Panic World - The cult using Minecraft to recruit

Episode Date: July 30, 2025

Often, like in the case of the Momo Challenge, when parents freak out about a thing online, it’s probably not really a thing. But, today we are talking about one panic that is real — “764,” th...e comm-network that is gamifying committing crimes and abuse. Joining us is Marcus Parks of The Last Podcast on the Left, to dive into this conspiracy that’s more than a theory. Our guest Marcus Parks is a host of The Last Podcast on the Left, which is currently doing a miniseries on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Check it out on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts! We have a related bonus episode of our Patreon this week, where our producer Grant Irving sat down with expert on extremist ideologies and groups, Dr. Marc-André Argentino. Learn more about the history of cults and networks like 764 by joining our Patreon for just five bucks a month at: https://www.patreon.com/PanicWorld. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, just a heads up. This is one of our more gnarly episodes. We're going to be talking about some pretty intense themes. If that's something that you don't feel like you're into today, you know, you can always skip and come back. But we're going to, today's episode is a little more intense than usual. Not including anything that, you know, has been revealed to actually have happened because of CIA involvement over the last 60 to 70 years. What is one conspiracy that, you know, has felt super unbelievable. that you later discovered where it's like actually quite real.
Starting point is 00:00:33 I mean, do you mean outside of say like MK Ultra? Yeah, yeah, yeah, so on and so forth. That's the easy stuff. That's easy stuff.
Starting point is 00:00:39 Yeah. Yeah, of course, that's easy stuff. I would say the, you know, introducing of crack cocaine into inner cities was also,
Starting point is 00:00:48 well, I guess it all, the problem is that the CIA is involved in all of it. I've said you up to fail here. Yeah. Yeah, you get that's the problem. It's always,
Starting point is 00:00:56 if it's real, it's the CIA. As far as conspiracy theories go, I think the biggest one was finding out that it was probably JFK's Secret Service agent who accidentally shot him in the back of the head. I have not heard that before. Oh, I believe it a thousand percent. Interesting. Yeah, that it was in the JFK's assassination was just the world's worst workplace accident. So I have a recent one that I think I believe, which is that Elon Musk's black eye was not from his son, X, but actually from Steve.
Starting point is 00:01:44 Miller because he's trying to do like a weird IVF breeding thing with Stephen Miller's wife. All right, I'll buy it. Because Stephen Miller is left handed. I don't know if X is left handed. So, and that didn't look like the punch of a child either. I mean, although Stephen Miller has little hands, so maybe. Anyways, uh, the reason I bring this up is because sometimes two things can be true, right? You know, we can have lots of insane moral panics and then we can discover years later that they, they were real. And then sometimes we also will never find out what happened. Like, we still don't I still don't know why all those clowns showed up in 2016.
Starting point is 00:02:16 No idea. That was one of my favorite mysteries, though. We debated about that endlessly. It's very confusing. And these things come around all the time. But generally speaking, my rule is that if there is a conspiracy, a group of people with some kind of plot or scheme that's organized, you know, instead of just like random people on the internet being annoying, then it's probably not true because if it was true, like, this is why
Starting point is 00:02:37 I'm not really a 9-11 truth there. Because like, someone's going to tattle. Someone's going to leak. I tend to believe that stupidity is actually the true conspiracy of almost everything. That's one of guiding principles of last podcast is never confuse incompetence for malice. Exactly. This is why you're the perfect guest for today. An example from our show we've covered before is the Momo Challenge, which was like some sort of like evil internet demon that was terrorizing children and making people commit suicide.
Starting point is 00:03:04 But it actually turned out to just be like a bunch of like really like misreported police reports around the world that didn't go anywhere, right? With all those fake or half-true stories, I think both you and I kind of assume when parents are freaking out, the story is likely bullshit. But the more the internet has evolved, the lines have become blurrier. For instance, our last episode on Slender Man explored this exact idea. A fake thing creates a real thing, creates a kind of half-fake, half-real moral panic. And now, in our even more flattened world, we have a true conspiracy that really does sound fake, but is actually a real threat. With me? Still with me?
Starting point is 00:03:43 My name is Ryan Broderick. And joining me is our producer, Grant Irving, who has put here in my script that today, especially, I am not supposed to make jokes that I've locked him in some kind of cage because we're going to be talking about torture. And I guess I'm not allowed to torture my producer because of woke. This is Panic World, a show about how the internet warps our minds, our culture, and eventually reality.
Starting point is 00:04:08 And today we're talking about seven, six, The Com Network, a coalition that is gamifying, committing crimes and abuse, and joining me an expert of dark shit, an expert on the blurred lines of real and fiction, Marcus Parks from Last Pot on the Left. Welcome to the show. How are you doing? I'm doing great. Thank you so much for having me. I'm a big fan of the show. Have you heard anything about 764 before? I have not heard anything about this. Okay. This is entirely new to me. Because for me, I usually go back into the past.
Starting point is 00:04:42 you know, to find out, you know, to discover the, the conspiracies that we've already been through. Like, modern stuff is usually beyond me because I have such a difficult time actually understanding all of the ends and outs of it. What happened? Well, that's, that's actually perfect because this does have tendrils that go into the past. We're going to be sort of referencing a lot of, I think, things that will be familiar to listeners of both of our shows. But let me give you kind of an example of the discourse around 764, okay? So this is from a local news report, ABC 7 in San Francisco.
Starting point is 00:05:14 This mother and daughter don't want you to see their faces to know their names or where they live. They are just breaking free from the terror that is 764. She explains how predators are scanning online games like Minecraft and Roblox for young girls. Did you notice any sort of like hallmarks of a mass panic, you know, a sort of like parents are talking to the local news? Like it feels very typical, right? It does. One of my favorite periods of history to study, and one of the things that I find the most fascinating, like one of the most fascinating chapters in American history is the Satanic Panic. And this does have shades of, you know, you have to shield your children from these horrible things. There's this unknown thing that you don't know anything about. Right. My big thing is also always like local news affiliates.
Starting point is 00:06:05 So whenever I hear about like a local news station that finds like a parent. It's like warning other parents. I'm like, mm, okay. Sure. Yeah. So immediate reaction to something like this is probably that it's not real or that's overstated. But that is not the case. I wish that was the case.
Starting point is 00:06:20 That is not the case. We are now in an era where real terror feels like somebody parodying fake terror. Okay. Broadly what we're talking about and what this piece is talking about is calm or COM. And it refers to an organized group that hang out on places like Discord and Telegram. and they really got their start around in 2021. And they are effectively nihilists that have turned nihilism into like an ARG, like a like a game you can play online.
Starting point is 00:06:50 And they level up by doing taboo behavior or committing really horrible acts online or in real life. Grant spoke to the public safety expert for the Canadian government, Mark Andre Argentino, and we'll be quoting from his blog from the depths quite a bit on episode. And here's how Andre describes it. Basically, I separate the Calm Network into the pillars of criminality. So cybercriminality is one. Their last part of the Calm network is offline or what they call IRL. This is everything from graffiti like we saw in Winnipeg, all the way to things like planning a terrorist act, like we saw recently with the arrest in Edmonton, all the way up to things like bioterrorism as we had with Commander Butcher in New York.
