Behind the Bastards - Part Two: The Sordid Story of Nature Boy: The Instagram Cult Leader Who Hates Toilets
Episode Date: May 15, 2025Nature Boy is now in Central America, where he weaponizes the power of Instagram's algorithm to trick rubes into flying out to join him and handing over all their money.See omnystudio.com/listener for... privacy information.
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Cool Zone Media.
Oh, welcome back to Bastards Behind the Stole Katie Podcast
guest, hey.
What a title.
Yeah, you can put that all, I believe in our audience.
They can put it together.
They can put it together.
You know what I'm getting at?
Yeah, they get the gist.
They get the gist, come on.
Do I need to do everything for you people?
Presumably they heard part one, so.
Yeah.
I'm just gonna record a podcast
that's me reading most of the words
and then re-release it every week with a different bastard
and you can put it together in your head
as like the right bad person.
But do you expect him to do all the work for you?
Yeah, come on now.
We gotta be able to meet in the middle here. It's
called compromise. Yeah. How are we doing Katie? How are you
feeling in the five minutes since we recorded part one?
Honestly, great. I reheated my tea. Great. Cuddled my dog.
Great. Feel refreshed. Great. Riding with bated breath to hear more about Nature Boy.
Yeah.
Well, let's hear about Nature Boy.
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The boy, Nature.
That's the name he's picked up at the start of this episode.
And we should start today by talking a little bit more about the conscious community or
the black consciousness community.
I've heard it described as both things.
Again, this is a subculture, not a massive one, but not a small one either that exists
primarily through kind of a nexus of YouTube and podcasters and some rappers.
Rolling Stone writer David Peisner describes it as, quote, an ecosystem of black spiritualists,
natural living advocates, herbalists, alternative historians, motivational speakers, and backpack
rappers.
Having gone through a bit of related non-culti content creators that seem to be-
Wait, I'm sorry, backpack rapper?
Yeah. Which I think is a term for rappers who are kind of not massive.
They travel around and do a lot of local shows and stuff.
Yeah.
Probably do a lot of, I think SoundCloud rapper is an adjacent sort of thing, right?
Sure.
Okay.
Cool.
Having gone through a bit of related non-culti content creators in this space,
a lot of what I see in this community reminds me of stuff that I saw and was kind of had
and sort of experienced adjacent to some of the different like hippie-ish, you know,
communities I spent time in when I was in my late teens, early twenties, you know,
rainbow gathering people and the burner community, all these like different sort of
where you would encounter this mix,
this wide mix of everything from like,
here's people who are actually really interested in,
you know, aquaponics and human manure
and alternative living situations.
And here's people who are actually trying to inform folks
about important aspects of American history
that have been covered up.
And here's people who are telling you absolute nonsense
about how you don't need vaccines if you eat enough zinc.
Yeah, picking.
And they're trying to get you to believe in, you know,
whatever fucking bullshit aliens are nonsense.
It's like piggybacking on another movement.
Mm-hmm.
That's one way to look at it.
But yeah, it's a net that casts some good things
and some bad things.
Yes.
And the kind of the big difference between a lot of where, you know, this kind of these
kind of different sort of hippie ish descended movements that I spent time in and around
when I was doing psychedelics a bunch.
And this community, which also focuses the conscious community, a lot of psychedelic usage
is that there's a bunch more of a focus on racial justice
because this is much more of like a black subculture
and a lot of education on the history of white supremacy.
So again, you get these real, the Tuskegee experiment,
redlining, the move bombing,
and also like moon landing conspiracies, anti-vac shit,
you know, all that stuff.
I found a write-up in Medium by Anna Stensgaard,
which gives a good idea of how people in this
community like to describe themselves.
And it focuses a lot on the concept of a conscious community, which is where the conscious community
subculture takes its name, but is an older term for... It goes back, you can find people
talking about shit like this in the 70s and 80s.
People would use the term to describe these kind of idealized,
physical, intentional communities formed along utopian lines, which is a thing people have done
in America since the nation has existed. This term goes back further than the subculture we're
talking about. Now, since forming real world breakaway communities is hard and usually a bad
idea, very difficult to do.
Most people wind up hating each other.
Most of these projects explode.
The vast majority of people in this subculture, it's an aspirational thing, right?
And they just kind of connect and talk about what they'd like to do via the internet.
Anna writes, quote, as it turns out, there's a parallel digital world teaming with conscious travelers. I discovered Facebook groups where conscious travelers or nomads
share their experiences and curate lists of the best conscious hotspots worldwide. Furthermore,
chat GPT can serve as a valuable resource in your global exploration of conscious communities,
offering guidance, insights, and information to enhance your search for specific locations.
So again, most of this isn't real. It's an aesthetic. People like the image of going back to the land, of being conscious,
of being enlightened, of being spiritual, but also all they really want to do is stay in a nice hotel.
You know, that's really a lot of this, right? So yeah, I do want to talk about another influence in this community and kind of where
a lot of the name comes from is an actual movement called the Black Consciousness Movement,
which is a real thing that comes out of the Black radical history and apartheid era South
Africa and specifically a guy named Steve Biko.
Biko was the first president
of the South African Students Organization
when it launched in 1969.
And inspired by black thinkers like Frantz Fanon,
he began publishing articles that posited an ideology
he called black consciousness.
He described his goal as to quote,
"'Demonstrate the lie that black is an aberration
from the normal, which is white.'
Biko urged the black community to celebrate
and take pride in their history
and traditional cultural and religious practices
as the indigenous people of South Africa,
pushing people to decolonize both the state
and their own minds.
He was a cool guy, which is why the police murdered him.
Per a very good article in...
Well, we're talking about a black radical leader
in 1969 South Africa.
The odds are good he wound up getting murdered by the cops, right?
Like it's a bummer.
Yeah, it is.
Yeah.
I'm going to quote from a very good article on Bicco in the retrospect journal.
Quote, the apartheid government regarded black consciousness as a growing threat and placed
a banning order on Bicco in 1973.
The repressive practice of banning originated from the 1950 Suppression of Communism Act,
which regarded all political opposition as a communist threat.
As a result, a banning order restricted a person's travel and social interactions,
as well as preventing them from public speaking or distributing written material.
In Bicco's case, he was limited to speaking to one person at a time and forbidden from
being a member of any political organizations.
Several tactics were used to circumvent the strict measures of his band. Bicco struck
up a close friendship with the white liberal editor of the Daily Dispatch, Donald Woods.
Over time, Woods became more educated about the plights of black South Africans, secretly
writing Bicco's biography when he was himself banned. In 1977, Bicco was arrested for traveling
outside of and therefore breaking his banning
order. He was severely beaten whilst in police custody and died of his injuries at just 30
years old. Again, literally banned from talking to more than one person at a time.
That is wild.
Fuck that government.
It's very impressive. I bring this up because, not because Nature Boy is an inheritor of Bicco's tradition,
but because the modern black consciousness subculture or conscious community, and I've
heard both names used for this same kind of amorphous subculture, is in some ways related
to the black consciousness movement.
And a lot of what Nature Boy is doing is kind of taking some of these things and pulling
them in a toxic direction.
For example, a big part of black consciousness is the idea that we need to really get people
to accept that being black is not an aberration, right?
Like it is just as normal as being white, which is a really important thing, right?
That like black is not an aberration from the normal.
And the toxic sort of way that's taken is like, no, no, no,
having more melanin is directly what makes you intelligent
and having more makes you an inherently better person, right?
Which is kind of where Nature Boy takes it, right?
See that a version of that sentiment today on Twitter.
I will always call it Twitter.
It's not just a nature boy thing.
Sure, but it's interesting that I just saw that an hour ago
and I went, huh?
And I was really trying to get to the bottom
of what this guy was even saying, but it took me aback.
So interesting that this is what we're talking about right now.
It's just, yeah, it's, you can see, it's important to understand kind of some of the history
and like the term that these people are aping.
And also in a way, it's also important to understand what nature boy, a big part of
once he becomes like a media influencer, he's constantly going to be talking about how he's
being targeted for murder, how the police are trying to kill him for his revolutionary actions. That's not at all a part of his story.
But that is a huge part of actual people who were actual revolutionaries in the actual
black consciousness movement, right? That is what happened to them. And he's kind of
like stealing valor from them. While again, rather than trying to liberate people in bondage,
All Nature Boy is trying to do is get a bunch of wives
and convince them to poop outdoors,
which is not revolutionary.
