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Oct. 7, 2024 - MyronGainesX
02:03:59
Fed Explains The Menendez Brothers. New Evidence Could Free Them?
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Time Text
And we are live.
What's up, guys?
Welcome to Fed Reacts.
I'm here with my boy, my guy, Frank.
Let me zoom this out a bit for you guys.
Frank, say what's up to the people, guys.
They are going to be covering the Menendez Brothers.
And are they going to get released?
get into it, man.
God damn it.
Wrong intro.
I don't know why.
I got to go back into my OBS and fix this.
But I don't know.
I'll get with Frank.
I'll get with Bills and fix it.
But Frank, say what's up to the people real quick before I put you down, buddy.
Say what's up.
So, Frank, guys, here he is.
Come on, buddy.
Come on.
What, now you want to act all crazy?
Say hello to the people.
Say what's up.
He's just chilling, man.
He's like, come on, man, put me down.
All right.
I'm going to put you down.
I'm going to put you down, Frank.
Here you go.
You want to jump on my lap earlier?
Now that I got him here, he's acting all crazy.
So, guys, welcome to the show.
Today we're going to be covering the Menendez Brothers, as you guys know.
See, now you want to bother me again.
We're going to be covering the Menendez Brothers.
And as y'all know, there's been a push to try to get them out of jail.
And we're going to cover them here in a little bit.
Before I do that, quick announcement.
Why do I not have this here?
Sorry, guys.
I'm like fixing the numbers.
Give me ones here, by the way, guys.
If we are good on audio and everything else, we should be live on all the platforms, by the way.
Let me double check and make sure we are good.
All right, see, we're live on YouTube.
We're live on X. We're live on Castle Club.
Shout out to all you ninjas.
We watched the most banned documentary earlier.
You guys know what I mean.
I think you guys know what I mean.
And let me make sure that we're live on Rumble.
All right, sweet.
We're live on Rumble as well.
Awesome.
Let me just go ahead and get up.
Sorry.
I'm on a Twitter space as well.
Let me get out of this space real quick.
Talking about a topic that I'd never be able to talk about on YouTube.
All right.
All right, cool, cool, cool.
I got some ones in here on Castle Club.
This is going to be a shorter Fed reacts, guys.
Also, just so you guys know, I am probably going to go ahead and watch a portion of the most banned documentary on the internet.
You guys already know which one it is.
All my Rumble ninjas, you guys know what it is.
So yeah, I'm definitely going to be covering that.
But before I do, let's go ahead and get into the topic at hand.
All right, guys, we're going to be talking about the Menendez Brothers.
All right, if I can figure out how to get this.
Give me one sec here because I'm trying to get the YouTube views.
Oh, there we go.
Boom.
All right, there it is.
All right, cool.
Got it up.
So the Menendez Brothers, guys, Lynn and Eric Menendez, born January 10, 1968, and Eric Galen Melendez.
Menendez, born November 27, 1970.
Generally referred to as the Menendez Brothers or American Brothers who were convicted in 1996 of the murders of their parents, Jose and Mary Luis Kitty Menendez.
All right.
So that's who they are.
That's what they look like now.
Holy.
These dudes have really been through it.
They've been in jail now for about roughly 35 years.
So we're going to go ahead and watch this thing here.
This is from seven years ago.
It was one of the first murder cases played live in full.
I think that all children love their parents.
Trauma to the torso.
Parents are like gods.
The men's carnage.
Shocking, the amount of blood.
Angie, guys, I was with her earlier today.
She is doing like a whole, you know how women are.
They got a bunch of random crap.
She's like redoing her closet and stuff like that.
So I told her, like, just stay home.
I would do this show by myself.
I don't really need too much help for this one.
So I just told her to stay home.
But we're going viral on X right now.
Bruh, 30 million.
I'll show y'all this real quick.
This is fucking crazy.
Speaking of which, bro, this is actually hilarious.
So Angie, right?
Right?
I'll show y'all this real fast.
This is her X account, right?
This is her X account.
She got 4,500.
When this crap popped off, she had like maybe 3,000, right?
Look at this shit, bro.
Where's she at now?
This is me tweeting her.
Bro, 26 million fucking views, bro.
All she did was put happy National Boyfriend Day, Mr. Grumpy.
She didn't think this was going to blow up.
Just posted some pictures of us together, right?
This is us in Miami.
I don't remember when that picture was taken.
This is us in LA.
This is us in Vegas.
And this is us in this also, LA.
We're on the pier.
Right?
26 million views.
Bunch of angry ass people.
She comments.
Oh my God.
I hit tweet.
She puts a picture of me.
Like, bro, this is just a girl showing love for her boyfriend.
And you know, Angie does a bunch of like little things like this.
You guys know how women are, right?
Because she's happy to have me.
She's a very appreciative woman, right?
And then you get all these angry ass chicks, bro.
Holy.
Bro, women are so some of these women are so miserable.
So fucking miserable that they don't have a boyfriend that takes care of them is a decisive individual, you know, is a leader, etc.
You know, Angie don't got to worry about shit.
She lives a great life.
And these women are so fucking jealous of her.
It's actually hilarious.
And I've said that before.
Like, women that are miserable want to drag other women down for that, down with them, right?
Like, women in happy relationships don't fucking care about the internet and care about being like harpies like these chicks.
But yeah, it is what it is, bro.
Weirdo dudes that don't got girls and weirdo women that are just like, you know, just jealous, quite frankly.
It's the best way I could put it.
Just extremely jealous.
So, yeah.
We got here.
I'm looking at federal agent 1811, possibly DEA.
How's dating life?
Which, well, as an agent, bro, you're going to have to be real selective among what girls you deal with.
You know what I mean?
Girls that do drugs, girls that smoke weed, girls that, you know, have criminal backgrounds and shit, bro.
You can't fuck with none of those chicks, bro.
Even girls that are like trippers and shit, you got to stay away from them.
So, yeah, shout out to Macho Balls, WMI.
Appreciate that.
But yeah, Top G's, Bugatti, bro, you say goodbye to being around like, you know, girls that are involved with criminal activity, bro.
Say goodbye to that shit.
All right, back to the documentary.
Or this clip.
This was a horrific crime.
It sounded like was it a robbery?
Was it a gang-related type thing?
Was it a mafia-related type thing?
And just so you guys know, I covered the Menendez brothers already, as you guys can see here.
I covered it on Rumble.
It's only on Rumble.
It's not on YouTube.
YouTube took it down because they're lame.
I basically reacted to a documentary.
So if you guys want to go ahead and watch that after this, here it is.
Feel free to go check it out for you, ninjas.
All right, there's the link for it.
Mods, if you could pin that.
But I did cover this already, so I'm not going to be covering the case as much.
We'll give a quick recap.
Who hated them?
Something wasn't right.
Things breaking.
Ringing noises from the booms.
The smoke from the guns.
I just fired every shot I had.
I just fired until there was nothing left.
The Greek state prison in California is Lyle Menendez.
Mr. Menendez, can you hear us?
I can hear you, Chris.
Take us back to that night and what happened.
I asked him if that's a threat.
He said you take it for what it is.
I know my father.
I know what that means.
He isn't going to go through a child molestation trial.
He would rather go through a murder trial.
That was a damning set of recollections.
I did not threaten him in any way.
She's lying to him.
He did not say that.
How do you explain it?
That's not accurate either.
Did you think that you guys were going to get away with this?
No.
Murder in Beverly Hills, the aftermath.
All right.
So this also, Lyman speaks out about parents' murder.
Let's watch this.
Then we're going to get into the more recent stuff.
Senate look at a murder case that rocked a generation.
Two Beverly Hills brothers, Eric and Lyle Menendez, convicted of killing their wealthy parents in a grisly double murder.
It's been nearly three decades ago.
It's a case that our Terry Morant has covered.
You've covered this from the very start.
I have a long time ago.
And you know, Robin, guys, it's a case that has haunted me all these years since I covered it as a young reporter.
It's one of those that just grabbed a hold of me and never let go.
The Menendez brothers trial at the time it was called the Crime of the Century when it happened.
And it had all the ingredients.
Murder in Beverly Hills.
A family shattered in the most horrifying way.
And as the case unfolded, shocking accusations of what was really going on in that home.
The victims, Jose Menendez, a Cuban immigrant to this country who'd made good becoming a corporate chieftain on both coasts and ultimately rising to become a Hollywood power broker and his wife Kitty, who seemed an all-American wife and mom.
And they seemed to have it all.
Their sons, Lyle, 21 at the time of the crime, and Eric, 18, good-looking, outgoing young guys, star tennis players.
They had the brightest of futures ahead.
But behind those closed doors, the Menendez family was a cauldron of lies and secrets.
And on August 20th, 1989, in Beverly Hills, it all boiled over.
Jose and Kitty Menendez brutally murdered.
And then, shockingly, Lyle and Eric, their sons, arrested for the crime.
And in this ABC News documentary, we gather so many of the voices of the participants.
You'll hear them, including for the first time in 20 years, we hear from Lyle.
I'm not gonna lie, bro, killing your parents is crazy, man.
But you guys are gonna obviously, you guys are gonna see why.
If you watch the case, you know, their thing is their excuse was they're being sexually assaulted.
Lynn Menendez by phone from prison about that night.
My name is Lyle Menendez.
I've been in prison for 26 years.
I am the kid that did kill his parents.
And no rigorous cues has changed that.
And no amount of regret has changed it.
Beverly Hills is a quiet town.
Even the business district kind of folds up at 7 o'clock.
We average two murders a year and really don't know what you're in for.
Bro, two murders a year.
Holy.
These dudes did the year average in one night.
