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September 1, 2025 • 105 mins

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Step into a world where gaming nostalgia meets the unexplained in this episode that bridges our digital and paranormal realities. We kick things off with an enthusiastic deep dive into Battlefield 6, a game that's rekindled our love for competitive shooters after years of disappointment. There's something magical about finding a game that brings back that feeling of "what gaming used to be" - the perfect blend of improved mechanics while honoring what made earlier iterations great.

But our journey quickly takes a darker turn as we explore the Red Room Curse, a chilling Japanese urban legend about a mysterious pop-up that appears on victims' computers before they meet their demise. This digital ghost story gained notoriety after being linked to a real-life murder in Japan, blurring the lines between fiction and reality. We dissect the psychological underpinnings of why this particular legend resonates so deeply with our collective fears about technology and vulnerability.

The conversation heats up when we tackle New York's infamous "sewer gators" - those legendary alligators supposedly dwelling beneath the city streets. While experts insist the sewers are too cold and toxic for alligators to survive, we uncover documented cases of real alligators found in storm drains dating back to 1935. Could these reptilian survivors have adapted to their underground environment? The evidence might surprise you.

Finally, we venture into the remote Brazilian jungle to investigate the legend of Jouer Verde, a town where 600 people vanished without a trace in 1923. From food left on tables to clothes still drying on lines and a cryptic message left on a schoolhouse blackboard, this mystery challenges our understanding of what's possible. Was it aliens, a government cover-up, or something even more inexplicable?

Whether you're fascinated by gaming culture, urban legends, cryptids, or unexplained disappearances, this episode delivers a perfect blend of skepticism and wonder. Subscribe now and join our exploration of the strange and unexplained corners of our world where fact and fiction intertwine in the most captivating ways.

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Much Love-----Kosmic Cove

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Oh you think darkness is your ally.
You merely adopted the dark.
Somebody drop a name word.
I was born in it.
Somebody, never.
Somebody drop Niagara.
Niagara Falls, welcome toCosmic Co.

(00:23):
Welcome to another episode ofCosmic Co.
That's right, this is yourco-host, yaya, with my co-host
reverence.
Ah, ah, ah, ah ah.
Dame tu cosita, ah, ah, ah ahah, dame, tu cosita Ah ah, ah,

(00:46):
ah, Mm mm, mm.
Crazy song.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Crazy song.
My co-host reverence crazy song, crazy song right, that is
crazy.
Song.
A powerful, it's really apowerful motivational listen to
the lyrics.
Listen to the lyrics get onyour grind, wake up, get that
bag hit 90 on the highwaysmoking a Newport smoking a a
Cadillac smoking.
Newport windows up.
Ryan, wake up, get that bag.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
Hit 90 on the highway , smoking a Newport, smoking a
Cadillac, smoking a NewportWindows up.
I seen that before.
I seen that before In thesummer, in the summer Nah, I
seen that before my own two veryeyes.
Bro Dude didn't even have AC,bro, he was just sweating.
Oh no, didn't have, oh no, hedidn't have any seat, bro,
motherfucker, just sweatingsmoking a Newport.
Bro he going through something.
Bro, he is going throughsomething.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
Seatbelt on everything bro.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
Seatbelt on Seatbelt around his neck.
The airbags were already popped.
They had a donut.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Coffee.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
Coffee.
Motherfucker what's up?
Wait coffee.
No the tire, don't do it, ohyeah chat he had a coffee.
Someone can stick it where thecoffee is.
Hey, something's good, you knowwhat Two each is all I can't
say that.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
I was about to say.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
Because a little blunt in the morning with a
little coffee at the car.

Speaker 3 (02:07):
That's, that's not.
That's not what we're here for.
Really.
What I like to see is a realgood chain smoker that actually
enjoys his coffee and cigaretteat the same time.
Really, if they're smoking acigarette and then they just
like flick the tip into their,into their coffee type shit then
take a sip and yeah then, yeahyou, I see if I see you asking
your uh if I see you asking yourcigarette your coffee dog.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
Look, man, whatever you're going through in life
right now, it's not that bad.
There's a brighter side thegreen, the grass is always
greener on the other side, man,just just pull through, man, I
am rooting for you, bro.
You know, i'ma pray for you dog.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
No, no, we gotta get america rolling again.
Y'all get back to that.
Rise and grind.
Fuck it, cut your life in halfhuh, huh all the people that
eddie years old they say that.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
They say that, like cigarettes be bad for you and
shit, but they one person diefrom cigarettes.
Alright, never mind.
No, because you'll be seeingold ass people bro smoke and
steal.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
You know what's crazy is.
They say cigarettes are bad.
I mean they are bad for you,right?

Speaker 1 (03:17):
Says who?
Fda Says Big Pharma, bro, bigPharma, big Pharma would do that
, but we don't want to dive intothat iceberg today.
Right.

Speaker 3 (03:25):
But no, but I know countless people, right, they
smoke cigarettes like chainsmoke.
I'm talking about carton a daytype shit.
No, no, I'm just joking.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Not a carton a day.
Oh, okay.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
Like you know, pack a day or like pack every two days
.
Okay okay, okay, okay smoking,bro, doctors, like you need to
lay off them cigarettes.
You know you need to get, getyour health right.
You're like 60 years old orwhatever seven years old, you
need a, you need to go walk.
All right, doctor, I'll listento you.
They they stop for a week.
They die dead ass they die.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
I'm only one that I've seen, that I've, I've
witnessed that.
Um, they I don't know what itis, but it's like the cigarette
was keeping them alive, bro.
It's like their main fuel,their life, the life force, the
essence, what's in thatcigarette, bro?

Speaker 3 (04:12):
right, but ain't, there is no way.
Stopping smoking a cigarette isgonna fucking kill him.
I mean, it happened to him, butI mean I mean yeah, but what
would be the logic over there?

Speaker 1 (04:21):
like what, like you?
Said bro I have a theory thatit's just Chat.
Let us know.
When you don't care about life,life does not care about you.
Therefore, hold on there.
Let me cut.
Hold on there, Therefore, sinceyou are not caring about life.
Oh, I said it wrong.
If you don't care about life,death does not care about you.

(04:42):
Ty.
If you don't care about life,death does not care about you.
Type.
The moment you start caringabout life, now death is coming
for you.

Speaker 3 (04:51):
You heard it here first it comes Cosmic Cole.
Type said whenever you don'tcare about death, death comes
for you.
Whenever you don't care aboutdeath, no, whenever you do care
about death, yeah, yeah.
Time, time, time.
I have what she's having youknow whenever, whenever the moon

(05:12):
rises up.

Speaker 1 (05:14):
The sun Goes down the sun goes down, fuck Headache
and check this out.
Check this out, stay with me,and when the sun goes up, the
moon comes down.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
He cooking, he cooking.
Oh shit, I didn't even knowwhat button I was trying to push
.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
No, take the knowledge.
I was about to get a littlecrazy.
I could make this crazy.
Really, I could do thiscomparison.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
That's too much inspiration.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
That's too much, bro.
That's too much for y'all.

Speaker 3 (05:42):
It's too much for y'all.
Next thing y'all know y'allgoing to be in the gym working
out.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Fixing your life, fucking, eating better.
And honestly, from the bottomof my heart, I don't want that.
I don't want that, I don't wantthat for y'all.
I don't want that for y'all.
I want all of.
I wish nothing but the word Nah, nah, chill out Wholeheartedly.
Look truthfully, if I'm beinghonest, if I could keep it a bug

(06:10):
with you, you know what's crazyis how people are actually like
that, bro, like people.
What you mean.

Speaker 3 (06:15):
People can actually be so damn spiteful bro.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
Oh, against other people.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
Yeah, bro, that is crazy to me, bro, Like what the
fuck is wrong with you.
That is crazy to me, bro, Likewhat the fuck is wrong with you.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
That's crazy people like that.
That's crazy people like thatout there.
No, but that's for me that'stoo much energy.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
Right, well, they ain't got nothing better to do.
That's too much energy, bro.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
We care about, like when someone's doing good you
know, good for themcongratulations, but to waste
your energy on.

Speaker 3 (06:44):
Ooh, I hope he loses, everything we're talking about
like half of everybody's cousinsup in mexico.
Motherfuckers, be,motherfuckers, be fighting over
a foot of land, bro, bro, whatare you gonna do with this, bro?
What do you say so long?
Literally.
What are you gonna?
What are you trying to hex meand curse my whole?

Speaker 1 (07:07):
generation.
Oh my god, that ass bro youknow what?
Just not even do nothing withthat land bro right, just to
look at it.
Just to look at it, bro noteven build, not even not even
prosper on that land just forthem say it's mine just just for
them to die and me get it backthat that ass.
Just let him stop smoking andfucking die, just for him to
like and me get it back, deadass.
Just for them to stop smokingand fucking die.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
Just for them to wake up in the middle of the night
with my hands around them whileI'm slow.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
Jerking them Just slightly, caressing them Until
the afterlife.
Talk about Don't fight it.

Speaker 3 (07:39):
Look at him, look at him Like a hungry dog.
Look at him.
He know where the snacks is at.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
Bro, I feel like he has a date.
Look at him.
There's no food in there, he'sjust going to look at him
Beanstalk.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
No, but that shit is crazy, bro.
I really don't understand that.

Speaker 1 (07:52):
It's too much.

Speaker 3 (07:56):
Let's stop doing that .
Buddy Really just walked infront of both of us squ starting
out to walk though that what?

Speaker 1 (08:02):
what a life, bro.
What a life this is why Ishould wear clothes right, that
ass, bro, because all this, allthis being buttoned up right
here, just it's not it, bro,it's out of fashion.
Imagine the people seeing thevisuals what these, these are
cgi all.
This is cgi right.
This is all green screenclothes.

Speaker 3 (08:21):
This is all green screen I'm not even here.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
I'm not even here.

Speaker 3 (08:23):
This is actually a zoom meeting this this is.

Speaker 1 (08:26):
We're not even real people, we just uh, it's a
program, we're a program we'reall a uh, we're just ai, bro,
that's it matters.

Speaker 3 (08:34):
Hold on now all right , so we're gonna go ahead and
get started.
Well, how was your week beforewe start?
Oh boring as hell, whathappened?

Speaker 1 (08:44):
uh, nothing, we just didn't have much work this week.

Speaker 3 (08:46):
Oh damn, so y'all could have went to the casino.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
We low-key could have , but yeah nothing.
I'm just going to take a coupleseconds here just to say just a
PSA.
Battlefield 6 is lit.

Speaker 3 (09:02):
Oh, we forgot, yeah.
Forgot about that, though, yeah.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Forgot about that, though.
Forgot about that, though.
Let me sit up for this.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Let me sit up.
I got my thighs out.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
I got my thighs out too, but look at how I feel like
I can go With tan or something,but look at that.

Speaker 3 (09:14):
You see that, I saw the brown on that sack.
You see that.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
Yeah, man Brown on the sack, ain't no way.
On my sack.
I say pay.
What the fuck you talking about, bro?
It said bleach.
My boy Got my nutsack bleachedon last weekend.

Speaker 3 (09:34):
I dipped them in a cup of bleach.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
That's it, that.
Shit looking crazy, bro.
Shit looking like the pastechicken nuggets, nuggets.
I made that up, all right, allright, battlefield 6.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
What you think about it?
Get a quick review.
Quick review, bro.

Speaker 1 (09:52):
Bottom line, bottom line.
If you play Call of Duty, Idon't want to see you in my
fucking game.
Though, if you're not going torest me, though, if you're not
going to run across Matt to rest, just me.
Fuck the rest of the team, justme.
Don't be in my game, dog.
I'm just playing.
I really enjoy it.

(10:13):
I've been saying this for years.
I've been looking, I've beensearching high, low.
I've gone to the ends of theworld.
I've gone to the center of theworld.
I've gone to the other side ofthe flat place of the earth the
flat place of the earth is greatLooking for a Call of Duty
killer.
Little did I know that Call ofDuty was killing the tail that

(10:39):
the CEO they got.
Don't give a fuck about thegamers.
He just in it like a greedycorporation and slowly they will
hang on.
Yeah, it's a breath of freshair.
Over the last couple of callduties, I've hated them.

(11:02):
I despised them, even though Ican't give them their money and
all their skins, but I just, Ijust despised it.
It's not fun, no more.
I don't know what it is.
Battlefield 2042 I don't knowwhat the fuck y'all were doing.
Y'all were smoking crack.
I don't know what the fuck thatwas.
So there was a void in my heart.
There was a void where Icouldn't find a game to really

(11:25):
fill in that void, you know.
And then with the GTA 6 gettingpushed back, that hole just
became bigger really, and Callof Duty was in it, just in that
hole, just fucking living shitout of it.
And then Battlefield 6 comes upand my hole got tight again.

(11:46):
Alright, it's just.
It feels like Battlefield 4 forme.
Did you play Battlefield 4?

Speaker 3 (11:55):
Yeah, it feels like.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Battlefield 4 for me, but improved graphics, improved
mechanics, and that's reallyall I wanted.
Really, that's all you wantfrom a game is improved graphics
, improved mechanics, and that'sreally all I wanted.
Really, that's all you wantfrom a game is improved graphics
, improved mechanics, and theydelivered.
I feel like they delivered thistime and I feel like it feels
like 2016, all over again 2016.

