Knowledge Fight - #212: Matrix Schemes and Billions In Liens
Episode Date: October 3, 2018Today, Dan is still slightly on the mend from being sick, so he and Jordan put off getting back into Alex Jones by taking a little Wednesday Project Camelot break. On this installment, Sweary Kerry in...terviews a woman who claims that she owns the rights to The Matrix and Terminator franchises. Tune in to learn whether or not that is true, and whether or not she's also psychic (spoiler alert: she is).
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Andy and Kansas, you're on the air. Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex. I'm a first-time caller. I'm a huge fan. I love your work.
I love you.
Hey, everybody. Welcome back to Knowledge Fight. I'm Dan.
I'm Jordan.
We're a couple dudes.
Like to sit around, drink novelty beverages, and talk a little bit about Alex Jones.
Indeed, we are Dan.
Hi, Jordan.
Dan.
What?
How do you feel about Lil Wayne's new album?
I don't give a shit.
The Carter 5.
Do you feel like it's a return to form for a guy who had really kind of lost his fastball for the past four or five years?
I've not cared about Lil Wayne since the block is hot.
Thought everything was downhill from Fuck the World.
It's a great song.
Fuck the world.
Or, of course, the black is hot.
The black is hot.
All right.
How do you feel about Christine and the Queens?
I don't know.
Was this a new doo-wop group?
No, no, no, no.
It's like this French lady.
Oh, no, I don't know.
I might be interested.
Yeah.
This is a reserved judgment.
Yeah.
No, it's interesting.
People are giving it a lot of high praise and I don't know how I feel.
More interested in it than Lil Wayne's new album.
Not interested in that.
Kendrick has this crazy narrative thing.
He goes on.
He does a bunch of voices.
Fucking fantastic.
I'd like to apologize to everybody that we did not have an episode on Friday.
Rare sick day.
Real coincidental right after two episodes prior.
You asked me when the last time I got sick was coincidentally end up sick as a dog.
Provided that that dog is very sick, right?
You know what?
You know what?
I do have a contention with the group there.
Oh, everybody was like, oh, get well soon, Dan.
And then people were mad at me.
Well, it's like nobody gave me any sympathy when I was when I was sick.
Didn't care at all.
God damn thing.
That's because I didn't take a fucking day off.
Well, that's because I don't take days off, Dan.
You could do this.
I can't do my job.
I can't do all the stuff that I have to do when I'm like writhing in a ball and yell.
Anyway, that is kind of rude of them.
No, it's fine.
I apologize on their behalf.
No, I apologize on my behalf.
Anyway, we are back in full effect and thrilled to be here.
I'm excited about what's going to go down today.
I had some other thought, but I lost it.
I can't remember what it is.
I think it's a, do you know who else is thrilled to be here?
Oh, is that our new donors?
I know.
See, that was a great transition on my part.
Okay.
Just patting yourself on the back.
So first of all, I'd like to say thank you to a new donor.
This is very exciting.
I'd like to say thank you so much to Mr. Matthew.
You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Thank you, Mr. Matthew.
Thank you very much, Mr. Matthew.
Is Matthew the first name or the last name?
It's Mr. Matthew.
Well, it could be both.
I call people whatever the name comes up as.
It could be Mr. Matthew Matthew.
It could be.
Well, we'll never know.
We will never know.
That's true.
But this next one, very exciting.
Okay.
I can't even tell you how excited I am to announce our new donor and say very, a very
heartfelt thank you to this person.
And they donated on a little bit of an elevated level.
So they're coming in as a globalist, very excited to welcome aboard Alex Jones.
What?
I'm a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Daddy shark!
Thank you, Alex Jones.
Thank you so much, Alex Jones and.
Undoubtedly the real Alex Jones.
I'm really sorry for you, but I just don't think you can afford to donate to our show
anymore.
I think you're gonna hurt him.
Yeah.
You got to save that money man.
But either way, we do appreciate you understanding where the truth lies what should be supported
and signing up.
I don't want to make too big of a deal of that, but it made it very difficult to engage
with work like legitimately for a couple of days, I was just alternately taking really
hot baths and laying in bed playing Skyrim because I couldn't barely move.
Great.
Great idea.
Both.
I wanted to get work done.
I wanted to jump in with this Alex Jones bullshit and it was very difficult.
And in the time that since we were recording this here, beginning of the week, Thursday
was when we recorded our last episode.
And since then in that in between times, some weird things have happened.
A few things have happened in the, in the intermediate period of time.
In the world of Alex Jones in particular, like, I know that a couple of things were
posted in the group that were brought to my attention, people asking like, well, we think
about this way.
I thought at the beginning of this episode, it might be good to just sort of give a blanket
comment on a couple of things.
Oh, kind of catch up.
Yeah.
A little bit.
Yeah.
Like, you know, a blog post where someone like was surprised that Alex Jones was saying
that football players kneeling or kneeling to white genocide.
And my comment to that, wait, what?
My comment to that is, uh, why is this person surprised?
Like, why is the person writing that blog surprised?
I have no comment.
Alex talks about that all the time.
Yeah.
He's very much afraid of white genocide.
That's a big part of his narratives.
Right.
So that doesn't, we don't need to spend, he's mainly afraid of black people exercising
any kind of rights at all.
So he's not just concerning their place in society as equals.
Yeah.
He's very afraid of that.
Not a fan.
The other one is a little bit more interesting.
And I actually got a message from policy wonk, Jonathan about this.
It was actually really, he brought up some interesting points.
And that was that Alex Jones recently crashed a, what was it?
Wedding?
A festival thing in Austin.
Yeah.
There was like a tribb fest.
And there was a panel, Charlie Warzell from BuzzFeed was on the panel.
They were talking about like web censorship and stuff like that.
Right.
And so Alex showed up with a bullhorn and tried to derail the proceedings.
Well, that's fun.
Which was super ironic.
Tyranny Crusher four.
Maybe, I don't know if he's numbering them anymore, but it's super ironic because part
of the panel, what they were talking about was Alex and his situation.
And then low and behold, Alex shows up and derails the ability of the people to run the
panel.
Well, no, I mean, it makes the panel, the panel's job is much easier.
They just go like, see, and then they, then they all leave.
Well, they offered him a place on the dais.
They offered him to engage in the terrible idea.
He just kept yelling in his bullhorn.
Of course.
And the point that Jonathan brought up is, and I, as soon as I saw this story, I said,
I have no interest in this.
I don't want to talk about this.
Yeah.
This is just him further deteriorating and declining down this road of, he's no longer on places.
So he's going to go bum rush people.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Somehow.
Yeah.
And Jonathan brought up a really good point of like, you know, he's kind of, like, you
see a mental state deterioration and like, he's just yelling slogans.
Like the answer to, uh, 1984 is 1776 instead of anything substantive.
He's just yelling bumper sticker phrases.
And he made another really good point that I think is interesting that we haven't brought
up necessarily.
And that is, if you look at the way that Owen Schreuer treats Alex Jones these days, it's
kind of like the child of an alcoholic parent.
Oh, you know how like when Alex quote unquote turned on Trump, uh, Owen was like, Alex,
maybe we should stop.
Maybe we should, you know, we're out of delay.
You're swearing too much.
Yeah.
That's sort of like trying to compensate for the out of control parents behavior.
Uh huh.
And he brought that up.
And I thought that was really interesting.
I wanted to give him credit for that.
And I think that's a really, it's an interesting thought, not worth us doing a breakdown of
him crashing a speech.
Right.
But I just wanted to tip my cap.
I thought that was a good, uh, good call.
Yeah.
Well, we have called the Owen Schreuer like Owen Schreuer is basically like, I think we
brought up the point that he's, he's like Alex Jones's daddy.
Like that's, that's the thing, but he's his, uh, buff son.
Yeah.
Cool.
Freddie buff son.
Yeah.
Um, so anyway, those are some of the things that have been coming up.
There's, there's more.
And I'm sure Alex is saying some horrible shit about Kavanaugh.
And I don't really want to talk about that because it's, it's ugly and ball.
Um, yeah.
And I really don't want to scream about any man telling women that they have not been
sexually assaulted.
Yeah.
I'm not, I'm not, I don't have the, I don't have the emotional energy.
Nope.
Nope.
Nope.
Not possible.
Um, so suffice it to say, uh, Kavanaugh can go fuck himself.
Oh yeah.
Um, you want more detailed nuanced analysis.
Uh, you should probably check in with news shows.
Yeah.
Um, and the FBI investigation is a sham, which is something that the news shows probably
aren't saying yet.
That's not true.
It will be a shame.
It is yet to exist as it, in its sham form.
Fair enough.
So Jordan, I wanted to talk, but I wanted to get into Alex Jones.
I wanted to do what we do best, but I couldn't really get it up for that.
Uh, in my still recovering state.
Uh-huh.
And thankfully the God's shown a light down upon me.
I, you know, I told you, wait, literal God's.
Uh, do you mean we're doing an episode about a man who believes you're reading, you're
reading too much into this.
Okay.
I know I told you that project Camelot wasn't looking like very green pastures.
Uh-huh.
Carrie Cassidy came out of nowhere and surprised me.
Wait.
So we're back on a wacky Wednesday.
I thought we were letting that go for a little bit.
We were, but now it's, now it's back hot.
Hannah from heaven spilled into my lap and I listened to this interview and I was like,
Oh, I got it.
Okay.
We got to do this.
All right.
So today we are.
It's actually with Brett Kavanaugh.
Isn't it?
Oh man.
That would be amazing.
That would be amazing.
Turns out in 2013, Brett Kavanaugh was a guest.
I genuinely think that might be a real thing.
These days.
Yeah.
Anything's possible.
Yeah.
Um, so today we got an interesting episode of project Camelot to discuss where we will
look at another element of the con and what have you.
Um, today, uh, we're going to jump in at the beginning of this interview.
This, uh, well, Carrie gives the guests credits.
This goes a little bit long.
Um, but I think it's worth it on some levels just to, he has two telescopes.
She.
Oh, okay.
We will, um, it's, I'm going to let this play out as it plays out and see what your,
your feelings are.
Hi everyone.
I'm Carrie Cassidy.
Hi Carrie.
Camelot and I'm very happy to be here tonight.
I've got Sophia Stewart with me and she's going to be on the phone line because.
She's a Nazi.
Uh, at her end and at my end, I had some strange camera failure and so I had to go on to my,
uh, other computer.
So I've, um, it's kind of a different look than the, the other one, but at any rate,
we are live.
So, uh, just want to say that it's great to have you here.
Sophia and, uh, what I'm going to do is I'm going to put a bit of your bio on the screen
here and, and go over that with the audience so that we can cover a few other points in
there and then, uh, ask you to sort of elaborate.
So what we've got is that, um, basically you're the author of the matrix and the terminator
series and you have claimed Hollywood still your works and made them obviously into blockbuster
movies.
And we have an extensive bio here.
It's on my website.
I'm putting it on the screen as I speak here, uh, so that you can see it there.
But briefly, uh, she is, uh, was a basically a prodigy, child prodigy.
How strange.
A terrific white writer, poet, creative genius.
And, uh, those are terms that were used to describe her and she, uh, I guess worked
in the, um, well, she received a bachelor of arts from the city university of New York.
Where a lot of prodigies go.
Miners in law and psychology.
And, uh, she came under the guidance of various celebrated authors and writers such as Max
Siegel, who was a former journalist of the New York times, uh, Emile Capoya, a publisher,
editor and essayist and critic.
And Paul Cherry, a playwright on Broadway, and she also served as an intern in TV at
the public broadcasting station, WNET 13, uh, worked with the Oscar winning film documentary
producer, Penny Miller, a Dotto and her graduating class was honored with a special letter citation
from Jimmy Stute, uh, Jimmy Carter in 1979.
Oh, excuse me, president Jimmy Carter.
Thanks.
I thought it was the other one.
