Behind the Bastards - Part One: The Sordid Story of Nature Boy: The Instagram Cult Leader Who Hates Toilets
Episode Date: May 13, 2025Robert gets back to basics with guest star Katy Stoll by talking about one of America's newest cult leaders, Natureboy, who used instagram to convince a small army of followers to join his crusade aga...inst toilets. (2 Part Series)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back for Behind 2 For From with Behind the Bastards, a podcast.
You know what it's about.
Bad people.
We tell you all about them.
I'm Robert Evans and back once again on the show is Arch Guest, Ace Guest, Katie Stoll.
How are you doing doing Katie? Oh
wonderful bad
Fine, I don't know pick a word. I'm doing it wonderful. All at once. It's just really hard to
Understand my emotions these days, but I'm here and I'm happy to be here. Yeah, I'm generally like
Terrible, okay. That's that's kind of the way I feel you know, I'm generally like terrible, okay? That's kind of the way I feel, you know?
It's like I'm bad, but there's a lot of people that are getting a lot worse, so I'm fine.
Yeah, there you go.
Bad, other people are worse, everything's good.
Or bad? I don't know how everything is.
Everything's so dumb dumb dumb dumb dumb dumb
Yeah, we used to have we used to have that as a theme song and then things got even dumber
You know what? I love it when people say boy. You should still be doing your podcast because the years just get worse
But obviously ever since senator Sanders
Came after us.
We simply can't anymore.
Yeah, it's too much liability.
Too much liability after that massive, massive lawsuit.
Well, that's what happens, I guess,
when you out someone as KMJFK before the files are released.
That's right.
Obviously the files that just got released,
look them up, completely vindicate us, but you know.
Yeah. But it is what it is.
It's unfair, you all lost a podcast
and Katie and I both lost out on purchasing our yachts.
So that's a bummer.
By yachts, I mean an exact replica of the boat from Jaws.
Yeah, but like a miniature version.
Yeah, very small, very small.
Like the Lego size one.
Yeah, one can dream though someday, Robert.
Robert, why did you not warn me about the images
I'm gonna have to show Katie in this podcast?
I just scrolled and it's, you should have warned me.
So we don't do stuff like that
because then you wouldn't be surprised.
And that's a big part of me enjoying the podcast
that we do.
I know, but wow.
Because I had to watch like fucking so many hours
of this, of motherfucking online documentaries
about this guy,
because all of his stuff has been pulled off the internet.
Katie, we're doing a cult leader today.
We're doing a new cult leader.
We're like, I mean, this guy's a little
older than me, but the cult is very much like Jin Z. Like it's a very modern, like social
media driven cult. And it's kind of one of the most, you know, there was a document about
those twin flames people that was a very like modern online cult. But this guy is like,
this is a Facebook and Instagram cult leader that we're talking about today.
That's how he builds everything.
Okay, the new school cult leader, I like it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, because like back in the day,
we've always had cults, but we used to have a lot fewer
because it was harder.
Like two, 3000 years ago, if you wanted to start a cult,
you had to just sit down and talk to a bunch of people
and convince them of shit.
And like, you know, maybe if you got really good, a couple of your followers would be
good at talking and you can get them to travel around and like talk. And, but that didn't
delegate that part. Yeah. And that's hard, you know, and it's slow. And usually you get
killed by the Romans, uh, before all of that works its way out, right? Which is why Jesus
was never able
to buy the Green Bay Packers,
which if you've read the Bible properly,
you'll understand was his ultimate goal.
Absolutely.
Yeah, as it is mine.
I'd be a good owner for the Packers, Katie.
Robert, are you the second coming of Jesus?
No, I'm the second coming of whatever guy
was good at coaching the Packers. Okay, okay.
I couldn't speak to that, I don't know.
I just like the hats, I don't know much about the team.
Anyway.
Mm.
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.
Hi, listeners.
I'm Melissa Jeltsin, host of What Happened to Talina's R. It's the story of a woman who disappears in the early days of COVID lockdowns
and the group of online sleuths who try to find her.
I didn't want to be talked out of this plan.
After I post this, I am turning off my phone for exactly this reason.
I kept just kind of asking everybody, anyone else think this is strange?
You'll notice that about me.
I don't lurk. I'm out there.
I'm an action kind of girl.
You can now get access to episodes
of What Happened to Talina Czar,
100% ad-free,
with an iHeart True Crime Plus subscription.
I'm a subscriber and you should be too.
So don't wait. Head to Apple Podcasts, search iHeart True Crime Plus and subscribe today.
Explore the winding halls of historical true crime with Holly Fry and Maria Tramarchi,
hosts of Criminalia, as they uncover curious cases from the past.
The legend of the Highwayman suggests men dominated the field.
But tell that to Lady Catherine Farrers, known as the Wicked Lady,
who terrorized England in the mid-1600s.
Her legend persists nearly 400 years after her death.
Highwaymen are in the
hot seat this season. Find more crime and cocktails on Criminalia. Listen to Criminalia
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
After a crime, you read the headlines. But do you know the story?
At the time that I called the police, he knew that I had called him and left the house with
a firearm and was texting me that he was going to use it.
I'm Hannah Smith.
And I'm Paisa Eaton.
We host The Knife, a podcast from the exactly right network that cuts to the heart of the
story.
Through in-depth interviews and candid conversations, we'll bring you firsthand accounts
of people living through the ripple effects of crime.
Most of us don't know the legal process.
And because they always tell you this word closure,
I really wish people would stop using that word
because there is no such thing as closure.
These are the scars that are left behind.
These are the voices you haven't heard.
New episodes every Thursday
Listen to the knife on the iHeart radio app Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
The best things in life are on the other side of difficult conversations
But if we're honest most people run from from them, staying silent, missing chances and
holding themselves back.
I know this is true because I used to be like that, until I realized that negotiation isn't
a talent, it's a skill that anyone can learn.
And once I did, everything changed.
I went from people pleaser to confident communicator, and now I teach Fortune 500 leaders and top
executives how to do the same. Listen
to Negotiate Anything on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
As time has gone on, cult leaders have always been on the bleeding edge of technology, right?
Because the key thing in terms of making it possible for cult leaders to spread more effectively
and for there to be more cults is that there are more ways with low barriers for people to reach
large numbers of other human beings.
Thousands of years ago, you had to get an elite following and hope some of those guys
would be really good at talking and really loyal and would go spread the message.
That's just fucking difficult.
If you want to look at it this way, I think this is the right way to look at it. Cults are a lot like pornography in that they're always on the bleeding edge of technology because that's the
only way they can stay profitable. Porn will always adopt the new technology that's going to be kind of the future before
like mainstream Hollywood, right? Because Hollywood's got, they've got margins, you know,
which is why you see, you know, 300 or a million dollar movies every year that flop and the industry
doesn't quite go under because like, well, you know, we have the ability to take some gambles
here. Porn can't afford to gamble like that, right?
So they really have to be thinking.
It's true.
You gotta be adaptable in the porn industry.
Absolutely.
You know, Robert, I've heard you share a lot of hot takes,
but this might be my favorite one.
Yeah, this comparison between cults in the porn industry.
Yes.
Edge of technology.
Always on the edge of technology, right?
And so, you know, cults, the printing press, huge for Colts, right?
Colts immediately figured out how to like, oh, we can now just put out our writing material
or reading material, however the fuck we want, right?
And then you get, you know, you get your Mormon churches and stuff like that in part as a
result of the fact that it's a lot easier to print stuff now.
The radio makes it a lot easier to spread stuff.
And obviously television, boy, howdy,
that really supercharges things, you know?
And then you start getting all these,
I mean, among other things, like the prosperity gospel,
these different sort of like quote unquote Christian churches
that are all about, if you give me money to buy a jet,
God will make your wildest dreams come true.
You can't do that.
That doesn't work very well through like a magazine, right?
Oh, definitely not.
You're not getting the same kind of return
on investment there.
It's the same thing with like,
if you have a creator that you listen to way too much,
that person will probably have an unfair influence on you
because they're in your ears a hundred hours a week, right?
And if you're attending one of these big cult churches
and doing it two or three times a week
and they're constantly talking about how you need
to give them money to go to heaven,
you'll probably do it, right?
I would, I'm easily manipulated.
Yeah, yeah, we all are actually, is the real answer behind
why do people do the things that they do.
Well, we're kind of stupid and it's easy to fuck with us.
