Stuff You Should Know - The Murder of John Lennon
Episode Date: December 7, 2023On December 8th, 1980, John Lennon was shot and killed outside his apartment building in New York City, by Mark David Chapman. Music history was altered forever. Listen in to this tragic story.See omn...ystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of IHeart Radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too.
And this is Stuff You Should Know, a solemn edition.
Yeah, pretty solemn.
Yeah, it's a solemn occasion.
This episode is coming out on the anniversary of John Lennon's death.
And not coincidentally, because we're actually doing an episode.
on the death of John Lennon, so it's appropriate.
It's actually the day before his death, if we're being nitpicking.
Close enough.
I was very close, Chuck.
Yeah, and I'm not one to commemorate death dates, especially murder dates.
But I did want to do this episode, and since I saw it aligned, I thought, you know, if we can get this out quicker than maybe it's timely.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Had you decided you wanted to do this before we did.
did J.D. Salinger? Or did it all just kind of work out like that? I think it just worked out like that.
Like the two were completely unrelated in my mind such that when you suggested we put them both out on
the same week. I was like, why? Nice. Well, they're related. The two are related for sure. Yeah,
absolutely. So let's talk about this. I knew about the death of John Lennon some, but certainly not to the
degree I do now.
Like, for example, I knew he was 40.
I knew he was shot.
I knew he died in front of his apartment building, the Dakota, which we've talked about
before.
I knew a few other things, but certainly not the details.
And I didn't know much about the guy who killed him either.
Yeah.
Well, let's tell everybody what we've learned, huh?
Yeah, I remember this happening, believe it or not.
Wow.
Because I was, but I guess I would have been nine.
When's my birthday?
March?
Yes.
So, yeah, you would have been nine.
Yeah, I would have been nine years old.
And I remember just like, you know, I didn't, weirdly, I grew up in a house that didn't have a lot of music in it, except for my room and my brother's room.
So it wasn't like the Beatles were a household name or anything.
Like most kids of my age who had parents who may or may not have been into the Beatles.
My parents didn't tell me anything about the Beatles.
Right.
But I knew they were a thing, and I knew, like, John Lennon is the guy with the round glasses because I was just a kid, and I remember it being, like, big news.
And I was like, oh, that singer guy that one of those round glasses was killed.
That's sad.
Yeah, it was really big news, as we'll see.
I mean, it's still big news today, but at the time, it was just earth-shattering, for sure.
Thanks to Olivia for the help with this one.
And I guess we should start with talking a little bit about John Lennon and his love affair with New York City.
Yeah, I'm not sure when he moved to New York City.
I just know that they moved to the Dakota, he and Yoko, in 1973.
When did they move to New York?
You know, not, I don't know if the Bank Street apartment was the first one, but they moved to Bank Street in 71.
So that may have been their first New York place.
I know they lived at sort of partially lived in one of the hotels there for a while.
Right.
But they lived at this very nondescript house at 105 Bank Street in the West Village for a couple of years.
But one of the reasons they moved is because they were robbed, like in the apartment and people busted in, former tenants apparently, and stole some artwork and the TV and Lenin's wallet and his address book.
And supposedly he put the word out on the street that Bobby Seals people are going to exact revenge if I don't get that address book back.
Oh, yeah, like the Black Panthers.
Yeah, I don't know if he had a legit connection.
I mean, he seems like the kind of guy that would have known the Black Panthers and Bobby Seale.
But it was enough to where that address book was in fact returned.
And I guess that was enough to where they were like, hey, Yoko, I'm one of the most famous people in the world.
maybe we should move to a building that's a little more secure.
I mean, that's why they moved to the Dakota is that it had a security guard, it had a doorman.
There was a driveway that was gated so you could drive in through the gate and they'd close the gate behind you.
And then you got out of your car in the courtyard so you didn't have to get out on the street.
It was much, much safer.
But saying that, I've read interviews with John Lennon where he talks about his life in Manhattan.