And her love and skills motivated her to move to New York.
So I wanted to play that out because it, it, it's sort of the reveal of she wrote the
matrix is, is embedded in there.
It seems like that is the thing she should lead with.
Otherwise that is all, now I'm not saying that all prodigies are alike.
Right.
I know there are reclusive geniuses like the one guy who's on Jeopardy who went to high
school like four times trying to get it right.
No, he was on who wants to be a millionaire.
Oh yeah.
That's right.
Yeah.
That guy's weirdo.
He's a weirdo, but he wrote for the Jimmy Kimmel live show for a while.
Really?
Yeah.
I think so.
God, that's great.
Yeah.
Uh, but this is not prodigy.
This isn't good prodigy back story.
This isn't good prodigy resume.
Well, I don't want to take away from her, uh, collegiate, uh, accomplishments.
I don't know one thing for, uh, or another about them.
I have nothing to say about them, but I will say that you're graduating class getting a
letter from Jimmy Carter.
Doesn't mean shit.
That doesn't mean anything.
That being in your resume is really padding pretty hard.
That's not good.
Now let's look at her list of mentors because this is very interesting.
Yeah.
Max Siegel died in 1988.
Okay.
Emil Kepuea died in 2005.
All right.
Are any of her mentors still alive to confirm that they were her mentors?
Leon Roth died in 2006.
Dale, I'm starting to see a pattern.
Paul Cherry died in 2014.
I'm thinking that there might be a pattern here.
And Penny Miller Adato is not a person.
Wait, what?
Perry Miller Adato is a person that she recently died, but was at the age of 97.
So you have to assume that she was probably not going to field any, uh, requests for
comment.
She was mentoring all kinds of stuff.
97 years young passed away earlier this year.
Yeah.
None of the people who are conceivably a part of her story in as much as they are part
of her bio as her mentors are alive or can confirm, which is mildly suspicious.
It reminds me of, do you know that movie Mumford?
That movie Mumford?
No.
It's about a psychiatrist.
I've heard of his sons.
It's a psychologist.
Uh, you like, uh, he's faking, uh, being a psychologist and he goes to this town and
he fixes everybody's lives.
Then he gets in trouble for, uh,
For being a fake.
Fake psychiatrist.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
So he goes to the main character Mumford.
Dr. Mumford, um, his whole doctor, he's not a real doctor.
Sure.
His whole backstory.
Whenever he's grilled on it is this list of people who have died.
Like his collegiate, uh, tragically died in, uh, uh, uh, uh air balloon disaster.
That'll happen.
So I get shades of that whenever I hear this list of all these people are like, dead, dead,
dead, dead, dead, all dead.
I hear the same story, but for a quote, creative genius that you do for a man who is in the
FBI for 20 years, where you're like, okay, dude, I'm, you're on Project Camelot.
I'm going to need more.
Well, if I met you in the street, maybe I'd give you more of a benefit of the doubt.
But if you're on Project Camelot, there are some questions that need to be answered.
Yeah.
You started a lowered state of credibility, which is kind of unfortunate, but I still
come to this with an objective viewpoint.
And whenever Carrie's reading the bio, I'm like, all right, I, I smell something kind
of weird.
First of all, she's saying she wrote the matrix and Terminator movies, but then I was halfway
expecting her to say that she was the Terminator and is also Neo and they stole her life story
wrong character.
But we'll get to that later.
Okay.
Uh, but she is a different character.
All right.
All right.
You're getting ahead of yourself.
So thankfully, even though Carrie sort of wrote, uh, reading off of this bio isn't super
great.
Thankfully, Sophia can come in here and give her own version of what's important about
her.
Right.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
Let me go ahead and elaborate for you.
Yeah.
Hello everyone.
Hey.
I'm from New York City and the last time it was on Carrie's show was a while ago and
I won my court case four years ago, actually September the 25th at the, uh, couple of days
a day ago, the 25th, September, uh, 20, 2018 is the fourth year of my win in the Utah federal
court.
I went on really celebrating that hard 2014.
I want everyone to know, and if you don't believe it, I will give you the court docket
so you can read it for yourself.
And everything has been going really great since my win.
Uh, the fourth installment of the matrix is, is the, the book has been out since 2010,
eight years selling around the entire globe and that's matrix four.
And I know you guys have seen it on amazon.com and of course my website, matrix terminator.com.
And so that movie is going to be coming soon.
I have some people on the table for one of brothers offered me $30 million for the script.
What?
And this billionaire came along and he updated five more million with just $35 million which
is on the table right now.
Check your math.
That's a lot of money.
That's a lot of money for some context.
Michael Crichton got paid $1.5 million plus a cut of the gross profit for writing the
screenplay for Jurassic Park, which they already knew ahead of time, this is going to be fucking
huge.
Yeah.
So that's even considered like a big payday.
Yeah.
No, his, the cut of the gross profit there now, did he get points on the back end?
Probably.
That's the question.
I think he did, but based on the deal, but, but that, they never would have paid him $30
million up front.
Oh, good God.
No, $30 million is approximately 10 times as much as anyone has ever paid for a spec
script.
And the examples of folks who have paid $3 million for such a thing are generally stories
of Hollywood's big mistakes.
There's literally zero chance that anyone has offered Sophia 30 million or $35 million.
That anybody who has any awareness of how movies are made knows that that is way beyond
the possibility, even if it's the biggest blockbuster ever matrix four, even so, even
so.
And you know how the, you know how the third one set up that cliffhanger ending that we
were all waiting to find out what matrix four would be like when they died.
Yeah.
Remember that?
Remember when matrix four was resolution?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Matrix four.
Yeah.
Now I want to read matrix four.
I want to read this matrix four.
I really wanted to before this episode, but I was like, I don't think I'm not paying for
this.
It's like 30 bucks for an ebook of it.
I'm like, of course, a little much.
That's the 30 million dollars of buying a book, perhaps a good, a good book, uh, ebook.
So all that, all that other stuff aside, she won her court case.
That's cool.
I'm really thrilled for her fourth anniversary of that.
That's awesome.
So now she owns the matrix and terminators.
There's a fourth one coming out.
The only thing I find really suspicious at this point is that 30 million dollar figure.
Yes.
That's impossible.
That is impossible.
You know how, like if you look at a movie's budget, that's absurd.
It's just absurd.
Yeah.
So, um, no, but I mean, come on, everybody in the world is hankering for a matrix four.
It's true.
That's everybody.
Again, name one person who doesn't want to see matrix four.
Me?
Oh, I'm fine where it is.
I even don't even, I don't even think that, uh, the second two were as bad as I thought
before.
Like when, when I saw them in theaters, I thought they were terrible, but I, I watched
them not too long ago.
A couple of years ago, I was like, I would check back in on this.
I didn't think they were nearly as bad as I thought when I was a kid.
They're not as bad as you think.
No.
I think they tell, they tell a fine story.
Maybe took a little too long to do it.
Maybe some parts were superfluous as hell, but, you know, and some stylistic choices I
thought were clunky.
I mean, I mean the next, I think the Wachowsky sisters next movie was a, was a speed racer.
I think so.
And then my favorite movie of all time, cloud atlas.
That movie is unwatchable.
How dare you.
It is literally unwatchable.
How dare you.
I have never finished that movie.
Well, let me give another shot.
Okay.
I don't know.
I don't think it's a good movie, but I did love it.
I thought it was really.
All right.
Who cares?
The book's better, but be that as it may.
So we've got the lay of the land here.
Yes.
Basically.
Yes.
She is a liar.
But I don't know why you're saying that.
I mean, she's embellishing this figure of 30 million for sure, but you have no reason
to call her a liar.
It's entirely possible that all of her legitimate mentors died.
It's possible.
Yeah.
And she, maybe she missed the decimal point or something.
Someone offered her 3 million.
Right.
Right.
Any of these things are possible.
You're very early on calling her a liar.
I see, because there's a lot of people out there that think that she doesn't own the
Matrix and Terminator movies.
And actually there's some articles about that online and Carrie asks her about that in this
next clip.
Why is it that some articles, there was one in 2013 who was saying that some reason that
they, they said that your court case wasn't settled.
Was that because it hadn't settled yet at that point?
Yes.
2013 article is, it was before I won the court case because what I needed to do in second
court case was, which was never done in the first court case was to enter in my copyright,
the internet, the derivative movie, and to enter in the copyright to the derivative
movie.
Right.
The copyright to the original movie because I'm the creator and two federal judges, the
magistrate judge, Evelyn J. Farr, and of course federal judge, Dee Benson, and their rulings
validated it as a fact that the movie, the derivative movie came from my third eye Matrix
script and book.
That's validated as a fact.
I can send the document over to anyone who want to dispute it.
Preemptively defensive is not a good way to live.
Reading and hearing about is the snoop, the snoop, something that's been carrying old
news on the internet every since 2005 when my case got dismissed in California.
The defendants, one of the brothers, Gail and her, James Cameron, Andy and Larry Wachowski,
the 22nd true fox and all of these defendants, they never won that case.
A lot of them terminated out before the judges ruling because they were scared of the Rico
going to jail.
Ooh.
What?
So you cannot go to jail in a civil course.
You can.
You invoke the Rico act.
You can't invoke Rico on.
This is racketeering, my friends.
How is it racketeering?
Because Joel Silver, Warner Brothers, the Wachowskis, they all got together and formed a criminal
syndicate in order to rip off Sophia Stewart, the rightful owner of The Matrix and Terminator
movies.
Also throw James Cameron in there and a couple of other people who have no idea who the fuck
they are.
You know what?
Let's throw Joel Schumacher in there.
That guy needs to go down.
Whoever directed that Sarah Connor TV show, throw them in there too.
Everybody's going down because they're a criminal syndicate.
That's where the Rico act comes in.
And that's why they tricked everybody into voting Arnold as governor so he could sweep
this all under the rug.
I'm sure that's.
He's already given a pardon to all of these, a preemptive pardon.
Right.
I'm sure that's a piece of this that we just don't have time to get into and neither did
Sophia.
I'm going to assume that's a piece of it, but the Rico act is one of those things that
like you often hear these people who are making these audacious claims, they invoke
racketeering often Alex shows around, racketeering Rico stuff all the time whenever he's sort
of running out of steam.
It was in the dark night.
And now you hear the Rico act is what the Wachowskis and Warner Brothers were afraid
of, which is why they terminated out of the original.
Oh, no, I got it.
Lawsuit.
I don't terminate it out.
I don't get it.
I don't get how.
You know the terminating.
I don't get how someone who is being sued can do that without settling.
Oh, no, no, no.
They just say, no.
No, thank you.
No, thanks.
I don't want to be sued today.
I don't want to be sued today.
I don't feel like being sued.
No, Sue's.
Excuse me, sir.
You know, no, Sue's me.
You know,
Sophia, I believe you forgot that we called no tagbacks.
Yeah.
So sorry.
But look, I don't think that may, I don't think that her version of that is necessarily
accurate.
I don't think that case, you know, who knows?
Who knows?
Man, when we get to the reveal of how this court case actually go down, I think we're
all waiting with bated breath.
This is, this is fucking ratcheting up tension, Dan.
So what you don't understand, Jordan, you might be thinking like, why are these two
things connected?
These two IPs, these intellectual properties, the matrix and terminator, why are they connected?
Right.
And Sophia explains that they're all the same story.
So why don't you tell people how it is you came to write, first of all, the matrix and
because I think that's the first one that came forward and then the terminator series.
No, no, the terminator actually came first and terminator and matrix is one epic story
is past, present, and future time travel.
Oh, I get it.
The matrix is the future, terminator is the beginning of the epic story and Sarah Conner
is really Neo's mother.
Why?
Because it's past and future time.
What I wrote was the second coming of the Christ, the evolution of consciousness, man
versus the machine.
In other words, the machines here, the awful prophecy that a baby is going to be born that's
going to grow up to destroy them in the future.