No, doesn't sound in alignment with the movement.
Not particularly enlightened either, yeah.
Or enlightened.
I don't think Steve Bicco would have been super into this.
Yeah, okay.
So when Nature Boy gets into the conscious community,
the first figure within it that he finds himself drawn to
is a guy who goes by the name Young Pharaoh.
Now, when I first started looking Young Pharaoh up,
I was kind of surprised
because he's talked about in these documentaries
about what happens as a pretty big figure.
And Nature Boy talks about him as a big figure.
He's only got like a thousand followers on Instagram
and a little more on YouTube. But then I looked into it, it turns
out he used to be much bigger and have a much larger platform and he lost his mind during
2020, many such cases. And so he got banned from a bunch of places and he never really
recovered. Previously, prior to 2020, he had started out and started building his platform
within the subculture by making a lot of videos about police brutality white supremacy
And he did well enough that he started making serious money
I think he's making like 200 grand a year at one point and he kind of switches
In and around 2020 and it starts sort of right before and
Starts singing a very different tune at a certain point and it happens kind of in a way that makes me think it might be
Inorganic where he'll start putting out videos about how the police
aren't that bad. And actually, I've never had a bad interaction with the police. And
I'm going to move to a white neighborhood because I think it's going to be like, it's
a lot of really weird. And he gets criticized by other people within the conscious community
for this shift. Then he loses his mind over COVID and starts blaming it on the Jews, which
is how he gets demonetized and banned from a bunch of stuff, which is why he sues Google
and he loses and gets stuck with a 40 grand bill. Most of the videos you'll find about
Young Pharaoh today are made by other people. The top showings, when I typed his name into
Google while writing this, are a documentary called The Rise and Fall of Young Pharaoh.
Another one is Young Pharaoh at airport crashes out
and punches his girlfriend.
And of course, Young Pharaoh explains
why aliens abducted him seven times, part seven.
Oh my goodness, Young Pharaoh.
You've been on a journey.
He has gone in some directions.
I could not have guessed what the next word
out of your mouth would be in that list by the way.
Oh man. Yeah. Woo! So I know you're all curious, why did the aliens abduct him? And just to get an idea of this dude and his vibes, I'm gonna play you a quick clip of him explaining. This is from part seven of the series on why aliens had subducted him seven times I think great teacher name is Rosa. I said that to her
I wanted to go down in history like Malcolm X and make history, you know
It's something to me. He just always wanted to
Leave a mark in history
So whatever that is in me in that spirit. I was connected to that
Maybe that's what the they saw on top of the fact, you know from what I was told
during one of my interactions is that I
Was super intelligent so it was easier for me to for me to receive a neurological upgrade so that way I
Could like channel or process information faster because I already had the ability to retain it you know
So it was just it just made sense, you know, to utilize me.
Well, that checks out.
Yeah, that seems, that all scans to me.
Can't see any reason why that wouldn't be true.
Yeah, so he seems like he's got his shit together, right?
So this is the first guy that Nature Boy is really going to vibe with.
He reaches out to this dude based on his videos.
They become close friends.
At least that's how Nature Boy describes it.
This is not going to be a long lasting friendship.
So again, those videos I played were that video that Sophie played was recent.
I got to go back to 2015 here.
So remember he's not yet obviously a crank here.
He is mostly talking about police brutality and white supremacy and kind of a fairly prominent
creator.
And when I said, I think there's something sketchy about how he changed suddenly to talking
about how he likes the cops and, you know, kind of going more right wing. He is invited at one point to speak at CPAC.
Now he gets disinvited right before
because of the aforementioned antisemitism,
but something went on there, right?
Really, the antisemitism did it.
Yeah, yeah.
So back in 2015, Young Farrow's blowing up.
He's not so obviously a crank
and Nature
Boy grows obsessed with his work and he reaches out online, the two vibe and they become internet
buddies.
This is happening right as Nature Boy has quit his job at the barbershop in order to
lock himself in his room and watch YouTube videos which he said made him question, quote,
the fabric of reality.
His partner at the time, Maisha, and the mother of his son, says that he stopped sleeping almost entirely
and describes what he watched as conspiracy theory videos.
He rambled daily about America, which he called Babylon,
and how it was gonna fall.
And, you know, fall of America,
not super wrong in predicting that maybe.
No.
But I don't think he's predicting it for the same reasons.
Yeah, so Nature Boy for his part says,
I started studying what America was, what money was,
breaking my reality down to a molecule.
And again, that all could lead you in a good direction,
but it mostly leads him to get very angry about the toilet.
He begins, again, this is-
Well, it is evil.
Yeah, again, he starts to become convinced
that direct exposure to sunlight makes you smarter
because it increases your melanin content.
He becomes, he's briefly a back to Africa
kind of black nationalist, right?
Where he's like, we need to return to Africa.
But around this time, his older sister Tanya dies.
And Maisha had been close to her, like his partner had been close to
his older sister. And so they go to the funeral and she's kind of surprised because Nature Boy
is really taciturn. He's like weirdly cold during the visit. But then when they returned to Georgia,
he goes through this really rapid visible decline in his mental health.
The first sign to outsiders is he stops bathing entirely.
And he would angrily rant to anyone
that you only need to bathe if you eat smelly foods.
And he has at this point become a fruitarian.
So he doesn't need to wash himself ever.
Now there's also some evidence
that something diagnosable is happening here.
Maisha says that he starts to suffer serious memory lapses,
often forgetting what day it is.
He stops cutting his hair,
which was for him a major red flag.
Again, this guy is like a fairly skilled barber.
Yeah.
In one video talking about this time, he says,
I had people like, dude, you good?
They would come to drop the money off from the barber shop
and see him with his hair all crazy,
ranting about conspiracies in Babylon.
And they were just like, I don't want to hear that.
So get it. Yeah, I mean, all of this is somebody having some sort of mental break,
being obsessive, locking yourself away, withdrawing,
breaking down your consciousness.
It's all alarming. It's all alarming.
And, you know, not bathing, not bathing.
You know, so people are, you know what I mean?
Yeah, people are immediately aware, right?
Like it's not the kind of thing that's hideable.
So Maisha decides eventually she doesn't want to hear this either
and she takes her kids and the child that they share,
dumps his ass and moves to South Carolina,
making the only good decision anyone will make over the course of these videos.
Nature Boy is okay with this
because it gives him more time to study
what he has decided will be his next career,
which is becoming a YouTube personality.
Now, right after she leaves,
Young Farrow gets invited to speak on a podcast
in New York City.
And Nature Boy kind of brute forces his way into like,
oh, I'll drive up there and be on it with you.
Like, we'll hang out, we'll be on the show together, right?
And as soon as, I think Young Pharaoh kind of lets him,
because they're buds, and Nature Boy
at the start of this thing immediately elbows his friend
out of the interview basically to go on a rant.
And you can see the moment here.
Again, this is from the Hood Horrors video.
The original video was deleted long ago,
so it's really the only place I have to access this,
but it's kind of a noteworthy moment to look at here. My brother Nature is here from Atlanta. First I want to talk to my brother Nature.
Why are you so infatuated, my brother? We're going back to Africa. Talk to the
people. The tropical man belongs between the tropic of cancer and the tropic of
Capricorn. What does that mean? If you look on the map...
Yeah, so he kind of pushes his way in, and the other guy seems more interested in him
too, and this sparks the end of their friendship, right?
Yeah.
Because he kind of pushes young Pharaoh out of this thing.
Now they will be in several videos talking about their beef, because again, this is a
YouTube subculture, right?
So this isn't the end of their relationship,
but now it is primarily based on them having beef
with each other, right?
Yeah, well, beef sells.
Beef sells, right?
That's how all of this shit works, right?
Now it's interesting, he doesn't,
this is his first, I believe his first appearance anywhere,
right, in terms of like social media as Nature Boy,
at least as far as I can tell.
And he starts his channel and begins building a following
pretty shortly after that.
But before he does so, he goes home
and he continues to spiral a bit more, right?
Some of his first content, he's a militant fruitarian,
but he's militant in terms of like,
he hates vegans for eating plants, which he regards as being as cruel as hating animals. He's very hard to get
along with right? This is a lot to account. You can only eat fruit because fruit wants to be eaten, but like you can't
eat like otherwise eat plants because that's hurting the plants. Yeah wild.
Fruitarian is also very hard to take seriously. Very hard to take seriously.
I don't mean to offend any fruitarians out there, but.
