3:38:52

INSOMNIA STREAM: THE MYTH OF THE WHITE SERIAL KILLER - 12/13/2025

Display stream descriptionDevon Stack discusses the myth of the white serial killer, noting that despite media portrayals, over 50% of serial killers are black, with whites at 37%. He critiques the film "Copycat" for perpetuating stereotypes, highlighting that 9 out of 10 serial killers in the film are white males. Stack presents actual statistics, revealing that blacks are disproportionately represented in serial killings. He argues that media often sensationalizes white serial killers, creating a false narrative. The discussion also touches on the psychological complexities of serial killers and the impact of media portrayals on public perception. Devon Stack discussed his experience with AI-generated music, noting the ease of creating music compared to traditional methods. He mentioned using tools like Suno for music and Grok for videos, emphasizing the need for multiple generations to refine results. Stack highlighted the potential of AI in creating subtle, non-offensive content, citing his song "Shylock's Ghost" as an example. He also touched on the overrepresentation of Jews among serial killers, referencing a database showing a 5-6% Jewish presence. Additionally, Stack addressed the importance of community and the potential of AI to aid in job searches, suggesting a project to map high-paying blue-collar jobs. Devon Stack discussed various topics, including his frustrations with typography errors in music lyrics and the efficiency of AI in document creation. He mentioned a movie trailer for "Avatar 2" and expressed skepticism about its connection to alien disclosure. Devon also touched on the potential of AI in job searches and legal research, criticizing the decline in search engine quality. He humorously addressed viewer comments about his work and personal life, including a request for "gay black Jewish music" and a discussion on the Freemasons. The conversation concluded with a humorous training tape on managing victims in the serial killer industry.
Full Summary
Catalonian Numbers Lady
00:00:00 Got zero. Got six zero. Got zero. You finger
Pale Siren - Touch Glass
00:00:38 tips and gestures. A happy to see me? Happy.
00:01:20 Listen is
00:01:42 better than no.
00:02:02 Messing I my Skin. Every scar is A story.
00:02:28 That's Why you so smooth.
00:03:37 It's Probably just A face. There
00:04:20 you you. I try not to stare at her.
Pale Siren - Digital Dollhouse
00:05:07 Just stay focused. Try don't kill the messenger. Keep it low. Risk staying in character.
00:05:22 Keep it sugar
00:05:30 coated. But you already know
00:05:42 this is your digital doll house. I'll give you
00:05:50 the tour house. I give you the tour I gave you The same as No, I can sell you on
00:06:42 you you I can tell you, tell you so happy To be you
00:08:04 this Is your digital dollhouse.
00:08:20 Value the Cure you
Santa AI
00:09:03 Merry Christmas, nigglers.
Devon Stack
00:09:18 Welcome to the insomnia stream, the myth of the white serial killer.
00:09:30 Not no no addition. The name was too long. I thought putting a dish well just didn't fit on the thumbnail, really. So that's that's why there's no addition. I'm your host of course. Devon Stack, hope you're having a good Christmas season. This, of course, will be the last stream for a while, although I will be on Millennial next week. I think what day let me. Find out what day here
00:10:06 do, but it do, Monday, Monday, Monday at 6pm Pacific Time, 6pm Pacific time, so I'll be on Monday, and then no stream for a while. And it's possible, it's possible, but probably not, because I'm going to be doing Christmas stuff, Christmas stuff, with the family, and then I should be around for New Year's.
00:10:46 In fact, I think we're gonna do a New Year's stream, right? What's the what's the day that that is? Yeah, it's Wednesday, right? So Wednesday, the 31st is probably the that possibly is the next time I'll be streaming, so it's gonna be a little little little bit of a break. So we'll be back. Like I said, it's possible there's a stream in between there, but it's unlikely.
00:11:18 So anyway, we're at the make the best of tonight, tonight talking about, what, what a, what a great Christmas topic, right? Like serial killers. Oh, man, I don't know. I maybe I should have thought of like a, a Christmas theme. It seems a little too early for Christmas, though, still it's, I don't even, we're not even like in the 12 Days of Christmas yet, right? When does that start? Or maybe no, or maybe it is like, right now. Maybe that's what I showed that maybe I showed down like a deep dive on the 12. Or is it, is it 12 days? Or What's that song on the first day of how long I don't even have, it's like, you get, like, a bunch of fucking birds and, like, what kind of gifts are these? I don't know how many days that goes anyway. I wonder what that's about. You know, it's like, different, it's weird how different, different groups celebrate Christmas in much different ways, even though they're all Christians, like, a lot of them, like, like, I know Mexicans do like, some weird fucking Christmas shit. I used to work with these, these Mexicans that I don't even know, like, what it was called. Now you get, like, some cake, and they bake like a toy in the cake, I know sounds safe, and it they cut up the cake, and then if you got the piece with the toy in it and didn't choke to death on it, you had to throw a party or something, I don't know. And they and they did something about like they celebrated Christmas later. Well, I don't remember what it was. I don't know.
00:13:01 Anyway, I decided, I decided, fuck all that we're gonna do serial killers. And one of the reasons is, I don't know if this happened to you guys with the with YouTube's algorithm, like it seemed like around Thanksgiving, they started trying to push the fact that they have movies so they, they would put like, oh, look free with ads, and which is just no ads for if you have a real browser, like brave or something like that, and it's all these crap movies.
00:13:34 And they, I've noticed too, that they edit them for in the same way that they'd be edited for television. Sometimes they edit it for length and but they they'll, they don't bleep out, but they cut out certain swear words, they blur out certain things.
00:13:51 And anyway, one of the movies that popped up was this horrible fucking movie. I've almost forgot it existed and the way that it opened, because that's how let's as long as I let it play. I was just like, holy shit. This is this fucking shit. This, this, this propaganda, like, it's bad enough, right?
00:14:15 That that every serial killer that you hear about in like, you know, True Crime type podcast, that's all white guys, right? They never, they never cover the even though they have, like, the world record, you know, they never cover blacks or Mexicans or like that. It's always just some white guy or some Jew that they talk about as if you were a white guy. And in movies, they're all white guys.
00:14:43 They're literally all white guys. And on television, you know, Dexter white guy. And the way this opened up, just it just pissed me off so bad that I thought that it'd be a good that it'd be a good topic to go over be. Because, I think a lot of people, because movies and television, it's realer than reality.
00:15:07 To a lot of people, they think this is just what it is. And look, I'll be honest, I thought this is kind of how it was myself growing up. I always thought like, well, you know, white people, we don't kill as as much and as as irrationally as the other groups. But when we do, we put, we put the effort into it, we turn into like Mega killers. Now there's some, there is some truth of that, but it's not as true as you might think.
00:15:39 And now someone's calling me that should know that I'm streaming right now.
00:15:48 Oh boy, I'm gonna tell them.
00:15:57 There we go. Hopefully they don't call again. There we go. Anyway, where was I before I was so rudely interrupted by the person who will hopefully be embarrassed that they did that. Anyway, this, this, this movie starts playing, and, well, I'm gonna play the clip. And I was just like, holy shit. Like, it's so in your face, it's so over the top that that this has to be looked into further.
00:16:29 So, without further ado, the movie I'm talking about, and it's funny because the movie is called copycat, which, which is funny because it's like a copycat of Silence of the Lambs. I mean, it's like a, it's like a knockoff, literally a knockoff of silence, of lambs with Sigourney Weaver. And the, not the girl from Fargo.
00:16:50 I forget where I've seen her in there's Sigourney Weaver. There we go, strong, powerful woman, Sigourney Weaver. And this is, this is, this is literally how the movie opens.
Sigourney Weaver
00:17:07 Let me ask you guys something, what turns you on? I mean, what really does it for you? Is it a great body? Is it a nice smile? Is it beautiful legs? Well, what turns on a serial killer is the suffering and death of another human being. Now I'd like to ask you guys a favor. If you could all please stand up.
00:17:28 All the gentlemen in the room, please indulge me for a second. Come on. It's only fair after all the time you spend ogling us. Now, would everybody under 20 and over 35 Have a seat.
00:17:42 And if you're of Asian or African American descent, you may sit down now. Kenny, can you turn that light on for us? Please? We can get a good look at these guys. All right, ladies, what do you see? Some pretty cute guys, don't you think? I mean, if one of these fellows asked you out for a drink, you'd go, wouldn't you?
00:18:02 Well, let me tell you something. Nine out of 10 serial killers are white males, age 20 to 35 just like these,
Devon Stack
00:18:12 just like these. You see, everybody be afraid. Be afraid of the white males. Now, interesting factoid here, the majority of audiences for horror films, just like with True Crime type podcasts, it's it's women.
00:18:31 Women make up about 60% of the audience for for horror films, and for, you know, psychological thrillers, or however they want to classify a movie like this and this movie look at a lot of movies that are like this, or just like science lamb, same sort of thing, where you have these strong, powerful woman protagonists that are up against the evil, violent men. This movie, in movies like it are designed to make women afraid of men.
00:19:03 That's really what it is. It's to make women afraid of men, and specifically white men, white men, normal looking, white guys, like that guy. And it's just and it's bullshit, lies. She's saying nine out of 10. Nine out of 10 serial killers are white guys. Specifically, she says, you know, if you're African American descent, sit down.
00:19:23 Well, that's going to be real funny here in a second when you see the actual statistics here, you know, there's lots of science, the lambs, lots of in fact, the most famous fictional serial killers?
00:19:41 Yeah, fictional. In fact, I was trying to find black fictional serial killers. They do exist. There's like, there's like, one or two of them, but we're clocking in like over 95% of serial killers. And. And movies and television are white guys. Hannibal Lecter is probably the most famous serial killer in a movie.
00:20:13 And then Buffalo Bill. Buffalo Bill, the other serial killer in Silence of the Lambs. Now, people often say, Well, at least he's a tranny, right?
00:20:26 At least they made him a tranny. But, you know, I went back to look at Silence of the Lambs, and I noticed something, actually, I noticed because I thought that too. I was like, Yeah, you know, we used to think that trannies were, you know, psychos, Norman Bates. We'll get to that in a second.
00:20:47 Yeah, that, but then, but then, there's this little bit in the movie you see when the strong, powerful woman goes to confront the toxic man murderer and try to figure out the Buffalo Bill situation. She brings up the fact that, oh yeah, he's a tranny, right? Lily is not a real transsexual, but he thinks he is.
00:21:13 Oh, he's not. He's not actually, no, he's not a real transsexual. So even, even when science lambs came out, they were trying to make excuses. They wanted to make him, you know, creepy, weird tranny guy. But no, but no, no, no, no. He's not like a he just thinks he is.
00:21:32 In fact, you take a little closer look at this character towards the end, when she goes to his lair. He's not only a pretend tranny, he's a Nazi. He's a Nazi. And he's obsessed with showing he's got, like, the sewing room where he's showing, like the the human skin suit or whatever.
00:21:54 Oh, by the way, on his bed there was a quilt with swastikas on it. Oh, yeah. And if you missed that, oh, look, there's like a swastika poster on the wall where, when the camera, you know, pans by. So not only is he not a tranny, he's he's a Nazi. He's a Nazi, just like, you know, just like I'm sure, the guy in copycat, then, you know another famous movie Seven, right? You have Kevin Spacey.
00:22:27 They don't even give a name. I think they call him John Doe, but Kevin spacey's character. Now, I was thinking like I was gonna make excuses for Kevin Spacey, but then I remembered something that Kevin Spacey, dead.
Kevin Spacey
00:22:46 You didn't really think I was going to miss the opportunity to wish you a Merry Christmas, did you? It's been a pretty good year, and I'm grateful to have my health back. And in light of that, I've made some changes in my life, and I'd like to invite you to join me as we walk into 2020 I want to cast my vote for more good in this world. Ah, yes, I know what you're thinking.
00:23:11 Can he be serious? I'm dead serious, and it's not that hard. Trust me. The next time someone does something you don't like, you can go on the attack, but you can also hold your fire and do the unexpected. You can kill them with kindness. So
Devon Stack
00:23:41 maybe there are some whites here. Serial killers. So I guess that's a bad example. Bad example there.
00:23:52 And by the way, that scary noise he that's, that's, it's still on his YouTube channel. That's where I got this from. Kevin spacey's YouTube channel still has this video, and he added the
00:24:08 yeah right around, by the way, right around this time people that were going to testify against him died. So anyway, there's, of course, there's this character from the Saw movies you know you got, I think his name is supposed to be John Kramer, also known as jigsaw, also known as Laura Loomer, who you know Laura Loomer,
00:24:42 if you're if you're new here, a lot of people don't realize Laura Loomer used to look like that, like a normal person, still like a Jew, but like like a human. So anyway, I. The Oh, times they are changing. And then, of course, you have what Patrick Bateman for American Psycho, and look, there's, there's, there's just example after example after example of these characters. And these are all older movies, but they're still doing it.
00:25:26 I mean, they don't make, they're not making as many serial killer movies. But when I looked at, I haven't seen these, but I looked at, you know what, one of the new serial killer movies, or at least within the last five years or so, it's the same it's literally the same thing, same exact
00:25:42 Oh, creepy white guy, creepy white guy in glasses. Oh, another creepy white guy, another creepy white guy. You know, I haven't seen these movies, but you know, it didn't all have to do is look at the fucking movie poster, and there's, there's the creepy white guy murderer. So what are the actual numbers?
00:26:00 What are the what are the actual numbers when it comes to serial killers? Well, it's, it's, it's hard to get real data on this, and that's because a lot of the reporting is local. The FBI doesn't have a public facing database that has, you know, all the serial killers or whatever. A lot of serial killers
00:26:30 end up, you know, not getting cut until much later, like there's a lot of people, you they don't, they don't realize they're serial killers until, you know, it's like some cold case or whatever, and they get the DNA evidence, and, you know that sort of a thing.
00:26:41 But you have, you know, all these jurisdictions where you have county, state and then the federal level. But there is some, some databases that are maintained for the research of serial killers, and if you look at the data, that is somewhat reliable, starting in the 1990s
00:27:04 and you look and you separate it by race, and by the way, it's a little muddy, because there's no Jew category. But be that as it may, Jews would be lumped in with white people with this statistic, turns out, over 50% I think it's like 53% over 50% of serial killers, as the FBI classifies them, are black.
00:27:38 Over half of the serial killers are black. Whites make up about 37% of the serial killers.
00:27:51 And I think other races be like Asian, Hispanic, although some of the Hispanics get lumped into the white it all depends on how you know, the reporting goes. That's that hovers like around, I think it was like 14% or something like that. Well, what happens when you adjust for for population? What happens when you do racist math and you do the per capita as it were? Wow, holy shit,
00:28:25 holy shit. Well, it turns out whites get a lot closer to that other category. Again, whites probably include some Hispanics, and definitely includes all Jews and blacks are just fucking out of control when it comes to being serial killers. In fact, one of the most prolific serial killers.
00:28:51 In fact, there are several prolific black serial killers, but one of the most famous black serial killers with a body count of they don't know, 100% possibly over 100 is Samuel little.
00:29:06 They, I think, confirmed, confirmed he has 60 kills. And it could be, as I said, it could be as high he's, he's, I think, confessed to like 90 or so. And they think it could be even more than that, another, another serial killer that you might not have heard of, although he's somewhat famous because he ended up on TV at one point. This is Rodney Alcala, Mexican, and eight confirmed.
00:29:40 But don't let that fool you, up to 130 possible. Up to 130 possible. Now, the only reason why you might have heard of this guy is this guy was was famously on the dating game at one point. It's. He actually won, and this is his appearance. I think it was, this was looks like it's probably late 70s.
Rodney Alcala
00:30:07 We're gonna have a great time together.
Narrator
00:30:08 It may be the creepiest episode ever on the dating game, because this bachelor looking for love back in 1978 is actually a serial killer. I'm called the banana, and I looked really good. No one had any idea that Rodney Alcala had already launched his killing spree when he appeared on the popular dating show.
00:30:30 He was a real creepy guy, a real idiot.
Jed Mills
00:30:33 Jed Mills was
Narrator
00:30:34 bachelor number two, and nearly 40 years later, he's still haunted by their encounter.
Jed Mills
00:30:39 This creep comes up, and he puts his face practically in my face, and he says, I always get the girl. When I think about what he said, I always get my girl. He kills him. That's what he's talking about. That's your best time.
Rodney Alcala
00:30:55 The best time is at night, night time,
Narrator
00:30:59 despite alcala's weird behavior on the dating game, The Bachelorette chose him, but never went on the date because she reportedly found him creepy and lucky for her, because Alcala would later be found guilty of seven murders. Investigators believe he may have actually killed up to 130 victims based on photos found on his property. Say hello to Rodney alkaline. Now the disturbing so 130
Devon Stack
00:31:29 so he's breaking the record He's destroying. I mean, they don't know. They have no idea. So you've got Mexicans and blacks eclipsing anything that any white serial killer has done, and just in terms of victims and in terms of frequency.
