual relationships, but that was I was poking around a little bit trying to find some things out.
I knew they wouldn't be privy to hot information, but there were some things that were bothering me, like were there any speculations on how they were dying?
How did you get the knowledge to outsmart the police?
Watching television, believe it or not.
Joseph Wombaugh, police story.
Got some tremendous insights into not just the gimmicks, the actual things, the tidbits that you would pick up from their procedures, but the mechanics behind that, the logic behind it, was I would not allow myself to walk into even a potential trap of behavior.
Plus, and one of those was talking.
So you guys are gonna see a trend here with uh with Kemper.
The guy was very smart, and he what he would do is he would align himself with law enforcement andor professional staff um and give himself an advantage and give himself uh kind of insight as to how they do the job.
And uh, you know, this wasn't by mistake, he knew exactly what he was doing.
He would, you know, talk, pry some information out here and there, befriend them, and um and he was very you know, very nice and cordial with these individuals, even though he was like a maniac, he was um very social and cordial with the police officers and the law enforcement in general.
And you can see the guy's well spoken, kind of fairly disarming, right?
Um doesn't look like he's gonna be like, you know, a harmful killer.
Um and then also uh he gave a lot of interviews uh after he was caught, and um he went into detail about how he was able to kind of get away with things, which gave um the FBI a lot of insights to how to identify serial killers.
Keep going strong, brother from Mr. Um We Buy Houses.com.
Shout out to you, bro.
I appreciate the support so much.
Uh all right, let's keep going.
Yes.
...about those crimes too much to people.
Initiating conversations about that.
There was a uh memorial service for two of the victims.
Yes.
Were you tempted to go?
Yes.
But I'd uh seen one too many episodes of one too many crime shows where that is one of the available resources for clues.
Welcome back to Crime A to Z, where we detail cases in criminals from the very beginning until well after other reporting ends.
Today we'll be talking about one of the most gruesome serial killer cases in American history, the case of the co-ed killer.
With an IQ at Neuter Genius level, serial killer, at Kemper was able to outsmart police and tragically his victims at every single turn.
His unassuming personality would be so enchanting that even a call into police to confess his murders would lead to them sending him away in disbelief.
Santa Cruz, California was traditionally a quiet beach town complete with surfers and retirees.
At least until 1965, The year the University of Santa Cruz was built.
With residents suddenly spilling over from relatively nearby San Francisco, the college turned the town from a peaceful, quiet retirement community into more of a bustling, youthful, loose, and free-spirited city similar to its hippie, Berkeley, California, counterpart.
So all was fine in the city until 1972.
Suddenly, girls began to go missing and body parts began to wash ashore.
Someone was killing young female or co-ed, hitchhikers, and the community wondered whether the fairly recent change in its residential makeup was to blame.
Real quick, back in that era, like in 1970s, the early 1970s, there were two other serial killers active in Santa Cruz, California.
These were uh Joan Fraser and Herbert Mullins, and they were also killing like girls.
So uh very often they will confuse the victims w from one another.
And that also made by the press, they made the Santa Cruz, they they named Santa Cruz the murder copies all of the world back then.
God damn, they're killing women like that misogyny.
Yeah, they'll go crazy out there back then, man.
Yeah.
So I quickly dubbed the elusive killer, the co-ed butcher.
On December 18th, 1948, Edmund Emo Kemper the third was born in Bourbon, California to two very disciplinarian parents, Cornell Kemper and Edmund Kemper the second.
He was the only son and the male child.
While Kemper looked up to his father, he resented his harshly punitive and verbally abusive mother.
His parents were divorced when the younger Ed was nine years old.
After which Cornell moved away with Ed and his two sisters.
Pause.
At an early age, Kemper began Fun fact.
Yeah, he was born nine uh December 18th.
Um another person that was born December 18th as well that was uh notorious alleged serial killer was Arthur Lee Allen.
He was the prime suspect to be the zodiac killer.
Yeah.
So and that birthday actually is how um they ended up like pointing to him as being one of the primary suspects for the zodiac killer.
So I did an episode on the zodiac killer, by the way, guys.
If you guys want to go ahead and watch it.
Um but yeah, Arthur Lee Allen was actually identified by one of the individuals that the zodiac killer shot back in nineteen sixty-nine, I want to say.
Nice.
Uh so yeah, he was he was identified, but he ended up dying in nineteen ninety-two before they could positively um tie him to the crimes and interview him uh rightfully.
But he was a top suspect um as a zodiac killer, and he was also born on December 18.
So very interesting.
Let's keep going.
In later interviews, he admitted that gas chamber and electric chair were some of his favorite games to play when he was a child.
At age 10, Kemper buried a pet cat alive, dug it up, severed its head, and placed it on a spike.
Kemper admitted in a later interview that he enjoyed lying to his family about.
At age ten, Kemper buried it a few years later when he was 13.
He murdered another family cat because he thought it favored his sister over him.
So he preserved separated parts of the cat's remains in his closet until his mother discovered them.
I I wrote that on one occasion when Kemper's older supposed this guy was awesome.
Yeah, I read it, I brought like each fact here on my notebook and I read it with like red flags.
Because when you have a kid 10 years old, 10 years old, uh buttering uh cat alive, and then be hated the the head taking out the hating the head and the stuff.
That's insane.
Like we have uh we have as a psychologist, we'll have like a field day with this kid.
Like it would be like it would be insane.
And then doing it again at 13 years old, another red flag.
It's insane.
Um and also a lot of serial killers um actually did this.
Um I think Ed Guyne did this.
Um Jeffrey Dahmer.
He didn't necessarily kill the animals, but Jeffrey Dahmer liked to like um find the roadkill and he would play with the organs and like kind of learn the anatomy.
Um who else did this?
There was someone else, I'm trying to think.
I think it was John Way Gacy.
No.
I don't know if John Wayne Gacy killed animals.
Yeah, because that's a trade that a lot of serial killers uh tend to have, like uh play with like dead animals, or like killing.
Dominant was the most famous that used to do it as well.
Yeah.
Uh maybe maybe Gacy did as well.
But yes, it's it this is common amongst a lot of serial killers where um you see this uh proclivity to violence and gore and blood at a young age.
So uh yeah, he's out here killing cats.
I guess he didn't like cats.
Our dogs are stuck.
He didn't do nothing to dogs, it just seems like it's all cats.
Yeah.
So but this is a I mean cats suck, yeah, but like goddamn, bro, you don't gotta do all that.
Holy it is a big red flag.
Like for your kids is killing animals.
Yeah.
Yeah, for any of you guys out there, your kid is out here killing animals.
Uh bro, you might want to make sure you ain't raising the second Ted Bundy.
Negatively punish that bad behavior immediately.
You need to turn into Frank Castle with that kid.
And put us, hey, what are you doing?
BONG!
Just hit him.
Damn.
Wait, that on you.
Oh, yeah, we're on YouTube.
Emotional damage.
That's what's gonna happen to the kid.
That was easy.
No, well, hey man, I I'm I'm a proponent of beating children uh when they do bad things, of course.
Uh you know, I got hit as a kid and I turned out okay.
Yeah, that's not that's that's maybe that's not a good thing.
But uh, but yeah, I mean, yeah, dude, I like I I genuinely do think that kids should be spanked when they do stupid things.
Disciplined, I they need to be disciplined physically physically physically.
Damn.
Alright, let's keep going.
When they mess up, you give them that quick slap.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, that's how you do it.
Or if they really mess up, you give them the you can Damn.
Yeah, yeah, uh teased him about why he would not try to kiss his teacher.
He responded, If I kiss her, I have to kill her first.
As the years passed.
What?
Yeah, he's crazy, bro.
Deviant.
Kemper grew bigger and stronger.
Which was not surprising, given that his mother was six feet and his father six feet eight.
Damn.
But Kemper's bizarre behavior also grew.
It became more concerning.
As a result, his mother used to lock him in the basement for the night out of fear that he might sexually abuse his sisters.
Kemper was locked underground in complete darkness with a trapdoor on the floor covered by the kitchen table to ensure Kemper was terrified and traumatized.
And it was those nights in the darkness where he allowed his hatred of women to fester and grow.
God damn.
He could use the Fresh of Fit podcast, man.
We would have taught him how to channel that misogyny.
Goddamn, bro.
He really hate women, but it was mostly because of his mother.
Yeah.
Because of the abuse of that he was a child.
Yeah, his mom.
His mom did some fucked up shit.
Yeah.
Uh and his grandma too.
Yeah, facts.
Learned that his father had remarried and had a stepson.
Kemper stayed with his father for a short while, but within a few months, his father sent him away to live with his paternal grandparents in North Fork, California.
Kemper was devastated.
He hated living in North Fork.
He described his grandfather as senile and said that his grandmother constantly emasculated his grandfather and himself.
At age 15, after he'd been living with his grandparents.
See, so again, people say all the time, Oh, fresh and fit, you guys like teach guys to be misogynistic, blah, blah, blah.
Masogony.
My what I always say is actually, if anything, we teach guys how to understand women so they don't hate them for what they'll never be.
Like when you see BS happening, like your grandma or a female family member emasculating a male in your family, you just know, okay, this is female nature.
Maybe I can give my uncle or dad the rational male, or teach them, hey, this is how women are, etc.
Like, I think a lot of the times when guys end up having frustrations or anger or resentment towards women, it comes from an inability to understand them.
And they don't understand that men and women are very different.
They try to tend they try to look at women from a male lens, and I think that's the worst thing you could do.
Because if you look at women from a male lens, you're gonna be pissed off, dude.
You're gonna be very angry because women interpret the world much differently than we do.
And uh I think a lot of that's frustration comes out sometimes through violence, unfortunately, right?