Starting point is 00:07:32 It's a loosely connected group of evil. So to say that they all believe one thing wouldn't be fair. But here's a statement from the quote unquote leader of 764, which is the most important group in this larger network. Okay. The goal of 764 is the purification of all living things through endless attacks. Evil has no limits. Uppercase, by the way. We won't stop until our goal is completed and all life forms are.
Starting point is 00:08:02 are eliminated, only 764 will remain. For us to achieve such ambition, the cult must share a single-minded passion for death and conquest for him. There exists only one pleasure, one reward, one satisfaction, a successful hunt. He must be prepared to destroy himself and to destroy with his own hands, everything that stands of our goal. This is so boring. This shit is so fucking boring.
Starting point is 00:08:25 Goddiel. Well, it's just so generic. There's nothing about this that is original. They sound like Cobra Command. Yeah, it's like that thing where if, like, you leave men alone online long enough, they all start talking like Sephiroth from Final Fantasy Seven. Yeah, it sounds exactly like that. Yeah, if they're nihilus, it's not going to fucking mean anything.
Starting point is 00:08:47 I guess that is sort of the point. But I don't know how you build something around that. Yeah, I don't want to go down like the Big Lobowski route of like, what is a nihilist? Like, how do you actually actively be one? But you know, this can be exceptionally dumb. cartoon villain-esque and still be harmful. I mean, it happens all the time now. I'm going to read you a bit more from Argentina's blog here.
Starting point is 00:09:10 So he wrote, Within 764's private inner circle, the defendants hammered home, the principle that violence, sexual, psychological, and physical, is both entertainment and ideological labor. And they rank them based on how transgressive they are. I'm sure most people did a similar thing in college.
Starting point is 00:09:27 You know, it's like we all go through that phase. But this is one quote, of a 764 message that Argentina had access to. So the quote reads, we're not anti-extortion. It does, in a way, promote harm and teaches cringy e-girls lessons. So, like, obviously, it should be no surprise to anyone listening
Starting point is 00:09:45 that this is also very gendered. Well, yeah. Yeah, of course it is. Yeah, that's just how it goes on the internet when it comes to shit like this. It does sound like it has, like, a cult mentality to it. when you have other people telling each other that's fucking awesome over and over again and you do it in a vacuum enough and you get the right group of people or the wrong group of people as it were really dark shit can happen but most of it is bullshit i mean most of the moral panics and moral you know because that is that same exact argument has been made by satanic panic um people in the past of you know like this is why you can't have metal concerts this is why you know like i always remember this old man talking about an azi concert And he's like, it was like watching Nuremberg.
Starting point is 00:10:32 I don't think you can put an Aussie concert on par with Nuremberg. But when it comes to the Internet and when it comes to where we're at today with Internet culture, like the, I mean, we're in the middle of rewriting the rules of what the world is right now, what humanity is, how it works. Like that's part of why I love this show. That's what I'm in your newsletters. Like, that's what I'm fascinated in. But I do believe that when the history books look back on this time period, it's going to be fucking insane because I do think the two most important things are going to be 4chan and the WWE. Which are effectively the same thing, I think, at a certain point.
Starting point is 00:11:15 I also, yeah, I always, like, laugh about, like, the danger around, like, metal shows where it's like what people imagine is, like, some sort of, like, dark evil energy. And what is actually happening is, like, that photo of that guy pissing into his own mouth in the middle of the mosh pit. You know, like that's, that's what's actually happening. I also, I, you know, I'm a big advocate for net neutrality, but I do think we need to carve out for, like, what I would call masculinity lifeguards. So, like, if you have, like, 10 or more men in one space online, there has to be someone in there that's like, you guys, like, can't go, like, full extremists. Like, you got to, like, calm down and, like, watch an episode of sex in the city or something, like, chill out for a second. But back to a story that has absolutely no chill whatsoever. let's really get a sense of how horrible this all is.
Starting point is 00:11:59 Last year, Attorney General Matt Olson for the National Security Division did it like a press conference about this group. And he had a line that was, it's not premised on the idea of child pornography, which, you know, answers a lot of questions. It's not premised on the idea of child pornography. Sure, should answer, yeah. But I should know there is absolutely like a non-consensual, like sexual abuse material aspect here, especially one involving minors, obviously. Yeah, if it's, if they're looking for the biggest transgressions, then that's always, I guess, taking a page out of Marquis de Saad here. Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:12:35 So the statement from Olson continues, and it says it's premised on the idea of collapsing society, and they do it through animal cruelty, and they do it through swatting and sexortion. So this sounds like satanic panic shit. It sounds fake. And when a government official is saying, you know, this group of people online want to destroy the world, they're going to, and they're going to do horrible stuff. I think it is pretty reflexive to just roll your eyes at that kind of thing. Sure. Yeah. And the institutions have had a history of overcorrecting when it comes to this sort of thing. I mean, there were people back in the 80s who were, quote unquote, killing in the name of Satan. You know, you did have
Starting point is 00:13:20 Richard Ramirez, who was genuinely scary, genuinely terrified. You had a man. You had a man. who would go out and carve out the eyes of old ladies and leave them on the dresser because he knew it would freak people out and he shows up in court with a pentagram on his hand. But the thing is about the satanic killers is that throughout all of my research, there was about three, maybe four. But when you kind of flipside that the number of serial killers who murdered in the name of God, or in the name of of Jesus, that number skyrockets. It's dozens upon dozens upon Gary Ridgeway, you know, like the Green River Killer. Some of this stuff does come partly from projection. And it does come partly from we know that the world is fucked up. We know that the world is chaotic. And especially like now, once this does hit a moral panic, if it does hit a moral panic, the very same people that
Starting point is 00:14:15 are causing all of the chaos in this world right now are the very same people that are going to be calling for stricter laws, that are going to be calling for people to be arrested, they're going calling for investigations. Those people, I think, are just going to make things far worse just because they, it's just how they do it. Yeah. How it's always gone. That's just the pattern over and over.
Starting point is 00:14:40 We came across this a bunch in our early episodes where you, you know, you'd have something like the Blue Whale Challenge in Russia, which was like a suicide game, or you'd have something like the Tidepod challenge or the NyQuil challenge, right? And there would be this hysteria element to it. and then there would be like an ironic component to it where people are engaging with it because they're seeing it and the institutions are warning about it. And then like it becomes like a purple monkey dishwasher thing where people that can't tell what's real and what's not anymore. And that is like obviously an important dimension to anything like this, which is that like especially now in the age of the internet, like public messaging is sort of broken like possibly forever. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:19 And as a result, this has been covered well and responsibly. and it's still under the radar. Wired writes about sort of the beginnings of the warnings about this, right? And they write, it sounds like a cheap, true crime conspiracy, an international network of predators, steeped in Satanism, lure children from seemingly harmless online platforms like Discord, Minecraft, and Roblox, and extort them to sexually exploit and grievously harm themselves. Some victims are even pushed to suicide, except it's true. And it gets even more...
Starting point is 00:15:51 but also worse at the same time because the groups... It always does. Yeah. It sounds somewhat like QAnon, you know, like that same sort of idea where... Not dissimilar. Yeah. Yeah, there's no central... Like, it didn't necessarily come from any one person or...