You're selling me a dream.
I want that dream.
Yeah.
Look, we've all bought steaks from some guy's car at a certain point in our lives, right?
Who among us?
If you were ever dumb enough to buy a frozen steak or speakers from a guy's car, you are
dumb enough to have fallen for something at some point, right?
Especially on Instagram.
This is why we need better education, yeah.
And you're kind of getting to where we are now,
which is like, yeah, the printing press, the radio, TV,
all of that increased the reach different cults
and cult leaders could have.
But the internet and most particularly social media,
that has really given these people unprecedented power.
And it's why we now live in a day and age where they basically run a lot of stuff.
Right. If not everything. Right.
Everything's kind of a cult these days because cults work, among other things.
Like there's this talk right now about the tariffs and people being like, Oh, my God.
Finally, his his base is going to leave him because of the tariffs.
And I'm like, I don't know if you guys have read about like the different cults
where a guy would tell everyone the world's ending on this day and then it wouldn't.
And then still with a big chunk of the loyal core of the of the cult would be like,
I guess we'll wait around for the next one.
I don't know what else to do with my life.
Yeah, they're in too deep at this point.
They still put out.
Yes, that's the way it always is. They're not leaving the cult even when, you know, they're in too deep at this point. They still put out. Yeah, that's the way it always is.
They're not leaving the cult even when, you know,
they've been starving, they can't afford food,
they're caught up, the roads have collapsed.
They still put out clothes for L. Ron Hubbard.
Well, and they should, cause he's coming back.
We all know that, Sophie.
I've been saying this for years.
You can't cancel L. Ron.
No, not L. R. H.
I can. And he't cancel L Ron. No, not LRH. I can.
And he would have loved TikTok.
That man would have been the best at TikTok.
Oh boy.
He would have had such a good TikTok.
Honestly, we've all missed out.
That could have been a beautiful thing for everyone.
That's really the great like what if of history.
The memes.
Yeah, screw these people.
Like what if Hitler had been killed?
No, what if L Ron Hubbard had access to TikTok
and a billion people?
I think he would have bought TikTok.
I think he would have bought TikTok.
Yeah, oh my God, what a time.
What if LRH had had TikTok and it was Zimbik?
Nothing would have stopped him.
So the internet and most particularly social media has presented these would-be cult leaders
of our day with a tool of unprecedented power.
The power of, we talked about back in the day, stochastic terrorism, right?
Which is trying to incite just random large groups of people in the hope that some amount
of them actually carry out attacks.
Well, stochastic messaging for cult leaders means that even if a cult leader of middling
charisma and skill can get a platform that reaches thousands or hundreds of thousands
or millions or more people, the vast majority of those people in any case aren't going to
actually do more than watch or read him.
But if a percent of a percent does, that's more than enough to build the kind of following
that can take care of you, right?
Sure.
It's just a numbers game.
Now this week we're going to tell the story of a cult leader who got his start, dozens
of followers and hundreds of thousands of dollars, all thanks to Facebook and Instagram.
Our subject for this week is interesting in part because he's not very talented.
As a cult leader, like LRH we joke about,
but Hubbard was really good at some things.
And that's part of what makes his story really fun
is that like, you are watching a man
who knows his business fuck up the world, right?
This guy is not very good at anything.
I don't think he's particularly bright
and I don't think he would have succeeded
at creating a cult in any other period.
This is a tale of a cult made possible by social media.
And if your ambition is to start a cult of your own, I think these episodes would be
a pretty good guide on how to do that.
And you should do that.
Go start a cult, right?
There's very rarely consequences.
These episodes do end with consequences for this guy.
But most of the time it doesn't, you know?
Hopefully we can learn from his mistakes and how to do it more successfully.
Learn from his mistakes and remember,
your goal should be the presidency,
not an isolated compound where you have many,
many sister wives.
One of those ends better than the other historically.
Well, we'll see.
We'll see.
We'll see, we'll see.
Still a lot of time for playing sister wife
to be proven the wisest.
Yeah, that's right.
All right, so our bastard for this week
is a guy named Elysio Bishop.
He was born in Harlem, New York in 1982, probably.
Like most cult leaders, he lies constantly
and hard details about his early life
are thin on the ground.
The best and most expansive piece
of traditional journalism about
the man is an article Rolling Stone published earlier this year. Here's how it describes his
earliest years. Bishop was born in Harlem in 1982 and said that he was a crack baby. The story of
his upbringing he lays out in his social media videos is troubled. Efforts to get in touch with
family members were unsuccessful. To fact check it, yeah. To be like, is any of
this true? Right. Rolling Stone is like we tried and we couldn't talk to them. I do like this article
and I respect it for providing like reasonably good context on a guy who's had basically nothing
written about him beyond a few short news articles. And those are all those are all focused on like,
you know, there's there's a couple of specific crimes that he's involved
in and so they're all very much like focused on those points in time.
The Rolling Stone article covers those points, but it also tries to give a more detailed
account of Bishop's life.
And as a result, it's, you know, one of our better sources, but I will say it still gets
some stuff wrong, you know, and particularly the paragraph that I just read, I think is an example of kind
of why we can't use that as our primary source.
And so the best source I found on this guy, weirdly enough, is a YouTube channel called
a Hood Horrors, which has a little more than 4000 subscribers.
This is not a big channel.
It seems to focus primarily on shady characters from what's called the conscious community
or black consciousness community, which is a subculture online that we'll discuss a bit
later.
And Hood Horrors did a 17 part series on Elysio that is fairly well edited and written and
includes original interviews as well as extensive documentation
of hundreds of hours of videos posted by his cult that have now been deleted. So it's the
only place to get at least glimpses of a lot of the firsthand sources on this stuff. And they,
I think they're coming at him from a more sympathetic angle than I am, because he's kind of
a shady member of the broader community they're a
part of, but they do a really good job of, I think, giving you details on his life.
And it's, I got to say, no shade on Rolling Stone, because their article was useful too,
but it's the best single source on this guy.
And they play audio of Alicia O'Talking where he claims that he was born addicted to heroin
as opposed to crack, which is what the Rolling Stone claimed.
I don't know whether he was born addicted to heroin
or crack or both.
It's not impossible, both are basically true.
And they're both bad, let's be real.
It sucks to be born addicted to anything.
Yeah, because then you don't get all the fun
of starting to do a drug.
That's the real tragedy here.
And then if your tolerance is already high as a baby,
where do you go from there?
I know, shit's gonna be so expensive
by the time you're 30, Jesus.
Sure, sure, sure, lay off the parents.
Just think about the fact that his life,
he's gonna always be trying to chase a bigger high.
Right. That's how he got here.
Yeah, that is essentially this story here.
So we've got one picture of his mom and dad.
I don't even have his father's name,
but as you can see from the photo,
he was a lot older than her.
Like there's a sizable age gap between these two people
and he dies of a heart attack right after Bishop is born.
Sure, he looks like he's right on the cusp there.
He looks like he's right on the cusp there. He looks like he's right on the edge, yeah!
So after he dies,
Patricia and her kids live in government housing,
and one of Bishop's older sisters,
who's about seven years old at this time,
said this about her recollections of their childhood.
It wasn't all good memories,
but it was a lot of good memories there.
So, you know, he has kind of a weird situation
with his dad.
Money's not super, you know, common for them, but they have a pretty loving household, at
least according to several of his siblings.
Now, and this is where I'm part of why I think Aligio is able to identify with Gen Z.
Like Gen Z, he comes into the world too late to have any recollections of the good times, you know?
There's a period of time in which his parents
are doing well and he misses that entirely.
A few months before his second birthday,
CPS takes him and his siblings away from their mother.
She had been a user of hard drugs for quite a while
and her use had escalated to the point
where friends of the family had called the government
about it. They were like, she can't be alone with those kids, right and
She overdoses fatally months after this one of Alicia's later sisters older sisters later said
She was street and that's why she died. So young she died at 33. You can't be doing nothing but the street if you died at 33
So that's what the family says about this kid's mom.
It is kind of worth noting that that's the account
that he gives in videos years later,
or that's the account that a member of his family gives
in videos posted years later,
he will claim to have no memory whatsoever
of either of his parents.
Although there's some allegations
that this is basically a defense mechanism, right?
Stop himself from feeling what happened to them as much.
So- Perhaps.
Makes sense.
Yeah. He and his siblings
all become wards of the state after this.