That's actually me.
So the terminators are coming to kill Sarah Conner.
But they're time traveling, necking without shame because they look just like we look,
wrapped in flesh, killed but cannot be killed.
Nice.
They're looking for Sarah Conner just to kill her so the baby Neo will never be born.
Right.
So JC John Conner, JC, JC John Conner, Jesus Christ goes up to be Neo, one and the same
in the matrix.
Not in Terminator 2 he doesn't.
Terminator was made October the 26th, 1984 and my copywriter 1981, 83 and 84.
My copywriter came way before the movie and all they did was adapt my script and my book
to the screen and created the three terminators immediately.
And then in 1999, March the 31st, the release of The Matrix, that's when they created The
Matrix trilogy.
One thing that's important to consider is that Terminator came out in 1984 but that doesn't
mean that that's when it began development or anything like that.
It actually takes a while to make movies.
Especially a movie like that in the early 80s.
The idea that it, I mean it took at least a year and a half to make that movie.
Oh, just the editing process alone.
Right, right.
And you can actually look into the history of how the Terminator movie got made and it
took a while.
Yeah.
It took a while.
People didn't have much faith in the idea.
No, they were like, that dude can't even speak English.
There's no way this is going to work out.
All I'll say right now is I guarantee the producers of the Terminator were like, well, I'll tell
you what, this man's never going to be governor of California.
I do like the story though that she's telling.
Like, like you responded to the idea of like, I want to see.
No, crossover Terminator Matrix fucking.
Look, I saw Alien versus Predator that fucking suck.
But Matrix versus Terminator fuck yes.
Well, you know, the reason that those two are pretty similar spiritually is because
they both pull on very old archetypes.
I was going to say.
The two, the two movies do sort of blend together when you want them to.
If you want to tell them as one story, you can because they both use sort of savior archetypes.
They both pull on the same man versus technology sort of fears that humanity has had since we
started making robots and technology.
Since we started making fire.
We had electricity.
Yeah.
So that's why those things could come together and it is appealing.
It is appealing.
The idea of like, let's fucking throw them together.
Oh, hell yeah.
It works.
I'm going to say this.
You know, you can do some research and you can find that this Sophia Stewart did have
a trademark or a copyright registered from February 1983 on her book, Third Eye.
Did you just mail it to herself?
Nope.
It is through the US Library of Congress copyright office.
All right.
It is, you know, it's a legit thing.
She did copyright Third Eye.
Was it published?
It is listed here as the entire text.
I believe when it is, give me a second here.
It's six pages long, I believe.
It's a short story.
Yeah.
It's a manuscript treatment.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's a manuscript.
And it's a manuscript treatment that she shopped around.
And if it's only six pages long, I'm going to guess it was not actually published.
You can't say, well, I mean, it did, it was eventually a book.
I'm not sure the exact year that she put out a book, but Third Eye is what she's basing
a lot of this on.
Right.
And you can't take away that it was in 1983, presumably a year before Terminator came
out.
There is a copyright that she has on file for this Third Eye treatment that she has.
So.
She wrote the Terminator.
She officially has more evidence on her side than any other guest in Project Camelot History.
That is true.
That actually is true.
There is something in the U.S. Copyright Office.
That is true.
We've never had anybody with actual government records.
So that alone, I think, leads us to have to, like, let's treat this with a little bit of...
Let's look into it.
Yeah.
We gotta look into it.
We gotta look into it.
Maybe she fucking owns the Matrix.
Yeah.
But you know what?
We never know because the media is covering it up.
And Joel Schumacher just terminated the lawsuit.
Mm-hmm.
You know, every time I've won four years ago, they've been covering it up in the media.
You know, I'm on the cover of a couple of magazines.
I've done over 4,000 media interviews.
None stopped.
Since ABC, Disney broke my story, October the 17th, 2003.
Sure, no lot of dates.
People do know about me globally around the world, but they have covered up the stories
that I've won.
And that's horrible because people, my fans, they call me.
They text me.
They email me.
They're on all the social networks.
And this is terrible.
You know, very terrible for them to cover up this news.
Rico!
Because everyone has the right to know that I've won and that I'm the creator and that
I own the Matrix and Terminator.
Everyone deserves to know that.
Everyone deserves to know it.
Yeah.
Actually, everyone, didn't she say everyone has the right to know it?
Yeah.
Where, where was that laid down?
That was in the bill of rights.
It's in there.
Which was actually sent to Disney for $30 million.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
So, um, so far so good.
I don't know.
Everybody has the right.
Yeah.
So this lawsuit that she's finished in 2014.
Yeah.
You might be asking yourself.
Which is a very specific date that she really, really likes.
You might be asking yourself, all right, she won this fucking case.
I bet she's loaded as fuck.
Hmm.
So we find out in this next clip if she won any money in that lawsuit.
What I'd like to know is whether or not you, in your, you're winning your case, whether
you were awarded any money to kind of keep you going.
Well, I was awarded almost a half a million dollars for attorney fees and three point
five billion dollars and leans on all of their properties.
Because what happened was I had three CPAs that come in and validate that they owed me
four point seven billion dollars.
These three CPAs are certified public accountants.
Their testimony is worth $25,000 each.
But they get three at $75,000 expert witnesses and they validate that they, that I was owed
four point seven billion.
Okay.
So four point seven billion is a lot.
Four point seven.
That is JK Rowling money right there.
Four point seven billion dollars.
And she's got leans.
She owns everything.
She's got leans.
She doesn't just own the matrix and the Terminator.
She can own any fridge.
She owns Warner Brothers.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She basically owns Warner Brothers.
She could.
No, she does.
She does.
She has leans on them, man.
Oh, okay.
She put leans on them.
All right.
Well, there's no way they can afford to pay those, pay those back.
So the, I assume the bank has foreclosed on Warner Brothers.
Absolutely.
And the court has awarded her the property rights.
She now owns Disney and now owns Marvel.
Yeah.
Oh, shit.
All the dominoes have fallen.
She owns every movie.
Holy shit.
What if the Iron Man shows up in the matrix four?
In the Terminator matrix Iron Man.
Exactly.
The possibilities are endless.
Oh, it not stopped.
So in this next clip, she gets into what happened in that case.
Okay.
Now none of the defendants ever showed up in the court.
It was a kind of like a double whammy.
I was getting the four law firms at the same time that had sabotaged my California case.
There was supposed to have been on my side, but they were paid by Warner Brothers and
these other defendants to sabotage me and to keep me from getting the evidence.
Listen to all of y'all.
It's a sabotage.
She owns that time now too.
She owns the Matrix and Terminator and the FBI and the DOJ's validations of the theft.
But I was able to do that in my second court case in Utah federal court from 2007.
It lasted seven years to September the 25th, 2014.
I'll say that in that Utah case, the defendant, one of them didn't show up cause he was dead
at the time, but the-
That actually was one of her mentors too though.
I don't think so.
That guy, honestly, when we get down to it, that guy did her dirty.
Oh no!
What?
The guy who died actually did fuck her over?
A little bit, yeah.
Holy shit.
This is a complicated tale.
We have two more clips and then I'll explain everything.
I've been trying to pretend that she has a good point and it's just-
Why are you doing this to me?
Cause I thought it would be fun as an-
It is fun!
Anyway.
I'm having a great time.
The sense of anticipation is unreal.
At this point, all we really know is that the courts have decided that she owns the Matrix and Terminator movies.
And is owed 4.7 billion.
4.7 billion dollars.
Billion dollars.
And that leads us to this revelation.
Alright, but where did you saying that you sort of had a lean on, as you called it, I think, on certain individuals?
Well, yeah, I got 3.5 billion dollars in leans.
Like, I own all of their properties.
And all I have to do is perform a debtors exam where they have to come and open up their books and show how much money that they have to pay in order for their properties.
You know, to either pay the money or to get their properties back or I can actually, after the debtors exam, sell the properties.
It's been 4 years and she is using the present tense.
Are you talking about whose property?
Warner Brothers or the individuals?
Yeah, I leans up Warner Brothers' property.
I leans up James Cameron's property.
Hell yeah.
Galen Hurd, Andy and Lyle Wachowski.
In fact, I can send you over the leans after the show.
And you can actually see the property that I leans up.
Please don't see what's all entered into the courts and the judge did not kick out the leans.
So the leans are good.
Leans are good.
So you're asking a very...
This has such a sovereign citizen.
Oh yeah.
The courts didn't stop me.
So now I have leans.
You can introduce anything you want into court.
It's strange that you can do that.
And it's not like the court has a responsibility to be like, this is bullshit.
Yeah.
Cut this out.
But anyway, she has leans on billions of dollars of property on the Warner Brothers,
the Wachowskis, James Cameron.
Open up your books, James Cameron.
I don't know if you can afford this $3.5 million.
Billion.
Oh, so wait, wait.
She has...
It's $3.5 billion in leans.
No, no, no.
She has $4.7 million.
No, no, no.
That's what she should have been owed.
But she only has leans for $3.5 billion.
She said billion?
I thought she said million.
No, sir.
Oh.
$3.5 billion.
I really don't think she's going to win this.
I really don't think she's going to take this one down.
So you brought up a really interesting point there.
And you said she's talking about it in the present tense.
She has these leans.
Yes.
Because she's explaining that all she has to do is do a debtor's exam or whatever.
Exactly.
All you got to do.
So you might ask yourself, why hasn't she done that yet?
Okay.
Fair enough.
But how long have you had the leans?
The leans are good indefinitely.
I've had the leans since for four years.
All right.
Four years.
Yeah.
Why have you not acted on that in particular?
Do you know?
Good question.
Yeah, because debtor's exams cost a lot of money.
I see.
And so a lot of people don't know that debtor's exams cost money when you do a debtor's exam.
So it costs money to collect.
See, the IRS, when they collect on your leans, the IRS, they got all this money.
They got all this power.
They got all these lawyers working for them.
And this is where I broke.
This is where I said, no way.
This can't, this is not true anymore.
Because if she had all these billions of dollars of leans and it was real, anybody would stake her.
Oh, yeah.
Anybody would be like, I will pay.
Oh, of course.
I will pay for this debtor's exam.
You give me a million on the back end and we're good.
Now you get billions of dollars.
Yeah.
Justice is served.
I get a million.
Yeah.
I'm not even going to be greedy.
I'm not even going to be like, give me 300 million of your 4.7 billion dollars.
Right, right, right.
Give me, like, give me, look, I'm going to charge more than I normally do hourly.
Yeah.
But hey, 4.7 billion.
I'm going to, I'm going to jump in.
Venture capitalists or seedy individuals would be banging down her door.
Absolutely.
To pay for that fucking exam.
Elon Musk couldn't even afford to be leaned against like this.
And he's going to wait.
Is he doing well or no?
He's settled, but is he going to, he's got to lose, right?
So this is, this is where things get kind of interesting.
What do you want to know about first?
Do you want to know about her copyrights that she has?
Or do you want to know about these court cases?
Oh, you know what?
First thing I want to know, is she actually a published author?
Probably.
Yeah.
I mean, she did write this fourth matrix.
I apologize.
Self published.
Is she a self published?
Most likely.
Yeah.
Like, did Simon and Schuster knocked down her door saying,
I don't think we got to have the fourth matrix.
I don't think so.
Okay.
But they could be part of this Rico.
Oh, that's true.
They could be.
So I'll just start with the court case.
Okay.
So what's important to know here is that if you look into this case and with
the situation with Sophia Stewart, you find that there's two court cases.
Yes.
That she's conflating a little bit and she's doing that intentionally.
The one in California and the one in Utah.
That's the first case, the California case.
Yes.
In this case, Stewart tried to shoot, she tried to shoot the moon.
She filed a lawsuit against the Wachowski siblings, Joel Silver, Warner Brothers,
and 20th Century Fox, claiming that the matrix and Terminator movies were based on
her book, The Third Eye.