Starting point is 00:16:06 Like, it just sort of builds upon itself, um, taking, you know, from various, you know, it sounds like taking from various pop culture references, just like QAnon took from, you know, every conspiracy theory from the last, you know, exactly, 200 years. It's cute. It's like Q&onon. in the sense of blended lore, but I feel like it's more broken down into different high school clicks.
Starting point is 00:16:28 Grant spoke with Argentina about how they organized themselves and thus sort of radicalized within each other. In the case of one individual who was convinced by a group to go out and commit a murder, that individual was subsequently turned into law enforcement by the people who had convinced them to do this
Starting point is 00:16:46 as part of the recruitment process. It's like, no, like, all right, he did it, cool. Let's fed him. him and then let's move on to the next. So there's no plan for like future building and growth. It is really about the destruction and chaos in the immediate. No, it's high school. It's like high school.
Starting point is 00:17:02 It's high school for destruction. It's like it's actually very easy to think about if you just think about it's like who's cool in the click in this moment. You have the cool kids table. That's like, you know, that's 764. Everyone wants to reach that epitome. Every other table is going to have their brands. You're the entities of the table.
Starting point is 00:17:18 I had to play on the team to be part of the jog table. I had to play magic card to go. of the geeks. In the Calm Network, you need to commit a criminal act that represents the pillars of criminality to sit at that table. So if you are at a table that is into offline content, well, you need to slash tire, do a graffiti, commit arson, whatever, right? If you're into an extortion community, you've got to get someone to self-harm, share explicit images, you know, manipulate them to do something. That is how you get in. So it is like high school in that sense where you have to participate to gain access. So as soon as you're in these spaces,
Starting point is 00:17:58 you have already crossed the threshold into criminal behavior. As you mentioned, 764 is the most notorious group in this network. People strive to join it. They want into that one. And I think once you understand the high school aspect of all this, it starts to really make sense. And it's easier to understand that this is real and get how it functions. And Argentina is documented how it all actually works. Okay. Argentina writes, the veteran was bragging about a car he set on fire and recorded in order to gain access
Starting point is 00:18:31 to the inferno cell, which I suppose is a cell for arson specifically. It was informed by the cell owners that firebombing should be posted in the IRL cell, not the, I love that like even in the most extreme situations, it all comes down to mod drama. It's always my, it's like, this is the wrong. You didn't you you didn't follow the subreddit's rules. Yeah. That's incredible.
Starting point is 00:18:58 And then he was told that it should be sent to the K&R server, which is dedicated to offline criminal activities. And like X for hire, like murder for hire, firebine for higher services. But what's interesting about that to me is that for me, you know, like when it comes to conspiracies and when it comes to stuff like this, it's always the most human answer. Yeah. that usually turns out to be the right one. And something like that, mod drama, like human shit,
Starting point is 00:19:27 it gives it a little more credence. You know, it really does. Like when you see people interacting the way that humans actually interact, that's why the satanic panic was always such obvious bullshit because the people, like, you know, the old books like Michelle remembers,
Starting point is 00:19:44 where, or, you know, where people or the McMartin preschool trial, you know, these kids would come out and, you know, tell these, you know, wild, fabulous stories about how I got flushed down the toilet into another basement and, you know, I went on an airplane and they had me back by, you know, the time my parents were that to pick me up from the daycare at 4 p.m. Like, none of that,
Starting point is 00:20:02 nobody in those stories actually acts like a person. Or, you know, the stand-up comedian, Mike Warnke, who told everyone that, you know, he was a satanic priest and then became a mulleted comedian who went back and forth between talking about his time as a satanic priest, sacrificing people and telling, you know, Gallagher stand-up bits about, you know, when does yoga go bad and shit like that? If it's human, then that makes me believe in a little bit more. And this sounds very human. Yes.
Starting point is 00:20:31 So everything you know now about 764 and the Com Network, who do you think is like the target demo for people in this? Like, what kinds of people do you think are in this? I would say white guys in their late teens, early 20s. So it seems to skew even younger. and to give you a sense of how this all started, we have an example of kind of like the original case that tipped off law enforcement into the existence of this.
Starting point is 00:20:55 So this is from Wired again. It says, God, these guys are so lame. Username Gore Butcher. Allegedly is Angel Louise Almeida, a high school dropout from Ocala, Florida with a violent past and a long rap sheet. In the fall of 2021, the feds alleged
Starting point is 00:21:14 Almeida posted images on Instagram of himself, posing with a handgun and a photo of himself in front of a Nazi flag and a computer screen reading I'm addicted to hardcore child pornography while wearing a shirt emblazoned with kitty fiddler
Starting point is 00:21:28 and do you want to guess like what the ATF found when they raided his apartment do you have I would get guns a lot of guns
Starting point is 00:21:40 a skull mask balaclava super cool and four electronic devices Investigators say his devices held hundreds of thousands of digital files, including reams of child sexual abuse material and communications with the other members of 764. And this is like the first time the FBI gets a sense of what's going on here. And they do classify it as a child abuse network. So, so take me through this one.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Like, okay, why was this guy so open? if he was so incredibly, you know, like guilty of so many things, like, why was he also so incredibly open about it? Good question. So in some ways, this group is sophisticated in how they operate. But as individuals, they're young and, you know, unwell and online. You know, he was in his early 20s. He was harming people.
Starting point is 00:22:35 But I think you can see those posts as a cry for help, you know, or at least a level of mental illness where, you know, he can't think through what he's posting. And that brings us to the mastermind that started 764. Let's start with you just taking a look at a picture. Jesus Christ. Yeah, this is the founder of 764 that you're looking at right now. It's like a human moon pie. He looks like if Paddington Bear was a boy.
Starting point is 00:23:09 He's got that mop, a red hair, top of his egg, quite chubby. he actually is far more clean cut than I imagined. That's incredible. So this is Bradley. And he looks, how old is this guy? Like he looks 17, he looks 15, 16 years old. So, so yeah, here's what you got to know about this, this Renaissance painting of an angel. The idealic image of, this comes from the Washington Post, the idealic image of Bradley Cadenhead.
Starting point is 00:23:40 Fucking Cadenhead. Cadenhead's close-lit family began to unravel when he was 10. His mother moved out that year in 2016. When, quote-unquote, my mom moved out, it affected me. Cadenhead told probation officers, Cadenhead began cutting himself, he said. And then everything I'm about to say is going to be very predictable, I think. He claims that he started looking at porn very early. He was bullied.
Starting point is 00:24:04 He started reading about mass shootings and thinking about committing mass shootings. He was hospitalized. That didn't seem to help. And then he stopped going to school. around ninth grade. So the Washington Post article reads, he became fascinated with videos of torture images he was exposed to while playing the online video game Minecraft.
Starting point is 00:24:22 He said he looked at the images for shock value, quote unquote, the kid never left the house after dropping out Stephanville Police Captain Jeremy Lanier said, his room and his bathroom were his entire existence. I mean, nothing weird with that. Like I live like that. The same month, he dropped out of school. And then Cadenhead started his first.