It's, you're not supposed to eat other things.
You simply are. You simply are.
There's a number of things.
Now he starts the Nature Boy Facebook channel
in I think late 2015 and his initial videos are,
yeah, these kind of rambling streams
where he will lay out his beliefs
about not pooping or peeing inside, not bathing, eating fruit. And most importantly, these kind of rambling streams where he will lay out his beliefs about not pooping or peeing inside, not bathing, eating fruit.
And most importantly, he kind of, he makes a sharp break from this return to Africa stance
that he has earlier and instead starts advocating that people drop out of Babylon entirely and
live in tune in nature.
There's a video, I don't think we need to play it, but like where he kind of makes the
stance that like, there's too many wars in Africa,
so we should all go to Central or South America,
because there's a lot of sun exposure there,
which will make us smarter, but it's not as dangerous, right?
That's kind of the reason why he changes his mind.
Now his videos are not highly produced at this stage,
but he's good looking and he's charismatic,
and he starts to draw in thousands
and then tens of thousands of subscribers.
He has an Instagram, he has a YouTube.
I think he's initially more of a Facebook
and Instagram person, but his YouTube starts to build.
And they get like a hundred thousand or so followers, right?
Each, which is not, he's not a massive star,
but people are listening, right?
And when you've got, you know, a hundred thousand
or so people who are semi-regularly
watching your stuff, you can get some of them to send you money, and you can get some of
them who start to develop a really strong parasocial relationship with you, which is
what starts to happen here. And he begins vowing that he is going to leave the United
States, Babylon, to South America, where he is going to start a conscious community. And
he starts talking to his followers like,
you should follow me.
We're going to completely change the world.
This is going to be the spark of the revolution.
I am going to end Babylon by beginning this movement,
by getting everyone to start conscious communities
in South America, where again, people already live.
That's right, I know people already live there.
It's one of those things where I'm always like,
okay, but like, if it was as simple as just like,
we all need to go live on the land
in fucking Peru or whatever,
why didn't all of the people living on the land in Peru
stop anything?
Ding, ding, ding.
Why didn't that make all of our problems?
Because like maybe they're more complicated
than just living in Peru.
I don't know, man.
Like.
Maybe you haven't thought this one through.
Maybe you haven't.
Maybe people living in Peru have a lot of issues
that like it's just, it's just very,
all of our problems are more complicated than that.
But you like, this is not about really solving problems.
Again, it's going to be about being able to take videos
of yourself in a very pretty place.
And speaking of being able to take videos of yourself in a very pretty place. And speaking of being able to take videos of yourself in a very pretty place.
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Um, Gilbert King? I'm the son of Jeremy Lynn Scott.
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Bone Valley, Season 2.
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Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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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.
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Ah, all right. So we're back. We're back from the pods. We're back talking.
Okay.
He decides he's going to leave for South America to start a conscious community.
And the way this ultimately happens is very funny.
He makes a video announcing, the day has come, I am going to leave Babylon to live off the
land as God intended.
His initial plan was to go to South America.
He talks about Peru a lot.
But as soon as he posts, I'm doing it,
I'm making the plans, I'm leaving for South America,
a fan of his reaches out and is like,
hey, my brother lives in Honduras.
That's where our family's from.
And he's inherited like 30 acres that you can use.
There's two old houses on the property
that you would have to renovate first to make it livable,
but like you can go down there.
So nature boy immediately is like,
well, fuck South America.
I'm meant to be in Honduras, right?
And you know, to be honest, from what I can tell,
I don't have detailed knowledge of this land,
but from what I can see, from what footage exists,
this would have been a good setup
for someone wanting to try and start,
assuming someone knew how to do all this.
You've got houses that are in okay shape,
they need some renovating.
You've got 30 acres. You can support renovating. You've got 30 acres.
You can support a good number of people on 30 acres.
If you knew what you were doing.
This is a dream scenario for a cult leader.
Absolutely.
You could do something here, right?
If you had any intention of actually doing the things
you were talking about.
So he commits, he buys a plane ticket
and he tells everyone first, he's flying down to Florida.
And if you want to leave Babylon too,
everyone meet up with me in Florida.
We're going to do a big meetup and we're going to fly down the Honduras together.
And he shows off his camping gear and a backpack.
He's got a life straw, which he clearly doesn't know how to use.
He's got solar panels to keep his phone charged.
He's got a brand new Cabela's backpack.
And he tells everyone, now that I'm going to nature, I'm going to build a village.
I don't know how I'm going to do it, but I know it's going to happen because I said it's
going to happen.
And again, that's a red flag because all of this is very complicated.
And if people don't have any background experience, they're simply not going to succeed, which
is indeed what happens.
But the day of the meetup in Florida comes around.
And there's a very funny video where nature boys like, well, my assumption was that nearly
all of my followers were young women. So I was expecting a a bunch of young ladies but the only people who show up are three guys in
their 20s. Yikes, sorry nature boy. Yeah that's not really shocking. Their names are Key, Olmec,
and Starlight. Now these are all dudes who are kind of in this community they're interested in
not just nature boy but other stuff. Olmec in particular seems to have some like,
a degree of knowledge about how to like farm and stuff,
and is really interested in trying this.
Nature Boy is skeptical about all of them,
because again, he was hoping they were all young women
that he could have sex with.
But he changes his mind.
When Starlight says he knows Spanish and has $20,000.
Nature Boy immediately tells him, you're useful.
Again, no one, he does not know Spanish.
He did not plan on having anyone with him who knew Spanish to create a community in
Honduras.
Absolutely wild choices.
Not needed, not important.
No.
Now, at this stage, this is not a cult.
This is some young men who have had their heads filled via YouTube and Facebook with
pretty ideas of living off the land and how easy it is.
The instant they arrive at the actual property, they look at this house, which had been like
the landowner's grandmother's house, and so it's filled with her old stuff.
It would take work to clean out and fix up.
And he decides it's creepy.
And so they immediately, permanently
scrapped their plans to live in the jungle and start a village
and instead get a hotel using star lights.
Twenty thousand dollars.
And just instantly, oh, you got to clean up a house.
No, no. You know what you were warned you would need to do.
Yeah.
And like a really minimal, like you're not talking about carving a home out of raw land.
There are houses you can stay.
You gotta clean them up a little.
You gotta do some work.
Yeah.
You've got camping gear with you and you're not willing to clean out a house.
So after a little bit of time in a hotel, they a house to rent in Santa Fe Honduras in a video at the time
Nature Boy notes that $20,000 sure came in handy. Oh
My gosh, so you just write in this other guys bunny renting places
Phoenix the landowner joins them and they start calling themselves
Etherians and posting videos of people camping in the front yard and calling it an intentional community.
Again, these people are camping in a city
in front of the house that they are renting.
There's a picture Sophie's gonna show you.
It's just tents in a yard.
It's simply just tents in a fairly well-cultivated yard.
This is not an intentional community.
You are doing what third graders do.
You are camping in your yard.
Looks like decently-
Making forts.
Yeah.
Six tents.
Decently landscaped yard.
Not a bad situation.
Yes, clearly someone, I'm sure it's not Nature Boy, is doing the landscaping.
Right out of frame is probably a major road, major thoroughfare.
This is again in a city.
This is the opposite of off-grid.
Yeah.
Now, this is all very silly, but what Nature Boy does next is actually pretty cunning,
which is, you know, they've got this house they're renting and some people live inside
and some people camp in the yard, but they will go out because Honduras is Honduras and
they'll go to very pretty places that are like tourist hotspots where there's waterfalls
and they will film themselves bathing under waterfalls and picking fruit from jungle trees
and brag about how they're living this perfect back to nature carefree lifestyle and like
drop out of Babylon and join us. Look at how nice this is. This is our life every day. He says,
this is not a vacation. This is where we live and you're more than welcome to stay.
And again, this isn't where you live. You're going to Honduras is a very beautiful place.
You are driving for an afternoon to tourist hotspots
and pretending your life is this like jungle paradise.
Again, you live in a city and a rental, right?
Also, I don't know if you are leaving Babylon,
if you're always connected and uploading videos.
There's like power lines in that photo.
There's power lines.
Like what are we talking about here?
Yeah, come on.
You have cars, you're using gasoline, all of that stuff.
Like you have not escaped Babylon.
You haven't walked away from Omelas.
So that said, these videos like this spread.
Facebook loves showing people videos
of like idyllic nature retreats and the like
and back to the land projects.