In June, 2005, the case was dismissed when Sophia Stewart failed to appear at the
preliminary hearing for her case.
In the court's ruling, Judge Margaret Morrow of the Central District Court of
California dismissed the suit, saying Stewart and her attorneys had not entered
any evidence to bolster its key claims or demonstrated any striking similarity
between her work and the accused director's films.
Yeah.
If you're going to sue somebody, it seems like you really want to show up to court
that day considering it's like a big deal.
Indeed.
So at that point, her case was closed.
Of course.
The California case is open and shut like that.
Easy.
Now the Utah case starts on August 1st, 2007 when Sophia Stewart sued a whole
bunch of people.
Many of them are named as John Doe's, like anonymous people she's suing in court.
The named individuals were people who were involved in her legal team for her
California case.
She sued Michael Stolar, Jonathan Lubel, Dean Weber, and Gary Brown.
The court dismissed the cases against Stolar, Weber, and Brown and said that she
couldn't sue a bunch of anonymous unnamed people, which left Jonathan Lubel as the
sole defendant in the Utah case.
Well, all those people terminated by not being named.
She sued for breach of contract.
You can't sue an unnamed person.
You can.
It's a mysterious lawsuit.
What?
That's why it was thrown out.
How can you sue an unnamed person?
So she was suing for breach of contract, breach of covenant of good faith and fair
dealing, malpractice, civil conspiracy, fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, and conversion.
Sounds right.
According to court documents, Sophia was acting as her own attorney in the California
case when, quote, sometime around July 2004, Jonathan Lubel contacted Miss Stewart at
her home in Utah to deliver his services as an attorney with respect to the
California action.
Mr. Lubel spoke with Miss Stewart over the phone from her home in Utah and sent a
written fee arrangement to Miss Stewart's home in Utah, where she executed the
agreement and paid a retainer fee.
He is not a real lawyer.
Mr. Lubel held himself out as an expert and stated he would assemble a competent
legal team to assist with the case, representations upon which Miss Stewart
relied.
The other named men, Brown, Weber, and Stoller were lawyers that he brought in,
and that's why the charges against them were dismissed because they were...
He wasn't the guy.
They were mere accessories of Lubel's inaction.
Yeah.
So Lubel was a horrible lawyer and failed to prosecute Sophia's case in a
competent manner.
It kind of wouldn't have mattered in the end because she was never going to win that
case.
No, of course not.
She was an attorney, and as a result of her losing the California case, Sophia was
ordered to pay the California defendant's attorney's fees on legal costs.
Oh, of course.
Which, if you can imagine, that was a huge bill.
Yeah.
She's suing Warner Brothers, the Wachowski Brothers siblings, Joel Silver, 20th
Century Fox.
That is a steep fucking bill.
They got some serious lawyers' fee racked up.
So because of Lubel being a terrible attorney in that case and getting it thrown out with
prejudice, she ended up being charged the opposite side's legal fees.
She got charged $4.7 billion.
In the Utah trial, the court did find that Lubel, though at this point deceased, was
still guilty of having wronged Sophia.
And they found, quote, Miss Stewart's malpractice claims, breach of contract, breach of
fiduciary duty and negligence, entitle her to damages stemming from the money she
paid under the contract, and the attorney's fees and costs awarded against her in the
California action and lost damages, if any, based on the underlying California copyright
case.
If any is a super important piece of words there.
Okay.
So had she and her lawyers shown up and had they won the case or were she to sue again
and found to be entitled to damages, then she would be owed those.
Right?
Well, but that what we're saying.
Well, that would be in a whole nother case.
The thing.
Okay.
So if you read that, what it's saying is that she's entitled to the money that she
paid him as a lawyer.
Yes.
The lost amount that she had because of the attorney's fees that she was charged because
of the resolution of the case.
Yeah.
And then lost damages, if any, based on the underlying California copyright case, which
were zero.
She would be owed that $4.7 billion, but the if any is in there.
And that's important.
And the if any is zero.
Well, yeah.
So Sophia won damages in the amount of $305,000, $930, $362, which is the amount she was sentenced
to pay for the attorney's fees in the California case.
Right.
This isn't a win as much as it is a shifting of blame off her and onto Lubell.
Right.
This lawyer who did her dirty.
Interestingly, the only place leans come up in this court document or in relation to
how the defendants in the California case had leans on her in three states prior to
the judgment, which were then released after this verdict.
Of course.
So that's probably what she's talking about there.
As for this case affirming that she owns the matrix, quote, Ms. Stewart's seeks approximately
$15 billion of damages in this case, stemming from her 15 billion.
Yep.
It's in the document.
She shot them.
She shot the moon so hard the game of hearts should sue her.
This is like, I'm reading straight from the court.
Yeah.
So she was seeking 15 billion in damages in the case stemming from her attorney's failures
in the California copyright case.
Ms. Stewart submitted documents and presented expert witness testimony to support this award.
One of these documents consists of a response from a Time Warner entertainment company lawyer
to a patented trademark office action.
The exhibit also includes IMDb printouts with gross profit figures and budget estimates for
various Terminator movies.
Well, I'm glad she printed it out.
Lastly, Ms. Stewart includes a message from an unattributed email address stating sales
figures for various matrix movies and spin offs estimating a quote total of over 2.3
billion.
Ms. Stewart also elicited testimony from witnesses, Art Tashima, a friend and CPA.
Catherine Katie Rini, a friend and licensed financial representative, and Jeffrey Castellone,
an investment professional.
In addition to her own testimony, the court finds Ms. Stewart may not recover damages
on this basis.
Thus, even assuming the merits of the underlying claim, the California defendants would have
been able to establish deductible expenses and the profit not attributable to Ms. Stewart's
protected works.
Without question, the California defendants incurred deductible expenses in making the
Terminator in matrix movies.
The gross revenue numbers Ms. Stewart provides therefore do not constitute a proper measure
of damages in the case as she would not have recovered that much even if her lawyers had
not committed malpractice.
Yeah, of course.
The court therefore recommends the district court award Ms. Stewart nothing.
In the order adopting and re...
So that's clear.
It's nothing.
The answer is zero.
Zero.
Zero out of 15 billion.
Yes.
In the order adopting this report and its recommendations, they lay out that she's entitled to just over
$300,000 in damages for her lawyer's malfeasance.
But the document ends by pointing out that, quote, Ms. Stewart has objected to this damages
amount and asserts that she's entitled to damages connected to the profits of the Terminator
in matrix movie trilogies.
For reasons stated in the report and recommendations, her objection is overruled.
So those are the two cases that she has.
And all these documents she has up on her website that actually disprove her own claims,
I don't know why she has...
That's a weird thing to do.
Don't know why.
It's a weird thing to do.
Yeah.
I found them on her website and in other sources.
So like, I can say that they're not like doctored or anything.
See, I think she's doing the Apple terms and conditions gambit where it's like, I'm gonna
put these up here.
Nobody's actually gonna read this shit.
So I'm just gonna claim it says what I wanted to say because nobody's actually gonna read
this shit.
Yeah.
So the other thing is she does have a bunch of copyrights.
She has filed a bunch of certificates of copyright that she has up on her website, truthaboutmatrix.com.
She's posted some screenshots of these certificates of registration with the U.S. Copyright Office
that she asserts her proof that she won her court case.
But this is absurd.
The first problem is that these copyrights are largely for things that are not contested.
For instance, she placed a copyright in 2013 for a screenplay titled Terminator 5 The Hologram
Clones.
I love it.
This is not proof that she created Terminator, nor is it even proof that she wrote a screenplay
called Terminator 5 The Hologram Clones.
Did you?
Well, she posted the screenplay up, I assume.
No, I couldn't find that.
Oh, she didn't post the screenplay?
Doesn't want to get that stolen.
Oh, that's a good point.
Copyrights and patents are an area of law where fraud is rampant.
If I have an idea for something, I could get a patent for it without ever making it.
Yeah.
There was the patent troll literally for podcasts.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A couple of years back.
And then the same thing with copyrights.
If I have a manuscript that I'm claiming to have written, I can get it copyrighted.
And all that is is copyrighting that specific thing.
Yeah, it seems kind of important to prove that it was stolen.
So one thing that threw me for a huge loop is that one of the things that Sophia has
a certificate of copyright for is the Animatrix.
Her certificate is from 2013, though the Animatrix shorts were released in 2003.
I was going to say, didn't the Animatrix came between the first movie and the second
movie?
Right.
And it explains some of the lingering plot details that the second movie just kind of
didn't even bother with.
I thought this was really strange and clearly this wouldn't fly.
The producers of the Animatrix would have had a copyright on their works.
But then I noticed that this copyright was specifically for an artwork, whereas the rest
of the copyrights she claimed to have were for screenplays and scripts.
She most likely got a copyright for a work of art she made called the Animatrix that
doesn't violate the existing copyright that the producers have for the film's Animatrix,
as they would be in a separate category of copyright.
Right.
Sophia has a certificate of copyright for Enter the Matrix.
Right.
But it's for a work described as text.
Enter the Matrix is a video game, so they would have a completely different copyright
over that existing property.
Of course.
So she has these things that, what it appears to me is that Sophia is doing, what she's
doing is filing totally fair copyrights to the works that she's created, like Terminator
5, The Hologram Clones, or the fourth Matrix book that she's written, then asserting copyright
claims to existing names of intellectual properties under different categories, knowing
that the appearance of having a copyright with the name Animatrix will trick most people
into thinking that she did, in fact, win her court case.
This theory is sort of elevated by her writing in all caps on her website, quote,
Sophia Stewart has won the copyrights to the Matrix and Terminator movie franchises.
The government has settled the matter.
The Enter the Matrix copyright proves that the trademark with the same name is owned
by Sophia Stewart.
Hmm.
All the shell game.
Wow.
All of this is kind of moot, though, because according to the government copyright office,
quote, copyright does not protect ideas, concepts, systems, or methods of doing something.
You may express your ideas in writing or drawings and claim copyright to your description, but
be aware that copyright will not protect the idea itself as revealed in your written or
artistic work.
Copyrights are only for specific works that a person has created, not for vague ideas expressed
in one piece of writing that might be mirrored in another.
So she's also saying that she owns the Bible.
I mean, she'd have to be to some extent.
Yeah.
She's, she's saying that she owns the hero's journey as a concept.
I mean, it's that, it's that brash.
Yeah.
All right.
I like it.
I like it.
I, again, the, she has plated balls with chrome.
There's no doubt.
Yeah.
It's pretty wild.
Yeah.
And this interview gets wilder.
Okay.
So why did you do all this stuff in like 2000s?
I'm asking myself a lot of questions.
Terminator came out in 1984.
Why didn't she know that her work was ripped off back then?
It seems like she would automatically know since it was such a huge hit.
You know about the Matrix movies.
When did you realize that your, your stuff was stolen?
In other words, what was the process by which it was stolen?
Yeah.
I want people to realize it was never any battle or any fight or any warring going on.
And I went, I didn't go to the movies and 84 because I was pregnant and I was married.
Okay.
So I was not at that time.
Divorce him.
I wasn't in any movies.
But in March of 31st, 1999, I go and I see the Matrix and I recognize my work on the
screen and me being a paralegal, as I said, to be an attorney and a doctor, I called up
one of brother's legal department, plus I come from a military law enforcement family.
There it is.
So I know the law also.
That doesn't make sense.
So I called them up and they offered me $5 million for the copyrights, but the copyrights
are worth more than that because I was doing taxes when I was 11 years old, like H&R block.
I was getting paid by long people to do their taxes because they didn't understand how to
do taxes.
Just why H&R block was born.
But I was already an entrepreneur.
She also created H&R block.
What I've been doing also as a teenager, payroll, I was creating wrong people's paychecks.
And I scored a 98 on the IRF exam, which is nothing but pure math, so they wanted me
to come and work with them.
So I understood numbers.