And like he would walk around Central Park.
He would go get breakfast, like down the street.
He was just like living like a normal New Yorker.
And he said that people would like say hi or whatever, but rarely would anybody ever bug him.
So he was living, he was super, super famous.
But at the same time, he was just living like a normal person by this time.
Yeah.
I think that's one of the allures of New York is you can be one of the most famous people in the world.
And generally, like New Yorkers themselves aren't the ones that are going to bug you anyway.
It's any tourists probably.
You know?
Yeah.
But otherwise, you can kind of live in New York and walk around and just do your thing.
And that's what they did when they bought five apartments at the Dakota.
They lived in a couple of them.
They had a studio one, which was Yoko's work studio.
And they had a guest apartment, very nice thing to have.
And then a storage apartment.
Yeah.
And they also had Sean Lennon in 1975.
And this whole era from about that time until his death has a couple of different portrayals, depending on who you ask.
A lot of times it's portrayed as John Lennon's house husband era.
He reputedly would bake bread and he would take Sean to go walk in Central Park and just being like a stay-at-home dad,
he turned his business affairs over to Yoko and just basically was like, I'm just here to live.
Yeah.
And another set of reporting, including from people who were like there part of his life,
like at least one personal assistant who was there toward the end, he said,
that's kind of a charade that he was actually really depressed.
He would lock himself in his room and just watch TV for days on end.
He was into the occult.
He may or may not have been doing drugs.
But it wasn't like baking bread and just been paying attention to Sean.
He was depressed.
But even if that holds true, by the time his death rolled around, he had turned some sort of corner because he was on a schooner somewhere on the way to Bermuda and ended up being the only person on the ship that wasn't seasick and was asked to like steer the boat through a storm.
And apparently going through that gauntlet made him like just, it just gave him some confidence or produced a spark in him that had been missing.
So even if the people who said that his last years were pretty depressing, the last year of his life was different than that. It was renewed.
Yeah. And, I mean, it was probably a little bit of both. John Lennon struggled his entire life with, you know, with just issues. He had issues from the moment he was raised until the day he died, generally speaking, in and out of drugs, stuff like that. So he was probably both would be my guess.
as far as the work goes, that fall of 1980 is when the album Double Fantasy came out.
Yeah.
A great record released on November 17, the first one since Sean was born.
And it was, you know, things were looking, I think, more positive.
You know, he regretted how he fathered Julian.
I think he felt like he had a second chance here with Sean.
He was madly in love with Yoko Ono, just like part of him.
partners and everything, and things were looking pretty good. I think he had largely sort of let
the Beatles thing, that was a tough breakup, you know, so he had to get through that.
Yeah. But it sounds like he kind of had by the time double fantasy came out, because it was a
fairly upbeat album about like family life and stuff, right? Yeah, a lot of it was. Yeah. So
that's John Lennon. Correaning toward him on a separate but soon to intersect path was another
person who is not in any way famous.
And depending on what interview you read of his, who you talk to, what psychiatrists
notes you read, was very disappointed that he was not famous or that he was a nobody.
His name was Mark David Chapman.
And I should say right out of the gate, Chuck, there's a lot of people who are like,
don't even mention that guy's name.
Yeah.
Because he said multiple times that the reason that he killed John Lennon, spoiler alert,
Mark David Chapman was the person who killed John.
John Lennon to gain fame to like basically bask in the reflective glow that he would gain from
taking John Lennon's life.
So people are like, don't give that guy any publicity.
You can't talk about the death of John Lennon unless you talk about Mark David Chapman.
And from interviews that I've read with him, there's a lot more to the story than him just
killing John Lennon because he wanted to be famous.
Yeah.
Although, I mean, like you said, he has literally said, I thought I could acquire his.
fame by killing him. So he was born in 1955 in Fort Worth, Texas to an Air Force father and a nurse mother.