He's separated from all of his sisters,
but he and his younger brother, Leo,
get to stay together for a while.
They bounce from foster home to foster home,
but they are repeatedly kicked out of each for fighting.
So they get found by foster homes,
he and his younger brother are taken in
and then they'll just beat the shit out of each other
and get kicked out.
Which first off, if you're a foster family
taken in two young brothers,
they're gonna beat each other up.
Yeah.
Like, you gotta know that.
You gotta take less issue with
than if you're assaulting the foster parents or something.
But yeah, you're your little boys. They're two little boys. They're gonna fight.
So this is enough of a problem though, that when Bishop is seven, the state finally separates him from his brother. And he gets sent to a foster house in Queens that's run by a couple,
Mr. And Mrs. Pope, and his younger brother Leo Leo, isn't there. Now he will later claim that he was sexually abused while in this foster home.
He alleges that he was molested and forced to engage in sexual behavior with other foster
kids while Mr. Pope took pictures of them.
Statistically, this is not unheard of.
An estimated 40% of foster kids endure some sort of abuse during their time in the system.
And at least 4 to 5% of foster kids are sexually abused while in the system,
a rate that raises significantly above the background level.
And Bishop isn't the only witness here, but I don't see a whole lot of gain for him to
have light about this, right?
And the way this usually comes up is he's being interviewed on his own backstory for
podcasts and YouTube streams by other creators within this consciousness subculture.
And he'll talk a lot about his dad mentally and sexually abusing him.
He claims that as a result of the abuse, he began acting out, uh, humping both boys and
girls in school with his clothes on.
At another point, he claims to have let a dog lick his penis saying, I don't regret
it either.
Um, which is, you know, I don't regret it either. Yeesh.
Which is, you know, I mean, first off,
you don't gotta tell people that story, man.
Yeah, that's when you can keep buttoned up.
You can take that bad boy to the grave with you.
Uh-huh, uh-huh.
There's plenty of things that don't need to be shared
for sympathy or shock or what have you,
but that's a thing he said, okay.
Kids do a lot of weird things,
and I try to be like,
yeah, I mean, you know, a lot of kids do weird shit,
but like, you don't need to tell anyone that.
That didn't need to be known.
That didn't need to be known.
I was born with a penis,
I don't know if that is something boys do.
Yeah, I mean, you know, boys do stuff, but not that.
Well, I'm gonna say, obviously,
he's not the first boy to do that, right?
Like that's a specific joke about like kids
putting peanut butter on their junk.
Sure, yeah.
But it's also, it's not common, you know,
of all of the weird fucked up things I knew
other young dudes to do with their junk.
None of them did that, because it's a little weird.
A little weird, you know know a little boy, okay
I bet there's gonna be plenty of things in this he's a little boy
He's not he can't be blamed for it right like that a small boy just like experimenting in a way
That's weird. You should you should you need to talk to him you need to be like hey, that's not something you could do
That's not something you could do to a dog. It's not something you should be doing to yourself
There's some guidance needed.
But guidance is necessary.
But yes.
If we were to believe the story
that he's laid out from his life,
I will acknowledge that this is a very traumatic start.
Not a lot of good guidance for this kid.
Not a good guidance.
Yeah, and again, it's this situation
where a lot,
he frames this as a result of and reaction to the abuse
he's experiencing from Mr. Pope, right?
And after some period of time,
he works up the courage to report Mr. Pope
to a social worker.
And to the foster system's credit,
which I won't say often here,
he gets sent to live with someone else very quickly, right?
Now, the next family he's sent to is a foster family in the Bronx who had also adopted his
younger brother Leo.
Okay.
Yeah, so first off, the brothers are back again.
That seems good.
These people are stable.
They live in the suburbs.
They've got a large house and they have at least an upper middle class amount of money.
And so he's pretty happy there at first, right?
He describes later, it was beautiful nature out there.
And things are looking up, right?
Maybe we've got our little orfinani story coming together.
The sun's come up, it's tomorrow, except for no, it is not.
As Bishop and Leo would both complain,
it's still like this house with these people
who had access to a know a lot more resources
They still weren't very nice or nurturing
Per Elysio, they wouldn't let me use a washing machine. We had to watch clothes wash clothes by hand
He couldn't let me have my tight my lights in my room. Like there was no light in my room
It was just a dresser in darkness
He has stated in other videos that one of his new foster parents told him it was because I was dark-skinned. I was dirty
Yeah that one of his new foster parents told him it was because I was dark-skinned, I was dirty. In interviews published by Hood Horrors, Leo has claimed that around this time he and his brother
were both diagnosed with learning disorders, including ADD. Bishop claims that he was put
on Ritalinin and Leo states that
both brothers were moved to special ed because of all this. Where stories diverge is that
Aligio is later going to claim that this is all the result of a con done by his foster
mother to get additional checks from the government for taking in two disabled boys. I don't think
this is true. Foster parents do get a stipend that can increase if their kid has higher costs due to a disability
and these stipends cap out at a fairly low level.
Although as rates vary from state to state, it's hard for me to say exactly how it goes.
The general consensus online seems to be that there are no real stipends that will defray
the cost in a super massive way.
Yeah.
It's just not going to happen.
Speaking of things that aren't going to happen, me miss out on these products and services.
Hi, listeners.
I'm Melissa Jeltsin, host of What Happened to Talina's R.
It's the story of a woman who disappears in the early days of COVID lockdowns and the
group of online sleuths who try to find her.
I didn't want to be talked out of this plan.
After I post this, I am turning off my phone for exactly this reason.
I kept just kind of asking everybody, anyone else think this is strange?
You'll notice that about me.
I don't lurk.
I'm out there.
I'm an action kind of girl.
You can now get access to episodes
of what happened to Talina's R
a hundred percent ad free
with an iHeart True Crime Plus subscription.
I'm a subscriber and you should be too.
So don't wait.
Head to Apple podcasts,
search iHeart True Crime Plus,
and subscribe today.
Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shankar.
I host a podcast called A Slight Change of Plans.
I started this show because unexpected change
comes for all of us,
and there's no set playbook for how to deal with it.
I have all of this psychological baggage
that I'm carrying with me,
and the last thing I want to do
is to pass that on to my daughter.
So I have to figure this out.
This puzzle of my trauma,
I have to figure it out,
and I have to figure it out now.
Join me this season when I talk to Amanda Knox
about her choice to reconnect with a prosecutor
who helped put her behind bars.
This is not about him.
This is about me and what I am capable of giving.
And I know that I am capable of being kind to this man.
And by God, I am going to do it and no one can stop me.
Listen to a slight change of plans
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Your gut microbiome and those healthy bacteria
can actually have positive effects throughout your body,
not just your gut, but your mental health, your metabolism, your immunity, your risk of cancer, heart disease, almost
any disease under the sun. Yep, you heard right.
Probiotics might actually impact everything from your brain to your heart.
So what's science and what's just really good marketing? On this episode of Dope
Labs, me and Zakiya cut through the hype and get into the real
deal behind probiotics with help from gastroenterologist Dr. Roshi Raj.
So yes, bacteria is definitely having a moment and I'm very excited about that.
From probiotic drinks and gummies to face creams and pillows.
Yep, we said pillows.
The probiotic boom is everywhere.
But how much of it actually works?
And what does it all mean for your gut, your skin, and even your mood?
Join us on Dope Labs where we break it all down into the lab like only we can.
Listen to Dope Labs on iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The American West with Dan Flores is the latest show from the MeatEater Podcast Network hosted by me, writer
and historian Dan Flores and brought to you by Velvet Buck. This podcast looks at a West
available nowhere else. Each episode, I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories
of the West. I'll then be joined in conversation by guests such as Western historian, Dr. Randall
Williams and
best-selling author and meat-eater founder Stephen Rannella.
I'll correct my kids now and then where they'll say when cave people were here and I'll say
it seems like the Ice Age people that were here didn't have a real affinity for caves.
So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th where we'll delve into stories of the West and come to understand
how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today.
Listen to The American West with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Oh, we're back. So we're talking about how, you know, our boy here, Elisha Bishop, has been taken to
— he's had a rough upbringing, right?
His parents are both dead.
He's been moved to one foster home where he was sexually abused.
And then he's been finally moved to another, which is a step up.
It's with his brother, right?
These people live in the suburbs, in a large house.
They've got some amount of money, and he's happy at first.
