Stuff You Should Know - The Creepy Legacy of the Hotel Cecil
Episode Date: September 7, 2021The Hotel Cecil in downtown Los Angeles has had no less than 16 unnatural deaths, from suicides to murders and everything in between. Listen in to the history of this decidedly creepy hotel. Learn ...more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart
radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too. Listen to
Skyline Drive on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant over there
and Jerry's hanging around somewhere lurking on the iHeart haunted hotel.
And this is Stuff You Should Know.
Yeah. Can we do a couple of quick announcements?
Yeah, sure.
Without singing that announcement song?
Did we have an announcement song ever?
Well, not us, but it like summer camp.
Okay.
You never did that?
No.
Well, I'm not going to sing it now then.
I kind of want to hear it now.
No, no, no, no, no.
Was it like announcements, announcements? It's announcements time.
Sort of almost. Yeah, that's close enough.
Trigger warning for this one, first announcement because there's some grisly stuff in here.
I guess that's all we need to say.
And then also we've been remiss and that we haven't mentioned the fact that
there's a Stuff You Should Know board game out.
Yeah, it's not grisly at all.
No, it's very family friendly, in fact.
It's one of the highest honors that's ever been bestowed upon us in Stuff You Should Know, Chuck,
because out of the blue, out of nowhere, about a year and a half ago, maybe?
Yeah.
Trivial pursuit.
The makers of Trivial Pursuit got in touch with us and said,
we want to do a Stuff You Should Know Trivial Pursuit game.
And they did.
It wasn't a practical joke.
The fine people at Hasbro, who I got to say,
I mean, we've worked with a lot of outside companies for various projects.
And boy, Hasbro is about as tight and buttoned up and awesome as any company we've ever worked with.
Right, but also super friendly, super fun, super nice.
Amazing.
And not in that creepy everybody's trying to be nice way.
They're all just a genuinely pleasant group to work with.
But yes, they are super buttoned up as well.
Very rare.
In the games.
Yeah, in the games.
They all seem like they make games for a living, which would mean that you have a pretty cool job.
And developing the game with them was fun.
And the questions are based on real Stuff You Should Know episodes.
And it is not just Trivial Pursuit.
It is co-branded.
So it is not, do not expect to get the Trivial Pursuit game with the little pieces of pie.
No, no.
Just want to be clear.
They said, we want to make up a brand new game for this.
And they did.
They made up a game.
And this is the Stuff You Should Know Trivial Pursuit game.
That's right.
And you can get it wherever you get games.
I recommend your local little indie toy gaming store if they have it.
But otherwise, we would love the sport.
You got a weirdo in your town who dresses up in wizard clothes and goes to work.
Go buy your game there.
Yeah, great Christmas gift, by the way.
Yeah, for sure.
Also, why just stop there?
It's great for dads, grads, moms, proms, everything.
I think it's like $20, right?
Yeah, it's like really, really reasonably priced, if you ask me. $20.
$20.
You got $2.20 in your wallet.
You could buy our book and the game at the same time.
So we did the TV show.
We did a book.
We do a podcast.
Don't forget our YouTube series.
Sure, you can.
And now, Chuck.
And now the game.
It's amazing.
And now the Hotel Cecil.
Yes, on to the show.
So I'm glad you did that little trigger warning because there is some grisly stuff in here.
But there's also, I think, some fact settings, some fact straightening that we should do from
the outset.
Because one of the things that people who get into the Elisa Lamb story,
which we'll talk about in a little bit, quickly find that there are all manner of
Internet urban legends and myths and conspiracy theories surrounding it.
And none of those seem to be true.
It's pretty annoying, actually.
Yeah, it is very annoying.
It's just so Internet-y, too.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, I mean, this goes on a lot these days.
But it seems like this one may be more so than even others.
Because the bizarre nature of one part of this story, and I don't know, I found myself
slightly annoyed.
I am, too.
In the exact same way that I'm annoyed by people who believe that the couple from the
conjuring were legit and real life.
You know what I mean?
Sure.
But at the same time, it goes even further than that.
I think I ran across a couple of articles that I really think struck home what's genuinely
annoying and even disrespectful about that is that at least Elisa Lam died because she had
serious mental illness that had been diagnosed and she wasn't managing properly with the
medications that she was on.
And that happens a lot.
And she died because of it.
And so to say that she was possessed by evil spirits or that there were ghosts at the sea
soul or even though she was murdered by an unknown suspect, it really disrespects the
reality of the situation, which is sad enough as it is.
But at the same time, Chuck, there's one more thing I have to caveat all this with.