(12:17):
The best year ever.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
Battlefield 4, that one came out like in 2014,
didn't it 2013,?

Speaker 1 (12:25):
right, yeah, yeah, but 2016 was a big year for, uh,
gaming.
What game came out?
Oh, let me look over quick, Idon't know, but it's just like
the memory of like I guess it'sbecause after we graduated
everything oh, just playing it.
Just they had straight bangersat that time, at that time, yeah
, every 10 years, every decadewhat I don't understand is how

(12:45):
they're still milking Black Ops.

Speaker 3 (12:47):
bro, fuck bro.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Yeah, they didn't.
Oh, battlefield 1 came out on2016.
Overwatch came out.
Typhoon 2 came out Dang you'renot lying, dan.

Speaker 3 (12:56):
Oh, 2016 was a banger year, huh.

Speaker 1 (12:59):
Oh, what else?

Speaker 3 (13:00):
Gears of War 4, eh, eh we're not gonna talk about
Gears of War right now.

Speaker 1 (13:05):
Pokemon Go shit.
Pokemon Go came out 2016.
Yeah, yeah, cause we used to gointo town to uh dang was it
2016?

Speaker 3 (13:12):
that what it say that what it say.
Oh yeah, it was because we wereat a school, I remember now
that what it say.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Yeah, bro, but oh, oh shit my duolingo um, yeah, oh
shit, my duolingo, um, yeah,right, it just feels, it just
feels nice, honestly, just tohave a game that that that I'm
enjoying playing.
And Right now, cause, cause,I'm gonna play with Sammy and my
brother, but Well, sammy andJerk, but, um, that year they

(13:40):
don't, they don't really likeplaying the same type of games.
But we, we were playing lastnight, but it just, it just felt
right.
It felt like what gaming usedto be playing with y'all and
everything Like it just feltgood.
It just felt good, the game wasgood, the vibes were good,
everything just felt yeah, likethis is it?
We back, we back in it.

Speaker 3 (14:01):
Who said we so back?

Speaker 1 (14:03):
We so back guys, we are so back, we back in it.
Who said we so back, we so backguys, we are so back?
Some dudes were saying thatshit in the chat yeah.
Fucking, blocking the fuckingweirdos.
Oh, during the match.

Speaker 3 (14:12):
Yeah, during the match, we were so back.
We were so back.
Shut the fuck up.
We're losing D.
Shut up.
Get off chat, get on comms, geton cards.
Razz me bro.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
But yeah, bro, it was .
What is he doing?
He chilling bro B-Stock.
What are you doing, chillingBro?
He always on some shit.
Bro, he going to show such badmanners to the other dog, bro,
look at him.
But yeah, what you think rightnow when you played it, how you

(14:45):
feel about it.

Speaker 3 (14:46):
I know it was your first match, but the guns they
give you, bro is just not goodbro.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Yeah, let me tell you what he's talking about.
He's talking about that becausehe was playing my class After I
disclosed that I was justleveling up that gun.
I never said it was good, I wasjust leveling up the gun just
because I'm trying to lockeverything.

Speaker 3 (15:03):
see, how everything's playing.
Why does he have a time aidscope on smg?

Speaker 1 (15:07):
hey, chill out bro, I'll try that.
What the hell we doing.

Speaker 3 (15:12):
I'll put that.
I'll put that with the cat iscatch it site, but uh-huh I
didn't even use the scope.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
I was just using the cancer site the whole time, bro
who, acting like it's call ofduty again no yeah, hey, the
green laser.

Speaker 3 (15:23):
They was cooking with that idea or what on call of
duty like whenever you couldstop ads and you just flick to
your oh, they don't have thatone here, they don't have it.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Well, maybe I mean it's the beta, so maybe with
full game release I don't thinkthey really need we'll see, oh,
I, I like those I like that typeof, but they do have the green
laser.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
You put it on the front barrel.
There's a front mount.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (15:46):
They do.
Got it on there, you just gotto lock it I think yeah, but
it's not.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
On Battlefield 6 yeah , but I don't think it turns
Like it turns Nah, I don't thinkso.
It's just.
It's just a standalone laser,but I do like when games that
you can aim with the laser.

Speaker 3 (16:01):
I like it I like it Right, I like that too.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
Let's see when the game comes out.
It comes out in October.

Speaker 3 (16:06):
Pre-order it.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
Oh shit, yeah, yeah, damn, that's why because I don't
know if you played the beta for2042.
Hot garbage.
2042 only became playable maybetwo years ago, just last week.

Speaker 3 (16:19):
Just last week, bro, they said you know what, let's
go ahead and release 2042.
They fixed it finally that shitfinally going to fully release
when it's 2042.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Guys, guys, come back .
We fixed it, we fixed it.
But now this game, for it beinga beta, it has its problems,
don't get me wrong.
It has its problems, but I feellike they can get it all fixed
up in the two months that haveleft.
I mean, it's just a beta, right, but I feel like they can get
it all fixed up in the twomonths that have left.
I mean, it's just a beta Right.

Speaker 3 (16:46):
All y'all coders, game developers, all y'all
people in there, all the studiopeople, the guys that do the 3D
models, get the work.
You see, mappa, mappa runstheir freaking employees dry.
They suck them, motherfuckers.
They put them on an IV machineand keep them at the desk.
Ea, listen, take notes.
You can make greatness if youoverwork your employees.

(17:08):
Matter of fact, fire half ofthem.
Fire, fire half of them.
Let them go and strike.
You need the publicity.
Then, boom, you drop the newBattlefield trailer while
everybody's protesting outsidethis is why I can't be a CEO Low
key.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
That's hard, that's hard, that's hard that.
This is why I can't be a CEO.
That's hard, that's hard,that's tough right there.
Yeah, if the game doesn't liveup to expectations that it's in
right now, my death is in yourhands.

Speaker 3 (17:33):
My blood is on your hands.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
My 13 reasons is y'all, this is going to be
Battlefield 6.
It's going to be all theprevious Call of Duty's.
Then Battlefield 6 has 13,.
Bro, what are you eating, broCrow?
What are you eating Crow?
Yeah, bro, I just got hot hoes,bro, I'm honestly I haven't
been excited for a game in awhile.
Stupid, stupid, excited thistime, bro.

Speaker 3 (17:56):
Talk about games.
I got one more game to talkabout real quick what you got.
Sorry guys, we had the nerd outa little bit.

Speaker 1 (18:03):
Just a little bit.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
We really don't Hold on, bro.
Let me look at my phone realquick, huh.

Speaker 1 (18:08):
What, what, hey, hey, yo what.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
What, what, what, yeah, yeah here I go.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
Luckily the camera got up back here.

Speaker 3 (18:18):
Cut what, I don't see nothing whoever it is, I got a
picture of it all right.
It says epic games.
New interview with gearboxesart director adam May reveals

(18:42):
that Borderlands 4 will feature.
How many weapons?
What possible guns?

Speaker 1 (18:49):
Let me guess Three million, three million.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
We're in 2025.
We got to talk big numbers nowInflation More than three
million.
Bitcoins going up out the roof20 million.
No, we talking inflation.
More I'm talking about about.
Oh, you're talking about less.
I'm talking about we got, wegot.
We got a market crash comingsoon.
No, I'm just joking, it's more,more than 20.
30 bill hold on 30 billion.

(19:19):
It says we'll feature 30billion possible guns thanks to
procedural generation and weaponcustomization, with new vault
hunters and the seamless, openworld.
The game launches september12th.
That's what it says 30 billionguns.
Okay now.
I got this news on facebook,like everybody else does oh take

(19:42):
the information from Snapchat?
All right, take that with agrain of salt, all right, all
right.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
Somebody see how I uploaded that.

Speaker 3 (19:49):
All right, I'll fact check that real quick.
Hold on.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Okay, I'll tell you this, bro, you don't have the
weapons on Borderlands Romain,right?
Uh-huh, okay.
So, and I only know because Isaw a video on it, that shit
pretty cool, right, the artworkfor it.
I like the Borderlands 3.
I like that artwork, but thegame was.

(20:13):
Eh, I beat the game like fivetimes, six times seven times.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
All right, so it is 30 billion weapons, 30 billion.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
Holy shit, bro, billion, billion.
It's because it has, like,different possibilities.
You'll never have accessories.
Yeah, that's what I figured.
That's what we're referring to.

Speaker 3 (20:31):
Yeah, but it says there'll be um, it'll be eight
manufacturer manufacturers okay,is this the same manufacturers?
Or I'm not sure who else.
Okay, okay.
Well, Borderlands 3 had oneplus billion weapons.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
Did they?

Speaker 3 (20:51):
That's what it says, so one plus billion.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
You talking about 30 billion on this one 40 billion,
40 billion 40 billion, okay,okay, the thing is, the thing is
okay, that is for billions, butthose four billions are
included, the different rarities.

Speaker 3 (21:07):
I guess so yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
Yeah, that's what they include, because I saw a
video on it like how they breakdown, how to pick that, and so
the other thing that goes intoit is each barrel is one thing,
each grip is one thing, eachaccessory is one thing.
So then the AR generated thingwill just put parts, different
parts, and then snap it togetherand that's a gun.

Speaker 3 (21:30):
So 30 billion, 40 billion configurations.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
There you go, yeah, that's, that's that's going to
be 40 different combinations.
What that lets me know isthere's going to be a couple
guns that all look and performthe same.

Speaker 3 (21:45):
So, as we know, is there's going to be a couple
guns that all look and performthe same.
So what you're telling me isthat can have an SMG that shoots
rockets and has a bayonet on it.

Speaker 1 (21:50):
And then one that shoots rockets but no bayonet,
and then one that has no bayonet, no rockets and a bayonet.
That's how that works.
We're about to see how it goes.
Have you seen the gunplay?
It?

Speaker 3 (22:05):
You haven't seen it no good.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
I don't know, I'm not Borderlands 3, I was high, high
expectations.
They did not deliver.

Speaker 3 (22:14):
Hold on.
Let's see what Borderlands 3did 4.4 out of 5 on PlayStation.
9 out of 10 on Steam 76%.
Love the gameplay.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
The gameplay is all right.
You're talking about War Dance3, right?
Mm-hmm, yeah, it's all right,Nothing's right home about it,
but it's.
I mean, I beat it seven times,not necessarily because it was
amazing gameplay, but 4.4 starsout of 5, with 40,700 reviews.

Speaker 3 (22:49):
That's just from PlayStation alone.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
Game Station don't count.
Game Station don't count, bro.
We talking about real gamers,bro.
We talking about real,authentic gamers, bro.
Pc reviews All right, yeah,yeah, yeah, yeah, he trolling,
now he trolling.
Oh Switch, switch, yeah, yeah,yeah, yeah he trolling, now he
trolling.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
Oh Switch.

Speaker 1 (23:07):
Switch.
Yeah, there you go, switch.
I'm talking about Switch.
Yeah, mobile use Mobile.
Yeah, the mobile gamers.
Yeah, there you go, real gamers.

Speaker 3 (23:16):
IGN rated at 9 out of 10.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
Pc gamers 63% and Metacritic it's 81 you know what
the other thing is too.
I think I would have enjoyed itmore if I had like more people
to play with, but the firstplaythrough that I did, you beat
it with me all right, bro, it'sbecause I'll be so anticipated
to play those games.
But when it comes to the openworld mechanics, it's too vast

(23:40):
for me which and I fall asleep,oh okay, I mean, but, but I mean
, but at the time you wereworking you were working too,
though at the time, I think,when it came out you had when,
that's when you had the, the twojobs and everything oh, yeah,
yeah, I think.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
So that's all.
No, no, no, no, becauseremember we got you that
borderlands 3, uh, chest oh,that's a borderlands 2 chest two
.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
Uh-huh, it's a borderlands 2 chest, nah, yeah
nah, yeah it's a borderlands,because the cars were
borderlands 2.
Damn yeah, because that wasbefore the borderlands 3, that
was yeah, that was it wasborderlands 2, then borderlands
prequel, then borderlands yeah,because I put all the codes, but
it was on the borderlands 2thing damn, I think you're right

(24:21):
.

Speaker 3 (24:22):
Damn, that shit was a long time ago, bro.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
Yeah, it was, it was a while back, but yeah, that uh,
um, but that's that's what itthat's what it was.
But then, battle of borderlands, three came out, and then
that's when, I think, you hadthe two jobs, if I'm mistaken I
can't remember because I beat itwith somebody, but then I went
back and beat it myself and thenwent back and then I played
with other characters and thenthen I went to Mayhem Mode.

(24:46):
They added Mayhem Mode, which islike everything's harder times
10, and then I beat it in thehighest Mayhem Mode.
Then I was like okay, I need tostop, this is too much, this is
insanity.
Now this is some Borderlandsshit, right here.

Speaker 3 (25:02):
Ultimate gooner.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
Oh, gooner Gooner, that, gooner Gooner, that's that
.
That's a psycho, bro, wholepsycho in that game.
Bro, I was going too crazy withthat game.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
But no, it's a good game.
But, like I said, maybe youhave more people to play with or
something.