Recalling in a later interview, it was beautiful nature out there, which I guess if you grew
up in central New York City, the suburbs qualify as nature.
Sure.
Yeah.
It's more nature.
It is a lot more nature. There's some trees out there. Sure. Yeah. It's more nature. It is a lot more nature.
There's some trees out there, right?
Yeah.
However, as both he and his brother would later complain, it still wasn't what you'd
call a nice or nurturing environment.
Per Alegio, they wouldn't let us use a washing machine.
We had to wash clothes by hand.
He wouldn't let me have lights in my room.
There was no light in my room.
It was just a dresser and darkness.
Bishop has stated in other videos that one of his new foster parents told him this was
because I was dark skinned, I was dirty.
And I don't know.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, it's, it's, it's, you know, this is, this is not like, again, he's
not the only person who's expressed things like this about his upbringing.
You know, you can find stories like this about his upbringing.
You can find stories like this a lot, not just connected to the foster system, but connected
to the foster system, which has a lot of issues with it.
Absolutely.
In interviews published by Hood Horrors, Leo, his brother, has claimed that around this
time, they were both diagnosed with learning disabilities, including ADD.
Aligio claims that he was put on Ritalin and Leo states that both brothers were moved to
special ed because of all of this.
That all seems pretty cut and dry.
Where stories diverge is that Aligio, who's again our subject this week, the guy who becomes
a cult leader, later claims that the ADD diagnosis and being moved to special ed is the result
of a con by his foster mother to get added checks from the government for taking in two
disabled boys.
From what I have been able to read, this seems unlikely.
There are stipends that you get for having a kid with a disability as a foster parent.
But from everything people say online, these stipends cap out at a fairly low level.
And although rates do vary from state to state, the general consensus online seems to be
that the best these stipends do is somewhat mitigate
the cost of taking in a child
who needs extensive medical care.
And it's worth noting the things that these boys
are being claimed of as having aren't the things
that get you the highest dollar help.
It's just ADD, right?
ADD does it, that's not,
that's not a disability. You know, maybe a learning disability. It's a a disability.
Maybe a learning disability.
It's a learning disability, sure.
Yeah, but it's not that it's not a,
it's that when you're talking about
the higher amounts of money that you can get as a stipend,
it is for something like your kid needs
constant life-saving medical care.
A wheelchair. They can't move on their own.
And even then, it's not much money, right?
It doesn't cover the cost of their actual healthcare.
So it's the idea that like, especially since,
if you watch enough videos with this guy,
I'm not surprised he's got ADD or ADHD,
probably now is what he'd get diagnosed with.
I'll just say I have ADD.
It's not uncommon, yeah.
There's a lot about his background
that I don't feel any need to question
because it happens to a lot of kids.
I don't think he's being accurate about this conspiracy
around him being given Ritalin.
So the timeline of this, early 90s,
maybe Ritalin needs to do that.
Exactly.
That felt like an early 2000s development.
Based on my memory of the late 90s,
more of the people, my friends and family members were on Ritalin than weren't.
So again, the idea that this had to be a conspiracy,
I'm just not buying, right?
Like it's just not super rare
for kids to have been on Ritalin back then.
Right, right.
So I, anyway, but this is a story.
This is at least what he's gonna claim.
Well, I will, but I'm gonna wait to see how this works.
Partly our job.
His brother doesn't make, his brother's just like, yeah, we had ADD.
You know?
Yeah.
I would.
I'm not sure yet because we're going to see where this is building.
All of this is valid, horrifying.
And this stuff happens.
And I don't know how much this cult leader is milking or not milking,
but, you know, leaning into something
for the story of his personality.
And that's why you have to go,
I try to when trying to determine
how reliable different claims he makes are,
I have to go to the evidence, right?
About 40% of kids in foster care
will experience some kinds of abuse, right?
So the fact that he claims he was abused in foster care,
I don't feel that he needed to be like,
well, I don't know, right?
That said, I found a lot of reporting
on how inadequate the support supplemental income is
for foster parents with disabled kids.
And this all does vary from state to state,
but like one article I found via Stat News quotes
a foster mother in Missouri who says,
it is about it being these payments is about a third
of what is actually spent out of pocket
on taking care of a child, right?
So again, I just don't see the evidence
that this is a particularly likely scam.
No, you don't get rich taking in disabled foster kids, really.
There are some weird scams we hear
about people get in a bunch of kids
and in fact to like make them work for him,
which we'll talk about in a second. But yeah
So and again, I i'm not saying like this key these kids didn't both experience abuse
Like given the number of families they pass through it would be almost impossible for them
Not to have experienced a good number of abuse a good amount of abuse, right exactly and just the fact
even outside of that,
being passed from home to home, the chaos of this
is incredibly traumatic.
So yes.
I try to have an open mind about this both,
because I've read a lot of articles from foster parents,
who seem to be people of really good will,
talking about how inadequate the system is.
And I've made, over the course of the last 10 years
of my life, a lot of friends who were in foster care
from an early age,
none of whom like the system or feel good about it,
all of whom feel very, very bad about how the system works.
This is not, I'm not going to,
I'm not going to pretend this is a comprehensive look at it,
but like it's really opened my eyes up to like,
I'm not going to say this is a good thing
that's being unfairly slandered.
So I'm going to try to look at sort of what seems likely based on the evidence vis-a-vis
his claims.
And he does make some other allegations about this foster family, which will be his, he
and his brother's last that are more credible.
He claims his foster mom used him for free labor, making him work for hours in her garden
and around the house as a quote unquote slave.
Leo's account comports somewhat with his brothers,
although he doesn't compare it to slavery,
he just says they were strict
and they had to do a lot of chores, right?
But it's not hard to find cases of foster parents
using foster kids as unpaid labor.
The most shocking recent example of this
is a case that just concluded in West Virginia.
A couple, Jean Kay Whitefeather and her husband,
Donald Lance,
were convicted of forcing their five adopted children, all of whom were black, to work as
slaves on their farm. They had started adopting kids from a shelter for vulnerable youths in
Minnesota and then moved to Washington State and finally West Virginia in 2023. They were
ultimately reported to the Canawa County Sheriff after a neighbor spotted Lance locking a girl and
her brother in a shed.
Per NBC News, the sheriff's office said the two children in the shed had no running water
or bathroom and had been deprived of adequate hygienic care and food.
The children said they slept on the concrete floor and had been locked inside for 12 hours
before they were found.
Another girl was found inside the home.
An indictment alleged that the couple targeted the children for forced labor because of their
race. They were charged with human trafficking, child neglect, forced labor,
and other crimes. And in a happy-ish ending, they were convicted and sentenced to 215 and
160 years in prison, respectively. So, you know.
That is a happy-ish ending.
That's a happy-ish ending. Like, yeah, that seems like about 200 years worth of prison.
Yeah.
Okay. That's fair.
Sure.
But also, oof.
So again, I don't know if Elysio is telling the truth about this family, but it's not
like this doesn't happen, right?
Being like forced to work an unreasonable amount because you're a particularly a black
foster kid, you can find more stories than the one I quoted here, right?
Now it's also worth noting that this last couple that they live with owns a church.
These brothers are forced to go to Bible study and attend church regularly.
There's this mix of things where Elysio clearly learns how to be a preacher a lot about how
people talk about religion.
It's going to make him very effective at talking about religion, at conversion, at the kind of shit a cult leader needs to do, right?
He gets kind of a crash course in that.
I mean, just speaking in general, talking about religion,
but also speaking to a group of people,
being charismatic, drawing them in.
And when you see him talk, if you, like me,
have just spent way too much time looking at different evangelical,
like, you know, fringe sects and stuff, it's like,
oh, yeah, no, I get where this comes from.
Again, folks, watch the movie, Marjo,
if you want a little more of an education on that.
Aligio claims that he was told several times he was a demon
and that he became scared of his reflection in the mirror.
You hear this a lot from kids who are,
stuff like this a lot from kids who are raised evangelical,
so I feel no need to question that claim.
He has also alleged that these last foster parents physically, although not sexually,
abused him.
His younger brother feels a little differently, and I think this may just be them both interpreting
the same thing differently because his brother Leo has acknowledged that they were both spanked
regularly when they misbehaved.
But he doesn't describe this as abnormal or extreme.
And it may not have been, right?
There's a lot like, it's always bad to hit kids, you know?