It's understandable the impulse to bring in restless spirits and the conspiracy theories.
It's understandable in this particular situation because of the setting.
Yeah.
And I guess the first part of this show will be about the setting, which is the
Hotel Cecil in downtown Los Angeles, which is not open right now.
It may be open in the future.
I think they were doing a...
This thing was open in the 1920s during the height of the depression.
And it's a very large hotel, 19 floor, 700 rooms.
And in the 1920s, it was sort of like a big deal for downtown Los Angeles.
It was near a major rail station and it was kind of just what LA needed.
And it was kind of fancy schmancy for the time.
And over the years, we'll talk a little bit about the downfall.
But at the time of Elisa Lamstay, they had carved out three floors and built a separate
lobby entrance to try in an effort to rebrand this hotel as something called Stay on Main.
And that they had three floors that were a little bit redone, cosmetically,
a little bit of a nicer lobby that was sort of away from some of the situations that were
going to detail here in a second.
But they did all share a common elevator.
And Elisa Lam was staying in the Stay on Main section.
Stayed on Main.
But that's just to point out the fact that the hotel was going to eventually,
supposedly undergo a massive renovation and that it was all sort of put on hold because
of COVID. And I think now it's just being sat on with some of the long-term tenants
that are protected to stay there.
Yeah, I think it was like 30.
But there's, like you said, 700 rooms.
Sure.
But you said it that the Cecil Hotel, which is very much down at the heels now,
started life in a much different way where it was meant to be like a pretty nice hotel
designed for middle-class travelers to LA.
And that situation next to the rail station was a big draw for it.
It was definitely a feather in its cap.
And I saw it's in the Beaux-Arts style.
You know, it's not incredibly pretty from the outside, but the inside lobby is still
pretty neat-looking.
Sure.
Lots of terrasso tile and columns.
And there's fake Roman Statuary and a big clock at the over-the-check-in desk.
It's really pretty in a really 1920s original style still,
although it's just kind of got this drab air that's kind of fallen over it over the years.
Yeah.
And that is in large part because, like you said, there are a lot of unhoned people there today,
a lot back then.
The area called Skid Row of downtown Los Angeles is kind of right there.
I used to drive through that area sometimes when I lived in LA when we would go downtown to eat
sushi or if we, you know, back then when I lived there, downtown was not as much of a destination
unless you were going to Staples Center or something.
But it's made a real resurgence since I've left and kind of trying to build downtown back up.
But Skid Row is still an issue.
And they're, you know, like you said, there are people there that work with unhomed folks
that are really trying their best to take care of them.
And the fact that that hotel is right there, just sort of looming large, is a bit of a thumb in the eye.
Yeah.
And I get the impression that the area that's now Skid Row in Los Angeles
had had at least since the 1880s kind of had an unusual reputation.
It wasn't always, you know, for people down on their luck or anything like that.
But, you know, it was a little more low rent than other parts of Los Angeles.
Like there was just a mishmash of all sorts of different people.
It seemed like really alive.
And the SESA was kind of built at the outskirts of that between what would become Skid Row
and then one of the nicest parts of LA at the time, Bunker Hill.
And everything was hunky dory for the SESA when it first opened in either 1924 or 1927,
depending on who you ask.
I could not confirm one way or the other because both dates have kind of taken off so much.
But when the stock market crashed, that area that was just kind of colorful and a little bit low rent
that it quickly became Skid Row as we understand it, beginning around the Great Depression.
And not only did the proximity to Skid Row kind of like lower the SESA star rating,
when the tenants started, the hotel guests started to dry up,
they had to lower their rates and start catering to people of less means.
And so the hotel just kind of stopped taking care of itself little by little,
starting around the Great Depression and continuing on through World War II.
Yeah, and it kind of became a last resort kind of destination for people with addiction problems,
people in the sex working industry.
And it got that reputation and pretty soon got a reputation for all kinds of bad things happening
there. There have been no less than 15 or 16 what's classified, I guess, as an unnatural death
at the Cecil. Many people took their own lives there.
Quite a few, I mean, if you read down the laundry list, it's like quite a few people
in ingested poison, quite a few people jumped or maybe were pushed out windows.
There have been some murders by gun, there have been murders by strangulation, there have been
sexual assaults. This one sad case of a woman who gave birth to a baby and was suffering from
some sort of mental illness, evidently thought her baby was born not alive and went to throw the
baby out the window and it turns out the baby was alive and then died. She was found not guilty,
I think temporary insanity was the plea there. And just weird, kind of tragic awful things
happening over the years time and time again at the Hotel Cecil.