All this stuff does fairly well.
And people start coming, lots of them.
So many that it like the other three guys
who had left with him, who he calls his warriors
start to feel overwhelmed.
They're like, we need to stop asking
for more people to join, right?
Because there's like dozens and dozens of them.
But at this point, young women start showing up, right?
That's the dream right there.
That's nature boy is like, this is working.
And you know what?
We're polygamists now.
Oh.
So very quickly, this turns from some slightly
to moderately deluded hippie kids camping
in a yard to nature boy telling multiple women that they are now his wives.
And he also doesn't use the term wife.
He calls them directs.
They're his directs.
So we've got a cult terminology starting to form.
In a video at the time he explains, with polygamy, it's just for me being with four female students
that I'm dealing with very intimately. It's just for me, being with four female students that I'm dealing
with very intimately.
It's nothing more and nothing less than that.
Sex for me is me plugging into a woman and sending my knowledge like a USB to a computer.
And when I have sex, I am putting fluid in you.
Inside the fluid is DNA.
On that DNA is all the knowledge that I know.
And now you're getting a direct transfer from my file into your ribosome, into your DNA.
And if you do that enough, you can take me on long enough
to the point where I'm inside of you.
Robert, I cannot believe you just read that.
I know, I know, that's one of my favorite pieces
of cult leader nonsense I've come across on this, Jeff.
That is so- My dick is a USB.
Unbelievable.
But also thank you for reading that.
Beautiful stuff, beautiful stuff, yes.
Are they all shitting in that yard?
They are all shitting.
Katie, everyone is shitting in every yard in this story.
You have to add that they are all pooping in the yards.
It's not that big a yard.
It's not that presumably burying it,
but again, they're all shitting in these yards.
Now, while he claims to be a guru,
bringing people back in touch with the natural world,
he very quickly spends the entire 20 grand,
not just on this rental,
but according to other people there,
mostly on dirt pikes and iPads,
which he's like, but I gave them away
to other people in the group.
He calls himself like a real humanitarian
for giving away all of these dirt bikes and iPads
to other people who join, but it's like,
it's not your money, bro.
Wild.
So that 20,000 goes quickly and soon everyone's scraping by.
He's barely managing to cover rent and food
with allegedly the $3,000 a month
he is allegedly receiving from that guy.
But just as soon as things are getting dire,
his key, one of the other guys who had joined him
in Florida, has a loved one die,
and he inherits $300,000.
And he starts by giving Nature, Nature Boy's society,
hey man, you know, the group really needs 20 grand
for this project, and he just keeps doing that over and over again
until he gets all 300 grand, right?
I feel so bad for them.
Although he's making his choices.
He's making his, I've watched an interview with that guy
after all this falls apart where he's like,
no, I don't regret it.
Like he was my teacher.
He was my guru.
Okay, man, I don't know.
Fuck, whatever, bro.
So they get robbed not long after this in Santa Fe
because Nature Boy is buying everybody's fancy gadgets
and computers, at least that's what they say,
is like they're in the middle of the street
and these people take everything on them.
I think they get, it's kind of unclear,
but I think they get into the house
because they get everyone's like passports,
a lot of their stuff, right?
Oh, that's bad.
I don't know.
I have some suspicions that what actually happened
is that Nature Boy was trying to subsidize this community
by also moving some substances, right?
I don't know, but the way people describe this
makes it sound like, no, they were targeted
and maybe it's because they had pissed people off.
And part of why I think this is once they are robbed,
this was just a mugging, they wouldn't do what they did next,
which is leave immediately the country
and leave most of their stuff behind in the house,
including several vehicles that they own, like vans that they own.
Right.
Like they leave a lot of money and stuff behind.
And that makes sense to me if you're like, oh, somebody told you,
you need to leave or you're going to get fucking murdered.
Right. Right.
There's otherwise why wouldn't you at least try to sell it?
I just, and this is based in part on the fact
that I spent a lot of time in Central America
and met a number of people doing things
that aren't wildly different from this.
And it's not uncommon for people in,
especially for the leaders of groups like this to think,
well, maybe I could move a little Mali
or something like that.
And there's already people moving Mali in these areas.
You're stepping into territory you shouldn't be stepping into.
They're scarier than you, nature boy.
So anyway, they flee, leaving all of their shit behind.
And he convinces everyone to move to Peru.
But on their way, they visit Costa Rica.
They're like going through Costa Rica.
And like everyone who goes to Costa Rica, nature boys like, Oh,
actually this place rips and decides, no, no, no, we're going to live in tune
with nature here. Right. Okay.
So they camp for a couple of nights and then they rent another house because
again, none of them know how to really like live off the land. Um,
it's also Costa Rica is a country.
They're not just going gonna let you set up camp
in the jungle randomly and start a village.
The same way they don't let us do it here.
The same way you can't really do that here, you know?
They continue producing videos
from different gorgeous landmarks and soon, you know,
and people keep joining, right?
You know, Costa Rica is even prettier in a lot of ways.
And so they're posting all of these increasingly gorgeous videos about their idyllic lives
outside of Babylon.
And a young woman named Velvet Marquez joins the group, right?
She is a freshman agricultural student at Tuskegee University.
She has some relevant experience to actual back to the land shit.
She had volunteered at a local land use NGOs and felt like a natural fit for what she thought
these people were doing.
She recalls not even knowing that there was like nature boy was the leader, right?
Because the videos they publish, he's not making it all about him.
He's constantly publishing these stories of other members.
So it really does sound like to an outsider, there's this wonderful community mostly made up
of like black people who have dropped out of,
you know, this fucked up country
and are living this idyllic life in Central America.
Yeah.
And so she decides to go join them.
Now, when she arrives, she's immediately surprised
to realize they are not growing food.
Yeah. They're not foraging.
They're eating at restaurants and driving in cars,
just like everyone else.
But she and Olmec kind of hit it off, right?
And you know, Nature Boy agrees that like he, she can be Olmec's direct, but Nature
Boy is also not clearly happy with this because he wants to be with her.
And so he keeps like hassling her and be like, are you sure you want to be with this other
guy?
Is she going to be with Olmec?
Right?
Um, so that's going to continue to be a thing.
Now around this time, another young woman, Kayla Reed, shows up from Canada.
And this is a white lady, right?
From a family that's at least middle class or upper middle class.
She again gets drawn to this the same way everyone else does.
It looks pretty.
It seems like a great way to unplug from this very toxic society.
And she's useful to nature boy because, you know,
he's in general trying to get as many young women
around him as possible.
But also she's white.
And there's by this point, one or two other white people
who he can put on camera and tell potential followers,
this isn't a racist thing, right?
Like we accept everybody.
He starts at this point changing his tune to like,
everyone is a shade of brown, right?
So he softens all this and again, to try to get more people and more money.
Now he's also cognizant of the fact that taking a young rich white girl to his cult in Central
America could force the involvement of international law enforcement, right?
So this is a kind of thing that he is aware from the beginning, there's some upsides and
some potential dangers,
and soon enough, those dangers make themselves clear.
Because Kayla didn't tell her parents what she was doing.
She is an adult, but she lied and claimed
that she was heading to a church camp
and then just disappeared
and never told anyone where she was.
And her parents...
That's gonna raise some alarms.
Her parents make a missing persons complaint,
not even because they're specifically sketched out
by this guy, but because they have no idea where she's gone.
She goes on a church retreat
and drops off the face of the world.
It's a very normal parent thing to do, right?
Well, yeah, it should be.
Yeah.
Find your child.
Yeah, you're gonna wanna find your kid.
And they are looking for her.
This is an open question for at least weeks
until someone sees her in an Instagram video with
these people calling themselves the theory ends and is like, Oh, fuck, I think she might've joined
the cult. And this is the first time that this group before this nature boy and his followers
would have were just a bunch of expats bumming around Central America, like a lot of people have
done, right?
This is the first time they start being called a cult by the media and they start getting
real attention.
The CBC, which is kind of Canada's NPR, starts reporting on these scant few details known
about Nature Boy and the Aetherians, who have now rebranded themselves under the name Melanation,
right?
That's kind of the YouTube brand for all of their videos.
And again, this is kind of a reflection of all of his melanin-based teachings, which have gotten increasingly elaborate. Right as this is all going on, the BBC sends a very
irritating young reporter to Costa Rica to do a documentary called Searching for a Cult Leader
in the Jungles of Costa Rica. I don't love this video, but it does capture the cult during a unique time.
