Endless Thread - Fryders and Alligator Alcatraz tours: When trolls get inventive
Episode Date: November 14, 2025Ben and Amory share two stories about some out-of-the-box internet trolling. First, Amory tries to untangle a web of rumors surrounding an unusual dish from New Zealand. Then, Ben takes us aboard Terr...i's Tourz, an alleged Everglade tourist attraction claiming to offer the nation's first ever tours of the South Florida Detention Center known as Alligator Alcatraz. Show notes: 3 Facts About New Zealand I Didn’t Know Until I Moved Here (Medium) Was this post a joke? (r/newzealand) Terri's Tourz
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Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
Sorry, I can't hear you.
Shut up. Yes, you can.
What?
I'm not buying it, Johnson. You're trolling me.
This is some inventive trolling, isn't it? It's inventive.
I feel like working on this,
episode has made me question everything.
Wow.
What's today's question everything?
Hit me.
I guess I'll start with a simple question, a humble question.
Pied and butter and jelly.
Wow, you're in the right headspace, I got to say.
Wrong answer, but right headspace, which is I was going to ask you about something you've eaten.
Okay.
Have you ever eaten a frider?
Frider?
Yes.
Don't know what a frider is.
It's a fried spider.
A what?
No.
A fried spider.
Nope.
No, I will not.
My story this week.
No.
It's a tribute to you because I know.
Find someone else.
Find someone else to co-host this episode with you.
Immediately find someone else.
No.
Today on Endless Thread from WBUR, we're talking trolling.
Inventive trolling.
We are trying to answer a central question.
Are friders a thing?
in New Zealand.
Can you read some of this AI overview summary for me for,
do they eat spiders in New Zealand?
Okay, the AI overview, which really is an interesting disruption to the way that we exist now.
Yeah.
And that includes the media.
While not a mainstream dish, they're already hedging.
Some people in New Zealand do eat spiders, particularly deep fried spiders known as
friders. This practice is not widely known or practiced, but it does exist within a certain
cultural context. And what's the link that they, the article that they cite over to the right
side of the image that I sent you? Medium, which is the other thing that made me a little
skeptical. It says three facts about New Zealand, I didn't know until I moved here. Unique Kiwi
cuisine. New Zealand is famous for wine and hobbits, but dot, dot, dot, dot. And it's a medium
imposed by someone named
Alana Irving.
Yes. The rest of that is,
New Zealand is famous for
wine and hobbits, but not so much it's
cuisine. Unless they've been here,
most people probably can't name any unique
kiwi dishes. But when I arrived,
one really stood out.
Friders. In
parentheses, fried spiders.
When I told friends back home about friders,
they thought I was joking. I'm not.
Just take it from dozens of
Kiwis. And she hyperlinks to
something in her, just take it from
dozens of Kiwis sentence, but we'll get there because I'm going to have you read the next
little chunk of Alana Irving's medium post for us.
All right.
When I asked the guy behind the counter at my local Spidey and Chups, no, absolutely not.
Keep going.
Spidey and Chups shop, come on.
In a touristy area, if you'd heard any anti-Iraknit sentiments, he rightly pointed out that
it's hard to argue with such a delectable snack.
This is parody.
People, quote, people from other cultures really are heavily biased against eating insects and the like.
Then they have a white bait fritter.
That's a fish, yep.
A white bait fritter with a bit of tunnel web mixed in, and they suddenly change their tune.
Yep.
No.
Then Alana includes a recipe for the perfect frider.
No.
So I'm going to send you that recipe, and I would...
Not interested.
I would love for you to read some of the ingredients and the steps for us, if you please.
This makes me mad because I love deep-fried things, and I just...
This is a bridge too far.
It's a web too far.
Six tunnel web spiders, 500 grams.
Ugh.
Oil for deep-briam, two eggs, two tablespoons water, two tablespoons.
Cornflower, I assume it's tablespoons.
or maybe it's teaspoons, one cup flour, baking powder, vinegar, milk, chopped thyme, mint, sage, flour.
Milk fangs until all the deadly...
No.
No.
Milk fangs until all the deadly toxin is out of the spiders before preparing?
No, I would have heard of this if it was real.
I reject this.
You reject this.
Okay.
So she also writes in this post, quote,
I find incredulity about friders to be culturally myopic.
Spider is eaten in many parts of the world, such as inland China, the Central Asian Plateau, and on several Pacific Islands, including New Zealand.
Quote, normal food is relative.
After all, there are many people in India horrified at the idea of eating cows.
Here's the thing.
Sure.