Also, it's pretty normal to spank kids, right?
And so the fact that Aligio calls this abuse
and Leo doesn't, I don't see it necessarily
as a discrepancy in what happened.
I don't either. That's up for interpretation. Also Leo's little brother, he was already in this
house prior. Right, he went in a little earlier. And also younger, so maybe his experience was
different. Or again, maybe he's leaning into the story for the narrative of his life. Either way.
Yeah, or maybe it's the kind of thing where,
yeah, they were both spanked and that's not good.
You shouldn't hit kids for any reason,
but also like, Elysio's kind of upselling it to have,
because having the super, right?
And like, he doesn't need to,
his background's very sad, right?
Yeah, but it's the narrative.
But I also understand that there's room
for different interpretations and the older child
might have gotten more of a brunt
Absolutely might like icons like I wouldn't I wouldn't qualify what I did is like particularly again
It was not excessive for the time
But I definitely got spanked more than my brother
Because during the time when I am older than my brother and during the time when I was a kid it was more normal
Right and my parents changed as society changed on that matter.
Right?
Like the way people do.
Like I got, my brothers got spanked more
because I was an angel.
Right, you were perfect.
Of course.
We were always talking about this, Katie.
No, it's because it changed.
The baby, like they didn't, by the time I was around,
they didn't feel as good about it.
Yeah, yeah.
And it, you know, there's,
there's a number of things that are possible here,
but I don't see any reason for him to be not, we do have to like I'm not trying like you do have to
Litigate a cult leader's backstory even when it is this sad because like they lie about a lot of stuff
They're cool. You see it. Oh, right
So I think we I'm hoping that we're doing like a fair enough job of being like this is probably true this one
There's less evidence for you know
Elysio says that the abuse he endured is what inspired him to begin committing petty
crimes and running away.
He would periodically be gone for days at a time during which he would do stuff like
just steal cars for the hell of it, commit petty robberies, burglarize houses and cars.
I have relatives who had severe ADHD who did stuff like this.
So again, I like this does all seem pretty consistent.
He was arrested several times, quote, I got locked up for everything. I was so young,
I was committing so many crimes. And again, this is the kind of thing if you're white,
if your parents have money, this doesn't last on your record. He's not, you know, all those
parents do have some money. After this cycle repeated itself a few times during his adolescence, he was finally convicted and sentenced to five years of juvenile detention, which is where he
spends the remainder of his time as a child. The last five years of his childhood, I mean,
and his first year of adulthood really, he spends incarcerated. At age 16, he is sent from a juvenile
detention area to East Jersey State Prison. So they're like, well, at 16,
you're ready for the adult prison.
And this we can absolutely verify happens, right?
And this is deeply abusive by the system, by the state.
No, kids should not go to prison.
I don't really think ever.
Like 16 year olds aren't adults.
You shouldn't treat them that way.
Even when they do horrible stuff, you know?
Like even when they're committing murders, they're still not adults, you know?
But this is the way the government is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You can do a whole episode on that.
We have done several.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, the juvenile offender system is just bastards all the way down.
It's like a fucking hedgerow of evil.
It is disgusting.
You couldn't drive a fucking tank through it.
So this is where he's gonna spend the rest of his childhood.
He describes this as a desperate and miserable time
during which he repeatedly tried to kill himself.
He was transferred to the prison psych ward
for some time as a result.
I have no trouble believing this.
This is an extraordinarily common story. Suicide is at large, just among all young people in the United States, the
third leading cause of death. And being a youth in custody substantially increases your
odds of attempting suicide or succeeding at it. Incarcerated children complete suicide
between two and four times as often as youth in the general population.
It is worth noting the evidence suggests that the kind of kids who wind up in custody are
also likelier to have struggled with suicidal ideation before incarceration. More than one
third of juvenile detainees report thinking of suicide in the six months prior to detention,
and that number is almost 50% for female detainees.
Wow. None of that's shocking.
No, no.
It's always worth bringing up, right?
People should always have this, be reminded of this, but yeah, it's not at all.
If you are casually aware of how any of this works, you're like, yup.
He's ultimately released in 2001 after his 19th birthday.
He goes back.
So again, by the time he is an adult
in the free world, quote unquote, for the first time,
he spent about a quarter of his life behind bars.
So not great, slightly more than a quarter,
if I'm remembering my tipping math,
which is the only math I know how to do.
Elysio goes back to live with his family for a while,
this foster family for a while,
but for what should be obvious reasons,
that doesn't go well, right?
He's ultimately kicked out, at least that's his story.
Maybe it was more of a, he, there's some,
I've heard some versions of it that like he chose to leave.
I don't know, I don't think it matters all that much.
Thankfully he has made contact
with several of his siblings at this point,
from which he's been estranged since he was very young, right?
The sisters and stuff.
Yeah, his sisters.
And they seem to, they're doing their best for their little brothers, right?
That's the feeling I get because he couchsurf with several of them for different periods
of time.
It never lasts.
He is very hard to live with.
And he is, just given based on what happens later, I have no trouble believing a pretty abusive person to live with. And he is, just given based on what happens later,
I have no trouble believing a pretty abusive person
to live with.
They really are trying, it sounds like,
based on both his account and the accounts
that you get from other members of the family,
that like they do attempt.
He couchsurf with his sisters for a while.
He couchsurf with an old friend,
and kind of between the two of them,
he is able to gradually over several months make his way from New York City down to South Philly.
This is where he gets his first adult job as a security guard and he seems to feel good
enough about this that he decides the army is a good place for me, which a lot of people
make a decision like this and outside of the whole problem of what the army does,
you know, imperialism, all that good stuff,
I do know a lot of people who will tell you quite out both,
I don't recommend other people join the army
and I would have killed myself
if I hadn't joined the army or the Marine Corps or whatever.
I would have wound up dead, right?
That's a very, just because like-
It's a parachute for them.
It's an, something to go do, but yeah, you wouldn't recommend.
Something to go do and I know people you know, something to go do. And I know people who like because
their parents because they had no, no one who told them how to
be an adult fight like finally, like being in the military and
having older people as mentors who are like, here is how you
exist in the world as a person was something they desperately
needed. Right. So sometimes it does work out to people for
people.
This is, yeah.
So this is post 2001.
2001.
So Verna, it's not a great time to join the army.
Not a great time to join the army.
One of the worst times.
I don't know that it would have begun well for him,
but he's not allowed to stay.
And I'm gonna quote from that write up in Rolling Stone,
quote, he has said he completed basic training,
but was discharged when the army learned
of his psychiatric treatment.
And this is, again, if he had tried a few years later,
they probably would have kept him
because during like the surge, right,
they were letting a lot of dudes with sketchy histories.
Like, yeah, we just need bodies.
You wanna take a samurai sword and a share, fuck it, go.
Like, that's a literal thing that happened.
That's an actual guy.
That said, you know, if you are,
if the army won't take you in like 2002,
you probably don't have a lot of jobs
you can get hired for, right?
Like that's just a reality.
And he's gonna spend the next several years of his life
on the verge of homelessness,
desperately pivoting from one gig and location to the next.
He signs up with the job corps, but he leaves very quickly.
He hooks back up with his little brother, Leo, who's an adult now, and they moved to
New York City with one of his older sisters for a while until she kicks him out or they
have a fight and they leave.
They wind up in Augusta, Georgia next where they crash with another sister.
And again, just a shatteringly common story
for people who come from this kind of soci,
who are orphaned, who grow up super poor,
who wind up in the foster system, stuff like this is not,
right now there's a lot of people
who have had experiences like this.
And most of them don't become abusive cult leaders
like Alicia, right?
Important context.
He gets his next full-time job at this point,
working six days a week at a slaughterhouse,
probably not good for his mental health.
One of the worst jobs you can do,
I say this is someone who slaughters animals,
like slaughterhouse work is just a fucking nightmare, right?
He starts drinking and smoking weed constantly
as a coping mechanism for how traumatizing doing this job is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's about, I mean, my mom used to,
cause she had a donut shop that bankrupted the family,
but like that's some of my earliest memories.
And she would deliver to the Tyson Chicken Plant
near Ida Belle, Oklahoma.
And that you could smell that place
from a half hour away, right?
Like I can't do like,
and she always just left after delivering it
looking haunted.
It's just a bleak thing to have to do.
Absolutely.
You won't catch me anywhere near a slaughterhouse.
No.
If I can help you.