Um, I don't want to sit here and say fresh a fit is preventing serial killers, but I genuinely do think that we teach guys to number one understand women and number two, not hate women for what they're never gonna be to you, okay?
They're not men, they're not gonna think like men.
And then most importantly, we tell you guys on the pod all the time never raise your hand at a woman, even if she hits you first, don't do it.
You know, don't ever do it.
So what happened with this man most uh most of the time, um is uh it's they it's mainly because of their mothers trying to put some certain abuse on them because of of what they what is going on with their fathers or with their marriage.
Because here I have here the the father of of Edmund Kemper used to hate his mother because she will abuse him too, like call him names and stuff, and they wouldn't have like a n like a nice marriage.
It was in fact he will say that it was like like a loveless marriage because they wouldn't stand each other.
So he will say these his dad was uh Worwell uh two veteran, so he will say that living with Cornell, which was Edmund Kemper's mother, it was like it's he said society missions in wartime and the atomic mom testings were nothing compared to living with Clark Carnell.
So you can't imagine that this man had nothing but like hater or you know, like a bad relationship with this mom with this with this woman.
So he will um I I don't know how to say she will put these haters towards Edmund because he only she only had two daughters and one kid.
And the and and the kid, the guy, the boy, will usually in the in families, they tend to look more like their dads.
So of course he will pull like these haters towards his his uh son.
Then that's what what that's what happened often with with um kids that are only child and stuff.
Let's hit some of these uh rumble rants from the ninjas.
Uh Mo has cleaned out the ones where you guys said some crazy stuff.
Uh so Mo, go ahead.
Let's pull them up real fast.
Shout out to all you guys.
Uh this one is for the support.
I really appreciate guys.
Uh so Myron, as a fellow waiver, please incorporate some cold pressed oils for your hair while you brush.
I'm trying not to put use any oil, bro.
I'm trying to keep it as natural as possible, man.
I hate putting oil in my hair.
Um, but I will keep that in mind.
Let's see here.
Um but yes, I have become a waiver.
Johnny Silverhand goes, which one of y'all discord gang gang is an artist, make that famous tsunami Japanese uh painting but with Myron's hair.
Okay.
Appreciate that.
Um Johnny Silverhand again.
I use my computational multi-model threading and encryption from Soul Killer and Grams to tap into anyone's BCI.
I don't know what you said there, but okay.
I appreciate that.
World School Listener at Big Mo.
You watch AEW2 and Thoughts of CM Punk getting fired.
Also, I started watching Mindhunter 2, but does it start showing more of the interviews later on?
I don't care much for the main characters.
Um yes, I actually um well I haven't been watching AEW because I'm it's normally a uh fresh fit stream going on, but I'm always keeping up with the community.
Um as for the CM Punk getting fired, um my thing is I say if I thought he left though.
Uh nah, he hit is actually got fired.
Okay.
Um because of the fight, but I still say one, um, if you can't get along everyone's wrong to uh jungle boy kind of I I think jungle boy was a little more in the wrong here because of um we're supposed to be in the climate of safety for the talent.
So um CM Punk is actually one of my um you know favorite rests of all time.
He's act CM Punk is the reason behind my name.
At least the B I T W part of my name.
So CM Punk is so it's uh it's when did he uh leave the W like 10 years ago he left the WWE, right?
He left WWE around 2014, but he was still wrestling in the competition the competitor company AEW.
That's what this um super chip rant.
Um, so where's the uh the question about Mindhunter, they do start showing the interviews later on.
And I'm quite shocked.
Uh seeing um interviews about Eb Kemper, I'm quite shocked uh how accurate it is with the character that they play in the series.
It's it's very accurate.
Uh okay.
All right.
Uh who's up next here?
Uh PJ goes, Myron, what do you think about the idea of making locals an easy to use app?
Have you thought about uh at that at all?
Love you guys uh no homo WFNF.
Um yeah, bro.
I mean a locals is pretty easy to use.
Um is good, it has a good interface.
Um and that's where I you know, shout out to uh local and ro locals and rumbles uh rumble.
They all work they work together, they're kinda tag team.
So um, yeah, man, castle club.tv, man.
Check us out over there.
Um and then we got Villa goes keen for this one tonight.
W Marn W and G W Mo.
Shout out to you, Villa.
I appreciate that so much.
Uh we got Sted Durin ADA goes, can you do a video on what family is like as a Fed?
Uh such as which agency is best for marriage and what agency would keep you single.
WMO W N G L Logan's loose wife.
Uh yeah, Setter and I'll do it easy for you right now.
Uh the a the agency that has the highest divorce rates by far is a secret service.
By far they're they have the highest divorce rate.
So if you want to go ahead and stay in a happy marriage, um the secret service is not it.
Um the agencies that have the best like work life balance are the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations HSI by far.
Um also IRS because it's a more of a nine to five gig.
Um the thing about IRS, HSI, FBI, etc.
Depending on the group that you're in, you can be in one of those groups that are like slower.
You can be in like a financial group that does a nine to five, etc.
But if you're like in a drug group or a gang group or something like that, yeah, you're gonna be out all night, uh all hours of night.
But you can absolutely get a work-life balance if you work in a more slower administrative or group that does more uh you know, complex crime, shit like that.
So, yeah, those are some agencies that will help you with work life balance, and then a lot of the OIGs, those are nine of fives too, uh OIG agencies because those are internal investigations.
So, yeah.
Do you think it may be because of the stress and the busyness of Secret Service?
Yeah, and you're and you're and you could get called at any time, especially if you're on a presidential detail.
Yeah.
And you work really long hours.
They're one of the few Fed agent uh uh special agent positions actually that get a lot of overtime.
Them and diplomatic security service are two agencies that will probably hurt your marriage if you're married.
You're gonna be gone all the time.
So, yeah.
Bro, please don't ever use Greece.
LMAO, I used to use Murray's and Blue Magic.
Yeah, bro.
Yeah, Greece is terrible, bro.
I'm I'm never doing it.
I'm keeping the hair natural.
Chains uh for life.
Uh also I was wondering, Myron, if you could rebuild the bridge between Sneeko and Zirka, that would be dope.
I'm working on it.
Uh Padawan goes, my brother was 6'3 in the sixth grade, and he's now 34 and 6'11.
Damn.
12 people don't phase me because I had to live with my brother till he left for college.
My dad's 6'9, I'm the run at 6'1.
Yeah, bro.
A run at 6'1.
Yeah, run a 6'1.
This guy is complaining.
Uh Johnny Silver's Johnny goes, dude was MK Ultra, a precursor to today's uh sand vistons that turn you into stands.
Sid never stance.
Yeah.
They're turning you into a cyber psycho that we have here in the year of 2077 P.S. Um rats from the future.
Um, it's uh from the video game Cyberpunk 2077 that he's referencing.
Um basically uh cyber cycles are basically like uh people who have got powers, but it overtook them, and it and it just goes haywire.
He's basically going out of control, he's going ballistic.
Uh that's what basically he's talking about.
And saying devastant is you know, he's killing people while like stopping time because he's so fast he stops time while killing people at the same time.
Yeah.
Uh shot out what else we got here.
Voodoo Boys for Life by the Brother.
Adam goes, uh, look into the Kenyan cartel regency hotel shooting Dublin.
Okay.
My my nerd glasses was waiting with.
You raise your value and go by and then read why women deserve less.
Absolutely, bro.
That's what you do.
Masogony.
That's what you do, my friend.
Uh Michaka goes, here's a list of Myron was on a TV show.
Fifty Shades Darker, left a family guy, occurred to Cowardly Campbell.
365 days without the food.
Ah.
I'm lost.
I don't get it.
Um, he's calling you black.
Oh, fair enough.
I appreciate that, sir.
I am black now officially.
My haters can no longer say that I'm not one of them.
This is the hood, eh?
But I'm still not gonna have a victim mindset.
Uh all right.
Where are we at here, Mo?
We're gonna go back to the uh doc.
Yes, we are.
All right.
And guys, again, you got two choices.
You can either, you know, if you want to support the show, like the video, number one, open up a tab on YouTube, support us over there.
Let's get to 1,000 live viewers on YouTube.
We got 1,000, y'all watching on YouTube right now, actually.
And we got another almost 1,000, you guys watching 949 on Rumble.
So guys, open up another tab, watch us on YouTube as well.
Let's get up in the algorithm there.
Um, and like the video, subscribe to the channel if you haven't on YouTube, and then also follow us on Rumble as well.
Um, and if you want to super chat into the show, guys, the super chat button is the FNF uh super chat.com, FNF Super Chat.com.
Uh, and your super chat will be shown on screen, or you can rumble rant in either or we appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
Let's keep going with the doc.
Parents for 10 months.
Kemper and his grandmother, Maud Kemper, were arguing at the kitchen table.
Kemper was furious and raced off to recover a hunting weapon that had been taken away from him because he was shooting animals pointlessly.
He returned to the kitchen and shot and killed his grandmother.
Oh, wow.
Then when his grandfather returned from shopping for groceries, Kempert went outside and shot him in the driveway next to his car, killing him.
Oh shit!
Oh shit!
Oh shit.
Kill both his grandparents.
He said uh not knowing what to do next.
He said that he did it be uh he killed his grandfather too, so he won't see his grandma.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So yeah, he was kind of collateral damage there.
Let's keep going.
Called his mother, who told him to contact the local police and turn himself in.
After being apprehended, Kemper simply said that he wanted to experience what it felt like to kill grandma.
The most common quote associated with Kemper.
What the hell?
Kemper later testified that he killed his grandfather to prevent him from suffering once he find out his wife was dead.
Following the murders, court psychiatrists briefly diagnosed Kemper with paranoid schizophrenia.