So I'm going to play a clip from it, which shows Nature Boy giving his spiel to a group
of followers.
Well, we really don't like using toilets.
What is the thing you hate so much about the toilet?
The soil belongs to the trees and I'm in an abusive relationship with the tree if I'm
not giving it back.
Their community is cold Melanie.
Okay. in an abusive relationship with a tree if I'm not giving it back. That community is cold Melanie. Okay, so that's at least how followers
are kind of describing their teachings at this point
to a guy from the BBC.
Now, this BBC guy does a short documentary
just on the cult and a slightly longer one
reporting on several different kind of utopian
living projects in Costa Rica.
He spends a lot of his time online
flirting with that Canadian lady in a way that makes me slightly uncomfortable. Or at least
that's my interpretation. Watch it, you may feel differently. At one point he
asks her if Mellonation is a cult and she gives him an answer that was
clearly scripted and drilled into her head by Nature Boy. Canada is a cult, like the
US is a cult. Everyone is a part of a cult.
Culture is a group of people who have similar beliefs.
Now I say that he clearly said that
because a bunch of his videos,
he uses the exact line that like,
well, the United States is a cult.
And there's a lot to be said
about cultic aspects of nationalism.
But as a general rule, when you are saying that,
you're saying that to be like,
so it's fine for me to have a cult too,
as opposed to we shouldn't have cults.
You're being slippery here.
You're being a little slippery.
Also it's like everything's a cult, culture.
I'm like, okay.
Yeah, not quite.
That's not quite true.
But there's a distinct version of cult
that we're talking about here.
To nationalism, does nationalism make people
vulnerable to cults?
Sure.
That doesn't mean you get to make a cult.
Right, right. So at this point, I think we've got
what I'd call like a hybrid cult, right? Nature Boy is starting to exert more and more control
over members. It becomes a higher control group than it had been, but also a lot of people start
leaving, right? And there's not, he's not, doesn't that, this is not like the church of Scientology,
where he's got like a wing of folks dedicated to going after people who leave.
And most of the people who come for a while are not crazy. They're not super dedicated. A number of them are interviewed in that BBC documentary have left and start their own land
projects because they're like, well, Costa Rica rips and I actually want to farm or something
like that. Right? Right. These people aren't actually doing the thing I wanted to do.
Yeah. Oh, this was bullshit, but this place is pretty rad.
You know?
Now, we get some good context on the kind of people drawn to Nature Boy in that BBC
documentary, which talks to a former member named Ave, who got involved because she had
a kid and she wanted to raise this kid in a place that wasn't the US because, quote,
the race thing was just really out of control.
Ave is a black woman living in Texas and says, I just didn't think a child would be able
to develop there.
And I get it.
And what's so interesting about Nature Boy is he's very much like doing a partial Jim
Jones.
Like he is recruiting from marginalized people who see how fucked up life in the US is and
are open to dropping out of society to find a better life.
But Jones, you know, before getting everyone killed,
they do start like a town, right?
Like they've got them, they're doing all,
there's a lot of infrastructure they put together.
There was a lot more thought put into that project.
They put a lot of work into it.
And Jim Jones is not a lazy man, right?
What's interesting to me is Nature Boy talks
a lot of Jim Jones shit,
but he is so lazy and he completely refuses to use any of the money. And they have a lot
at one point, enough that they could have started something and potentially with the
knowledge made an actual sustaining project, but he has, he is almost violently opposed
to the concept of farming, right? Yeah.
Or he obsessively talks about being back to nature. He hates the idea of actually living off the land
Well, I think we've seen nature boy throughout his life. Yeah start a lot of things and quit them
He didn't like the amount of work that the barber shop required. It's
You know looking for an easy way to make money and fuck women.
Yeah.
You can say fuck women. I think so.
Yes, that's what he's doing. And he's very, it's just such a lazy and there's a couple
of stories from former members who like show up and he tells everyone that like, you know,
we only go to the bathroom outside and they're like, okay, so we're like making our own manure
to like grow things. And he says, absolutely not. Under no circumstances do we ever do anything.
Like he even tells one person,
why would we grow our own food?
There's markets.
It's like, you are literally talking,
preaching about the apocalypse, my dude.
Like fascinating, fascinating cult for that reason.
Now this doesn't do well again.
A lot of people realize this is bullshit.
Ave, who has a kid, leaves right away, right?
But it goes off like gangbusters among people
who are deeply insecure or who are the kind
of narcissistic dumb fucks who adopt countercultural beliefs,
not because they have real criticisms of society,
but because they wanna feel special.
And this clip from that BBC documentary
of two of his followers taking this fucking reporter
to a hot springs makes really the
narcissist system in this belief system, the narcissism in this belief system incredibly
evident.
Are you how old are you guys?
I'm actually a mortal.
I don't die.
Okay.
You never die.
Albert Einstein says this.
Define me the nation.
Living in a righteous path.
Living from theanation.
Living a righteous path, living the righteous path, the narrow path.
Would you say that you're part of Melanation or are you just like, you are Melanation?
Is this like a big movement?
Do you think it's going to change?
Definitely a big movement.
Yeah, like things from all around the world are coming together.
Okay. So again, the whole I'm never going to die, Albert Einstein said so thing.
Like it's, it's, again, they're so lazy.
These people like are not actually, this is not an ideology.
These people have not are not thinking about anything.
They are casually ingesting YouTube videos with pretty things and they just want to bum
around and not do anything all the time, right?
Like there's no real belief here. There's no commitment to overthrowing an unjust system. There's no commitment to learning how to survive
It's just it's so it's such a fundamentally narcissistic thing
So I guess I'm not surprised this is a cult that forms through Facebook and Instagram, right?
Yeah, that's it's attracting that type of person
it's also attracting somebody that's
Potentially thinking well, I want to be in those videos. I want to have
Exactly the waterfall stuff
It's it's very poorly thought out. It's so I keep thinking back to like Scientology
Yeah, evil stupid
Not a shallow belief system deep and labyrinthine and complex, right?
The zizzi and so we've talked about yes is everything silly nonsense. Is it all dumb as hell? Yes, but it's complicated
And there's a lot of effort being put into this silly crazy belief system, right?
Everything every as I the more I learn
about these fucking, you know,
Melanation, the Aetherians, all the different things
that they call themselves, they're more,
I'm like, God, these people are so fucking lazy.
Like.
They don't actually, there's no actual ideology here.
No, it's just a hot dude with an Instagram, right?
Other than not pooping in a toilet.
Other than not pooping in a toilet.
It's such like a, man, I guess I'm appreciating all the Colts that put in the actual hours, right?
Yeah, you know put in the good old fashioned good old fashioned cult god, you know
Yeah, it's really selling me something the Colts these days so lazy
It's the problem with the internet. Uh-huh, yeah, it's made everything too easy, right?
You don't have to really work because the scale of social media means you can just find
some people who will buy into anything.
Everything's fallen apart because of the internet.
All right, sorry.
So eventually, the heat from Canadian authorities over this lady staying with them gets to be
too much, and Nature Boy convinces Jasper, she also goes by Sun Ray or whatever to return home.
She describes that as her making a choice to protect everyone by leaving, there is a
video of him very clearly talking her into it.
I think he just didn't have much use for her and like he wasn't into her and decided like
this is more trouble than it's worth, right?
Now, he has rapidly developed more narcissistic cult leader
traits by this point.
One of his most common refrains is,
what I'm doing is beyond Martin Luther King Jr.
It's beyond Malcolm X.
It's beyond all of that.
And this is something his followers repeatedly say,
he's beyond Martin Luther King.
He's beyond Malcolm X.
And like, again, both of those guys, a lot of work,
very complicated, large organizations they ran that made serious
impacts on the world, not just hanging out under waterfalls.
Anyway, initially, he discourages his directs from getting pregnant, telling them that if
they do get pregnant, it's a sign that they have been cursed by God.
When a young woman named Pocahontas joins the group and he makes her his direct, he
immediately impregnates her and kicks her out of the group a week later. So that's good. Now, he does eventually change his opinion
on this, right? He has more kids with several of his followers. His kid Osiris visits him and spends
several months living with the cult in Central America. So that's not great. And there's some
videos of him like yelling at this kid, making him like crawl around on the ground. So that's not great. And there's some videos of him yelling at this kid, making him crawl around on the ground
and he's complaining that it hurts.
And Nature Boy is like, you just need to toughen up.
You have to do it.