So, Black Tate says, with Angie being okay with you being with other women, if there was a girl that she wasn't comfortable with sleeping with, maybe a possible friend or something, would you still sleep with them regardless?
No, I don't talk to her friends, bro.
That'd be kind of fucked up.
But no, I don't talk to her friends.
But she doesn't, I don't talk to her about that stuff for obvious reasons.
You know, she's still a girl at the end of the day.
When you get a murder call.
What's the problem?
Aren't we shot?
12 shots in the middle of Beverly Hills on a Sunday night, and no one calls the police.
We're waiting at the house.
No one shows up.
And I still can't believe it.
I'm sitting on the stairs afterwards thinking the police are going to be there in seconds.
They've got roving patrol.
And people, many, many people did hear the shots.
Many neighbors came in and said they heard all these shots, but nobody called because they just figured this is Beverly Hills.
This doesn't happen in Beverly Hills.
So you called the police, but at that point, you had already decided.
We were very stunned, and we felt that we would go to jail, obviously.
And we, you know, it was a selfish reason to just not want to have to go through that.
You know, by this intersection, I could actually see the police tape and the police cars in front of Nenda's house.
As we walked in the front door, the only thing I could really detect is the silence.
And then in the back of the foyer, was this library family room, which is where the murder occurred.
The television was on, so it was just a normal evening for them.
Kitty was wearing white.
She was covered in blood.
Jose had a shotgun blast in the back of his head.
It was holy.
Shotgun black's bass blast in the back of that is crazy work, man.
It's really horrendous.
When Jose and Kitty were found dead, the police didn't do what they normally do in a case like that.
There are things that could have been done that night that would have proven that they were the killers.
The murder weapons were in their cars.
Nobody bothered to look.
At the time, we felt they were victims.
And you're not going to press them.
Also, let's just be honest, it's Beverly Hills, so you're going to assume.
Guys, this is the late 80s.
Let's just call it Spade a Spade.
They probably thought, oh, nope.
Probably some black guys.
We got to go find them.
You know what I mean?
Like, they're not thinking that these two fucking, you know, rich kids are going to be the killers, right?
Because your parents just got blown away.
And your parents just got killed.
So the last thing you want to do is like, you know, make it as if they're the ones that killed them.
Right?
Noam Billy, 20 pounds down from the day.
I met you guys in the Vegas at the gym.
Shout out to you, Noam Billy.
Good work.
I'm currently volunteering in the gym this week because it's Mr. Olympia week.
I'm taking this opportunity to meet all the people I can and try to network as much as possible.
WMR and man of the people I got you, bro.
Got you, man.
That was, I'm happy that you're using that gym membership and you lost 20 pounds.
Donna Margaret, for you.
Shout out to you Noam Billy.
And I like the fact that you guys are keeping him accountable, right?
That gym membership isn't in vain that I got him.
So thank you guys for that.
I remember it was the morning after the murder.
I pulled up to the house and then all of a sudden my car door slammed open and Eric jumped in and scared the hell out of me.
Frantically said to me that they needed my husband's legal help.
I said, Eric, what's going on here?
Well, he says, Mrs. Wright, my parents were murdered last night.
And I said, what?
He was not sad, not crying, no emotion.
Of course not.
Emotion whatsoever.
Who would think of legal advice the day of your parents' murder?
Unless you're guilty.
Facts.
But the real issue in this case, of course, wasn't who did it.
The Menendez brothers quickly confessed after they were arrested.
The question is, why did they kill their parents?
And what they said about that in court.
Claims of a life of abuse, including sexual abuse at the hands of their father.
That shocked the country, triggered a national debate.
And one last thing.
That interview with Barbara Walters back in 1995, that is the last time they saw each other.
And if the penal system works, they will never see each other again.
What is it?
Like you said in the beginning, that this is something that has stayed with you all of these.
Yeah.
So these interviews, the videos I showed you guys were years ago.
So now we're going to get into today, right?
So this comes from the LA Times.
Kim Kardashian wants the Menendez brothers to be freed as DA Review's case.
And obviously, this comes on the heels of the Netflix series Monsters, which is huge, right?
Right now.
If I'm not mistaken, is it?
Let me see if I can.
Do I got my Netflix account logged in?
See if I'm logged in on this bitch.
I might be logged in.
Sign in.
Oh, man.
No, I'm not signing, chat.
Maybe I'll sign in and show you guys.
They're going to immediately hit me with a copyright, though.
So, Kim Gardasha wants the Menendez brothers to be freed as DA Reviews case.
Obviously, Kim K, you guys know the useless Bimbo.
I think we all know how she got famous.
Kim Gardashi wants Lyle and Eric Menendez, the brothers convicted in the grisly 1980 murders of their parents to be freed.
The reality star, daughter of the OJ Simpson attorney, Robert Kardashian, has fashioned herself as an advocate for criminal justice reform.
And in a personal essay for NBC News, she wrote Thursday that she hopes that the brothers, who have already served 35 years in prison, could have their life sentences reconsidered.
And I got the letter right here.
Okay.
This is by Kim Kardashian, October 3rd, 2024.
Let's go through this.
We are products of our experiences.
They show who we were, who we are, and who we will be.
Physiologically and psychologically, time changes us.
And I doubt anyone would claim to be the person they were at 18.
I know I'm not.
Yeah, facts.
We were 304 back then.
And still a 304 today.
But hey, who's judging, right?
You think you know the story of Lyle and Eric Menendez?
I certainly thought I did.
In 1989, the brothers, aged 21 and 18, respectively, officially shot and killed their parents in their Beverly Hills home.
In 1996, after two trials, they were sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
As often the case, this story is much more complex than appears on the surface.
Both brothers said they had been sexually, physically, and emotionally abused for years by their parents.
According to Lyle, the abuse started when he was just six years old, and Eric said he was raped by his father for more than a decade.
Following years of abuse and a real fear for their lives, Eric and Lyle chose what they thought at the time was their only way out, an unimaginable way to escape their living nightmare.
Their first trial was heard before two separate juries, one for each brother.
Their abuse claims formed the foundation of their defense with family members testifying on their behalf.
After hearing this evidence, over half of the 24 jurors voted not guilty on their murder charges, resulting in hopelessly deadlocked juries and mistrials, wildly seen as a blow to the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office.
And then they went ahead and took some more L's in 95 or 96 with your boy OJ.
Right.
Soon, the Menendez brothers case would continue to play out amid another high-profile murder case prosecuted by the same DA's office.
More than four months after the Menendez mistrials, O.J. Simpson was charged with the murders of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman.
For those of you that are wondering, guys, I covered the O.J. Simpson case extensively on this channel.
So please go check it out.
It's actually one of my favorite episodes that I did.
I actually give you guys a theory on what I think actually happened on that fateful night back in, I think it was 1995 with Nicole Simpson and Ronald Goldman.
Yep, Goldman, you guys already know.
So, yeah, go check that out.
It's on, I don't know if it's on Rumble.
I might have done it before I was on Rumble, but it's definitely on YouTube.
But it's like, there's an age restriction on it.
Matter of fact, let me, I'll get, I'll just get the link for you guys because I already know.
Because you guys, the reason why I say this is because you guys always asked me for the OJ Simpson case.
And I'm like, dude, I did it.
But I know it's kind of shadow banned because it's age restricted.
So here it is.
Damn, this thing is a three and a half.
Look, look, see, of course.
They fucking blackball me, right?
Here it is.
The following content may contain graphic.
They're violent imagery.
So yeah, not surprised that they would do that.
But here it is, guys.
Watch it after this stream, of course.
I go into detail on this one.
I think it's one of the best reactions to the murder.
But go check it out.
I'll give you guys my perspective on it.
Very well versed on the O.J. Simpson case.
I covered it.
I actually talked about it with the Hobson's on my last interview with those ninjas.
Shout out to them.
Anyway, then eight days after Simpson's acquittal, opening arguments began in Eric and Lyle's second trial.
However, this time the judge had changed the rules.
Both brothers were tried together before a single jury.
Much of the abuse evidence was deemed inadmissible, and manslaughter was no longer an option.
Ooh, that changes things.
Some witnesses from the first trial were barred from testifying about the alleged abuse, depriving the jurors of crucial evidence.
The prosecutor, having successfully argued to exclude the abuse testimony, mocked the brothers' defense during his closing arguments for not producing any evidence of abuse.
Their lawyer has since said the judge's rulings essentially acted as a directed verdict.
And so the brothers were convicted.
They were sentenced to life without the possibility of parole and have remained incarcerated for almost 35 years.
The only way out of prison now is death.
Their first trial was televised for all to see, and Eric and Lyle's case became entertainment for the nation.
Their suffering and stories of abuse ridiculed and skits on Saturday Night Live.
The media turned their brothers into monsters and sensationalized eye candy.
Two arrogant rich kids from Beverly Hills who killed their parents out of greed.
There was no room for empathy, let alone sympathy.
Eric and Lyle had no choice of a fair trial against this backdrop.
Back then, there were limited resources for victims of sexual abuse, particularly for boys.
There are virtually no systems in place to support survivors, and public awareness of the trauma of male sexual abuse was minimal, often clouded by preconceived judgments and homophobia.
Can anyone honestly deny that the justice would have treated, excuse me, can anyone honestly deny that the justice system would have treated the Menendez sisters more leniently?
Despite overwhelming family testimony acknowledging the abuse Eric and Lyle suffered, the public remains skeptical.
Robbed of their childhoods by their parents, then robbed of any chance of freedom by a criminal justice system, eager to punish them without considering the context or understanding the why, without caring about whether the punishment fit the crime.