00:31:52 So the idea that white, you know, creepy white guys, creepy in cell white guys are the ones that are all the serial killers that's made up. It's completely made up. And I wonder why that might be. I wonder why that might be. Why would they want to impress upon the audiences of horror films that they have to really watch out for normal white guys, like normal, nice white guys.
00:32:28 Why? Why would they want women to get the ick when they encounter mild mannered, normal white guys? And isn't it funny, also, that the fact that this guy, I mean, this guy's like a serial killer. I mean, reportedly, she didn't go on the date, but she picked him, she picked, like the fucking serial killer on the dating game, and not not like the normal white guy sitting next to him.
00:32:59 And look in this movie, it's they take it into overdrive. So she has this presentation where she tells it the audience, oh yeah, serial killers are all white guys. It's all white guys, especially those normal looking ones of reproductive age. You got to watch out for those normal white guys of reproductive age.
00:33:24 Those are the ones that are scariest.
00:33:26 Those are the ones that might kill you, just like, like she gets attacked by one of them in the bathroom after her little presentation, she's attacked by not just a white serial killer, but like the most over the top, hillbilly, like comically bad hillbilly accent, ginger, white, like the whitest, the widest caricature of a white guy they could come up with that would also be repulsive they get they blackened his teeth, they made him a hillbilly, and then they made him a ginger, because there's nothing whiter.
00:34:08 And that's the serial killer that is assaulting her in the bat in the women's bathroom, a place that that all women are supposed to be able to feel safe.
Killer Hillbilly
00:34:22 What are you doing with my good
00:34:25 how'd you get my gun? Are you spying on little girls again?
00:34:33 Hey, I'll tell you something right now. Hey, don't you look pretty up there, officer. Hey, you know what I want to know. I need you to help me out on this. Dr Hudson, because you're the expert. Now, how would a fuck knocker like me take out a dumb guy like this? Huh? Would you stick him? Would you shoot him? Stick him or shoot? Shoot him, stick I can't, I can't decide, but I think I'm just gonna go ahead on and do both.
Devon Stack
00:35:12 I mean, it's like, it's for fuck sake, for fuck sake. So they have this go on, and it turns her into like some kind of crazy fucking recluse, but, but simultaneously, she's also this computer genius. Now, you got to remember this 1995 when this movie came out, the other thing that women were afraid of was it was computers.
00:35:35 It was technology. You know, women are the natural enemies of technology, and computers were getting more popular, and these normal smart white guys that are you're supposed to be really afraid of. They typically were. They were the ones using the computers, right? They were the ones using the computers that sorcery, that digital sorcery, and it made them uncomfortable, made them nervous.
00:36:03 And so they they had to, of course, show that this strong, powerful woman who not only had a mastery of the psychology of the the white serial killer, she also was a was a big computer nerd, and she understood computers. They also, you know, this is, like I said, it's kind of rip off of signs of lambs.
00:36:28 So they have the the boss girl, you know, the the the cop that's going to be investigating these serial killings is a girl that is, you know, she's, she's better than her male partner, and in basically every way you know, this is where they're at the the trading range or whatever, and and she's, she's Showing them up. You
Male Cop
00:37:15 please, please, you.
Female Cop
00:37:24 The good news is you're still alive.
Male Cop
00:37:27 You see a downside to that? I take it.
Female Cop
00:37:30 This is pretty remedial stuff. Ruben, remedial. Whoa, whoa. Let's review the scenario. Anyone at the Academy teach you to shoot conservatively, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. You shredded him.
Male Cop
00:37:40 What can I say? I'm an intuitive cop
Female Cop
00:37:42 with more impulse control. Let's assume you didn't mow down a 75 year old man who couldn't hear your warning because he's deaf. Let's say you've reached the guy while he was trying to surrender.
Male Cop
00:38:04 Ah, well, he jumped at him.
Female Cop
00:38:08 a
00:38:15 shoulder of his gun. Hands exposed. You hit the brachial nerve. He drops the gun. You read him as Miranda's, yeah. Plus, you haven't taken a human life, so your karma is still okay.
Devon Stack
00:38:27 Typical male excess, I sure showed him. So she's this badass boss girl. This is also playing into, you know, the the power fantasies of the women in the audience that are are there to enjoy this movie, unaware that the whole purpose of this film is to poison them against normal white guys and make them afraid of them.
00:38:57 And of course, it's a 90s movie, so she has to hold the gun sideways like she's in a fucking NW, a music video rat, a Tat, Tat, take a get like that. Nigga, what's up? Nigga? Like, the dumbest way to hold your gun possible. But anyway, it was, it was the 90s. People liked holding guns sideways for some reason.
00:39:20 Cut to one of the new victims. And again, like I said, it's not just the white guys are scary. Here's something else that was happening that was there was very frightening. I mentioned that women are afraid of computers. Those computers stressing women out. And part of that was men, the men that were using the computers, suddenly have the ability to meme. I'm not kidding this.
00:39:50 This has a it's funny because, you know, 30 years later, and it's the same sort of demographic that that the left targets. For extermination, and that is, you know, right, leading normal white guys who use computers and meme on the internet. And that's, that's, that's exactly what they're trying to paint as the scary, evil guy that is creepy and and watching women, you know, through the the trees, and then going home and and jerking off,
00:40:25 I guess, to the video, and making memes with their with their Footage. You
Evil Devon Stack
00:40:54 Yes, yes, you
Devon Stack
00:41:13 i Yeah. So, yeah, he's, he's, that was another thing that women were freaking out about, you know, digital video and privacy and all that stuff. Now, you know all that stuff is,
00:41:32 is gone. There's, there's no privacy whatsoever. You had a similar movie at the time called the net with Sandra Bullock, where, you know, trying to play into the fear of computers, you know, the scary, the scary internet was going to kill you, especially the men on the on the scary internet, they were going to come and murder you. So, you know, same sort of a thing.
00:42:00 And that funny thing is, just like the net, when they do start to talk about computer stuff, which they'll do here in a moment, it's, it's what they did in all these 90s movies that retards were going to go see the people writing these scripts, and the audiences, for that matter, didn't understand computers at all.
00:42:17 So they would just say random computer words, when, when, like, the scene with the computer was involved, they would just like, you know, if you ever watch the net, you ever want to laugh, watch the net, and it's just like, Oh, I'm going to use these, these insane, imaginary, You know, operating systems and and websites to do insane, meaning, you know, nonsense, things that weren't possible. Same sort of thing here.
00:42:48 So anyway, the, you know, cut to boss chick. She's, of course, showing all the men up. She is dressing down the male cop that you know he's, you know, you're contaminating my, my crime scene.
00:43:04 And you dumb, you know, Grog head, brain man. And then the old man, that's her boss, you know, she's just like, rolling her eyes like, Ah, you, you stupid man. You don't understand anything about I'm, I'm the fucking investigative genius from this place, and you're you don't know what you're doing, and then she starts investigating the murder scene, and comes across Sigourney Weaver's research, her genius serial killer research, and they go to visit her, where she lives, of course, with a gay guy.
00:43:39 Well, she's got like, so she's got this gay assistant, because now she's agoraphobic because of the serial killer attempt or whatever, so she's got like a man servant. So she literally has like a manservant. She's this ultra lefty feminist chick with a gay man servant.
00:44:01 You Yeah, and they go to her, and they're like, Oh, hey, guess what? You know, we think, we think we have a serial killer. Maybe you can help us with Your, your big, super brain, and she has, like, a panic attack. Another thing, nothing women can, you know, can connect without panic attacks.
00:44:19 Oh, that's, my fibromyalgia causes those and then she has this fag hag moment after they leave, where she's talking about how she loves the younger the younger cop, the male cop, and the Gay Guy and her are dishing on how good looking he was
00:44:41 and then she starts getting to work on her computer, going like, beep, bop, bop, bop, bop, let me. Let me tap into the serial killer database and find out what I can find. Meanwhile, the the meme guy, the creepy meme guy that that kills women, he's you. Is at home making memes you
00:44:59 Oh, so yeah, he's, he's making memes watching videos of these chicks he's gonna make memes with. And then he he sends her one of the memes. He sends her a meme while, of course, she's beating a man at chess. On on chess demon, some made up. I don't know it's computer thing called chess demon. I play chess demon, and I beat men on chess demon, so she's playing chess demon, and that's when then a scary meme shows up in her in Her computer mail. You
00:46:53 Oh, amazing, last this takes me Back
00:46:54 a flash animation I Oh,
00:46:54 God. You there's the sick pervert.
00:46:54 She's mixed. Oh no. She got sent like, some weird flash animation on her, on her, like, computer mail. Oh no, the computer mail. So the weirdo meme thing that the guy sends her, she gets freaked out, and she's like, I'm telling the cops, look, it's tomorrow.
00:47:54 Dot, Avi, tomorrow to avi, at least, you know, they got a file extension, kind of, right? Everything else on that screen is nonsense, but you know, so she's like, Oh, look at this, guys.
Male Cop
00:48:07 Did you try and play it back?
Sigourney Weaver
00:48:09 si
Female Cop
00:48:10 How did he send this to you?
Male Cop
00:48:11 He's hacked into her
Devon Stack
00:48:12 internet address. He hacked into her internet address. He hacked into her internet address. Guys trace it,
Male Cop
00:48:21 no, not, unless he's actually online right now,
Female Cop
00:48:23 rewind,
Male Cop
00:48:25 yeah, we should be able to play it back, yeah. How long's the program?
Sigourney Weaver
00:48:30 30 seconds.
Devon Stack
00:48:31 Get a copy of that thing. How long is the the program? Now, make sure you run the AVI program up to tape. Oh, she got tape back up. Back up to tape. That's good. Something. Tape backups. That's a thing, right? Guys, back up to tape, tape.
Male Cop
00:48:55 She's got a tape back up, which means we can make a copy and take it with us. How do you go about all this stuff just spent using video arcades, I guess
Devon Stack
00:49:05 Nvidia arcades. So he's gonna back up the tape, the the the AVI program, meme flash animation that was sent so they can trace the the internet address of the hacker and but then, just as he's about to back up the tape the AVI program, wouldn't You know it that that sneaky fuck real killers shit? It,
Sigourney Weaver
00:49:47 no, oh, no, excuse me. We virused her motive? Try the sea. Drive to
00:49:58 any other suggestions. It's gone. The file's not here. It's not on C drive, and it's not in list. The utilities are retreating.
Devon Stack
00:50:08 It's not on C drive or list utilities. Oh, my God,
Female Cop
00:50:12 would somebody mind telling me what
Male Cop
00:50:14 he wrote a self destruct virus into the program so you try to copy it. Just erase booby trapped it.
Devon Stack
00:50:20 Oh, the booby trap, virus self destruct. I gotta hand
Female Cop
00:50:24 it to the guy, smart little, what you look like?
Devon Stack
00:50:29 Oh yeah, he's, he's a smart guy that you know, with his booby trap something. So they're all mad now because the the self destruct Avi program virus booby trapped her internet address, and now they'll never know. They'll never know the identity of the girl in the flash animation that the meme guy sent her. So they're all mad
00:50:59 and the strong, powerful woman she's gonna she's gonna go home, and the cute young guy that's into older women is gonna stick around and try to unhack her computer.
Male Cop
00:51:12 Hold on a second. This is what we're gonna do, turn the monitor back on, and I'll stay until we figure out what's happening. Okay, go on,
Female Cop
00:51:20 catch you later,
Male Cop
00:51:23 right?
Sigourney Weaver
00:51:25 Heil Hitler,
Darth Vader
00:51:29 did somebody say Heil Hitler?
Male Cop
00:51:34 We can talk about Hitler later. First, we need to get the hacker video configuration traced.
Darth Vader
00:51:39 Have you tried reinstalling your RAM tape drive, CD on internet.
Male Cop
00:51:44 Yeah, obviously now I'm downloading the C drive, BIOS chipset interface.
Darth Vader
00:51:49 Make sure to hyperlink screen, save a server, net, state, navigator, email,
Male Cop
00:51:55 first I need to get the floppy RAM reinstalled on the internet modem.
Devon Stack
00:52:00 By the way, I didn't add that. Heil Hitler, I don't even know what she meant by that. I don't know why that's in the I was like, what? Because she's not, I don't know. I don't know what's in, what it's in reference to, like, the the girl cops, just like, all right, I'm gonna go home.
00:52:19 The guy's like, Okay, you feeling okay? And she's like, Heil Hitler, it's like, what? Like, I'll back up just so you can, I don't know. I honestly don't get it. I was, I didn't, I wasn't even sure I heard it right. I was like, What did you just say? Heil Hitler, for no reason. And here look, this is the context.
Male Cop
00:52:36 Turn the monitor back on and I'll stay until we figure out what's happening. Okay, go on, catch you later, right? Heil Hitler, what
Devon Stack
00:52:54 you Okay? Heil Hitler, all right, based maybe I don't know, I don't know how to feel about that. That's a little bit weird. So anyway, Heil Hitler and they stay up all night trying to unhack the email computer virus, self destruct Avi program. And they're, they're unable to do it.
00:53:18 They're unable to do it. They can't put it together. And then you get to meet you finally get to see the meme guy. You finally get to see the memeer. And you get to see a common origin story for these creepy white guys that you're supposed to be afraid of, these mild mannered, highly educated, nice, well meaning, white guys you should definitely never breed with, because they're the scary ones.
Mother
00:53:47 I've been calling and calling, didn't you hear me? You completely forgot about
00:53:55 you maybe to sue you, teasing me, naughty little boy. $6 little boy, what are you doing? Want to watch Letterman with me?
Killer Computer Guy
00:54:07 Well, I could darling, but you know,
Mother
00:54:09 I don't watch talk shows on my own. I know it's just I'm writing. I mean, I've got this one.
00:54:16 Go back to your silly little computers.
Background
00:54:19 It's got to be complicated. No. Dicks, you buy a bottle of soy sauce. You forgotten something already, and we also buy a bottle of liquid smoke. Listen to this I didn't like. Add in preservatives in my poop. You mix them together. You soak that thin slice raw meat for just about five
00:54:35 or six minutes. That's it. Put the meat on the tray. A day and a half
Devon Stack
00:54:41 later, you have features, yeah, me too. Now this is the thing. You always have this kind of a dynamic. There's always a woman that is a catalyst. There's always a woman who is emasculating the man who creates this. Monster.
00:55:00 And you might think to yourself, Well, isn't that kind of, in a way, suggesting that a domineering woman, you know, something that feminism promotes, that that is, that's kind of like the root of these, these serial killers, right? That's the, it's the, it's actually the feminine energy that is that is triggering this. And you're thinking too much like a man. You're thinking too much like a man.
00:55:33 See, if you're thinking like a woman, you know that the the accountability algorithm works a little bit differently. And instead, what, what, what the perception is when you see these sorts of things is, it's, it's not to explore, you know, a, a, you know, authentic psychological, you know, cause to why this, this man would would become violent.
00:56:07 But instead, it's, it's to show that treating because, you know, these women are never, you know, shown as evil, right? They might be overbearing, they might be clingy, they might be over protective, but it's this toxic masculinity that is really what is, is causing the problem. It's that because you are trying to as a woman, I guess, police his his masculinity in any kind of way.
00:56:43 You better watch out if you do that, because his masculinity will, will, inevitably, because it's being restricted, will come bursting out of the seams and he'll become a violent monster.
00:56:58 So this is the and by the way, this also makes you think that any guy that you meet that is like this mild manner kind of guy, if he's maybe, maybe he's like that because he's henpecked, and maybe he's like that because he has this bitterness for, you know, towards women that's been building up and building up, and maybe he's going to lash out at you. In fact, they did exit polling with women that saw both the movie Psycho and the movie silence of lambs, and in both cases, they said that they trusted normal white guys less
00:57:46 after watching the movie, specifically people that they would consider normal strangers. I mean, not people they knew, but normal strangers. They had a like, I guess, a phobia, really, of strangers after watching those films.
00:58:06 So it psychologically traumatized them not to be afraid of, you know of that woman that's in the bed? I mean, she's harmless, right? Again, maybe she's kind of a bitch and not fun to be around.
00:58:19 Look, you get the same thing was in the Joker movie, right? It was his mom that was overbearing that set him off, made him crazy and psycho, obviously, same sort of a thing. It's his mother that triggers it. And so it's, it's, again, it's, it's, it's not that the female energy creates a monster.
00:58:42 It's that female interaction might unleash the monster that's already within these men. And look in psycho, same thing, you know, this is the psychologist at the end of psycho that goes through and explains, like, what happened to Norman Bates, like, why he went, you know, why he went off, off the deep end, and how he's now he's his mother.