He also near the end of 2017 posts an important video, which is described in that Rolling
Stone article.
I wanted my son to be so pure that he'd never know he was naked, says Bishop, who has four children. I take baths with my kids. I'm naked with my kids. I have sex in front of my kids. Stone article.
This is what really draws a lot
of ire online because people start accusing him of being a pedophile and that's not an
unreasonable thing to draw from that.
No, it's not at all. And for someone who has talked about sexual abuse in his own childhood,
you would think there'd be some connection about how destructive and confusing that would
be.
Well, and it's this kind of thing where like, is it bad for kids to be around communities of people
who are naked? Like, no, there's nothing inherently bad or sexual about being naked, depending on like
how you do it. Is it bad for like, like people, like most people have been naked a significant
amount of their lives in the history of the human race. It's not inherently bad for people
Likewise is it bad for kids to be aware that their parents are having sex again most human beings throughout history
We're broadly aware of the fact that adults around them had sex because you had a one-room shack
Everyone lived in or you were all out basically camping all the time, right?
None of that is inherently toxic. should your kid be playing with your dick
No
No, or do you need to be?
Nope, it does your kidney to be breastfeeding while you have sex
Necessary then it's a kink then you've got a weird thing going on right I feel so bad for the woman that situation who
Probably feels a little powerless because it's his cult.
Weird.
Yes.
It's weird.
And he's like telling you like, no, this is again, this is the thing that we're doing
that's destroying Babylon.
No, it's not.
You've just got like a bunch of weird kinks, most of which are around pooping.
He takes videos of his son pooping.
It's weird.
This is what draws the ire of the Costa Rican government. The governor of the province or whatever
that his cult is camped out at actually is like,
there's enough of a local uproar about this guy
because the stuff online goes that viral
that like people in Costa Rica are like talking
to the government being like,
do we really want this fucking weird pedophile cult
hanging around? This cult pops up in my neighborhood? I don't know. I don't want to be a nimby here. I don't know, do we really want this fucking weird pedophile cult hanging around?
This cult pops up in my neighborhood?
I don't know.
I don't want to be a nimby here, but like, ah!
So the governor schedules a meeting with Nature Boy,
and Nature Boy posts some videos about obviously,
this is all taken out of context,
I'm not doing anything wrong.
I'm happy to have a meeting with this guy
and show him that nothing we're doing
is wrong or weird or bad.
And then the day of the meeting, he has his followers load everything they own into vans to have a meeting with this guy and show him that nothing we're doing is wrong or weird or bad.
And then the day of the meeting, he has his followers load everything they own into vans
and flee the country or flee the state, right?
They don't quite leave Costa Rica.
And in fact, in October, they get deported after being detained at a checkpoint.
Most members are found to lack passports since a lot of them have been robbed.
Many had overstayed their visas.
Costa Rican officials were clearly kind of just trying to figure out what was happening
because there's these vans full of like mostly Americans who don't have a lot of IDs or have
overstayed their visas.
And Nature Boy immediately, like they detained them and Nature Boy goes live on Facebook
from the police barracks and claims he's being murdered by a government,
just like Malcolm X or MLK.
And again, neither of them were murdered
by Costa Rican immigration authorities.
Quote per Rolling Stone,
we're live on Facebook right now, he shouted.
Everybody bring their cameras out.
Make sure they record this because if we're gonna die,
we're gonna die just like this is going down.
An immigration officer boarded the bus and offered to let everyone go
once they signed some paperwork.
We're not signing nothing, Bishop yelled.
We're standing up for humanity.
If you don't stand for something, you're going to fall for anything.
Bishop insisted they wouldn't get off the bus.
You're going to have to use violence.
Moments later, police did.
Such a piece of shit.
It's just like the cops are even like, we'll let you go.
You gotta like sign some things saying, you know,
you have to leave that like you can't stay in Costa Rica.
No, but he's putting on a show.
He's putting on a show, right?
And like there's this audio and it sounds bad.
Like the cops beat them up.
But like, again, you had an out.
Like you're choosing now to occupy a police bus
for no reason.
I don't know. It's not the kind of civil disobedience that I really,
again, is there a massive ethical issue in Costa Rica
putting American travelers on buses?
I don't know.
I don't think so.
I think you had an out and you didn't take it.
I think it sounds like you had an out.
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Ah, we're back. So, we're so back. So this whole confrontation, which was totally avoidable and
stupid, causes Nature Boy to
go viral in the consciousness community subculture yet again.
They spend several months back in the US pooping in the backyards of Airbnb's.
Now not all of Nature Boy's followers leave, you know, as soon as they get into his content
to join immediately.
One guy, Daylin Armstead, around this time, who is a musician and an audio engineer, gets
into his YouTube content and spends a year or so not showering and pooping in the woods of
Maryland before he finally leaves to join them.
This is when they're in the back in the US.
Just preparing.
He explained his mind state to Rolling Stone, if I didn't change the way I was living, I
was going to suffer some kind of consequence from the universe.
So I left in the middle of the night and didn't tell anybody.
Now, when he joins the group, he does left in the middle of the night and didn't tell anybody.
Now when he joins the group, he does it alongside a couple of other people with audio and video
editing experience who have joined.
This is like, and none of them really last long, so they're all kind of handing off the
baton to the other, but they start producing higher quality videos for the Mellon Nation's
different accounts.
And Nature Boy kind of starts turning the cult into a media powerhouse or at least
a low level one. They release some very mid rap songs that are nonetheless competently
produced, right? Like I wouldn't say the lyrics are very good, but like the sound quality
is fine. They're clearly made by someone who knows how to produce a song.
Did he do it as Nature Boy?
He does some of it. He is not, they have, there are other members who are actually somewhat popular who like have a following
Because they're more competent. He is kind of noted by everyone is not knowing what he's doing and anytime someone says hey that track sounded like shit
He gets angry so he can't really make anything good, but he starts publishing books at this point
It's so he's gonna show you a couple of the titles
There's a lot of them most of them are just a few pages
And Sophie's going to show you a couple of the titles. There's a lot of them.
Most of them are just a few pages.
One of them is Divine Knowledge of the Self
spelled CLLF study guide.
And that is intentional.
CLLF is absolutely, cause cells and stuff.
He's wearing a native American headdress in this,
which is a thing he has started doing by this time.
There's another one with an illustrated version of him
called Master Chief, Exposing the Food
Industry.
No, no, rewind.
There is 15 reviews and it has 4.4 stars.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's some good reviews, there's some bad ones, but you know, 4.4 stars.
Some of his stuff just has like two or three.
Why is he wearing an indigenous headdress?
Because he starts doing that at this point.
They have a lot of videos where they're all dressed as
both as a mix of like Egyptians and like native Americans
and march around like soldiers.
He loves doing that.
That's terrible. Okay.
And again, they're living in like Mexico
and Honduras and Costa Rica.
Like none of this is, it's just what they're doing.
Okay.
It's just what they're doing.
It's just what they're doing. Okay? It's just what they're doing. It's just what they're doing, okay?
Sophie, it's behind the bastards.
Yes, he sucks.
So this does start to bring in more money.
I don't think the books as much
as the video content and the rap.
At least 14 sales.
At least 14 sales,
which is good that they have more money
because by this point,
he has spent all of Key's $300,000 inheritance. But the growing notoriety
because he's putting out videos and they're getting some traction, he has
followers, but the fact that he's more famous now that he's had these big
scandals, it leads to someone digging up that gay porn he was in and for several
years he will have to, he will do, he puts out a lot of videos denying it's him,
even though it obviously is. It's him. And there are videos where he will do, he puts out a lot of videos denying it's him, even though it obviously is.
It's him.
And there are videos where he's like, look, if it was me, would that be so bad?
I said, just admit it, man.
Like-
Own it.
You have managed somehow to make a lot of wild shit fly, so-
Yeah, just, he does eventually admit it, but like it takes a wild amount of time.
He does eventually admit it, but like it takes a wild amount of time. So he gets fed up with the states and he decides to fly everyone back to his Ignacio, Belize,
to try and again, to try his hand again at forming an intentional community.
He's immediately recognized by the owner of an internet cafe and run out of the country
for being a pedophile.
So good work, random internet cafe guy in Belize.
That was the right call. Belize? Is that even Costa Rica? Get the fuck guy in Belize. That was the right call
Belize is that even Costa Rica?