Eric and Lyle were condemned before the trial even began.
So as y'all can see, right, Kim is, you got this huge Netflix special right now going on, and you got Kim Kardashian speaking on their behalf.
And most Americans, I'll keep it a thousand with y'all.
Most Americans don't even know about this case like that because this case was overshadowed by the OJ Simpson case, right?
The O.J. Simpson case, just so you guys know, was the biggest trial in American history.
I think to this day, chat, tell me if you guys agree.
Give me ones if you guys agree.
Give me twos if you guys don't agree.
I think the O.J. Simpson case was the biggest trial in American history by fucking far.
By far.
I think it was the biggest trial.
It lasted for several months, took forever.
Man, it was huge.
So, yeah.
Let's go on over here.
So this, fast forward to today.
Murders in American history.
Now, new evidence is being examined in the case.
It was one of the most notorious murders in American history.
Now, new evidence is being examined in the case of Eric and Lynn.
Yeah, I think this was bigger than my, yeah, I think it was bigger than Michael Jackson's case too, guys.
Yep.
Someone in the Rombo Chat has.
My Menendez, the brothers convicted of killing, shooting and killing their parents in their Beverly Hills mansion in 1989.
CNN's Camila Bernal is in Los Angeles, Camila.
Fascinating case.
What are you learning?
Absolutely, Jim.
So the attorney representing the brothers now says he's very optimistic about the district attorney reviewing evidence in this case.
So the question is not whether or not these two brothers killed their parents.
They admitted to doing so, doing it in that mansion.
And I think it's very important for you guys to know they confessed to the crime.
They did it.
We know that.
Now it's a matter of, hey, should they get the life penalty given the circumstances that led to the murder?
Now, look, some people could be critical.
They'll be like, bro, you guys were fucking adults when y'all shot them.
What the hell?
18 or 21?
This was like revenge.
This is cold-blooded murder, right?
You guys could have been left the house.
Why were you guys still there?
Right?
So that's what some of the critics say.
And then obviously people on the other side say, well, look, this dude abused them.
It was fucked up.
They deserved that.
So see what happens here.
In Beverly Hills back in 1989, the question is, should they be serving a life sentence?
And their attorney does not think so, which is why he has been pushing for this sentence and this conviction to be vacated and also pushing for a review of this evidence.
He says, because the evidence proves the sexual abuse allegation.
And this all, especially after so much interest in this case, thanks to social media, thanks to documentaries, thanks to that Netflix docudrama.
A lot of people talking about this case and also talking about the sexual abuse allegation in this case, because that is the central argument of the defense.
They say that these two brothers killed their father because he was sexually abusing them.
So part of the new evidence that the defense team is putting forward, they say proves that sexual abuse.
One of the things is a letter that they say they have written by Eric to a cousin.
And they say this letter details that sexual abuse before the murder.
The other thing that they're reviewing is an allegation from a member of the boy band Manuel.
And he says he too was sexually abused by the brother's father, Jose.
So that's really important because now you got a celebrity vouching for them saying, hey, look, you know, this guy abused me as well.
So that's huge for these guys, for the brothers, to add credibility to their argument.
They Menendez.
And so that's why the district attorney now says, yes, he will review these.
He has not made a decision.
And remember, Georgia Gascon is currently running for re-election here in Los Angeles.
So this is in the midst of all of this.
And I do want to point out, though, that one of the things that both the.
Also, guys, do me a favor, man.
Please go follow me on X and on Instagram, man.
My Instagram is at almost 9,700.
I want to hit 10,000.
Once I hit 10,000, I can stream on Instagram as well, and we could reach some more people and wake some more people up, man.
Shout out to Astrophysics One.
He says, yo, Myron, I immensely appreciate the political knowledge you've been dropping lately.
What do you think about North Korea's Kim Jong-un?
Is he misunderstood as bad as Putin?
I'll be honest with you, bro.
I don't know enough about him to give a educated opinion.
But what I will do is I'll go ahead and research.
Carter Man92 says, W My W Angie L gorillas, ABBA and Tree.
I appreciate that, bro.
I appreciate that.
Those guys, bro, dude, they've made 70 videos on us, guys.
That's fucking crazy, bro.
You know what I've noticed, guys?
There's people that literally, their most viewed videos are only if they talk about us.
It's actually fucking phenomenal because what it tells me is we're fucking lit, bro.
We're fucking lit, man.
Like, we are, bro, it is crazy to me how people say, oh, these dudes are banned.
Oh, these dudes are demonetized.
Oh, these dudes are crashing out and all this other shit.
So, let me get this straight.
We're shadow banned, demonetized, censored, having to make new accounts, yet we're still more relevant than the people that talk about us.
Oh, no, that is fucking awesome.
Like, dude, it literally makes me laugh as to how people make content.
No one gives a fuck.
They talk about us, everyone gives a fuck.
My girl literally just makes a post saying, Happy boyfriend day to Mr. Grumpy.
That's her nickname for me.
She calls me Mr. Grumpy, right?
30 million views.
Anus and Reach make a video on us, million views.
Make a video not with us in it, 200K, 300K.
Nobody gives a fuck about those guys unless they talk about us.
I look at other people that talk shit about us, these other like channels that are reaction channels, bro.
They can't get views unless they talk about us.
Bro, I find it incredible that we are still so culturally relevant four years later, almost four years later, despite the fact that everyone and their mom has tried to destroy us, cancel us, censor us.
It's really a blessing.
It's really a blessing.
All these people are like our free marketing team.
And they don't even fucking know it, bro.
Like, they're our free marketing team.
Because the more they talk about us, the more people say, damn, why does everybody talk about this about you guys?
And then, boom, people come on over and watch us.
You know what I mean?
It's crazy, bro.
It's crazy.
You know, the funny part too is like the people that talk about us, nobody talks about them.
One more time for y'all.
The people that talk shit about us, nobody talks about them.
They got to talk about us to get views.
But nobody knows, cares, or talks about them.
If people are talking about you, you're relevant.
If people's views come from you, you're hella relevant.
So thank you, haters.
I feel like Maino back in the fucking 2000s.
I hate her.
Because you guys literally, as much as you guys hate us, you keep us relevant.
It's fucking comedy.
And they're talking shit saying, oh, we get paid off of Fresh of Fit.
No, we get paid off of you niggas.
Because let me tell you guys something.
I shouldn't be saying this, but I'll say it anyway.
There's a certain appreciation for people that are willing to tell the truth regardless of the cost.
Because when you tell the truth and you talk about taboo topics that other people are too scared to talk about it, to talk about, like our criticizers, for example, they would never dare talk about them boys.
They would never dare talk about what's going on in the Middle East or Palestine or Gaza.
They would never dare talk about who runs America or who runs Canada.
They would never dare, you know, look into certain components of history.
Never.
Our criticizers.
They would never go as hard as we do on the alphabet community or feminism.
They wouldn't.
Because they know what they can and can't say, right?
And they're not willing to jeopardize their money to do it, which is fine.
That's cool.
You know?
But us, we're willing.
Yeah, I'm going to full screen this shit for you, ninjas.
right what i was gonna say guys was what our haters don't realize is is that when you make these videos talk about us criticizing us for getting canceled or censored and ha ha ha we make money off these guys etc Actually, we make money off you guys.
And I'll tell you why.
When you make these videos, 70, 20, 30, a lot of our haters have, you know, several videos on us, which is comical.
What you're starting to do is your audience starts to say, damn, these guys are obsessed with these individuals.
Let me look into these niggas.
And then people look into us and then they're like, oh, these guys talk about topics that no one else will talk about.
Holy fuck.
And people respect the truth.
And people really respect people that talk about the truth while putting things up that they love at risk, right?
So what ends up happening is when you're a truth teller and you're an individual willing to talk about certain topics, people respect you.
And not only do they respect you, they want to support you even more because they know that you're the underdog and they know that everyone is trying to cancel you and censor you and take you off the throne.
So what these guys have done effectively is they've made us the underdog, right?
And America loves an underdog.
So secretly, because of our viewpoints and how controversial we are, people are rooting for us.
And I'm damn sure they're supporting too.
I see it on Council Club, right?
I love all you guys over there on Council Club.
6,000 plus strong.
6,000 plus strong.
World fucking wide, by the way, right?
Almost 7,000.
Right?
People really appreciate the truth and they appreciate people willing to tell the truth regardless of the circumstances and regardless of what might happen to them.
And we've proven that we are willing to have these difficult discussions.
Guys, we started as a dating podcast.
We could have just stuck with that, just interview girls, let the money roll in, don't jeopardize it, stick with that.
But it's not all about the fucking money, man.
If I only cared about making the money, then I would just keep doing after hours, talking about dating, and keeping it there.
Staying away from politics, staying away from sensitive topics, staying away from certain things, right?
Stay away from certain guests, right?
But I said, fuck that.
Fuck that.
This isn't all about the money.
It's about telling the truth no matter what.
And that is why I will always win.
That is why people will always support me.
That is why when I go to fucking the United Kingdom, when I go to Canada, right?
When I go to fucking Dubai, when I go to fucking Romania, people know who I am.
People in China know who I am and translate my fucking videos.
Why?
Because I tell the fucking truth about taboo topics that other people aren't willing to discuss.
I could pull up to Montreal where those two fucking losers are and probably still attract a bigger crowd than them.
And they've been on YouTube for 15 while I've been on for four because I'm not a bitch and I'm not scared to talk about certain topics like they are.
And money isn't everything.
So every time they turn out their 50th, 60th, 70th video, 70th video, people say, damn, you're obsessed.
Let me look into these guys.
And they find out exactly why we are better than you niggas.