00:59:06 And look, they don't portray his mother as like, some kind of evil bitch, even though, like, that's, I think, how a lot of men, you know, view that, that character that you never really actually meet. She's described as just being, like, slightly overbearing.
Detective
00:59:21 I got the whole story, but not from Norman. I got it from his mother. Norman Bates no longer exists. He only half existed to begin with, and now the other half has taken over, probably for all time,
Victim's Sister
00:59:40 did he kill my sister?
Detective
00:59:44 Yes and No
Devon Stack
00:59:49 and no, it was also the mother. It was the mother that did it. So basically this, this bit taps into.
01:00:01 So anxieties that women already have about intimate partners. They all, I mean women, when pulled always, always have higher, much higher anxiety when it comes to
01:00:16 fears about, you know, violence, sexual for obvious reasons, sexual violence and and so this is, this is what they're going after. They're trying to play into this idea that you might he might seem like a normal guy, but what if he, what if he has weird issues that have nothing to do and that's the other thing too.
01:00:36 It's the issues don't have anything to do with you. It's some it's like his mom, or it's his ex girlfriend or something else, but you don't know what it is. You know, he might seem nice and normal, like Norman Bates seemed like a nice, normal guy, but you don't know. Maybe he's had because, look, same thing with Norman Bates. Who did he go after women? He wasn't killing man. I mean, I killed like the private investigator that was looking, you know, where for the woman, but he's targeting women.
01:01:04 All the serial killers in these movies that are white males, they're targeting women because they have some kind of bitterness against women.
Detective
01:01:12 Now to understand that, the way I understood it, hearing it from the mother, that is from the mother half of Norman's mind. You have to go back 10 years to the time when Norman murdered his mother and her lover. Now he was already dangerously disturbed. Had been ever since his father died.
01:01:36 His mother was a clinging, demanding woman, and for years, the two of them lived as if there was no one else in the world. Then she met a man, and it seemed to Norman that she threw him over for this man, now that pushed him over the line and he killed them both.
01:01:59 Matricide is probably the most unbearable crime of all, most unbearable to the son who commits it. So he had to erase the crime, at least in his own mind. He stole her corpse. A weighted coffin was buried. He hid the body in the fruit cellar. Even treated it to keep it as well as it would keep and that still wasn't enough. She was there, but she was a corpse, so he began to think and speak for her, give her half his life so to speak.
01:02:44 At times he could be both personalities carry on conversations. At other times, the mother half took over completely. He was never all Norman, but he was often only mother, and because he was so pathologically jealous of her, he assumed that she was as jealous of him. Therefore, if he felt the strong attraction to any other woman, the mother's side of him would go wild.
Devon Stack
01:03:16 Now it's a bunch of nonsense, but this taps into the fear women have, too. A lot of women
01:03:24 fear or have anxiety about the relationship that men have with their with their mothers, and the judgment that they get from the Mother, you know, like no one's good enough for my son, that sort of a thing.
01:03:35 So that's what they're playing on in this they also touch on the fact that, oh, he's not an actual, he's not a real tranny either, you know, because that was a big thing too, like, oh, Norman Bates, you know, at least back then they made trannies into the killers. Well, actually, not so much.
Detective
01:03:53 Now, after the murder, Norman returned, as if from a deep sleep, and like a dutiful son, covered up all traces of the crime he was convinced his mother had committed. Why was he dressed like that? He's a transvestite, not exactly,
Devon Stack
01:04:12 not exactly. Now I'm gonna do a bunch of mumbo jumbo, but how he's not a real tranny, which is what they do. So anyway, it's funny that they can't just be like, yeah, he's a fucking tranny, and that's part of why he's a psycho. Because I suspect, even though this came out in 1960
01:04:28 there was already trannies in Hollywood. There's, like, people don't realize this. Trannies have been around a long time, and they were going to be in Hollywood if they're going to be anywhere in America. So yeah, there's no, there's no, there's no, no. He was a psycho, and that's part of it.
01:04:47 Nope, nope. He wasn't really a tranny. He was just trying to be like his mom. So anyway, back to copycat. So he's this emasculated man. And that's the other thing too, is, is it puts this fear in women that well, if you try to just be a strong, powerful woman, and he feels threatened by that, if he, if he perceives that you're trying to emasculate him, this could happen to you.
01:05:20 You might awaken this beast that's within this man. And in fact, those, those those guys on the internet meme mean all day, that's, that's really the source of their rage, and that's what they still say. That's what they say today, right? Isn't that what they say? Like, who hurt you? Like that, you know, that's what they say.
01:05:35 That's what you hear from the feminist crowd about in cells, is that it's, you know, it's, it's all based in some kind of bitterness about women, because maybe something like this, some woman emasculated them at some point, dominated them at some point, hurt them in some way. And again, the reasoning therefore isn't, oh well, the woman that created that monster is the issue?
01:06:03 No, that doesn't enter the conversation, right when they when they say these things about incels today, they're not implying, oh, you may female behavior created this monster. Even though they are saying that they You're a monster, they're saying that the monster was always there, and all it took was interaction with a woman who wasn't perfect. Wasn't perfect, maybe, for it to be unleashed, or, you know, whatever it is, right?
01:06:26 You're, you're still the reason, even though, like, they're implying that some kind of woman lit this fuse, you are still the the stick of dynamite, right? So that's the same sort of a thing. And so he's being emasculated, which is created this need in him now to lash out at normal women and let you know, in this case, go to his basement and torture some shape that he's got tied up. You
01:07:40 I just a normal white guy sharpening my
Killer Computer Guy
01:08:02 greens. Oh, looks like you're on a little trouble. Okay, place my hand. Okay, put my elbow right here. Just cut. Hold. Oh,
01:08:28 didn't I say I take care of you? Goodness, you're so hot.
Devon Stack
01:08:38 Now this is gonna hurt a little bit, I'm afraid. Now it's time to inject you with Windex.
01:08:45 All right, so he's killing this bitch, and, of course, kills her, leaves her body naked again. There's always like a weird sexual element to this, you know, to imply that you're sexually unsafe, that everything these guys are doing is sexual in nature, you know, these normal, mild mannered white guys, given the chance, that's how you'll end up.
01:09:10 Strong, powerful woman goes and meets with scouring Weaver to try to figure it out. And she goes on her internet machine again and beep, boop, boop. Pop. Pop goes into her, her nonsense application there the the input, DB, 3% 3% 3% ATR, three secretor, non secretor.
01:09:35 And they're like, Oh my god. Oh my god. According to the computer machine. The computer machine says he's, actually, he's mimicking other serial killers. He's a copycat. He's, he's, he's basically staging all of these death scenes to to be like other other murderers that have happened from, you know, obviously, all from white men of. Course, and he's just trying to mimic their behavior as he sits at home. Meaning about
Anchorman
01:10:06 it, the mutilated body of an unidentified young woman has been discovered. Police have yet to comment on the brutal slang, which is the fourth such body to be found in the Bay Area in just the last six weeks. Meaning, I must mean Susan.
Anchorwoman
01:10:21 Task Force is being set up inside the police department. Aiding the police is noted criminal psychologist, Dr Helen Hudson, Jim it was her expert testimony that sent darrylee Cullum to death row for the murders of two young women. Cullen later escaped and attacked Dr Hudson killing a police officer. Meanwhile, school yards are empty, college campuses
Devon Stack
01:10:43 are deserted. Yes, I used meme dot exe to create the meme. Put her face on things, all right, so then he taunts her with more memes. He kills some more people, like this girl. It's kind of funny, because it's, it's supposed to be after Son of Sam a Jew,
01:11:07 but that this isn't how Son of Sam killed anyone. I think he just, like, shot some woman like, well, she was parked at the side of the road. But they try to make again, if you're in public, if you're in public and you're approached by a normal looking white guy, you better watch out he might shoot me.
Killer Computer Guy
01:11:30 Oh, hi, sorry. I'm a little lost. You help me out. Sure.
01:11:40 Thanks.
Devon Stack
01:11:40 Big mistake. You never should have trusted that normal looking white dude, because now you're dead, because he was trying to copy David Berkowitz, aka Son of Sam, and now you're fucking dead. So then, of course, he goes and starts creep filming more people, because, you know, digital cameras start. That was also part of the paranoia the women were having about technology in the late 90s, is that cameras were getting smaller and they were going to be creepy perverts going around filming you from the trees.
Sigourney Weaver
01:12:17 This guy's copycatting. He wants what those killers, Scott fame, the power to terrify us, to take whoever, whatever he wants without saying please, and if you find that your hands are still willing, you can turn murder into art. He really wants us to think what he's doing is art. I think we're looking for someone desperate for acceptance. Probably has a fair academic record, and I think has a technical job, something that demands a certain precision.
Devon Stack
01:12:54 Yep, highly educated, smart guy, smart white guy with a technical job. Those are the ones you got to watch out for and in this case, he works at a sperm bank. And let's, let's play on yet another fear, visceral fear, that women will have, and that is that a guy like this, the creepy guy that you're supposed to be at this at this point, if you're not feeling the ick, there's something wrong with you.
01:13:18 He works at a sperm bank, and he's secretly replacing the sperm donations with his own sperm. So now they're these women, again, is visceral fear now that this super creepy murder guy is now secretly impregnating them with with with technology. He's using technology to impregnate them against their it's like rape. It's like some kind of high tech form of rape.
01:13:48 So he does that, and then there's like a scene where, I guess, he breaks in and puts bugs in a room because girls are afraid of bugs. And, oh, look, it's not just bugs.
01:13:59 It's a human finger, a human finger that marks a page or book that some kind of clue or something, and anyway, doesn't really matter, then the the hillbilly serial killer from the beginning of the movie is going to do a video chat, a video chat back when that was super fucking high tech. Fact, this is like, it's actually way more high tech you would do in 1995
01:14:26 but they're gonna do a video chat with the hillbilly. And of course, he sounds, not only he sound like a hill, but now he's got an American flag hat on. Yeah, you couldn't, you couldn't make him more white and conservative. In fact, he always when, even though he's like this psycho murderer guy,
01:14:47 he's always making like, these God and Bible and Christian type references. So he's like the ultimate evil he's this white Christian male who likes America and. And is from the south, and then I want you to speak into this microphone.
Killer Hillbilly
01:15:05 She gonna see me through that. She gonna hear me. You just speak into the microphone. Hello. Hey, Doc. This
Female Cop
01:15:17 is Inspector Monahan. I'll be speaking for Dr Hudson,
Killer Hillbilly
01:15:21 I'm hanging up. I ain't talking to no
Female Cop
01:15:23 cops. Just received your book. Do you know anything about it?
Killer Hillbilly
01:15:28 Yeah, I surely do. But that's all I'm saying, until that foxy lady gets on the horn, put her on
Devon Stack
01:15:36 and again, it's a sexual obsession that he has with her. In fact, he he tells them that he won't help them crack the case unless she sends something to him.
Killer Hillbilly
01:15:49 It gets awful lonesome in here, Doc, I think about you all the time. A personal token would be nice. Let's see something feminine, something Lacy, something really, something pretty. I got it. Send me some of your squirrel covers. I beg your pardon. I beg your pardon. Your panties. You wear them, don't you? That's what I want. Jesus, I want them autographed to me, personally, darling. Call him deal.
Devon Stack
01:16:29 Oh, yeah, you must have her panties. He has to have her panties in order to help. See, it's, it's every they're hitting every fucking button, every fucking button super creep guy wants your panties in order to help you find the other super creep guy.
01:16:48 So anyway, then her gay man servant goes and goes to some gay party, but because the copycat killer is now, what is it? Ted Bundy, I don't know. The guy who killed fags. He shows up and kills her, her gay man servant, which was pretty based.
01:17:13 And then you get this scene after he kills the the man servant, some wild eyed chink? Well, I don't know, can you really be wild eyed if you're a chink, is there? Can you be anything other than chinky eyed?
01:17:28 I think, I think that's like the you're pretty limited, right? Like you really have only one setting anyway, some crazy chink flies off the handle at the COP station, and this is where I thought so they have this scene where her partner is is being being threatened with a gun. And you would, well, let's play it first,
Male Cop
01:17:57 put up your weapons. Weapons up.
Detective
01:18:08 Easy, okay, okay.
01:18:21 Nobody out that door. All right, Lay out.
Male Cop
01:18:40 All right? You?
01:19:21 It turn so
Devon Stack
01:19:25 at this point I was like, oh, at least they're gonna make her look like she was dumb. Right in the beginning, she was trying to talk all this big game about actually, actually, you shoot them in the in the shoulder muscle, and then he drops the gun, and then he still, and I'm thinking, like, that's, that's how it's gonna go, right? Like they're gonna be like, Oh, actually, she was wrong.
01:19:45 She should have been like the guy. She should have been like the man, like she was wrong this whole time she was she was just the bitch, and now he's dead. Now, now her partner's dead because you want to play your little fucking, you know, precision game. With your with your shots? No, no, no, sir.
Female Cop
01:20:08 I tried to control the situation. I tried to control it and made a choice. It
01:20:20 didn't work out, and an officer got killed.
Detective
01:20:26 Mary Jane, you made a decision and it was the right decision. You just got the wrong result. That's all, what?
Devon Stack
01:20:37 No, it was the wrong decision. It was clearly the wrong decision, anyway. So, like, oh, for fuck sake, really can't even give us that. He can't even give us, like, whatever.
01:20:48 All right, so no, it was the right decision. It just everything just blew up in your face because you made it anyway, whatever. So then they go to, they figure out who the copycat guy is they go to, like, with the SWAT team to go get him, but then his house catches on fire, and they think that he burned himself up inside.
01:21:08 But of course, obviously that's not what happened. He dressed like a cop, went to Sigourney Weaver's house and, like, beat her up and then dragged her to the same, I guess, lecture hall where she was assaulted by the hillbilly in the beginning of the movie, because now he's copycatting the guy from the hillbilly guy, and then while she's all tied up. Oh, this, I thought was funny.
Killer Computer Guy
01:21:37 Did you know Helen that more books have been written about Jack the Ripper and Abraham Lincoln, yeah.
Devon Stack
01:21:45 And how many of those books in 1995 would have accurately stated that Jack the Ripper was a Jew, an Eastern European immigrant Jew that we know he is now because of DNA testing. You know, I did all stream on that. No, I had a cough there blanking on his name right now. But yeah, so the yet another example of Jack Ripper, some crazy white guy that no, no Eastern European Jew, showed up in England and immediately started killing women.
01:22:29 So anyway, I thought that was kind of interesting. But the other, the other part about this is they underscore the fact that he's just this creepy in cell that has a fear of female energy.
01:22:43 You know that it's again, it's not, it's not that the feminist energy is actually creating the problem. It's the toxic masculinity and the inferiority complex that he has, especially in the face of a dominant woman, that that monster within him is unleashed.
01:23:04 You know, if you have, for example, if you meet a man who responds poorly to female dominance, well, that's, that's a serious that's a ticking time bomb. That's a serial killer waiting to happen.
01:23:17 And that's why you have this scene here where the, only way to really, really get to him is to show, show him how you're a strong, powerful woman when you're tied up in his trap.
Sigourney Weaver
01:23:28 Fuck you
Killer Computer Guy
01:23:33 mwhat
Sigourney Weaver
01:23:36 you heard me, you little twerp. You think I'm afraid of you.
01:23:41 I know you are. I know all about you.
01:23:46 You're just a sad, second rate, boring, impertinent little copy cat.
Killer Computer Guy
01:23:56 Watch it, bitch. I will slice that smile off your face. Do you hear me? Darrell, they couldn't get it up. Do you hear me?
Devon Stack
01:24:12 Oh, my God, I don't even know what to do with all this female energy. So he's, uh, that's the one way to, you know, she, she said he couldn't get it up. And he's a, he's a little twerp and whatever. And now he's rattled. He's rattled because, because he thrives on fear, as one of these memor in sales on the internet does, that's all they thrive on, is, is generating fear in women.
01:24:38 So the strong, powerful woman cop, ignoring, of course, the orders of her male superior, who is clearly an idiot, doesn't realize what's at stake. She charges in anyway and attacks and there's like some stupid gay fight where you know it's impossible. It, Sigourney Weaver would overpower a guy with weapons in his hands. But, you know, whatever it happens, the cop gets injured, and they run to the roof.
01:25:10 And of course, this is, you know, once again, one when facing the the in cell, what is the proper response? The thing, they'll shut him down and make him furious, is to mock him and laugh at him.
Killer Computer Guy
01:25:37 What the fuck are you laughing at?
01:25:42 Bitch? Are you laughing at? What are you waiting for?
Devon Stack
01:26:08 Ah, the Secret shoulder shot worked again. You
01:26:42 you ah, the most girly music ever starts playing like I feel like I'm watching fucking Anne Green Gables over here. All right, we won. Thank God. And so she is. She saved the day. And of course, we end with the hillbilly guy talking about panties and God and acting like a hillbilly.