As a result, he was committed to a Tascadero State.
That was sweet of him.
You know, he didn't want his grandfather's I'm sorry.
Not at all.
Hospital.
An all-male maximum security facility, the house's mentally ill convicts.
With a population of over 1600 patients, several dozen who had committed murder, and eight hundred mentally disordered sex offenders.
It was more than the ten-person team of psychiatrists could handle.
And ultimately, and tragically, the institutionalization of Kemper at the facility ended up exposing him to extreme deviant behavior and making him far more dangerous than he was before he was there.
That's him when he was later recalled.
Yeah.
I found myself the the muck shut.
Yeah, when he was 15.
Yep.
And he was 6'3.
60 right at that point, well.
Yep.
God damn.
Ended up exposing him to extreme deviant behavior and making him far more dangerous than he was before he was there.
He would later recall, I found myself a minor in a psychiatric hospital for hardened criminals.
According to the law, I should have been sent to an institution with minimal security.
But the judge was so outraged by my crimes that he declared, I'm not wanting to send this young man to Disneyland.
That's why I ended up in a Tascadero with people on average 20 years older than me.
Believe me, I grew up very quickly.
Yeah, that messed him up.
And Kemper would do more than just grow up at a Tascadero.
He was extremely smart and bright.
His IQ clocked in at a mere genius level, somewhere between 136 and 145, both of which rank in the top two percent of scoring.
And he was also incredibly friendly and extremely likable.
All of these aspects resulted in him becoming a trusted assistant to the psychology staff with access to the detailed files of murderers and sex offenders, including detailed accounts of how they carried out their crimes.
So y'all can see here, what is he doing?
Befriending staff, befriending police.
Um and this is how he was able to kind of get away with things or knew what was happening at the time.
Uh any time he was committing crimes, etc.
So you can see that he's already kind of playing this role where hey, you guys could trust me, I know I'm a criminal and stuff, but I'm not as bad as the rest of these guys.
You could trust me to help you out.
They're exactly stopped to cap.
And then you guys gotta remember also that they were severely understaffed, so any help that they could get was wild widely appreciated.
He was uh he was trained to administrate uh the test, psychological test for the for the sexual offender.
So he learned a lot from them.
Yes, yes.
You guys are gonna see here in a second, actually, how he uh how he would beat the test, so let's keep going.
And the tactics that used to get away with them.
In his role, the then 15-year-old Kemper would hear firsthand highly graphic details of violent rapists, and he began to have his own violent sexual fantasies.
And he also noted how most of the rapists had been caught because they were identified by their victims.
So he concluded that his best chance of being successful as an assailant was to make sure he didn't leave any victims alive.
Also, since he had access to psychological tests, he knew exactly what psychologists were looking for when they diagnosed patients.
So he learned how to pass any tests at will.
He had actually memorized the exact responses to 28 separate assessments.
Bam.
So he knew what to say to not come off as crazy.
So, let's keep going.
Damn.
While Kemper was originally diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia upon admission, psychiatrists and social workers at a Tascadero re-diagnosed him with a personality trait disturbance.
Then, after five years at a Tascadero, the now gigantic six foot nine-inch, two hundred and eighty-five-pound Kemper, was granted parole and released from the psychiatric facility on December 18, 1969, which was his 21st birthday.
He was released to a halfway house along with a recommendation from the hospital that Kemper not be allowed to return to his mother as it could trigger more violence.
But once he was released, there was little to no oversight or management.
And without any means of support or assistance, Kemper returned to live with his mother.
Once he was staying with his mother again, Kemper's relationship with her became even more toxic than before.
The two often had arguments, which the neighbors usually overheard.
Kemper later said, My mother and I started on horrendous battles, just horrible battles, violent and vicious.
I've never been in such a vicious verbal battle with anyone.
It would go to fists for the man, but this was my mother.
Kemper relocated to Alameda to live with a friend after getting a job at the division of highways and accumulating enough cash.
But that only gave him little relief from his mother, who still frequently called and visited Unannounced.
And since he often struggled with money, Kemper would end up having to return to his mother's apartment frequently.
Kemper would also be involved in two motorcycle accidents.
One of which rendered his left arm broken, for which he'd receive a $15,000 settlement and use it to purchase a Yellow Ford Galaxy.
Hang with that car.
Pause.
began.
And real quick, you said $15,000 back in 1970, or no, was this 1969?
$15,000 back in...
I think this is 1969.
Yeah.
In the 2022, it was 198,000.
And then also, oh, the other thing, yeah, I know you guys said that he had worked for like the department of highways or whatever.
Um keep in mind, guys, that like uh, you know, back then, we know I'll talk about this because it's gonna come up again.
So I'll talk about um how he was able to get that job in other situations as well.
Let's let's keep going.
To practice.
Back in the early 70s, hitchhiking was not uncommon when college students on the West Coast, and Kemper would pick up numerous young female hitchhikers over and over and over again, as he fantasized what he could do to them and fine-tune his strategies.
He delivered each of them safely to their destination.
Um, real quick, guys, fifteen thousand dollars in nineteen sixty-nine is the equivalent and purchasing power of about twenty-four thousand nine hundred forty-one dollars today.
Damn!
Yeah.
Yep.
Yep, that's a lot.
Yeah, so he basically got 125, let's just say 125,000 back then in today's dollars for the motorcycle accident.
Go ahead, what are you saying?
So, yeah, he he will pick up 150 hitchhikers before the first killers.
Oh, it was 150?
Yeah, before, before.
Damn, okay.
He didn't uh he will like let them all let the let them.
He actually drove them to their destinations.
Yeah.
And uh yeah, he was practicing and figuring out how to make them feel comfortable, conversations to have, and you guys are gonna see here in a second why he did this and why he took this deliberate route to spend that much time driving random chicks around.
So he was at home to basically an Uber in the 70s.
Yeah, it was a hundred and fifty before he started killing uh heat hikers.
That's a lot, man.
Damn.
God damn.
All right, let's keep going.
What are you killing people?
Never mind.
I I will say later.
Noting which of his actions was the most effective for gaining the women's trust.
Kemper would later discuss these practice runs, sharing that it all started because of his inability to communicate with women.
My inability to communicate socially, sexually...
I wasn't impotent.
But emotionally I was impotent.
I was scared to death of failing in male-female relationships.
I knew absolutely nothing about that whole area.
Even if just sitting down and talking with young lady.
Man, if he had fresh a fit, man, he probably wouldn't have been acting all crazy like this, man.
God damn.
Let's keep going.
Ironically enough, that's why I began picking people up.
He performed these practice runs for more than a year, fine-tuning his strategy until May, 1972.
The early 1970s in Santa Cruz was already a terrifying time for residents.
John Lindley Fraser, a Charles Manson, and you guys also gotta understand too that by him picking up the girls, right, that are hitchhiking, it allows him to kind of break the barrier and interact with women.
And because there's like he's picking them up, so they're kind of forced to interact with him.
So it's like him talking to women with training wheels.
So for him, since he has like all the social anxiety, he can't approach them and talk to them, he would pick them up because hitchhiking was a thing back then.
And um, and then they'd have natural conversation or whatever, and then he did this, he had to do this for a year, and I didn't know he picked up that many girls, 150.
He did that 150 different times.
That's how much anxiety he had around women that he had to do this for so long until uh, you know, he ended up, you know, doing the other stuff.
Yeah, but he wouldn't he wouldn't pick up like just any hitchhiker.
He will pick up girls like young girls that he will feel attracted to, and like they had to be no fat chicks?
No, because he's back then there was like the heppie movement, and he hated he girls because they smelled, they wouldn't shave, and don't so he would he wouldn't be just like any girl.
It would have to be like pretty girls, like middle class girls.
Okay, alright.
So he wouldn't Alright, so no fat chicks and no hippie chicks.
He wasn't lying.
Fair enough.
Uh oh, donate sandbox, uh, just showing appreciation to my boys and Angelica uh lost shows.
Uh wait, last uh okay, hold on.
Um, last shows have been great, both uh the Fed Reacts daytime and night shows.
God bless you.
Much love.
Thank you so much, my friend.
I guess I appreciate that greatly.
If you guys want to super chat into the show like that, we have to get it.
FNF Super Chat.com.
Yeah, we appreciate you.
Yeah, we really appreciate it, man.
Uh, let's keep going.
Had just recently been convicted and sentenced.
And another serial killer, Herbert Mullen, was about to begin terrorizing the city just months after Kemper would begin his killings.
So between the three of them, the small California town was about to begin a streak of killings that would help it earn the title of murder capital of the world.
Bam.
I'm sorry, she's that this guy just literally chaved his half of a of the head and just let the other half with the colour.
Oh yeah, that's not Photoshop.
That's real.
That wasn't photo.
And he let the mustard too.
Wait, that's that was real?
Yeah.
That's like not Photoshop or anything.
No.
Oh wow.
Go back to that, Mo.
What he was crazy.
I thought that was like Photoshop or something.
No.
Or like, or like, you know, a little edit.
So he actually did look like that.
Yeah.
Oh wow.
Wow.
That's not Photoshop.
Business on one side, party on the other.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Anyways.
Alright.
Let's keep going.
Yeah, let's keep going.
Wow.
That's Krillex, they said.
I thought he was losing hair dealing with Skrillex.
Yeah.
Skrillix, man.
I thought he was losing hair from dealing with that.
That would help it earn the title of murder capital of the world.
On May 7th, 1972, Ed Kemper would put his long-awaited plans into action.
Picking up Mary Ann Pische and Anita Mary Lucassa, two 18-year-old Fresno State University students who were hitchhiking.
He was supposed to be driving them from Berkeley to Stanford University.
But after an hour's drive, he arrived at a remote woodland location close to Alameda that he was familiar with.