Starting point is 00:24:41 764 chat room. And if you're wondering why we've been calling it 764, that is his area code. Yeah. He started posting gore, self-harm, animal abuse, child sexual abuse material. He kept getting reported to Discord and having to make new accounts. And he wrote on May 10th under the screen name Felix 0744 in a server called Fed's. He wrote, I'm device banned from almost every email service. I've been through 400 Felix accounts, 100 fake accounts for Discord, banned on Roblox twice.
Starting point is 00:25:17 I've already been reported to the FBI 15 times and they haven't done shit. Although weirdly, he like bleeped out shit. I don't know. It doesn't matter. And then lastly here, when the police showed up with a search warrant on the afternoon of August 25th, 2021, Lanier said, Keaton had emerged in the apartment, his hair dishevelled, inside his room, which Lanyar said, reeked of body odor. Man, if the cops are arresting you
Starting point is 00:25:42 and they're like roasting you about your body odor being so bad it made the rooms think. Like, I don't know. You got to give up, dude. Like, you've got to give it up. No, no, it's over, man. So he started.
Starting point is 00:25:55 So it all comes from this guy or this kid. I mean, so how old is he when he was arrested? Grant, do we have an age for when he was arrested? Was he still a minor? He should have been going an issue. 10th grade. Yeah. Yeah. So, uh, yeah. So in in March 2023, he pleaded guilty to possessing child pornography and he was 19 years old, but he was sentenced to 80 years in prison. And so when they arrested him years ago, he was still a minor. Yeah. So like he started this at around 15. Right.
Starting point is 00:26:26 So to get the timeline there. Yeah. That's incredible. Two last straight things here before we move into the break. So, uh, because I do think this is important for kind of understanding the like irony quotient at play here. So Caden had told probation officers that he had no actual interest in child pornography. Like it was which I mean... Was it academic? He said
Starting point is 00:26:49 that he used it to recruit predators to his group and to control and intimidate people. Now, I'm like willing to take that with a grain of salt and say like, I don't know, man, you had a lot of child pornography on your laptop or somebody like didn't care about chop photography. But I will say we did an episode a couple months ago
Starting point is 00:27:05 about like red rooms and like hitman for higher sites and stuff. Yeah. And if you spend time on like what's called the dark web, child sexual abuse material can be used as a currency or as leverage. It is a thing that people in the more nefarious corners of the internet use, you know? Of course. And last thing that really thematically gets at the heart of the issue. Bobby Stidham, the Aarith County's director of community supervision and corrections,
Starting point is 00:27:30 told the judge that Cadenhead's online persona was no less dangerous than a predator on the street. I don't know if he knows where the internet ends and real life begins. And after the break, we're going to be talking about sort of how what Keaton had built started to spread and like why these groups are now almost impossible to knock down. And we're going to talk about that right after a word from our sponsors, whoever they are, they're probably really pissed to be on this episode. And I apologize. Hey, Matt, last podcast, we've been doing it for years. What is Roblox? Roblox is like Minecraft if Minecraft was a casino.
Starting point is 00:28:14 Okay. All right. To put it more clearly, it's basically it's almost identical to Minecraft in terms of its mechanics. It's like a sandbox game. You play like Minecraft, but you can build games inside of it more easily than Minecraft. Okay. And so it, there are a lot of problems with it, like in terms of what it's allowing, like, what it's allowing children to do on there. And there's all kinds of safety issues with it.
Starting point is 00:28:39 And there is an app store that exists inside of Minecraft that kids can develop games for. Right. So it's a lot more monetized, basically. So, okay, one of the things I would like to know, maybe this can help me understand, like, how, you know, these connections are made. Like, when I played, you know, when I play Minecraft, like, it's, I never go online. I despise online gaming. I can't, like, oh, so you're not grooming children on Minecraft. Okay.
Starting point is 00:29:07 No, I just wanted to make sure. I just want to make sure. Yeah. Cool. No, no, I appreciate it. Everybody's, not everyone who listens knows who I am. So I'm glad to be really clear. Yeah, you don't want everyone to know.
Starting point is 00:29:16 Yeah, I can't stand like online gaming or interacting with other people in that way. Like for me, like gaming is a very like solitary experience. So when it comes to like Minecraft or Roblox, like how do people connect and how do these conversations start? Like how do you get from, hey, how are you to, you know, do you want to kill? a cat? I think you just leave with the cat thing. No, so I can I can tell you this. So I had some experience reporting on a Minecraft influencer years ago. And it took me two or three years to finally get like the proof that he was grooming kids on Minecraft and connecting with them. And so I learned
Starting point is 00:29:58 a lot about the process through like talking to his victims and sort of doing the reporting there. And the way it works is like you play Minecraft by yourself or you play it with other people you might know in real life or maybe you go into a discord that you find on like the Minecraft subreddit and you meet people there but one of the easiest ways to sort of find people is to stream yourself doing it okay so like this isn't even just true for predators this is also just true for like the vast universe of like Minecraft celebrities like the dream SMP they will stream themselves playing put it on twitch or put it on you know YouTube or whatever then they might advertise a discord in the chat of that platform, move people there.
Starting point is 00:30:43 So what you're doing is you're just moving people to more and more private spaces. And that's not even true of just Minecraft. That's kind of how almost all online radicalization eventually goes. Like you're broadcasting as a way to capture people and then you want to just take them to a more quiet place to be like, have you heard about the 14 words? You know, like that's the, that seems to be most people's vector. for this stuff. Okay. That makes a lot of sense. I mean, it's how it's always worked. Yeah. Yeah. It's, I mean, it's the same in real life to it to a degree as well, right?
Starting point is 00:31:14 Like, yeah, eventually you're on the compound. Yeah, a lot of like Nazi punk bands used to do that. They like put it, you know, they try to sneak into a festival and then they try to take, you know, convince you to do whatever. Um, so, uh, you are an expert in all things dark and a cult. Uh, what would you say makes this different from like random four chand bullshit that you've come across. Well, most of that stuff, you know, it's all talk, you know, but yeah, but the problem is is that, you know, all talk ceased to mean anything many years ago because, you know, what you said earlier about, uh, the judge, you know, saying that he doesn't know where real life ends and the internet begins or vice versa. That judge doesn't understand that those two things,
Starting point is 00:32:01 they are the same thing. Right. In 2025. Like there's, you know, a 4chan, you know, we started with the 4chan post and we ended at January 6th. Like I said earlier, like the rules have changed. Like, you don't know what is real. You don't know when those things are going to start jumping into, I guess, like actual violent territory when it comes to actually like committing violence like one person against another. Yeah, I think that's exactly right. And what the internet has, I think, changed maybe. I actually am not sure.
Starting point is 00:32:35 Maybe you do know this better than I do. I think the role of like irony or abstraction has changed. Maybe. Like the internet is such an easier place to create like a context free environment. You can create like a game structure. And sort of I think it's sometimes easier to not think about the real life implications of what you're saying or what you're doing or what you're engaging with. But then I also think like maybe you can achieve that in real life just as easily like pre-internet too.