Yeah, like another frequently referred to incident was where a woman named Pauline Aughton,
she jumped from I think like the ninth or tenth floor to take her own life and landed on a guy
who was a passerby who happened to just be walking, unluckily, beneath the Cecil at that
moment on the sidewalk and was struck by Pauline and they were both killed. And that doesn't
usually happen very often, that's a pretty remarkable thing. And I know that the most
I could find was I think 18 incidents, but it seems like those are just ones that have been
documented. There seems to be quite a bit more. There was a Netflix series, I think a
four part series on this recently, and they interviewed a woman who had spent 10 years
managing the Cecil. And she said that, her name is Amy Price, she said that under her 10 year
tenure, at least 80 people died that she knows of. And you can kind of imagine like,
like, you know, you could find newspaper write ups from like the 20s and 30s and 40s when somebody
jumps out a window and definitely when somebody jumps out a window and lands on a hapless pedestrian,
like that's definitely going to be documented to make news. But if somebody on Skid Row overdoses
and dies in this hotel, you know, is that going to be documented? So it's possible that there are
a lot more people who have died at the Cecil from unnatural causes over the years than just those
17 or 18. Did you watch all of that documentary? No, I haven't seen it actually yet. Okay. Have
you seen the whole thing? Yeah, you know, I feel terrible because the director was is the great Joe
Burlinger who actually had on movie crush. And one of my favorite episodes where we kind of just
talked about documentary filmmaking, he's a legend. He did the Paradise Law series, he did that
documentary on Metallica when they're all in therapy. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I mean, he's just,
he's just sort of the legend in the genre. I did the Ted Bundy tapes recently. That's like,
yeah, he did that. And then he directed the movie version with what's his face? I said,
Ryan Gosling. Close. Another super handsome hunk. And that was a good movie. But this wasn't so
great. I didn't love it. It felt kind of overlong and a little salacious and like, yeah, that's
the impression I had from reading about it. Yeah, so I was disappointed. But Joe is a great
filmmaker and a good guy. So I feel kind of bad. I think that's a fair caveat. A great filmmaker
and a good guy can still make a hunk of poop. What an hunk of poop. It was all right. Okay. But
maybe let's take a break and I'll email Joe and tell him I'm sorry ahead of time. All right. And
we'll be right back. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance
Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do,
you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously,
I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband,
Michael, um, hey, that's me. Yep. We know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush
boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Not another one. Kids relationships
life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If
so, tell everybody you everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never
ever have to say bye bye bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app
Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't
believe in astrology, but from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's
like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology. And lately,
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
because maybe there is magic in the stars. If you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up
some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league
baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet
and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good.
There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic
or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the
iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
So, okay. The Cecil Hotel starts to get a pretty, not a great reputation even around town. I read
an article on KCET.org, which I guess is a PBS station in SoCal. And they said that local residents
started to refer to the Cecil as the suicide. That was the name of the hotel for people around there.
And it just kind of like, it just kept going. Like every time, you know, maybe a couple of years
have passed without some high-profile death in the hotel. And then it would happen again. And it
would just reaffirm everybody's ideas that there was, that place just wasn't quite right. There
was something wrong with it, almost like it was a magnet for that kind of tragedy, you know?
Yeah. I mean, I think most major cities have had at least one of these hotels that just sort of
is inexpensive, maybe in the wrong part of town and has a reputation sometimes for
lured activities and checking in and not checking out. And this was LA's. And LA for sure had more
than one. Sure. It did not help their reputation in the 1980s when Richard Ramirez, aka the Night
Stalker and one of the more sensational serial killers in American history, he stayed there for
a while and lived there and apparently brought body parts back to the Cecil Hotel. It's at Cecil
like I'm British. Cecil Hotel from some of his victims to Ingest there. And that's certainly
like super creepy. Wait, did you say Ingest? I hadn't come across that he ate that victim's eyeballs?
I think so. Wow. Man, I'm not sure. He wasn't like, I don't think he was
Dahmer level, but he was known to eat some body parts. There's a great documentary on his
case too. It's super disturbing. Yeah, that's on Netflix as well, I think,
if I'm not mistaken. But one thing I hadn't realized before that I ran across when I was
researching some of his stuff was how he was caught. It's just absolutely triumphant.
It was a mob of people in the neighborhood. In East LA. He was spotted. He saw himself
on the front page of the newspaper and just instinctively started running,
tried to carjack a woman, hit her, was seen hitting her and an older man
basically ran over and helped the woman, pulled Richard Ramirez out of his car.