Speaker 1 (25:16):
But I just did it just to.
I just wanted to like see allthe guns they had.
I think I got probably up to aAll right, how about this?

Speaker 3 (25:23):
I'll get it and we'll do a playthrough of it.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
Ooh, okay, what you think.
Yeah, we can do that.
We're not about to go crazywith that thing.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
But I'm going to be on a tight schedule a little bit
.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
Yeah, yeah, I figure, yeah, I figure.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
You play, I don't follow behind.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
Tight shit, tight shit.
Here we secondary account,secondary character, and that's
the character we're just goingto play.

Speaker 3 (25:45):
Something like that, something like that that's how I
think I had it with you too.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
Yeah, that's how I think I had it with you, right?
I think so Because I madeanother one just so I could play
with you, because my level wasway too high.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
Oh, because it is based off your level too, yeah
it's based off the level.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
It's based off like it takes everybody level and
then gives you an even groundsort of sense.
That's it, Cap I remember onetime that even ground with lower
players it's not the same asthe lower level.
For a higher level it's supereasy, for a lower level it's
stupid hard.

Speaker 3 (26:18):
That's enough on him, right, yeah, that's it.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's what we're going to do.
I'm going to beat it First game.
I'm going to run first one andthen, when you have time, we'll
play like that.

Speaker 3 (26:29):
We need to do a playthrough.
That's what we need to do.
Y'all let us know if y'all wantto see, like, do a little
gaming channel on YouTubeMinecraft.
We'll do like a little gamingYouTube.
Yeah, Chet, I'll retire.
Keep the podcast, Alright.
So today we're going to talkabout a couple things, One of

(26:51):
which I was really excited totalk about because I feel like
we can make a bunch of jokesabout it.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
Oh Lord.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
It's the FFF oh okay.
I think that one's going to begood.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
Wait, you said, make jokes about that one.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
Mm-hmm, wait, you said make jokes about them,
you'll see okay, I'll see, I'llsee, I'll see jokes, yeah.
So let the people know we'regonna be talking about about
today.
Damn what the fuck I justsaying.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
Talk about a baby, we're talking like the little
kid from the oran berries.
No, but you're talking aboutlike.
You're talking about like oh,you got that cajun accent.

Speaker 3 (27:20):
But you're talking like that little kid from the
Oran Berries.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
Nah, bro, you talking about like.
You talking about like.
Oh, you got that Cajun accent,but you talking like that.
Well, what's?
Gambit.

Speaker 3 (27:29):
You talking like Gambit, bro, no that's what's
his name from King of the Hill.
What's his name?

Speaker 1 (27:38):
Fucking you talking about Hank Nah.

Speaker 3 (27:42):
The fucking skinny dude, the one that be talking
about like the dude with thepocket set no, no, no, that's I
haven't seen Kings of Hillforever.
That one dude that goes likewho the fuck he talking about.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
Who he talking about.
Hold on, hold on.
I put Hank here.

Speaker 3 (28:06):
Boom no, dude, boom no, not yeah.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
Boom Howard, boom Howard.
Oh, you talking about theblonde dude?
Is it the blonde dude?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3 (28:14):
That's Boom, Howard ain't it.

Speaker 1 (28:15):
Is it?
I don't remember his name, broBoom Howard.
Oh shit, bro.
Who am I talking about?
What the fuck.
Why am I tired, bro, Like I?
Ain't slept till like.

Speaker 3 (28:28):
Yeah, boomhauer.
Yeah, that's the one that talksto me Six in the morning
playing.
All right, sorry y'all, we'regoing to go ahead and get into
the subject.
But, y'all let the people knowwhat we're going to be talking
about today.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
First topic is we're going'll be talking about
something controversial.
Really, the red red roots curseright.

Speaker 3 (28:47):
What is that?
Did you know what that was?
Uh, I never heard about that.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
Uh are you not tapped in.
I'm not tapped in, bro, nottapped in.

Speaker 3 (28:54):
How you hear about this, go ahead, tell me how you
heard, how you, how you know,there I was in the room yeah,
dark room, uh-huh right you know, I was, I was edging right I
was just figuring out whatedging was, all right If I could
visualize it.
For I mean, put it in like avisualization for you.
He said, if I could imagine it,I could go to it.
If I could put this into aperspective for you to visualize

(29:16):
it in your brain, imagine likea push, pop and just Just like I
don't even know where I wasgoing with that.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
I thought you were going to say some freaky ass
shit.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
I thought you were about to, and it gets like no,
I'm just joking, no, but I heardabout it because of the.
I was listening to one podcastright and they were talking
about some other conspiracy.
They were talking about someconspiracy about some.
I don't even know if I want toget into it, because I might
want to talk about it but justlike one conspiracy.

(29:50):
So I looked it up.
I was like I've never heardthis conspiracy before.
So I looked it up, I typed thewrong thing in and it gave me
this creepypasta, ish kind ofconspiracy thing or whatever
folklore in a sense, it wasmeant to be it was like an urban
legend.
I was like wait, what is this?
I was like hold up.
This is actually pretty good.
It's short, it's simple, but Ilike it that's what she said I

(30:16):
had to get that in there, I hadto get that in there all right,
so we're gonna be talking aboutthe red room curse and, for
those that don't know, this isan urban legend, so this is not
like really true.
This real life, this real lifethis real life some would say
real almost like a legendsomeone said real someone said
life.

(30:36):
How is a legend not real?
You clearly see michael jordana legend, you clearly see you're
not listening.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
You're not listening.
You clearly see cosmic coldlegend legends.

Speaker 3 (30:53):
You clearly see katie perry in space legend okay, so.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
So the episode for today, you know, uh, it's gonna
be about red room curse.
Yeah, he lost it, y'all he lostit.
Alright, let's get into it.
Okay, want me to start it off?
Go ahead, bro.
Okay, so Ain't even much to it.

Speaker 3 (31:13):
This shit like a couple sentences.

Speaker 1 (31:14):
Yeah, I tried to look up For more information on it,
cause I know I wanted a topicthat wasn't gonna be too, too
much.

Speaker 3 (31:21):
Too much Just be a little easy on us.
Okay, okay, looking for you.

Speaker 1 (31:27):
I turned this into a whole whole book report.
Check that out.

Speaker 3 (31:32):
Yeah, Chad.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
Yeah, chad you about to get overwhelmed.
I think I wrote the same shitlike five times, bro.

Speaker 3 (31:39):
Good old book report days bro who about to be me
repeating the same facts twotimes I got this on 30, 30 sides
.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
I got this shit double space bold.
This shit is a lot Alright.
Okay so the Red Room Curse AkaHeia in Japanese.
It's a chilling Japaneseinternet urban legend that
centers around a sinister redpop-up advertisement.
Okay so the pop-up.
While browsing the internet,the victim encounters a red

(32:08):
pop-up advertisement.
Okay so the pop-up.
While browsing the internet,the victim encounters a red
pop-up with black text.
Asking do you like blank?
Oh, do you like question mark?
Sorry, attempts to close thepop-up are futile and it
continues to reappear with moretext filling in the sentence.
Eventually, the sentence iscompleted, asking do you like
the red room Question mark.
The screen then turns red,displaying a list of names the

(32:31):
red rooms of the red roomsvictims.
The victim senses a presencebehind them, loses consciousness
and is later found dead intheir home with the room's walls
painted red with blood I sawthat they said whenever you get
the pop-up message, it's like alittle kid's voice.
Oh, oh, yeah, yeah, I found oris that like a retelling?

Speaker 3 (32:51):
There's, I found some variations or like oh okay.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
You would say variations, yeah, variations of
like the ending or likeDifferent retellings yeah,
different, different yeah yeah,so I included that also.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
Just one book report.

Speaker 1 (33:08):
My fault, my fault?
No, you're good.
You're good, Hopefully I did.
That was gas litchy, the screenthat turns red displaying the
list of oh, what was it.
Did I already say that?
Yeah, yeah yeah, okay, thevictim senses a person.
Oh, I already said that.

Speaker 2 (33:17):
Two my bad, I wrote that down, so it was my fault.
How'd it make it big?

Speaker 1 (33:31):
How'd it make it?
Okay, I'm dead.
Legends believed to haveoriginated from a Japanese
interactive Adobe Flash horroranimation uploaded to the
GeoCities in the late 1990s.
It gained notoriety in 2004 dueto the Sasebo slashing, a
murder committed by a Japaneseschoolgirl.
They call it Girl A, who wasreportedly a fan of the Red Room
Curse animation.
There are some variations ofwhat happens after the initial
red screen appears.
They call it Girl A, who wasreportedly a fan of the Red Room
curse animation.

(33:52):
There are some variations ofwhat happens after the initial
red screen appears, but thegeneral outcome is death in a
room covered in blood.
The most common variationstates that, after encountering
the repeating pop up asking doyou like the Red Room, the
screen will turn completely redand display a list of names.
The victim will then find theirown name added to the end of
the list.
Following the red screen andthe list of names, the victim

(34:12):
senses a mysterious presencebehind them and loses
consciousness, and the cost ofdeath is often attributed to
suicide.
A less common variationdescribes the victim developing
a crack on their body thatrapidly expands, causing them to
split apart.
That's another one.

(34:33):
That's another one.
According to my sources,pornhubcom the connection
between the Sasebo slashing, aswell as the Nevada 10 murder and
the Red Room curse.
Urban legend lies in theperpetrator's alleged connection
to the Red Room curse.
Urban legend lies in theperpetrator's alleged connection
to the Red Room's flashanimation.
So the sustainable slashingobviously happened in 2014 and

(35:00):
it was where girl A murdered her12 year old classmate, satomi
Mitadai, by slashing her neckwith a utility knife Girls' Aid
fascinations.
Following the murder, it wasreported that Girl A was a fan
of the Red Room Curse flashanimation and linked to the
video was reportedly foundbookmarked on her computer.

(35:21):
This discovery fuelsspeculation that the Red Room
Curse might have influencedGirls' Aid age actions leading
to the murder.
This association propelled theRed Room curse urban legend into
wide notoriety.

Speaker 3 (35:35):
That's where all the news outlets started picking it
up, saying that the Red Roomcurse is causing local teens to
go crazy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it startedcrazy.
Whole hysteria.

Speaker 1 (35:47):
Whole hysteria, really, mass started crazy.
Whole hysteria, whole hysteria,really Mass hysteria, mass
hysteria.
This is Lil Sawbar.
It's crucial to understand thatthe Red Room Curse itself is a
Japanese urban legend and not areal entity that can coerce
people to commit violence.
The connection between theSasebo Session and the Red Room

(36:08):
curse highlights the power ofurban legends and their
potential to influenceperceptions, especially in cases
with unusual circumstances.
Do you want to add anything?
It's just a little quick fact.

Speaker 3 (36:22):
Go ahead, bro, not facts, but little side antidotes
, I guess that people said theysaid that, according to some
people's beliefs or theirthoughts on the theory or
whatever, or like thecreepypasta or every legend
itself, they said that the redroom can contain lists of
previous victim names, like yousaid, but it said that in some

(36:44):
versions the blood that shows upon screen is actually like the
victim's life force drainedthrough the screen oh, okay,
that's like yeah, or say that,um, even though, like, the
pop-up thing pops up like as anad or whatever it is, even if
you're offline or it's unpluggedoh, it still pops up.

(37:04):
Oh, that's what some what somevariations say Okay, okay.
And then, like a later version,the curse is spread by, like a
link or file sent by a friend,okay, who has already been
cursed, okay.
So I don't know if it's one ofthose things where it's like, if
you don't share this to 10people, then you'll be cursed.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
Type shit right right .

Speaker 3 (37:23):
Me every time, sending like the one that says
if you share this with fourpeople, you'll have a million
dollars next time.

Speaker 1 (37:27):
But I'll be sending that shit.
I'll be sending that shit.

Speaker 3 (37:29):
Just in case, just in case.

Speaker 1 (37:31):
Just in case.
Just in case the one I'msending might be the one Take my
bank account the next day.

Speaker 3 (37:39):
Fuck.
Next one, next one.
I'll get on the next one, yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:43):
I got it Okay, so I'm going to just mention the
original Red Room Flashanimation.
So it is believed to be thesource of the urban legend.
It was an Adobe Flash horroranimation uploaded to the
GeoCities in the late 1990s.
It depicted the story of a boywho, after discussing the Red

(38:05):
Room with a classmate, stumbledupon a pop-up on his computer.
The story of a boy who, afterdiscussing the red room with a
classmate, stumbled upon apop-up on his computer.
It's similar to the other onein terms of what happens.
The animation features a redpop-up displaying a red door and
initially asking the samequestion do you like it?
This is what you were talkingabout.
This question is accompanied bya child's voice and the pop-up

(38:27):
reappears when the viewer triesto close it.
Each time it appears thesentence lengthens with text
emerging from the vertical line,until it reads do you like the
red room?
In this one, the final pop-updisplays the list of names,
starting with the boy's schoolfriend name at the top.
It's implied the boy's own nameis added to the list.
Following the pop-up, sometimessomething grabs.