That's why you see in the Matrix, the binary code for 1 and a 0, matrix and terminates
quantum physics, calculus, ancient sacred geometry.
Oh, that's why.
Why are we throwing in ancient sacred geometry?
Why not?
That answer was rambling enough.
We don't need to do that.
No, you got to throw it in.
Wait, did she just say that the reason that she knows she owns the matrix is because they
used binary?
No, no, no.
It's because she was an accountant.
At 11?
Yeah.
Doing people's taxes.
Isn't that illegal?
That's child labor.
I don't think it's just nothing.
I think it's kind of just spaghetti on the wall.
It is a lot.
I think when you boil it down, it's, okay, I was pregnant and I was married to a guy
who didn't want me watching movies in 1984.
Is he dead or did they divorce?
She says it in the past tense, so I assume something happened.
But now she's 99, you know, comes around, she's going to movies now.
Finally allowed to see movies.
Right.
Kids are 15 at that point.
I think women got the vote shortly after that too.
I think, isn't that how that worked?
I burnt their bras and got three movie tickets.
Yeah.
First thing you do, get the ability to watch movies, then you get the right to vote.
So she goes and sees the matrix and she's like, God darn it, I've been ripped off.
Of course.
I wrote six pages.
So then she calls a lawyer and the lawyer's like, here's $5 million.
It seems a little bit preemptive.
Yeah.
I don't think that happened at all.
So in this next clip, she just talks about how her work is copyrighted.
We already talked about that a little bit, so I'm going to skip it because Carrie asks
her like, okay, she was trying to get to that in this clip where she was saying, how
did you know you got ripped off?
What was the process?
And so now she tries to understand like, how did this start?
In other words, how did they get your work?
Where was your work?
Did you submit?
Because it kind of sounds like you didn't submit it to a film company.
It does kind of sound like that.
I was like, sent it over to 2015 Fox looking for George Lucas because when I saw Star Wars
and I didn't know that Star Wars was George Lucas.
You were not allowed to see movies back then.
I only saw that George Lucas was the director and I wanted him to direct my work because
I wanted him to set my words to Lucas because I saw a film credit that he was a true-to-be
Fox.
So I sent my scripted book to him at 20th Century Fox and Susan Medzbeck, who was Vice
President of Creative Affairs, she got hold of the script in the book and saw how valuable
it was commercially and she just stole it outright and brought it in Gail Anherd and
Cameron and all of these people and David Madden and Valerie Rae.
Okay, now that's-
They just don't pass it around.
Right, I appreciate that, but your name was on it, your copyright was on it.
How did you get it submitted over at Fox in those days?
Good question.
Back in 1981, there were no agents to receive anything.
Not true.
People were just receiving all kinds of stuff back in the day in 1980 and 81.
That's pretty ludicrous.
Wait, in 80 and 81, every studio had just like a, hey, unsolicited scripts, send them
on over.
Yeah, absolutely.
This is cockamamie because she in other places has claimed that the Wachowskis posted that
they wanted like submissions for science fiction stuff and that she sent her work into them.
Posted where?
I don't know, Craigslist?
What, in the classified ads?
No, there was no Craigslist in 81.
Something like that.
Who gives a shit?
What?
Who gives a shit?
If they don't, and look, if you don't have agents, you definitely don't have the internet
and you did have agents, it was going all the way back to the fucking fifties.
But I'm just saying that like that story is even different than the main story that she
tells of the Wachowskis getting the text and that's where it rolled from.
She sent it to 20th Century Fox because she was hoping George Lucas, famed director.
The only George Lucas who directed what, like three movies, but he only directed the first
Star Wars, right?
Yeah.
He directed the first Star Wars.
77.
Yeah.
He did until 1981 or 1983.
So four years after Star Wars.
She got it.
She had it.
Look, she, hold on.
I don't know why she didn't reference American graffiti because that's probably his best
director.
When did Empire Strikes Back come out?
76.
No.
No.
It was 80 something.
I'm pretty sure it was in the 80s.
No.
Regardless, I think.
I know it was before agents were around.
Absolutely.
No agents.
No agents.
That's why Harrison Ford is broke.
Oh, this is a little tough.
It's a little tough.
It's a little tough.
There's red flags pretty much everywhere.
There's a few.
So I'll just say it.
Dude, genuinely at the start of this, you had me kind of convinced that there may have
been like some sort of case for her where it's like, oh, she did put together all of
these ideas.
Maybe they were stolen.
Well, it's one of those interesting things that if you go to her website, truthaboutmatrix.com,
there's.
Which is the 9-11 blogger of Truth About Matrix.
It might as well be.
Yeah.
There's an entire section that she has of her copyrights and it's interesting because
here she has her copyright for the Matrix 4 and at the date of it is July 20th, 2010.
Is it just Matrix 4?
She doesn't have a subtitle?
The Evolution Cracking the Genetic Codes.
That's the subtitle of Matrix 4?
Yep.
Oh boy, I don't want her helming the Matrix 4.
Also the nature of the work.
Nor do I want George Lucas anywhere near the Matrix 4.
The nature of the work is listed as movie treatment, synopsis, 4D movie attraction, and hologram
clones.
4D?
Hologram clones?
Listed as.
It's a 4D movie.
Listed as.
I'm back in.
New machines.
Just new machines.
Just a copyright on the hologram clones, which is a new machine.
This could be another copyright troll here.
All right.
But the interesting thing here is that was from 2010, but she claims that she wrote it
in 2000.
Right.
Which is fine, but legally there's no proof of that until this 2010 date.
You gotta mail it to yourself.
And it's the same thing with this stuff, like enter the Matrix.
This text that she has copyrighted is from 2015, but she claims the date of completion
was 1981.
Huh.
That's just based on her own reporting in this, basically an affidavit of copyright.
Well, she was a famously published author in 1981.
So I assume everybody can trust that she was writing so many fucking manuscripts and,
and screenplays that there's just no way that you couldn't kind of accept that there's
a benefit of the doubt there.
Right.
I don't think so.
I just don't.
Sorry.
I don't believe any of this, but it's interesting because on a recent episode that we didn't
go over the one where Kerry was talking about how like, Hey, you know, a lot of my people
have been brainwashed.
A lot of my sources brainwash and like, just because they lie doesn't mean they're liars,
that sort of thing.
I know another thing that she was really trying to stress is that like, just because
I have someone on doesn't mean I agree with them.
Because I'm trying to get to the bottom of stuff because I'm, I'm a journalist.
I'm an investigator.
Well, double.
Well, so because she's like, you know, Eddie Page can come on and we can have a conversation.
That doesn't mean I believe him.
She fucking believes him.
Oh, of course.
But that's why I just want to play this next clip to show that she's not just investigating.
She 100% believes Sophia.
No, it's kind of funny, you know, it's, it's, it's a lot of people have had this kind of
story stolen.
Okay.
And, but yours is one of the most outrageous sort of flagrant cases, I think.
Okay.
So you believe this is the most flagrant flagrant copyright violation.
She is.
Oh, well, how could it not be?
It would be the single largest court case in history.
If the Utah court were to award her $3.5 billion, I mean, it would be crazy.
I'm not going to go out on a limb here because the cloud Atlas never would have been made.
All I'm saying is I would guess they would try and appeal that.
Oh yeah.
They wouldn't just lose the case and be like, but 3.5 billion.
Oh no, we got leans.
At least we get to keep the other 11.5 billion that she wanted.
Well, the other thing to recognize, and this is something that comes up in that court case
is that like at the end of the day, even though the matrix is a massively successful franchise,
that doesn't mean that it made a lot of money.
It doesn't necessarily mean because of all the money that went into it, right?
There is still a decent chance that they barely broke even.
No, they, they made a lot of money.
Well, I don't know all the specifics, but you always assume that like, oh, you made
80 million at the box office.
You might have paid 80 million to make the movie.
No, no, no, for sure.
But the matrix, the matrix monies, the matrix money was, was big money, but also you got
to consider too that a lot of the times when people talk about budget stuff, like the budget
figures that are included on like IMDB and stuff like that often don't include advertising
budget.
Right.
They often don't include a lot of extra expenses that are on there.
Right.
I'm not saying that necessarily these movies didn't make money, but the figures that you
assume about them, the 15 billion and stuff like that is probably grossly exaggerate.
Oh, of course.
Well, the matrix was a fairly low budget and it had very little advertising behind it,
which is why everybody was surprised that it became such a huge hit.
Right.
So at the very least, the first matrix has been wildly popular.
Yeah.
And then you got to figure, like, yeah, I know you got to have the advertising costs in there,
but you got to figure merchandising.
You got to figure all of this other stuff.
But a lot of that also has expenses that go along with it and a lot of the merchandising
stuff ends up making money for like Tyco, the toy companies and stuff like that.
That's true.
So there's a lot of hands in that pot that aren't necessarily all going to the Wachowskis
or Warner Brothers.
Well, what they are doing is going to Sophia is what they are doing.
They are.
The reality of filmmaking and all this stuff is a lot more complicated and less enticing
than people like Sophia want to make it appear.
Right.
Now, the other thing you got to consider is that Sophia Stewart is far from the only
person to sue Warner Brothers and Joel Silver claiming that they stole the idea of the matrix
from them.
There's a certain fanaticism that's inspired by movies like the matrix and a lot of people
want to take ownership for having created it.
One such fellow litigant was a guy named Thomas Althaus who claimed that his screenplay,
The Immortals, had 119 similarities with the matrix.
119?
Yeah, man.
That's a lot.
That's not even, they weren't even 119 pages in the matrix.
No, they're not.
A lot of just repeating flip, flip, jump.
So this case went to court and the judge ruled against him, which seems fair, given this
plot synopsis for The Immortals, quote, Althaus's film follows a CIA agent who takes a drug
that makes him immortal.
Jim Reese finds himself in the year 2235.
Case dismissed.
Excuse me.
Case dismissed, sir.
Jim Reese finds himself in the year 2235 AD battling to wreck the plot of Adolf Hitler's
son to wipe out all non-immortals.
I find in favor of the defendant, please excuse this, sir.
I would like you to pay the defendant's court cost.
Frankly, I want you to pay the cost of me being here to death.
Substantively different plot than the matrix.
Althaus's main argument was that the Christ-like nature of Neo was similar to the Christ-like
part of his main character.
It's similar to the Christ-like nature of Christ, which is the older thing.
To which Judge Klausner said, quote, illusions to Christianity and literature date back hundreds
of years and are not generally protectable.
Interestingly, Althaus has a very similar backstory to Stewart, in that they both claim
that they submitted their scripts to Warner Brothers, at which point Joel Silver stole
it and passed it on to the Wachowski siblings.
That fucking Joel Silver man.
This makes absolutely no sense, because before the Matrix, the Wachowskis were not the sort
of folks that movie companies would be committing crimes to bolster.
Before the Matrix, the only two movies they'd made were the forgettable movie, Assassins,
which boasts a 16% on Rotten Tomatoes, which the Wachowskis unsuccessfully tried to take
their name off of, claiming the co-writer, Brian Haglund, had essentially written out
all of their contributions to the movie and bound the sexy noir crime film starring Jennifer
Tilley and Gina Gershon that failed to make enough movie at the box office to even cover
the film's modest $4.5 million budget.
I want to see that.
I love Jennifer Tilley.
She's great.
She's great.
She's the wrong man with a, oh no, no, no.
It's got Dave Foley in it and Jennifer Tilley.
Don't care.
It is legitimately one of the funnier movies you'll ever see in your life.
The Wachowskis showed promise, but their first two outings did not produce the sort of response
where a studio would go out of their way to set them up to succeed.
They weren't like somebody, they weren't a team that was like, oh my God, we've got
to, we've got to fucking break the law for them.
It's absolutely ludicrous to assume that there would be this grand conspiracy in order to
get them these intellectual property that had been stolen based on the fact that their
first two movies didn't even really break even.