Killer Hillbilly
01:27:12 Just so happens I'm awaiting the arrival of a pair of genuine Helen Hudson undies, signed personal to me, a real collector's item. I'm sure you'll know they're yours. But don't forget, a disciple must be strong if he is to succeed where others fail. Peter strayed from the path and the Lord smote him good. So keep it simple. Then glory is yours and vengeance is mine, as the Good Book says, I know you'll get my meaning.
01:27:56 Happy hunting partner, Darry Coe, there
Devon Stack
01:28:06 you go, the nets copycat. Make sure to throw in some, you know, religious talk there, you know, it makes it that makes the guy even creepier, you know, if he's religious at all, and if he's, you know, Southern fucking forget about that. And that's, that's copy can and there's, like I said, it's called copycat. It's funny because there's, like, a million movies just like it. There's a million movies just like it.
01:28:06 They still make them today. It's the be afraid of normal white guys, even though, statistically, that's who you're safest around, and even in terms of serial killers, which is goes against what most people think like I said this is adjusted for population black serial killers versus white serial killers and other the white, of course, being inflated by the reporting of Hispanics as white and Jews as white.
01:29:08 But be that as it may now, one thing I will say, one thing I will say, because, look, bottom line is, people wouldn't want to watch people wouldn't watch this stuff if they you know, they weren't compelled. No one's making them watch these movies, right? And one thing I will say is white serial killers, because it's an enigma, because it is a spectacle, because it's not like how boring would it be if you had one of these black serial killers as the protagonist in one of these films.
01:29:44 They're not really complicated. There isn't some like deep psychological, you know, maze you have to go through to get to the root of why a black serial killer is killing, right? That's why these movies. Are compelling and interesting to the audience, because when they do see a normal white guy, they that's not a killer, it's not a killer.
01:30:11 And so you're basically creating a situation that is not realistic, and then creating this backstory to explain how it can happen, and that's why it's interesting to people, and that is why, because it's so anomalous, that's why they I think people are drawn you know, that's why the audience is drawn in on stories like this. And you can even say the same thing is true of the true crime podcast.
01:30:40 My guess is, most true crime podcast people, they're not choosing their stories based on some kind of weird feminist or Jewish agenda, so much as they're choosing stories that they find interesting. And the bizarre is interesting and the added, you know, out of the ordinary is interesting, and a white guy going on a killing spree is bizarre and out of the ordinary and it's puzzling.
01:31:09 And so it is. It's like a it's like a brain teaser. You know, what makes a normal white guy turn into a killer? And so in those instances, when it happens, it is, it's a compelling story, because it is kind of like, well, that never happens, you know, it's kind of like, if you were to find, you know, it's like, the same for the literally, for the same reason.
01:31:29 If you know you on TV, hey, look, we have a dog that can drive a car. He'd be like, what a dog that can drive a car. I gotta see this. I've never seen a dog drive a car.
01:31:42 I got to figure out, how did this dog learn how to drive cars? Does it? Can he really drive a car? How long that take? Who got him to drive that? You know, it's the same it's literally the same thing. It's this out of the ordinary, weird thing that that you wouldn't expect to have happen a white guy killing lots of women. That's crazy. What made him do it? What caused this crazy thing to happen?
01:32:07 And that's, I think, ultimately, why the audience is interested by these stories, because there is some kind of, there is a level of psychological complexity to it, necessarily, because it's not just the normal behavior of a white guy to do this, whereas, if you did, I mean, how long would the movie be? If you it was about one of these black serial killers? It wouldn't, it wouldn't be some, like, grand scheme that the black guy has of, you know, recreating the crime scenes of all these past serial killers.
01:32:40 No, just be like, I'm gonna make, I'm gonna make the white girl bleed. You know, it was just, it'd be like, you know, some Nick brain bullshit. And so that's, in fact, it's kind of like the case even, you know, we've covered, there was that Mexican serial blanking on his name, the Mexican serial killer that would ride, he would ride on the trains to different towns. One of the reasons why it took him so long to define him, because he would just ride, you know, like a hobo on trains to different towns and then just kill randomly.
01:33:11 And there was no, like, deep psychological reason behind it. He just liked killing people. Now there wasn't like, some complex story that explained why he was the way that he was and and that's, I think, Why, another reason why this kind of stuff gets produced. So, you know, it is what it is. But I just saw this, and just that opening scene where she's trying to make it sound like, you know, oh, you watch out for the white guys. That's where I had to go. I had to find the real numbers. And because I always suspected it.
01:33:46 Why I knew, I knew blacks killed more, I didn't know what the exact numbers were, but this is the exact numbers. The exact numbers are, you know, I said blacks, it's like 53% it's over 50% it's not much over. It's like it's less than 55 and, you know, you account for population, it's, it's several times over the norm, you know, to the extent that there's a norm for for serial killing, anyway, that's uh, that's the the myth of the white serial killer. So there you go. All right. Well, let's, uh, I guess let's do some super chat, some hyper chats.
01:34:38 Also, uh, what was there? Was something else I wanted to go over tonight. I'll think of it. I'll think of it. So one of the things is I noticed that entropy was left out, like for some reason, it didn't close out the last stream. So I had to end it and then start it over again.
01:35:00 But I did screenshot the ones that were already in there before doing that. So let me bring up the screenshots so I don't miss anybody. And I broke my I broke I broke my donation button, although I think the big donut button still works, I was updating it, and I know none of the buttons are working.
01:35:31 Okay, the donut button is not working. The Big Donut buttons working, but the donut button is not working because I was updating it, and then, like, I broke something, and I have, I think I have to update a plugin or something to make it work. Anyway, we got Brody. Brody says your AI video creation was awesome. Well, I appreciate that. Talking about the Whitman's, yeah, lots of good feedback.
01:36:04 Like, pretty much everyone likes it, so except for, like, a handful of psychos that think that AI is unleashing demons or something like that. But yeah, if you have any kind of sense of humor at all, and you're not like a psycho that thinks AI is, is demon possession, possession of some sort? Yeah, no, I appreciate that. And like I said, probably not gonna make anything like that again for a while, because it was it also, you know, it took a lot of took a lot of my life away. My life force was drained making that thing.
01:36:45 But I figured whatever I make next, to the extent that I will, I have a much better understanding of the workflow. And I don't know, maybe something shorter, if it's shorter, I can manage it just trying to make something that's that long, that's 22 minutes long, is pretty crazy. And then obviously, of course, I've been making the music stuff lately that is also interesting.
01:37:14 That is also interesting, just like with AI video, it's it's not as easy as people would think, the songs that I have produced, that I have posted, just just be thankful I'm not posting everything I've made, because I've made lots of stuff that has been horrible. Because that's it's like with AI video.
01:37:34 It's, it's very easy to make garbage music with AI music generators, and it's almost impossible to make it generate a full song that doesn't have at least some crap in it. So that you have to, you have to edit and post, because it's just, you know, some random nonsense that it puts in there.
01:37:55 And just like with AI video, to be very specific, you have to know what you're going for. You can't just be like, make an awesome song. You can't use it for lyrics. Well, I mean, you can, but, like, it's gonna be the worst lyrics you've ever heard of before. In fact, I think I sent, let me see if I have, I saved the screenshot. I asked it to make lyrics, and it made the most insane lyrics, screenshotted it and sent this. Let me see if I got
01:38:26 it. Where is it? Hold on.
01:38:36 Here it is. I'll bring this up here. I
01:38:43 give you an idea of the kind of lyrics that AI thinks is great. I forgot what the prompt was, but I was telling to make a song, just because I wanted to see like, well, what would it make? Well, this is what it would make.
01:39:14 This is literally a screenshot of some lyrics AI wrote for me. If you see me online again tonight, call the FBI. There's a bomb threat. Because I know better. If you see me posting up online again tonight, I'm probably going to die, but you're not going to hear about it.
01:39:37 You are not going to read about it, no, because it's all going to be over. It's it's all going to be over. I have had enough of it all. I'm so over it. These are, these are real AI lyrics. So you can't, if you're making AI music, you can't you. You can't trust AI to write your lyrics for you, or it writes like a psychopath.
01:40:14 So, yeah, you have to write your own lyrics, and then you have to really know. You have to be very specific with the style prompt, or it's going to just make the most formulaic bullshit. And then on top of that, it's not going to know. It's really difficult to get it to deliver the law in the same way that AI video.
01:40:37 You can type in dialog and get it to say the lines in order for it to say it with the emotions that you have intended, you have to be extremely specific with the prompt, and then there's a lot of trial and error on top of that, and sometimes it just never gets it.
01:40:54 One of the things I found when writing lyrics and then trying to get it to sing in the way that I wanted at a certain point, you kind of kind of have to just give up on a verse and and change the wording, because it just, it gets hung up on something. It doesn't make any sense, right?
01:41:12 Like the, the the the rhyming scheme, you know, like the the rhythm of it, mathematically, should make sense to it. But for some reason, it doesn't like a word or sing something weird, and it's just easier just to change, change a word or a whole line that it's, it's, it's choking on.
01:41:34 And then, even then, like, once you get it like a you finally get it to start sounding the way you want it to, you still have to generate, like, a lot of versions before you have enough to work with to edit together into a song that said, I've been making electronic music since I was about 12. And in fact, I was making the first time I ever made electronic music. This is going to really date me.
01:42:04 The program was a DOS program. I was, I was making mod files in DOS the first time and again, I was like a kid the first time I was making, and we had a shitty computer, but, but I was making, like techno in DOS.
01:42:25 But I've been making music pretty much almost non stop since then. But it's been a few years since I've really because I've been doing this right. I haven't done any any kind of music other than, like the meme music that I've made a couple songs here and there, like the cybers and stuff like that. And compared to, you
01:42:45 know, playing around with loops and sequencers and samples and and all this other stuff, it's a billion times easier. It's a billion times easier. And just like with AI video, sometimes you'll get an unexpected result that you actually like. So it's not something that you would have thought of, but now that you see it, you're like, oh, that actually is better than what I was thinking I wanted to do.
01:43:09 And same thing with the audio. Sometimes it'll come up with something that is what isn't what you were asking for, but it's actually not so bad. And so you can, you can start to build on that. I've only like, I said, I've made hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of generations, and I've only posted like, a handful of them, but people, people seem to like that stuff. And it's another proof of concept.
01:43:36 It's a proof of concept that you can make with, with AI stuff that people actually like, especially if you're not sitting there hammering them over the head, you know, where you're not making the songs where, like, you know, you're rhyming stuff like wooden doors or ballpoint pen. And then you can put in these themes. You can put in themes of white replacement.
01:43:58 You can put in themes of, you know, in fact, I mean, fuck the name of the song I the first one I put out was Shylock. Shylocks Ghost. Do you guys know who Shylock is? You know what a Shylock is like? That song is literally about Jews. That song is literally about Jews rigging the system. It's just, I'm not obvious about it, right? It's just subtle. I mean, the Shylock parts not subtle, but it's subtle enough to where it doesn't get censored because it's a character out of Shakespeare.
01:44:33 But, you know, it's, it's literally about Jews. So you can do that if you, if you are vague enough, or, you know, like, not vague. Maybe that's not the right word, but you're not as on the nose with it that a lot of right leaning people tend to do when they make, you know, content. If you if you leave it up to interpretation a little bit, you end up, I think, making something that more.
01:45:00 People want to actually watch or listen to or or, you know, what have you. The other songs are also right, leaning in, in in theme and in meaning.
01:45:12 But again, they're, they're, dare I say, poetic enough to where it's not on the nose slap you in the face with, like, crime statistics or or something like that. And look, if I want to get more explicit later, once there's people actually listening to to that music, then you know what I mean?
01:45:33 Like, that's the other thing you got to think about, too, building an audience before you start hitting them with the the propaganda is not the worst idea, either. A lot of television shows did that like cheers. For example, when cheers first came out, it was very, you know, Sam Malone was like this womanizer. He was, you know, very masculine, and he was banging all these chicks, and then by the last season, he worked for a woman and was basically a balding, pathetic has been.
01:46:12 And that's the, you know, that's the the audience at that point was already, was already sucked in. And that's something that, I mean, obviously that show lasted well, like a decade almost. So it was a very they had a long time to make that arc, but they didn't really take super long to do it. I think after, like, season two is when they started really twisting the knife in there.
01:46:40 So there's lots of examples of that where they make a show or even a movie that starts out kind of normal, and the left wing commie Jew nonsense doesn't come until you're already kind of interested in the story. Anyway. Um, yeah, where was I? So thank you. Oh yeah, Brodie, I appreciate that. And yeah, I'll be making Look, I just think it's a new tool. There's people that will complain about using AI to create music and videos, but people complain about digital cameras. They complain about drum machines.
01:47:19 It's funny, like, people, oh, you should make music with real instruments. It's like, You mean, like, a, you know, like, go to any, go to any studio. Like you realize most of the stuff's already electronic, right, all right. Like you realize that there's, there's genres of music.
01:47:38 There have already been, like, there are 100% electronic and have been for decades, right? In fact, that's kind of why I stuck to those genres when I was making that music, was because I thought that would be what would would be most appropriate, and it's kind of what I like.
01:47:57 I If you don't make what you like, you're gonna make crap, because you're not gonna know if it's good or not, because there's people that are people that are saying, oh, you should, you should make this kind of music. And I was like, Well, I don't like that kind of music, so I wouldn't be good at it, because I wouldn't know if it was good or not, because I don't like the stuff that everyone thinks is good, not saying it's not good.
01:48:15 It's just I wouldn't I can't tell if it's good or not. So if I can't tell if it's good or not, I can't make it, and then know that I made anything good. So that's the other thing too, is you can only if you're going to make anything that's music or video or, you know, that's, that's not, you know, overt propaganda, that's something that you want to be, you know, something you want to be like artistic with.
01:48:39 You have to like it yourself, or it's going to be bad. Or at the very least, at least it'll be formulaic, you know, because you might know how the formula like, if you're like a, I mean, there's lots of musicians that go and work for bands like contract work, and that might not be their favorite genre of music, but they know the, you know, the technical aspects of that kind of music and and how to produce it.
01:49:05 But if you want it to be great or or really good, you have to, you have to like it yourself. Then we got gorilla hands. Gorilla hands says, say this in your most Joey voice. Oy, vey, I don't really have a joey voice. I got allergies right now anyway, so I don't know if I can do Joey voice. My eyes are watering right now, like crazy. Hang on a sec. Literally having trouble seeing my screen.
01:49:36 My allergies been nuts for like, a week. You think, I mean, it's winter almost everywhere else, but it's like the end of another spring in the desert, and so there's a lot of pollen and shit in the air still, like, we haven't, we haven't even had like, a like we usually by by November, there's at least one, you know, freeze at night, and there hasn't even been, I don't think we've been in the 30s yet. This year.
01:50:03 Oy, vey, I hope Devon doesn't mention the fact that most serial killers being Jewish, because that'd be very anti semitic. And another show a goyim back to the serious voice, Lana and Henrik have been on fire lately. Henrik is 100% right about this being the fight of our lives.
01:50:22 Well, I don't know if most serial killers are Jewish. It's hard to get numbers on that. I tried to that database that I was basically I had, I had chat, GBT and grok analyzing it for me. So I went to go through it, and I tried to get grok to extrapolate
01:50:45 the number the percentage that were Jewish, because it doesn't say what percentage of them were Jewish. So I said, Okay, well, look at every Jewish last name, and based on that, compare that with the last names of the people in this database, which is like a few 1000 people in this database, and then what you know, make your best estimate of what percentage are Jewish.
01:51:12 And it was like refusing to do it. It kept saying, like, Oh, I did a sample of 100 of the names. I'm like, No, don't it's not that many. It's like a million names, look at all fucking 2000 names, or however name, and compare that with Jewish last names.
01:51:28 Like I know you can find a list of of Jewish last names and tell me, based on just that alone, that data point alone, how many you would suspect, how much, how many you'd have, like a 50% or higher confidence level, they were Jewish, and it wouldn't, I couldn't get it to do it. And it kept just estimating. And the estimate was pretty low. It was higher than the Jewish representation, or, I mean, Jewish population. It was the, I think it was estimating.
01:52:00 It was like five or 6% I think it was, it was five point something percent. And of course, if the Jewish population is 2% then they're, you know, they're over represented. Dramatically, they're over represented. But the you also got to understand the the data is not complete, and one thing grok said was that it was entirely possible that, like grok told me this, grock said that Jews might be under reported.
01:52:35 Like, how did it phrase it? It said that Jews might be under reported because of the taboo of Jewish serial killer. I mean, I might even still have that tab open. Let me see if I can find specifically what it said, because I was like, what like? Why are we like? Grok knows this
01:53:00 here, I think now, let me see how it actually phrases it, blah, blah, blah, I know I can't find it. Is this a different tab I got? I have a few
01:53:19 about okay, it's a different tent. Hang on white serial killers.