(38:48):
The boy's own name is added tothe list.
Um.
Following the pop-up, sometimessomething grabs the boy from
behind.
He is later found dead and hisroom walls are painted red with
blood.
Uh, the animation concludeswith a jump scare and a red room
pop-up that appears to be onthe user screen rather than
within the animation itself, andthe Red Room Curse.

(39:12):
Urban Legend, particularly itsdepiction in the Flash animation
, has spurred various theoriesabout its symbolism, reflecting
anxieties prevalent in Japanesesociety and broader internet
culture.
I got that.
You want me to go.
I got the information of likewhat it represents or like what,
yeah yeah, yeah.

(39:32):
What like in Japanese culture orwhatnot.

Speaker 3 (39:35):
Or like the fears.
Is that what you mean?
Yeah, like the fears.

Speaker 1 (39:39):
Yeah, like the fears, yeah, so fear of the known and
the internet.
The sudden appearance of thepop-up and its unyielding nature
plays on the fear of theunknown, particularly within the
vast and often unsettling realmof the Internet.
The inability to close thewindow or escape the curse,
despite efforts to unplug thecomputer, highlights the

(39:59):
perceived uncontrollability andinescapability of digital
dangers.
The Red Room Curse, similar toother Japanese internet-based
horror stories, taps into theanxieties associated with online
privacy, stalking and thepotential for harmful content
you know what that reminds me of?

Speaker 3 (40:17):
because it says like a pop-up message right, right.
So sometimes when I was ayounger kid, or whatever, and I
was on the internet, where'sthis?
Going, I'd be chilling right,I'd be chilling you know,
browsing the internet.
Where is this going?
I'd be chilling right.

Speaker 1 (40:27):
I'd be chilling browsing the internet.

Speaker 3 (40:28):
Then that shit would pop up with the message saying
horny milfs in your area,located five blocks down the
road.
I was like there's no way.
That shit scared me, bro.
I felt vulnerable.

Speaker 1 (40:40):
I felt like so I ran outside.

Speaker 3 (40:43):
So I ran outside with my shirt off, down five blocks
this way, that way, wholecircumference, whole five blocks
, just to make sure there's nosingle moms in my area Single
morning moms, just in case.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
Just in case Just in case he really a hero y'all.
I really had to make sure hereally a hero y'all If there was
.

Speaker 3 (41:02):
I had to notify everybody.
You had to verify first.

Speaker 1 (41:10):
I had to verify first after the d.
You gotta be like yo.
That's crazy.
That's crazy.
Had a, had a, had a, hadanother.

Speaker 3 (41:15):
I ain't gonna lie, I ain't gonna lie put a whole damn
fucking virus on the computer Iain't gonna lie, no, no, I'll
take this out.

Speaker 1 (41:24):
This is out.
I ain't gonna lie, bro, therewas okay.
So that pop-up, that pop-up,y'all know the pop-up, y'all
know the pop-up, y'all know whatI'm talking about.

Speaker 3 (41:32):
Y'all know what I'm talking about Bro.

Speaker 1 (41:34):
It showed up with like a girl on you Like the
picture.
For real, but I think like theystole the picture pictures and
then I told you like ascreenshot of it.
And then, like you had like thewhat I was watching in the back

(41:56):
and I was like I can't sendthis, I can't, I can't send this
, right, I can't.

Speaker 3 (41:58):
It's you, hey, that's you.
Then bbc, uh, midget, you knowcovered in barbecue sauce.

Speaker 1 (42:00):
You know I can't send that to people.
You know what kind of look atme, fucking weird getting
cracked behind the eye.

Speaker 3 (42:07):
You know I like to be specific because you know that
helps me figure out what I liketo see, or like what's another
one single moms making a shakefor EBT type shit that really
right there.

Speaker 1 (42:26):
Hey, see they get it.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
See, they get it.
They understand they get theflow.

Speaker 1 (42:32):
They know what's going on EBT type shit, type
shit.
That really, that really rightthere hey.

Speaker 3 (42:36):
See, they get it.
See, they get it.
They understand, they get theflow, they know what's going on.

Speaker 1 (42:39):
Yeah, I don't know what the fuck that was, though,
no, but but yeah, bro, that'scrazy bro.
So like that, I don't even know.
I don't even know why is myteacher on here why I hold bro.
If only bro, if only I couldhave used that as blackmail.
All right, all right, y'all,y'all going too crazy, y'all
going too crazy, y'all going toocrazy.

Speaker 3 (42:58):
Who said my inner monologue is leaking?

Speaker 1 (43:00):
Y'all going too crazy , bro, I don't even know.
Alright.
What are?

Speaker 3 (43:04):
you.
Chilling bro.
They dogs be chilling but um.

Speaker 1 (43:10):
What were we what?
Were we talking about Okay.

Speaker 3 (43:12):
My fault y'all.
We gotta get back on it Alright.

Speaker 1 (43:13):
So Death and the afterlife.
The legend explicitly connectsthe Red Room with death, as
victims are found dead Withtheir rooms painted red with
blood.
The color red itself Can beassociated with blood, violence
and death In various cultures,making it a fitting symbol for
the legend's chilling narrative.
The list of names appearing onthe screen can represent a

(43:34):
macabre roster of the cursedindividuals, signifying their
independent, their impendingdemise.
Sorry the okay.
So fragility of life andpsychological vulnerability.
The railroad curse can beinterpreted as a cautionary tale
about the fragility Is that?

Speaker 3 (43:51):
how you say it Fragility.

Speaker 1 (43:54):
That one right there.
Fragility, frag, fraglitity.
I think that's right, thefraglitity Chat.
Is this right?
Fragtity, the fragtity, thefragility of life and the
potential for unexpected tragedy, especially for the young, and
impressionable Psychologicalimpact of encountering the

(44:17):
pop-up and the subsequent lossof consciousness suggests a
potential commentary on thevulnerability of the human mind
to suggest, to suggest Jesus,fuck man.
On the vulnerability of thehuman mind to suggestion and
fear.
One theory suggests the red roomsymbolizes a destructive
retreat from reality whereindividuals, like the characters

(44:39):
in the haunting of Hill House,seek refuge in isolation, only
to be consumed by their innerdemons.
Jesus, I cannot read today,fuck, fuck.
The internet as a gateway, onlyto be consumed by their inner
demons.
Jesus, I cannot read today.
Fuck, it's all good bro, fuck,all right.
The internet as a gateway toforbidden knowledge and danger.
The legend implies that the redroom pop up appears when users
are looking for forbiddencontent or have spent too much

(45:02):
time online, suggesting aconnection between curiosity and
danger.
This interpretation ties intobroader concerns about the
internet's role in exposingindividuals to disturbing or
harmful material, particularlyin the context of the deep web,
although the Red Room livestreamitself is deemed a myth.

Speaker 3 (45:24):
No way, no way.
This was a lie.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
And that's how you turn two sentences.
It's a full-on book report,easy, easy.
Where we at Easy, almost donewith the episode yeah, man,
that's how you do that rightthere, oh man.

Speaker 3 (45:42):
Oh man, what you think about it, though I mean, I
know it's not real.

Speaker 1 (45:45):
Yeah for being a least.
What, what, what if the whatturns out?
What if I beat my meat tonight?

Speaker 3 (45:52):
right, and the red screen pops up on the ad pops up
of local mom oh yeah, oh yeahthen when you click on that,
it's like when I exit, I'll talkabout ew no as one does, as one
does ew, no, disgusting, thelight just turned on.

Speaker 1 (46:07):
Huh, the light just turned on the red light.
It wasn't on before.
Reverend said it better fuckingbe on, oh shit.
So when I click on it and I'mlike Ew, no, it keeps on popping
up, take it as a sign Take it.
That reminds me of like when yougo to a sketchy site and you

(46:28):
and you try to watch the videobut it has an ad.
So you try to exit out the ad,out the pop-up, and then it
sends you to a whole otherwebsite and then when you try to
get back to that, it restarts.
That's technically what I'mgetting from that.

Speaker 3 (46:42):
Y'all know what we're talking about, y'all know what
we're talking about.
That's what I get for that nowit's pretty cool.
I like the community behind, orlike the slight history or the
slight story behind it.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
Yeah, like the way it came about.
I like how something thatreally happened like messed uh,
like they connected that to tothe, to the creepy pasta of it.
It gives a little bit more morevalidity, more uh that's a
little flavor.

Speaker 3 (47:06):
Yeah, it's a little flavor to it.
Yeah, that's a little.

Speaker 1 (47:08):
I mean, we obviously hate that obviously, yeah, the
someone had a, someone had adoubt for that.

Speaker 3 (47:13):
Yeah something like that had to happen, but and it
is pretty- cool, especially kid,yeah it's just, it's just
pretty interesting.
Sorry that's what I meant like,just the whole thing in itself
is interesting, like the.
The fact that somebody createdwas like you know what?
What?
If you're laying down or you'rechilling your room and boom,
this pop-up message pops up, andthen it says this thing in chap

(47:34):
, japanese, and then obviously,like the names come up and then,
because they get prettycreative, like some people get
pretty creative with likecreepypastas or like urban
legends and shit like that Ialways like them.

Speaker 1 (47:44):
Stories, yeah, I like them, especially after we've
been covering them.
For like a couple of lastepisodes.
We had like how do you say itproperly?
A couple episodes back that wehad covered them.
I started getting a little bitmore into the creepypastas and
like actually enjoying them.

Speaker 3 (47:59):
Yeah, yeah, it is pretty nice, but I don't know.
Y'all, let us know what y'allthink.
Y'all, let us know what y'allthink.
Y'all let us know if there'sany.

Speaker 1 (48:07):
Have y'all ever got the pop-up?

Speaker 3 (48:08):
Right.
Have you ever got that pop-upof local milks in your area, or
hot single moms or somethinglike?

Speaker 1 (48:13):
that Did you also go, did you?

Speaker 3 (48:15):
click on the link and let us know if you ever did
find one.

Speaker 1 (48:18):
To this day.
To this day.

Speaker 3 (48:23):
I still been looking for one.
I haven't got that ad anymoreTill this day.
Them pop-ups don't pop upanymore, so you know the.

Speaker 1 (48:30):
You know the column be bad when the pop-ups ain't
popping up.

Speaker 3 (48:35):
No, no go ahead.
But now y'all let us know whaty'all think.
Y'all let us know if we missedanything about the whole Red
Room curse or anything like that.
But we're going to go ahead andhead on to the next subject.
Oh, I keep pushing the wrongone.
I need to switch it.

Speaker 2 (48:50):
Fear.
Is it all in your mind or couldit be real?
Welcome to.

Speaker 3 (48:57):
Fear, Fact or Fiction ?
Your, your is Not me.
Not me, not me.
I'm trying to think what elsethey say.
What would Nina say?
Who the fuck you talking to?

Speaker 1 (49:13):
Who the fuck you talking to hey?
Bro Get your bitch ass overhere.

Speaker 3 (49:24):
Whatever big bro says yeah, he got that voice down
correctly, the right bass andeverything.

Speaker 1 (49:27):
Whatever big bro says yeah, he got that voice down
correctly, the right bass andeverything.
Yeah, you be watching themstreamers.

Speaker 3 (49:36):
Right them streamers, bro.
But we're going to be talkingabout the sewer gators, the
alligators in New York.
You hear it I?

Speaker 1 (49:46):
ain't going to lie for this one.
I actually didn't get a lot forthis one.

Speaker 3 (49:50):
No, I actually have some news clippings.

Speaker 1 (49:52):
You got news clippings.
I got like Actual physical newsclippings.
I got like a couple of them,but no, I'm just joking.

Speaker 3 (49:57):
No, okay, I was about to say but yeah, we're going to
be talking about the wholeentire thing where people said
that there's alligators in NewYork's sewer system.
Allegedly, allegedly.

Speaker 1 (50:08):
It's actually facts, bro.
Well, yeah, two of them.
Go ahead, go ahead, go ahead.
So back at night.

Speaker 3 (50:16):
I need my paper, I need my notes.
Who ain't memorized the notes?
I just did them.
I just did them while you wasin the bathroom.
No way you got that much.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
Holy shit no way you got that much Holy shit.
No way you got that much Okay.

Speaker 3 (50:33):
All right.
So all right.
Do you want to tell the legend?

Speaker 1 (50:37):
Yeah, because I honestly yeah, go ahead.
You might have to correct me onsome stuff, Uh-huh go ahead.
Apparently you got moreReference.
Apparently you got more no.
Who got a bunch of no's?
No, there's a little bit allright.
So the term break it down toy'all.
The term sewer gators primarilyrefers to a popular urban

(50:57):
legend, particularly associatedwith new york city, about
alligator, about alligatorsliving in the city sewers.
According to the myth, thesealligators were initially
discarded as pets, often afterbeing bought as souvenirs from
Florida and flushed out toiletswhen they grew too large.
The legend often describes themas growing to enormous sizes,

(51:18):
possibly becoming albino or evenmutated due to the dark, toxic
sewer environment.
So the legend dates back to the1930s, with various accounts of
sightings and rescues ofalligators in and around new
york city.
Uh, over time the story becameembellished with claims of a
bino, blind or even mutatedalligators in that meeting the

(51:40):
sewers, feeding on rats andtrash and menacing sewer workers
.
The sewer gator myth has becomea popular, recurring theme in
popular culture, including books, movies, television shows and
even inspiring characters likeleatherhead and the teenage
mutant ninja turtle franchise.
Uh, so, in all fairness, myfault, no, go ahead in all

(52:03):
fairness, we're talking aboutnew y City here.