I'm like cultural blind spots fully accept.
I'm saying in the age of the inner.
I would have heard about this.
I definitely would have heard about it.
And people in India might be like very, you know, I mean, that's a huge population.
They might be, as she suggests, skeptical of the idea of eating cows.
But it's not like they've never heard of people eating cows.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Okay.
That's a good point.
I'm calling this fake.
Calling this fake.
This is all fake.
Until you milk a spice.
ferns in front of me, defry it and drop it into my mouth. I reject it. Okay. So we're going to break
this down together. If we go back to the original Google search that led us to the Medium Post,
you'll see in the little preview version of the Medium Post that there's a picture of a
frider. Golden Brown and crispy looking. Right. And very spider-shaped. This picture comes from an
Epicurious recipe. This recipe calls for two frozen adult Texas brown tarantulas or two Chilean
rose tarantulas. Neither of those places are New Zealand. Correct. So at the very least,
our medium poster, Alana Irving, chose us, it's a suss frider photo for her piece. Yeah. Especially
given that she allegedly quotes a guy from her local spidey and chupp shop. Why can't you just
take a picture there? We have a suspicious photo appropriated as being
friders. And then we have
the hyperlink higher up
when the writer, Alana Irving, says that all of
her friends think she's joking about friders,
but she's not. Just take it from
dozens of Kiwis. The hyperlink
on that sentence goes to a
Reddit post from eight years ago
in the New Zealand subreddit.
No, these guys are trolling. The title is
was this post a joke? And it
links to the post in question and says,
I was reading through this post as a Brit, and I
am so confused. This has to
be a joke, right? I find it hard to believe
that so many people would have joined in on a troll, yet I can't find anything about it on Google.
So I'm going to link you to that post, Ben, and I want you to start by reading the title for us.
Are there a lot of spiders in New Zealand compared to the U.S.?
That's the title of the post?
Yes.
So can you read just some of the top comments on this post for us?
There are quite a few, but during the summer months when they're breeding, you're allowed to
the adults if they're more than 12 centimeters or 5 inches wide.
In my experience, it's best to warn tourists before they eat a dish with them in it
because some people can be fussy when it comes to what they're used to eating.
To be honest, it's mainly older people who have them.
Younger people would rather have McDonald's or something.
Okay.
No.
What's the very next one?
It's a recipe for deep red spiders.
It's not just a recipe.
It's the same recipe.
It's the exact recipe that Alana first included in her medium post.
500 grams of tunnel web spiders, cornflower, the whole thing.
I think we're in copy pasta zone here, you know, as in you copy a post from the internet and you paste it somewhere else on the internet.
And for some reason, we call these copy pastas.
This feels like a copy pasta, right?
You're picking up what's going down here.
One of the sort of confusing things about Reddit can be that, like, in a lot of instances, you can actually trust the comment section, which is one of the reasons why I love Reddit is because you can basically, like, you can kind of get a sense from the sort of like overall group's responses of whether something is real.
The collective wisdom that happens is real.
But also, Redditors love a joke.
They love a comment thread joke.
And if you basically like tickle them with your original post by saying, is this a troll?
You're really like flipping a coin.
Because most of the people who are going to respond to that, you're basically forcing them to choose between like actually giving you real information and being like, oh, let's keep it going, baby.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I've just sent you another comment that I'd like you to read.
Oh, boy.
From a Redditor whose username is Proceed to Party.
As an American who had no knowledge that eating spiders is a normal thing there, this is horrifying.
Having said that, I'll try anything once.
And when I finally make it to your beautiful country, I'm putting this on my list.
Edit, reading the rest of this thread has me so effing confused right now.
Is this real or not?
please dot someone dot okay um i've sent you one more thing that i would just love for you to read
the response that proceed to party got okay what i see is mention it to your hotel receptionist
they always know the best places to get friders and then proceed to party says no to thanks but
okay here's another sort of like cultural blind spot comment i know it's hard to get perspective
from cultures outside your own but people do things differently all around the world yes of course
A spider is eaten in many other parts of the world, such as inland China, and the Central Asian Plateau, not to mention on several Pacific islands.
Yes, this includes New Zealand.
Many Indians are as horrified by the eating of cows, as Westerners are by the eating of dogs.
These things are all relative.
What jumped out at me about that is this mention of inland China, the Central Asian Plateau, the idea of people in India being horrified at the idea of eating cows, that exact language.
This is when I'm like, oh.
We are definitely in copy pasta territory.
Because Alana Irving mentions this exactly in her medium post because she did indeed copy it from Reddit.