01:53:33 Now, I was just surprised that it explicitly said everywhere I'm doing, yeah, I hate the lies you have to tell. AI, I'm like, I'm doing a research paper that challenges the idea that, Okay, where did I get where's the geo question? Okay, there we go,
01:54:08 yeah, so the database is called the Radford FGCU serial killer database. It's got 3690 documented cases as of 2023
01:54:21 blah blah blah blah blah blah
01:54:26 blah blah blah where's the thing where it tells me about the geo thing.
01:54:34 Blah blah blah blah, yeah. And then when I was trying to get to give me the exact number with the last names, it gave up after G. So it didn't check every Jewish last name. It just picked every Jewish last name, A through G, for some reason, you know, starting letter, and then it would give up.
01:54:57 And I couldn't get it to, like, give me a comprehensive answer. Hmm, and then, then it also mentioned, now I can't find them. It said something about Jewish cases being under reported in that, in that data, database specifically, but I don't know. But be that as it may, it's not that most, most serial killers are not Jewish, but they are.
01:55:27 They are more as a group, more likely than whites to be serial killers, you know, by population. Okay, so let's see here. Where was I? Then we got gorilla hands again.
01:55:46 Says folk first, luxury, decadence and sports ball comes last. It's time to put our big boy or big girl pants on and do what we can for our people.
01:55:57 As a Catholic, I'm not offended or wish harm on pagans. Well, there you go. That's the attitude to have, yeah, and yeah, I think look at at least that's what I'm about. I'm about race first. And if we can get most people thinking like that, most white people thinking like or even like, a good chunk of white people thinking like that, there's no end to what we can accomplish, but we got to have that solidarity, and that has to be the that has to be the glue that holds us together.
01:56:27 That's the glue that holds our enemies together.
01:56:30 So that's got to be the glue that holds us together. Gorilla hands also says Mormon and Protestants are still my folk white whites are facing extinction level event, and need to act accordingly. Every little bit to help each other out is very important. Exactly. That's why.
01:56:49 That's why I say. You know, we got to look Jews. Don't care if they are reformed Jews, if they're Hasidic Jews, if they're atheist Jews, they're Jews at the end of the day, and they they have each other's back. And that's like, if, unless we want to lose that's what we got to do, too. And then gorilla hands simply says, I think this button still works. He does. I didn't break that one.
01:57:16 It's too loud. All right. Then we got gorilla hands again. Says, oh, and I love the AI stuff. Well, I appreciate that. Then we got Oh, it's cut off. So let me get to the other screenshot that I took.
01:57:37 It's Oh phase, oh. Phase says, Oh yeah, the Negro song is that still around? That's got to be my hard drive somewhere. I wonder what I might have called it Negroid.
01:57:58 Yeah, I did Negro song. I think I don't know what else that could be. Yeah, there we go. Non AI, by the way.
01:58:18 Where am I now? That part's a guy, the voice people
01:58:28 built this country. It's actually my voice with a black girl filter, black girl AI filter, anyway, um, yeah, that's uh, stuff like that will. Will is way easier to make now, that took a long time. It took because, again, I was out of practice, and I don't even know how to use the software anymore.
01:59:01 Uh, of a says Negroid, some cybers Jono buttons would be very sweet. Not gonna lie. Anyways, I'll cash the replay. Looking forward to it. Devon, well, I appreciate that. And, yeah, well, that's the thing. Is, I can now make music for the the donut buttons. So and which is, which is something I'm working on, so I'm not just stealing weird, random techno, techno noise. All right, then we got blue cord with a big Christmas time. Dono, ah, it's not working. I did break it. Hold on. I might be able to manually make it play. Let me see, children today will be reading the best
Money Clip
01:59:50 Christmas ever. Our story begins
01:59:52 with the magic negro. You. It. Where did the show man go? The best
Devon Stack
02:00:18 Christmas ever. All right, blue cord. Blue cord says, Good evening, Mr. Stack, I hope all is well with you at the pillbox. Did you ever fix the hole in the roof? Merry Christmas and thank you for what you do.
02:00:36 Yes and no, it's not like it's patched. It needs to be I need to rip it up, or rip up the roof and and put down, like plywood or, you know, whatever the you know, I don't know that. I don't know, I don't know construction terms, but I need to rip up the roofing and re roof. It. It's, it's waterproof right now, and it's, it's good enough for right now, but it needs to be, it needs to be redone. It.
02:01:10 The problem is a big enough portion of it needs to be redone to where I'd have to it would have to be, well, I mean, probably this time of year, right, when it's not now the storms are kind of done, like now that it's not boiling fucking hot. So maybe this is something I'll do when I get back from holiday stuff, I'll rip up my roof and put a new roof on. It's just I'm not it's kind of something I've been putting off because that's going to be like a whole thing. I've never done any, I mean, I don't think it's gonna be that complicated.
02:01:47 You know, Mexicans can do it, right? So how hard can it be? It's, it's basically just gonna be ripping up, you know, roofing tile, not tiles, but shingles, and ripping up the wood. And, you know, it's nothing, you know, it's not like rebuilding a carburetor or anything like that.
02:02:06 So I just, I've been putting it off. I have it patched up. I got it to where it doesn't rain inside my house, but it needs, it's, you know, there's rotted because of the leaking, right? There's like rotted plywood underneath that needs to be pulled out and replaced. One thing at a time, one thing at a time, playing triage over here. All right. Well, thank you very much. Blue cord for the big dono there.
02:02:36 All right, then we had love and division. Love and division. Over on honesty, says, Merry Christmas. All Well, I appreciate that love and division. All right, then we can go back to entropy again, to the the new ones from tonight,
02:03:00 and we got someone stole my bike. Says, Deb, you posted on x how gays got in politics for their own interests. Do you think there's a correlation between them getting into politics and gay HIV meds like prep and others being subsidized by taxpayers? Might be worth doing a stream on I feel like it's fairly unknown, sadly, hope all is well. I mean, what do you mean?
02:03:26 Like, is there a reason why wait? Hold on. Well, obviously, yeah. I mean gays, I don't think that's why they got into politics, but I think that obviously fags have had a lot of influence in in politics for decades, at least decades, and probably longer.
02:03:45 But like, you know, more substantially in in the last several decades. And obviously that's that has influenced the the medications, you know, the fag medicine for, you know, being subsidized. It's also why,
02:04:04 you know, training surgeries are subsidized in many places, including some prison systems. So, yeah, I mean once, once, once you have fags and having, I mean, look, once you stop arresting fags. Because you remember, we used to the LAPD, the LAPD, used to do sting operations in male public bathrooms and arrest fangs. They used to, like, you know, kind of like they, they do the the
02:04:36 prostitution stings, right, where they have, like, a cop act like a prostitute and arrest guys. They're wrong. I don't even know if they do that anymore. Actually, anymore, actually, but they in the 1960s
02:04:46 Well, yeah, not super long ago, in the 1960s in LA, in LA, they were doing sting operations like that and arresting fags and in parks and stuff. Um. As soon as we stopped doing that, it was all downhill.
02:05:06 You know, what are you gonna do? But yeah, I was speaking more honestly. It's, I was talking more about, like, influencers and and talking heads, but obviously, yes, politicians too. There's just a lot of fucking fags, like, they're so and it's and it's not even party dependent. It's not like, oh, all the fags are Democrats.
02:05:28 No no. And it hasn't been that way. I don't know ever, really. I mean, you go back to the the Bush senior administration, but that's when they had that big scandal with the the gay call boys and and all that stuff. I did a stream about that. I think this this last year. So it's not, it's not a it's not a new phenomenon the fags have been on in both parties, just just as long as the Jews have been in both parties, you know?
02:06:02 So, yeah, there's and of course, in media, just generally, fags have been in media since we've had media, all right? We got hammer authority. Oh, it's not responding to my thing. That means it's probably broken, but I'm not going to refresh it, because it'll break it worse.
02:06:22 Hammer authority says regarding serial killers, even though Carl Panzer RAM wasn't Jewish, I can definitely see why Netflix won't do a movie about him, truly anti social in the clinical sense. Also, you've streamed on the on the road before, MS Paint was a vibe that needs a sequel.
02:06:45 Also, you've streamed on the road before, oh, I know your time out, yeah, yeah. But this is gonna be, I'm gonna be a lot more. I'm gonna be a lot more on the road. It's possible. It is, it is possible, but it's gonna be, it's gonna be a lot more gorilla streaming.
02:07:06 If I do it this time, we'll see, we'll see it's possible. It might be more difficult. It's gonna be more difficult to have privacy, let me put that way, it's gonna be difficult to have a quiet place to stream and and, and be talking about the kinds of topics that that we talk about here.
02:07:27 Oh yeah, I'll do what I can do. I'll have, I'll have the necessary hardware with me, and I might have internet. I might we'll see, we'll see corn pop the bad dude says, where all my niggler Faggots at? I don't know. I appreciate that. Bessemer says, Merry Christmas, Devon. Hope you have a wonderful break.
02:07:56 Well, I appreciate that. Yeah, it's needed. It's needed. I've been working real, real hard the last little bit look. I'm not complaining. I've, I've really had fun. I've really had fun working on with the AI stuff.
02:08:10 And I feel like I'm learning new creative software again, like I used to be really passionate about learning, you know, the new version of After Effects and and the new plugin that just came out and like, the, oh, look what you know after or cinema 4d can do now they added this feature.
02:08:28 I used to get really psyched about that, because that's what I was doing all day. And that part of my my job is, is really not it's it hasn't been a really something I've been able to focus on because I'm not really making animations anymore and, and just because AI is kind of disrupted all that so severely, it's been it's been fun. It's been fun playing around with these new tools and creating stuff, and, you know, having that kind of a creative outlet. So, yeah, have I been working myself to death?
02:09:05 Absolutely, but I'm not complaining. It's been fun. All right, then we got friendly fashion says, love what you're doing with AI music. You should repeat what you told me in the X reply about the work that goes into it, any reason why you don't include the music videos on YouTube, any long term plans with this experimental album?
02:09:28 Well, the you see YouTube auto, auto uploads it because I go through distributor that puts it on Spotify and everything else and then. So that's how they're getting it. There's only one music video. That's the one for shylocks, ghost. It's, I don't know I could post it somewhere.
02:09:47 I just did it more for, like fun. The as far as what you're talking about on the the ex post, I got pretty much already covered that basically I. What he was saying was, there's people that think that if you just put lyrics into it and then hit Make song, that you're done.
02:10:07 And while it's true that if you put lyrics in in it and then hit Make song, something comes out like a song, sort of, I guess, you know, I guess you can call it a song comes out and it would sound not like what I am posting. It doesn't sound like, it's not as just like with AI, right? Yeah, you can go to grok and type in bunny rabbit and hit go, and a bunny rabbit on a video will come up, but it's not going to be, you know, necessarily, what, what you're going to want to see, or what what it does not.
02:10:41 And, I mean, it might look insane, you know, like it might not be exactly what you want. Same thing with the music stuff. It takes a lot more than just that. That said it's, you know, like I said, it is easier than just sitting there with loops and a drum machine and the sequencers and playing with MIDI stuff. And, you know, but it's absolutely not just put lyrics in and hit a button and then song happens.
02:11:06 You know, every single one of the songs I've posted has taken several, several, several generations, in some cases, like 100 and it's never just a one shot like, oh, the whole song is done. It's always editing bits that get created together into one song. The way I described it in that ex post is it's not like being a musician.
02:11:35 It's not any more than getting an AI video is like being a cameraman or a cinematographer. It's not, it's more like, in the same way, making AI video is like being a director, because you're just directing a, you know, in a sense, a virtual camera crew to get what you want. It's like being a music producer. It's not like being a musician. It's like having a band, an electronic band, and you telling them what to do, and telling them, you know, this is the kind of song I want you to make for me, and then giving them notes on how to, you know, change it to better fit what you're looking for.
02:12:16 And it, there's not nothing intuitive about it, right, like whatever you have in your head, you have to be extremely specific on how you describe it. And again, I'm not trying to make it sound like it's some kind of super difficult process. I think it makes it very accessible. I think many of you guys could probably play around with it and maybe come up with some good stuff.
02:12:43 And I encourage you to try to do that. So I'm not trying to make it seem like you have to be some kind of, you know, virtual virtuoso to make this stuff.
02:12:51 You don't, but it's not. It's also not. It's just like it's real easy to make music slop if you don't, you know, have good lyrics, and you can't rely on the AI for lyrics. I mean, you can, but it'll make that crazy shit, and you can't rely on it to to come up with something that sounds good the first or second or maybe 50th or 80th time, and even when it when it does, there's always gonna be some kind of weird artifact in it that you have to fix, or, you know, you might have to combine three or four different generations, or, you know, something like that. So anyway, that's pretty much what I was saying on Twitter.
02:13:39 And look, whatever I'm not trying to say, like, like, I said that you have to be some kind of genius to make this stuff. But it's also not as easy. If it was as easy as some of those people are saying, then they would make it, you know, just you should make it right, like, and I'm not saying that to be like, Oh yeah, you do it. Dan, I'm saying, No, really, if it is that easy, that you know, if you, if you have that ability to make it that easily, then you should, what's you should be doing that, like you should be doing that.
02:14:12 Because there are, there are people out there that that could do it, if I can do it right. So people should be doing it so that, yeah, it's, it's not as it's not as simple as it's just any more than, than hitting a button to make the Whitman's explained, the Whitman's not with maybe a handful of exceptions, and it's mostly just like, it was, like, filler stuff. None of the shots in the Whitman's was like the first take.
02:14:43 Like often it was like 10 or 20 takes to get finally, the shot that I wanted, in the case of the churro shot, when I was trying to demonstrate that same thing with the music, the churro shot took, like,
02:14:57 so many generations, and I had to make so. So many changes and and I had to settle for something that wasn't exactly what I wanted, right? Same thing with the music stuff is, if you if you're really trying to get the sound that you want, you're going to make a lot of fucking generations, a lot of tweaking the prompts and a lot of it's like I said, it's like working with a band and having to give them really specific instructions on what you want, and and they're never going to 100% they can't read your mind, you know, it's never going to 100% be what you want.
02:15:32 So sometimes you have to settle for something else, or, you know, and just like with the AI stuff, with the video. Sometimes, sometimes you have to, you know, adjust like, the lines, you know, the verses, to make it come out right. Because I've had like there I tried to make like I've only posted, well, there's like, four now, right? Four pale siren songs, which I know very, very low effort name, but it is what it is.
02:16:11 And that's not how many songs I made. I made a bunch of songs, but they, most of them, are crap. I couldn't get them to work. You know, like, I'd have, like, the lyrics I thought were really good, and I'd have the style that I wanted. And then, you know, after like, 80 generations trying to make it, you know, make the delivery on time and and how you want it, you just get, yeah, you got to kill your babies, as they say.
02:16:39 Now you gotta. You gotta just be like, No, it's the sunk cost fallacy.
02:16:42 Thing you know, starts to kick in. We're like, this song is just not gonna work. And, yeah, maybe, maybe the lyrics are just bad. Maybe that's why it's not sounding good. So anyway, um, let's see where are we at? We got my lying eyes. My lying eye says, Merry Christmas. Can I get a one Wookie before 2026 I might be able to manually Wookie.
02:17:16 I have to find the Wookiees on my computer. Is this a wookie? I think this is a wookie. We're gonna I don't know.
02:17:33 It was a wookie. I named these files just as as bizarrely as you might expect. So you're lucky that was a Wookiee. Thank you very much. My lying eyes. Oh, you all say, take care of them bees. It's cold. Be Well, see you on the planes, brother. Well, I'll tell you what that it's not cold.
02:17:55 The bees are still active. The reason, like I said, my allergies are bad right now, is the bees are, are getting pollen right now, like they're still working away. I could probably pull more honey off some of them, but I'm gonna, you know, the survival rate has, has not been so impressive. Last year. It was bad, right? So I'm gonna let them just do their thing. Um, let's see. And then we got sacred squirrel.
02:18:24 Sacred squirrel, the big Dono. Let me see, I got a manually, big Dono. This thing, money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend himself. Look how Jewy this bag is. Do
02:18:58 Oh, hit the wrong button. All right, see when I manually do it. I forgot that it doesn't auto take it out of the list here. That's all right. This will work. All right, so sacred squirrel says almost or got almost everything in order to move my order curious into the wild. Even got a magic toilet that will Holocaust our waste. You and churro, have a Merry Christmas. Well, I appreciate that.
02:19:27 Yeah, that's, that's, that's always a big that's that people forget about that, that aspect, if you don't have a septic system, you're gonna have to do something. I mean, you can do compost toilet, which, it's not as it's not as bad as you think. But you know, you have to have, like, a long term plan for that too.
