Ray William Johnson: True Story Podcast - The Greatest Con Man In TV History - The Don Lapre story
Episode Date: February 9, 2025This is the story of Don Lapre and his late night infomercials ...
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This is your fix.
I am your host, Stasi Schroeder.
Welcome to Tell Me Lies, the official podcast.
What's the most unhinged thing of season three?
Stephen, because he's so evil.
I do think he is misunderstood.
You see everyone-based consequences.
It's intoxicating.
The writers just know how to trick you.
There's always a twist in this show.
Tell Me Lies, the official podcast, January 6th,
and stream the new season of Tell Me Lies, January 13, on Hulu,
and Hulu on D.
If you've ever watched TV late at night in the 90s, you might remember seeing this guy, Don.
Our goal is to educate over 200 million...
Well, one day, Dawn was suddenly found unalived.
Why?
So back when Don had nothing, his whole goal was to do whatever it takes to get rich.
So he goes and he starts a dating service.
But it quickly fails.
And two months later, he files for bankruptcy.
Then he sets up a little quick.
credit repair company and he charges people to help repair their credit. The problem with that is it's a scam.
When people sign up with Don's company, he doesn't repair their credit. He only gives them
information on how to sign up for new high interest credit cards, which would potentially put them
right back into debt. So his customers get pissed because this is fraud. So the state sues him, a judge
orders him to pay his victims back, and his credit repair business is ultimately shut down. Oh, but that
doesn't stop Don, he is determined to get rich. So he starts another grift and that fails.
Then he starts yet another where he's selling 1-900 numbers, psychic hotlines and shit like that.
So he starts advertising these 900 numbers in the newspaper. And this is where he learns
that advertising whatever grift he's doing is gonna be the key to make him rich. So he does
this and he really starts pulling in big numbers. Allegedly over $50,000 a week. So he's finally
getting rich. But for some reason,
this just isn't enough for Don. And he wants to take it further and make more. And that is when he gets into the world of late-night infomercials. And in these infomercials, Don always makes himself the star, and he starts off by selling those same 1-900 numbers.
Another way to make unheard of amounts of money is by getting your own 1-900 line. But then he starts branching out into selling other garbage. But where he really gets traction is when he starts peddling people bull-shut-ad-ad-ad-divise.
on how to get rich.
Basically, he's selling get rich quick schemes.
And this grift is definitely shady,
but it's technically not illegal.
So it really works for him.
And he starts running these late night infomercials
all the time, like every night of the week.
And soon he's selling his get rich quick schemes
to hundreds of thousands of people.
And suddenly, just like that,
he and his business are allegedly worth
over $40 million.
Dude is killing it.
And by this point, he's a household name.
He even gets parodied.
on SNL played by a young David Spade.
Hi, I'm Don LaPrie and I have a question for you.
And this success continues for years.
And Don just keeps spending money and he keeps trying to expand his businesses.
But over time, it slowly stops working like it used to.
It seems like people are getting tired of his get rich quick schemes.
And so his profit margin starts to fall.
And at one point, his company's losing half a million dollars a week
and he owes a bunch of money on back taxes.
And he loses really really.
big on a real estate deal in Mexico. And then one day, Womp, Womp, poor Don has lost so much money
he has to get up in front of all his employees and break the news to them. All his companies that were
once worth over $40 million have now gone bankrupt. But as we saw before, bankruptcy is not
going to stop Don. He is going to grift whoever he can to get rich again. So a year later,
he comes up with his biggest scam yet. And he partners up with this.
guy, Doug Grant. And Doug Grant is a whole other shady character with a whole other
backstory. But Don and Doug Grant, they get together and they decide to set up a company,
selling, of all things, vitamins. And they call it the greatest vitamin in the world. But
despite its name, it's basically just a standard multivitamin. But that doesn't matter. Don
knows he can get on TV and he can sell it. And that's exactly what he does. He goes right
back to making those late night TV infomercials, starring himself, sell.
telling these vitamins.
Our goal is to educate over 200 million people.
But here's where the whole thing gets shady.
Don's not just slang in these standard multivitamins.
He's making all kinds of claims about exactly what they're able to do.
Like he claims these vitamins can cure diabetes and they can cure heart disease and that
they prevent cancer.
Spoiler alert, they don't.
And not only are they making false claims, but Don and Doug Grant turn the whole thing
into a pyramid scheme.
they start recruiting people to resell the vitamins for them, promising them huge commissions
and that they'll all be rich, and they can own their own business and all they have to do is pay
several hundred dollars up front to get started. Classic MLM nonsense. But over time, the pyramid
in their pyramid scheme actually gets huge. From their infomercials, they recruit over 220,000
people to help resell these bullshit multivitamins. And this goes on for several years. And
And allegedly Don and Doug Grant's company brings in over $52 million from doing this.
So all this success and all this attention, this ends up going great for them.
Until.
Eventually, the FDA catches on to the claims that Don and Doug Grant are making about these vitamins.
And they don't like it.
So they issue them several formal warnings to stop saying your vitamins do all this stuff that they don't really do.
But Don and Doug Grant, they don't stop.
They just keep on running these infomercials and they keep selling.
So after years of FDA warnings and customer complaints,
Don's cons finally catch up to him because their business gets rated.
And eventually all their vitamin websites are taken down
and their greatest vitamin in the world business ends up getting dissolved.
And ultimately, there's a four-year-long investigation into Don's shady business model.
And during this time, his business partner, Doug Grant,
he actually goes to prison for unaliving his wife.
So that's fun.
But after all these investigations and all the evidence they have against him,
Don knows he's going down for this vitamin scheme
and that he'll likely spend a lot of time in prison.
So one day, he just vanishes.
He doesn't show up to his court date.
He basically says, fuck it, and he goes on the run from the law.
But unfortunately for him, about a day later, they find him,
hiding out in a local gym.
So that didn't work.
So they arrest Don and they throw him in jail
and he has to wait there until his trial starts.
So there he is, he's facing 41 counts of fraud, and he's potentially looking at 25 years in prison if he gets convicted.
And this scares the hell out of him.
So one morning, two days before his trial, Don, he takes a razor blade and he unalives himself right there in his jail cell.