Frankly, and not to be insulting.
I still don't think they're a team that a studio would go out on a limb legally and
break a crime for.
Well, I mean crime, sure.
Or commit a crime for, but break a crime cloud out.
This is great.
All right.
So now the interview takes a bit of a turn.
Sophia is about to make a claim that I do not believe.
The FBI have told me that when they come in, they're going to arrest all of these people
because this is what that's for the copyrights to come in at some point, it'll be some kind
of task force because they got special task force to come in and do this type of work,
especially when it's a conflict of interest.
They got these special task force that they can send in, they'll make these arrests and
then you would only get restitution.
They told me because they stole copyrighted work.
It's a RICO.
It's a RICO offense.
That's really not what it is.
Nope.
It's not.
And the FBI is not going to arrest the Wachowskis.
What, what tech, what would the task force look like?
Like you got a SWAC team, right?
Everybody knows they are highly militarized, probably two militarized.
Special weapons and tech.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not good, right?
So your task force though for a fake RICO situation.
What do they look like?
I don't know.
Like just suits, man.
Just suits?
Just suits.
Just suits.
It's a normal FBI.
No, no.
You got to come in casual.
Yo.
You got to come in.
You got to come in like, like, oh, you got to come in like, hey, we're a bunch of tourists.
We just want to see Universal Studios.
And then bam, you're thinking of a RICO suave, unbuttoned shirts.
That's exactly what I'm thinking.
And a bandana.
That is the real crime here.
Yeah.
RICO suave.
So now we find out something that I think we all probably should have assumed about
Kerry long ago.
Because you know, I worked in Hollywood, right?
You know, I was an independent producer.
I actually wrote screenplays.
I tried to shop them around.
How did it go?
I met a lot of these players you talk about.
So as is the case with all of these people that we end up talking about, they all have
failed entertainment history.
It's weird.
It's really weird.
Kerry has a history in trying to sell films.
Why didn't Charles Manson just sue the Beach Boys?
Why not?
That would make more sense than, well, it wouldn't make as much sense.
You would lose.
Whereas with the cult, there's a better case than Sophia Stewart.
That's actually true.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So anyway, Kerry was trying to break into Hollywood.
It didn't work out because we're where we are now.
But here's what she wants you to know about her time in Hollywood.
I worked in, you know, pretty deep in at many years, but they never would let me in.
But I was quite psychic and I tapped into and heard a lot of gossip and whatnot.
So I know a lot of the stories back channel.
I can tell you that what went on with your screenplay, with your book and your writing,
some people knew.
That's dangerous.
That's a dangerous line to be taking with someone who is clearly a little delusional,
as Sophia Stewart clearly is.
You know, if she's willing to post these trans, like these court documents on her site that
prove that she's wrong, right, there's an element of delusion into what she's putting
out into the world.
Oh, absolutely.
And so now Kerry is saying that I worked in Hollywood.
I was in deep, not really in that deep, but I was psychic and I heard gossip.
Yeah, I really don't like that part.
That part is the part that bothers me.
What the psychic part of the gossip part, because they're both bad.
One the gossip.
Why do you gossip?
I heard gossip.
Say things to my face.
I heard gossip.
Second, if you are going to gossip, definitely don't gossip about a psychic person who can
fucking remote view you while you're doing it.
She's saying that she knows that the stuff that Sophia is saying are true because she's
psychic, which I just throw out whole cloth.
I just say, no, thank you.
And then the other part, the gossip part, I'm like, Oh, that sounds more real.
Yeah, that's what you're basing this on.
No, and it sounds gossip.
It sounds less like you were psychic and more like somebody was like, okay, I'm going to
be honest with you, Kerry.
It's kind of not going to happen for you.
I saw something on TMZ.
Yeah.
Hmm.
So, okay.
Now, now here's the thing, right?
This is the thing.
This is not far-fetched.
Like many ideas are stolen, maybe not entirely like everybody sends in scripts and all that.
Not everybody retains the rights to them.
Maybe somebody has an idea.
Somebody else writes a better script based off that idea.
And I mean, think about, think about our friends, people who do commercial auditions, right?
Sometimes you'll do a commercial audition and you'll have a great performance and they'll
be like, yeah, but we don't want you and what winds up happening is the guy they do choose
or the person they do choose, winds up doing an imitation of the performance that they
really liked.
I get it.
I get it.
It's tough.
But, Sophia.
I'd like to now redo some of her treatment for this third time.
Oh, God, no.
This is in the court documents.
Well, hold on.
Because you brought it here.
You brought it here.
If there's one thing I know, it's that she is a creative genius.
This is the...
I'm just going to quote.
The proposed science fiction film deals with Earth during the year 2110 AD.
By that time, Planet Earth had experienced horrible nuclear wars and a spiritual evolution
was underway.
Doing great.
Also, man was finally moving from the unconscious to conscious stages of spiritual development.
That seems like the reverse of what the matrix is, but fine.
Thus, it seemed apparent that the spirituality would soon prevail over technocracy and Earth
would have a lasting quote unquote piece.
Unfortunately, members of Earth's largest banking institutions and corporations secretly
banded together in a final effort to maintain the object worship of money as a permanent
way of life.
By controlling the mass media, the secret organization with the code name of Rothfellers...
Creative genius, Rothfellers.
That's a definition of clunky right there.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
So the Rothfellers...
I don't even say it anymore.
I can't even hear you say those words anymore.
So the Rothfellers...
What?
They convinced people on Earth to rebuild their weapons systems as a means to provide
money and jobs for everyone.
War began again even before the new weapons systems were finished and most of the population
abandoned the pursuit of spirituality and died in nuclear battles.
One of the major research and weapons system development organizations on Earth was headed
by the philosopher-scientist Ikan.
His organization was instrumental in building the Space Star, a huge vehicle shaped like
a pyramid designed for interplanetary warfare and space travel.
That actually sounds fun though.
Originally, the Space Star was supposed to be the flagship of Earth's space fleet and
it contained the most secret and highly advanced devices known at the time.
The Rothfellers commanded Ikan to use the Space Star as a vehicle for war against people
who resisted their tyranny.
Ikan accepted the assignment with some reluctance.
Just before beginning the assigned mission, Ikan personally experienced a spiritual happening
that began to manifest in the form of an eye.
After the happening, he said it aside as a simple hallucination and continued his organizational
tasks.
This doesn't sound anything like the Matrix.
That doesn't sound like anything at all.
Doesn't sound like anything.
It does not.
It sounds interesting-ish.
I said-ish.
Anyway.
I want to read the Matrix 4 still.
I know that's terrible, but you know what?
That's her earlier work, Dan.
Look, we can't all come out the gate throwing haymakers even if you are a prodigy, which
literally means you come out the gate throwing haymakers.
Quote, Queen Jaune is gorgeous and possesses the unique capability of changing the color
of her skin to reflect her inner emotions.
She's a mood ring.
She's a mood ring.
Unfortunately for Queen Jaune, she comes into intimate contact with Ikan's growing spirituality
that penetrates her machine-conditioned consciousness.
Whoa.
The intimate contact that penetrates?
Dan.
Sexy.
She falls in love with Ikan.
Oh, okay.
So yeah, of course.
At the last minute, Jaune helps Ikan and his people escape from sore, avoiding the oncoming
war fleet from Earth.
Ikan escapes, but the Rothfeller soldiers capture and hold Jaune as hostage for her
deceit.
Do you know what's really interesting?
I think she has a better case against, uh, who's the guy who did fifth element?
I don't remember.
Oh God.
Why can't I remember?
Yeah.
I know.
Luke Basson.
She has a better case against Luke Basson.
Yeah.
There's an argument to be made.
Yeah.
I'm scanning through this and I don't think at anything, uh, no, nothing reminds me of
the Matrix so far.
So there's a, there's a bit of a fight between them and then quote, was it Kung Fu followers
of Ikan board the space star and fight their way into Earth combat or Earth orbit Kung
Fu.
They descend to Earth amid cheers of the multitudes now affected by powers of the third
eye within Ikan.
Wait, they, he, he did them all.
The Rothfellers are defeated and peace is proclaimed.
So that's the exact opposite.
That's really nothing like the Matrix.
I don't see any similarities in this thing except for maybe there's a ship.
I mean, there's a ship in the Matrix to the Nebuchadnezzar and then maybe, but that's
not a spaceship.
And you could, you could make sort of a flimsy argument that, uh, you know, it's, it's spiritual
in nature, like the, uh, the stuff in the Matrix, like what Morpheus is trying to impart
a spiritual in nature when it's really not.
It's more, it's more of a user manual kind of.
So it's not really a spiritual awakening that Neo goes through.
It might be presented as such.
And if you want to interpret it that way, you can, but it's really not.
No, it's anything, but it's very concrete.
Yeah.
It's ending.
I mean, it's, in fact, it's rooted in as, as though that spiritualism itself is a function
of reality as opposed to the, the, the trick, the trick that's being played.
Yeah.
I don't know, man.
Uh, her, her screenplay and her pitch don't sound anything similar to this.
No, those, that's not good.
Uh, but she's mad at some judges.
Sophia is and she, well, let's be honest.
We all are mad at some judges.
That's fair.
But that's, that's just life.
But in this next clip, she might slander one and I went in there by the grace of God and
I did pray to God and he told me what to write and I wrote that she, and I didn't know she
was the, she had prostituted her way to becoming a judge and to a attorney named Larry Long
called me up with a witness on the phone and he was laughing and he was reading the legal
briefs and he asked me, how did you know?
I said, what?
He said, how did you know she was the chief prosecutor because she sucked my Johnson.
He sucked away to the top.
I told him God told me and I wrote it in a legal brief.
Whoa.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
That's crazy.
She wrote a legal brief saying my judge is a whore.
She sucked her way to the top.
That is not good.
With no evidence.
God just told her that was like, oh boy.
See, now here's the other thing.
I'm starting to think that she stole the copyright from God and God, it should be awarded damages.
Interesting.
That's, that's my position here.
I feel like there's no way to me that out in court.
Also, you really shouldn't put that in your court briefs.
No.
I'm, I'm, look, I don't know a lot about judges, but I'm going to guess they are immediately
going to be far more hostile to your case.
It might prejudice the court where you to say, by the way, no matter what you do, I
invalidate this judgment because you blew a lot of guys to get here.
And I have no evidence of that.
I would like to put into court my prayers.
A voice I have decided is God.
You suck a lot of dick.
It's, it's also very strange that God told me the thing that I thought before I asked
is weird.
How it's super weird.
It's so weird how me and God are often in agreement when I'm getting petty as hell.
Really, really on the same page here.
Yeah.
I think it's probably because I'm also a prophet.
Yeah.
So, um, I think at this point, don't you remember when Elisha was like, dude, shut it.
Too many dicks getting sucked in my way.
I think that we're pretty much done with her my matrix talk at this point and terminate
her talk.
I think we've kind of dealt with that for the most part.
How so?
Uh, I'm not going to say that I could be a lawyer and like walk through this case in
an actual court, but for a podcast, I think I've pretty well laid out what the deal is.
But what's interesting is that the episode doesn't, it doesn't end like carry that seems
like it's where it should end.
That's her credits.
That's why she's there.
She and Carrie keep talking.
And the interesting thing is as they talk less about, uh, the matrix stuff, it becomes
more clear why I don't believe her about the matrix stuff because she starts to get real
wacky.
Is it because she tries to describe the plot of the matrix and gets it wrong?
No, that would be amazing though.
I would be amazing.
I would love that.
Oh, that would be so good.
No, but, uh, here is where, uh, this is where I was like, uh-oh.
The Luminati told me in the year 2006 and the Mason, the Luminati's pulled me up and
the Rothschild and Leo Zagami and big fans of mine and the matrix and terminator.
And they told me that I would have a second law student.
I would win that law student.
I would play a major role in world events.
So they pretty much told me what was getting ready to go down in the year 2006 before I
even initiated a second lawsuit.