And she also copied the Reddit comment that included that quote from her local Spidey and Chupp's shop about how people change their tune about eating spiders once they try a fritter with some tunnel web mixed in, direct copy paste.
So at this point, I'm like, okay, I think we've officially.
We've got a troll here.
And indeed, the other two facts about New Zealand from her medium post that Alana didn't know until she moved there, supposedly, are one, that it's illegal to have a garden in New Zealand.
Were you familiar with this idea?
No.
This was another hoax that New Zealanders helped perpetuate online in recent years.
And two, it's important to be aware of giant birds, specifically the Moa.
I sent you a picture.
Yeah, yeah.
So this was...
No.
What's the captain?
Describe the picture.
A rare Moa attack caught on camera.
And then it's what looks like a slowest camper, like running away along a riverbed next to what looks like a big bird kind of creature with giant floppy feet and a hair suit.
Yes.
It looks like a person in a bird suit.
It looks like a person in a bird suit 100%.
So, yes, the Moa was a giant bird ostrich-like but bigger that it was native to New Zealand, but it went extinct thousands of years ago.
Of course, of course.
So this is when I tell you how my journey down the rabbit hole on Fridays began.
It started with this post.
All of New Zealand teams up to troll an unsuspecting American who wanted to know about the local spider population, another.
Unsuspecting American is caught in their convincing web of deceit.
And that other unsuspecting American is the commenter we mentioned earlier,
Proceed to Party, who also has the top comment on this best of post,
because that's where I found this. Can you read that top comment?
That's not fair. They're really convincing Kiwi bastards.
They're funny fissues, though. I'll give them that.
Thank goodness. One of them took pity on me and messaged me to let me know
that my hotel receptionist would probably think I'm out of my mind if I asked where to get fried spiders.
Edit, I've never gotten gold before. Thanks, friend.
So the funny thing is, even though I went into this knowing that this was all allegedly a hoax,
I too found some of the Kiwi Redditors in the original post really convincing.
And I was afraid to write off frieders as not a thing because our cultural traditions and cuisines are so different from country to country.
and region to region.
Yeah.
And it wasn't until I read the rest of Alana's medium post that I finally felt for sure
comfortable going like, okay, no.
Not a thing.
I mean, here's like the amazing thing about the internet is it's sort of like widens your
aperture in this like incredible way.
But it also is guaranteed to slowly degrade truth.
Yeah.
Which is, which can have like hilarious consequences and very nice.
not hilarious consequences, but I love to go down the rabbit hole on a hilarious consequence.
Yeah. And the hoax continues. I found a post on threads from just last year of someone saying, like,
can someone from New Zealand tell me what a frider is? Is it rude to refuse them? And people are still trolling.
And only a few kind souls in there said, like, no, no, mate. They're pulling your leg.
No, mate. And I should say, well, friders, that term, that does not appear.
appear to be a thing. Fried spiders is. You find them, I think, most commonly in Cambodia in some
other Southeast Asian countries. So people do eat fried spiders. Not to self. No need to travel to
Cambodia for culinary exploration. I mean, go for some other reason. There you go. Yes, yes, yes.
But frieders, spidey and chups, not a thing. Even though I emailed Alana Irving as I was looking
into this. And I believe that she continues to troll me because she emailed me back.
She did?
She emailed me back.
She said, thanks for reaching out.
I'm glad to hear of your interest in New Zealand, but I have to say I'm disappointed that you assume it's all a joke.
Oh, my God.
Okay, just to be clear, though, I do love Cambodian food that does not include spiders.
I have eaten bugs at various restaurants.
Emery, you might take exception to that.
But in a world where a large format protein is very destructive to the world, I don't mind.
and I personally support eating bugs, just not spiders.
Even if they're deep fried, I will try a handful of chaps, though.
Oh, yeah.
Sign me up for chaps.
Yeah, we could get a basket.
We could share a basket of chaps.
Never met a potato I didn't like.
All right.
When we come back, another story about inventive trolling.
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Amory.
Ben.
Do you know what Alligator Alcatraz is?
It's a detention center that Trump has built in the Florida Everglades.
He opened it this past summer.
And its purpose is to detain people that the Trump administration thinks are here illegally.
Yeah, about 5,000 detainees cut up in ICE's immigration sweeps.
So, do you know the significant?
of the number 4547.
Nope.
So to a lot of MAGA supporters, this refers to President Trump.
Because he was the 45th president and then he was the 47th president.
Exactly.
Yes.
This has kind of become a rallying cry number for the president.