Avoid factory farm to meet people if you can.
Which, you know, often you can, although everything's getting more expensive. I don't know, If I can help that. Avoid factory farm to meet people if you can.
Which, you know, often you can,
although everything's getting more expensive.
I don't know, do whatever you can do.
Do what you can.
I'm not your boss.
Yeah, just do your best.
It's miserable work, so he starts taking drugs a lot more.
You get the feeling, I think this might be a guy
who is schizotypal.
I don't know that he's been diagnosed with that.
It's just because of some of the things that happen later. Either way, the fact that he starts smoking
weed is not going to be good for him. Neither is the drinking. He increasingly has issues
controlling his anger. During one argument with his older sister, he punches her in the
face and she kicks him, but not his little brother out of the house. So again, this is
a guy, I don't know if this is the first physical violence that he
uses on someone close to him, but this is the first kind of documented case. It's going to be
a pattern in his life. And so Bishop's going to spend the next several weeks living on the street.
He's outright homeless now until a friend of his. And it's kind of unclear from the interviews I've
heard. A lot of this comes from interviews pieced together by that hood horrors YouTube channel
Which again you should check out this guy doesn't have a lot of followers, but is very good at what he's doing
I really recommend it's like a 17 part series so yeah by far
I've done my best that that Rolling Stone article is good
The hood horrors piece is by far the most detailed history of this guy if you find yourself really interested in everything that's happened with this cult.
But it is a long, it's like nine or 10 hours of content.
That's a commitment.
Yeah.
So again, he gets invited by this friend of his
to come crash in Atlanta.
He manages to get work as a barber.
And one of the things that you're getting from this
in addition to the bad stuff
is that he must be pretty charming to a lot of people
because he does keep getting invites with people
to stay with him and crash with them.
A lot of folks, including people
who aren't his blood relatives, try to help him, right?
Yeah.
So that's not-
That's what I was thinking.
All these people that let him couch surf or crash,
there's gotta be a reason.
Yeah, there's gotta be a reason, right?
This isn't a guy who is like a purely toxic force
to the people in his life. Otherwise he wouldn't be getting these reason, right? This isn't a guy who is like a purely toxic force to the people in his life.
Otherwise he wouldn't be getting these opportunities, right?
So he gets some work as a barber for the first time during this period and he's able to like
make a living at it.
He has some skill at this, but barbering doesn't pay a lot or at least the way he's doing it.
He's not making good money.
Obviously I know some people do quite fine with it. So he starts basically being a sugar baby for women who have more money with him, which
is basically every woman.
He has almost no money at this point.
He says, quote, I used my body, I used my looks in order to get money and access to
cars from various women.
He also starts selling weed to supplement his lifestyle.
And as you'll see, you know, some people are just kind of naturally jacked.
Like they have to work out some, but like working out a fairly minimal amount, eating
an okay diet, they're just shredded.
He's one of those people, right?
Being jacked comes fairly easily to him, you know?
He's never doing well enough to afford his own place at this point, or, and this is me
reading in between the lines a little bit, I think it might be more that he is unwilling
to spend any of his money on rent.
So he's always living with someone, usually a girlfriend, who he inevitably cheats on
constantly.
And this is how he winds up for the third time homeless, because he gets kicked out
of the house for cheating.
The desperation of this situation convinces him
to take an offer that he had been given by someone else
to start stripping at a gay strip club.
He describes himself as going gay for pay.
And you know, I, Sophie will show you some photos here.
There's documented evidence of him at this point
as a dancer, as a stripper and a sex worker.
He claims, quote, I was the number one dancer
that was hosting the shows in every arena in Atlanta.
I can't verify this, but like, yeah.
So how would you describe this guy looking from those,
what Sophie's showing?
Like-
He's pretty hot.
He's pretty hot.
Like he's, he's, he's yoked, you know?
He's a good looking-
That does look like someone who works out a lot.
Good bone structure in his face.
Yeah, yeah.
Works out, oiled up.
All oiled up.
He knows how to dress, he looks pretty good.
Yeah, I could see people throwing some dollars his way.
I can see, it's one of those things,
I don't know if he was the number one male stripper
in Atlanta, but yeah, I could see him doing gay male stripper.
I could be like, I can see him doing pretty well.
Yeah.
I don't have trouble believing that this is, this is something he's able to like do quite well at.
His stripper name is Tyson for Tyson Beckford.
Oh, I forgot, I forgot one image.
Oh, what's that?
Oh, is it the naked one where he's holding
the water bottle over his cock?
Okay, why'd you forget that one?
Yeah, cause I mean, that's a good one.
It was on a sec, It was on a separate page.
Yeah, well, you'll pull that up.
There we go.
There we go.
Yeah.
Looks like a lot of people's Tinder profile right there.
Yeah.
If you're lucky, Jesus.
If you're lucky.
You'll see the T pendant he's wearing.
That's because his stripper name is Tyson
for Tyson Beckford, who is a Jamaican American actor
and model who hosted two seasons of Make Me a Supermodel and was one of Ralph Lauren's big male models for years.
I don't know much about the model industry, but what I read casually says he's one of
the rare male models who is like as big as some of the biggest female models, right?
In terms of like his income and success.
I've heard that name before.
He's very big.
He's a big deal.
Um, Alagio suggests, uh, insists that he was and is entirely straight and that this was a purely mercenary arrangement for him.
That said, he doesn't actually seem to be like homophobic or transphobic.
So there's that, I guess.
Good for him.
Completely rotten inside. That's cool.
Yeah, he's just not, I don't think he has any personal care about that whatsoever.
He's certainly not a super judgmental guy when it comes to that stuff. Yeah. Speaking of people who won't judge you,
our sponsors will never judge you. They would never, they would never dream of it.
They're the only people who love you and the only people you can trust. I think we can all agree on that.
Certainly. Certainly. no argument from me.
Certainly, no argument from anyone.
Why would you argue?
Hi, listeners.
I'm Melissa Jeltzen, host of What Happened to Talina Czar.
It's the story of a woman who disappears
in the early days of COVID lockdowns
and the group of online sleuths who try to find her.
I didn't wanna be talked out of this plan. After I post this, I am turning off my phone for exactly this reason.
I kept just kind of asking everybody, anyone else think this is strange?
You'll notice that about me. I don't lurk. I'm out there. I'm an action kind of girl.
You can now get access to episodes of What Happened to Talina's R, 100% ad free, with
an iHeart True Crime Plus subscription. I'm a subscriber and you should be too. So don't
wait. Head to Apple Podcasts, search iHeartTrueCrime Plus and subscribe today.
Hey, I'm Dr. Maya Shankar.
I host a podcast called A Slight Change of Plans.
I started this show because unexpected change comes for all of us and there's no set playbook
for how to deal with it.
I have all of this psychological baggage
that I'm carrying with me,
and the last thing I want to do
is to pass that on to my daughter.
So I have to figure this out.
This puzzle of my trauma, I have to figure it out,
and I have to figure it out now.
Join me this season when I talk to Amanda Knox
about her choice to reconnect with the prosecutor who helped put her behind bars.
This is not about him. This is about me and what I am capable of giving.
And I know that I am capable of being kind to this man.
And by God, I am going to do it and no one can stop me.
Listen to a slight change of plans
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Your gut microbiome and those healthy bacteria
can actually have positive effects throughout your body.
Not just your gut, but your mental health,
your metabolism, your immunity,
your risk of cancer, heart
disease, almost any disease under the sun.
Yep, you heard right.
Probiotics might actually impact everything from your brain to your heart.
So what's science and what's just really good marketing?
On this episode of Dope Labs, me and Zakiya cut through the hype and get into the real
deal behind probiotics with help from gastroenterologist
Dr. Roshi Raj.
So yes, bacteria is definitely having a moment and I'm very excited about that.
From probiotic drinks and gummies to face creams and pillows.
Yep, we said pillows.
The probiotic boom is everywhere.
But how much of it actually works and what does it all mean for your gut, your skin and
even your mood?
Join us on DopeLabs where we break it all down into the lab like only we can.
Listen to Dope Labs on iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The American West with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network,
hosted by me, writer and historian Dan Flores, and brought to you by Velvet Buck.
This podcast looks at a West available nowhere else.
Each episode, I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories of the West.
I'll then be joined in conversation by guests such as Western historian Dr. Randall Williams
and bestselling author and meat eatereater founder Stephen Rannella.