All right, very interesting.
They know, they already know what's going to happen.
I'm telling you the Luminati's, they know what's written in processing.
They know what's going to happen and everything.
And so what I'm trying to say to you is that they did everything in their power to put
Hillary in there because they were going to keep everything the same with Hillary.
And it was going to be business as usual.
And they were going to keep getting away with everything.
But they knew that Trump, Trump, it was part, Trump was part of the revelations.
His name is like a trumpet.
This is off the fucking rails.
What? When did we get here?
Turns out the creator of the matrix is into trouble.
So as she put it, right, the Illuminati called me up.
Hello, Illuminati, Illuminati.
Oh, Illuminati.
I've been expecting your call.
Now you're going to make another lawsuit and then you're going to play a big role in the
vote.
I was, I was, I was praying to God about this horror who was pissed off at me in the store.
Right, right.
And it turns out she sucked her way to the grocery aisle.
Right, right.
She sucked her way to stocking late shift.
Just, just to be clear, I am saying this from her point of view, not sex worker, not horror.
I'm just, yep, just trying to be right.
I'm not trying to be that.
Right.
I'm not trying to be that guy.
You're fine.
We're in a place where you just don't need to be that guy.
You don't need to be that guy.
You're fine.
You're in the character of Sophia.
That's okay.
Hold on.
Let me, let me get really into the character of Sophia.
You better turn around.
Uh, okay.
All right.
It's important for an impression.
Uh, all right.
Hold on.
Let me start with the classic.
Uh, does anybody here like impressions?
Pause for the audience to say they do.
There you go.
All right.
Turn around.
All right.
Turn back.
I for real wrote the matrix, right?
God, I just heard him say I did better sue this shit.
God, you have.
Damn it.
You told me I was not going to win the first lawsuit.
I don't even know why I filed that was at them.
That was the Illuminati.
That wasn't God.
No, the Illuminati told her she was going to win the second lawsuit.
Right.
Right.
But God obviously had to have told her that she was going to lose the first lawsuit.
I would assume he would've maybe, maybe he didn't want to break that news.
That's hard.
Give someone bad news.
That is tough.
It's tough.
God doesn't really give the news so much as he legit.
He just like does stuff.
Oh, we got to work out our relationship with God.
God doesn't like to be the bearer of that.
Where does Trump come in today?
Well, it's because the Illuminati wanted Hillary to get him because then they can
keep doing their dirt.
They're not going to do with their lawsuit.
It has everything to do with their lawsuit.
I told you this is where things get off the rails.
She starts bringing up the Illuminati, telling her the future.
See, now somehow I'm fine with that part.
Well, it's more project camel.
Exactly.
I don't like it dovetailing and that's why Trump is great.
Right.
That is, that is super weird.
But that is where all these people are because con men understand other con men.
Yeah, that's true.
That's why they, like there's a familiarity with Trump that a lot of these, like I started
to think about why Trump is appealing across so many weird, disparate bases.
Yeah.
And it's really interesting because with Alex, I think it's like, you know, his
business model largely relies on the deregulation of the supplement industry.
Right.
That sort of thing.
Right.
So if you want to take.
Not anymore, it doesn't.
Well, sure.
But at the time it did.
If you want to take it from that level, if you want to look at it on a crass materialistic
level, you could make the argument that he sided with Trump because he realized there
was a chance that if Democrats got in power again, that there would be trends towards
putting restrictions on a lot of the things that he sells, right?
It would make his empire crumble.
This, this billion dollar unregulated industry of selling snake oil.
Right.
Maybe they might regulate it.
Sure.
That's a possibility.
Or you could look at it from the angle of like it's very clear that Trump has been a
white supremacist forever and that resonates with Alex.
Right.
And he knows that he's not going to get rid of regulations on guns.
There's a hundred reasons why Alex would join up.
So for him, it's kind of a murkier territory.
But then you start to look at people like Carrie Cassidy and why would she support
Trump?
Yeah.
And because he's crazy, you know, that he's a spiritual weirdo.
Right.
And she believes him when he says, I'm going to release all the JFK information.
He's fucking not.
He's never going to do that.
But he keeps saying, God, but that'd be fun if he did.
He keeps saying he's going to do that.
And that gets people like Carrie Cassidy who believe that there's some sort of nefarious
thing going on on the hook.
And then Trump talks about the deep state that resonates with Carrie Cassidy and these
paranoid weirdos.
Right.
Of course they're on board.
Right.
Jim Baker, his sort of milieu, that whole world, the evangelical world on one level,
they don't realize that the reason that they're being led to support Trump is because people
like Jim Baker and a lot of people who make money off religion realize that Trump is going
to and has moved to ease the rules.
Right.
For churches to make money.
Right.
Right.
And make profits and that sort of thing.
The con men know that the con man is not going to hinder their con.
And in fact, will probably enhance their con.
Right.
So you have a bunch of diverse con people and it's like, there's nothing really bringing
all of them together.
Like, because Carrie largely doesn't seem hyper conservative.
She doesn't seem like someone, I mean, she is, she has some bigotry in her, certainly.
Yeah.
But she doesn't seem like somebody who's like political in that way.
Right.
So she's not on the, the, we need healthcare trip because the Trump administration is going
to finally release the hologram beds that heal everybody.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Randy Kramer's med beds.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So all of the, all of this comes down to like, I think, I think that everybody's being
tricked in different ways, but they're doing it to themselves.
Yeah.
Or they're doing, it's being done to them by the taste makers and the voice, uh, people
like Alex, like Jim Baker.
01:28:36,940 --> 01:28:37,740
Like Jim Baker's leading a lot.
And fucking Fox News.
Jim Baker's leading a lot of people astray insinuating that Trump is going to be a blessing
for Christians because he knows that his business is protected by Trump being an office.
Right.
Right.
Right.
There's not going to be any kind of SEC IRS investigation of Jim Baker's weird compound.
Yeah.
As long as Trump's in office.
Yeah.
So and Alex, same thing.
It, it's weird to me because we always want to over complicate things.
I think it might be that simple.
Yeah.
Like there might be just a lot of people realize that like he is way too busy covering his
own ass.
He's never coming after us.
Right.
He's the con of fire in tree in chief.
Well, it's kind of like if you're a shit kid in school and you're like substitute comes
in hungover and you kind of intuitively know like, hell yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's good.
I can't get in trouble today.
It's a good day.
This guy is just going to be, we're going to watch a movie.
Everybody's going to be cool.
Yeah.
I think I'm going to sell drugs right in front of him.
He's going to be like, I could use some drugs.
Exactly.
Yeah.
There's some, there's some element of that.
I think I don't know how much that's the entire thing, but I think more than probably
people want to.
So I like your theory, but like, and I'm not saying that you're, you're 100% behind
this or anything, but if I, if I understand it correctly, when the Connors who are used
to conning these dumb people talking about Sarah and John, uh, no, no, no, I can't talk
about that.
It's copyrighted.
Yeah.
But not on, not on this podcast.
No, we release this, uh, when they realized that a con man was going to be president,
they directed all the people they were conning to support the con man to be president.
Right.
That way the con man who knows the game isn't going to crack down on their cons, which is
why Alex probably hates Bush and the other guys.
They're Republicans, but they're not con men.
They're just liars and stupid and evil.
Maybe.
I think they're, I think that's, that's definitely a piece of it.
I don't know.
I think there's much more to look at here, but that's just a sort of thought.
Anyway, I told you this is going to be crazy.
And in this next clip, uh, Carrie asks Sophia if she's been thinking about aliens and then
her answer, her answer makes no sense.
Are you thinking about the incoming AI that's basically alien technology?
You know, I'm alien, alien AI.
Are you, are you, you know, where is your mind with everything now?
Well, I use, I want people to know I'm amadextrous.
Amadextrous meaning is that I have the same strength in both hands and it means that I'm
using both loads of the brain.
Sure.
And that it doesn't systems and I cracked the codes on system.
So that's why I was, I never studied trademark law ever and I beat them in trademark law.
I can beat them in any law because I can crack the system on anything that I do and come
up with things that you can't even imagine.
So have you been thinking about AI?
Yeah, I know a lot about trademark law.
What?
Hold on, huh?
That's weird.
That's weird, but then we'll just call it weird.
This next clip, Jordan, this made me feel so worried on a number of levels because it
is an instance of like, I think that she thinks that movies are taunting her.
It made me deeply uncomfortable.
You remember that?
I know you remember because you're reading the matrix book.
You do remember the virtue car?
Yes.
The hologram car that starts up with a musical note.
I think I do.
I'm still, you know, no clue.
You can go back and look at it.
Yeah.
The wireless car, the virtue car.
It's the first virtual wireless hologram clones.
You saw the holograms in the movie.
They even said in the Black Panther movie, hi, Sophia.
She owns the Black Panther movie?
They called her Sophia.
You do know that the artificial AI in Saudi Arabia that they made her into a citizen.
Yes.
And she's getting paid a paycheck.
Her name is Sophia.
Now, you know, they read the third eye matrix book and they read the fourth installment.
Uh, I got bad news.
Sophia comes from a Greek word for wisdom.
So there's an AI in Saudi Arabia?
I don't care about that part.
That's not really interesting to me.
I want to know.
I'm more interested in...
They orchestrated 9-11, Dan.
I'm more interested in the idea that she did...
Did an AI orchestrate 9-11?
I'm more interested in the idea of this virtual car thing.
And I like to call her attention to the Wonder Woman cartoon.
Of an invisible jet.
And then her saying that even in that, in the Black Panther, they said, hi, Sophia.
Because one of the characters was named Sophia.
They only named that character Sophia.
So she would get the shout out.
Well, if that's the case, I would recommend that Sophia story avoid watching the Golden Girls,
The Walking Dead, Nip Tuck, Vanilla Sky, Color Purple, Grey's Anatomy, or Young and the Rexless.
She should also never agree to meet with countless Russian queens from history.
Or Sophia Varghara, Sophia Coppola, or Sophia Loren.
Don't talk to any of those people.
No, hold on.
She could totally meet Sophia Loren.
Or the embodiment of wisdom from Gnostic scriptures.
Come on.
She owns that story now.
She does, yeah.
That one is part of the corket.
She owns Nothicism.
Yeah.
So, look, Sophia Stewart has done a lot for the world.
She has written The Matrix.
Yeah.
She has written Terminator.
I've heard.
She, the Illuminati say she's going to have a lot to do with the future.
But she's going to be a big deal.
But it's not just the future.
She's also helped with things that we didn't even realize she's helped with.
Oh, no.
Homeland Security.
What?
Red and the FBI, they all got autographed copies of my book.
And Homeland Security called me up one year and they were totally blown away.
They read The Matrix short book and they said, I saw the Roswell incident.
God damn it.
I saw the Roswell incident.
They said, we didn't know how these ships flew.
They had captured these ships back in the, you know, the 40s and the 50s.
So you wrote Independence Day?
And they broke them down by aerodynamics.
And they didn't know how they flew until they saw it in the Matrix short book,
where I said they flew with magnetic ring portion in the reversal of gravity
and how they cloak invisible, how they break the time barrier speed,
but how they also hover like helicopters.
They broke the time barrier speed.
And if you don't believe it, Carrie, I will send you over the classified information
that they sent me from Homeland Security.
That's a relief.
I do believe you.
You know, I've remote viewed the moon myself.
In fact, I just had a dream about it the other night.
That's not the same thing.
Yeah, there's a lot of crazy stuff going on on the moon.
There's a lot of...
No, there isn't.
There's a lot of crazy stuff.
It's a really boring place.
A lot of crazy stuff.
It's not.
A lot of crazy stuff.
Oh, God.
A lot of crazy stuff that Carrie is dreaming about on the moon,
talking to weird dudes who take pictures of the moon.
God damn it.
This is so fun.
Why did it?
Where did this...