There, he killed Pesche, then Lucassa.
Kemper then put both women's bodies in his Ford Galaxy's trunk and began driving back to his apartment.
And he was nearly caught when he was stopped on his way by a police officer for having a broken tail light.
Oh wow.
Kemper remained calm and polite and was just issued a warning.
And how the police officer decided to check Kemper's trunk.
Kemper said, he would have instantly killed him.
Pesce's skull would later be discovered on Loma Prieta Mountain in August of that year.
Despite a thorough search, no more of Peshe's remains, nor any signs of Lucasa were ever found.
Kemper would later comment on how this first murder was bumped by guard.
Yeah, I find it in an interview, you just can find the time sum.
He said that uh these two girls, they were friends, they were roommates.
And there was another girl, like a third girl that uh they didn't she didn't want it to go with them because their parents wouldn't let her hitchhike.
So uh he said in an interview that if he will have the three of them, he probably would have wouldn't have done like the killings because it will like they will outnumber him.
Oh would have been too much.
Yeah, and one of them didn't want it to go in the car, like so the other one had to convince her to hit hike uh with him because she didn't want it to go in the c in the car because she wouldn't hitchhike.
So it was one girl, like I think it was like Anita Luceska, the the first girl, that that was very she was very used to he chaired because she will do it like very often, and she will do it like in every country she will go to.
Like she loved to huge hike because back then in in the 70s, this was like a big thing.
Like girls will do this all the time.
So yeah.
Wow.
That was a huge thing.
Funny, because uh Ted Bundy used to pick up hitchhikers too and kill them.
So um, and it's wild because these guys, right?
These hit the like Ted Bundy and this guy, both charming, you know, not ugly dudes, paws.
Uh especially Ted Bundy.
Ted Bundy, like the girl, I remember when he went to his trial, girls were showing up there trying to like bang him as well.
Yeah, he got married in prison.
He had a girlfriend and he had a girlfriend mistress and a wife.
Yeah, he was out here pimping it, man.
Serial killer killer chicks, bro, but still had gone girls.
Like Richard Ramirez, too.
Like, bro, I'm telling y'all, man, Clout is the number one.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
Oh, I didn't know that.
They married with the way in prison.
Both of them.
Wow.
We talk about women, bro.
Yeah, I know, bro.
I know wow, right.
All right.
Uh oh, sadden Halo 2 go donates one dollar.
Hey, man, I just wanted to say thank you for what you do, your motivation for men, they help motivate me to lose weight anyway, God bless.
Thanks, bro.
Uh appreciate that greatly.
Kemper would later comment on how his first murder was bumbling and how he should have been caught.
I thought I was pretty slick.
And went and stripped all over myself.
That first two murders.
The first 24 hours, there were three clear times I should have been busted.
And I wasn't.
Because three different individuals or three different groups of people got scared.
And minded their own business.
And looked the other way.
Kemper's next victim was Iko Koo, a 15-year-old dance student who was hitchhiking to a dance class after she missed her bus.
Kemper would pick her up and strangle her.
Yeah, and kill Japanese chicks too.
Yeah.
Bless you.
If I'm not mistaken, uh this was big chick because there was one girl that uh He shot all these chicks too.
If I'm not mistaken.
Yeah, because because the dumbass will try to strangle them by putting the the well, not strangle them, like affixia them by putting the fingers up the nose.
Suffocate.
Suffocate that's the word.
Yeah, thank you, Mo.
And they wouldn't die because they were breathing through their through their own.
Oh, so he would he you just sucked at strangling them?
Yeah.
He just was like uh trash serial killer.
He was very stupid.
He was trying to strangle them, it wouldn't work out, and then he was trying to suffocate them and it wouldn't work out.
So he was like, okay, let me shoot them.
Wow.
I didn't know that.
I didn't I didn't know okay, so he tried because I was thinking in my head, like most serial killers strangle.
Like that, like that's how Ted Bunny did it.
Ted Bundy used to really enjoy that.
Like you would strangle them, and then like they'd like they'd pass out, and then he'd let them come back to life.
Um who was the dude?
Okay, so he was successful.
But then it was some like he was.
And he failed.
Yeah.
Oh, and he's six foot nine, like bro, two eighty, what are you doing?
Um Samuel Little, um, the most the the serial killer with the most kills, actually.
Mike, what are you doing?
Like, you should try hard with you.
I mean, six foot nine, too eighty.
Like, come on, bro.
It shouldn't be that hard.
What are you doing, man?
Oh, like, bro, you can overpower.
That's the height, man.
Oh god, no.
Come on, man.
But he worried about the wrong shooting.
Yeah, he would definitely worry about the wrong shit.
And then the other thing too, right?
Is um what was I gonna say?
See this guy.
Oh, in something, something else.
The two first girls that he killed, this guy was he was insane.
The uh when he because he c handcuffed uh one of them, I think it was uh Pesha, the Maria Pesha that didn't even find their buddy.
He brushed one of their breast with the with the back tie uh with the part back part of uh of his hand, what he was trying to handcuff her, and then he was like, Whoops, I'm sorry.
Dude, and then he killed her.
Wait, whoa, wait, he he tried to what?
When he was trying to handcuff the girl, yeah, when he was handcuffing the girl, he brushed the back of his hand with one of his breasts.
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, he accidentally touched the poop.
Yeah, and accidentally, and he was like, he felt so embarrassed, he was like, whoops, I'm sorry.
I'm not about to violently murder you, but I didn't mean to touch your poop.
After you're dead, but like I'm sorry for touching.
God damn, Angie!
That's that's what he said.
God damn.
That's what he did.
Yeah, I know that's what he did, but just say force uh force.
Yeah, like for smile.
Yeah, but god damn, man, you had to say all that.
But yeah, um the other person that used to say like um Samuel Little, by the way.
He has the most uh kills uh um of all serial killer history.
We covered him too.
I think he has like something like 60 something.
He strangled every single one of them.
I think only one he drowned, but all of them he's strangled because he said he didn't like blood.
I think it was the Grindriver killer too.
He also strangled their own.
Yes, he strangled all of them as well.
So um, yeah, a lot of serial killers, man, love strangling.
So I guess this guy Ed Cumper tried and failed with a couple of them.
Um yeah.
I did not know that that he suffered.
But it what what is funny is that he tried to suffocate him by putting his shit and the girl was like breathing through his mouth through her mouth.
Yeah, literally.
Oh man.
I mean, at least he was a gentleman, you know.
Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't mean to touch your breasts there.
I'm sorry.
What a nice guy.
I'm sorry.
Alright, let's keep going.
What a nice guy.
These girls should never mind.
After Kemper murdered Koo, he was due before a panel of psychiatrists for follow-up parole requirement.
Kemper told them what he knew they wanted to hear.
And the two doctors on the panel concluded that there was no reason to consider Kemper a threat to anyone.
They congratulated each other on having rehabilitated a killer child.
And both of them recommended that Kemper's juvenile record be expunged to give him a better shot at becoming a better citizen.
Alright, pause.
The judge disagreed with ceiling Kemper.
Yeah, that's an L. You didn't rehabilitate anything.
But they didn't know.
They didn't know.
And um and another thing too, guys, when they say, Oh, we're gonna expunge a record, that's BS.
I mean in today's day and age.
Because nowadays, when you get arrested, anytime you get arrested, you're gonna get your fingerprints rolled into the system and it's gonna be put into the National Crime and Information Center or NCIC, right?
Or index, whatever it is.
It's NCIC.
Um, and they'll be able, and that generates an FBI number, and they'll always be able to pull up that arrest, right?
They might not necessarily be able to go ahead and retrieve the records if you're a juvenile, but that arrest is always gonna show.
But I want to say this back then in the 70s, they didn't have a standardized interstate database to show all this stuff.
Policing was not necessarily sophisticated as it is now.
They didn't have DNA, they didn't have technology, they didn't work together.
That's why a lot of serial killers in the 70s, etc.
were able to make things happen and go undetected, especially someone like uh Ted Bundy.
Ted Bunny is a big reason why they need an interstate database to keep uh to keep track of criminals because he was he was killing women in like seven or eight different states.
He was traveling all over the place because they didn't necessarily have the capability to connect all the law enforcement agencies together through the computer and the internet.
Mo, you had something, or was it Angie?
Somebody I saw.
Somebody said that he's uh Ed Mun Kemper is related to Mr. Ritardo.
Oh Lord, Mr. Ritardo.
Are we gonna go into that again?
First record, but didn't have any grounds to fight it.
Kemper delighted in both the secret trade as well as his ability to pull off such a feat.
Just one day after murdering Coo.
He drove away with a clean bill of health and a criminal record, white clean.
Kemper would lay low for a while, reveling in fantasizing about.
Oh, another fun fact.
I think it was the first uh Asian girl that he killed.
Oh, the 15-year-old.
Yeah, he was there was one girl that he locked himself out of the car, and he had the gun under the seat.
And the girl let him in again, and that's when he grabbed the gun and killed her.
Oh my god.
This guy, well, this girl this time is the girl.
L female.
Yeah.
She could have shot him ended him right there.
And we wouldn't be reacting to this documentary right now.
We would have been reacting to it for a different reason.
We'll be like dumbest criminal ever.
Yeah.
They're gonna let him in.
Again.
Inside.
Alright.
Stupid.
Shout out to Angie with these little tidbit facts on the side.
I appreciate that.
I did watch a bunch of videos.
Yeah, well, you you d to be fair.
Um we were supposed to cover this guy a while ago, but like something else always came up, or she would do a poll and you guys would vote for somebody else, so you know.
No, and and are you doing it?
For the guys that asked, like, where do I come with this this stuff?
Like, I love true crime, I've loved true crimes forever.