Hey, it is what it is.
So, anyway, with that said, we're going to get back to the topic at hand because we're diversified over here.
We cover true crime, geopolitics, girls, dating, self-improvement, making money, cryptocurrency.
Oh, we cover it all, baby.
Speaking of which, crypto course is out right now.
It's live, guys.
If you haven't got in there already, let's see here.
Mark, can you do a Twitter space talking about Sir Major case?
Oh, yeah, a fucking loser.
You know, since we're on FedReax, let's have a little bit of fun with this one.
So, quick little detour here, okay, guys.
And I apologize for this.
We'll get back to the menu, brothers.
I promise, I promise.
But we might as well have fun with this.
This fucking loser right here.
All right, this nigga right here, because someone at Calcutta Club said this shit, so let's have fun with it.
This guy, right?
This fucking dork right here, this convicted felon, right?
This guy right here, he goes ahead and mass reports me on X, right, for making some comments about defending myself, right?
He calls me a racist and all this other bullshit, right?
This dude gets arrested by the FBI, right?
Gets arrested by the FBI, where he is back in 2020, right, for scamming.
He had a bank account called Black Lives Matter of Greater Atlanta, right?
And from April 2018 until May 2020, the account balance for this account ebbed and flowed.
However, it never had a balance that exceeded $5,000.
At one time, had a balance of negative $12.42.
In June 2020, the social media page received approximately $36,493.80 in donations.
In July 2020, it received approximately $370,000 in donations.
And in August 2020, an additional $60K in donations, right?
$59,914.
All this money is transferred in the social media donations to the bank account titled and operating the name of Black Lives Matter Great Atlanta, owned and operated by Paige, right?
So basically what this dude did was he took that money, right?
Oh, they got a criminal complaint on this shit?
It's FBI Cleveland.
What district is this?
Oh, not bad.
Let me see if I can find this shit.
criminal complaint yeah this thing is a big L bro He got sentenced to prison for wire fraud.
Dude went to trial and lost, right?
He got 42 months.
So, let me see if I can find the indictment.
He had a fake charity, right?
Hold on one second.
He got convicted in a jury trial, which is a big L. Here's his indictment right here, right?
Here's the indictment.
This shit funny, bro.
What can I not fucking pull this thing up?
Bro.
All right, let me go back.
You know what?
Hold on.
You're just going to go on a PACER.
Pull this show.
This shit pisses me off.
This is Northern District, Ohio.
All right, cool.
Pacer, boom.
All right.
No.
Northern District of Ohio.
Pacer.
Boom.
We're going to get in here.
Northern District, Ohio.
Log in.
Let's pull this up.
Quick little detour chat.
Because this dude is a fucking loser and he got me banned off of Twitter spaces for being a bitch.
So we're going to have a little bit of fun here.
So let's see here.
Here's this case.
Right.
So there was a criminal complaint filed first, right?
So FBI wasn't fucking around.
They got this boy on a criminal complaint first.
Matthew DeSorbo, special agent FBI.
Let's fucking go.
Don DeMarco for Matthew.
Sir Major pays, aka Tyree Connors page.
They got him for wire fraud, money laundering, money laundering.
All right?
FBI, bam.
Here we go.
Yafian has been an FBI specialist since August 2019 and is currently assigned to the Joy Terrorism Task Force located at the FBI Toledo's resident agency.
Yafian has investigated the commission of federal crimes involving national security matters and the criminal offenses that include complex financial crimes, money laundering, and terroristic threats occurring in the Toledo area in the course of these duties.
Your Afghanistan has participated in numerous federal search and arrest operations.
So, right, they may, oh, shit, they got him with a cooperating witness.
Okay.
So he got a complainant sent a complaint to the National Threat Operations Center that this dude was committing fraud, basically, right?
So cooperating witness.
So more than likely, this dude right here, more than likely, guys, probably got jammed up on a case that said I could give you guys Sir Major, right?
So this goes through the entire investigation.
The funny part.
Oh, no, it's not here.
Okay.
You know where we're going to find this shit?
Hold on.
We're going to have some fun with this one.
Here's the end dimer, right?
Oh, man.
This is a big L, right?
All right.
The scheme of defraud.
This is him taking the money.
Right?
So he bought a property.
God damn, $100,000.
Hold on one second.
Here we go.
Defendant used a substantial portion of the funds donated to BLM in a matter inconsistent with the organization's public and private pretenses, representations and promises.
Specifically, the defendant uses donations to buy personal items, entertainment, hotel rooms, clothing, firearms, and real property for personal use in Toledo, Ohio, and on one and at least one occasion to pay a prostitute.
Bro, we smoking that Sir Major pack, bro.
Guys, you know what FBA stands for?
Frequently buying ass.
Let's go.
We smoke at that FBA pack today, boyos.
This fucking loser, man.
This nigga had the nerve to fucking mass report me.
Bro, he said I'm going to report you to the FBI.
And I'm like, bruh, you already get fucked over by the FBI.
How are you going to report me to the FBI?
I didn't break no laws.
I break no laws.
You did, though.
A bunch of them.
And now you got to go to jail for 42 months.
Fucking L, bro.
So he got sentenced a couple of days ago for wireframe money laundering, et cetera.
So this dude, a loser.
Apparently, he was in a movie.
Whatever.
Yeah, he L, bro.
He's a big L. So anyway, we smoke in that Sir Major Pack.
This dude's a fucking loser.
Anyway, back to regular scheduled programming.
Hope you guys enjoyed that cooking him for a little bit because he truly is a loser.
And the district attorney have said essentially is that if this case was viewed today, that sexual abuse allegation would have been seen differently, Jim.
Very interesting.
All right, Camila Bernal.
Thank you very much.
And joining us for perspective on this is Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascone.
Mr. Gascone, what about this new evidence presented in the petition filed by lawyers for the Menendez brothers?
How was this evidence discovered and what's your take on all of this?
Well, hi, Jim.
First of all, thank you for having me here.
Look, we have two different petitions, and I know it gets a little complicated, but basically, as Camilla indicated, one is basically asking the court, as a habeas petition is asking the court to take a quick look and see if there's evidence that had that evidence been presented to the jury and the court during the trial, the outcome might have been different.
The other one is a resentencing motion, and that basically is asking to take a look at the original sentence and see whether there should be another different type of sentence given that they have rehabilitated and there's a whole list of things that they have listed.
I started looking at this case very closely several months ago, and I have increasingly became concerned that it was critical that we review the new evidence that is being presented as well as evidence that had been suppressed during the second trial.
This is a case at Han.
All right, guys, since I'm petty, I have to do this.
Smoke, baby, who I smoke?
Tinky, who I smoke?
And now I wonder what I...
Yeah, fuck those FBAs, man.
Fucking losers.
BLM is definitely a scam.
Buying lavish mansions is what the fuck that shit is.
First time around when the jury was given information about sexual molestation, and then the prosecution in the second time around suppressed much of that evidence that was not presented in the second case.
And they were convicted and they were sent to prison with life without the possibility of parole.
I mean, George, a lot to unpack there, but I mean, I mean, obviously, these murders were brought to life in this recent Netflix series and other documentaries.
But is this recent attention having some bearing on how this case is being re-examined and how you're looking at it?
I mean, it sounds as though you may be predisposed to thinking that maybe this needs a second look and maybe something needs to happen here.
Well, you know, the petitions were filed by the defense about a year ago.
We have been, you know, we go through a very thorough process.
We have a photocopy of a letter that allegedly one of the brothers sent to a cousin talking about molestation.
We have the evidence that came out a couple of years ago.
And if I'm not mistaken, this letter came prior to them killing their father.
About the menudo band member talking about his molestation.
You know, we have done about 300 resentencing cases since I've been in office and only four have reoffended.
And the reason that I attribute to that is we're very careful about looking at all the circumstances in the case.
The reason why we have become more public is because after the documentary, we began to get, you know, many, many requests from media and others about where was the case.
The case is actually scheduled for a hearing on November 29th.
And but for the documentary, quite frankly, we probably would not be talking at this point.
We may be talking later, but that certainly has increased the attention by the public, and that's why we're being public about where we are.
And George, I mean, let's talk about the aspect of this that is really coming to light once again.
Although you did say it came up in the original trial, and that is that these brothers, it's believed they were sexually abused.
They say they were sexually abused.
And do you think it's possible that folks looking at these allegations now will say, okay, these murders happened, but, you know, because of these circumstances, maybe these two brothers have served enough time.
Malik Tubb says I should react to the murder trial.
I don't know, bro.
It's a little too long.
And they should be able to.
But we will be reacting to the most banned documentary known to man after this Fed reacts.
We're going to watch another portion of Europa.
So definitely make sure that you guys, Cal's Club only, though, ninjas.
Council Club only.
And they'll tell you in Cal's Club and some of the guys in here on Rumble that might have a Cal's Club.
You guys already know why we have to do it that way.
So guys, get on Cast Club, CastleClub.tv.
Jump in in there.
We're going to have a watch party after this.
Be free and move on with it.
Well, guys, we'll be back on Twitch.
Good question.
Guys, don't worry.
We'll be back on Twitch on the 17th.
We got something huge planned for you guys.
It's going to be a good time.
So the 17th, just hold out a week and a half.
And we'll be back.
It is going to be awesome.
We're going to do a subathon.
We're going to take over.
Don't worry.
One step back to take five steps forward.
If you're subbed on our Twitch, don't worry.
You're going to still have the sub.
Don't sweat it.
We'll be back.
All right.
So we're going to take over.
We're going to come back on that Thursday.
We're coming back on Twitch.
The breaks don't stop, my friends.