Speaker 3 (52:07):
We're talking about New York Bar for bar.
We're talking about not regularrats For all the people outside
of the country or people whohave not been to New York or

(52:28):
don't know about New York.

Speaker 1 (52:29):
You can feed a family of five with a New York rat,
bro they got big rats over.

Speaker 3 (52:34):
I'm talking about massive fucking rats, about the
damn size of a damn dog.

Speaker 1 (52:41):
That ass, that ass my dogs.
Come here, buddy, come here,come here, come on For reference
.

Speaker 3 (52:48):
Come here, buddy, come here, come here, come on
For reference.
Come here, buddy, come here.
Isn't that actually a dog?
It's actually a Raffa, new York.
Y'all showing off his dog forall the people that are
listening.

Speaker 1 (52:59):
Butthole at the camera, tell him.
Tell him.
Tell him Word to Word to mymother.
Word to Word to my dad, tellhim.
Tell him.
Snowball, tell him.

Speaker 3 (53:08):
On my butters.

Speaker 1 (53:10):
Okay, buddy, on my butters, you go chill now.
Buddy, go chill now.
He's like what the fuck, whatthe fuck?
Going on.

Speaker 3 (53:17):
What's all this?
Make it the Mikey way, make itthe Ike way.

Speaker 1 (53:20):
I mean.

Speaker 3 (53:21):
Ike.
I said Ike, make it the Mikeyway, you seen that Uh uh, no,
I'm making the Mikey way.

Speaker 1 (53:26):
You seen that?
Uh-uh, no, uh-uh.
What is it People talking about?

Speaker 3 (53:29):
Mike Subs.
Ain't that the name of theplace?

Speaker 1 (53:31):
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're like let Mikey do histhing.

Speaker 3 (53:41):
Oh you're talking about Jersey.

Speaker 1 (53:43):
Mike's Jersey, Mike's Jersey, Mike's.
Oh yeah there you go.

Speaker 3 (53:45):
Jersey Mike's yeah, they were.
Like they're big, like y'all.
Look at videos of New York ratswhen y'all get a chance and
y'all see that if the wholealligator is not having enough
food, what you talking?

Speaker 1 (53:57):
about To be fair.
Yeah, I mean yeah.
One rat is more than enoughfood for, and everybody knows,
the only thing New York rats eatis New York pizza.
It's a proof of fact, guys, I'mwalking here.
I'm walking here.

Speaker 3 (54:14):
It's a proof of fact, guys.
But my father ain't mean to cutyou off.
I just wanted to let the peopleknow.
If they think that a rat's notgoing to be enough food, think
again, look it up.
Yep, yep, you get mugged by arat if you go down the wrong
alley.

Speaker 1 (54:29):
I bought that one time, but it was a rat trying to
sell me an 8th for $45 brotrying to sell you a Rolex?
He did, bro.
The human was still attached tothe Rolex.
That shit was crazy dudetalking about Hillary.
Shut up, boy.
You gonna want this watch ornot?
I was like bro chill, I'm noteven from here.

(54:50):
Yeah, I can tell.
Started snapping Walkingtowards me.
I said yo, yo.

Speaker 3 (54:58):
Then four more rats came out of nowhere.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
Four more of them.

Speaker 3 (55:01):
They all started snapping in synchronous.

Speaker 1 (55:05):
I had a.
Then they all broke down insong Talking about jazz hands.

Speaker 3 (55:07):
Synchronous.
Yo, I had a, I had a.
What?
Then they all broke down insong Talking about jazz heads or
something.
They walking up, running upsteps, then jumping, just
holding their shins like thatlanding.

Speaker 1 (55:22):
I had to get out of there.
I had to skedaddle.
I ran up the stairs thinking Iwas going to be free Officer.
Officer, there's rats downthere with jazz hands, lock me
up, bro, threw me in the jailcell.
Bro, I'm in jail now.
Right, I'm walking around, youknow, come to find out it's run
by a fucking rat.

(55:43):
They're the number onetaxpayers of the city.
Rats pull up.
They're still trying to sell methe watch.
I'm like, bro, I don't wantthis True story.

Speaker 3 (55:55):
Why would I make it up?

Speaker 1 (55:56):
Why would I make this up?

Speaker 3 (55:57):
I wouldn't tell y'all something that isn't true.
I wouldn't.
What were you going to say,though?

Speaker 1 (56:03):
I'm going to cut you off.
You said they didn't want tocut you off.
I said, well, that wasn'tbullshit, all right, okay.
So that's really apart from thestories, like a couple stories
I have the other thing is thereality of the situation.
I don't know if you want me tosay that yet, or you have me.

(56:24):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, saythat yet, okay.

Speaker 3 (56:33):
Let the people know, okay, so, because it's all a
conspiracy, it's all aconspiracy theory.
People think like yeah, likelike yayo said, like people had
them as pets, they got too bigor they were gonna get too big
so they flushed.

Speaker 1 (56:38):
I mean to be, to be real.

Speaker 3 (56:41):
I can see as a possibility yeah, I mean, that
makes I mean they found, theyfound some well, it's kind of
like the same thing with Floridaand pythons, ain't it?

Speaker 1 (56:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (56:49):
Like they had all the snakes and now they have all
the snakes that got loose.
There's like infested withsnakes.

Speaker 1 (56:54):
Pythons reproduce at a rapid rate and they kill
everything else.
So yeah, that's the problemthey're dealing with right there
.

Speaker 3 (57:11):
Yeah.
So I mean, yes, I get that thesewer system is not an ideal
area to adapt into, but if thepossibility of a generation to
evolve in a sense to where theycan adapt, because that's kind
of like bugs, you know, like,but it's like crazy.
I'm going from bugs, I meananimals, the reptiles, the bugs,
but for example, like a bug,right, a bug can eventually
become immune to a chemical yeah, yeah, cockroaches like they're

(57:32):
fucking cockroaches, they'relike essentially evolve, in a
sense to become resistant tocertain chemicals or some
bullshit like that, because I'vehad people that work in pest
control I think my cousin mighthave told me this too but they
become like, they evolve andbecome immune to like certain.

Speaker 1 (57:47):
No, there's been.
I saw a report not so long agotalking about within a couple
years, traditional pesticideswon't be able to kill roaches no
more Like they.
It's crazy how that works.

Speaker 3 (57:58):
Right, you just spray the cockroach and it just goes.
All you hear is you gotanything stronger, bro?

Speaker 1 (58:05):
That last pack was not it.
My boy, that shit you upcharging me on that pack, bro.

Speaker 3 (58:10):
That was not it imagine it just literally like a
little roach, but like somecartouche.
Like when it reaches out it'slike a big ass hand grabs it and
then it just pulls it down to alittle little small size and it
just goes like the whippet yeah, yeah it's gonna to use it as a
whippet thing.
No, you hear it.

Speaker 1 (58:28):
Rotate the galaxy gas off, the pesticide off the rod.
It is crazy.

Speaker 3 (58:33):
No, but essentially, like I'm saying, though, if that
can happen with the bugs, I'msure an alligator could somehow
evolve and adapt.

Speaker 1 (58:45):
Maybe, maybe, maybe.

Speaker 3 (58:46):
Maybe If we're going off possibilities.
Maybe, but if we're going offpossibilities, anything can
happen.

Speaker 1 (58:51):
Really, that's what I always say Anything can happen.

Speaker 3 (58:57):
I think that's what the word means, but nah, like,
what were you going to say aboutthe things, though?
I was just going to like thefacts behind it Like how, why
can't yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (59:10):
Go ahead, let the people know, okay, okay.
So studies have, such as oneconducted in Gainesville,
florida, have documented asurprising diversity of wildlife
, including alligators, utilizea stormwater sewer system to
navigate urban areas.
So they do this in Florida.
They do do this in Florida.
They do do this in Florida.
They'll be in the sewers,they'll move around, you know,

(59:30):
they'll do this in Florida.
It's been important todistinguish between stormwater
sewers which handle rainwaterand sanitary sewers, which
transport human waste.
Alligators are most likely tobe found in stormwater systems
which may connect to naturalwaterways.
So we often you know there'salready differences, we already
work in this there's twodifferent sewers Limitation

(59:53):
survival experts agree that thecold temperatures, lack of
sunlight and toxic conditionswithin most city sewer systems,
especially sanitary sewers, makelong-term survival for
alligators highly unlikely.
Alligators are cold-blooded andneed external heat sources to
regulate their body temperaturesand digest food.

Speaker 3 (01:00:14):
But Go ahead bro, go ahead bro.
You would think it'd be likeclammy down there right, not hot
, but you'd be like I don'tthink it would be cold,
necessarily I don't think it'dbe cold.
I don't think it'd be coldeither.

Speaker 1 (01:00:29):
I really don't know how that works, I'll be honest,
but just by like, just by likereading this just kind of patron
who takes the cold shit.
Mmm, who takes the cold shit?
You feel me?

Speaker 3 (01:00:42):
that is true.
Imagine you got 10 piles of hotshit coming down the sewers
into that thing.
Alligator, alligator, justchilling, ah, rubs itself in it.
What Huh?
Who knows, that's what I gotout of that.
Teach your lady.

(01:01:02):
Explain your word.
Translate this in layman'sterms for me.

Speaker 1 (01:01:07):
Talk to me like I'm a baby.
I mean possibility.
We're only here to speculate.

Speaker 3 (01:01:12):
We can because it doesn't say it's impossible, it
just says it's highly unlikelyyeah, yeah, they're not.
Yeah, yeah, that's, that's agood one right there because
motherfuckers was like can theyget to the moon?
Is highly unlikely.
What the fuck do we do?
we got to the moon okay, I don'tknow okay can we find the cure
to uh the black plague or have asolution to the black plague?

(01:01:36):
Highly unlikely what they do nomore black plague.
So if you're going based off ofpossibilities, it is a
possibility still that theycould.
Yeah, y'all let me know if I'mcooking or I'm cooking shit,
y'all let me know who saidthey're taking shit like the
alligators in the suit.

Speaker 1 (01:01:54):
I mean, you got a point, though you honestly do
got a point, but with that, withthe wording and everything
that's, you gotta look at thefinal print.
You gotta look at the finalprint, that's you read the words
for what they are you reallygotta read the words for what
they are, not for what you wantit to be.

Speaker 3 (01:02:06):
There you go, damn.

Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
Alright, alright, holy fuck.

Speaker 3 (01:02:21):
You scared the fuck out of me.

Speaker 1 (01:02:24):
Feel my hands, bro.
Feel my hands, bro, Bro.
Editor.

Speaker 3 (01:02:26):
Feel my hands, bro, feel my hands, bro, feel my Bro.
Low Editor.
He scared the shit out of me ohmy god bro, oh bro.
Bro, that scared the fuck outof me.

Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
I just looked over there, bro, and I see like a
head popping.

Speaker 3 (01:02:41):
Yeah, I just saw her head pop, I was like no way
those are eyes that I saw.

Speaker 2 (01:02:44):
Oh, my god bro, I didn't even hear her come in, oh
fuck, I ain't neither.

Speaker 3 (01:02:48):
I just saw the dogs looking back there, holy fuck
bro, we got pranked.
I'm about to shit myself.
We got pranked, feel my asshole.

Speaker 1 (01:02:55):
Feel my asshole.

Speaker 3 (01:02:57):
We got pranked.

Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
Holy shit.

Speaker 3 (01:03:00):
That shit was scary low key.
All I saw was your eyeballs.

Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
I thought it was that I.
I thought it was an alligatorcoming.
I was about to say, hey, I'mgone.

Speaker 3 (01:03:07):
The alligators are inside the house.

Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
They came out the toilet.

Speaker 3 (01:03:13):
They came out through the toilet.
Sorry y'all, we had technicaldifficulties.
First we got scared, Then thedogs were roughhousing, and one
of them messed up their tooth.

Speaker 1 (01:03:23):
I think it's off that toilet.
They were biting the toy toohard, I think.

Speaker 3 (01:03:26):
Probably.
Oh yeah, but the wholealligators in the sewer system
thing I saw, Well, you got moreto add to it.
No, go ahead, Go ahead bro.

Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
I'll just oh, hold on , let me make sure.
No, that's it.
Yeah, that's it, you're right.
Yeah, that's it for me.
Three stories, or two storiesand a half, okay, or a town.

Speaker 3 (01:03:46):
so to say there's actually a holiday in New York,
in Manhattan, manhattan,manhattan.
Is that in New York?
Yes, right, is it?
Yes, all right, I want to makesure I'm not wrong, but okay, so
I know that they said there's athing called Alligators in the

(01:04:07):
Sewers Day.
But okay, so I know that theysaid there's a thing called
alligators in the sewers day.
So each year on february 9th,commemorating the 1935 incident,
they have like a semi-holiday,is it?
They celebrate the fact thatalligators in the sewer because
they accepted it as, yes, it'sa- urban legend or whatever, but
they like to sell it kind of oflike Mothman, they just like to

(01:04:27):
party.