Ugh.
I thought we were just going to get some serious copyright talk, Dan.
I have always wanted serious copyright talk on this show.
Oh, we got some.
And now we're getting the Illuminati shit.
Oh, we got some.
Every time I try and have a substantive discussion with you about the real issues.
You can't have the sweet without the salty, the sour without the bitter, the rough without
the smooth.
She did.
She did sound...
That's a Jason Lee speech from Vanilla Sky.
Sorry.
I wasn't going to talk about it.
A character named Sophia.
I wasn't going to talk about it.
Was that...
What's her face?
I don't remember.
You're talking about Penelope Cruz?
No, no.
The other one.
Cameron Diaz?
Yeah, Cameron Diaz.
Is that one?
I don't remember.
I don't remember character names.
I remember Tom Cruise was in there.
So...
Was it Cameron Diaz?
Yeah, it was totally Cameron Diaz.
So...
You lost your train of thought pretty hard there.
So, if I understand this correctly.
She solved the Roswell mystery.
She's willing to, one, share classified information to somebody who's not allowed to have it.
Tell people on air that I'm willing to give you this.
Two, she sounded more Alex Jonesy than I think anybody we've ever heard on Project Camelot
in that she's like, she's totally claiming that they called her up.
Yeah.
And they were like, how did you know?
Yeah.
And she was like, I just reverse engineered it.
Yeah.
God, that's stupid.
She will go into later talking about how she astrally time travels and she's able to go
to other places and then ask them how their technology works and then come back and write
about it.
All right.
So, she's a time traveler also.
So, here's my new pitch.
We've said before that these people should just be screenwriters and clearly we know
they can't do that because writing is actually hard and dialogue is an issue.
Yeah, yeah.
They're not good with that part.
Lucas learned that.
Not good.
Yeah, I did.
Yeah.
Maybe they should just be in writer's rooms though.
Yeah, yeah.
They're just like throwing out, throwing shit at a wall.
Like if you put them near a whiteboard, you're going to get something.
If you are in a writer's room and you're trying to write like black mirror episodes.
Yeah.
If you have Leo Zagami in there and you just tell him to shut up unless he's poked.
Yeah.
You hit a dead end and you poke him.
Yeah, exactly.
And then he's like, blah.
Yeah, yeah.
We don't need your help when it comes to the actual like writing part.
Right.
But I don't know where.
We'll pay you double to shut up unless we poke him.
That would be a smart idea.
You have to wear a blindfold and a dunce cap.
But we'll poke you.
A blindfold and a dunce cap.
That's harsh.
The dunce cap is just for us.
We'll poke you.
Well, now that you're blindfolded, we can just say that it's a nice hat.
Yeah.
It's a po-hat.
Yeah.
Leo.
Yeah.
So I mean, she solved the Roswell mystery.
But you noticed, I mean, the thing that I thought there was the most Alex Jonesy about
that is like, you were recognizing earlier that she seems to have a lot of dates.
And then when she's talking about the Roswell thing, she's like, the national security agency
called me some year.
Some year they called me.
Some while back.
Some year.
It's a while back.
Not even saying a year.
It was a few times.
The other one, she has specific dates.
I'm going to go with many moons ago.
So in this next clip, Carrie asks if she has had contact with aliens.
Yeah.
Let's see.
There was some, another question I saw in here.
Someone wants to know, oh, have you been, basically, do you feel that you've been contacted
by aliens, abducted, any of that?
Well, I'm going to say this.
While I was writing the Matrix and Terminator in 1980, I had a dream where I saw the ship
that you saw in the Matrix, the Nebuchadnezzar.
I saw the ship in a dream.
But I didn't know that the ship was an alien ship until Homeland Security was contacting
me in 2010 or 2011.
And they sent me over the Pentagon and they can a picture of the ship.
Why?
Which I will give to anybody when they get the Matrix four book.
I will give you the Homeland Security Pentagon information.
It's real.
I think that's illegal.
It is.
I'm really going to go with that still illegal.
I mean, if it's true, it's illegal, but it's not.
But this is a trademark of her sort of technique.
I've read interviews or not interviews, but I've read pieces that people have written about
interviewing her.
And oftentimes you hit a brick wall whenever you ask for evidence because she'll say like
buy my book and you can get it.
It's all this stuff that's just intended to sell the book with this carrot that she's
dangling out in front of it.
Secret Pentagon pictures of the Nebuchadnezzar that proved that my book is actually blah,
blah, blah.
It's a look.
I respect the hustle.
Totally.
You got a hustle.
I get it.
This is a bad hustle because it's a bad hustle.
You're only going to get idiots to, to believe you because anybody.
That's a good group of people to hustle though, Dan.
Yeah.
They're the hustliest people or hustle.
It's really not hard.
It's really not hard, but any, any halfway right thinking person would hear like, Oh,
I buy your book and then you're going to send me Pentagon documents.
Yeah.
We have fucking right.
Yeah.
That doesn't make sense.
Yeah.
Get out of here.
That doesn't make sense.
That's a huge pet peeve with language.
Like I don't, obviously, like as like all of all of those little words that we've just
thrown into our conversation.
Yeah.
Even though they're not really there for any reason.
Sure.
The one word I cannot stand anymore is basically, basically what's going on.
I can't do it.
Yeah.
The word needs to be removed.
It's kind of a, an attempt to sound smarter while using the light.
Yeah.
I'm, I'm, I, I'm boiling this down to the particulars for you.
When in reality you are absolutely dodging everything.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So, but it doesn't matter because it turns out that we learned something else about
Sophia in this next clip.
Oh no.
Let's see.
Do you feel that you're what I would call a pre cog?
The future.
Yes.
I'm, I'm the Oracle.
The Oracle was created after me being a visionary seer.
There it goes.
She's the Oracle.
She's the Oracle.
Yep.
So now not only, not only should she be suing James Cameron and, and the laundry list, but
she should go after just about everybody.
Socrates, the Oracle of Delphi.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, but she's the Oracle in the matrix, man.
That's her.
What do you fucking think?
I did not think that I would assume what happened is she wrote this vaguely science fiction
theory treatment in the early 80s and she ended up seeing the matrix and you know, the
character of the, the Oracle is a kindly older black lady and she identified with that character
and because she's a little bit delusional, kind of put a bunch together and then it was
like, Oh, that's me.
Oh, that's, and then everything went off the rails from there.
So that's my guess.
If that's what she identifies with, I assume she's sued Akira as well, the producers of
that movie.
What do you mean?
Well, because that scene was essentially directly taken from a scene in Akira.
No, she doesn't know about that.
She doesn't know about that.
She doesn't know about a lot of the sources that the matrix actually came from.
Because they did take a lot of shit.
There's a lot of like, it was a remix movie.
Yeah.
Like that's, it's like, it's a, it's a great movie.
It's like a DJ.
Yeah.
It's because like we said, right at the beginning of this episode, one of the reasons that it's
so, um, mixable with other things is because it's so basic.
You know, it has, it has such archetypal, uh, imagery and, and storytelling.
And what it did is it took this very simple universal story, put it into a weird sci-fi,
uh, cyberpunk, uh, aesthetic.
Right.
And then served as a proof of concept of a slightly stolen version of filmmaking with
the bullet time stuff and the, the, the interesting, uh, cinematography.
Right.
Well, it's just like Star Wars was, I mean, it was like a stolen from Kurosawa and all
of this shit.
Like, look, we get it, man.
It's tough to come up with ideas.
And that shit's great.
Kurosawa didn't come up with it originally either.
No, exactly.
Yeah.
Fucking new shit Shakespeare and show Joseph Campbell didn't come up with the hero's journey.
He described.
No, he did.
No, he didn't know he came up with it.
He described it.
Are you sure?
Yes.
How do you know?
Guessing.
I mean, for somebody who has studied Greek, I have no idea how it is possible for you
to know where archetypes come from.
Come on, Dan.
I don't even think they come from that.
But anyway, we have one last clip.
Yeah.
One of the things that ties all of these disparate worlds of con people together, whether it's
Jim Baker, whether it's Alex Jones, whether it's project Camelot, it's a lack of flossing.
They're all afraid of CERN.
And look at the CERN machine.
Instead of using CERN to create different weather patterns that the native, the indigenous
people, the natives were using.
When they did the war dance with the rain, the rain dance.
That's right.
Well, they brought the rain down to water, the earth when it had a drought so they could
grow plants and food.
But these people are using the CERN to destroy and kill people so they can bring wealthy
oceanfront properties and all kinds of evil stuff for wealth.
Right.
They wanted Hades.
They wanted Puerto Rico.
They wanted Cuba.
But Fidel died.
But you know what was holding them back on the voodoo and Hades?
Voodoo.
Uh, Kuber.
Uh, Louis.
Fidel was saved by voodoo?
Yeah.
All right.
They couldn't get around the voodoo.
Okay.
Couldn't get around the voodoo.
Could not get around.
You know what?
I swear to God, I say that on a daily basis.
God, I wish I could just get around the voodoo.
You can tell even in that clip, the carry is like, okay.
All right.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
I don't know what we're talking about.
We got to close this one.
I do not know.
This has gone too off the rails.
Look, I'm a remote viewer and I know what's going on on the moon.
It's weird stuff.
Even I don't believe that voodoo is real.
Voodoo.
It's such a, it's such like, it's amazing that Arthur C. Clark's quote of like any technology
indistinguishable from magic.
No.
Right.
Like it's a frustrating truth that that is true even when the technology is explainable.
Right.
Like it's not magic.
No.
It's very explainable.
It doesn't do a weather dance.
No.
What?
Also.
Wait.
So weather dances are real.
That's number one.
And CERN is just a big science weather dance.
It's a big evil weather dance.
It's a big science weather dance that's taken down Puerto Rico.
But also Fidel, they wanted to take Fidel.
They wanted to take Fidel down, but it was voodoo that kept them.
Yeah.
Also, she goes on to ramble about like Louisiana, New Orleans is full of voodoo folk.
Of course.
No, that's true.
And it's like, wait, you're talking about evil weather weapons and like voodoo not be
like being, being very strong against these weather weapons.
The voodoo is strong with this one.
We can think of one hurricane that was the most devastating in all of history.
And it hit the one place that is most voodoo in the United States.
Well, somebody is going to get around the voodoo eventually.
I think that argument's flawed.
If your argument is that voodoo negates weather weapons.
Even on your own merits, that argument is flawed.
I think it's all bullshit, but you got to get around that somehow and you can't.
You can't get around the voodoo dance.
So all this is to say that Sophia Stewart undoubtedly wrote the Matrix and Terminator
movies.
Absolutely.
This is a mess.
If there's one thing that we can all take away with from this is that you can't get
around the voodoo.
No, can't.
Can't do it.
That's a good shirt.
Can't get around the voodoo.
Can't get around the voodoo.
So I think now at this point you probably recognize why I decided, yeah, we got to talk about
this.
Yeah, we got to talk about this.
It was a lot of fun.
It was a lot of fun.
We will be back to Alex Jones on Friday, but until then we do have a website.
It's knowledgefight.com.
We do.
What if you wanted to follow us someplace?
We have a Twitter at knowledge underscore fight.
How about another place?
How about if you wanted to subscribe to something iTunes is an option.
All right.
What else we got?
I don't know.
Do we have any other plugs?
I don't think so.
We're terrible at this.
Nope.
You know what though?
Oh, I'm going to be, it's still not Friday on Thursday and tomorrow night.
If you're listening to this on Wednesday, Illinois, good friend to the show.
Matt Drafki and two brothers roundhouse.
Love Matt.
You can't wait to be there.
A lot of fun.
Yeah.
But you know what?
Sophia Stewart clearly lying about a whole bunch of shit, but she's not killed anyone.
Alex Jones probably did kill a dude.
Andy and Kansas.
You're on the air.
Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex.
I'm a first time caller.
I'm a huge fan.
I love your work.