I'll correct my kids now and then where they'll say when cave people were here.
And I'll say it seems like the Ice Age people that were here didn't have a real affinity
for caves.
So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th, where we'll delve into stories of the West and come
to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we
experience the region today.
Listen to The American West with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're back and we're talking about this fucking guy.
This fucking guy.
Things are starting to go well for him.
He's making good money.
He also continues serially dating women
and he gets one of these ladies pregnant with a child,
Alicia, Alicia O'Jr.
And he seems to have no further contact with this kid
beyond naming him. Cool, cool, cool.
Soon after this, he gets another lady pregnant, Maisha.
Maisha has two kids prior to meeting him.
They get together and start living in the same home
and he names their son Osiris
and he does spend some time with this kid
trying to parent him.
And he'd been doing pretty well,
okay, at least financially before,
but now he is effectively taking care of both,
this first kid that he seems,
I think he sends some money to,
I'm sure he's not totally up on his child support.
He's supporting the second kid
and he's helping Maisha support her other kids
and he finds himself strapped, right?
The stripper money is not alone enough for this.
So he starts working as a, like an escort, right?
A gay escort.
And like, you know, he's now having sex for pay, right? A gay escort. And like, you know, he's now having sex for pay, right?
And he also stars in at least one pornographic film. I suspect there are more, knowing how
that industry works, but we have documentation of at least one. This is not easy for him.
He begins drinking more heavily and when he gets drunk, he is often physically violent.
This comes to a head in 2011 and I want to play a
segment of Maisha and Aligio both discussing the incident, which is part of that Hood Horrors
documentary. There were other videos where this was related, but they've been pulled from the
internet. So this documentary is the only place I can find it. Again, I really do recommend watching
the Rise and Fall of Nature Boy Aligio Bishop, which is like 17 parts at this moment. But yeah,
here's a brief clip of them talking about this incident.
Look out the window.
He's stabbing my tires to my car.
So I go to the door.
He like come outside.
I'm like, nah, like you've been drinking.
I know you. I don't do you with an alcohol.
Like, go ahead.
He pulls me outside and I was holding on to the door.
So when I held on to the door, I closed it.
He grabbed me, dragged me down the stairs. He got on top of me he was beating my face and I don't know how the police just pulled up in the yard they saw him on
top of me and they pulled him off of me
I ain't gotta know where a cop pulls me off of cause I'm trying to fucking murder her.
Wow.
Yeah.
So not great.
Oh, I hate him.
Yeah, not great.
He gets arrested.
Yeah.
For aggravated battery,
sounds like fair charges based on, you know,
what they say and what he admits.
He just says he was trying to fucking kill her.
Yeah. And the police report notes
that Maisha had severe swelling over her left eye,
the size of a fist, a laceration behind her left ear,
marks on her upper body and her pajama pants were torn.
He faced 20 years in prison,
but by the time it took about a year
for the case to come around to trial,
by which point Maisha and him had reconciled.
She writes the letter, a judge in his favor.
Bishop takes a plea deal that includes probation and a thousand dollar fine, but no prison
time.
Okay.
And again, it's this thing where like they make up, he apologizes.
He says that he had promised the universe that if it got him off for these charges,
quote, I would never hit another woman.
I should note that in this is, he says this in a live stream years later.
And in that live stream, he immediately adds I lied because he becomes very convinced that
men abusing women is an important thing philosophically.
But that's in the future.
You know, at this point, my issue takes him back.
They're still living together. He does make some changes after this,
although I don't know how you'd categorize these.
He claims, and again, these are his allegations
that are not verified.
He claims he befriended a wealthy biblical scholar
named Dr. Mike Brown.
Dr. Mike Brown is a real person
with a Wikipedia and everything.
He is a messianic Judaism guy, which is people who believe, it's like they think that they're
a kind of Jews that accept Jesus as the Messiah. It's a very problematic thing. I'm not going to
get into it. He's a major Christian Zionist. He does have a
real PhD in Bible stuff. He's got a pretty messy history in terms of shit he said. He's held anti-
pride rallies. He has claimed homosexuality is caused by childhood trauma. He has in the past
supported conversion therapy and Uganda's criminalization of homosexuality.
He's also claimed not to be anti-gay,
but I don't know if this is an example of him
having softened or just lying.
I don't know.
He's definitely has said some really fucked up shit.
He has been accused of sexually inappropriate behavior
by a female employee and he denies these allegations.
Aligio has apparently claimed that the two had a clandestine relationship and that for years,
Dr. Brown paid him $3,000 a month as an allowance and also fronted him the money he needed to start
his own barber shop. He starts his own barber shop around this time. He has money from somewhere.
I have no, I'm saying this because this is a thing
you can get sued over and I absolutely do not want to be misreporting this. There is no outside
verification or confirmation of any kind that his allegations against Dr. Brown are true,
nor have I come across similar allegations against Brown. Again, the allegations against him
are that he is abusive to a female colleague, right?
Not that he's hiring male prostitutes
or doing a sugar,
those are not allegations I hear anywhere else from him.
So I am telling you this because these are the things
that Aligio claims,
not because there's outside verification of this.
I don't know the truth here.
Don't sue Robert, you guys.
He's doing his best.
Really trying to state what the actual known facts are here.
What we do know is that he gets enough money
to start a barber shop.
It is not a small shop.
He hires a team of barbers.
Photos make it look like more than a dozen chairs
in the shop.
And it does fairly well.
It seems to be a pretty successful business.
He starts to make good money during this and this business is supporting a decent number
of people.
He lets his little brother live in the back.
He won't let him be a barber, but he'll let him sweep up after.
I don't know why.
Interesting.
Leo seems pissed about it.
So things are going pretty well, but if this is a grind, you know,
running a small business is not easy.
I've never heard anything that makes it sound
like barbershop is an easy kind of business to run.
And he grows exhausted with the grind
and starts getting obsessed with the idea
of living closer to nature and dropping out of society.
Who amongst us, right?
Common thing to desire. Yes. Yeah.
Not a weird story. Unfortunately, he starts to explore this by meeting a bunch of hippies
on the internet and watching YouTube videos from different creators in the black consciousness
community, which we'll talk about in more detail, but it essentially mixes, this is a subculture,
the black consciousness or conscious community,
online is a subculture,
just sort of a collection of YouTubers,
there's some podcasters, some rappers,
who have this mix of like very standard hippie
back to the land style ideology,
with also an education on like the history of racism
in the United States that is unfortunately mixed with stuff that gets scammer like quote
unquote natural health and astrology.
And from what I can tell, it's a broad subculture.
So depending on who you get obsessed with as a creator in this, you might wind up learning
about both like, you know, organic farming
and making human manure and stuff,
all of which are wonderful things.
And alongside like the destruction of Black Wall Street
and Tulsa and the move bombing, right?
Very real conspiracy theories.
But there's also a sizable chunk of this community.
Well, you will learn some very not real conspiracy theories.
Right?
It's so tough.
There's a slippery slope in those different communities. It's like, yeah, I want to take that, but not that. theories, right? It's so tough. There's a slippery slope in those different communities.
It's like, yeah, I wanna take that, but not that, you.
What, you, this, but.
And it's difficult when like so much of it is about like,
this is a largely black community talking about like
the history of racism against
and like institutionalized bigotry against black people
in the United States.
There's so many real conspiracies.
And it's also, once you hear about those,
easy for a lot of people to get pulled into the stuff
that's not so real.
Absolutely, absolutely.
He gets really interested in black Israelite stuff,
which is basically black people are the lost 13th tribe
of Israel or whatever.
He gets into a lot of anti-vaccine stuff,
which is adjacent to a lot of, you know, to
at least elements of this subculture.
Aligio's loved ones at the time mostly describe him obsessively watching videos about conspiracy
theories and natural health.
And particularly when Maisha talks about this, she always says he's watching conspiracy theory
videos.
He buys an RV, never a good sign.
Never a good sign. Never a good sign.
If your friend drops out of social interactions, spends months watching YouTube videos, and
then buys an RV, you need to intervene.
He's about to do something bad.
These are red flags.
These are red flags.
That said, in this particular case, this is more a sign of where things are going.
The RV itself doesn't end too badly.
He and my Isha live on the road for a month
and try to just let other people run the barbershop,
but they're bad at it.
And so he's forced to come back from Florida
to stop it from going out of business.