Speaker 1 (01:04:28):
They just like to party.

Speaker 3 (01:04:29):
Let's be honest here.

Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
Really.
Can you really blame?

Speaker 3 (01:04:33):
a person who won the Pond of Day.
Can you really blame a personto party?
So there was actually anincident that happened February
9th in 1935.
Okay, and hold on.
Where is it at?
Oh, but right here it saysfebruary 10th.

(01:04:53):
Okay, the it was february okay,sometime in february 1935 there
was an article that readalligator found an uptown sewer.
Okay, so it describes that agroup of east harlem boys
shoveling snow into a stormdrain on east 21 30 123rd street
who spotted something moving,so they went to go.

(01:05:14):
Look, they pulled up.
They pulled up a seven to eightfoot alligator weighing around
125 pounds using a clotheslineand then killed it with snow
shovels because it was likethrashing around.
This is something that actuallydid happen.
Like the news came out, theyhad like reports.
The local paper even put likethe name of the people who were

(01:05:40):
involved with it.
Not only that, but I think theyalso put like the addresses of
the people, because it was likecommon for like newspapers to
put the person's name along withthe address.

Speaker 1 (01:05:53):
The address is crazy.

Speaker 3 (01:05:54):
Okay, so it says teenagers.
Salvatore Condolusi, anthonyRomano and a few others were
named as witnesses andparticipants.
They weren't anonymous sources.
And a few others were named aswitnesses and participants.
They weren't anonymous sources.
They were listed with addresses, which also was common for
1930s reporting and addslegitimacy to the whole.

(01:06:16):
Thing.

Speaker 1 (01:06:16):
Yeah, yeah yeah, but that's like they found an actual
alligator.
Yeah, so they actually foundlike an alligator and they
dragged it out.

Speaker 2 (01:06:23):
Yeah, like in the storm drain or sewer system area
or whatever you want to call it.

Speaker 3 (01:06:37):
It's happened before.
So I don't see, like I don'tknow, bro, I just don't.
I mean maybe not deep in thesewers or maybe like not in the
entrance, but I feel like theremight be something.
So I mean me personally, that'swhat I believe, I think it.

Speaker 1 (01:06:45):
I believe, I think it'd be something.
I think that the more of themyth I think that's where it
gets a little cloudy the factbecause they're thinking they're
going to Bano, they're gettingmutated because of the human
waste and everything.
That's some of what people weresaying that was happening.
Some accounts do say they justfound regular alligators.

(01:07:06):
It was just regular alligatorsthat were, that were down there
oh, regular alligator, it wasjust right they weren't like
mutated or yeah, I felt likeit's just regular.

Speaker 3 (01:07:14):
Yeah, I think it's just regular, regular they said,
on august 23rd 2010 in queens,a 18 to 24 inch baby gator pops
out of an overflowing,overflowing storm drain and
hides under a car, so NYPD andanimal control had to come out
to get it.
But they said that it wascommon for them to find

(01:07:39):
something like that because abunch of people had illegal pet
alligators or caimans and theyalways like deal with that.

Speaker 1 (01:07:48):
If you think about it , new york is is an island.
Essentially it's just an island.
So I you know you get.
You get saltwater crocodilesalso, or like I feel like maybe
not necessarily an alligator,but you could get those.
I think maybe this is just astretch going back to like the

(01:08:08):
sewers connected to to somefresh waterways and stuff like
that or like natural waterways.
I feel like you know they couldclimb up those those same ways,
or just climb up a shore andthen get going to the city.

Speaker 3 (01:08:20):
I think I don't know maybe because I mean it's not.
It's common for like animals tolike change their patterns and
evolve to like do differentthings.

Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:08:29):
Like, for example, like was it the salmon that go
upstream?
Yep, oh yeah, that's the waythey're built Like they're meant
to, like do some shit like that, or or how bears would go from
here but then migrate to adifferent area because food runs
short at this area or like adifferent, like like sharks,
because food runs short at thisarea.

(01:08:49):
Or like a different.
Like like sharks.
I remember on shark week theywere talking about how there was
an island or like a place somesome place along the coast over
in in europe or some place overthere were like we never had
sharks.
People would be in the ocean orthe waters and no problem
they're like no problems withfishing or swimming but then
they actually started capturingpictures of like the sharks and
then there was like more sharkencounters.

Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
I think some lady ended up getting attacked or
whatever okay, okay, this isrecent, yeah, yeah, oh, this is
recent, yeah, this is like therecent shark week, but they said
that the sharks were startingto like migrate toward that area
and they're like trying toresearch, like why?
Like why I was doing, why theystarted doing that so see,
that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (01:09:27):
Like animals would essentially sometimes change the
way they act or expand ormigrate to different areas or
whatever so.
I mean it makes sense.
I mean I'm not saying deep inthe sewer systems, but maybe
like on the entrance.

Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
Just like the edge or like entrance or over.
Yeah, yeah, something like that.
Yeah, yeah, something like that, yeah you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (01:09:47):
Yeah, so it's not far fetched in my opinion.
And then there's like anotheraccount Okay, february 2023,
prospect park lake in Brooklyn.

Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
Oh, this is recent.

Speaker 3 (01:09:56):
A lethargic four foot alligator, likely a dunk pet,
is rescued and sent to the Bronxzoo.
The incident reignites thelegend legend.
Experts reiterate that sewersare too cold and toxic for
gators to survive long term ohthey're too cold.
Yeah, they just found, but theykeep finding them.
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:10:18):
They said it's too cold, too toxic, too toxic.

Speaker 3 (01:10:24):
On this only had a bit I don't know, bro, because
I'm sure like isn't there aplace like in Chernobyl where
they have like fish in the pondand they're like mutated?
Yeah, we're talking aboutradiation here.

Speaker 1 (01:10:35):
Yeah, what little human feces gonna do to an
alligator?

Speaker 3 (01:10:40):
well, what you think.
I think it could be, possible.

Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
I don biology yeah, I don't know all science.

Speaker 3 (01:10:44):
I don't know how like that will affect other y'all,
y'all tell me, am I talking outmy ass?

Speaker 1 (01:10:49):
other other am I talking out my alligator but I
can see like an actualpossibility of something.
I mean not even possibility, Imean it's, it's happened,
they're clearly there's caseswhere it's happened they're like
you know what?

Speaker 3 (01:11:03):
we don't have alligators, but yes, we might
have a couple that we have torescue.

Speaker 1 (01:11:08):
In the sewer and shit From the sewers.

Speaker 3 (01:11:10):
But I swear we don't have no alligators I promise you
it's safe down there.

Speaker 1 (01:11:16):
I promise you.

Speaker 3 (01:11:18):
Oh yeah, why don't y'all go down there and live
stream it?
Oh, they did All right, goahead.
It says camera studies androutine reports.
Document gators using or waityeah oh no, this is in florida.
Okay, they use the cameras tosee that florida did do that um

(01:11:42):
pretty much like new york city'sdepartment of like
environmental protection saysthat they have no record of
alligators in the new york citysewer system and have no
evidence of nest or breedingpopulations okay they said, if,
like a stray juvenile, makes itunderground, long-term survival
is unlikely is unlikely thatsame word unlikely yeah same

(01:12:06):
word.
So winter temperatures, which istrue.
It does get cold.
It does get real cold.
The low light and food come onnow like food.
The rats are everywhere.
It's not going to be hard forthem to go up a bank and see a
rat get the rat or some bullcrap, or like the pigeons,
there's pigeons everywhere.

Speaker 1 (01:12:26):
Flying rats.

Speaker 3 (01:12:27):
Flying rats.
I get that they're not good forcold.
They're like cold-blooded orwhatever, or whatever.
You know they're not meant forthe cold or whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:12:39):
But alligators, I mean, I feel like they'll be
able to adapt to that situation.
Let me think, bro.
I feel like there's beenanother place where there's not
supposed to be alligatorsbecause of the cold weather, but
they found alligators.

Speaker 3 (01:12:54):
I'm telling you, bro, they learn to adapt and evolve
yeah, especially beingespecially talking about a
creature that's lived, since.
This is dinosaur.
This is dinosaur.

Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
You're right, this is a dinosaur, bro.
I'm talking about, like afighter, a whole meteor wiped
out, oh shit bee stock stop.

Speaker 3 (01:13:11):
Meteor wiped out a whole entire big chicken, but
wouldn't take out the alligator.
Would take out the big lizard.
Who's got a t-rex lizard?
I don't think it's the chickensoh, I'm talking about alligator
.
Oh, they wouldn't walk by thebig, big lizard right, but I
don't know, maybe I'm justtalking about out my eyes like I

(01:13:32):
said I believe it.
I mean, I personally feel like Icould see that they.
There is a possibility thatthere could be alligators around
the sewer system, maybepossibly go in and come out of
the source yeah, yeah, that'sall.

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
For example, like you said, I get it's hot.
Okay, I get that but likethat's their perfect condition.
Yeah, that that's their perfectcondition, but, like you were
saying, like that they'readapting, they're like it's just
evolution pushing itself to themax of like, actually trying to
survive there let me check isit hot in the sewer system?

Speaker 3 (01:14:12):
go ahead, you can keep.

Speaker 1 (01:14:14):
Uh.
No, I just feel like going,going based off, like if you, if
you're gonna adapt to asituation that you already in, I
feel like the alligator wouldbe the best animal to adapt to
the situation, but I'm almostcertain that's a place where
alligators do see, look, I justasked google.

Speaker 3 (01:14:32):
I said is it hot in a sewer system?
Yes, it can be warm in a sewersystem.
The wastewater flowing throughthe pipes is generally warmer
there you go, the surroundingground temperature.
Even in winter, this warmth cancreate a humid environment and
cause condensation, which is whyyou might see steam rising from
sewer grates on cold days.

Speaker 1 (01:14:54):
That's what I'm saying and there's two, I'm
saying unlikely see, new york islying to y'all.

Speaker 3 (01:14:58):
They are lying to y'all faces.

Speaker 1 (01:15:00):
Y'all have alligators in y'all sewers.

Speaker 3 (01:15:02):
You hear Word two.

Speaker 1 (01:15:04):
Word two there's alligators in y'all sewers.
This very moment, as we speak,y'all city is being overwhelmed
by alligators in the sewers.
Go ahead and give him a ground.
The secret alligatorassociation does not want you to
know that there's alligators inyour sewers this very moment

(01:15:25):
plotting to attack with theJihad and the Acaida.
They do not want you to know.

Speaker 3 (01:15:31):
And the reptiles.

Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
The reptilians, the reptile people Hold on the
reptile people they're in NewYork.

Speaker 3 (01:15:42):
The chairman and council people of New York have
reptiles in their who's themayor of New York?

Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
oh, you don't know the mayor what's his name Mario
or Luigi you gonna tell me healligator right there.
Yeah, jeff, you bro.

Speaker 3 (01:16:06):
I can tell he sheds.

Speaker 1 (01:16:08):
I can tell he knows his alligator Right there, that
picture right there.
I know he knows his alligator'sin the sewers and he is
debating what he gonna do aboutit?

Speaker 3 (01:16:16):
It looks like he'll look you dead in the face and
say, nah, I didn't know it.

Speaker 1 (01:16:21):
He's the type to look at you you bugging, you bugging
.
Wait until you bugging rightnow, guys, guys, we have just
stumbled upon an iceberg.

Speaker 3 (01:16:30):
I don't know Y'all, let me know what y'all think.
If I mean, yeah, yeah, it wasfff, so it's a fear factor
fiction, but I mean we reallycan't rate it yeah we can't rate
that one.

Speaker 1 (01:16:40):
Yeah, we can't rate that.
I just feel like it was a goodlittle yeah, it was a good yeah,
yeah, I agree with you.

Speaker 3 (01:16:45):
I agree with you I'll give you that one.

Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
I mean, we went the creepypasta route and I feel
like maybe we could have justthrew that in there because it's
a cryptid, in a sense yeah,because some people say kind of
like the Rat King, that's likeits own little thing too, but I
thought the Rat King was whenrats get their tails tied
together and then one survives.

Speaker 3 (01:17:04):
Is it.

Speaker 1 (01:17:04):
Yeah, that's.

Speaker 3 (01:17:05):
Go ahead.

Speaker 1 (01:17:06):
look at that I got you right here, wait a minute.

Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
Oh, that's probably like a character from like shit
they made, or whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
Oh, like that's an actual.

Speaker 3 (01:17:14):
Phenomena.

Speaker 1 (01:17:15):
Yeah, it's like an actual.
Yeah, yeah, see, yeah, righthere, google, google.
A rat king is a group of ratswhich intertwine tails,
essentially forming a giant rat.
While some scientists believethey're folklore, others
consider them a rare naturalphenomenon.
Yeah, so it's just like that.
They just get tied up.

Speaker 3 (01:17:34):
Oh, okay.

Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
There's so many in one small area that they just
get just from moving.
They just get interlinked ohokay.
They'll end up dying becausethey just can't move.
They get tied up and die Okay.