Starting point is 00:33:10 Oh, yeah. Cults can do it. Political leaders can do it. You know, it's, you know, I think the internet makes dehumanization a lot easier. You know, it's one of the first times in history where it feels like, you know, we can do it to ourselves. You know, where we can convince ourselves to dehumanize another human being, to dehumanize other people, just for our own purposes, without somebody telling us to do it, without someone leading us into it. I think the internet gives us a lot of opportunities to do so. And I think once people start figuring out, oh, this makes me feel better about myself
Starting point is 00:33:42 than the feedback loop begins. And it's also directly related to the dopamine rush of the internet and the diminishing returns, which, you know, that also relates back to so many, like you see with, you know, serial killers. You know, you see it, you know, with these people, you know, they may have a year between their first kill and their second. And then it starts to be where they have to kill every, you know, some guys are killing two, three times a week. I'm like that with ordering Taco Bell. Yeah. It just the timeline speeds up.
Starting point is 00:34:17 The timeline speeds up. You get that, you get the diminishing return on doing that terrible thing. Yeah. The cheesy gordy cordy nutch doesn't hit his heart the second or third time. Yeah, no, that's exactly right. It really doesn't, man. And then you got to get that, you know, like, well, I'll just add a bean and cheese. You know, I'll just get extra red sauce.
Starting point is 00:34:32 Yeah, exactly, but it doesn't do it. Yeah, it just doesn't do it. So, Argentino and his blog about 764 kind of touches on this as well. The heinous and traumatic acts are done simply for the lulls, for administrative privileges in a chat or server, once again, mod drama, classic, for a special title or tag next to their username to be put on a roster from one of the com groups or for access and entry into the most private and closed networks of these communities. These rewards sought by these minors are ephemeral as titles can be removed or lost by an admin who thinks their content is lacking or if they become victim or get quote unquote cucked.
Starting point is 00:35:11 And what I think is really fascinating. How did I know cucked was going to come up at some point in this? Yeah. I mean, once we let Grant out of the cuck chair to ask a couple questions later, he can talk all about that. No, so what I think is really fascinating here, though, is when I started covering, I guess what you would call like digital extremism or online extremism or online radicalism or online radicals. actualization like 10, 15 years ago. The assumption was that eventually we would solve it and then we would come up with new problems, you know, because the world keeps turning.
Starting point is 00:35:39 But this group is such a fascinating example of like the post-Forchan world where the lines between like an in-cell and a violent troll and white supremacist, which were very distinct when they first appeared. They were different boards on 4chan. You know, the guys on pole and the guys on R9, or an R9. 9K or whatever. They were different people. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:36:02 But for the next generation coming up, the Roblox Minecraft generation, Gen. Gen Alpha even, those things have all flattened down into just like a soup of online misery. It's such a natural extension of where we were headed 10, 15 years ago that it like depresses me that it just like is this obvious in hindsight that we were headed here. It's really difficult to see where culture is going nowadays. We've never seen anything like this.
Starting point is 00:36:27 We've never seen like the. another podcast, besides last, but I also do a music history podcast. This guy's got two podcasts. Oh, yeah, baby. Oh, yeah, man. But it's a music history podcast. It's called No Dogs in Space, where we look at, you know, like the history of a band, and we, you know, also look at, like, the cultural context of that band, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:52 the things that were happening around them at the time that informed their music. In 1973, they talk about 1960s. like we talk about 1945. You know, like they talk about it like it happened a million years ago. Sure. And they talk about culture as this ever-evolving thing. And I can't remember the last time we as a culture talked about moving towards something and talked about the evolution of anything.
Starting point is 00:37:20 2025 feels exactly the same as 2015 culturally, at least to me. It's all become a blur. I don't know if that's – I sometimes wonder if it's just because, you know, 42 years old. No, it can't be that we're both older. I think it's not that. I do agree with you, though. I do agree with you.
Starting point is 00:37:38 You know, when you combined like this sort of insane, like internet culture that we have, that the way the world is totally flattened out, like, when all of these things come together, you do wonder, like, how, and I know that's the central question that you have, how do we fix this? Like, how do we get out of this? We need a new video game is what we need Um
Starting point is 00:38:01 No I I already fucking blew through Eldon Ring and now they bring it back and now I gotta play with other fucking people to play Eldon Ring now Play a from software game no We just need more video games The the business model that both Minecrafts But to a large extent Roblox but definitely social
Starting point is 00:38:18 platforms like Facebook or Instagram or whatever All Thrive on is one of Digitally replacing something in real life And it's interaction it's social interaction. And we talked earlier in the episode about the dehumanization that is inherent there. And I don't want to sound like, you know,
Starting point is 00:38:34 an old crank that's like, the internet makes you a bad person. And we have plenty of episodes on, for Panic World about how like actually the internet also allows you to be kind of anything you want to be. And that's especially important if like real life is tough for you. Yada, yada. Everyone knows the deal.
Starting point is 00:38:48 But we need to actually humanize and understand the consequences of this new sort of gamified terrorism, gamified, you know, horror online. It's important to keep in mind that we, We are largely talking about teens, victimizing other teenagers or people in their early 20s praying on people who were only a couple years younger than them. And so this is from a CBC documentary.
Starting point is 00:39:07 My name is Trinity. I was 14 when I was groomed by members of 764. And I was exploited for three years. It just became so painful. I didn't feel real. I didn't feel like a human being. She goes on to say, I met these people on accident. One of my friends who are showing me these gore videos on Discord.
Starting point is 00:39:27 invited me to one of them and I ended up talking in these servers. Now I should say, anyone listening, if someone's showing you Gore videos, don't join a Discord for that. No. Just don't do that. Anyone that wants to sit in a Discord and talk about Gore content is weird. That's a weird thing to do. I grew up, look, I grew up in the age of rotten.com and I never once thought I want to join a chat room to talk about what I just saw on rotten.com. That did not ever occur to me.
Starting point is 00:39:55 Obviously, which is not to say that we should blame the victims. you know, whose morbid curiosity helped them go deeper and deeper into these worlds. Sure. She says she was love bombed, convinced to provide blackmail material, and they kept giving her escalating tasks, like cutting usernames into herself, which is interesting because, like, on the Blue Whale episode we did, like that was a fake thing. So where do you think the adults were in all of this?
Starting point is 00:40:20 The adults as in like moderators, parents, like that sort of thing? Any little, literally anyone who could have done. done anything here to stop this from happening. I mean, I mean, this just everything about this just screams loneliness. Yeah. Like, everything about this screams abandonment. Like, everything. Like, this does not seem like, you know, nobody, nobody's watching any of these kids.
Starting point is 00:40:45 Yeah. But that's not always the case. More disturbingly, Trinity's mom was trying to help. She would say, I need my phone back. They love me. If I'm not on the internet, they're going to tell everybody. They're going to show everybody. You have to give it back to me.
Starting point is 00:40:57 What would happen when you took away the phone or turn off the Wi-Fi? She would break through drywall to get to me. She would get violent. She would start screaming and drooling and throwing herself on the floor, banging her head on the walls, scratching herself, pulling her hair out. Yeah, it's a nightmare for both of them. Trinity's mom said she slept with the door locked and with all the animals in with her, like all the pets.
Starting point is 00:41:22 The police were not very helpful. Yeah. Obviously, like, yeah, duh. And this did reach a breaking point. By July 2021, they pushed Trinity to try and kill herself on stream. I live streamed for everybody in a discord of me taking a blood bath and scorching hot water. When she was in the bathtub, I was pounding on the door for her to come out. After this, they got her to a hospital, thank God.