With their lives.
I mean, Jim, even if you look at the first trial, right?
The first jury hung.
Yeah, Goliath Blanchard, you might, you better fucking join in, bro.
We are analyzing the documentary on another level.
We watched the first hour.
Still got 11 to go.
So jump on in, bro.
Jump on in, guys.
Calclub.tv, gonna react into that documentary.
I'm gonna be doing a lot more like, you know, X-ray to stuff over there.
When I say that, I don't mean corn.
I mean, as in, like, you know, stuff that I could never do, not even on Rumble.
We're gonna be doing that over there on Calc Club, guys.
So CouncilClub.tv coming in.
Some of that evidence was presented.
So clearly, even 35 years ago, people had concerns, but there is no question that our sensitivity to sexual assault is much more significant.
Today, we also, I think, has been clearly established that both men and women.
I think that will work in their favor, guys.
That sexual assaults of men is taken a lot more serious now than it was back then.
I mean, bro, let's be honest.
In the mid-90s, it's like, what?
Dude's getting sexually assaulted?
Cap.
That's how they looked at it.
They were like, stop the cap.
You know, they didn't think it was a real thing.
So this actually does work in their favor, that things have modernized like this.
Los Angeles is wildly liberal now and left-wing.
So this actually works to their favor.
Women can be sexually assaulted or boys and girls.
I think, you know, 35 years ago, you know, cultural norms were a little different.
So I do agree with you, and Camilla kind of raised that issue, that there's no question that a jury today would look at this case probably very differently than a jury did in 35 years ago.
But even 35 years ago, when some of this evidence was presented, there was certainly doubt as to their, you know, whether they were guilty of first-degree murder.
Again, there's no question that they committed the killing.
The question is, to what degree of culpability should they be held accountable to, given the totality of the circumstances.
And I do want to have you listen to this comment from Mark Garregos, attorney for the Menendez Brothers, and we'll talk about it on the other side.
They've been bottle prisoners.
They have worked tirelessly in the face of literally no ability or expectation that they would ever get out to reform.
And now we fast forward 35 years later, we've got a much more robust and evolved understanding of abuse that, yes, abuse can occur both with females and with males.
I will say if they were women, they probably wouldn't have got life, guys.
I'll give it a thousand with y'all.
If they were women, they probably wouldn't have gotten life.
But their big fuck-ups is there were dudes and bruh, you're 18 and 21.
What are you guys like doing in the house still and killing them all these years later?
You know?
And then the mom, too, like, come on, man.
I think it's time.
Their family thinks it's time.
Yeah, George, what do you think about what Mr. Garrego says there?
Well, I think Mark races, you know, points that there is no disagreement on my end.
First of all, we don't know.
Yo, Castle of Ninjas, we got like 100 of y'all in here.
Do me a favor, guys.
Open up a tab on Rumble and on YouTube, man.
Let's hit break 1000 on YouTube.
And yeah.
That both bays and girls, men and women, can be sexually assaulted.
And I believe that the issue.
And if you're watching on X, we got like another couple hundred or a thousand ninjas over there.
Also, open up a tab if you guys don't mind and watch on YouTube and or on Rumble.
Yeah, we're live right now.
I wish I could show the numbers on the other platforms for all the haters.
Oh, you guys follow off your views off.
Bro, we split our views among so many different platforms now that it's hard to get a telltale on everything.
But yeah, all you guys that are watching on the other platforms, do me a solid open up a YouTube and Rumble tab.
And yeah, let's keep cooking.
Their efforts to rehabilitate appeared to be very valid.
And that's one of the things that we're checking into because absolutely they had no prospect of getting out of prison.
They, you know, they probably thought they would be there for the rest of their life.
So that certainly speaks very highly to their commitment to be a different human being, perhaps as they were 35 years ago.
And I think that that all plays a role in what will be my final decision.
And I don't want to push you on a final decision too much right here, but to read between the lines, George, it does sound as though that you feel like this needs another look.
Well, Jim, unquestionably, and that is a reason why we started to take another look, you know, months ago.
But clearly, that is a reason why I'm speaking to you and others today, because, look, we have both a moral and an ethical obligation.
If there was evidence that should have been presented, and if it were presented to a jury, would that have brought a different outcome?
We have an obligation to take that into consideration as we move forward.
All right, George Castone, Gascon, thank you very much for your time.
We appreciate it.
So what we'll also do, guys, is let's see what else here.
Watch that one.
I know that this is an area of tremendous interest nationally.
We know especially since the Netflix documentary came out.
We're getting a lot of calls.
Ellie.
Oh, yeah.
Dude, ain't nothing we're going to bring publicity like a Netflix special, man.
Like, guys, the Netflix special single-handedly revitalized so many fucking cases.
If we want to talk about the O.J. Simpson case, the Ted Bundy case, Jeffrey Dahmer came out of fucking nowhere and exploded in popularity in the past year or two.
Like, Netflix brings things back in that people forgot about decades ago, man.
District Attorney George Cascone dropping a potentially game-changing announcement that convicted murderers Eric and Lyle Menendez, who are serving a life sentence, could be freed.
In this case, we've gotten petitions for the brothers and both.
And the rehabiest, basically, what someone that was convicted is asking a review of new evidence that had been made available.
And just so you guys know, as a district attorney, he is the top law enforcement official for this city of Los Angeles, right?
So he's the one that oversees every single case that's coming through that county, so to speak.
So not just Los Angeles Police Department, but Los Angeles County.
Saying his office is evaluating new evidence that could potentially lead to their release 35 years after the brothers brutally slayed their parents, Jose and Kitty Menendez, in their Beverly Hills mansion.
So we have been given a photocopy of a letter that allegedly was sent by one of the brothers to another family member talking about him being the victim of molestation.
The brothers lawyers submitting that letter allegedly written to Eric.
This is a letter that they talked about before, guys, that I mentioned to you, Ninjas.
To his cousin months before the murder.
Reading in part, I've been trying to avoid dad.
It's still happening.
Every night I stay up thinking he might come in.
I'm afraid.
He's crazy.
He's warned me a hundred times about telling anyone, especially Lyle.
The DA also receiving a sworn affidavit by Roy Rosello of the 80s boy band Menudo.
Okay, let's look this guy up real quick because I saw, obviously, this is coming.
Roy Rosello is his name.
Roy Rosello, Puerto Rican singer and businessman.
All right, so this is him in 2002.
So he's born in 1970, Puerto Rican Papa, gospel singer, businessman, a former member of the popular Puerto Rican group Menudo.
Roy currently lives in Brazil, where he's focused on his music career and builds a family.
Through his membership in Menudo, as well as his personal pursuits, he has participated in several television series and shows such as The Love Boat and The Morning Show Solid Gold, Good Morning America, and Soul Trainer Period in all major networks such as CBS, NBC, SBT, and Fox in addition to several international festivals and award ceremonies such as Tokyo Music Festival, where he won the Gold Award in 1984.
He was a presenter at the Grammys, handing the award for best recording for children to Michael Jackson for his album, E.T., the Extraterrestrial.
Alleging he was sexually assaulted by Jose Menendez when he was just a teenager.
They could walk out based on what the court decides, or they can have the sentence given a different shape, or they can have a new trial.
Right?
And those are all options.
Damn, a new trial?
Fuck.
And we will evaluate all of it.
There has been a sea change in California.
Remember, that's their defense counsel.
Fast forward 35 years later, we've got a much more robust.
You know what, Mark Garregos?
How much do you guys want to bet this is like a pro bono lawyer?
Hold on.
Let me look at the guy real quick.
Now I'm curious.
He's probably famous.
Mark Garreg.
Yep.
Man, how'd I fucking know?
So Mark Garregos is an American criminal defense lawyer and the managing partner of Gregos and Gregos in Los Angeles.
Gregos was born in Los Angeles, California.
Yeah, so this guy's clearly like, yeah, notable.
Yeah, boom.
So he, after representing convicted Whitewater figure Susan McDougal, former business partner, former Bill Clinton, Garregos requested a presidential pardon for McDougal on January 20, 2001, though the decision was entirely up to former President Clinton pursuant to Article 2 of the United States Constitution.
Gregos also represented McDougal in a 12-count embezzlement trial in Los Angeles where the jury returned a not guilty verdict.
He represented Gary Condit, NASCAR driver, Jerry Mayfield, Scott Peterson, Scott Barney, Roger Clinton Jr.
Yeah, this guy, okay, so let me break this down for y'all.
Guys, there's a lot of lawyers out there that are what I call celebrity slash clout chaser lawyers.
And what ends up happening is you'll take on big cases pro bono, aka means for free.
And the reason why you do that is because the notoriety of the case and the press coverage of the case is your payment because now you have officially become a celebrity lawyer and you can charge way fucking more for the next client.
So, and if you win, it's even better.
So a lot of the times these like celebrity lawyers will come in and take a case.
And obviously they'll do their best because if they can get their client off or get him a lower sentence or whatever it may be, like they can use that.
It's free marketing because the paparazzi and the news stations are doing all the marketing for you because you're the attorney on the case.
Now, of course, if it's someone who everyone hates, like an OJ Simpson or the school shooter, the guy out of Florida, forget his name.
Chat, please, what was the guy, the kid's name that represented the, oh my God.
What was the lawyer's name that represented the kid down here in Florida that killed all those kids?
Someone's going to name the serial killer.
She took that case and I think pro bono, and she got a bunch of publicity for that.
Nicholas Cruz, thank you.
So, you know, great opportunity For lawyers to build their status and their ability to charge more when they take big cases like this.
Guys, the name of the Twitch is Fresh of At Podcast, but you won't be able to find it now because we're suspended.