And the woman whose car it was, husband came over and started beating him.
And he tried to get away and just an increasingly large mob chased him and would beat him and he'd
get away some more and they chase him down and catch him again. They finally pinned him down
and waited for the cops to come. That's how he was caught. It's so great.
Caveat that. I'm not down with mob justice, but a group of people finding a serial killer
on the street and like subduing him way okay with that. No, I totally am. In this particular
instance, like I'm all fine with that kind of justice for sure. Yeah, it's an a badge of honor
for East LA because the entire city of Los Angeles was, I mean, it was a scary situation
there in the 80s. I can imagine. That's where Cheech Marin was born, according to that one song of his.
That's right. So the Night Stalker, he was not the only serial killer that checked in there.
He actually inspired just a few years after he was convicted in I think 1989.
I think like in 92, maybe 93, there was another serial killer named Jack Unterweger who was Austrian
who had already been convicted. I think when he was like 19 or early 20s of killing a woman
by strangling her with her own bra and went to prison. He was very, very smart, very charming.
He used this to basically get early parole. He convinced the public that he was actually
reformed and apparently was held up as like a great example of how the prison system could
rehabilitate someone and it was just a complete false fabrication. He was basically posed as
a true crime journalist like he reinvented himself as that, went to LA and other parts,
he went to Europe, traveled through Europe a little bit too, but also ended up in LA
to do research on his true crime novels, went along on ride-alongs with the LAPD
and ended up using that to scout victims. He killed three sex workers and the whole time he
was staying at the Cecil Hotel and they think probably is an homage to Richard Ramirez or at
least a connection to him. At this point, the reputation for the hotel, it's not the kind
of thing that is going to appear online 15 years ago when young people like Elisa Lamb
are searching for an inexpensive place to stay. Sadly, that's exactly what happened was a Canadian
traveler, she was 21 years old, was on her way up the West Coast traveling by herself. Her parents
were a little unnerved by her traveling by herself so she was asked to check in every day
which she was doing. At the time, they had kind of dorm style rooms, kind of youth hostel style
rooms where you have bunk beds and a shared bathroom. You could stay there, it was a traveler's
hotel. I hate to say it, but if you didn't know much about LA, you may end up at the
hotel Cecil because you could stay there for like 75 bucks a night or something like that.
Yeah, from what I could tell, StayOnMain did a really good job of using their website to their
advantage and making it seem like this is a really hip happening spot. In some ways, they were
kind of just a little ahead of their time because apparently that area around Skid Row in downtown
LA is like the hippest spot to live in now again. But at the time, it was still really, really
skid rowy basically. It could be dangerous. Yeah, and I think it still is, but I think
it's just becoming more and more gentrified and it's becoming, I guess, less dangerous in that sense.
But at the time when Elisa Lam showed up in 2013, it was a dangerous place to be, but
this particular spot was just full of, especially European kids on basically budget holidays,
staying in LA basically in hostels. And I know originally she was put into a room with a couple
of other girls that I think were traveling together, but she was traveling alone. So it was
very hostile and not hostile with an E. Well, yeah, there's an E, but it's in a different place than
you'd expect. Yes. Youth hostily. It was very youth hostily. Like she was put in a room with
other people at first. Yeah, LA didn't have a lot of that. I remember there was a youth hostel in
Venice that, for some reason, I always wanted to stay there when I lived in LA. I was like,
I'm gonna go down and stay in the hostel one night because the beach was so, the beach was
really far when you lived on the east side and you kind of never went over there much
unless someone came to town and wanted to go to the beach. Well, that makes sense, sure.
So, and you know, I was broke back then, so it could have been a like a little staycation.
Did you ever do it? No. No. This is one of the things you think about late night
and then you wake up the next day and you're like, no.
You blew all your money on Taco Bell instead. Oh man, I miss Taco Bell. Do you? I don't.
I mean, I didn't eat it that much, but like I haven't had it in years. I've had too much,
I think was my problem. Oh, okay. Was that the deal? By the way, side note, speaking of weird
late night foods, we had a guy on our front door camera the other day come in the middle of the
night and leave a package and we were like, what is this? We went out the next day and it was a
bag full of crystals. Wow. And I think it was a delivery, like a door dash or something. Oh,
crystals. I thought you meant like amethyst or quartz. No, no, no. I mean, tiny square sliders.
He had the wrong address. I think so. Either that or your daughter has mastered the telephone by now.
It was really weird. And the course of the first thing I did was feel terrible that someone's
late night munchies didn't get satisfied. Did you eat them the next morning? Just as a homage?