02:19:47 You can't just be like, I'm compost toileting without having you got to any and that's something you can't fuck up on, because you will get weird. You know, human poo pathogens in that compost.
02:20:00 To, unless you do it right, like, you have to have it go above a certain temperature to kill off all the pathogens in there's like a chemical, you know, makeup that the compost test. I mean, there's, there's a lot of information on there on how to do it safely.
02:20:20 But it's, it's not, it's not just like, you know, poo poo in this compost pile. Or, you know what I mean, like, there's, like, there's a science to it and it, you know, it can be bad. And I would, even though, like, they say it's fine, I would never use that compost for, like, anything you're going to eat. I, you know, you you can use it for maybe decorative plants, but I would not want that compost, you know, feeding the plants to cheat, because if you get it wrong, if you get it wrong, you know, that can cause some serious issues.
02:20:51 But that's one way to do do things when you're off grid, or you can, you know, there, it's not super difficult to do a septic system. There's, again, tons of, tons of YouTube videos of people that have done off grid septic systems. That's probably, I would think that's probably the better way to go.
02:21:10 I mean, there's some people that do the compost thing. It just that just seems it's just kind of gross and too much work. But the septic system thing is not that hard. And then SIG would squirrel again says, check out red ice recent show our two options if you get the chance. The last 20 minutes are pretty distressing, by the way, all those goofy Christmas tunes like Rudolph are by Jews.
02:21:34 Well, I know this. I did. I did Rudolph the Jewish reign, or what was it called? I think it's called Rudolph, the Jewish reindeer. I did that video years ago.
02:21:45 Many before anyone was saying this stuff, by the way, I'll have to say, I know I'm not the first one to notice that, but in our circles, I'm pretty much the first one to notice that, and only as I noticed it was because Dennis Prager used to brag about it on his radio show when I back when I used to listen to Dennis Prager, many, many, many years ago, over a decade ago now.
02:22:10 And so that's what brought it to mind. I was like, I remember he used to always, he used to always, you know, brag about how Jews had been so instrumental in making all this Christmas music and and in retrospect, I'm like, maybe that's not the best thing, actually.
02:22:26 And then I went and looked it up and saw that, wow, it wasn't, wasn't just a few of them, it was most of them that you hear on the radio around this time of year. Um, but yeah, yeah. Yeah. All right. Thank you very much. Sacred squirrel and Merry Christmas to you. Then we got Attila the hung.
02:22:47 Attila the Hong says hi to Evan. Speaking of serial killers, I was reading the story of a German who hid the corpses of his victims in the attic above his flat when the cop showed up after his neighbors complained about the smell. They blamed it on the floods. Oh, in the food on the foods floods.
02:23:08 His Greek neighbors cooked, which the cops believed and left. Can I get an anti semitism intensifies? I can hit the button. I don't think that's broken. I Is this the one anti semitism intensified? Wow,
02:23:43 up. Yeah, it's just pretty much the dough things that are broken, because that's what I was fixing. All right? I gotta, yeah, I gotta check out this red ice thing. People. I mean, I usually watch their I haven't in a few weeks, but I typically would watch their show or listen to it rather.
02:24:02 But it's been a few weeks since, because I've just been, honestly, I haven't, I haven't had much time for anything since, like November, or really October. So I've been, I've been a busy been a busy bee since October. Uh, let's see here. Then we got, uh,
02:24:21 sacred squirrel says hammer authority. I read the book about old Carl, the myth is that one of the last things he said, If the human race had one neck, I would strangle it to death.
02:24:37 Uh, old. Who's old? Carl, oh, the Carl Panzram regarding serial killers. Carl Panzram wasn't Jewish. Look him up. Who the fuck is Carl's pant? Carl Panzram, no, that's taken away. Back. That's not why I've heard 1930s or no, 18 or no, no 1930s although he was Eastern European. Wait, are you sure he's not Jewish? I
02:25:16 think he's Jewish. Is let's see here, and the only reason why I say that is it says he was the sixth of seven children born to East Prussian immigrants, Johan, John Gottlieb, Panzram and Matilda, Elizabeth Panzram Gottlieb, as well as being a pinball company is a Jewish last name, So I don't know. I think there's a little jew in there. I don't know. You come you're an Eastern European immigrant that comes to America around the turn of the century. Pretty high likelihood of Jew blood in there somewhere.
02:26:13 And his dad's name is Johan Gottlieb Panzram. So I don't know. I think there's a little, I think there's, uh, at least some Jew. I don't know for I don't know 100% but I know, I know for a fact, Gottlieb is a Jew name because it's because the pinball stuff, because I know, I know a little bit of pinball history, and that guy was a joke. All right, so then we got
02:26:48 where are we at? Here? Rivers of blood says, Once I asked my favorite music genre was in front of a bunch of guys, I said classical, and someone remarked, I would turn out to be a serial killer. Ironic, since the guy who commented was some bald oil driller with a with goblin spawn.
02:27:09 Thanks for putting this myth to rest. And Merry Christmas. Oh, yeah, nothing scarier than a like, you know, that's what they did, you know, with Hannibal Lecter, right? They tried to make him as genteel as possible, you know, like, oh, look, this, this classy, highly educated white guy is, you know, he secretly wants to eat your brain.
02:27:31 And that's the case with all these serial killers, right? They're never, they're never. Like, well, in the case of Buffalo Bill, I guess, and he was a tranny. But they, you know, they, they muddied the waters with the Nazi shit. But so often, like the most popular serial killers, are depicted as these highly educated, mild mannered men. Attila, the hung says, Devon, I wish you and all the insomnia stream gang, a Merry Christmas. Well, I appreciate that Merry Christmas to you as well. You and Yours.
02:28:06 Then sacred squirrel, again, says it's an incendiary toilet. Oh, never even heard of that. After a week of use, I have to take a cup full of ashes out of the tray, kind of like we had to do in Auschwitz. How is churro? Hope he stays out of trouble. Merry Christmas to all my white brothers and sisters.
02:28:27 He's been MIA a few days. I'm not worried yet. I don't get worried till it's been over a week, and even then. I mean, since he's been back after his after his, like, five month hiatus, there's been a couple times he's been gone, like, a week, and, you know, there's, I don't know where he goes, I don't know where he goes, but he comes back. And he's been gone about, I think it's like day number three.
02:28:53 And, yeah, I don't, I don't know why, I don't know why he leaves, but, you know, sure he'll be back. And then I got people watching it Well, assuming he comes back, I got people Well, either way, I got people that are going to feed him when I'm, you know, the days that I'm gone. So he'll, if he, if he happens to come back on a day that I'm gone, then he'll have, he'll have someone here.
02:29:23 Defeat him anyway, because someone's going to be here, all right? They want to go to rumble. Well, actually, let me refresh entropy first. Yeah, I knew it. It broke.
02:30:07 Gonna wait no. It says I'm stir.
02:30:14 Make sure now that it's loaded up. Make sure I'm not missing any of these. I got that one, got that one. Got that one. We got till of the hung. We got sacred squirrel, sacred squirrel, my line eyes. We got friendly Fash. We got Bessemer. We got corn, pop the bad dude, hammer thorzine And, oh, this is an oh, wait, no, I got that one too. That was someone stole my bike. Okay, so those all worked.
02:30:54 Then we go over to RUMBLE, RUMBLE, RUMBLE, RUMBLE, all right, so on. Rumble, we got either who's Joe said a lot of stuff or rumble repeated a lot of who's Joe things. Let's see here, who's Joe. Who's Joe says, Hey, Devon, I'm getting a new job. Hopefully I can get overtime and send you more money. But I have had or but I had a few points. First of all, in one of your recent streams, you said people need to join clubs and build communities. People were too scared because of Waco.
02:31:33 But when you zoom out the graph, you'll see that clubs were very common, so much so that the Flintstones Incorporated. I think you meant the words little jumbled there, the Flintstones had like
02:31:51 a a men's club in it. In American culture, people used to be heavily involved in communities and a RE and a return to that is great for social well being and nepotistic career advancement. The famous book Bowling Alone finds the root cause of the decline of community life. Robert Putnam wrote restoring the American community as a guide book on what to do to bring back community life, you are right. People need to get over this fear and the decline of community life. Robert Putnam wrote, restoring, oh, wait, it is.
02:32:33 It is repeating a bunch of your stuff. Let's see, restore community and its benefits. Also, there has been a string of left wing assassinations, and the Charlie Kirk shooter had a whole Discord server where they talked about violence. It's repeating you a bunch of times. Is there another part to that? It just repeated your thing like a million times over. So it might be a little bit jumbled.
02:33:12 Why didn't do that? Tyler Robinson proves that the feds aren't all powerful or all knowing, plus adding on to what you've said in a recent stream is that 80% of people are incompetent, including feds, join communities. I think this fear of Feds being all knowing and powerful are pushed by conspiracy theorists like Candace Owens, who say it wasn't actually Robinson, it was the deep state.
02:33:44 Tendency to conspiracy is bad. One last idea, if I work overtime at this new job and make 400 a week doing DoorDash on top of these multiple jobs, I can make roughly 3k weekly. I want to make a project and share it with you. My core idea is taking top 10 population centers in each state and finding some key info about different blue collar job categories, taking average, median and pay range plus 25 this is getting complicated, plus 25% of wages for each field in each area, basically creating a job guide made to help people get high income quickly. I can make 3k a week with two warehouse jobs and a side gig. Imagine if a bunch of us had high pay, and that's repeating your things a million times again.
02:34:57 I might come back to you because I'm. Hmm, hold on it repeated your thing like a million times, at least on my screen. Dr, Jelly finger says I was going to suggest another stream topic, but I'm going by really ah, but I'm really more curious about the Mossad sponsored Sikh terrorism in Canada. Sorry, I've already mentioned, yeah. Well, I'm also curious. I'm not looking at that, all right, go back. Sorry.
02:35:23 Who's Joe. I didn't want to forget that one. I'm having to scroll through like 80 versions of what you've said to get down to to see if there's a another one after that. Let's see here. Blah, blah, blah. Why is it repeating everything so much.
02:35:48 All right, then, Dr jolly finger again, says, also, I've been several weeks and haven't mentioned it, but Eli Weinstein is officially back in jail. What do you think of his chances of another pardon are I?
02:36:01 I don't know. I kind of, I kind of feel like it would be too even for Trump. I don't know, though, is anything over the line for Trump. What he's talking about is the the Jewish scam artist that Trump pardoned, who is now back in jail for, for running yet another multi, you know, million dollar scam. Would he get pardoned again? I mean, I don't know it's Trump, so who fucking knows, right?
02:36:27 I mean, at least not tell it won't be until he's on his way out like Trump will at least have the the wherewithal to wait till you know it doesn't matter anymore that he doesn't. All right, back to who's Joe here. All right, the my elevator pitch is basically a map of where to find high paying jobs low experience jobs, and giving tips on how to stack those to maximize income and base of high earners. Would give greater funding if I flush this project out and share it with you. Could you do a stream to cover this topic?
02:37:05 I would love to hear your thoughts on this. Sorry for the text while, yeah, this is a little long, man. I'm just being honest. But, but Miss streams. I mean, I don't know. Like I said, What are you proposing to make some website that helps people find jobs? I mean, I'm not getting, like a stream on your website, but, I mean, I don't know. I don't know that that's a topic that that I would be covering on the stream.
02:37:39 Just, you know, hey, here's how you get jobs. I think most, I mean, I don't know that that's like something I could spend three hours time. I think most people, not you know everyone. Everyone knows what their strength is, if they need basic, you know, employment advice in terms of, you know, how to get through an interview and stuff like that. I mean, I don't know this is the right, you know, venue for that.
02:38:04 But, yeah, if you look, if you have a project that you think is going to help white people get employed, yeah, go, go for it. You know, if you think it's going to be useful for people, I don't know that. I'm not 100% picking up what you're laying down in terms of what, what you what you think you're going to be putting together, because there's already a lot of stuff like this. I mean, there's already websites that give you like s i It's been a long time since I've been, you know, on the job market.
02:38:39 So I don't remember the names of them, but I know that they existed, like, 10 years ago, right where they'll tell you the based on the area, they'll tell you the average, you know, what people get paid for on, you know, for those jobs in those areas. And so a lot of this stuff already exists. I mean, there's, there's a lot of money in that, in, you know, in recruiting and in hiring people. So there's a lot of, there's already a lot of resources out there. If look, if you got some kind of unique take to it, I mean, go for it.
02:39:12 But like I said, I think that with with with not a whole lot of research, you can usually get a lot of that information already, unless I'm just not understanding 100% what you're saying that you're going to put together there. But, yeah, I mean, look, blue collar stuff's out there.
02:39:33 There's a lot of stuff that people can do to make money, and if you're willing to put in a little extra hours, and there's, I've always said that when you're younger, especially, you know, that's the time to grind. Try to get that that ball of money saved up is early on in your life as possible. Don't blow it all on on the bar or on chicks, you know, like or or stupid you know.
02:40:00 Frivolous stuff, get your ball of money going. Make the sacrifices that if you know you're not coming from money that your ancestors clearly did not make, you know whether certain because of circumstance or something else, they didn't make it. That's why you don't have the money, right? So you gotta, you gotta make those sacrifices and get that ball of money going. And if that means you got to work three jobs. Look, if you're able to do it and you're going to be more, I'll tell you you're more able to do that when you're younger.
02:40:35 I used to, you know, when I worked as a bouncer, i That wasn't my only job. I worked as a a bouncer at night, and then I worked as a in a television station in the morning. In fact, it sucked because, like, there were days where, because the bar closes at two, right, and then you're there and maybe tell three or four cleaning up, and then you I had to be at the the TV station at four in the morning for the morning news to get, you know, to start prepping for the morning news.
02:41:08 And so I just, I would just have to drive directly, or actually, for a while I was riding a bike. I had to ride my bike from the bar in my, you know, bouncer uniform, you know, which is like a shirt, you know, to the television station, and then without sleeping, and then I had to do the morning show, and then I'm there, just because then I'm doing commercials after I do the morning show, and then I had to ride My bike home, sleep for like, a couple hours, and I'd be back at the bar,
02:41:45 because the, you know, the bar would open up, or, you know, they, they didn't have a bouncer during the day, but, you know, they need a bouncer, you know, soon as, I mean, I don't remember, it was like, maybe, like, five or six in the evening, you know. So, yeah, I wouldn't be able to do that today.
02:42:01 I won't be able to, I don't know. I guess physically I'd be able to do it, but I have the, I don't know that I'd have the motivation to do something like that anymore. But yeah, I do that. You know that's that's when you got to do it. That's when you got to do it, and hopefully find better paying jobs than then bouncer and and video bitch. All right, so we got anyway. Thank you very much. Who's Joe.
02:42:26 Then we got zazzy mctazzbot. I once had my hippie boss tell me, zazzy, you have the face of an ax murderer. I said that's because of my beady eyes and my prominent brow ridge. She agreed she may have been hitting on me. I don't know. Should there be a dump bump at the I don't, I don't, hmm,
02:42:53 I don't get it, Jazzy, I'm not following you. And then zazzy mctazzbat says, I like that. You keep hammering the blacks are way more dangerous than whites. Nail right on the head. Streams like this give us all the ammo to fight back against. We was kings bullshit. Thank you.
02:43:11 Well, yeah, like I said, this is you can look it up. I gave you the name of the the database too, by the way, and you can look that up. It's, it's, it's all public information. Now it the data is separated in two time periods. It's post 90s, which is the more accurate data. Pre 90s data is very iffy, because they didn't really, there wasn't even, like, a solid definition of, quote, unquote, a serial killer.
02:43:40 And so the the official numbers pre 90s are like, way out of whack with, you know, it's like, it is like,
02:43:50 higher in terms of white people. Like, that's the because, you know, again, like I said, the data is weird. But post 90s, it's been pretty consistently mega, mega black murder. So you can look that data up. It's publicly available. You can look you can ask even woke ass, chat GPT will tell you this.
02:44:12 If you ask chat GPT, it'll probably give you the qualifier of the 90s in this database, which I think that's when it started existing. But since, pretty much we've been keeping records on this stuff, that's that's how it's shaken out. Tyler wo five says replay gang, I hope you're doing well, Mr. Stack, haven't stayed awake long enough to catch a stream in forever. But whenever you, whenever I do, you always get the support?
02:44:42 Well, I appreciate that. Tyler. WF, five, and like I said, maybe next year we'll be on a little earlier, but we'll see. I haven't I haven't really had a chance to even think about it. It's been madness over here.
02:44:54 And I don't know if you guys can tell I'm not exactly a planner. I. I know one of these guys that like plans things, you know, far in advance, I'm basically always just winging it like, I don't know why. I've just that's, that's how I, you know, I kind of shoot from the hip. It's always worked out. It's probably not the best. But, yeah, I'm not. Nobody's, you know, nobody's real, structured people. It's a little chaotic over here at all times. That's just, you know, that's how I exist. I thrive in the chaos. I thrive in the chaos.