Speaker 3 (01:17:50):
But I don't know.
I don't know.
Y'all let me know what y'allthink.
Y'all let us know if y'all haveany facts or if any people from
new york if you're listening,have you seen an alligator in
the sewers?
Next time you're passing over,like the little sewer thing, put
your ear right there.
Maybe drop your phone downthere.

Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
Live streamers I did hear growl one time when I went
by the sewers oh yeah, that'sright when you went uh-huh, I
did.
I did hear a little growl, butit could have been my stomach, I
don't know.
Could have been, could it couldhave been, I don't know y'all.

Speaker 3 (01:18:20):
Let us know what y'all think.
Let us know if y'all have anystories or anything like that or
any like.
Um, like y'all parents saidsomething, your grandpa said,
they saw this, or some shit likethat.
They're lying to y'all.
I know it gets cold, but againwe just asked google we Google
Shed being flush is not cold.
That's all we're going to say.

(01:18:40):
That's all we're saying.
If it's humid, you have thatcondensation that reptiles like
is that humidity?

Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
Yeah Right, don't they like humidity.
They like heat and humidity.
They're cold-blooded yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:18:52):
Right, that's what they like, so that's essentially
a perfect environment for themis it not chat, let's, let's
read chat real quick w w, w.

Speaker 1 (01:19:04):
Why the fuck was?

Speaker 3 (01:19:04):
I looking why the fuck was I looking yeah, true,
prayer hands, prayer hands.
Yeah, thank you for thedonation.

Speaker 1 (01:19:11):
Why the fuck I look at you dollar donation I
appreciate that yeah, he lost it, y'all he lost it.

Speaker 3 (01:19:18):
Alright, so that's gonna be the end Of that topic.
Let's go ahead and finish itoff With the last topic.

Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
That's a little finisher.
That's a little finisher.
Alright, next time.

Speaker 3 (01:19:27):
Oh shit, bow, bow, bow, bow.
Let the people know what thelast topic is.
Y'all Alright?

Speaker 1 (01:19:35):
bro, this is our Towns that disappeared, people
gone.
What Towns that let the peopleknow what the last topic is?
Y'all all right, bro, this isour towns that disappeared,
people gone, what towns thatdisappeared?
Is that what you put?

Speaker 3 (01:19:42):
no, that is right there's no way a whole town
could disappear silly.
I was about to say believe itor not?

Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
believe it or not?

Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
essentially all right okay so I found a couple.

Speaker 1 (01:19:55):
I found a couple, but the thing is they didn't
disappear like off the map typeoff the map type, like they were
just abandoned and I just foundthe reason why they were
abandoned.
Yeah, so you might have these.
Uh, if you do just, and I'llcover everything you only have
one there's one that's what Idid.
Oh, okay, okay, because I justgot a couple guys okay, that's

(01:20:16):
fine, okay, okay.
So I'm going to shoot off mycouple.

Speaker 3 (01:20:22):
No way More than one.
That's what I do.

Speaker 1 (01:20:26):
Is this an ad for a certain?
Is this single horny dudes inyour area?
All right, so you want me to gofirst, or you just shoot off my
my load when you want it, whereyou want it at, huh, where you

(01:20:49):
want to shoot it at, all rightall, right All right guys, let's
be, mature here.
All right.
All right, I got a couple Justoff the top type shit and then
if it's the one that you gotcovered, just let me know and
then I'll skip that one.

Speaker 3 (01:21:03):
Mine is the one in Brazil.
Fuck, is that the one you have?

Speaker 1 (01:21:08):
Oh, okay All right, so I'm going to start off easy.
Bodie, california, a goldmining boom town that thrived in
the late 19th century, with thepopulation reaching up to
10,000 at its peak.
According to Sky History TVchannel, gold deposits
eventually ran out and thepopulation dwindled to zero by
1950.

(01:21:29):
Today, bodie is a CaliforniaState Historic Park, preserved
in a state of arrested decay andconsidered one of the most
famous ghost towns in theAmerican West.

Speaker 3 (01:21:41):
Was this like during the gold rush.

Speaker 1 (01:21:42):
That was during the gold rush.
Okay, All right.
Next one I got is Craico, italy,a stunning medieval hilltop
town in southern Italy.
Craico's population began todecline as early as the 1890s
due to poor agriculturalconditions.
A series of landslides,possibly caused by faulty

(01:22:04):
pipework and excavations, madethe town unsafe and residents
were evacuated in 1963.
Earthquakes further contributedto the town's abandonment and
it has since became a popularfilming location.
The next one is Hashima Island,japan, also known as

(01:22:29):
Gonkunajima.
This island, oh, battleshipIsland.
This island was a thriving coalmining facility and, at one
point, one of the most denselypopulated places on earth.
When coal resources weredepleted in 1974, the island was
rapidly abandoned, partiallyopen to tourists in recent years

(01:22:49):
.
It's a stark reminder ofindustrial decline and has been
proposed as unESCO WorldHeritage Site.
This one I like a little bit.
The Ronald Colony oh yeah, oneof the first English attempts at
establishing a permanentsettlement in North America.

(01:23:10):
The Ronald Colonists vanishedbetween 1587 and 1590, leaving
behind the only word Croaten,croaten, croaten, carved in the
post.
The fate of the colonistsremains one of America's oldest
mysteries.
According to historycom,theories include integration
with local Native Americantribes, being lost at sea or

(01:23:30):
perishing at the hands of tribesor the Spanish.
Next one is Caioquia, a largepre-Columbian wait, you said
Brazil, or the Spanish.
Next one is Cahokia, a largepre-Columbian Wait, you said
Brazil, right, okay.
A large pre-Columbian citylocated near modern-day St Louis
, missouri.
Cahokia was a major center ofthe Mississippian culture and a

(01:23:52):
thriving metropolis with apopulation potentially reaching
tens of thousands.
The city was abandoned by 1400CE for reasons that remain
unknown, though theories includeenvironmental factors, resource
depletions, social andpolitical problems and possibly
disease.
Today, the site is a UNESCOWorld Heritage Site and a State

(01:24:13):
Historic Site in Illinois, indusValley Civilization site and a
state historic site in illinois.
Uh in this induced valleycivilization, one of the largest
ancient civilizations.
It flourished in what is nowpakistan and india.
Cities like uh, cities likemojengodaro, loto do la vida and

(01:24:36):
Calibanga were part of thiscivilization.
It disappeared around 3,000years ago for reasons unknown,
though some theories point toclimate change, specifically
droughts and famine.
Mayan civilization Flourishingin parts of modern-day Central
America.
The Maya were known for theiradvanced engineering,

(01:24:58):
mathematics and intricate citieslike Tikal, chichen, itza and
Copa.
They experienced a declinearound 1900 CE and, while the
exact cause is debated, theoriesinclude warfare and climate
change that led to famine andabandonment of major urban
centers.
My final one is Pine Point,canada.

(01:25:21):
This mining town was suddenlyabandoned in 1997, with
residents leaving behind theirhomes and belongings.
Economic factors led to theclosure of the mine, which was
the town's primary source ofincome, causing the sudden
exodus.
So that's it.
For me, that's a whole bunch of.

Speaker 3 (01:25:40):
I like the.
I always like the.
Uh, the colony, the lost colonythe lost colony run oak.
Yeah, that was always a goodone to me, because I always
liked that I remember learningabout in school.
And then the fact oh, for real.
You learned for in school ohshit, we talked about it briefly
for a little bit, okay, I don'tremember if it was elementary
school or I know for sure middleschool.
We talked about it briefly fora little bit.
Okay, I don't remember if itwas elementary school, or I know
for sure, middle school wetalked about it?

(01:26:01):
did we?
I know for a fact we did.
But um, I like the fact thatthey said like they went missing
or they were gone.
Then when they finally gotthere, like you said, there was
like the word carved in the treeand then the theory was that
they that there was like somenatives that had like blue eyes
or some crap like that oh, itwas what some people said, or
some crap like that, like it wassomething like that, like, oh

(01:26:23):
shit, I can't remembercompletely I was gonna say we
may have to cover, cover thatwith just, we'll cover that on
the next episode.
Yeah, just more death, yeah,yeah maybe, maybe, maybe, all
right, so this is the one I got.
This is is Legend of JouerVerde, brazil's Vanishing City
Town.
Sorry, all right.
They say this happened onFebruary 5th 1923, deep in the

(01:26:49):
Brazilian jungle.
The remote town of Jouer Verdewas home to around 600 people,
mostly farmers, laborers, livingfar from the nearest major
settlement.
Life there was quiet, the kindof place where strangers were
rare and where travel slowly.
So that morning a group ofBrazilian soldiers were

(01:27:12):
reportedly passing through thearea on patrol.
They expected the usual warmwelcome from the townsfolk,
people stepping out into thestreets, children running to
watch the soldiers march by, butinstead the streets were empty.
Oh, it was me.
Get myself a key.
Oh, it was in Brazil.
Was it Brazilian?
What did they say?
Get yourself a key, tota, youlistening?

(01:27:35):
Is he Brazilian, right?
Yeah, yeah, okay, I'll play.
I'll play, all right.
Um, that morning, a group ofbrazilian soldiers.
Oh no, I already said that.
Oh yeah, the town was empty.
So at first the soldiersthought that the townspeople
were hiding maybe a wild animalor raiders had scared them

(01:27:56):
indoors.
But as they begun to search,begin to search, they noticed
something unsettling.
Houses were open, doorsswinging in the breeze, food sat
on tables, halfy and clotheshung on lines still wet from
washing and some homes firesburned low as if someone had
stepped away minutes ago.

(01:28:17):
No one was there, not a singleliving soul, not even animals.
The silent was so complete thatthe soldiers claimed they could
hear the wind moving throughthe empty alleys.
When they searched theschoolhouse, the strangeness
deepened.
Inside, the desk sat nest.
The desks sat neatly in rows,books open to half-finished

(01:28:38):
lessons on the blackboard andlarge white chalk letters.
Someone had written there is nosalvation.

Speaker 1 (01:28:45):
Oh, fuck, okay, okay.

Speaker 3 (01:28:47):
So they like, looked around in a corner and they
found a recently fired gun,still warm to the touch.
So, despite searching thesurrounding forest for miles,
they found no footprints leadingaway, no signs of struggle, no
graze.
It was as if all 600 residentshad simply ceased to exist in an

(01:29:08):
instant fuck I should.

Speaker 1 (01:29:10):
I should have done some shit like this right,
that's pretty crazy okay okay.

Speaker 3 (01:29:14):
So the soldiers reported the incident to their
superiors, but, as the legendgoes, the brazilian government
quickly classified all records.
Some say the military wanted tokeep whatever happened there a
secret.
Others believe the soldiersthemselves were warned never to
speak of it again.
So, according to some theories,people are saying it could have
been like a mass alienabduction, one because it's in a

(01:29:38):
remote area in the jungle.
So how often do right or howlike um how will.

Speaker 1 (01:29:46):
Other people would see it how kept up with our
people, with them like nativesof the area or whatever.
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (01:29:52):
Yeah, I see what you're saying because they said
that, um, just like, because thelack of bodies.
And then the eerie finalmessage no footprints, people
were saying like yeah, nofootprints, no nothing.
So how would a bunch?
Of people just suddenlydisappear.
So but like one of the theorieswas like aliens literally just
came, took them all, took themall took them away the grand

(01:30:14):
rapture the grand rapture umanother theory was like a time
slip or a dimensional riff okayso perhaps the entire town fell
into another reality or timeperiod.
Okay, which is kind of crazy,because have we covered?

Speaker 1 (01:30:29):
we have, we'll cover.
Time slips on the next episodeso we'll do it.

Speaker 3 (01:30:34):
Y'all look forward to time slips and the lost colony
and then fear fact fiction.
We'll figure something out, butum, that that's that's pretty
crazy.
Right there they also have likegovernmental experiments that
had gone wrong, maybe likechemical weapons, sonic warfare
or secret research that erasedthe population, maybe okay, oh

(01:30:56):
shit, okay, okay.

Speaker 1 (01:30:57):
That's what some of the things um mass suicide, cult
activity.

Speaker 3 (01:31:02):
I mean, the chalkboard phrase could have
been like a farewell, eventhough there was like no bodies
that were ever found just whatthey're saying, like there is no
salvation.
That does sound a bit culty.
Um, some people say that theland was once home to a massacre
and that the spirits finallytook revenge.

Speaker 1 (01:31:23):
Okay, the other ones.
I'm more of an alien.
I'm still on that one.
That was that for me.

Speaker 3 (01:31:31):
That's Call me crazy Snowball, yeah call me crazy,
too, call me crazy but I'm morewith the no footsteps Recently
shotgun.

Speaker 1 (01:31:37):
All the clothes still wet Like yeah call me crazy too
.
Call me crazy, but I'm on withno footsteps Recently shotgun.
All the clothes still wet.
People were still living theirlife.

Speaker 3 (01:31:44):
Books were still open .

Speaker 1 (01:31:47):
Up to a couple minutes ago they were still
living their life.
So a whole town like that.
You're going to see someevidence of them going somewhere
.
So, I'm more of the alien.
I'm more of the alien.
The great rapture's.