But we'll be back on the 17th.
It's going to be huge.
An evolved understanding of abuse: that yes, abuse can occur both with females and with males.
The renewed interest in this case sparked in large part by the release of a controversial Netflix drama series, Monsters, the Lyle and Eric Menendez story that's topping streaming charts.
Okay, you have to shoot for us so that you don't back out.
What?
It also has social media abuzz.
Kim Kardashian, an outspoken criminal justice reform advocate, pending an op-ed today.
You mean 304 that tries to reform but can't reform.
Come on, man.
That's fine.
We'll use that title for now, I guess, since people want to fuck in so fucking funny, bro.
Saying, I have spent time with Lyle and Eric.
They are not monsters.
They are kind, intelligent, and honest men.
My hope is that Eric and Lyle Menendez's life sentences are reconsidered.
A new generation looking at the case through a new lens.
They're more aware of the trauma that people can carry with them from abuse.
It's more brought out into the open.
It was late summer 1989 on a Sunday night.
Shots rang out in Beverly Hills.
What happened?
Who is the person that took the shot?
My father, Roger!
Jose and Kitty Menendez were just watching television and eating ice cream when their sons burst into the living room with the shotguns.
They just repeatedly fired at close range.
Kitty, a homemaker, and Jose, a powerful music executive.
Jose Menendez was a titanic personality.
He was domineering.
He wanted to get what he wanted, and he was going to steamroll anybody who got in his way.
Since they were not initially suspects, they were able to claim an insurance payout of $600,000.
Oh, Lord.
And I already know the prosecutors hammered them on that shit.
You motherfuckers weren't really being abused.
You guys just wanted money.
Menendez brothers went on a spending spree.
They bought Porsche.
Oh, man.
Yep, that makes you look way more guilty.
Bought expensive watches.
That raised suspicions, sharp suspicions in the district attorney's office.
It got to a point where I have all this money and so much pain.
I don't know what to do with it.
Guilt was weighing heavily on the then 18-year-old Eric.
You went to your psychologist, Dr. Ozeal, and told him.
So I got a chat here from Jamal Yomar.
And some of us normal guys got to go to work Monday morning.
All the good lives are always late as fuck.
Maybe I'm wrong and it's better overall for you, but I think the live numbers will go way up if you do these solo streams earlier.
Chats, chat, do you guys agree with him?
Give me a one if you guys agree with him.
Give me a two if you guys don't agree.
See what you ninjas think.
well it's only 10 28 right now all right see you guys saying once
all right that you had committed all right maybe i'll start Uh, Fed Reacts at uh at 8 p.m. instead.
Would that make you guys better?
8 p.m. or 7 p.m.
Type of what you guys want, 8 p.m.
or 7 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time for FedReacts, 8 p.m.
or 7 p.m.?
7 p.m.
or 8 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time.
what you guys say.
I see lots of 7 p.m.
Also 8 p.m.
All right, maybe I'll do a 7 p.m.
from now on instead of 9 p.m.
For Sundays since Ninja's got to go to work I get I used to be a 9 to 5 or two so I understand Yeah, Yeah, don't worry guys, I'll be back on Twitch on the 17th.
Got a big stream plan for you guys that night.
When we come back from Twitch jail.
You committed this crime.
You were in torment and you told him.
I felt that I was the worst person on earth and it got to a point where I couldn't live with myself anymore and I needed help.
And so I went to him and that is what the catalyst was for me getting arrested.
The glow of innocence once surrounding the Menendez brothers is now shadowed by charges of murder.
Prosecutors say greed drove the boys to shooting their parents to death last August.
In July 1993, Lyle and Eric's trial began.
The two handsome, well-dressed defendants would propel it into a media spectacle.
They were getting love letters and people writing to them.
So it was just a huge mania and you have to.
And yeah, guys, women love criminals.
This is very common for murderers, people on trial, to get love letters from women, get a lot of support from women.
We know this if you guys watch my Ted Bundy breakdown and Jeffrey Dahmer and Richard Ramirez, who I covered all those serial killers, by the way, in exquisite detail.
I might add one of the best breakdowns ever and the Zodiac killer, though.
He never went to trial, but you guys get what I mean had to add him in there.
He's one of my favorite serial killers to cover.
But Jeffrey Dahmer, Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy and Richard Ramirez were getting fucking women going crazy for them when they were in trial.
And these guys like killed a bunch of women, bro, in a grotesque fashion.
I think we weren't in a place where there was social media and things like that.
The brothers testifying that they experienced sexual abuse at the hands of their father.
My dad.
Wait, one second.
Let me ask.
No, no.
He was in the process of answering, so there's no need to ask him.
Can you answer the question?
Yes.
OK.
It was you telling Lyle what?
That my dad had been molesting me.
And after confronting their parents about it, Eric and Lyle feared for their lives.
Thought they were going ahead with their plan to kill us.
I was just sitting on the couch with my hands in my head saying we're going to die.
They had been so abused, so traumatized, and that the family was in such horror, such a situation of tension and secrets that were coming out that they were afraid they were going to get killed if they didn't kill first.
The details, horrific.
He would put me on my knees and he would guide me all my movements and I would have oral sex with him.
Oh, fuck.
Bruh.
When Eric was 13 years old, he had told his cousin, Andy Kano, about the molestation.
He wanted to know that if this happened to every kid.
I see you guys asking me about Columbine.
Guys, I covered Columbine already.
I'll get the link for you guys in here.
I do remember very.
I told y'all, man, I put the work in for a lot of these cases.
You guys don't even know it.
Very specifically was him asking me to make a promise to him never to reveal that to anybody.
And so the question in the trial was, do claims of abuse excuse you or mitigate your responsibility for killing your parents?
The abuse excuse, it was dubbed, and it fascinated the country.
After weeks of deliberation, a hung jury.
Here we go, guys.
Columbine shooting right here for you, Ninjas.
I got y'all, man.
Don't worry.
Here it is right here, guys.
I had to take it off of YouTube, but it is here on Rumble.
Fed explains the Columbine shooting.
Right?
I react to the documentary that really first school shooting in American history that kind of set everything off.
But yeah, and I give a lot of commentary on this.
So feel free to go check that out, guys.
I put the Rumble link there for you, Ninjas.
So feel free to go, you know, save that in another tube, in another tab.
And yeah.
The judge declaring a mistrial.
And as I recall, it was women on one side, men on the other side.
The women believed the brothers, the men did not, or were not willing to go with the defense.
Two years later, a retrial.
Well, the second trial was very different.
No television cameras, and the judge severely limited the what the brothers would call the corroborating evidence of how brutalized they were by their father.
But without that sort of sex abuse element, it really looked like they were just these really privileged, greedy children who massacred their parents because they were getting cut off financially.
They were convicted of first-degree murder, sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
I've said for years that if the Menendez brothers were the Menendez sisters, they'd be free today.
People didn't want to believe it could happen to boys.
They just didn't want to believe it.
Three decades later, the new series from Ryan Murphy stirring controversy because of the suggestion of an incestuous relationship between the brothers.
We all have to remember that this is not an accurate quote-unquote account.
And anytime you do a series or a film, especially in Hollywood, it's usually sensationalized.
Error taking issue with what he describes as blatant lies and a dishonest portrayal of the tragedies in the Netflix series.
Saying in a statement released by his wife, the show has taken the painful truth several steps backward, back through time to an era when the prosecution built a narrative on a belief system that males were not sexually abused.
Murphy, no stranger to controversy, telling e-news the series has created.
All right, hold on one second.
All right, Jack.
Gotta check this out.
You just know I gotta do it.
Director of Monster Netflix.
All right, so boom.
So this is it.
Ryan Murphy, right?
It's him.
All right.
All right.
For once.
Culture, which is male sexual abuse, which we do responsibly.
I think it's time.
Their family thinks it's time.
I think we're at a point now where any...
Wait, hold on one sec.
Now, we're going to check.
Let's see here.
Who is it?
CFO Spencer up Getting that tingle
CFO of Netflix January 2019 served the Activision Blizzard CFO after holding a number of positions in Walt Disney Company.
Yeah.
Every single time.
All right.
Back to a chat.
Any reasonable person taking a look at this case believes they should be out.
For now, the Menendez brothers remain in a San Diego correctional facility.
The next hearing on the case set for November 26th, leaving many wondering, could they soon walk free?
I'm not leaning in any direction right now.
I'm keeping them open line.
recommendation will be presented to me but the final decision will be mine and just for okay So I was going to end it off with here.
Guys, I don't know if you guys have watched Monster before.
I haven't.
I'm probably not going to watch it, to be honest with y'all.
But apparently, this thing has heavily spoilers and it compares real life versus Netflix.
All right.
So if you want to watch it, hey man, might not want to watch this part of the stream.
Well, in this video, we're breaking down monsters.
The Lila and Eric Menendez story has just dropped on Netflix and it chronicles the crimes committed by the brothers.
But how did it go down in real life?
And does the title Monsters refer to the brothers or the parents?
Well, that's something we aim to go into in this video.
And throughout it, we'll be discussing all the facts.
This will also go over what happened at the end and some of the things Netflix changed for the show.
I've also watched the Barbara Walters interview in full, and we will be talking about both sides of the case.
If you learned something, then please hit the thumbs up and make sure you subscribe for videos like this every day.
Without the way, thank you for clicking this.
Now let's get into monsters.
Okay, so the series centers around the murders of Kitty and Jose Menendez, carried out by their two sons, Lyle and Eric.
The show gives it.
Hey guys, do me a favor.
We got 735 you ninjas watch it.
Let's hit 735 likes.