And I've researched this guy ages ago.
Like I've known Ed Kemper for ages ago.
Like, so yeah, this guy is like an E C PC for me.
Fair enough.
I have a qu uh do you think Um the the Asian girl that you know that failed.
Do you think like maybe she was turned on by him still?
Like maybe she's still having a crush on him.
Well, she wasn't the one that got locked he got locked in a car with, right?
The Asian one.
He locked himself out of the car.
But was it with the Asia girl?
Yeah.
Oh, she was the one that could have oh she was 15.
And I yeah, she was 15.
And um, I think he was because she was too scared, Mo.
She was like shocked because he had pointed the going the gun at her before he locked himself out of the car.
And then he left.
How'd he do that?
Like, how do you uh hey, because don't move.
He probably wanted to.
I'm gonna put this here, and I'll be right back.
And he gets out the car.
Oh, I left the key inside.
What happened is that he wanted to go on the other side of the of the car to get her out and put it because this is what he will do.
He will put the victims in the trunk after they kill the head.
Killed them, yeah.
Yeah.
So I think he was trying to get her out of the car, and you know, accidentally, He he locked himself out when he was trying to get her, like, you know.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, okay.
Because she's in the passenger seat.
He was trying to grab it.
No, I under I understand that.
And guys, also keep in mind, these are old cars.
This is 70s.
Yeah.
Like, if you like yourself out of the car, there ain't no automatic button, like, let me back in.
Like, no, it's old, bro.
You gotta, you gotta you gotta hit the little thing like this, uh, you know, you gotta roll the window.
So, um, yeah, this old school stuff, but yeah, uh man, that was L on her end.
Um Alright, let's keep going.
Oh, uh, and then real quick, guys, we got 1100 of y'all watching on YouTube right now.
Tell me that solid guys and like the video.
Let's get to 1,000 likes on YouTube, man.
I really appreciate that.
Hit that like button on YouTube, smash that like button.
Yeah, like the video.
See, Angie go ahead and even wrote it out for you guys on a notepad.
Like the video, like, so yeah, like the video.
Let's hit 1,000 likes, goddamn it.
Alright, let's keep going.
His past murders.
He continued picking up hitchhikers, releasing them, and learning.
But as the fighting with his mother continued and escalated, the strong urge to kill returned.
And on January 7th, 1973, Kemper, now living with his mother again, pause real quick, picked up 18.
Mo, let's pin on the top of the chat, by the way, FNF, um, FNF Super Chat.com.
Guys, if you want to super chat into the show, FNF Superchat.com.
I know some of you guys have issues with rumble rants, or if you're watching on YouTube and you want to be able to don uh super chat into the show, um FNF Super Chat.com.
Let's keep going Got it 18 year old student Cindy Schall While driving around the Cabrillo college campus He would shoot and kill her.
By this point, police have connected the co-ed killings to each other.
As a result, they increased the bus schedule and strongly warned the students against hitchhiking.
Also, students have been warned to only accept rides from cars with university stickers.
But since Kemper's mother worked at the college, he was able to get such a sticker himself.
Then one month later, February 5th, Kemper had another argument with his mother, after which he stormed out of his house in search of possible victims.
On campus, he came across students, Alison Liu, 20 years old, and Rosalind Thorpe, 23.
Once they entered his car, he shot and killed them both.
Kemper had no preference for how he murdered his victims.
Whether it be strangling, shooting, stabbing, or smothering.
His only consistency was the treatment of their corpses, where his MO included necrophilia, rape, and other horrific violations.
What?
Kemper would later confess that performing such acts with his victims' corpses allowed him the ultimate control of his victims.
And then he relished having the corpses all to himself.
What?
He would freely discuss during later what may have started.
Um this is common, very common among serial killers, guys.
John Wayne Gacy, Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy, um Ed Kemper that you guys are seeing now.
Um these guys, most serial killers actually, um, they really get off on control.
That is what they want is control of the victim.
And uh also the Green River Killer, Gary Ridgway, all these guys, like that's their sexual fantasy.
Is like not only the killing itself, but it's a control of the individual during the killing and after the fact with the corpse, these sick bastards.
So um that's what that you're gonna see that theme with serial killers.
Mo, I can see you laughing in the back.
Well, what's up?
I'm I'm I just thought it was something fucked up.
No, and and also Ernie Why are you laughing with that?
I thought of something messed up.
Oh, okay.
Alright, go ahead.
No, that earlier when when he killed the first cat when he was 10, he he stated that he derived played her from successfully lying to his family about the cat.
So he was also like a manipulative man.
You like the deception?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fair enough in getting away with it.
Yeah.
Alright.
I'll probably say it later, bro.
What?
It's crazy.
I can say it now.
Go ahead.
I think he kinda got taste.
He kinda got good taste.
What?
He's he's got good taste.
How does he got good taste?
In his search criteria.
Like the girls are pretty.
Oh, okay, okay.
I'm I'm over here like, wait, what are these about okay?
Alright, Mo, whatever.
You fucking weirdo.
Started his need to dismember bodies, as well as what was going through his mind after he would do so.
I could put it on an incident.
I mean, my father chopping the heads off of our two pet chickens, and my mother insisting that I eat them for dinner.
Uh you know, we can say it was something that simple.
I don't think it was.
Oh, my dad hit it off back with a hatchet.
Um there is also this interview, he said that, but he there is another interview that he said that when he was a child, he went to a magician, and this magician had like a trick where he will have like a guillotine, and then he will choose like uh um a girl from the public,
and he said that uh uh a volunteer was a girl that was very pretty, and he got fascinated at how pretty the girl was, and when the guillotine went down, and of course this is a magic drink, she didn't die, they didn't cut the head.
Um when the guillotine went down, he was like he did rever they re what's the word derived.
Revived revived.
Yeah, he derived like a uh fantasy of getting like of taking off a pretty girl's head off.
So yeah.
So he said it in the in an interview that that's what like you know, like ignited the theory.
It seems like he has a type.
He likes thin young women is what he likes, it seems to me.
Yeah, yeah, thin young, thin, young, attractive females, which actually Ted Bundy too.
Same way.
Yeah.
Uh Ted Bundy really liked fit attractive uh young women between 18 to 25 with dark hair.
That's what he liked.
Fit feminine friendly, nice.
Yeah, pretty much.
So I thought you liked bigger girls though.
Huh?
I thought you would like bigger chicks.
Uh I I'm I'm more uh He said he liked black women.
No.
Which ends up being bigger chicks.
No, no.
Bill said that you like like ratchet girls.
I know I used to.
I I I used to, but I'm more used now.
I'm like, these days it's uh anything you can get.
I mean, I'm ready to eat for everyone.
Hey, listen, I'd be on demon time.
Well, yeah, we know that, motherfucker.
Oh my god.
All right.
All right.
Although my type is uh Latinas that don't speak English.
That's that's normally my good taste, sir.
Good taste.
Alright.
I got on my bike and I wrote a bike.
I just tried to stop it.
I remember that.
I got on a bike, rode around the block.
I was crying.
I haven't talked about that for a lot of years.
I'm sure that may have implemented something.
That may have gotten something rolling, but along fantasy lines.
But it took a lot of years of development along those lines to really get off.
A couple of months after the murder of Alice and Liu, a records clerk at the police department was inspecting the bill of sale for a particular firearm.
She noticed that the purchaser's criminal record, which was officially expunged, could be faintly seen through the blackout marks.
She could make out that the person was previously involved in a murder in another county north of Santa Cruz.
The man attempting to buy the firearm is a Kemper.
That's it, bitch.
By this time, Kemper was well known and well liked by local police, as he would regularly hang out with the off-duty officers after work at a local bar called the jury room.
Like you've done with so many psychiatrists, prison staff, and other professionals before them.
Kemper came off Andy, check to see if that bar still exists, the jury room.
Probably not, but I think it does.
What?
I think it does.
If it still exists, that's gonna be crazy.
Let's keep going, Mo.
It must be like something like uh, you know, I'm not used where she used to hang out, like a museums kind of thing.
Uh Mo.
To the officers, as personable, likeable, and seemingly as harmless as they come.
Big N, as they refer to him, would spend hours discussing guns, ammunition, and other topics of interest with the officers.
Although Kemper was friendly with police, none of the officers were interested in being the one who would have to confiscate the gun from the towering big head.
The most junior of the detectives of the sheriff's department, Michael Alufi, would end up being tasked with confiscating the gun.
And so if it is suspect, disappearance is a time.
It's in California.
Where?
Um The address is seven seven twelve Ocean Street, Santa Cruz, California.
Wow, it still exists.
Let's see, uh Mo, if you can't pull it up on Google, let's see what this is where Ed Kemper used to, I guess, get drunk with the cops.
It must be like guys, I'm telling you, like, gain information on people.
Like, say it again, Angie.
Uh the gury room.
Oh, 712.
712.
712 Ocean Street Santa Cruz, California.
And while we pull that up, guys, we only got 600 something likes on this video.
But there's how many of y'all in here?
There's 1100 ninjas in here, but we only got 697 likes.
Guys, we should be at 1,000 likes.
Easy.
Guys, they demonetizes on YouTube.
The haters are coming.
People talk smack.
It is what it is.
We're continuing to give you all this content Bro, we're still here for y'all, you know, making free content, no ad sense revenue.
It is a hit, it is what it is, but we're doing it anyway because we want you guys to be able to get this content.
So the only thing I ask, man, you don't have to donate a dollar to the show.
If you do, I really appreciate it.
CastleClub.tv.
Go ahead and support us over there.
It's only $100 for the year or $20 a month.
um But the only thing I ask is that you guys like the video.
Let's get up to 1,000 likes, man.