Interestingly, it also refers to I think it's HR bill for 547, strengthening protections for Social Security beneficiaries Act of 2018.
which was signed by Trump.
I think there's some debate about whether this bill helped or hurt our ability to collect and protect Social Security.
But I digress.
Do you know what Terry's Tours is?
Terry's Tours.
No, I have a guess.
All right. What is it?
It's a guy named Terry with a boat who takes people on tours through the Everglades.
I mean, you're not completely.
Completely wrong.
Okay.
But let me send you a TikTok.
Okay.
For you to watch.
And you can either describe it during or after.
It's Terry from Terry's tours of Lake Lanier,
and we brought our fantastic endeavor down to the Everglades
for the first official alligator alcatraz swamp tours.
Okay.
So Terry is a woman.
Uh-huh.
A blonde, white, middle-aged woman wearing a Hawaiian shirt who is advertising Alligator Alcatraz tours, specifically boat tours of Alligator Alcatraz.
Yeah.
She said something about, like, you can name an alligator for...
Yeah, you can adopt alligators.
$4,547.
Yeah.
She said a bunch of really offensive stuff.
She said that they'll give kids on the tour a bubble gun so that they can blow bubbles at people being detained there and say, get out of my country.
They have a version of like hungry, hungry hippos except it's alligators eating, as she says, brown people.
What do you think?
I think it's bad, Ben. I think it's pretty upsetting.
Well, I'd like to tell you about comedian Lassandra Vasquez.
Excellent.
Who created this video?
Thank God.
Okay, I was hoping so because at the end, the laugh being slowed down, the like,
ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
That makes me feel so much better.
Lassandra, a comedian, very big on TikTok, 900,000.
and followers just about regularly skewers politicians.
The Terry's Tours, spelled T-O-U-R-Z, of course, promotion leads to a website.
And if people try to book a tour of alligator alcatraz or adopt an alligator, rename the
alligator, it instead funnels visitors towards organizations that offer legal and financial
assistance to migrants.
these organizations include the National Day of Labor Organizing Network and also Border Kindness.
This was all reported in the publication Latin Times.
We had a little overlap in our two stories.
Did you see the fried alligator bites?
Yes.
In her video?
Yes.
Deep fried.
We got that deep fried crossover, baby.
That dipping sauce.
Yep.
So, you know, what does this remind you?
you have. Does this remind you of anything?
Hmm.
The first thing that comes to mind for me was when the KKK tried to sponsor a chunk of highway
so that it would say like this portion of the highway is sponsored by the KKK.
And so the highway administrator, wherever, I forget where this took place, renamed it,
the Rosa Parks Highway.
So it was like, this segment of the Rosa Parks Highway is sponsored by the KKK is like
maintained and kept beautiful by the KKK.
Wow.
Okay.
But what are you thinking of?
Well, that's a really good example.
This, you know, and it is part of this kind of like history of similarly politically motivated,
um, uh, trolling.
Um, and also like-
Were you talking about Gen Z buying up the tickets to the Trump rally?
Yes.
Okay.
Yes.
Back in 2022, there was this Trump rally where a bunch of TikTokers reserved tickets or spaces
or like showed interest.
to the tune of maybe a million people
and then they never showed up
to the rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
only 6,000 people showed up.
A lot of people felt like it was a big embarrassment
to the Trump campaign.
Another example is this
trolling of the Kellogg Company
that was created by this TikToker
and the sort of troll was Sean,
this TikToker designed these
bots to troll
troll the website created by Kellogg and flood it with fake job applications after Kellogg,
the company sort of employed anti-union practices or practices deemed unfriendly to labor unions
as some of its employees were trying to get organized for collective bargaining.
We interviewed that guy.
I don't know if you remember Gen Z for Change, that episode of Endless Thread.
I highly recommend you go back and check out that episode about Gen Z for Change.
But back to Terry's tours, Lysandra Vasquez posted an update a few days ago, at least a few days ago on the day that we are taping this.
And I will send you that.
Okay.
So she posts this update where she mentions that people were saying you should be collecting email addresses for the people who want to buy a tour.
And so she updated the page so that it is much easier to collect their email addresses.
She kind of updated the Google search so that it looks even more official when you search Terry's tours on Google.
She's showing some data about the number of visits she's had to the site.
And she tells people who are in on the joke not to put their contact information in that this is just to kind of socially entrap the people who might.
might actually be genuinely interested in something like Terry's tours.
What do you think? What do you think about all this?