Also, guys, on Rumble, do me a favor, open up a YouTube tab, like the video on YouTube so that we can go ahead and get up in the engagement, my friends.
I'd really appreciate if you guys could.
So, and then I'm going to give you guys my take on this after we're all done.
...several points of the characters'lives.
Initially, the brothers blamed it on the mafia, but over time, the story soon fell apart.
The pair then said that...
Of course they blame it on the mafia.
Well, the mafia did run shit back in the late 80s, but still.
Parents abused them, and this has made some sympathetic towards them.
Now, this is the first major point of contention in the show, and Ryan Murphy's already received some criticism for it.
Monster, the Jeffrey Dahmer story, had similar issues, and Murphy was behind that show as well.
There, he expressed that he wasn't so much interested in the killer's eventual outcome.
He was more interested in the factors that made him.
That definitely feels like it's the case here as well.
With them going through lots of potential factors with the killers, viewers have already made it known the abuse story was highly contested, though.
It's also said that it felt like a last-ditch attempt to defend themselves against two people whose lives they'd already destroyed.
But what do we know?
Well, the brothers murdered their parents.
Yeah, because that is true that the dad was never able to defend himself.
Jose and Katie Menendez on the 20th of August, 1989.
From what forensics could gather, the pair shot Kitty 10 times in Jose 6.
Kitty was still alive during the first round, and then Jesus, I see you got a question here.
Yo, Marina at the end will give her take whether or not they should be released.
I personally believe they shouldn't be given that they're both adults and planned a killing and then lied to the police.
I wake up for 3 a.m. for work, but I love watching live, so for me, the earlier the better because I want to watch the whole thing.
I got you, bro.
But yeah, Jesus King, nowhere I'm going to give my take after we watch everything.
And Lyle returned to the car to reload.
After both the pair were slain, we then get a bit of discrepancy as some reports say the brothers remain in the house.
And Machaka says, Two late streams are better.
Hang out with the gang.
Fair enough.
There they were waiting for the police to arrive.
With the plan being they'd say they were a Batman.
This is something we see in the show with them claiming to have also been at the taste of LA.
Now, whether they went there or not, again, is something people go back and forth about, but the show painted out that they did indeed travel out into the night.
It's believed that the pair thought people in the neighborhood would hear the shots and they'd then return home to the scene of the crime to the police.
This is something they discussed in the episode.
However, as we see, things didn't go that way.
Like we see though they ended up calling the police with the play on the call being in the series.
Now initially the brothers blamed the mafia and police thought this was the case.
It seemed implausible that two well-off young men would kill their parents, and thus initially the investigation looked elsewhere.
However, things seemed off about the crime scene, and several details just didn't seem to fit.
To add to this, the brothers acted very strangely and then went on a spending spree.
According to reports, they spent over $700,000 in just a few months, as we see.
That's crazy, and that hurts their credibility a lot right there.
They hire expensive tennis coaches with Eric competing in a series of tournaments in Israel.
They picked up bottles of champagne, bought Porsches and Lyle also invested in several businesses.
This included the Chuck Springs Street Cafe and a wing restaurant in New Jersey.
He also picked up a Rolex watch and the pair attended several basketball games.
This included getting front row seats at a New York Knicks game with them appearing in the background of Mark Jackson's trading card.
The good life.
Well, it was the same life before or afterwards.
With more money.
With more money.
But I didn't know what to do with the money.
I went to.
It got to a point where I have all this money and so much pain.
I don't know what to do with it.
And eventually.
I don't know.
Which, by the way, guys, in 1990, let's go ahead and just look at this from a more inflation calculator.
Right?
So this is 1989.
We'll go 1990, right?
Because they died in 1989.
And we'll go with 600,000.
That's 6,000, 60,600K.
Damn.
That's the equivalent of 1.4 million today, guys.
Holy.
And then they said 700K.
So one said 600, another one said 700.
So we'll go.
Let's go 700,000.
Bro, 1.6 million.
God damn.
That's quite a bit of spending power, my friends.
that's crazy oh you're losing me i would think that you would be in such grief that you wouldn't be able to buy rolexes and invest in business facts i don't mean to me let me understand i'm you know i'm the public I don't think that it's understandable.
I mean, I people react to some traumatic event like that in different ways.
However, it was the confession to a therapist.
That was the main thing that sealed their fate.
Eric confessed to his, which is what we see happening in episode one.
His girlfriends who tipped off the police and they were then charged with the murder and march the year after.
You went to your psychologist, Dr. Ozeal, and told him that you had committed this crime.
It got to a point where I could no longer live.
I felt that I was the worst person on earth, and I. I it got to a point where I couldn't live with myself anymore and I needed help.
And so I went to him, and that is what the catalyst was for me getting arrested in Lyle.
Things would then begin with their trial in 1993.
This was a nationwide talking point, with a trial being broadcast every single day.
How about the brothers had separate juries, even though they were tried together.
Due to them not being able to reach a unanimous decision, it was classed as a mistrial and a second trial was held.
That takes us to 1995 and the trial that we see happening in episode 9.
Their defense was to put their parents on trial and neither denied killing them.
That was a big misperception about this case that it was about justification or excuse.
And my brother and I essentially pled guilty.
That was very hard for me to hear the ridicule about that because we I really felt that Eric and I we could have gone to trial like most people and just sort of we weren't there wasn't had that trial.
What do you mean we could have gone to trial?
We wouldn't have to go to trial and just say that I was you know chipping golf balls at the time and I wasn't there.
And Eric and I went to trial and said we didn't.
No, there were tapes.
There were tapes.
Tapes became admissible because we said we did it.
However, several things weren't admissible in the second trial which led to their conviction.
They go with a story we see in episode 9 in which Eric says he told Lyle about the abuse.
After confronting Jose, they claimed he said he'd kill them if it ever got out publicly.
This then led into the murders which they classed as self-defense.
Now the brothers apparently had the feeling they might be able to get off due to the OJ Simpson verdict.
This is what starts episode 9 and we hear OJ and Eric discussing their case in episode 8.
This is something that happened in real life as well with a pair having hundreds of conversations when incarcerated.
Apparently Eric even told OJ to plead guilty at one point and go with the same strategy as him.
However, as we see the book and recordings leads into them basically being a confession.
Lyle avoids taking the stand, and this is because it would lead to a cross-examination in which the book could be used to question him.
Lyle and I fought because he felt that telling the world that Dad was a sexual murderer, was killing Dad twice, and he did not want to kill Dad twice.
And he fought and he said, I don't want to go up there, I'm not going to take the stand, I'm not going to do it.
And then when he did, there was a great outpouring, but there was also people laughing at him, and it was strange.
Titled The Private Diary of Lyle Menendez, in his own words, it's something that could have completely sunk the case.
Now here, we also see people who testified to talk about their relationship with their parents.
This includes a car salesman, a pool repairman, and the captain of the boat for the shark fishing trip.
This basically played off the real-life trial in which several witnesses came to their parents'defense.
On top of this, Eric's friend Craig discussed how the pair wrote a play about a character that murdered his parents in cold blood.
This, on top of being fans of the Billionaires Boys Club, painted out a fantasy of how Eric was fascinated with killing his parents.
On top of this, we know Eric was also aware of the storyline before its release because it was based on elements of their friend's life.
That is Brian, whose parents were killed for money, and he takes a stand to reveal the truth.
Now it turns out that Lyle wrote a letter to him, asking him to testify in their favour.
This ended up backfiring and it painted out him as being even more guilty.
Now, another element we see is that the jury is given one of two options: that is, life without parole or the death penalty.
It said that after being found guilty, the jury viewed them as spoiled brats, and several of them were adamant the pair should be killed.
As we see, one gets so worked up about this, she has a heart attack, and this ends up being replaced.
The replacement was then more sympathetic and felt like the pair weren't violent people.
Ultimately, this is what saved them.
As he thought, if there was a chance they told the truth, their deaths weren't something he wanted on his shoulders.
Now, in the end, the pair were devastated because they were sent to different prisons.
We actually have a moment from the interview in the lead-up to this in which they discuss the possibility of them being split up.
It's important to you to stay together when you get moved to the state prison.
Very important.
That is what's gotten us through these six years and through our life.
The family that Eric and I grew up in going to jail with your brother is crazy, but I guess that would help you bear it a bit more.
We had to be there for each other throughout, and it really created a bond that gets us through very rough periods.
Some people might say, why should we put them together?
I mean, look what they did.
They should be punished as much as possible.
Let's separate them.
What do you say to that?
You know, people will say that.
Some there's nothing to say to that.
What we did was awful.
And I wish I could go back.
We will spend the rest of our life in prison.
But if I'm not, if I'm not, if we're not put in the same prison, there's a good probability I will never see him again.
And.
And that.
That I. Some things that you cannot take, and there's some things that you can endure.
With everything taken away, it'll be the last, you know, it's the last thing you can take.
Bro, Bob, bro, Walters was wild.
Like, she did her job, though.
I can't even be mad.
Just a normal.
I'm just a 90s were a different time, my friends.
A lot of you ninjas don't even know.
The 90s were a different time.
Normal kid.
Oh, Eric, you're a normal kid who killed your parents.
Yo, the 90s were a different time, ninjas.
They were definitely a different time, man.
Oh, Lord.
Man.
I know.
Which reminded me a lot of.
We're just normal men.
What do you mean, normal men?
We're just innocent men.
Yeah, check out the interview because it's crazy.
Now, later on in the end, then they make fun of them about it on TV.
Bro, the 90s were crazy, bro.
So they also mentioned the wedding bells that Lyle could be hearing soon.