Because like I said before, we got 1,100 of y'all watching on YouTube, and we got another uh let's see here.
1,000 watching on Rumble.
So, guys, let's get the likes up on YouTube.
Open up another tab if you're watching it on Rumble and click the like button.
Really appreciate it.
Hell, if we can get 2,000 likes, that'd be even better.
Uh, but here's a here it is right here.
Uh, the jury room, it looks like.
Um, can we go on a Google map on this thing?
Um it's always cool to see these like old locations.
Yeah, um, like what they are now, how are they like now?
The fact that still aren't the picture, on the left.
Yeah, click the picture.
Yeah, there you go.
Bam.
Oh, wow, that's really it.
Yeah.
Damn.
And it has the same old ugly sign.
Zoom in on that bad boy.
Sports bar live music cocktails.
Wow.
Wow.
Well, where's it at?
Like, like go go back a bit.
It's it's probably in the plaza.
I want to see.
Oh, this is it?
That like that's it.
That little thing.
That little green room, that little green thing.
No, that ain't it.
Yeah, that is it.
Can you check that review uh pictures, Mo?
I want to see who hides inside.
Yeah, they gotta have like Ed Cumper pictures in there or something.
Yeah, something like that, yeah.
4.4.
Wow.
What this go.
No, you just press one picture and then you go from there.
Yeah, scroll down, Mo.
Right there.
Yeah, click the picture.
Yeah.
And then you you okay.
Yeah, that's ugly nigga, man.
Yeah, dudes be taking pictures like that and putting it on their Tinder thinking they're gonna get chicks, bro.
Oh, look at that.
Well, it looks exactly like the pictures from the 70s, so they probably like didn't change much.
And they'd say Emma Kemper.
With his cupmates.
He did have like a lot of like friends.
Uh cops.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yep.
Wow.
And he has a lot of reviews.
Well, you guys make sure to check it out.
I guess so, yeah.
Yeah, go check it out.
If you want to uh the with a bar where Ed Kemper place, uh oh, Paris is unprofessional.
She laughed him on one dollar tip.
Oh Paris must have been one of them boys.
Oh man.
All right.
Let's go back to the documentary.
Unappreciative females, man.
What else is new?
Shh, we're talking about women, bro.
Yeah, I know.
Women, man.
Yeah, but still, man.
It's fucked up.
Laughing him in his face.
God damn.
We talk about women, bro.
All right, let's keep going.
Alufi and his partner drove to Kemper's home on a quiet suburban street just before Kemper was arriving home.
They informed him that they needed to retrieve his gun to make sure he was authorized to have it.
And without incident.
Kemper opened his trunk and allowed the officers to retrieve the gun bundled in a towel.
Alufi noticed that the trunk, oddly, had absolutely nothing in it.
No liner, just a bare trunk.
But he didn't think much of it.
They returned to the station, turned the gun in, and thought nothing further of it.
Having taken the lives of his grandparents and six young women without suspicion.
Kemper was about to embark on the murder he dreamed of since he was eight years old.
It was springtime.
It was April.
For two months I hadn't killed her.
I said it's not going to happen to any more girls.
It's gotta stay between me and my mother.
And it's gotta I can't get away from her.
We're still fighting.
She's still belittling me.
She's still I'm like a puppet on a string, and I entertain her.
She knows all my buttons.
I dance like a puppet.
With that pain.
It even gotten physical.
So here I pick up these two young ladies in Berkeley on Ashby Avenue.
Petite little dolls.
I want to see how together I am.
If I can resist this temptation.
The girls ask Kemper if he's going in their direction.
And they get in my car.
They want to go one way.
I know they need to go the other.
If they go the way they're insisting on, we're headed right back out to where the first two co-eds were murdered.
And I'm saying to myself, oh my god, all I gotta do is relax, and they'll take me to their death.
I've got the gun in the car.
The same one I've been doing it with.
I insisted, as gently as I could.
I took them where they needed to go to their college.
The girls got out of the car and thanked Kemper.
That was one week before I murdered my mother.
I said she's gotta die.
And I've gotta die.
Or girls like that are gonna die.
And that's when I decided I'm going to murder my mother.
God damn.
On April 20th, man.
From murdering his own mom's own, bro.
Masogony.
1973.
After returning from a party, Kemper's mother, now 52, awakened her son when she arrived home.
And she went out to a party.
She got soused.
She came home.
Went to sleep.
I was woken up by that.
I got came out.
I walked up to her bed.
She's laying there reading on paperback.
And she said, Oh, I suppose you're gonna want to sit up all night and talk now.
Shot at her.
I said, "No." I said, "Goodnight." It's gonna kill her.
You know.
And I was so cold, it's so hard.
But that's the first time in ten years.
I've looked at it that way.
I mean, that intensely, that honestly.
It hurts.
He waited for her to nod off, crept back into her room, and stabbed and beat her to death.
And what's her closing words?
I suppose you want to sit up all night and talk.
I wish I had.
I guess that's what you're doing.
Fearing that his mother's best friend Say what?
Nah, because you said I guess you want to stay up all night and talk, and that's what pissed him off.
Let's keep going.
Did they say it about the the head that they that he buried it in the back the backyard?
I don't think yet, no.
So there was a girl, Cindy, that he killed, and he be hated her.
And the head he buried in his in his mother's backyard in the back in front of his mother's room, so she, whenever she will like pick out the window, she will see the head.
And he did it because according to him, his mom always wanted people to look up to her.
What?
What?
Can you believe that?
What the fuck?
Alright.
Um, what the hell are you watching before you came here?
You got these random crazy facts, man.
What's everything about this guy?
I guess so.
Yeah, man.
What's going on here, bro?
All right.
Let's keep going.
Sarah Hallett.
Like you're done with so many psychiatrists, prison staff, and you gotta go home to Nyanji.
I'll still safe around you, man.
Alright, let's get to go home tonight, man.
I'll feel safe around you right now, bro.
Yeah, you might get some crazy ideas, man.
Next thing you know, we ain't gonna have our money Monday.
It's gonna be murder Monday.
Fresh murder Monday by itself, nigga.
You gotta be like, where's Byron?
You're saying it as if I did it.
Oh yeah, what's going on here, man?
Come on, man.
How are you going here?
This is the soft that you guys asked for.
Come on now.
Explaining about it?
Mm-hmm.
Facts, facts.
Facts.
Mm-hmm.
What's going on?
Just keep doing the documentary, man.
Yeah, Mo is having too much fun.
Yeah.
Hey, where'd he go?
Yeah, man.
Let's just keep playing a documentary.
Delighted.
She arrived, and Kemper strangled her to death as well.
Kemper placed both bodies in a closet and fled the area, taking caffeine pills to keep awake for the more than 1500 mile drive.
He drove nonstop to Pueblo, Colorado.
After driving for three days without sleeping, Kemper arrived in Pueblo, but couldn't find any news about the killings of his mother or her friend on the radio.
Ted Bunny.
Ted Bunny operated in uh California, Oregon, Washington, uh Colorado, Utah, etc.
So, yeah, also drove cross-country a lot.
Went all the way to Florida to kill chicks, man.
These dudes are wild.
Let's keep going.
We're likely onto him.
Kemper found a phone booth and began to make a call.
Two weeks after detective Aluffy visited Kemper to retrieve the towel wrapped gun from his bare trunk.
The Santa Cruz police department received a phone call at 5 a.m. in the morning.
It was Ed Kemper.
Freely admitting fresh and Angie coming.
Killing his mother in her.
They say freshen Angie tomorrow.
She gotta replace me?
Yeah.
I'll be dead somewhere.
Yeah.
Guys, if you don't, if you don't see me tomorrow, guys on the call.
Her name is Angelica Camacho.
She lives at I'm just kidding.
Yeah.
If I'm gone tomorrow.
Wait.
Oh, well, I don't sniff or anything, but it was her.
That did it.
Maybe I'm gonna see me tomorrow, bro.
Bro, just call the police right now.
Just be like, yo, I'm gone.
Feder Yeah, federal uh federal office.
Yeah, yeah, man.
Angie, whatever.
Yeah, it's Angie.
She did it.
Y'all know who it is.
Whatever they said she did, she did that shit.
Guilty as guilty as Jelica Camacho, y'all know.
Can you imagine if something actually happens to you?
People didn't actually believe it's me.
Yeah, it's her.
Yep.
She did it.
Alright.
Alright, let's keep going.
Stop this bully.
This is bullying you guys.
I'm being bully right now.
Um didn't take the big ed that they used to hang out with at the jury room seriously.
He advised Kemper to contact them later.
Kemper did, but again, was met with disbelief and assumed to be a prank.
Kemper called in again and urged them to send detective Luffy, who had recently been to his mother's home to confiscate his weapon to return there to check and confirm his story.
Kemper also confessed to killing the six co-ed students.
Then he waited for the police to come and arrest him.
Police rushed to the home of Kemper's mother and found the home undisturbed.
There was no indication of the murder until they turned over his mother's mattress and found it soaked in blood.
Here there is a cryptic note left by Kemper, which read...
Not sloppy and incomplete, gents.
Just a lack of time.
I got things to do.
Approximately 5 15 a.m.
Saturday.
No need for her to suffer anymore at the hands of this horrible murderous butcher.
It was quick, asleep, the way I wanted it.
Ed Kemper was taken into custody.
Thrilled by the notoriety of being a serial killer.
Once Kemper was apprehended, he began compulsively confessing.
He provided long and detailed confessions that seemed unending to officers.
He delighted in detailing anyone who would listen.
The crimes he committed in chilling and graphic detail.
Crimes so pathological, the officers were left, disturbed.
And with Kemper's arrest, police finally discovered why the co-ed killer had eluded them for so long.