Get the fuck out of Belize. Yeah
This guy can't settle
No, no
He's just always jumping around
His whole life
Yeah, so there's two good decisions right now. Although, you know, Maisha eventually does let him spend more time with his kid
Which isn't a great call right now, although, you know, Maisha eventually does let him spend more time with his kid,
which isn't a great call, but you know, her leaving and that guy in Belize being like,
get the fuck out of my, get the fuck out of this town. Great calls.
Yeah.
Um, so he changes the group's name yet again, I think in part to try and, you know, lose
some of the heat on them to carbonation, right? Uh, and in the grand tradition of scammers
and conmen for generations, it is at this point that
he flees to Mexico.
Several new folks have joined at this point, and the oldest of them is a 59-year-old mother
of several kids.
I think she might have been a grandmother named Magdalena Sevilla.
She had successfully raised several kids to adulthood.
She was the manager
of a store. She's a person who lived a very complete adult life, a functional member of society.
But she also was someone who had a lot of trauma and a feeling that her life was somehow incomplete.
She falls into this content. She sees all these young people living these blissful lives around
these beautiful things of nature. She's like, I want this in my life, right?
And so she quits her job and leaves everything behind.
Her children who were interviewed for that
Hood Horrors documentary, expressed being like really
surprised by this, but are like, at least for a while
she seems happy.
So we were like, I don't know, maybe like,
she's 59, right?
Like, what are we supposed to do?
Now she has a heart condition
that she's been on medication on
for like a decade at this point.
Again, it's totally manageable.
She is managing it, but Nature Boy hates medicine.
And it's kind of, you could,
some of the accounts of people at the time,
it is insinuated that he harasses
her whenever she takes it.
There are some reports that she felt afraid of him knowing that she needed medicine and
that she was sick or that she was taking it.
And she doesn't like quit cold turkey, but she starts rationing it and not taking it
as often as she is supposed to.
And it eventually she runs out entirely.
And in videos from later in her stay, she starts to look
visibly unhealthy. The group kind of travels around, they go back to Belize for a while and
then back to Mexico to a place called Palenque where they rent a modern stone house. Although
again, most cult members are camping in the yard and everyone is pooping in the yard.
Now, at this point, Nature Boy has drawn in some cult members who are, you know, they're
better at editing and video.
They've got like recording studios set up.
They're putting out a lot of content and some money is coming through with this.
More money comes in from Nature Boy requiring new members to hand over their debit cards
and credit cards when they join.
One former member claims he gave Nature Boy a card with $1,000, his life savings on it,
and Nature Boy immediately spent it all on a ping pong table.
So again, not great money.
Near the end of 2018, Sevilla dies in the night in her tent due to a pre-existing now
unmedicated heart condition.
Velvet Marquez, who is still with the group at this point, but will leave later, told
a reporter, he does not allow people to have medical attention.
This is why Mamma Dia, that's what they called her, passed away.
Now, by this point, Nature Boy is fully calling himself God now.
He has forced the whole cult on a strict diet, where everyone can only eat at the same time
he gets hungry.
He starts randomly forbidding men and women to speak with each other and in true cult
leader fashion begins doling out unhinged punishments. When members displease him,
they're made to do squats or stand in a corner. He also starts filming the sex that he has with
followers and sometimes posting the videos online, sometimes as revenge porn, sometimes just as
content. They make most of their money at the... He sucks so bad. They make most of their money at the, he sucks so bad.
They make most of their money at this point from a social media app based in Singapore
called Big O Live, which pays people for streaming.
Shaka Calvin, one of his followers claims, that's when it would really get bad because
Bishop Nature Boy started becoming a celebrity.
They were all having to do things to get attention, to get money.
And the things they do, like they start, instead of there being any kind of message, they start
really focusing their content on, we need to have like reality shows shit about everyone
having fights and conflicts within the group.
So he starts ordering people to fake fights and arguments for the sake of viral content.
And he also starts- Yeah, beef cells.
Yeah, beef cell.
He also starts talking like a militant revolutionary, which is when they start really doing a lot
of these videos where they're dressed as like Pharaohs or Native Americans and they're marching
like soldiers to, again, stuff that he thinks is going to shock people and go viral.
As Daylin Armstead, the music engineer who joined, recalled the Rolling Stone, working
frequently with two other initiates, Armand Palmer, who went by Pisie, and Ishmael
Goodwin, aka Calibur, the group's musical output accelerated.
"'Loving the Money' and "'Hating the System' is loving the warden and hating the prison,'
Palmer raps, with an eerie synth hook looping behind him in one song called Negropian.
The song's music features Musa and Palmer shirtless, decked out in feathered headdresses,
tribal jewelry, face paints, stocking around vivid jungle landscapes. The message was a product like cocaine, Musa says. We
were there to package it and get it out." Again, these are all members who are handling
the actual entertainment portion of things. The stuff that actually does require some
discipline is this, right? Now, as time goes on, an increasing part of his message becomes
domestic abuse because
Nature Boy has started seeing, by this point, Velvet, who starts out as Olmec's direct,
is now his direct, his main wife, and he has started hitting her.
He's also hitting basically every other woman in the group.
Former member Courtney Townsend claims, quote, we'd end up having these meetings that would
last six, eight hours where he's explaining why he's locking a velvet in a room, why he had to slap her.
His explanation was that we've been programmed by European men to be weak little men, so
our women will never respect us.
The women will respect him and he's the guy slapping these girls, locking them in rooms.
He actually does a live stream at one point with velvet and her dad where velvet's dad
asked like, why do you keep hitting my daughter?
And nature boy says, because I was upset with her.
And her dad responds, she made you bust her in the face,
her nose bleeding profusely everywhere.
I'm going to tell you this pops, Bishop responds.
When it comes to me, I'm a man.
So again, this has become the central,
what started as we need to overthrow Babylon
and go back to nature, it is now,
primarily what we need to do is hit women.
That's what the cult is turned into. It's just a vehicle for his own desires, his own instincts
that he doesn't want to work on or improve from. It's a place where he can do whatever the fuck he
wants. And here's what part of what's extra gross about this. It's not even that this is like,
obviously he wants to do this, but there's another level that is very social media to this that I
find even sicker, which is that a lot of their viewers and they're getting paid by viewers, whether or not those
viewers like them are hate watchers.
So a lot of why he's doing this is because it makes people angry and they share and repost
and it gets him more traffic.
Right?
He cracked that up.
That.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now that said, this does get him reported
to the Mexican police.
In March of 2019, they get raided,
which prompts them to flee the next day for Nicaragua.
They eventually get raided there.
And after about a month, they get deported
and they go to Panama where the same shit happens.
They spend some time there.
There are police reports.
They get arrested.
They get deported.
This happens
several times until COVID hits. Now, the plague is actually a lifeline for Nature Boy and Carbon
Nation because again, he's making his followers hand over all of their money and everyone starts
getting those COVID checks, right? In addition to being, it gets easier to get like on unemployment
and stuff. And so he starts taking that directly from them.
And they have enough coming in now
that he tries to set up in Hawaii on the big Island next.
Now, if you remember,
Hawaii has extremely strict COVID quarantine protocols
at this time.
And it gets like two weeks that you have to spend
in a hotel room, not leaving for any reason,
but an absolute medical emergency, right?
If you want to spend any time on the island at all, right?
Like that is my recollection of it,
that's what I read in the article.
They show up in Hawaii and immediately break quarantine.
And in fact, post videos of themselves,
not just breaking quarantine,
but like touching endangered turtles
that you're not allowed to touch.
So they get arrested by the Hawaiian government
and they get deported as Americans.
They get deported from Hawaii, which is not easy to do.
You have to really suck some horrible shit
to get deported from Hawaii as an American citizen.
Now, while all this is going on,
Carbon Nation has become a YouTube production house, putting
out videos that are mostly either sexual or involve giant, traumatic fights between members.
Less and less time has been spent actually preaching any kind of ideology, but the parasocial
bond formed by watching this stuff is strong enough that people keep joining, including
Janay Newell, a 25-year-old waitress at a raw vegan restaurant who by 2020 had come
to consider Carbon Nation my frequency family. What was what he preached? People of like minds coming together on a common
mission to elevate the consciousness of earth. This is all again, just repackaged bullshit. I
was hearing shit like this 20 years ago from fucking assholes on a primitive chunk of the
internet, but like, yo, we're all in the same frequency. No, you're fucking not.
You're shitting in a yard and hitting women.