Starting point is 00:41:52 She met with the National Canadian Police, like a special unit. the specializes in this. They took her devices, but they couldn't figure out who she was talking to. They did later arrest her worst abuser. When they were arrested, they asked him why he did this. And according to the arresting officer, he said, I like the blood. And he got seven years in prison. After the arrest, she met with the FBI and helped them.
Starting point is 00:42:17 This whole situation is giving me power back. I felt like I lost a piece of myself to this. It's a good end to this. And people listening, if they want to hear more by this, you should watch the CBC documentary. It's very good. She's moved into her own apartment. She's moving on with her life. She's, you know, growing up suddenly normally now.
Starting point is 00:42:36 But it's easy to see that a young person in Trinity's position could take her life or be traumatized indefinitely. Like when you really start fucking with someone's emotions and you really, and especially when they're younger, this just seems like pure, you know, emotional. you know this is just completely this is just scrambling up somebody's emotions you know and and that can really fuck up a person yeah i think the i think part of it like one of the dimensions at play here is that this is happening across platforms that are created specifically for you to use them more even if they're negative it's a dimension that like i don't see spoken a lot about when we talk about kind of like abuse cycles online where it's like you might like you might be engaged
Starting point is 00:43:21 with really bad content. Yeah. But the platform you're doing it on is programmed literally to make sure that you keep logging in every day to engage with that bad content. Yeah. And like feeling like that matters. And I can see, you know, we're talking about people who you're talking about people who are 14, 15, 16 years old, which means they've never even known a world without that stuff. Like it's never even existed. So I could see how that could really scramble your.
Starting point is 00:43:51 your incentives or like your point of view or your perspective, which brings us to the other side of the coin, the abuser. This is from my Washington Post story. Samuel Hervey, a 25-year-old in the throes of a severe mental health crisis, a Minnesota native, stepped into the frame of the live video stream. He sat down, cross-legged, and emptied a plastic bottle filled with gasoline onto his head and his clothing, then lit a flame. Among those watching the November 21 live stream was a few.
Starting point is 00:44:21 15-year-old girl in an Eastern European city who had spent much of the previous week in close contact with Hervey, urging him to take his own life on camera. I was getting my big break, she recalled, thinking during Hervey's suicide. It was a competition of who could do the worst thing, so obviously I felt very cool. When the post spoke to that young woman, she was now 18. She's only referred to the story by her screen name, which was FMLK. And she said, I feel very bad for what I did even now. It's something that happened when I was in a bad space. I feel like this thing is going to haunt me for the rest of my life, you know, as it should.
Starting point is 00:45:01 Yeah. So let me give you a bit more background. It really paints the picture of how these groups work. FMLK's victim, Hervey, was in a mental health crisis and went online. That same day, Hervey created a chat room, referred to as a server on Discord, dedicated to his suicide. He named it An Hero Tempest. Do you know the term Anne Hero? Of course.
Starting point is 00:45:20 No, I was on 4chan. And way back in the day, I'm well familiar with Mitchell. Yeah. So most of the users told him not to do it, but FMLK reached out to convince him to actually do it. And it was a way to gain clout in 764. I think it is really like a big part of this is feeling like it matters. Yeah. A lot of these people are looking for purpose.
Starting point is 00:45:46 They're looking for something to do. They're looking for some way to feel like they're a part of it. Like, it's getting attention. It's getting notoriety. It's getting status. Even if it is just a fucking badge, you know, even if it is just, you know, something that's next to your username, even if it is just being a mod, you know, status is status. You know, that humans still crave the same things today that we craved, you know, 5,000 years ago. Our brains really haven't changed that much.
Starting point is 00:46:15 We just are now in this situation where, you know, our brains have. haven't caught up to where we are. Like, I always love the Maya Kulpa from an internet utopianist that, you know, it was from an article, you know, maybe four or five years ago. Or this guy had spent the 90s telling everyone that the internet was going to change the world, that it was going to bring us together, that it was going to make everything so much better. And he came out and said, I'm sorry, I was wrong. Good.
Starting point is 00:46:47 I hope so. He said, I was so fucking wrong. I can't believe how wrong I was. You really shit the bed on that one. Yeah. This is where their prediction ends up. During hours of interviews at a coffee shop and in a restaurant, she was at times nervous, but spoke matter of factly.
Starting point is 00:47:04 This is from the Washington Post story. As she described her entry into the dark online community, it began in 2019, she said when at age 13, she was scouring social media for gory pictures and videos. She joined chat rooms on Discord and telegram for a group that called itself cult with a V. a 764 predecessor whose members posted graphic images of self-harm and child pornography. At the time, she said she was trying to belong. She had no friends at her school and felt like an outcast. I thought they were edgy.
Starting point is 00:47:33 I wanted them to like me. And she's really like the worst case, you know, humanly possible of a thing that happens to all of us. She realized that wasn't the, you know, the click or the group that she wanted to be a part of. She started the 10th grade at a new school that fall. She made new friends. and she came to see the online groups in a different light. I realize those people are scum, she told the post. I realize that if I keep doing that, my life was not going to be good.
Starting point is 00:47:58 And what this is so illustrative of is the breakdown between like seeking out like goth or edgy or dark fictional material and the internet sort of being a repository of the real thing. And it's like when I was a mentally ill teenager, I, you know, saw it out really dark. themes and spooky stuff and heavy music. And it was all fictionalized. And, you know, I would come across Gore content and be like, no, thanks.
Starting point is 00:48:26 You know, it wasn't super easy to access. But now, after so many years of building up like this massive, massive collection of content across all these platforms, like, you can just go find that stuff. And I do think the lines are blurred for a lot of people entering that world as young people now. Man, we are in the wild fucking West right now. Like, and trying to figure out like what this stuff is really is really doing. into us. It sometimes feels like we're in the time period of like lead gasoline. Do you know the lead
Starting point is 00:48:56 gasoline theory? I do. I believe it. It's one I believe actually. That lead gasoline basically led to like what Gen X like being like conservative essentially? Is that the way of it? Well, no. Well, it is partly that. But it is it's more with the boomers and it's more with violence. And you know, just throughout the years you could see in countries, and you saw this like not just America, but you could see it in country after country, where like the rise of the use of leaded gasoline, like the more leaded gasoline was used, you saw a line a few years later of crime, like skyrocketing. So like, you know, the serial killer, like they asked like, why aren't there's many serial killers around, you know, today as there were like in the 70s and 80s. Because in the 70s and 80s, it's one of
Starting point is 00:49:47 that theories is the reason why they were so violent the 70s, 80s and 90s, is because of the exposure to leaded gasoline. And you see it in countries across the world. Once they ban leaded gasoline, you see their crime rates start to dip a few years later. And I think social media is going to be the leaded gasoline of the 21st century. But I think you and I are fine. No, I'm fucking, I think we're fine. Oh, dude. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:50:15 I think we're the only two people that it hasn't impacted. I think we're fine. Yeah, man. I'm perfect. I'm fucking... Not Grant, though. Grant's a real sicko. And we're going to talk about some other sickos, the 764 group and what they've been up to right after a break from some very upset advertisers.