As he was hanging out with the police at the jury room, Kemper was observing their strategies relating to his case and gleeting how they planned to identify and catch him.
That inside information gave him an upper hand in eluding them.
Casual relationships, but that was I was poking around a little bit trying to find some things out.
I knew they wouldn't be privy to hot information, but there were some things that were bothering me.
Like, were there any speculations on how they were dying?
Did the cops like you?
Like I said, a friendly nuisance.
I got in the way.
And it was deliberate.
Again, friendly nuisances are dismissed.
Bam.
Why did Kemper kill?
Experts have concluded that all of Kemper's earlier killings were simply a symbolic rehearsal for killing his mother.
And once he'd accomplished killing her, he no longer needed to kill.
And that's why he turned himself in.
Um he will call it Surrogates.
He will call the girls that he killed Surrogates for his mother, who was like his learned target.
Oh wow.
It was all a practice run.
Yeah.
Yeah, and then he he kind of like uh well in this the series that I saw.
He kind of like made it seem as if he was just mad that people were confusing his killings with the others, these other uh serial killers guys that they were doing.
Ah, the other two guys that were operating in that area at the time.
So he was like, okay, they're never gonna catch me if I don't confess.
And he kind of like called one of his friends, cop friends, and he was like, Yeah, I um you know those girls that you guys found the bodies?
That was me, and nobody believed him.
Yeah, they laughed at him.
They thought he was pranking them because he is to hang out with them.
So, yeah.
They for uh the first time he called, they didn't take him seriously.
Then he called again, and that's when they finally said, No, we'll go check out the house.
Because it was when when he started like describing how he did it, that's when they started to believe him.
Okay.
Come on.
Stop the cat.
Like, come on, man.
You want me a pull light the other day.
Yeah.
Oh, wait, no, no, but that's a part of the other.
Yeah.
Beers are you tonight.
Yeah.
That's part of that.
Ow!
Yeah, that's a part of the other team.
That's great.
No, I mean.
Alright, let's keep going.
Kemper, on the other hand, claims his motives were different.
When asked in an interview why he turned himself in, he claimed he sensed the police have found him out when Sergeant Aluffy came to confiscate his gun.
He figured they were playing a game of cat and mouse with him.
And that they were fully aware he was the murderer.
And so to spare his mother the embarrassment of learning that he was the co-ed butcher, he claims he killed her.
similar to what he stated in the cryptic note that he left.
In a separate interview, however, Hemper claimed that the reason he turned himself in was that the original purpose was gone.
It wasn't serving any physical, real, or emotional purpose.
It was just a waste of time.
Emotionally, I couldn't handle it much longer.
I just said to hell with it and called it all off.
On May 7th, 1973, Kemper was charged with eight counts of first-degree murder.
After learning of his detailed and exhaustive confession, Kemper's defense team had no defense options other than to plead not guilty by reason of insanity.
Kemper's trial began on October 23rd, 1973.
Yeah, yeah, that Justin Bieber.
Yeah.
Let's keep going.
Selected by the court deemed Kemper to be legally sane.
On November 8th, after just five hours of deliberation, the jury of six men and six women found Kemper guilty on all accounts of first-degree murder.
Prior to sentencing, the judge asked Kemper what he thought his punishment should be.
That was an easy question for Kemper since he's a face moment since childhood.
Yeah.
His response to the judge was that he felt that he should be tortured to death.
Damn.
But since there was a moratorium on capital punishment in California, Ed Kemper was sentenced to eight life sentences.
I mean, W accountability, but he probably knew in the back of his mind that the death penalty was off the table, so he was like, you know, let me sound better.
That was easy.
He'll find a size when he was a kid with games like the electric chair and the gas chamber.
Because he will find a size that he will get killed like that.
Yeah.
For him, killing was kill hub in his case.
Alright, let's keep going.
Gas chambers.
Yeah.
We're still on YouTube.
Come on.
Come on now.
to be served concurrently.
Edmund Kemper is serving out his prison term at the California Medical Facility State Prison at Vacaville, north of San Francisco.
Not surprisingly, given Kemper's apparently likable personality wherever he goes, Kemper has been considered a model prisoner.
And ironically, given his crimes, he makes guards, prison staff, and inmates alike feel comfortable in his presence.
At one point, he was in charge of scheduling inmates' appointments with psychiatrists.
And he was also the coordinator of a project called The Blind Project, a nonprofit project to help blind inmates.
Kemper voiced over 5,000 hours of narration for the project, resulting in hundreds of audiobooks.
Since he's been in prison, Kemper has granted, and no doubt delighted in numerous in-depth interviews.
Do me a favor, guys.
Again, only 872 likes.
Let's get 130 more likes so that we can hit 1,000 likes.
We got 1,100 y'all watching on YouTube.
And then another 1,100, you guys watching on Rumble.
Literally 50% split down the middle.
Either way.tv.
But the only thing I ask is you like the video.
And follow us on Rumble too, man.
It's free.
Support the channel, man.
Another fun fact is that this guy, um, he will like to play with the interviewers or like the people that will, you know, have interviews with him.
Because there were some interviews.
Well, the the interview will have like a panic button behind uh like under the table.
Yeah.
And he will play, it will say, How I wonder how long it will take the guards outside to to uh to get here before I I behate you and I take your head and I kill you here.
It will take me literally like two minutes.
You are five two, I'm f 6-9, and he will play like that.
You mess with them.
Yeah.
This dude.
He's like, screw it, y'all can't do nothing else.
I mean, I already got life in here, and they can't kill me, so yeah.
There were some interviewers that got scared and they will press the button, they will cut like the time how long it will take them, and they've caught like the cops, yeah, they will take them like thirty minutes to get to the Yeah, yeah.
I mean, in prisons, guys, yeah, because it cause you like every door that you open needs to have another door closed for it to open, so it's very difficult to navigate through jails a lot of the times or prisons.
So I'm not surprised.
Uh let's keep going.
For documentaries and other productions covering his life and crimes.
He's also been the subject of multiple books, movies, television miniseries, and even songs.
He was the inspiration for the character of Buffalo Bill in the 1988 novel, Silence of the Lambs, and a number of others.
And several songs have even been released that feature quotes or excerpts from his vast library of interviews.
Kemper has also worked extensively with the FBI.
In the 1970s, the FBI began a project where they would visit serial killers in prison to help them understand and identify them.
Kemper was one of those killers.
As a result of interviews during that era, FBI agents were able to identify some common serial killer characteristics and backgrounds that we had not known until that point, including that they typically torture animals as children.
In one interview with Kemper, reporter Robert Ressler recalled a terrifying encounter that occurred during his third interview with Kemper at Vacaville Prison.
Wrestler had already had two previous visits with Kemper, where he was accompanied by at least one other person.
But on this third visit, Wrestler felt that he had established a rapport with Kemper, so he decided to interview him alone.
They spoke in a tiny locked cell near Death Row for four hours.
Then, once they concluded their talk, Wrestler pressed a very audible buzzer to summon a guard to come let him out.
But no one came.
So Wrestler continued to talk.
After a few minutes passed, Wrestler pressed the buzzer again.
No response.
A full 15 minutes later, when there was still no appearance from the guard, wrestler pressed the buzzer again.
Still, no response.
Wrestler tried to remain as calm looking and unconcerned about the lack of response as he possibly could.
But Kemper quickly picked up on his reaction and commented.
Relax.
They're changing the shift, feeding the guys in the secure area.
Kemper then smiled and stood up, re-revealing his enormous size to Wrestler.
Then he added, might be 15, 20 minutes before they come and get you.
Wrestler panicked, but tried not to show it.
Kemper continued.
If I went in here, you'd be in a lot of trouble, wouldn't you?
I could screw your head off and place it on the table to breathe the guard.
There you go.
Realizing that Kemper was completely correct, Wrestler tried to fill what seemed like an eternity with talking and bluffing.
He told Kemper that he'd be in deep trouble if he messed with him.
Kemper responded, What could they do?
Cut off my TV privileges.
Wrestler threatened long-term solitary confinement.
But Kemper shrugged the threat off and reasoned that whatever period of solitary he would get would pale in comparison to the prestige he gained in prison from killing an FBI agent.
Wrestler was now in full on panic mode, but he tried to remain composed.
He reflected on how dumb he'd been to decide to interview Kemper alone, suddenly realizing that he fallen victim to Stockholm syndrome, where victims begin to identify with their captors, then trust them as a result.
Despite having been the chief instructor for hostage scenarios, wrestler found that he had fallen victim to the very condition that he taught others to look out for.
His mind raced to determine his next move.
He decided to continue the number one strategy for hostage scenarios.
Talk.
So he said to Kemper, Surely, you don't think I'd come in here without some method of defending myself, do you?
Kemper replied, Don't shit me, Wrestler.
They wouldn't let you up here with any weapons on you.
He was right, of course.
Wrestler verbally sparred back and forth with Kemper to both buy time and allow himself to regain his composure.
And then finally, a guard arrived.
From then on, it became FBI policy to never allow an agent to interview a convicted killer, rapist, or child molester alone.
In 2015, 42 years into his sentence, Kemper suffered a stroke.
Yeah, you can never uh yeah, that's just bad practice to interview anybody by yourself.
You always want to witness so that you have someone else that can testify to what was said.
And then nowadays, right, you interview and you use a recorder as well.
So but yeah, I mean that was foolish.
I mean, you never want to I mean Number one, you want to be in shape, so that you know someone this is why it's so important to like always be in shape and shit.
Like I would I wouldn't have I didn't think it even being in shape, I mean six nine, three hundred.
Yeah, six nine to eighty, yeah.
You you want somebody else in there with you.
You don't want to be an idiot, you know what I mean?