And he grew up four miles from my house. Wow. Yeah, I had looked it up before years ago,
and I did it again today because I couldn't remember. He had a Decatur address, but it wasn't like
Decatur Decatur, like we think of it. Right. He went to Columbia High School, which was a rival high school to
my high school that I went to, obviously older than me. But yeah, he grew up right down the road.
And his dad was a pretty tough guy. Apparently, there were stories that he told about physical
abuse against his mother in which he would step in to defend her. The mother did say that there
were, there was some abuse, but she, you know, I think like a lot of women of the time, downplayed that.
But he didn't seem like a very good guy, as evidenced by the fact that at one point, as well,
we'll see Chapman thought about killing his father.
Like, he wanted to kill somebody.
Right.
And we'll get into all that.
But as a kid, there were, you know, he was sort of a go-getter in some ways.
He started a newspaper for the neighborhood.
He was a coin collector.
He was kind of a normal kid in some ways.
But then he also, you know, Olivia found this one thing, and I've seen this elsewhere,
that he would create these fantasies about people who lived in the walls and that he was their king.
And, you know, initially I'm like, that's, that's kid stuff.
Like, kids do all kinds of things like that.
Right.
But the more and more I read, it seemed like it was, it bordered on like a godlike complex rather than just sort of, you know, make-believe friends.
Yeah, they considered him important.
And they were the only ones who considered him important, supposedly.
Yeah.
But I think, like, that's a good illustration that he was showing signs that could be taken as mental illness, like, as early as childhood.
Yeah.
Yeah. There's a lot of debate on the internet whether he's mentally ill at all.
It seems like the growing consensus, especially as we understand mental illness more and more, that, yeah, he's probably very mentally ill, which makes the fact that he's not being treated for mental illness in prison like that much worse, you know?
Yeah, of course.
So he came of age in like the 60s and really kind of bought into the whole hippie thing for a little while when he was in high school, started doing drugs.
I think he started huffing in halents, which is, that's what you do when you start trying drugs in Georgia.
And then he just kind of moved on and eventually came to acid.
I think he tried heroin a few times.
Like he definitely tried all the drugs.
And he also was into the Beatles.
His favorite album was Sergeant Peppers.
He also kind of got into conspiracy theories and UFOs.
He was just kind of like into all the stuff you get into when you start doing lots of drugs, right?
And then he had a turning point.
Chuck, he, like, completely did an about face during high school.
Yeah, it was only, he only had to do drugs for a couple of years.
And, you know, from 14 to 16 at Columbia High School, he became a born-again
Presbyterian Christian, quit drugging.
And during his drug years, like, you know, I saw those just weed and LSD, but I guess some
other things were sprinkled in there.
But he was actually ran away from home and was.
living on the streets of Atlanta for a couple of weeks is like a 15-year-old.
Oh, wow.
But when he straightened himself out, he got a job at the YMCA after he graduated and was a counselor.
He worked with Vietnamese refugees in Arkansas, and by all accounts, was really good at it.
He was popular with the kids.
He was popular with the campers.
This is sort of, I guess, where we can start talking about the catcher in the rye.
Yeah.
Because the one thing that he sort of identified with was,
was, well, Holden Caulfield as a whole, but Holden Caulfield and his liking kids more than he liked adults.
And that was certainly seemed to be true with Chapman.
Yeah, he definitely came to identify with Holden Caulfield for sure.
I read a people, like People Magazine interview with him from 1987.
It's really long piece by a guy named James R. Gaines.
And in it, you get the impression that Mark David Chapman,
during this time is struggling with trying to be sane, trying to be good, trying not to be bad,
trying not to feel like he's going crazy.
Yeah.
And at one point, he finally got to the point where he's like, he was apparently tired of struggling.
He basically turned his back on God and started praying to Satan.
And it was just like, just turn me crazy.
I'm basically, I'm sick of trying not to be crazy.
From that point on...
His words.
Yeah.
Yeah.