02:45:40 So we'll figure out what we're doing. All right. Then we got Ken crab, something I don't know how you say that 858, longtime fan Wasp here first time sending a rant. Thanks for all the streams and love the historic videos. Dirt meat was pretty great. Keep up the good fight. Well, I appreciate that. And, yeah, that was, it was what I'm so glad people got, you know, thought that that was funny, because there was a point where I was just sleep deprived, and I was like, this is either really funny or it's really stupid.
02:46:22 And I can't tell which I just I can't I'm too tired to know. But luckily, thankfully, because, man, that would have been embarrassing if it was just like this train wreck of stupid. I'm like, No, but really, it's funny. I'm glad, I'm glad people liked it. I'm glad you liked it. There we got lil wagon says just received a telegram from Erica Kirk's handkerchief. It reads as follows, faggots. I think the faggots button works.
02:46:54 There we go. All right. Thank you very much. Little wagon. Then we got Reaver from Craigslist. Hey, Devon Reaver from Odyssey here, would you ever consider doing a stream on Shula myth Firestone? She was a Jew of typical origin and a radical feminist author. She met a fitting end really. Well. I will into that and that to my notes. Never heard of Shulam myth, Firestone.
02:47:30 Wait, I guess that makes, I don't know why I never clicked Firestone is that would be a Jewish name, huh? I guess Firestone tires is a Jewish name. Nope, I don't have any Firestone tires on my cars. I don't know if it's still a Jewish company, but that my guess is that it would be right now I want to know is Firestone owned by and operated by Jews? Firestone tires? Where would I find this out?
02:48:09 Happen. It was founded. My Harvey Firestone. What's your early life?
02:48:25 Might just be German.
02:48:34 He might just be German. And currently the CEO, is Italian. Okay, I don't know why I wanted to know that.
02:48:52 All right. Then we got D man says, I was gonna mention non white serial killers, but you beat me to it. And then D man again, says the scary noise with spacey is stock music. I've heard it in a lot of TV shows and video games.
02:49:09 No, I just thought it was interesting that he would edit it that way, that he would edit like, some ominous like, dun, dun, dun, like at the end of his thing, like, out of at the end of his weirdly threatening video that he posted, like, amidst his, his controversies and and people dying surrounding his, you know, it just, I don't know that there's something, there is something genuinely serial Killer ish about Kevin Spacey and probably most homosexuals, all right, then we got, oh, that one's a repeat. That's a repeat. Yeah, rumbles repeating.
02:49:54 A billion of these that I it's hard to get through it. D man again says two crazy or two or cool things. Things about you. Dev one, Sigourney Weaver actually lived in the same apartment building my mother lived in when she grew up in New York City. Interesting. Number two, it's her birthday today, so watch really your moms are Sigourney Weavers. Let me look
02:50:28 Sigourney. We were 70 fucking six now, holy shit. She was born in 1949 1949 for fuck sake. I don't know. I don't really. I mean, here she was old. I didn't realize she was that fucking old, 19 fucking 49 No, her birthday is October 8, so it must be your mom's All right. Well, happy birthday.
02:50:53 Happy birthday to D man. D man's mom. So I guess D woman, but I'm bump. All right. Watch the collapse. Podcast says, Sorry, I haven't done out enough these past few months been on the replay. Gang, love you. Man, hope all is well. Devon loving the AI clips lately also, will there be a pre order sign option of the other rope? Two? I don't know.
02:51:21 I don't know depends on, I don't know if I can do a signed one, because of how it's going to be released. You know, I thought about, I'll tell you what, when, when, when there's the box set, when there's the box set of the trilogy, because it's going to be a trilogy, when there's a box set of the trilogy hardcover, I'll make a special signed hardcover trilogy box set that I will personally,
02:52:01 I will make separately, and I will personally will make it limited edition, so it won't just be like some print on demand kind of a thing, right? And then I will personally ship it to you guys when that happens. But that probably won't be that'll be down the road quite a ways.
02:52:22 That's something I won't have to worry about for a while. All right, then we got Dr Jen Stein set or Jen Steen. Perhaps, I don't know now I'm scared of white nerds. Well, there you go. White nerds are are murderous. Kalergi says, If Hollywood has taught me anything? It's that male, black and brown strangers are just friends.
02:52:44 I haven't met, met yet, these weird white men, on the other hand, I'll be keeping an eye out Absolutely. All right. Yo. Jimbo Rockford says, I think sag country Weaver said that. She said, Well, all right. Said, what she said was because he was a white male taking charge, and he had the audacity to tell strong, independent women what to do, that makes him evil, of course. I mean, like at the end, when is that taking charge? When he has her like,
02:53:18 Oh, he's hanging her with a with a metal wire. I guess, in a matter of speaking, it's taking charge, but I don't know. D man 119 says about Silence of the Lambs, a friend of mine is a corrections officer, and mentioned it's always blacks who throw sperm at people and masturbate in view of people, pretty gnarly stuff.
02:53:41 Yeah, I could like a gone without knowing that, and we got a D man that says, I think Buffalo Bill actually tucked his dick between his leg. What's with you guys between his legs and science the lambs? Normally, I'd go back to see but I don't think I want to psychos like him in fiction and non fiction, get the pit? Well, ironically, Buffalo Bill himself had a pit. In fact, is that still around the Do you guys remember this? I
02:54:34 Let's see how this will download. This is a very old name. How many years ago? 14 years ago. That's an old name. See if I can get it to download. It's
02:54:58 an oldie but goodie. Or at least I remember it being good. Maybe it's hot garbage.
02:55:14 See if it'll load up here.
Lego Buffalo Bob
02:55:32 It rubs the lotion on its skin. It does this when it's told, it rubs the lotion on its skin, or else, it gets the hose. And when it's done, there's one more thing, a simple little task. It's Put the fucking lotion in the basket.
02:55:52 Put the fucking lotion in the basket. All these stupid women are the same.
02:56:00 Helps me not to think of them as human, so I call them it instead of by their names,
Lego Victim
02:56:09 Mister, please. No more abuse. Can't you see, there's no excuse. My family's probably wondering where I've been.
Lego Buffalo Bob
02:56:17 Most of you so your skin gets loose. Stop crying out you big fat girls, just put the fucking lotion on your skin and then put the fucking lotion in the basket. Your chances for survival are remote. I'm impervious to all your silly whining, so wipe down before I jam a moth right down your fucking throat,
Lego Victim
02:56:43 Mister, please. My mom's got money. Let me go. This isn't funny. Cops are sure to send somebody Turn Me Loose. Don't be a dummy.
Lego Buffalo Bob
02:56:52 Listen to your screaming whale. Keep it down, you fucking whale. Mind the broken finger nailed. The last girl climbed halfway but furled.
Lego Victim
02:57:16 Precious down here, you piece of shit,
Lego Buffalo Bob
02:57:22 put the fucking poodle in the basket. I kill you, but there's someone at the door. Don't make me go and get my gun and shoot you. It's a waste of skin. They don't sell fat girls in a fucking store. Pour my fucking precious in the basket. Don't you hurt my
02:57:48 one and only friend. You don't know what pain is, but I'll cheat you. Lay a fucking finger on my poodle's pretty
Devon Stack
02:58:02 head. Ah, yes, musical Lego version of a scene from Silence and the lambs. All right. How did we get on that? Exactly, then we got D man 119 says, Have a Merry Christmas, Devon. Since you mentioned Jigsaw from the saw series, live or die, make your choice.
02:58:32 You know, I've never seen, I've never seen a Saw movie. I mostly because I've never been like a gore kind of, you know, I like psychological thrillers or whatever I can get into, right? And it's not, you know, not like, I'm, I'm, I can't, you know, like seven, for example, has a lot of, like, gross shit in it, and so I can't handle that. But it's like, when it's saw, where it just seems like it's hyper Gore for no reason.
02:59:02 I don't know. It just seemed a little I don't know. I've never seen, I've never seen, and there's like, a billion of those movies. I've never seen any of them. I've seen parts, obviously. So there's just, there's no way you can't have seen at least some of it. But I've never seen the whole, you know, any of the whole movies. All right. Then we got the Shogun says that you're you have to update your floppy, tape, Flash disc, modem, drive, data key to get the donut button to work. Devon, I know, I know I need to update the internet modem, cable, monitor, tape drive
02:59:42 and we got D. Man says, I appreciate your talents with AI, but I have a zero tolerance policy towards AI music or documentaries. Please make real music and real documentary style videos you made on YouTube again. Well, I'll tell you what with your $1 donut. Man, that's not going to be paying for real. The for real documentaries. All right,
03:00:05 you know, there's a reason why I'm having to use AI, and that $1 is the reason
03:00:13 you can't complain if that's what, if that's what you're bringing to the table. Man. All right, we got Rupert says replay gang here. When is the next stream? Good night, Professor. Stack, Merry Christmas. Well, Merry Christmas to you. Rupert, all right, then we got junkie nurse, junkie nurse with a big Christmas. Dono children, today we'll be reading the best Christmas ever. Our story begins with the magic negro.
Money Clip
03:00:51 Where did the show man go?
Devon Stack
03:01:00 The best Christmas ever. All right, junkie nurse. Junkie nurse says, Merry Christmas. Could you do a short breakdown of the AI music stuff you've been using and what you think is the best video AI to mess with. I want to fuck around with some of this stuff. I've been using suno. I remember if it's suno.com or it's S, U, N, O, is the music
03:01:37 thing it is, you pretty much have to pay for one of the plans, because they give you almost no credits, and then it does an amazing job if you need, like, a simple background music track where it's, you know, it doesn't have to be amazing, just needs to be like, I wish I'd had this, you know, when I was doing Video all day long and having to go buy copyright free music in I mean, it for that. It's perfect. It'll crank out very generic sounding, but not bad sounding music,
03:02:14 especially with no lyrics, you know, like if you just need a back background track, and you know how to describe music, it'll do that all day long, and it's great. And the beyond that, though, you know you're gonna be, you're gonna be making a lot of generations of stuff, or if you do, like, a if you want to do a parody, right, like, if you want to do a Christmas song parody, pretty easy. It depends on the genre, too. Some genres,
03:02:49 if the music is less complex, like country music, like, I think I was like, a couple weeks ago, I mentioned that the number one song in the country genre was literally, and it's an AI country music song, and that's because country music is pretty basic, and, yeah, not to say that whoever wrote the song had zero talent, yet you have to, you still have to write a song.
03:03:18 But it makes sense that country would be probably one of the first genres that that would happen in, because it's very formulaic. I mean, come on, it is, and it's, you know, it's not the most complex music in the world. So if you're gonna be, it depends on the genre, it'll do better at certain genres.
03:03:37 But again, you're probably not gonna get what you want the first try. And my workflow is basically, you know, I write, first I write the lyrics, and then I plug them in with a extremely detailed explanation as to what I want it to sound like. And then one of the reasons why it to make so many generations is then it's the tweet game. First of all, it's never going to come out.
03:04:02 The first one's not going to sound like what you want. And so you have to change the prompt, change the prompt, change the prompt, change the prompt, change the prompt, then you'll finally get sort at least in the ballpark. But then there's a prompt, the lyrics usually like it's not singing when lines right, or it's totally off. So then you're tweaking the lyrics, tweaking the lyrics, tweaking lyrics.
03:04:23 Then you finally get the lyrics to where it's like, it likes, you know, at least it's sort of delivering it how you want, in sort of the right genre that you want. And then it's tweak mode, tweak mode, tweak mode. And then you might get lucky or more or close enough, and then you can go in and chop it up in, you know, like Adobe Audition, Audacity, Sound Forge, whatever audio thing you want to use.
03:04:54 In fact, I don't know what people use anymore. I used to use Acid Pro, which I don't even know if that's a thing. Anymore, but that was like a loop program. It probably really, you can make loops in that thing all day long. You can make loops again. It depends on your genre.
03:05:10 You can easily make loops, but it'll it'll produce, like a full song. It's not just a loop, but that's probably the best, the best workflow would be to use, like some kind of looping software, and if you really want to be but you have a little bit of wiggle room with suno. The real downside is the vocals. The vocals are are limited, especially with female voices. I feel like there's more range on the male voices.
03:05:41 The reason I don't use the male voices is for at least the genres that I like male vocalists in. I did not have a lot of success with a voice that sounded cool, like it just it always sounded like, like dollar store, you know, like it was, like, it just sounded like generic, like, copyright free music, like there was no, I couldn't get a voice like is, even though there was more variety in voices, you get much different voices when you, when You started playing with male voices that none of them sounded good.
03:06:25 And I think that'll change. I think that the other problem is, too, is once you lock in a voice that you like, you might keep the prompt the same and regenerate, and the voice will be 100% different.
03:06:37 And you can try to mitigate that by being really specific with the voice. But even then, I've run into problems where it's just, you know, it's a roll of the dice. There's, it's hard to get consistency, but that's, that's pretty much the process I use there. As far as the video AI stuff, I was just using grok, but that's why the the
03:07:03 aspect ratio is weird. And, you know, with grok, it's just, you just describe what you want. Same thing. You'll learn. You'll learn to, you know, I just, I recommend playing around with it, and you'll learn that they have the it has its quirks, both the the
03:07:20 music AI and the video AI. It'll take a lot of trial and error before you start to realize you know what it wants to hear, to get what you want it to do. And even then, it's not, it's still kind of hit and miss. But if you're if you're patient, if you're patient and repetitive, you will get, you'll eventually get something you want. You know, it's really, it's it's about patience. It's about, like I said, in terms of the music.
03:07:53 It's like being a music producer working with an unruly band that is not very good at intuitively knowing what you want. And so you have, you have to be extremely specific with with how you describe the music and, and even then, it's not, it's not a guarantee the the video AI is exactly the same.
03:08:14 You can be you have to be extremely specific with what you want and, and even then, you might not get what you want. So there's always a element of randomness to it and and that's the problem too. There were the real frustrating thing with the music there. There was a couple instances where I had a typo in the lyrics, right? Like I fucked up a word when I had it in there.
03:08:43 And I didn't notice at first, because I was just, it was always so bad that, like, I was just hitting, you know, regenerate again, and then it would nail it, but then there'd be the it would sing a word wrong, and he can't, I mean, there's not, you really can't, you know, there's nothing you can do about it. And then you'll never make it sound like that again, and so it is kind of, it's just very there's just a level of randomness in it that makes it suck. But, you know, is it faster than doing it from scratch? Absolutely, absolutely.
03:09:18 But thank you very much. Junkie nurse, then we got lamb chops. 1977 says, Have you seen the boys next door? 1985 it's an anti white male movie about two youths that go on a killing spree in LA directed by a woman. It insinuates that most serial killers are white men. No, but I would imagine that pretty much every Hollywood movie insinuates that, and I will copy that in my notes, if I can find my notes, where'd my notes go?
03:09:57 I have too many tabs on. Uh, I've maxed out the tabs on notepad. All right, thank you very much. Lamb chops. All right. Scroll, scroll, scroll, then we got D man, says, Thank you very much for your hard work all year, and I look forward to at least, at least this one's not $1 D man, all right, you're working a little closer towards me doing the document? No, but realistically speaking, AI is just it's too much of a time saver.
03:10:30 Look forward to the next stream. I hope it's the Knoxville double homicide. If you're up up for it, I can't wait. Merry Christmas. Devon, well, I appreciate that. D man, Dr Jen Stein says, make more gay black Jewish music. Gay black Jewish music, well, I don't know what gay black Jewish music is, but yeah, we got a gravy Bear says, recently, I read Rob Halford's bio, and he talks about going to truck stop bathrooms and waiting all night in a stall, tapping his feet as a secret code and waiting for another fag to reply.
03:11:16 Yeah, that used to be the way before the internet. I guess fags. Bags didn't have it so easy, huh? Then we got Whiskey Tango. Foxtrot says Devon any thoughts on discourse with the new Steven Spielberg? Alien or disclosure, not discourse. All will be disclosed. Movie Trailer being released in the avatar fire Nash movie release on December 19. I don't know. I mean, I think it's just marketing. I think it's marketing.
03:11:49 We'll see. I'm getting kind of like, bullshit vibes from what I've seen about it so far. I don't think it's going to be like, Oh, here's the disclosure. Finally, I don't think that's how it would be. Look if there was, like, going to be some actual Alien Disclosure from the government or whatever, they wouldn't be doing it, you know, with avatars release. Or maybe they would, I don't know. These days, who knows?
03:12:16 I just don't think that that's how it worked. D man says, oh, and then honor of the victims of the Wichita massacre that you covered. May the victims rest in peace and the twin nigs Rest in Pieces. There you go. We are around the anniversary of that, aren't we? Who's Joe?