It's actually making me think of our SRA episode, the Socialist Rifle Association,
and the people from the Massachusetts chapter that we spoke to who were kind of saying like,
well, you know, the right is going to take up arms. And so we should also know how to use these weapons.
and it kind of feels like in a similar territory of like the internet is going to be used for, you know, we don't even necessarily need to call it like good or evil.
It's going to be used for certain outcomes.
Right.
And if you are not also using it to try to reach people in this day and age, like you could quickly get outmatched.
Mm-hmm.
Out-trolled.
Yeah, yeah.
out-trolled. And so, yeah, it feels like there's, it feels like we're only going to be seeing a lot more of this.
I think we're seeing a really interesting exercise, which is basically separating Trump supporters from their money.
And what's interesting about that to me is that a lot of people would also say that Trump is actually taking advantage of his supporters, whether it's Trump coin or, you know, all kinds of different sort of MAGA-related merch.
they would argue that Trump's supporters are being taken advantage of financially,
as well as, you know, intellectually and emotionally or whatever you might say.
So what's interesting about this is this is kind of like an effort to, I guess,
play the same game in a way, maybe from Lassandra.
I have not spoken with Lysandra, but like, you know, I feel like she's playing with this
idea of like, all right, if you're going to be stupid enough to vote for Trump, then like, I'm going
to see if I can separate you from some of your money as well, because you're also doing that.
Again, I am not calling Trump supporters stupid.
I'm just saying that seems to be the sort of part of the motivation here, but I think it's
kind of interesting.
But I guess I wonder, like, you know, it's a, it's, it is certainly an inventive troll as we,
as we established as the theme.
But I, right now, I guess this is kind of where I am kind of emotionally.
It's like, I want real change in the world.
And if her goal is to maybe change hearts and minds, like, that only works if you can
see the ridiculousness, if you can actually process the ridiculousness of some of the
things that she is trying to make seem ridiculous.
Yes.
And so will being redirected to these other things that feel totally contrary to what people who might genuinely be interested in a territory believe is directing them towards those resources actually going to change hearts and minds?
Yeah.
Like, I don't know.
That doesn't mean that I like disapprove of it by any means that that approach, no matter what you're making a video about.
It's just, I do wonder if we are, are we, are we, are we, are we, are we, are we, are we.
creating more division. Maybe it just allows people who are feeling crazy right now, looking at all the things are happening. Maybe it allows those people to feel less crazy and maybe that's enough. But I take your point that it's sort of like inventive trolling, you know, lesser than sign than, you know, than like real discourse and discussion and kind of like open-hearted, direct.
conversation about the things that are dividing us.
Yeah.
So, it's tricky.
Yeah, and it comes at a time when we are, whatever you are fighting for, people are
genuinely curious about like what is going to work, what is actually effective.
And this came up in the Jeffrey Noe episode, too, is that he's talking, you know,
Jeffrey Noe was talking about marching in the streets with hundreds of thousands of people.
And, you know, I don't.
even remember if it was in the episode or if it was like more in our discussions while we were making
the episode of like, God, does that work anymore? Like hundreds of thousands of people marching in
streets, does that actually do anything anymore? So we're all just kind of like, what works? What can we
try next? And or maybe it's less about the strategy and more about just like we have these tools and
hopefully we can keep laughing in the process. But I don't.
I don't know, man. It's tricky. tricky, tricky.
So we first talked about Alligator Alcatraz and Vasquez's inventive trolling months ago.
And it seems important to note that ice raids have only continued and intensified since then.
And Alligator Alcatraz is caught up in several court battles and lawsuits, everything from the private contractors being paid to build out and run the place to issues of access to lawyers.
for detainees and attorney-client legal rights.
No official tally from Vesquez on how much she's raised by redirecting people to support immigration protections with their dollars.
But you don't have to visit her TikTok to find those links.
They're in our show notes.
Endless Threat is a production of WBUR in Boston.
This episode was co-hosted by myself, Ben Brock Johnson, and Amory Siebertson.
It was produced by Frannie Monaghan.
Our editor is Meg Kramer, Mix and Sound Design by production manager Paul Vyfton,
us. The rest of our team is Grace Tatter, Dean Russell, managing producer Summa To Joshi, and
Emily Jenkowski. Also, by the way, last week, we erroneously said that Despicable Me is a Disney
film. Dispicable Us. It is, in fact, produced by Illumination, and was animated by a French
animation studio, McGuff. We som desolate for Le Rue or something. If you have an untold history and
unsolved mystery or some other wild story from the internet that you want us to tell.
Get in touch.
Endless thread at wbUR.
Dot org.
Merci.