Once he's back to try to keep himself interested
in the barbershop, he sets up a stage there,
which initially he's like, so local acts can play, right?
People can do standup or, you know, musicians can do stuff. He like gives out liquor and beer and stuff,
which is not super uncommon for a barbershop. So he's trying to like make it into a community
space. But that becomes him primarily using that stage to give speeches that are like
rants about his different pet theories. And at this point, he's embraced a couple of specific theories. One of them, and this is an older preexisting theory,
is the idea that higher amounts of melanin in the skin
can correlate directly to higher IQ, right?
The more melanin you have, the smarter you are.
And kind of what goes with that is exposing yourself
to sun by spending as much time nearly naked outdoors
as possible makes you smarter, right?
Okay.
He also starts to believe that bathing is bad for you.
You don't need to bathe if you eat only fruit or other foods that don't make you smell.
This is a thing Steve Jobs believed.
No one else agrees with this.
And he also-
And as a reminder, Steve Job washed his feet in the toilet.
Yes, yes.
Now, that is something Elysio would not do because Elysio believes toilets are evil.
He comes to insist and believe very strongly
that pooping and peeing indoors
is one of the greatest evils you can perpetuate
because they are, by doing that, you are robbing nature,
right, of your critical, you know, of nutrients and stuff.
I wanna play a clip of him talking that was republished by Hood Horrors.
This is from all of his stuff has been taken off the internet
after the things that we'll talk about in part two happened.
So it's hard to find a lot of this.
These different kind of documentaries online about him
are some of the only sources remaining,
which is why I'm going back to this documentary.
I do want to, again, continue to, you know,
shout out the rise and fall of Nature Boy,
Alessio Bishop on Hood Horrors.
It is a really good piece of work.
But here is him talking years later, explaining his theories about poop.
So this gives you an idea.
This is filmed later, but it gives you an idea of the kind of shit he's saying
in his rants at this barbershop.
They showed me where to use the bathroom,
which we all use the bathroom in the backyard.
This is not shit, poop, nah. It's very sacred. When you eat right, when you eat the right thing,
you eat from the earth, it is no longer toxic waste. It is organic. It is soil. You get the
fruit, you eat the fruit, it eats the soil.
This is how you give back.
The government is taking this and putting it in the toilet and stealing it and disconnecting
you from the universe.
And stealing it?
Stealing it?
Yes, the government.
The government is stealing your poop?
The government is stealing your poop by making you think you need a toilet.
For what?
What guy?
To disconnect you from the universe so you don't realize the evil schemes they're perpetuating,
I guess.
Some key words and phrasing in there of like, this is sacred.
Sacred.
And the government, it's just leading into the conspiracy of it and the religious.
And here's the thing, I actually have a lot of friends and have spent a lot of time myself
using stuff like composting toilets, right?
I've lived on and I have spent a lot of time on,
in properties where people are very close to a closed loop.
I have known and know people
who do the very close to zero impact environmentally.
They produce all of their own food.
They turn all of their own waste.
It is possible, it's a lot of work.
It is much more complicated.
And I want to, and I say that
because I want to make it very clear.
He is not saying you should make your poop
into human manure.
He is not an advocate for utilizing any of this waste
in any way.
He just thinks you should only shit in the backyard.
Yeah.
That is very important for you to understand.
It's a big difference.
And he is not know that much about it, but there are some hygiene issues here.
There's lots of why we have.
We would all die if society did this.
Yeah, I know that there are better places to put in nature than others.
Yes. That it can't.
It can have negative consequences.
If our whole society committed to like a functional,
extensive human-ure program,
sure, that would be better than what we do.
But if everyone just pooped in the yard,
we would all get sick and die
because it's bad to just poop in the yard.
And in general, probably you're bad for the-
Bad for the yard.
The bad for the yard in your plans.
It's not good to just shit everywhere
for the environment either.
Yes.
Also, if it's not toxic when you eat all the,
I don't know.
None of this is accurate.
After one of these rants where he's just talking
about how the government's stealing your poop,
a former regular at the barbershop asks him,
Hey man, you used to just give us drinks
when we came to get a haircut.
What happened to the drinks?
What?
This is changing.
He is not happy at the barbershop.
The barbershop's not super happy with him.
And in short order, he works out a deal
to basically give away, sell his ownership
of the barbershop in exchange for an ongoing interest
in the business to somebody.
He's already committed himself to begin copying
the conscious community figureheads he'd
grown obsessed with.
And he'd even thought up a new name for himself.
And from this point forward, he no longer goes by Aligio Bishop.
He now uses a new name, Nature Boy.
And we will be talking about that and his growth into a significant figure within the
conscious community in part two.
How you feeling so far, Katie?
I'm feeling great.
I'm excited to hear what happens to Nature Boy.
I'll tell you one thing,
a lot of people pooping in backyards.
Ah, that's the stuff.
Nature Boy, the Beatles song.
Yeah, that's right.
Wait, is that a Beatles song?
I don't know.
There's a lot of Beatles song, I don't know. I just think I just- It is, Mother Nature's right. Wait, is that a Beatles song? I don't know. There's a lot of Beatles song. I don't know.
I just think it is Mother Nature's son.
Mother Nature's son.
Different.
Different.
I just think of a former side character on Behind the Bastards, Ric Flair.
That's right.
Oh yeah.
Ric Flair, the nature boy also, I think, pissed on a chair or something at one point in that
story if I'm remembering right So you know similar guys maybe?
Maybe someone pissed on his chair well
He was part of the he was one of the ones that was in the the adoption scandal where he was just kidnapped
Oh, yeah, he was stolen as a baby. Yes
For sure. Yeah, he was definitely stolen as a baby. Where comes back is what I'm yeah
Yes All right everybody for sure. Yeah, he was definitely stolen as a baby. Riddler comes back is what I'm saying. Yeah, yes.
All right, everybody.
Katie, you want to plug your plugables here real quick?
Oh, sure.
Well, you can find me over at some more news with Cody Johnston.
We now have three episodes a week.
Well, we've got two podcasts and then
the main show, the YouTube show. And you can check us out there. We've got a Patreon. We've
got all the things. That's it. Go do that.
Yep. All right. Well, everybody, go poop in your backyard.
Don't do that. Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonedmedia.com, or check us out on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Behind the Bastards is now available on YouTube.
New episodes every Wednesday and Friday.
Subscribe to our channel, youtube.com, slash, at, Behind the Bastards.
Hi listeners. I'm Melissa Jeltsin, host of What Happened to Talina Czar.
It's the story of a woman who disappears in the early days of COVID lockdowns,
and the group of online sleuths who try to find her.
I didn't want to be talked out of this plan. After I post this, I am turning off my phone
for exactly this reason. I kept just kind of asking everybody, anyone else think this is strange?
You'll notice that about me. I don't lurk. I'm out there. I'm an action kind of girl.
I said about me, I don't lurk, I'm out there. I'm an action kind of girl. You can now get access to episodes of What Happened to Talina's R, 100% ad free, with
an iHeart True Crime Plus subscription. I'm a subscriber and you should be too. So don't
wait. Head to Apple Podcasts, search iHeartTrueCrime Plus and subscribe today.
Explore the winding halls of historical true crime with Holly Fry and Maria Tramarchi,
hosts of Criminalia, as they uncover curious cases from the past.
The legend of the highwayman suggests men dominated the field, but tell that to Lady Catherine Farrers, known as the
Wicked Lady, who terrorized England in the mid-1600s. Her legend persists
nearly 400 years after her death. Highwaymen are in the hot seat this
season. Find more crime and cocktails on Criminalia. Listen to Criminalia on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A crime makes headlines. People talk about it for a few days, then it disappears.
But for the people left behind, their story is just beginning.
But at night, we hear the garage opening and my son hears it, we freak out.
Honestly, I didn't tell my son this, but I felt that was it.
From the exactly right network.
This is The Knife.
Real stories of crimes ripple effects told by those who lived them.
New episodes every Thursday.
Listen to The Knife on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
The best things in life are on the other side of difficult conversations.
But if we're honest, most people run from them, staying silent, missing chances and
holding themselves back.
I know this is true because I used to be like that, until I realized that negotiation isn't
a talent, it's a skill that anyone can learn.
And once I did, everything changed.
I went from people pleaser to confident
communicator and now I teach Fortune 500 leaders and top executives how to do the same. Listen to
negotiate anything on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.