From that point on, he just kept really going downhill from there, essentially.
Yeah, and I think that can be the case as you, you know, depending on what sort of mental illness you have, as you get up in your upper teenage years, things can really sort of settle in.
Yeah.
And I saw a lot of interviews.
He talked a lot about the two sides of himself.
As we'll see later, there were certain psychiatrists after, like during the trial that diagnosed him as having paranoid schizophrenia.
He heard voices in his head, like things like that were starting to happen with more regularity.
So in 1977, he kind of dropped out and moved to Hawaii.
I think thinking it would be good for him.
He did have a suicide attempt there.
but he also got treatment for depression
and started traveling and stuff like that.
He did.
This is really strange.
He, at this time, managed to travel the world.
I could not find how he paid for it,
but I know that he paid for a later trip
by selling an original Norman Rockwell
that he had acquired.
So this guy who is like basically living on the beach
in Waikiki with no money
suddenly goes on a trip around the world
to Asia, to the middle of the,
least during this several-month period between, oh, I think it's sometime in 1978.
It's a really bizarre little footnote that there's not a lot of information on, but that's
one thing he did.
And the reason that we bring this up is because his travel age and a woman named Gloria
Abe ended up marrying him.
And they're still married, actually.
Yeah, they were, I mean, that may be one of the facts of the podcast.
They were married for 18 months before he murdered John Lennon,
and she has subsequently stayed married to him.
And the interviews that I read, she's like, you know,
I took an oath of marriage in front of God and everybody,
and I'm going to honor that.
So that's basically the end of the story.
I mean, there's really not more to it than that.
She has stayed by his side, you know,
does regular conjugal visits with him in prison,
and they're, you know, they're still going strong, I guess.
But in Hawaii is when, although he was getting depression treatment,
he really went downhill with his mental health there.
And that's where he started obsessing about killing somebody famous in order to gain fame.
And Lenin was on a list as well as Johnny Carson and Elizabeth Taylor, Paul McCartney,
George C. Scott, the governor of Hawaii, Ronald Reagan, apparently David
David Bowie was on the list. It was a big list of people that, you know, the police found this upon their investigations of people that he wanted to murder.
Yes. Alarmingly, he was hired as a security guard and outfitted with a gun during this period. And in 1980, he quit his job and he bought his own gun. He flew from Hawaii to New York with a gun in November of 1980.
And by this time, like you said, he'd come up with the list of famous people who he might kill.
And during this trip, he later said that he visited both Reagan's and Carter's election night parties, probably with a gun.
Kind of like a Travis.
Bickle.
Yeah, Bickle kind of thing.
Yeah.
But he didn't do anything, obviously, and he actually went back to Hawaii afterward.
Yeah, and before he did that, he went to Georgia to get bullets because at the time, you know, the good old days, you could not even buy bullets in New York City.
So he went back to Georgia to get bullets.
And I don't know if he couldn't buy them there or what, but his plan was to get them from a cop friend of his and said that he was thinking about killing his dad.
And then, you know, went back to Hawaii at that point, then went back to New York on December.
six, which was a Saturday, and maybe that's a good time to take a break. What do you think? Yeah.
All right. We'll be right back.
Hi, Kyle. Could you draw up a quick document with the basic business plan? Just one page
as a Google Doc and send me the link. Thanks. Hey, just finished drawing up that quick one-page
business plan for you. Here's the link. But there was no link. There was no business plan.
It's not his fault. I hadn't programmed Kyle to be able to do that yet.
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I got to thinking, could I be that one person? I'd made AI agents before for my award-winning podcast, Shell Game.
This season on Shell Game, I'm trying to build a real company with a real product run by fake people.
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All right. So Mark David Chapman is in New York on December 8th. John Lennon and Yoko Ono are promoting the album they had just released Double Fantasy.
They went to breakfast. John Lennon got a haircut. He had that awesome hair at the time.