But um but yeah, I mean, this is why it's important to have some combat training, etc. 'cause a lot of tall guys can't necessarily fight.
So um, but yeah.
But yeah, that was an L on his part.
He should have definitely had a partner with him.
But It is what it is.
1970s were different.
What else?
Let's keep going.
This brought his volunteer efforts with the blind project to an end and resulted in him being declared mentally disabled.
In 2019, he was said to be at least partially confined to a wheelchair, doesn't bathe, and has essentially given up on life.
He's generally in very poor health, suffering from diabetes, heart problems, and other ailments.
Kemper was first eligible for parole in 1979.
His parole would be denied that year, as well as in subsequent hearings every year until 1982.
Between 1985 and 2017, Kemper would come up for nine more parole hearings, four of which he waived his right to, and the remaining five of which resulted in his parole being denied.
At his 1988 hearing.
Once he was denied, Kemper stated, And at his 2007 denial, the prosecutor stated, We don't care how much of a model prisoner he is because of the enormity of his crimes.
Kemper's next eligible parole date will be in 2024.
At which time he'll be 76 years old.
Aside from the heinousness of this case, the one finding that sticks with us the most is his statement by Kemper that seems to be common among serial killers and general criminals alike, similar to Joseph Fritzel, who recommended checking the basements of other fathers.
And that is that for every one of them that's caught, there are many, many of them that are not.
Well, I'm not an expert.
I'm not an authority.
I'm someone who has been a murderer for almost 20 years.
Can you say how many people might be doing crimes like you were doing?
It would be a guess, but it's not it's far more than 35.
It isn't that impossible in this society.
It happens.
Are there more people?
They didn't give up.
How many she didn't give up?
I did.
I came in out of the coal.
And what I'm saying is there are some people who prefer it in the cold.
In the end, the question that many have is the classic one of nature versus nurture.
Was Ed Kemper born to kill, or did his upbringing, environment, and experiences groom him to kill?
The ongoing debate amongst scientists, criminologists, and psychologists is which one plays the larger role in making a serial killer.
Genetics or environment.
But what experts do agree on is that Kemper is a classic sociopath.
Everything's all about him.
He feels no guilt.
He has no compassion whatsoever.
But what of that?
Was he born a sociopath?
Is it his fault that he's that way?
It's a contentious debate.
We want to hear what you think.
But before you comment, we'll leave you with one statement from Kemper himself, where he shared.
I need to believe that something in me is salvageable.
So, what are your thoughts?
Was he born that way?
Or do you think that if he had not been exposed to the gruesome and brutal crime details at Atascadero, that his murders would have stopped there?
Or maybe if he had not returned to living with his mother.
Please share your thoughts in the comments.
And if you like this video, please do us a favor and hit the Mo, let's uh let's uh run a poll uh for the audience.
Guys, do you think serial killers are made from nature or nurture?
Let's throw a poll up.
I think it will depend on the killer.
Yeah.
But I want to see what the audience thinks.
What do you think plays a bigger role in general?
Um But yeah, and we'll see.
And then and then and then uh actually yeah, yeah, let's say it's serial killers.
We should we do it for Ed Kemper in general?
I will say Ed Kemper because this is too general.
Yeah, let's do it for Ed Kemper in general.
I will I will say that he was born to kill.
You think he was born to kill?
Yeah.
You don't think it was the nurture?
No.
You don't think it was messed up background?
No.
He um I mean it definitely helped.
But since he had these needs since he was a kid, I would say he was born to kill.
It was something within him that...
Polls coming up on YouTube, guys, here...
And you guys will have to do the poll on I think I don't think Rumble will allow us to do a poll.
So yeah, come on over to YouTube guys and do the poll.
And we got 955 likes on here on YouTube, guys.
Do me a favor and please like the video so we can hit 1000.
Um scene photos.
You want me to show them?
Well, no, no, no.
We'll we could give Mo the link and we'll show him on screen.
Okay.
We'll have to go to Rumble only to do it.
Are they that violent?
Uh, it's I like because there are so many uh photos that they might link it to Kemper, but it's not really him.
I just found like the real one.
It's his mom.
His mom's head.
It's his mom's head?
Yeah.
He cut the head off.
He cut the head off and he masturbated with the head.
With the mom?
Yeah.
Ugh.
Okay, that wasn't in the documentary.
There is there he wasn't in the documentary.
I miss I probably missed.
No, he didn't, no, no, no, No.
There is a word that they use for the practice of what he did.
Let me let me see the head real fast.
You wanna see the head?
Yeah, let me see.
Uh and then I'll see if we can show this or whatever.
Let's uh don't don't tilt tilt it.
Yeah, tilt it this way.
Let me see here.
Oh Lord.
God damn.
Um trying to find a word that rumagio, I think it is.
And he did the same with his mom's friend too, but he didn't masturbate with the head.
He masturbated with the body without the head.
Uh damn, bro.
No wonder he ain't gonna get no pro, bro.
Else son.
Um let's see here.
Well, uh, what's the poll saying, bro?
All right.
Ed Kemper's serial killing urges natured or nurtured.
Let's see what y'all think.
Oh, it's it rumatio what he did.
It's uh if we make you.
But don't look it up.
Don't don't search for that on Google.
Yeah, don't do that.
Um let's see here.
We got uh we got the poll going right now.
Okay, you don't want to show it?
Uh yeah.
Because I don't want to see this.
Like I can take it off.
Yeah, well, we'll send the link to Mo on uh the telegram chat.
So that he can have it.
Um let's see here.
I saw 72% for nurtured.
It looked like Mo, what what are we looking like?
Yeah, it looks like it's be it's 70% nurtured.
Yeah, he had a mess up up bring in.
Uh um Mo, let's um let's read some of the rants and the chats that came through that we might have missed.
And shout out to all you guys subscribing to the channel.
One second.
Yeah, I got these.
Okay.
Well, I'm gonna send you the picture.
Uh you're gonna see it because I'm not gonna send you the link.
Um so beware that I'm sending you the picture.
Uh love the recent changes to the show.
Adding Mo and moving Angie to the desk was some great changes.
W Fed W and G gains.
Appreciate that, bro.
Um Work uh world's coolest nerd goes.
I stopped watching WWE after Sam Puck left.
Uh then WWE fumbled the push of Dolph Singler as w uh was g gonna start watching the AEW whenever I got time, especially when CM Punk joined.
Uh um I was still watching it because especially I was a big uh Roman Reigns.
Roman Reigns is actually my current favorite right now.
Um CM Punk.
It it was hard to see him leave because I know his biggest issue is the fact that he just wanted to close out WrestleMania.
Doesn't matter whether he won or lost.
I think he should have closed out of WrestleMania.
He deserved CM Punk definitely deserved that.
Um yeah, I fumbled the push of Doll Ziggler.
And I I already know you're probably talking about that survivor series where the doll ziggler was the sole survivor on that survivor series, and that was the best time to push Dolph Ziggler.
And uh but you know what we'll do, because you guys have been asking for this.
We'll probably do a wrestling um podcast on Castle Club dot TV.
We'll do a wrestling one for y'all and we'll like react to clips and shit like that because we'll be able to do that without getting hit with copyright over there.
You know what I mean?
Oh, and we're gonna do um Fresh of Feet.
We're gonna do the sandwich contest for the girls.
So the what?
Sandwich.
Oh, a sandwich contest, yes.
Yes, we are gonna do a sandwich contest.
Yes, sir.
We are gonna do a sandwich contest.
Yeah.
And so the guys.
Oh, what else do we got here?
I'll definitely be the judge.
No, yeah, we know that.
Uh we got Johnny Silver and goes, we need to bring back mental hospitals.
Yeah, because dude be wilding out like Nick Cannon and crew.
Yeah, he was going crazy.
Um Death Song goes, I'm a junior in high school with a good grades, and you've inspired me to become a special agent.
What should I major in during college?
And do you have any tips for me?
Um, intern and major in accounting, bro.
Major in accounting.
I'll help you.
Uh what else we got here?
And stay stay clean.
Don't do no drugs, don't hang out with idiots.
Uh keep your nose clean, bro, and you'll be able to get into law enforcement.
Keep the nose clean.
Oh, literally and figuratively.
Uh hey, I'm having a great time listening to no to Mo laughing.
And that's from Kim Pop.
Thanks, Kim Pop.
I appreciate that.
Uh Nerd again.
Maybe he wasn't trying to strangle them with his fingers.
Maybe he wanted her to smell his fingers.
You know what they say.
Two in the pink and one in the stink.
All right.
What is what does that mean?
Don't worry.
I'll tell you on Rumble.
Black vet, Big Mo, record your demon laugh and use it as a sound effect.
Frutality.
Alright.
What else do we got here?
Um anything else?
Well, we've got to wait a rumble for the others.
Ah, yes.
Okay.
Um, oh, the rumble rants are crazy?
Yeah.
Okay.
Because some of our guys.
So that is gonna do it for the YouTube portion of the podcast.
If you guys want to go ahead and enjoy the rest of the podcast, we got some crime scene photos, some commentary, and some crazy rumble rants over there that are not safe.
Come on over right now, guys.
Rumble.com slash Fed Reacts, actually.
Uh, we'll throw the link in there.
Um, yeah, come on over to uh Rumble right now.
I don't think it's gonna be that bad, but Rumble.
Yeah, but we we're playing honestly.
I don't think it would it it's bad that where we would get banned off YouTube, but we're playing a safe here, guys, because you know it is what it is.
They don't they they hate us.
So we're gonna go over to Rumble anyway.
So we're just playing it safe.
I don't think it would violate good guidelines, but come on over to Rumble, guys.
You guys know what time it is, aka Let's get ready to rumble one second.
And like the video, guys.
Export Selection