Starting point is 00:50:37 So just a quick run through of some other acts of terror that have been committed by 764 and com groups. So in March of 2022, a member attacked an 82-year-old man. Two weeks later, he killed him. an elderly woman in 2024. A Swedish user with the name Slane, 764, stabbed eight people and recorded it. And December, 2024, a 15-year-old opened fire at the abundant life Christian school in Madison, killing a student and a teacher before killing himself. There's, you know, all kinds of stories about extorting and then kidnapping minors,
Starting point is 00:51:11 foiled terrorist plots, tons and tons and tons of child sexual abuse material, swattings. And then one last one here. from Wired. The nonprofit National Center for Missing and Exploited Children received hundreds of reports of minors extorted into hurting themselves in 2023. There was a sharp rise over the previous years where they only ever saw a handful of these cases. In these online groups, some of the most egregious online incitement reports that we're seeing in terms of what these children are being coerced to do. Just to sort of give you a last little picture of where we are at the moment, This is from Argentina again.
Starting point is 00:51:49 The U.S. Department of Justice accused Prasan Nepal, Trippy, as he was known, a 20-year-old from High Point, North Carolina, and Leonidas, Veragianis, or someone who goes by war. I would go with the cooler name, which is your name in that case, by the way. His name is Leonidas. Okay, anyways, who is a U.S. citizen in Thessaloniki, Greece? Kids don't always make the best decisions when it comes. So, like, when I was 14, I like to go by Doom, Hammer online.
Starting point is 00:52:17 I mean, that's sick. I went by Rye Man, which is not good. Well, I went between Doomhammer and Alien Pirate. Okay. Those are both very good. Wow. Yeah, so these two were accused being leaders of and playing key roles in running 764 from late 2020 until March 2025.
Starting point is 00:52:36 A complaint filed in Washington, D.C., in April 2025, charges both men with operating a child exploitation enterprise. Each faces one count of child exploitation under a charge that carries a potential life sentence. And here's some last bad news for you from Wired in 2025. In the face of international law enforcement presser, dozens of prosecutions and worldwide disrepute the network of young sadists, misanthropes, child predators, and extortionists known as Com or 764 has not shrunk away into obscurity. Rather, its members have progressed from online extortion and crimes related to child sexual abuse material to real world violence.
Starting point is 00:53:14 So we're talking about knifings, killings, fire bombings, drive-by shootings, school shootings, and murder for higher plots across Europe, North America. They've all been connected to a splinter group called No Lives Matter. This is not the same thing as what was connected to the IVF bombing. Yeah, yeah. But it's not not because these things are all, I think, based around a very modern sense of nihilism. It is all kind of ballooning out and flattening and spreading in a million directions the way this stuff always does. So how is this story not massive? Is it just that it's too hard to explain?
Starting point is 00:53:54 Because that is sometimes what we've run into is like when we come across it like a story that's, you know, just from history that you get like, well, everybody should know about this. How does everyone not know about this? Sometimes it just does come down to it's difficult to get people to pay attention. So, yeah, I think there's a couple things at play. One, it took a lot of time for in cells to be taken seriously as a terror group. It really took, like, Elliot Roger doing something quite big for that. They were around, obviously. I also think that this group, you know, there's not that many of them.
Starting point is 00:54:30 So they can have a big impact while still being relatively tiny. Audrey told us that in 764, there's roughly a dozen name members and three times that many recruits. and about 17,000 unique accounts. Okay. So this is a very cynical take here, but I think that this group is not going for scale in the way that we're used to internet-inspired terrorism. It's honestly very anti-millennial in that way.
Starting point is 00:54:56 Like they're not going for a massive bombing or a huge spree shooting. Sure. I would guess there's probably a fear. I mean, I even feel it now, like doing this episode, about telling people about this. Because I felt that way about Kiwi farms. Like I was like, I don't actually think normal people need to know about this until like, you know, you can't anymore and you have to tell them.
Starting point is 00:55:19 But like, I don't know. I, it also just sounds fake. It does. It sounds like a bunch of Joker hinch and without the Joker, where they're just sort of agents of chaos. And sometimes, I mean, and that is terrifying. It's terrifying to think about. It's terrifying to talk about. Can I throw out two, just one thing to add to this?
Starting point is 00:55:37 You can come out of your cage now. Thank God. This just seemed like a specific episode where it felt very inappropriate to make cage jokes, but fine. I'm part of 764 now. I'm in. I want to get the flare on my telegram username. One, I think that there's a problem where it sounds silly and we're so quick to be like, that is a moral panic, that is bait. Yes.
Starting point is 00:56:00 That there's an immediate dismissal because everything is a flat circle. So all these kids are just playing off of things and yes, anding things that are, that we're fake and making them real. And two, I think that it doesn't have a political ideology. If this was, obviously, there's lots of swastikas and there's people identify as neo-Nazis within 764, but they are not doing this in the name of Hitler. And if it was in the name of Hitler and it fell, if this fell within left-right politics, it could then be packaged in a way we understand.
Starting point is 00:56:33 And now we exist in a new age of terrorism where it doesn't work that way. This is very important. And it's becoming more important because accelerationist violence is increasing. We are not ready as a society, as a country. Law enforcement is not ready. And when I talk to people who are extremism researchers, when I talk to consultants who deal with the FBI, I have friends who do that work,
Starting point is 00:56:57 they're like the number one thing that we are screaming at the FBI, screaming at law enforcement agencies to understand is that nihilistic accelerationist violence. is going to be the domestic terror of the future. It is right wing. It is far right. It is connected to all of the other things. But the branding is so different and so new that we are not,
Starting point is 00:57:23 like the media cannot figure it out. Like they have no idea how to deal with it. You know what it feels like in the 80s, you know, anytime they showed a punk as a criminal. And he was always laughing in that really high register while, you know, he's being. Yeah. like, yeah, exactly, like beating up an old lady or blowing up a gas station, like Robocop 2.
Starting point is 00:57:42 Yes. You know, like, yes. It feels like that's what's happening now, like that, because that was never real. That, that, that didn't exist back then. That was a conservative, a conservative fever dream. And maybe there is something about, you know, wanting to stay a little bit detached, you know, where you say, like, we don't want to say that it's a moral panic. You know, you know, we don't want to be, you know, lumped in with any of that.
Starting point is 00:58:05 We don't want to come out and say, like, hey, maybe we, should be thinking about these kids. Like that even saying it feels a little goofy. It does feel goofy. You mentioned the Joker earlier, but it's very similar to the Jokers, the gang from Batman Beyond that took the Joker's mantle
Starting point is 00:58:23 and turned it into a biker gang. They killed Terry McGuinness's parents in the first episode, and he becomes Batman because of it. Wow. No, but a decentralized domestic terrorism, global terrorism. I mean, we've had versions of this forever.
Starting point is 00:58:37 Like ISIS is the kind of the blueprint, but ISIS was ideological. Yeah. And we are not really prepared to think about the lack of ideology as an ideology, even though it obviously, it has to be. Well, I mean, we've, I mean, what the fuck do you call the mass shootings that we've had, you know, over the last 20 years? Like, was there any ideology behind, you know, did Sung Cho have an ideology? No, he had Richard McBeef. there was no ideology even going as far back as Columbine. There was no ideology.