No. No, no, no. No? You don't like crystals or was it because it was sitting there overnight?
Right. Both. I never was into crystal for some reason. Man, I like crystals.
It was the thing. I just was, I don't know why. I think I was just a Waffle House guy.
I don't, I'm fine with Waffle House too. The big problem with crystals though, Chuck,
I'll tell you, is their fries are probably the worst fries of any fast food low-kit. They're
the most bland. Somehow, if you just bit into a raw potato, it would be less bland and tasteless
than if you ate a crystal's fry. I don't know how to do it. And if you're from the other places
in the country, White Castle is sort of an analog to crystal. Anyway, this is not an episode of The
Doughboys. This is stuff you should know. And back to Elisa Lam. She was supposed to be there for
about, I think four days and check out on February 1st and did not get in touch with her parents
like she had been doing each day. She had been seen shopping for books at a nearby bookstore
and then bought some books. And this is one of the things in the documentary, like, you know,
they didn't really have any footage of her with any other people inside the hotel before her
disappearance. Well, she was also reported to be constantly by herself too by people who saw her.
Yeah. I mean, she was traveling alone. So that makes sense. But she did get handed off. There
were two gentlemen that handed off a kind of a largest, largest box to her on camera in front
of the hotel. And of course, the internet sleuths are like, who are these guys? What was in the box?
And apparently in the box were these books that she got, because she had spoken with a book read
seller about like the size of them. And boy, I don't even know if I can carry these. And I think
had them delivered to the hotel or whatever. So kind of nothing to see here. And another example
of how annoying this case can be with people online speculating like wrong stuff. Yeah,
yeah, can be a little annoying for sure. But yeah, so she was she was alone, traveling alone.
I think she started out in San Diego, or at least her last stop had been San Diego,
her next stop was going to be Santa Cruz. And yeah, her parents have been like, okay,
you need to call us every single day. And she had been pretty faithfully until that February 1st
came and went with no call. And I believe they pretty much immediately contacted the hotel and
the LAPD and said, Hey, you know, our daughter hasn't checked in. Can you see what's going on?
I don't know if they did it on February 1st or not. But in pretty short order, the LAPD determined
that she she was just gone. She wasn't she was nowhere to be found. And that there was some
suspiciousness going on for sure. Yeah, I mean, they did a thorough inspection,
they went to her room. They had found that the hotel had gathered all her stuff and bagged it
and was holding it in storage, which was regular protocol when someone doesn't check out and just
leave stuff. Nothing shady going on there. They checked around the hotel in the alleyways and
sidewalks. They checked up on the roof. They didn't find anything. And things got really strange. And
I guess we should take another ad break here, but things got really strange when the hotel sent them
footage from inside the elevator of the Cecil Hotel. And we'll get to that right after this.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing
could be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough, or you're at the end of
the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance
Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right
place because I'm here to help. This, I promise you. Oh God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have
to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so my husband, Michael. Um, hey, that's
me. Yep, we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide
you through life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids relationships life in general can get
messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Oh, just stop now. If so, tell everybody,
yeah, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye,
bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever
you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology.
But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life in India. It's like smoking. You might
not smoke, but you're going to get second hand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if
the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there
is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove
in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses, major league baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show
about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to
father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think
your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, Chuck. So Elisa Lam is now known to be missing. She left her stuff behind at the
Cecil Hotel and she didn't check out. She didn't call her parents as she usually did.
And she's officially a missing person. Within a couple of days, I think maybe February 6th,
the police held a press conference and explained what was going on to the public
and basically asked for everybody's help. And if anyone had any info, you know, where did she go?
Where is she? How's she doing? Is she okay? And I guess I don't, I didn't see anything
about any crazy leads or anything like that. It doesn't seem to have really kind of
captured the public's interest at first. And I saw there's this guy named Josh Dean,
who's written several articles on the Elisa Lam disappearance. And I believe one of the
ones that he wrote kind of pinpoints why there wasn't a huge public interest in the first like
weaker even two of her case. It was because Christopher Dorner had gone on his rampage
against the LAPD, basically declared war on the LAPD and was killed in I think the mountains of
San Bernardino in a standoff, like right when Elisa Lam went missing. So not only was the public's
attention on this, especially in LA, the LAPD's attention was definitely on that as well. So
Elisa Lam was kind of like this faint little chirp in this huge maelstrom at the time.
Faint chirp in a maelstrom. It's the best I could come up with on shorts.
Amazing. Are you kidding me? Oh, thanks. You just made that up? Yeah. Yeah, I did. You like it?