It's when he was sort of in his
kind of like
greaser stray cats look.
Yeah, yeah, you're right.
It was kind of a cool look
because he always had this long hair usually
and all of a sudden he had sort of this greaser look
which was super cool.
And he had a very, very famous photo shoot
done at his apartment that day
with Annie Leibovitz for Rolling Stone.
Yeah, what a day.
The iconic cover that was released
much later in January of 1981
where John Lennon is curled up naked beside Yoko Ono,
and the picture's kind of taken from above.
Very, very famous photograph.
And that photograph was, you said,
taken on the day he died.
That's right.
Isn't that nuts?
Yeah, not as nuts as one of the other photographs taken that day.
No, that is, that's great foreshadowing.
So after the Annie Leibowitz photo shoot,
they went downstairs to Yoko Studio,
and they were interviewed by RKO Radio.
and then after that was time to go to work.
It's like 5 p.m.
And Yoko and John leave the Dakota to go to the record plant,
a recording studio to work on a new single called Walking on Thin Ice.
This is around 5 o'clock.
And they leave the Dakota.
And as they're leaving, they met a fan who was standing out on the sidewalk.
And it turns out had been standing on the sidewalk essentially for the last few days
waiting to run into John Lennon,
and that fan was, in fact, Mark David Chapman.
Yeah, as an odd side note,
and I think this just came out in sort of semi-recent years.
He was not the only person to meet Mark David Chapman as a musician there.
But James Taylor said that he bumped into him.
He lived, I think, a couple of buildings up from the Dakota,
and he met Mark David Chapman on the subway.
And he told this story, you know, in the past few years, he said that he had buttonholeed me in the tube station right in front of 72nd Street the day before the murder.
And he had sort of pinned me to the wall, not physically, but, you know, just sort of metaphorically, I guess.
He was glistening with maniacal sweat and talking some freak speak about what he was going to do with his stuff and how John Lennon was interested because I don't think we mentioned he wanted to be a, he wanted to be famous.
but he supposedly tried to play guitar.
I'm not sure how much he fancied himself a musician.
But I don't think it's like he was delivering demo tapes or anything unless I never caught that.
But Freaks speak about what he was going to do, how Lennon was interested, and how he's going to get in touch with John Lennon.
He said he seemed either drugged or in a manic break of some sort.
His eyes were darting all over the place, dilated like crazy, and that he closed by saying he was just someone who knew me.
and who I didn't know, and he had an agenda that I couldn't deal with, and I knew that I needed to get away from him.
Isn't that crazy? He met James Taylor the day before he killed John Lennon.
And Taylor heard the shots from his apartment when it happened.
So, but before that, after he met James Taylor, but before he shot John Lennon, this is still, we're around 5 o'clock when Yoko and John are leaving the Dakota for the record plant.
Mark Chapman walks up and asks him to sign his copy of double fantasy, that record that had just come out the month before.
And that photo that you referenced, Chuck, the even weirder photo, there's a picture of this happening, of John Lennon signing Mark David Chapman's copy of double fantasy.
It just so happened that there was somebody with a camera standing on the sidewalk that decided to snap a picture of John Lennon signing an album for the man who would take his life a family.
few hours later. Yeah, it's one of the creepier photos that exists, especially if you're a
Beatles fan. It was a photographer named Paul Gresh. And he didn't quite happen to be there. He was
someone who hung out there all the time to get pictures of Lennon. And they were, in fact, friendly
because he was always around. And, you know, obviously a huge Beatles fan. And John Lennon,
like, he would chat him up. And he was, he was really, he was a generous human as a,
a super famous musician.
Right.
And so he would spend time talking with Gourish and stuff like that when he was waiting on a car or something like that.
And that's why he was out there for a few minutes this time is they were kind of just waiting on their car.
And yeah, he signed it in PIN.
That record was auctioned off a couple of years ago for $900,000.