Speaker 3 (01:31:59):
That's what I'm at right now something strange yeah
, I believe in really chemicalwarfare or anything like that so
in some versions they claimthat the town was later burned
to the ground by authorities toerase the problem so others say
that oer verde still stands, butdeep in the jungle.
But it's cursed and no one, andanyone who spends a night there

(01:32:22):
never comes back.
It's pretty much like an urbanlegend or urban town?

Speaker 1 (01:32:26):
some paranormal shit.
That's some paranormal shit.

Speaker 3 (01:32:27):
Okay, the type of shit where it's like it's a
rainy day you see, a town with alittle light, you get there and
then you wake up.
The town was never there, typeshit, type shit, um, but um,
they said that, like a group ofexplorers supposedly camped near
the ruins of the town and whentheir friends came to find them,

(01:32:49):
their camp was still there,tents, pitched, food, still warm
, but they were gone just likethen they got kidnapped too, but
they disappeared too but I knowthat they said that um, what
was it?
they said there's like noevidence about it, though, like

(01:33:12):
they said that, what should we?
Like there's no actual likedocumentation of it happened
okay but then again that's likepeople saying, like the
government could be hiding thisand just like hiding it from the
people, like it's a cover-uptype type shit okay.
And then other people aresaying it's not true because of

(01:33:32):
the name itself, like awareuh-huh verde doesn't fit
brazilian fate name like oh,yeah, yeah, yeah because verde
is portuguese for green yeah, orspanish for green or whatever.
But aware isn't portuguese, it'sdutch slang and there's no
record of a brazilian town bythat name.
But okay again, the governmentdoes strange things.

(01:33:56):
Yeah, it's not uncommon for thegovernment to try and hide
something like that.

Speaker 1 (01:34:00):
Definitely not uncommon.
Definitely not uncommon.

Speaker 3 (01:34:07):
Notice the one.
That's pretty much it.
And then there's no eyewitnessaccounts.
But then again you can't reallyexpect eyewitness accounts of
everybody from the towndisappearing and only that.

Speaker 1 (01:34:18):
But if everybody that found it was for the government
.

Speaker 3 (01:34:20):
So what else was there?
There was something else aboutit.
Um, hold on, give me a sec,give me a sec I like that.

Speaker 1 (01:34:33):
I like that.
All right, we're gonna pause itright now, just playing hold on
, hold on, hold on.

Speaker 3 (01:34:44):
Uh, that's pretty much it.
That's sorry, I thought I hadsomething else.
Editor.
Yeah, that's pretty much it.
Now, I thought there was likeother stuff about it, but no,
that's.
That's pretty much the wholething.
But like, like you said, it'swell, like, like I'm saying,
like it's not.
I mean, it's not uncommon forthe government to try and hide

(01:35:06):
stuff, especially when it comesto like alien stuff, because I
know a lot of people stuff likebelieve, like well, not believe.
But according to reports,accounts um of people that
actually encounter alien stuff,the government's.
You're literally boom rightthere within it's like the
incident happened and boom, thegovernment wasn't this.

Speaker 1 (01:35:28):
You know it's all wrong.
You know, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:35:30):
We, the men in black, show up so it's not uncommon
for something like that tohappen, and there's actually an
incident that happened where, uh, somewhere in south america I
think, where they were like thesouth america had to use the
military and they were likehunting down chupacabras, oh
shit.
And they, they said theycaptured some, but then as soon

(01:35:54):
as they captured some, the USgovernment literally showed up,
took the Chupacabras and thendipped out.
According, to some reports orsome people, some accounts that
people may have had, but thefact that if it's true, like
they found the Chupacabras, thenthe government instantly shows
up.
Or like the Roswell incident,with the aliens crashing down

(01:36:15):
and then boom, the governmentshows up.
Or like the roswell incident,with the aliens crashing down
and then boom, the governmentshows up.
Literally, yeah, seconds ormoments later, maybe like a
couple hours later.
But the fact that thegovernment's so quick to be
there, and, like they know, theyknow where to be or they might
have gotten pressure from the usgovernment to say hey, you know
okay, say like get rid of allthis this, this town never

(01:36:37):
existed.
Take it out your Didn't you saythey burned it.
They said that the governmentburned it to get rid of the town
to make it look like it neverexisted.
I don't know, though.
I don't know Y'all.
Let me know what y'all think Imean the government.

Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
You really can't trust the government.

Speaker 3 (01:36:56):
You can't believe your government, man.
You can't believe thegovernment really, man.
Where's my 10-foot hat.

Speaker 1 (01:36:59):
You can't, you can't.

Speaker 3 (01:37:01):
They're listening to us right now.
What happened?
Close the blinds, close thewindows, get under the couch,
shut the door, shut the door,hold your breath.

Speaker 1 (01:37:17):
Hold your breath for 30 seconds.

Speaker 3 (01:37:19):
And then bang your head, and then bang your head.

Speaker 1 (01:37:21):
That's the only way the government can't get in your
head no, don't do that.

Speaker 3 (01:37:24):
No, don't do that, do it.

Speaker 1 (01:37:25):
Here I cost the cove You're out of here.

Speaker 3 (01:37:28):
First, we're just joking, y'all.
It's all jokes, but y becauseit's like, even though it might
not be true, just the fact thatthere's some story like that out
there, it's pretty fascinatingto me, in my opinion no, it is
oh, what'd you say?

Speaker 1 (01:37:48):
I agree with it, but I like it.
Like I said, but I should havedone something like that, like I
like the fact that there's apossibility that these people
could have been taken by.

Speaker 3 (01:37:58):
A whole town.

Speaker 1 (01:37:59):
A whole town could have been taken by.

Speaker 3 (01:38:00):
I mean the last colony.
It was a whole freaking colonythat got lost.
All y'all had to do was staystill build a little
civilization right there on thecoast.
That's all y'all had to do.
What y'all do, get lost.

Speaker 1 (01:38:13):
Personally.

Speaker 3 (01:38:14):
I couldn't put the address in GPS.

Speaker 1 (01:38:16):
I couldn't do that personally me.
I couldn't put the address ingps, I couldn't do that silly
geese.
So the geese, but I meanthere's, I mean I don't need
that.
But okay, this was a oldcivilization but it was just
like people that was, uh, peoplethat was, you know, just out
there in the wilderness nativeto the area native to the area
you know how would these peopleget lost or not?
You know, it just doesn't makesense.

(01:38:39):
And there has been reportswhere aliens had contacted
ancient civilizations before.
You can see it in their work,you can see it in the pictures
that they carve in.
You can see it, there's aconnection there.
There's a connection there.
There's a connection there, andlike what you're saying, with

(01:39:02):
the government showing up andknowing, like how do they know
that there's something going onat the other side of the world,
or like somewhere in the country, how do they know that you came
in contact with alien life?
And they just show up, they'rethere to shut you up, you know,

(01:39:22):
to explain it away, take awayyour evidence, stuff like that.
So it it doesn't surprise me ifyou know the government knew
this happened and just to getpeople to stop looking into it,
they just decided, like to sayit's all a lie it's all a lie,
yeah I don't know, I don't know,y'all let us know.

Speaker 3 (01:39:36):
But then again, like it was the soldiers that saw
this according to the story, notreport to the story but then
again, like we said, like themilitary would tell its people,
like don't talk about this.
Like yo, if you don't wantsomething to happen to your
family, don't mention it.

Speaker 1 (01:39:52):
Yeah, they've done that before.
It's it's not.
It's not.
It's not a new tactic.
It's not new.
At this point, it's not evensecret to anybody that what they
do, what they really to do, toto keep information from being
out there for being.

Speaker 3 (01:40:06):
Yeah stuff like that yeah but I don't know.
Y'all let us know what y'allthink.
Like I said we, if we missedanything, y'all messages on
cosmic cove at k-o-s-m-I-C,underscore C-O-V-E on Instagram
and on TikTok.
I guess we're going to wrap upthis episode.
Did you have anything else youhad to say?

Speaker 1 (01:40:24):
No, that was all I know, too Okay.

Speaker 3 (01:40:25):
But yeah, we're going to go ahead and wrap it up.
Quick shout out to mygirlfriend Thank you so much for
always listening, you know.
Thank you so much for alwayssupporting me.
I support me.
Um, I know times is gonna gettough now and even in the future
, but I appreciate the patienceyou have and that you're willing

(01:40:48):
to like.

Speaker 1 (01:40:49):
Uh, just let me cook just let me cook.

Speaker 3 (01:40:50):
I promise it's all gonna be worth it at the end.
I promise, all right, just letme cook.
I know it's gonna be a littletough.
Like I said, I may be stressed,I may be irritated I may be
tired, but it's all gonna beworth it in the end.
I promise I hope so.
If not, I'm gonna crash out ontiktok, no, but um, thank you so

(01:41:12):
much for always supporting me.
Shout out to my cousin, pepe,you know, thank you so much for
always supporting me too.
Thank you for always checkingup on me.
Thank you for always just forjust like being someone that I
could just talk to, even if it'sjust like I could have a
stressful day, and he'll justcall me and then I'll just like
chill, you know, just relax,like just telling what's going
on, yeah, just talk and, uh,just just pretty much be on the

(01:41:34):
phone, just like talk or orwhatever.
It's always nice to talk tosomeone.
It don't have to be about lifeor anything.
It just be like us bullshittingor whatever, just make cracking
jokes and everything, but it isnice.
So shout out to you, pepe, butalso shout out to all the people
who stay tuning in.
Thank you so much for listeningto us, thank you so much for
always coming back, even thoughsometimes we might be a little

(01:41:57):
off topic or the notes might notbe the best.
But don't blame me, blame myfree, blame Google.

Speaker 1 (01:42:07):
Blame Google, blame Google for not doing all these
notes for me, for not answeringFor me.
How, though, precisely askthese questions?

Speaker 3 (01:42:14):
Right, I guess a hard thing.
Come on now.

Speaker 1 (01:42:16):
Come on now Google.
Come on now Google.
Come on now Google AI.

Speaker 3 (01:42:19):
Come on now.
Come on now, google AI.

Speaker 1 (01:42:21):
Come on now, but um, they could be typing all these
words and shit Just come on now.
What do you mean?

Speaker 3 (01:42:25):
I have to watch five videos that are two hours long
and read five different forms.
I only got one hour to do mynotes while I'm driving down
there.
But yeah, thank y'all so muchfor tuning in.
You know, we only hope tohopefully make the content
better for y'all.
I know I haven't posted onYouTube, but we'll get there.

Speaker 1 (01:42:49):
You're the only cow bro.
You're the only cow bro.

Speaker 3 (01:42:51):
That's where you get the bag.
Though that's what they say, Ineed to be more into it.
I'm sorry y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:42:57):
They're going to censor us over there.

Speaker 3 (01:42:59):
I haven't even got no editing offers.
Nobody's been messaging Come onnow, come on.
Y'all must not care about free,huh.
So everybody wants to work fora price nowadays.
Huh, everybody want money now.
It ain't about the money.
What happened to the good oldwork?

Speaker 1 (01:43:21):
hard and be rewarded.
It's about working 30 years forfree and reaping the rewards in
the future.
See, y'all think about thefuture.
Everybody want it now.
Right, everybody want it now.
Everybody want it now.

Speaker 3 (01:43:32):
Come on, man, we do offer a welcome package, maybe
like a Slim Jim Arizona.

Speaker 1 (01:43:37):
Fucking Arizona, too much bro.

Speaker 3 (01:43:39):
And a pat on the back .

Speaker 1 (01:43:41):
Tom Bowen, you got this.

Speaker 3 (01:43:43):
No, but yeah, like I said, thank you to everybody
that tunes in.
I really appreciate all theTikTok love, all the love that
we get on Facebook or that I geton Facebook because I be using
my personal account.
Oh, you be using your personalaccount.
Wild huh Ty using my personalaccount.

Speaker 1 (01:43:57):
Oh, you be using your personal account Wild huh Ty,
your personal account, PersonalFacebook account.

Speaker 3 (01:44:04):
Again, like I said, be sure to rate the show.
Give us five stars.
Wherever you're listening to usfrom, be sure to rate us.
Leave us a review, send us amessage, follow us on TikTok, on
Instagram, at KOSMIC underscoreC-O-V-E and K-O-S-M-I-C, space
C-O-V-E on YouTube.
But that's pretty much it forme.

Speaker 1 (01:44:25):
I just want to give a shout out to my brothers Sammy
Jeroney, just for just listeninglaughing, listening laughing.
Enjoy the, enjoying theshenanigans the shenanigans,
really, because that's all I'mhere for.
Really I'm just here to justspread a little laughter, just
make y'all say, oh my god, Ican't believe he said that, and
really that's, that's all I canoffer really right.

Speaker 3 (01:44:48):
I just be saying a bunch of stuff that be, uh, that
could later that could laterget me during the trial.

Speaker 1 (01:44:56):
You know that.
You know that.
That's really just you know.
You know, you know that's.
Where else are you going to seea rap with Jazzy All?

Speaker 3 (01:45:11):
right, but that's that's.
That's going to wrap up withthis episode.
We're going to see you on thenext one, so later Peace.
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