Yeah, but I just have a feeling that next time I'm in your house, it's going to be like,
it's going to be carved into your desk or something. Right. It's on a t-shirt. Right.
Did you put, you make Momo wear that t-shirt every day? That's right.
Yeah. And you know, the other big reason was until this footage actually came out of the
elevator car, then, you know, that's when the public's attention really caught hold.
That changed everything. Yeah. I mean, there's no way around it. It's a very sort of unsettling.
And I remember when this happened before any of the facts of the case were kind of out,
I remember looking at this video and it is very unsettling and it does appear to be very creepy
and that a young woman gets on an elevator very kind of casually, presses all the center buttons
on all the floors. I think they determined she was on the 14th floor
and sort of pressed all the floors on the way down. Elevator doesn't do anything. The doors
don't shut. She moves to the back corner and sort of standing there. She goes and she looks
outside of the elevator both ways a couple of times in the hallway and then kind of retreats
back quickly. At one point, she steps out into the hallway and appears to be gesturing towards
somebody or she's at least making hand gestures to the right down the hallway.
Yeah. And they're unusual hand gestures. They're not like the normal hand gestures you might make.
They're not at all subtle or casual or almost even like, you know, you might not even realize
you're using your hands when you're talking sometimes. Like, these are more gesticulations
than just mere gestures. You know what I mean? Yeah. And you know, there's no doubt and eventually
she kind of leaves around to the left and exits to the left and the door stays open for a while
before it shuts. But there's no getting around the fact that having known nothing and knowing that
this person disappeared, this young woman, and then you see this, it seems very suspicious.
And creepy, admittedly creepy. I don't even think it looks that creepy. It looks to me like
that she is trying to get away from someone and is afraid someone has followed her or is
gesturing at a person who she feels threatened by. It's what it looks like to me. I know
other people online talk about otherworldly spirits and she's like you said earlier,
she's conjuring spirits with her hands. That never occurred to me. It just looked like she
might be in some kind of peril and was trying to get away from someone. Right. But that's creepy
in and of itself, you know? Yeah, I just mean not creepy in like a supernatural like what's
going on here. No, I think the thing that really when it really turns creepy to me is when she
turns around and hides in the corner of the elevator, like she's hiding. And then the second
part that's genuinely creepy is when she like leans out and like looks both ways and then kind
of jumps back into the elevator. It's just I mean it's really hard not to kind of put yourself
in her shoes and she's clearly frightened at that. Yeah. And to see somebody frightened like that,
it's creepy. And you're waiting on someone to enter the elevator, but that never happens.
With the internet sleuthing, you couldn't really make out the time code very well.
And so all the people online are like, well, why can't you make out the time code and the time
stamps? Like what would degrade that and not the rest of it? And then they think they're right.
And then they think they decoded it and there's almost a full minute missing and the hotel Cecil
edited out a portion clearly and before they sent it to the cops and they interviewed the woman
and you're talking about the manager and she was like, no, of course we didn't edit anything out.
Like we were horrified by this disappearance and just sent them everything we had.
Right. Plus I'm sure also that most of the employees that stay on Maine know exactly how
to edit video out before handing things over to the cops anyway. Well, it is LA.
That's true. That is a good point actually. But I don't buy it. I think it was it is what it was,
which was a person in an elevator who had some was having some mental issues.
And, you know, we'll get to that in a second. And I think, you know, it's sort of like the easiest
explanation of the video, at least to me, seems to be the most accurate.
All right. That's what I buy. That's how I buy it too.
That was so that video was released on February 13th and now all of a sudden the public is
taking notice. She becomes an internet meme like almost overnight with people like watching
and analyzing that video like you were saying. And yet they still can't find her. No one has
any idea where she is. It's been two weeks now since she went missing. This video is out there.
The whole the entire internet is on the case now. And it wasn't until a couple days, I think two
days after the video came out, Chuck, that one of the guys, one of the custodians of the Cecil
of the Cecil Hotel of stay on main, I should say, was asked to go check on the water supply on the
roof because the Cecil Hotel used gravity fed water. They had four 1000 gallon tanks on the top
of the roof. And when you open the tap, the water would come pouring down from those tanks into your
room and out the faucet. And some of the tenants, I don't know if it was just the hotel or some
long term tents, but they were complaining that the water pressure had suddenly gotten really low.
And that the water that was coming out had a strange odor and taste and weird kind of color
to it. And so they dispatched the custodian to the roof. And he went and checked. And I think
as he was approaching the main water tank, I think tank number one, he noticed that the hatch was
open and in very short order made the grizzly discovery of Elisa Lam's body. Yeah, he was
a he was kind of like the super he was a maintenance guy. His name is Santiago Lopez.