Initially, she describes him as kind, but on March 27th, 2022, during a party at the
DeKalb County house that they had started to rent, because they're back in the continental
US at this point, Nature Boy had one of his other wives punch Newell repeatedly after
an argument.
She says, all right, well, I'm out of here.
I'm leaving.
But Nature Boy kind of sends people after her and convinces her to come back.
And then he tries to coerce her into sex.
She says no repeatedly and he keeps repeating, I'm not going to rape you.
And then we should have sex one more time.
And eventually he coerces her into having sex. Once she leaves, Nature Boy immediately posts revenge porn videos of them having sex.
Newell goes to the cops and she initially is not pressing charges for rape, just for
the revenge porn.
But the cops are like, this actually, this is, this, it has to be so bad for the cops
to do this.
The cops are like, this actually sounds like rape to us.
Like you should probably-
That is an unheard of development.
That is an unheard of development.
That is.
And it's, again, if this is a white cult leader,
I don't think any of this happens
in terms of like the legal consequences.
That is a huge part of it, right?
That he is a black cult leader is why the cops see this.
But he is, this is rape, right?
He's doing a bad thing.
It's all the bad things.
So he gets arrested, he gets charged, he does bail out, he's going to spend like the next
two years almost fighting in court while his coat collapses around him. There had been
a few dozen people at most at one point, and they're down to like a half dozen hardliners.
One of his followers, Amar Jawaid, flees with a bunch of money and hard drives that presumably
included revenge porn. On March 6th, 2023, he's found dead
inside of a house that's on fire.
It seems to be related to some gang stuff he was into
as opposed to Nature Boy, but I don't,
you know, it's not fully known,
but it's one of those people who knew him will be like,
it's because of Nature Boy's influence
that he got into that stuff in the first place, right?
Because he joined when he was 18
and this dude had a real dark impact on him.
I don't know, but those are the two deaths that are somewhat tied to this cult.
The court case finally reached its conclusion earlier this year and it didn't go well for
Nature Boy.
One of his wives admitted to posting revenge porn when she was like trying to defend him.
And in general, every time his remaining loyal followers got up on the stand, it was bad
for him because the things he convinced them to do were bad.
The state offered him a 30 year plea deal, which he rejected.
So on March 1st, he is convicted on all counts and sentenced to life in prison without the
possibility of parole plus 10 years, which is where he is now.
So wow.
Yep.
Again, that is why the story it's both like, yeah, this you go. Wow. Yep.
Again, it's one of those.
That is quite a story.
It's both like, yeah, this guy sucked.
I'm glad he's not out and free, but also like, well, there was only justice in this case
because he's a black guy, right?
Yeah.
It's a little complicated.
Both of those things are true, you know?
Yeah.
And it's also complicated by the fact that, you know, he is to be believed,
which I think there's no reason not to believe
the story of his childhood.
It's incredibly traumatic.
And you can see the through lines
of how he got from point A to point B here
and his aggression and constantly being moved around
and abused.
And then, but that's no excuse.
It's not an excuse.
To behave this way.
It's interesting if you want to look at like the cult
that has a very, that takes the cult that kind of,
I think about a lot when I read about this,
cause he's kind of a lower effort version of NXIVM, right?
And NXIVM is a higher effort version in part
because you've got this guy, Keith Ranieri,
who gets his start doing other kinds of cons,
is targeting a higher level of wealth individual,
is targeting people who are more prominent.
And he's doing a lot of, when you get right down to it,
it's the same, they're not,
he's talking about saving the world,
all he's really doing is being like lounging around
in nice hotels and houses and rental houses
and having sex with a bunch of women
who he also physically and mentally abuses, right?
Ultimately, both cults are doing the same thing.
Raniri makes millions and millions of dollars
and is adjacent to a lot of very powerful people
for years and years and years and years,
like a long time before he gets justice.
Nature Boy, it's just a couple of years.
And it's in part because Nature Boy does not have,
because of his background, the ability to kind of reach
and influence the level of wealth people that Raniere does.
And it's part because like just he immediately gets
a lot more new,
you know, shit, right? Like he gets a lot more attention from law enforcement.
He gets, it gets taken seriously
because he's not a white guy, right?
But he also, yes, 100% of what I'm about to say
does not, it's not countering that.
But like to your own point, he's pretty lazy.
He's pretty sloppy and lazy about how
he's going about this, not preparing, you know, and really not even trying to keep up the facade
of there being anything too intellectual or spiritual or it's just about
or it's just about Instagram,
posting the videos, making money, chasing the clout. Oh, it's subs are dying down, going down.
You gotta add fights, fabricate it like the reality TV show.
And it's wild because it's possible to do it.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, it is.
That's part of what's interesting is because, you know, Ranieri did have to
create a lot of like, he had to build this curriculum around his cult in order to start
getting the following that he eventually turns into like what it turns into.
When you've got the internet and the way parasocial relationships work, if you're able to just
get an audience with content that you're putting out hours of on a regular basis, you can really easily get a number,
enough people to kind of support you as a cult leader.
You know, this isn't a massive cult.
He's not a massive star,
but a hundred thousand or so regular listeners
can get a dozen or two people who will come out
and live with you at any given time
and enough money that you can get away with this.
And it takes so much less effort.
A guy like Ranieri, there is more background work
that Ranieri has to do to get started, you know?
Yeah.
So it is just one of these like social media has made
starting a cult a lot, take a lot less effort.
And you can fuck up a bunch of people's lives
doing that a lot more easily.
That said, the cults don't tend to last as long. Maybe that's the upside, right?
Well, they're more visible too. Yeah, they're more visible.
What they're doing is on display. It's hard to obfuscate what's happening.
Yeah, and that is kind of worthwhile.
A worthwhile side story here is that a lot of why this cult gets taken down is it's not
just the racism of the police.
It's also that there's a lot of people watching and following this online and saying this
is wrong and taking effective action to both scare other people.
A number, a lot of people both get out because people are making a stink about how fucked
up this is and don't join who might otherwise have joined because of all of the people who are trying to stop this. And it also makes it harder for them
to act and operate. So that is an up side of it, right? Is that there is like a community kind of
defense aspect here. People realize, well, this is really fucked up, right? Like that hood horrors
documentary is somebody who covers a lot of stuff within the subculture being like,
people need to know how this happened and why, right?
So that's good, you know?
Yeah, the good with the bad.
Good with the bad, I don't know.
It's just so easy to get swooped up in movements
that you don't intend to.
The pipeline, there's much to be said about this, we know.
Yes, much to say.
That's why this show exists.
Yep, all right. All right.
All right. Well, that's the episode.
How are you feeling, Katie?
I'm feeling great.
Learned a lot about nature boy and cults.
Yeah. Formed my own cult.
Actually, I already have.
Yeah. You know what?
Yeah. Join Katie's cult where, I don't know, Katie,
what Central American nation do you think you're going to wind up in? But yeah, join Katie's cult where, I don't know, Katie,
what Central American nation do you think
you're gonna wind up in?
Oh, that sounds like a lot of work.
Can it just be based out of California?
A lot of cults are.
Katie, good news about that.
I mean, I feel like it's fine.
The promised land, yeah.
I'm just gonna come to your compound and start it there.
No, my cult already exists. It's called Some More News. It's like it's fun. Yeah. I'm just gonna come to your compound and start it there. No, my cult already exists.
No, no, no.
It's called Some More News.
You can support our Patreon.
Yeah, I'm too tired.
Cults, that seems like so much work.
I'd rather, I'm gonna play Age of Wonders 4
in my underpants alone.
That's my plan.
Ooh.
What a nice evening.
Yeah, sounds great.
So we're not gonna start that that colt in Curacao?
Well, no, Sylvie, you should start that colt in Curacao.
We definitely still need a colt in Curacao,
but primarily as a way to get money
and as a way to purchase products without tariffs.
That's really the benefit of having a colt in Curacao.
Oh, yeah.
That's a real big benefit.
And I'll just move there with you.
We don't even have to start a cult. Sounds good.
See you there.
Yep.
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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. Something unexpected happened after
Jeremy Scott confessed to killing Michelle Schofield in Bone Valley Season 1.
Every time I hear about my dad is, oh, he's a killer. He's just straight evil.
I was becoming the bridge between Jeremy Scott and the son he'd never known.
At the end of the day, I'm literally a son of a killer.
Listen to new episodes of Bone Valley Season 2 on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
too on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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 Frye and Maria Tremarchi,
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 Podcast 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 them 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 Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
You're listening to an iHeart Podcast.