Starting point is 00:59:09 You know, Adam Lanzah had no ideology. A lot of them, there's fucking nothing behind it. Yeah. So we've been living in it. Like, that's the funny thing about it, is that we've been living in this reality for a very long time now. It just seems like now they're starting to organize. We've, or, and we've open sourced it. We've created, like, we've made it scalable.
Starting point is 00:59:30 Yeah. You can kind of feel a collective disappointment in media. whenever there's a mash casualty event and then it doesn't fall into an ideological thing that is politically advantageous oh yeah it's like we're waiting for the manifesto and then if it does if the manifesto is weird it just becomes less interesting to talk about as and as like a scene on punditry level which is like a problem no but i can tell you why which is like in the 2010s when when these things were like post sandy hook like that period after Sandy Hook, there was first a desire to find out who these people were and find
Starting point is 01:00:11 their social media history and publish it. That was like, that was like wave one of like the digital media mass shooting playbook. Yeah, let's watch every YouTube video that Elliot Roger ever made and, you know, analyze it. And then there was wave two, which was find out why they did it, which is not easy to do. But quickly, a lot of newsrooms, ones I worked in, once my friends worked in, editors in those newsrooms figured out that if you could say, well, Facebook was connected in some way, like the Christchurch shooter. He live streamed on Facebook. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:45 Well, that doesn't become one story. That becomes a series of stories of like, we've asked Facebook for comment. How did Facebook allow this to happen? It's good for business, but also I don't want to be super cynical about it, but it does tie into a larger fascination with these things and a desire for answers. And so in the case of 764 to bring it back around, if the answer is these kids don't believe in anything because they were born at the end of the world as far as they're concerned and they're just tormenting each other until they all die, like that's not satisfying for
Starting point is 01:01:19 anybody. That's really, thanks for listening, guys. Have a great day. Like, yeah, it's just not satisfying. When you start asking why, you know, you say as far as they're concerned it is, the end of the world, and I find myself, you know, caught in that hole quite a bit as well. You know, it's if you have to start asking the questions of like, well, why do they think it's the end of the world? That introduces a lot of questions that a lot of the media sponsors don't like to answer.
Starting point is 01:01:49 Yeah. How are you feeling? You seem, do we bum you out? Do we bum you out? You're all right? Oh, absolutely not. No, no, no. This is my job.
Starting point is 01:01:58 Okay. This has been my job for a really long time. Just making sure we have similar brain damage. No, good. We failed, Ryan. We didn't break him. It's our first guest in so long way. Actually, no, I will say you are the first guest we've had in a long time that hasn't ended our episode just gray and like absolutely stricken with anxiety.
Starting point is 01:02:17 So yeah, this is good. This feels good. Oh, no. I actually confirms quite a bit that I've been thinking anyway. Like, and it kind of puts into perspective, like, you know, Actually, it helps me to understand the mass shooter epidemic of the last 20 years quite a bit better. And, you know, I like when I understand something, it makes me feel better. And I, and I, that's part of why we did start the whole thing of last podcast is like, I wanted to understand this stuff.
Starting point is 01:02:41 You know, even if the answer is disturbing, at least it's not, you know, just in a black hole of nothingness. Well, I actually, that is where I wanted to end this. Because I do think with all this stuff, the answer is almost always 100%. Like I would say like 99% of the time, the answer is like you have to sort of engage with this stuff earnestly and thoughtfully and not like these kids are obviously reacting to stuff around them. It's telling them that like life does not matter. Right. Obviously. And the simplest answer here, the most effective answer, which is also unfortunately the cringiest and the most embarrassing is you just have to say, no, it does.
Starting point is 01:03:22 Like a lot of what we've talked about this, this episode is just a reflection of like kind of how, I don't know, I feel like we screwed up by like letting this meme of like, it's the end of the world become so pervasive that like 16 and 17 year olds are acting like it is and treating it like that way. And I and I just think that like, you know, if anyone's listening to this feeling like really distraught, instead of joining some sort of Nihilist Discord page, just, I don't know, like get yourself like a little treat. you know watch a watch a tv show or something have a little treat or something uh but like remind yourself that yeah like life is worth living yeah i mean because that is what this is this is people who just got sucked into this mindset that it's very hard to pull out of we are at this moment at this inflection point and i don't know which way we're going to go i don't know which way we're going to turn but you know things will get better eventually that's right you know whether Whether it be 10 years from now, five years from now, it might even be 100 years from now.
Starting point is 01:04:22 Even if I've got to go on Minecraft and figure out how that works to help, I'll do it. If I have to do it, I don't want to do it. But there's always, there's always, there's always, it seems like a good place to start. More mods seems probably like a, more mods. More mods. I mean, that's the things that is eventually going to be where everyone's job is just going to be to make sure that everyone else isn't being awful. Right. And we're just a Internet lifeguards.
Starting point is 01:04:47 As I said, we got to get it. masculinity lifeguards. This is a silly question I ask you. I ask this to all our guests, but it's silly for you. If people want to follow you on the internet, where can they do that? No, you can, if you enjoy, you know, history, if you enjoy dark shit, if you enjoy, you know, like, true crime. Like, true crime used to be our bread and butter, but these days we're, you know, moving a little bit more towards, like, history stuff. We're in the middle of, on last podcast on the left, a whole series on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
Starting point is 01:05:16 And it's, my God, the parallels between today and 18. John Wilkes Booth's Discord channel was out of control. Yeah, I've heard that. Yeah, man. It's just the parallels of the way people talk about stuff and, you know, the divides in our country today. Like, it's another one of those things that just shows you, you know, we're just, you know, history's just rhyming constantly. So if you like that, you know, we're, and I also do another podcast called No Dogs in Space. where we go through music history.
Starting point is 01:05:49 And, you know, we did a whole season on punk. We've done a, we did a season on the Beastie Boys. We went through, you know, the history of hip-hop and how it, you know, conflated with, you know, the history of punk, Velvet Underground, all kinds of great shit over there. If you want to check it out, go check out the podcast. Thank you so much for doing this. This was a blast.
Starting point is 01:06:05 This was, thank you so much for having. Great. Thank you. Hey, if you want to hear the full interview granted with Andre, you can find that on our Patreon. Patreon.com slash Panic World. Panic World is a production of Courier. It is written and produced by Grant Irving and hosted by me, Ryan Broderick. Josh Fielstead is our production coordinator and our amazing researcher is Adam Bumis. From Courier is Shane Verkest, who edits our video episodes, along with our producer,
Starting point is 01:06:31 Devin Moroni, and National Managing Director and Executive Producer Kevin Dreyfus. R.C. DeMezo is their VP of Brand and Social. Charlotte Robinson is their Deputy Director of Brand and Social. Marianne Couga is their director of marketing, and Tracy Kaplan is the Senior Vice President of Sales and Distribution. If you want to sponsor the show or give us products to sell, she's the one to talk to. You can email her at Tracy at Courier Newsroom.com. Lastly, here's my advice for you. Chill out and touch grass while you still can.

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