And he's in the documentary too. I don't think he saw the hatch because the hatch is on top of the
tank. But he went to go and he said it was a routine thing if there was any kind of water issue
was to climb the ladder to the tanks and go look and see what was going on because there's
probably a clog or something. And he saw her body naked about a foot below the water to sort of
suspended there. And, you know, when they interview this guy in the documentary, it's really sad,
you know, he was sort of at the center of a lot of this with interviews. And he he was speaking
through it, I guess not through a translator, but through subtitles. But he was clearly,
you know, still very upset about this. And it scarred him to see this woman floating in the
tank. And he knew immediately who it was, and called down to the hotel manager who we've been
talking about, and said, you know, she's she's up here in the tank. And, you know, the cops came,
they found her clothes, which were determined to be the same clothes. She was wearing in the
elevator video, kind of at the bottom of the tank, they had sunk. And, you know, immediately,
the new mystery is not what's going on in this video, although, you know, that played a part,
because they were still trying to figure that out, as far as foul play goes. But was how she made it
in here, and why she made it in there? Yeah, because she she it was like the hatch is not easy
to get in or out of, they had to like cut her out of the they did cut a hole in the bottom of the
tank, so they could access it, right? They couldn't just pull her back out of that hatch. So that's
kind of weird in and of itself. She's also nude. That also kind of added to the mystery of the whole
thing. And then also the, you know, the coroner, when when he made his toxicology report available,
he basically said it was it he wasn't able to make any conclusive, find any conclusive results,
because there wasn't enough blood to take a sample from, you know, she just kind of permeated the
water in that her blood had. And it wasn't you just couldn't like take a water sample and be like,
oh, yeah, there's no, you know, there's no drugs in here, anything like that. So all of that
combined really kind of just just took that mystery, you know, that people had been primed to
start thinking about with that video, and then just blew it through the roof, you know, I mean,
the the water being, you know, going to other people's taps in the hotel and, you know,
at least the land basically being a part of that water really kind of solidified her legendary
status or the legendary status of her mystery, I think in people's imagination, anybody who comes
across that case can't help but like, let the mind wander in that respect. Oh, for sure. I mean,
the idea of drinking water and bathing in water with a decomposing body, I mean, the body had
was in a pretty, pretty rough state of decomposition at that point. They did do obviously in the
autopsy, they didn't find any signs of foul play. There were no, obviously, no, like obvious wounds.
There were no internal wounds. There was no strangulation. They pretty much said this doesn't
look like foul play at all. The one one of the mysteries was how she got up there. Yeah, because
the you if you want to go just through the regular staircase to the rooftop, and this is not a rooftop
that you, you know, doesn't have like a rooftop hangout area or whatever, although people, you
know, there was plenty of graffiti and beer bottles and drug needles and some people would
make their way up there. But if you go through the regular door, it's one of the alarm doors,
which would trigger downstairs and all throughout the lobby. That never came on. And you have to
have a key to disable it. But there is a fire escape entry with a ladder basically for the last
like for the last story. It's a little precarious. Yeah. But she could have just simply gone out
the window to the fire escape and climbed up the ladder and then up the ladder to the tanks. It's
not, you know, it's a little, it would be a little bit of a scary trip up that ladder, I think. Yeah.
Yeah. But considering what happened, she, she clearly was, was not in a good place mentally. So
I think that's completely believable. That journalist, Josh Dean, went in I think 2015 to
see the CISO himself. He had gotten obsessed with the, the case. So he went and kind of
investigated in person. And he quickly found that open window was still open. And the fire escape
was easily accessible. And in the, I think one of his articles is called American Horror Story,
which is a reference to what I think the hotel season of American Horror Story was based on,
or inspired by Elisa Lam's disappearance. But there's a picture that he took of that ladder
leading from the fire escape on the 15th or 14th floor up to the roof. And all you see is up,
like you just see the ladder and then above it is sky. But after reading about it, your imagination
just thinks of like the 15 stories behind you, like as you're, you know, as you're looking up
this ladder. It's one of the most unsettling pictures I've ever seen if you read the text,
you know, that surround it. But he said by his judgment, an average person could easily make
it up that ladder, especially if you don't look down. He said, if you're carrying a body or
another person, you could not do it. He said it just would be too difficult. It's one of those
straight up vertical ladders on the side of the building. But if you were in a manic state, as
a lot of people believe Elisa Lam was, you could probably make it up that ladder pretty quickly
and you wouldn't even necessarily consider looking down and all of a sudden you'd be on the roof.