03:12:40 Who's Joe says, I think the Internet helps you sort through jobs. I would work a warehouse shift, drive to a security site and get paid to sleep some nights. It's not that bad. Prime working years 18 to 36 Yeah, I think it's, that's, that's an accurate window. That's an accurate window after 30.
03:13:04 Yeah, that's that's about when you start getting tired of doing that. Dr Jen Stein says, Jews and Negroes, vice versa, Negroes and Jews. Okay, not, not sure what that means, but there you go. Who's Joe again? Says also you can use AI and job search, GPT and what CDL jobs pay 100k How much experience do you are to get in do yard jockey work? Count for experience? What yard jockey jobs pay $30 an hour in my area. AI is a helpful tool. Yeah, AI is great for stuff like that, not just for making music and videos.
03:13:54 I use it for, you know, law stuff and for, I mean, it hasn't replaced, and it should never replace researching stuff, you know, search engines or whatever. Although, part of the reason why a lot of people, I think, are using AI more than search engines, is search engines.
03:14:16 They've gotten so bad, you know, they in an effort to cure but here's the problem. In an effort to curate the answer to your search queries, they've made them terrible. But AI, unfortunately, is the ultimate curated search query. So it's not really a win in that department, but you will get, you will.
03:14:39 You will get what you're looking for at least most of the time, versus sometimes you do a search in like Google or or even, you know, brave search, or Yandex, or anything. And although I found Yandex, well, Yandex is either really awesome or really shitty. But you know. Any of these search engines, it's they've gotten worse over the years. The other guy says, Did you enjoy Pierce, Morgan and Fontes debate? I didn't watch it.
03:15:13 Why would I? Aren't I dead to him, you know, why would I watch, Why would, why would I watch a couple of homosexuals arguing on the internet? You know, let's see here. That's that is about it. Wait no back over on entropy, we've got sacred squirrel says ordered your dirt, meat, tea.
03:15:44 Get some sleep. We need you sharp with a rapist wit. Well, I will definitely get some sleep tonight. I'm not gonna. I can't, actually, I don't actually get to take a break, break, even though I'm going to be taking a break from the strings I do. I do get a couple days off. I get a couple after I do the millennial thing Monday night.
03:16:12 I do get a couple nights to my sort of to myself. But then it's, it's go time again, just in, just in other aspects of my life. All right, then we got corn pop the bad dude says, didn't you zoom onto the face of the serial killer when Weaver had the men stand up. Also, I did a video on classic movies connected to villains.
03:16:40 You guessed it, it was because of German composers. Are you talking about the beginning? No. So the that's how the movie did it. The movie, I guess they thought they were being clever, is when she's talking about serial killers. And this is what you're talking about here in the beginning, being white males.
03:16:59 They had the actual serial killer in the audience, right? Watch. So she's like, Oh, it could be anyone. It could be any of these white males. It could be. And then they, they show the guy who later ends up being the white male serial killer later on in the movie. So that was, that was their clever, clever thing. And you're right, though most people wouldn't notice that right away, but it plants the seed perhaps, all right, and then we got one more. It looks like
03:17:35 on rumble Volks.
03:17:41 Man says, Hey, Devon, I've been listening for two years and found an episode where you expressed interest in the Freemasons and their rituals. I messaged and tagged you on gab about a secret ritual. We'll have to look on to gab. I pretty much use gab just to post links for the streams.
03:18:02 I haven't, like, been like, on gab in like, a long time. Yeah. I mean, look, I don't know how influential they are these days. I don't know how you know, like, organized they are, you know, I don't know.
03:18:25 Well, honestly, I just don't know a whole lot about them generally. And I'd be curious, I wonder how accurate? Because here's the problem, I feel like you're not going to get accurate information from them, because they're a secret society, right? They're not going to tell you, and to the degree that they tell you, like, if you have their website, I'm, well, I'm sure they have a website, it's gonna probably be more like, oh, look, we do community service. You're gonna get the sales pitch right. So you're not gonna get any info from them.
03:18:55 You're not gonna be able to get any reliable information from a lot of conspirators, either because I feel like they blow things out of proportion, and they're in there and all their information is like, second or third hand. There's that guy who I don't think he's posted in a long time, like years ago.
03:19:17 There was that Jewish guy that was a Freemason, that that became like an ortho bro for a while, he was posting on YouTube, and he talked about it a little bit. I forget his name now, it's been a long time, so I've seen this stuff, but he, you know, he used to talk about Freemasonry as if it were some kind of, you know, still kind of some kind of evil influence on the world. I don't know. I feel like that would require probably a lot of research and I, and my guess is, it's evolved over the years.
03:19:51 You know, the i My guess is it's they're not what they used to be. But maybe I'm wrong. Maybe they're just, that's how. That's the thing is, if it's a secret society, right, maybe they're just, that's just how good they are. Art Bell was a Freemason. Lot of Mormons are Freemasons.
03:20:10 My mom said that they had, like, I think one of their churches burned down or something like that when she was a kid, and they they until they got the church fixed. They met at a Freemason lodge for for church. Because I, you know, I like the bishop, or I don't know, someone was a Freemasons. They let him use it, right? Not because, I mean, there was no, there's no official Association, but, you know, I think Joseph Smith was a Freemason. I think I don't know. Don't hold me to that.
03:20:47 Yeah, and look, I almost wonder if I mean not Freemason specifically. But as I've said before, I almost wonder if one of these aging out
03:21:00 clubs, you know, that have some kind of secret society element to them. Maybe it's ripe for the picking, right? Like, if enough white people and enough like, maybe in an area, you could take over a chapter of it, right? Like you could basically, because who belongs that stuff anymore?
03:21:20 I mean, I don't know, maybe Freemasons, there's still a lot of younger people. I think they're one of the ones that are still more around than, like some of these other groups. But I feel like you could probably saturate one of these low membership or geriatric membership organizations with younger people and essentially turn it into a brotherhood of white nationalists. You know, I don't know, right?
03:21:47 Like, maybe, maybe something like that is worth looking into. I just don't know enough about what's even out there anymore. I mean, there used to be a lot of these clubs. There used to be a lot of them, and I would imagine some of these still exist in some form or other, but there's probably some goofy shit going on. Yeah, anything that's got any kind of secrecy is also got some goofy shit or some evil shit going on, so I don't know. All right, then we got who's Joe with a big Dono? Let me try the button. Nope. Button doesn't work. Find it. Here we go. Money is power. Money is the only weapon that the Jew has to defend itself. Look how Jewy this bag is. You
03:22:53 all right, who's Joe? Who's Joe? Says, if you make work two jobs at $30 an hour. That's like 200k with overtime, keeping cost of living low. You can invest to eventually buy apartments. State capitals are stable. Markets can build generational wealth. Yeah, I would say it's pretty easy to keep your living expenses down if you don't want to, yeah, if you're not like an obsessive gamer, if you're not an alcoholic, you're not like a pothead.
03:23:31 You know, if you just keep your life simple and so much entertainment these days is free, or at least you can make it free or cheap. Most of what I do is free and cheap, or, you know, free or cheap. There's so much you can do inexpensively these days. And camping is cheap, you know, or free.
03:23:58 There's lots of fun stuff you keep your expenses low, and you'd be surprised at how much money you waste if you if you actually make it a priority to save money. And so many people don't budget. So many people, their version of budgeting is, looking at the balance when they, you know, on their on their bank account, occasionally, on on their app, or, you know, when they go to the ATM or whatever, and it's that's like, as far as it goes, there's no planning at all. There's no, you know, as long as there's still money in there, I can keep spending money.
03:24:40 Do I still have enough to cover rent? Well, then I can keep buying stuff. And I don't think that most people that are living paycheck to paycheck have to be I think that if you really make an effort to live cheap and look food too, I mean people that eat out, just not eating out, like if you're one of these people. People. And I used to be one of these people that where you eat out all the time, just because of at a convenience, or because, you know, because socially right, like, because where I used to work, that was the thing.
03:25:12 Like everyone out to lunch together, and so as part of the camaraderie of the office, you went out the lunch with the cool guys because, you know, and maybe that makes sense in some instances, maybe it's worth the the overhead if it's going to lead to more opportunities. But I mean, more often than not, it's just you're spending, you know, 40 bucks every day to, you know, to go out to lunch with a bunch of hooligans that are that aren't going to get you anywhere, you know, and that shit adds up quick.
03:25:44 And same thing with happy hours. Like, if you're like, oh, go to happy hour, because that's where everyone cool again, do the calculation going to going to happy hour and making friends with people that you work with can lead to more opportunities, more money, and sometimes it is worth the investment, but a lot of times it's not. And you know that's you blow 100 bucks on on appetizers and drinks in a night, and you do that a couple times a week. I mean, this shit adds up quick. This stuff adds up real fast, or or dating, right?
03:26:20 Yeah, maybe be a little more frugal with the dating. I know I get it. First Dates are expensive, right you I mean, when I used to be, you know, on the on the hunt, actively, you know, you're spending like 100 bucks on for a first date, not just like, you know, obviously just the day, but maybe you buy a new shirt to wear that night.
03:26:48 If you go downtown. I used to reason why these numbers might seem high to some people I lived in, or maybe low to others, I lived in a city, so it just that's everything was more expensive, like you go out to dinner you're not taking is, I mean, if you don't take her to a McDonald's, like, you just take it like a normal restaurant. You pay for cabs, you get a haircut, you know, whatever it is, right?
03:27:14 It's gonna, it's at least 100 bucks. It's at least 100 bucks. And if you're, if you're trying, if you're actively trying to find someone, you might do that at once a week. That's, that adds up. That adds up really quick. You know, that's, that's like, well, it's, that's 5200 bucks a year. Yeah, that's, it's a lot of money. So if you, if you identify the the money drains and and really, at the very least, make an effort to roll back on that stuff, you'd be surprised at how much you know, how quickly you can actually save money.
03:27:56 It. It just takes discipline like anything else, and it does kind of suck for a while, but it's, you just have to know it's someone's got to someone in your bloodline has to be the one that that that does the suck. So thank you very much. Who's Joe? I think that's it. What? No.
03:28:20 Sorry. My eyes are watering again, having trouble seeing the screen.
03:28:25 Um, Volks. Volks. Man says the link I sent you was one of four videos someone posted where he had infiltrated a lodge and recorded their initiation ritual. It was the last post he made on Gab, and it was two or three years ago.
03:28:49 Interesting, yeah, look, I don't know. Maybe, maybe, right? Maybe they're still super secret, powerful, you know, that is possible. That's entirely possible. All right, guys, well, I think that's it. Um, let me just double check.
03:29:23 Uh, that is it all right, guys, well, um, like I said, I'll probably be here for New Year's. Well, probably the next time you guys see me. And ah, sorry, my eyes are just really watering around. My nose is running now too. I don't know what. I don't know what it could be, yeah, what I think is I got some Acacia in the back that is blasting pollen everywhere. Anyway, hope you guys have a good Christmas. Hope you guys. It's been a fun year. 2025 has been awesome. 2020 20 Well, obviously, not all, not every aspect of it, right?
03:30:10 But, you know, relative, it's been pretty good, and 2026 is going to be be better, I hope. And things look things are turning around, and we'll talk more about this, maybe on the New Year's episode. I mean, Elon is, I mean, look, we cannot, we can always wonder what his motives are. But he's almost, he's almost defiant, posting like he's he's real close. He's basically posting on white genocide.
03:30:39 I'm almost, I'm almost like surprised he hasn't tweeted out defiant with some of the stuff he's been posting and some of the accounts he's been replying to. But who knows? Who knows? Maybe he's i It's hard to know the intentions of people like that, but I don't there's not, it's not bad. It's so far, you know, I don't see, I don't, at least right now, I don't see the bad, other than the fact that he obviously has been lumping Jews in with white people. That's that's bad. We need to, you know? We need to.
03:31:18 We need to fix that problem. Who knows. Look, if we can get, we get Elon to talk about the JQ, that'd be amazing. But anyway, I don't know that's ever gonna happen. But yeah, things are changing to some degree, some degree, and there are some positives, some positive developments in terms of, I think white identity is it's not quite mainstream. It's a lot more mainstream than it was a year ago, and the JQ was a lot more mainstream than it was a year ago. And again, there's some negative aspects to how that's unfolded, but you know, it's it's not all bad.
03:32:01 But, yeah, I hope you guys have a good holiday. I'll be on on Millennial on Monday and and then, who knows? Maybe, maybe I'll surprise you guys during the break.
03:32:12 But in the meantime, for Black Pilled, I am, of course. Devon Stack,
Narrator
03:33:05 Success in the serial killer industry isn't just about cold blooded murder, it's about how you manage your victims in the moments leading up to their untimely death.
David
03:33:14 Say, how about you come up for one last drink?
Mary Lou
03:33:18 Only if you promise to be on your best behavior.
David
03:33:21 Oh, I promise.
Narrator
03:33:27 In this training tape, you'll learn how to properly manage your victims and guide them to slaughter like a true professional. Let's take a look at the first step. Before a victim arrives, give your place a thorough clean. Make sure nothing suspicious is left out in the open. Prep any murder weapons you plan on using, and stock your place with appropriate supplies for handling the corpse.
03:33:54 Now you are prepared to host a victim. Being a courteous host is all about making your victim feel comfortable. Ease them into the new environment by having them participate in an activity like picking out a movie to watch. This gives you time to prepare them a special beverage.
David
03:34:20 Oh, you snuck up on me.
Mary Lou
03:34:23 I saw what you did, David. I must be really special to get two limes.
David
03:34:32 Uh, what can I say, Mary Lou? You're just too sweet.
Mary Lou
03:34:40 Oh, um, I chose Air Bud, pretty random that collection of yours.
David
03:34:46 Hey, I have a soft spot for dogs that can play basketball.
Mary Lou
03:34:51 Hey, you haven't given me the grand tour of your place.
Narrator
03:34:55 It's easy to feel rushed during this part of the interaction. It's vital to resist any impulses and remain patient. You don't want to risk alerting the neighbors, or worse, get blood stains on the new carpet.
David
03:35:09 Oh yeah, how rude of me. Come on.
Narrator
03:35:12 But what happens when a victim gets suspicious? One moment, you can be friendly and chatting with a victim, then the next you're faced with an outburst of fear.
Mary Lou
03:35:24 David, what is this?
Narrator
03:35:27 When suspicions arise, always provide your victim with believable information. Your job is to sell an explanation that they will buy.
David
03:35:35 Don't worry, that's just a prop for a horror movie I'm working on. Pretty scary, huh?
Mary Lou
03:35:43 This is insane.
03:35:48 I had no idea you were this creative.
David
03:35:52 I guess there's more to me than meets the eye.
Mary Lou
03:35:54 And here I am thinking you had some serious issues.
David
03:35:58 Hey, I'll drink to that.
Mary Lou
03:36:00 Cheers!
Narrator
03:36:01 Through the subtle art of misdirection, the killer turned a mishap into a misunderstanding. Now they just have to entertain the victim until they're incapacitated.
David
03:36:16 There's just something about a dog playing basketball that really warms my heart.
Mary Lou
03:36:20 Yeah.
David
03:36:30 Hello! This is the wrong tape. I'd like to introduce you to our newest member of the family.
Mary Lou
03:36:36 David, is this one of your movies?
David
03:36:38 Uh, no, this is, where is that remote? Don't watch this.
03:36:44 Here's Jessica! I love you, David!
03:36:49 It's just a prop. Give me a kiss, Jessica!
Narrator
03:37:00 even the most experienced killers make mistakes. Anyone can accidentally record over Air Bud with them making out with a severed head. So if your execution doesn't go exactly as planned, you need to act fast and cover your tracks.
Neighbor
03:37:17 Is everything okay in there?
David
03:37:19 One second.
Neighbor
03:37:23 I heard screaming.
David
03:37:25 Coming.
03:37:28 Hey, sorry about that. We're watching a scary movie and got a little carried away.
Neighbor
03:37:33 Scary movie, huh? Why is she wearing sunglasses?
David
03:37:42 Uh, she's been smoking a little marijuana, and she got self conscious about her eyes.
Neighbor
03:37:49 No, no, this isn't right.
03:37:57 You know, there's a strict no smoking policy here at these apartments.
David
03:38:02 Yeah, I know, I know. I just, I figured I'd tell you, because you seem like a chill guy, right? I promise we'll be good.
Neighbor
03:38:09 Just keep it down.
David
03:38:10 Yeah, yeah, absolutely, yep. Won't happen again.
Narrator
03:38:20 Congratulations, you've reached the end of the training tape. Now you have the knowledge to stay alive in the serial killer business. As you head into the final part of the process, always remember, every victim deserves to be treated with courtesy and care, not just another corpse to have sex with. Please continue your training with the next tape on body disposal techniques. From everyone here at serial killer industries, happy hunting.