Do either one of you have girlfriends?
Do either one of you have someone who cares particularly about you now at this point in your life?
I do.
I have someone who's California allow conjugal visits.
I think they do, bro.
California conjugal visits.
Let's see here.
Damn.
In California, you do not have to be married for a conjugal visit.
You can spend time with an immediate film member, including spouse that registered domestic partners, siblings, children, or parents.
And New York visitors can be children, spouses, parents.
So yeah, they have conjugal visits in California, guys, where you could basically smash a chick.
I love very much and is a saint to put up with everything that comes with this.
Can you tell us who she is?
Yeah, her name is Anna Erickson.
Oh, damn, bigger.
I hope that we can get married.
Even though it's a very limited relationship because of where we are, the exchange of love and sharing, it keeps you in touch with yourself and softer.
And, you know, otherwise, you can become very hard and cold in here.
As the realization dawns on them, we hear Millie Vanilli's.
I'm gonna miss you.
The group appeared throughout the series, and I wondered if that was intentional.
In case you don't know, both were exposed for lip-syncing and not singing their songs after winning several accolades.
This could be Into the fake facade the pair put into the world, but yeah, I might be looking too deeply into that.
It turns out the lyrics were the last thing Lyle said to his mother, and it brings things full circle from the memorial in episode one.
Huge shout outs to Brain Pilot for pointing out that they also had Lyle wearing Jose's shoes.
There was a documentary that went over how Lyle said he'd finally filled his father's shoes, which again was something that seemed like a red flag.
Now, the final scene of episode 9 replays things on the boat, but this time we see things from Jose and Kitty's perspective.
This leaves things far more ambiguous and shows the parents in a really good light.
They're working on the marriage after the affair, and Jose wants to run for Senate.
Kitty could go back to working as a journalist, and it seems more optimistic.
Kitty then calls over to the kids, but Jose says to leave them when they don't respond.
As we see, they're talking about the murder, which is when we cut to black.
Now, to complicate things further, we know how real-life events develop beyond the show.
Their cousin Annie Cano stated that he received a letter which supported their side of the story before the murders ever happened, saying things were happening and that it was worse.
Now, painted out a scared boy who worried every night his dad would come in.
The letter said, Every night I stay up thinking he might come in.
I need to put it out my mind.
I know what you said before, but I'm afraid.
You just don't know dad like I do.
He's crazy.
He's warned me a hundred times about telling anyone.
Though Andy testified, the letter wasn't admitted, but it still stands as one of the key things that Sway's opinion.
There were also allegations from Roy Rosello, who claimed Jose sexually assaulted him.
He said he was drugged and assaulted when he was 14, and during a docu series, he pointed to a photo of Jose and labeled him as a predator.
Now, after the events of the show, we know the brothers were uncorroborating evidence, my friends.
United in 2018, this marked a reunion after 22 years.
Allowed to serve their sentences at the same prison.
They were then moved into the same housing unit.
Since then, they filed numerous appeals, including one that has the testimony of Roy Rosello.
How about the pair still remain in prison, and it's unlikely they'll ever get out.
Either way, that wraps up the video.
And in the end, oh, that's until Kim Kardashian advocated for them.
So, all right, let me give my take on this, and then it's going to be time for the most banned documentary ever.
We're going to watch about an hour of that.
So, look, obviously, this is a very tough situation, right?
You got two individuals who were, you know, well, here are the facts: they killed their parents in cold blood, right?
But then you get the more human side where, hey, we were victims of abuse, our father abused us for a long time, the whole self-defense angle, etc., right?
And then you got the letter that shows that this was potentially going on prior, and you got an independent victim coming forward corroborating that their father may have been involved in some nefarious acts, right, with underage children.
Then, on the other side, you have, well, they were there watching a movie on a Sunday night.
Were they really a threat to your life?
You come in with shotguns and blow their brains out, right?
You're adults at this point, just leave, report to the police after the fact.
Like, did you need to kill them then and there at that point, right?
Kill them in that manner.
Then you go on a spending spree.
You got equivalent of today's dollars, 1.4 to 1.6 million dollars.
You take that, you go on, you learn tennis, and you go to Israel and you travel, and you, you know, limousine ride and Jeff Fly.
Woo!
You know, on some Ric Flair type shit, right?
So there's definitely angles to both sides.
Now, you guys know how I am.
I'm hard on crime, so I don't think they should get out.
You, you know, you should have you don't kill, you should have went to the police, gathered some evidence, and let your dad fight it in court.
Killing them ain't gonna do anything, right?
And then the way you guys went about it after the fact is fucking stupid, right?
So, getting out, I don't know about that.
I don't think so.
However, realistically speaking, I think they got a very good chance of getting out.
And the reason why they got a good chance of getting out is because they're in California, super woke.
They got Kim Kardashian on their side.
They got a documentary that's bringing their name out there.
And, you know, the United States has a different view on sexual assault when it comes to men, right?
So, this dude, Carlos Montana, mirroring a bitch free the boys.
Fuck you, bro.
Like, why are you here?
Like, nigga, fuck you.
Fucking hate these idiots in the chat that talk shit.
Fucking weirdos.
Ask for my opinion.
I give my opinion.
You over here want to fucking be a fucking loser.
Fuck you, Carlos Montana.
Fucking pussy.
Fucking weirdos.
Anyway, so yeah.
You know, I think I'm hard on crime, man.
I'm hard on crime.
I think there's no excuse to go in there and kill both of them the way that they did.
Like, all right, let's say the dad touched them.
What's the point of killing the mom, bro?
Did she touch you?
Oh, she facilitated it.
So that's worth it going in there and blowing her fucking brain out.
Like, nah, man.
No.
And again, we don't know for a fact because remember, they came up with this shit like after they got arrested.
So either way, it looks a little weird.
Shout out to Zerka.
I don't know if that's really him in the chat.
Is it really him?
No, it's not him.
All right.
So, so, yeah.
But either way, I think they have a very good chance of getting out.
Super good chance of getting out.
Because of the political climate.
Mind you, this DA is running for office.
So him letting the brothers out would probably be a W for him in Los Angeles County.
So I think they're in the best county during the best time.
One of the biggest influencers or celebrities to be on their side.
So, I mean, I think their attorney bragged that he could get them back by fucking Thanksgiving, bro.
So we'll see what happens, guys.
There's a good chance they can get out.
You know?
So, and Carlos Montana, we don't know the truth, my friend.
We don't know if the dad really was doing that, man.
Like I said before, I'm a believer in innocent till proven guilty.
So, so yeah.
But so, Rock and Carlos Montana, how about you guys do your own podcast and give your takes then?
If you guys feel that way about them, just do your own shit, bro.
Go scream free him over there.
Make your own shit.
So, those are over here screaming freedom boys.
All right, bro.
Go make a podcast and scream Freedom Boys over there, bro.
We don't give a fuck about your opinions over here.
There's a reason why people are watching me and they're not watching you, Carlos Montana.
So, anyway, do something when I have to because you're crashing out.
All right, nigga, go make your own shit, bitch.
Now, I see why people be banning you fucking dudes in the chest sometimes.
I'm not going to ban you because I do believe in free speech, but I can see why niggas be banning idiots like this.
Anyway, I'm just giving you my take, guys, on it, because I'm hard on crime.
I don't think blowing someone's brains out because you got touched when you were a kid, allegedly, right?
When you're a fucking adult and your parents cut you off for money, I don't know.
There's too many things don't add up anyway.
With that said, guys, we are gonna go ahead and go into that documentary.
You guys know what documentary it is.
So, come on over to Google, guys.
Come on, I say Google.
Fuck that.
Come on over to Castle Club.
Got 100 plus ninjas over there.
We're gonna make the switch.
If you guys are watching on YouTube, do me a favor.
Go ahead and like the video.
We got only 392 likes, guys.
Let's hit 700 likes.
Can we get 700 likes, please?
I'd really appreciate that chat.
Let's get to 700.
Someone said, turn my audio up.
My audio is fine, 4K capital.
You're just probably poor and your fucking shit sucks.
Because everyone else told me at the beginning of the show that it's good.
Right, Chad?
Give me ones if audio is good on my YouTube audio, bro.
Nobody else is fucking complaining about that shit.
The name of the documentary I'm talking about is it's called Monsters, bro.
It's on Netflix right now.
You can go check it out.
But anyway, guys, I'm going to get off of YouTube here.
We're going to go ahead and react to the most banned documentary on the internet for certain reasons.
Come on over to Calculus, guys, Calculator TV.
It's always a good time.
The most based group of ninjas.
So I'm going to go ahead and end the YouTube and the Rumble and X as well.
So guys, come on over.
If you don't want to join Castle Club, that's fine.
The show ends here.
I will be live tomorrow.
I think we're going to have, I'm working on getting General Flynn for you guys.
And potentially we might have Brandon Carter as well.
So General Flynn, Brandon Carter.
That's what I'm thinking.
It's going to be a good day.
And then we'll obviously have Fresh of Fit News as well.
So you guys might get three podcasts tomorrow.
All right.
So, no, Rock, I don't care about you, bro.
This other dude, whatever the fuck his name is, with the car emoji, he's annoying.
You can have your opinion, bro.
But the other nigga is annoying.
Carlos Montana, he's a bitch.
But it's fine.
I ain't going to ban him.
He's just annoying.
All right, guys.
Come on over to YouTube.
Come on.
Sorry, YouTube.
Fuck YouTube.
No, come on over to Calice Club, guys.
We're going to go ahead and start streaming some shit.
Come on over.
I'm going to end the YouTube stream here.
Peace out for the YouTube guys.
Tune in tomorrow.
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