And after you were on the roof, it would be a fairly easy proposition to get into one of those
tanks, especially I think she weighed about 115 pounds and was about five feet four inches.
So it was possible for her to get into one of those tanks through that hatch. But either she
was too scared to come out conceivably or she couldn't get out when she wanted to get out
and tired of treading water because the water would have been about eight feet deep
and drowned after a while. Yeah, I mean, they did. I think the police dogs did pick up her scent
near that window. So that seems to be what happened. And you know, this is one of those cases where
the more I read like all I could feel was despair about this poor woman having what looked to be
some sort of medication related manic episode, maybe scared, maybe thinking someone was following
her and trying to get away and going at great lengths, going to great lengths to maybe hide
somewhere like inside of a water tank. I don't know like why her clothes were off or why her
clothes ended up in the tank. I'm not saying any of this makes sense, but it is something that could
happen. And all I can think about is what an awful place that she must have been for something like
this to have happened. Yeah. And I mean, to kind of back up the mental break theory, which is what
I buy. That's where I put my stock. Remember, I said she was originally put in a room with
a couple other girls she didn't know at the stay on Maine. They complained about her behaving
strangely. So she was moved to her own private room. Apparently, she went to a taping of the Conan
O'Brien show and was escorted out because she was behaving strangely. And then detectives also found
she was on four different medications for bipolar one disorder and depression. And the LAPD, based
on the prescription dates on the bottles and then the number of pills that were left and the
instructions on the bottles, the LAPD were able to determine that she hadn't been following the
dosage recommendations or taking her pills or medications. So if you put all of that together
and then also that people taking their clothes off as part of a psychotic episode happens,
it's been documented. There's no pieces missing on the table. She could have gone out on that
fire escape, gone up the ladder. There's nothing that is, well, yeah, but then there's this really
big thing that remains unexplained. It explains absolutely everything. And then suddenly it
kind of makes all the other stuff, like government mind control or ghosts or whatever seem just
kind of gross. Totally agree. I believe her parents brought a lawsuit against the hotel that was
eventually dismissed if I'm not mistaken. And it just remains a very, very sad situation in a
sad case. And it is very annoying when you get online and everyone thinks that their spirits
being conjured and all this wacky stuff is just not the case. Not the case indeed. You got anything
else? I got nothing else. Well, that's it for the Cecil Hotel and the Lisa Lam RIP. And since I said
RIP, that means it's time for a listener mail. I'm going to call this follow up to Y2K. Oh,
yes. And this is something that we actually had in our notes that we, I guess, just kind of failed
to bring up. Yeah. Right. Yeah. I mean, you had it in your notes as well. Yeah. Yeah. The 2038
problem. We got a lot of emails about this and we're not going to fully probably explain to
everyone's satisfaction how it works. But hey, guys, just got done listening to the Y2K podcast,
which brought back an interesting range of memories of living through that time. In case
you weren't aware, there's something called the UNIX Y2K problem that still exists, but is slowly
being fixed by smart people behind the scenes. Thank goodness. The majority of computers in the
world run UNIX based operating systems, not Windows or Mac OS. And unless these systems are patched
at 3.14 on January 19th, 2038, their clocks will roll over to think it's midnight, January 1st, 1970.
Yes. The cause is basically the same in the early versions of the OS, only had so much memory allocated
to time representations, but more modern versions now have this fixed and hence computers aren't
susceptible once they're updated or upgraded, although not all systems can be easily updated.
And that is from a bunch of people, but specifically from PhD, Alan Chalker.
That's great. Thanks, Alan, to everybody who wrote in. I was like, oh man, I meant to include that.
But apparently UNIX represents time as the number of seconds from the epoch date, which is some date
in 1970. And then eventually it's going to have more seconds than it can represent in the number of
digits. So it'll just roll back over like he was saying. It's just pretty neat, UNIX. Pretty cool.
But also I'm glad to hear that there are smart people working on that because we got 17 years,
man. You guys take it easy. Take a weekend, you know. Sure. Go, go, sit in your house and social
distance from everybody. That's right. We also got a lot of emails just from people that some
people whose parents helped rewrite code or were heading up projects, rewriting code. And it was
pretty cool. We got a lot of emails about that when we struck a chord. Yeah, it was a good idea,
Chuck. Well, if you want to get in touch with us like Alan and everybody else did, you can send
us an email. Send it off to stuffpodcast.ihartradio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of
I Heart Radio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the I Heart Radio app. Apple podcasts
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart
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Apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology
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international banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on
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