It was signed in PIN, but it also has, you know, like police Sharpie markings, like evidence markings.
on it and stuff like that. It also has Chapman's enhanced thumbprint, like from police forensics
dusting it. Yeah, it's, I mean, I don't know. One other, I'm not going to cast dispersions on
who would buy something like that for almost a million dollars. Yeah. But, you know, 10 people
bit on it. So I guess I'm not sure if it was a Beatles fan looking to show it off or destroy it or
what. I didn't get any information about who bought it. There's one other creepy footnote of this
initial meeting too. Apparently, somebody reported.
who was there when all this happened,
that John Lennon asked Mark David Chapman,
is that all you want?
And Mark David Chapman apparently just stood there in stunned silence.
And John Lennon asked him again, is that all you want?
And I guess Mark David Chapman said, yeah, or something like that.
And so John Lennon said, okay, see you later.
And turned around and got in the car and left for the record plant.
Yeah.
And that was enough.
That interaction was so amicable and,
friendly as a super famous guy talking with someone, you know, stalking outside of his apartment
that Mark David Chapman reconsidered in that moment and was like, geez, you know, maybe I should
go home and show my wife this autograph that I got. He was really kind to me. But that didn't happen
because he has mental illness. He heard in his head when he came back, Lennon and Yoko Ono got back
just before 11. He was still there. That limousine, like he said, could have pulled in that
courtyard area where they would have had a gate behind them, but they dropped them off on the
sidewalk. And in his brain, he said he heard a voice saying, do it, do it, do it. With his
external human voice, he just said, Mr. Lennon, and John Lennon turned around, and he fired his
38 pistol five times and hit him four times.
Yeah.
So John Lennon stumbles forward, and I believe it was either the dormant or the security guard is standing there.
And John Lennon says to him, I've been shot.
And there's a three-part documentary series coming out on Apple Plus called John Lennon, colon, murder without a trial.
And I guess some publicists didn't do their research or whatever, because all of the
the stuff that all of like the ink that's being written about that documentary in the last week
is about how it reveals John Lennon's last words, which turned out to be, I've been shot.
But anybody who cared to even go read even the first couple articles that covered this at the time,
we'll see that his last words were, I've been shot.
They made it sound like it was breaking news.
Yes, they made it sound like at long last this documentary 43 years later has revealed his last words.
But his last words were, I've been shot.
Technically, his last word was yes.
Because when he was laying there on the sidewalk,
the police got there within two minutes.
And one of the cops said, are you John Lennon?
And he said, yes.
And that was the last thing he ever said.
The cops got there really quickly.
But the thing that they found,
that was extraordinarily creepy,
was what Mark David Chapman did
after he shot John Lennon, right?
Yeah, the security guard yelled out,
Do you know what you just did?
And Chapman said, I just shot John Lennon, which would become a Cranberry's song in 1996, that was about the murder of John Lennon.
And he picked up his copy of Catcher in the Rye, and he leaned against the building and started thumbing through it.
I think he had bought a new copy that day of his favorite book.
And he, you know, didn't try and get away, didn't try and do anything.
Went very peacefully.
the police when they got there knew how dire this was,
you know, four bullets at close range like that,
was, you know, basically a death sentence.
And they knew they certainly couldn't wait for an ambulance.
So they put him in the squad car,
drove him to what was at the time,
Roosevelt Hospital, now Mount Sinai West.
And supposedly, I mean,
I saw that he was listed as dead on arrival.
They tried to resuscitate him.
I think for about 20 minutes.
Yeah.
And they finally pronounced him dead at 1115,
but I've heard different accounts that he died in the police car to he died, you know,
upon arrival at the hospital.
And I'm not really sure anyone knows the exact moment.
No, I read an interview with the emergency room doctor that tried to save him,
Stefan G. Lin, and he said, like, the bullets were so incredibly well placed that he actually
had Linen's heart in his hand.
trying to pump the blood to keep the blood flow going.
And he said there was nothing to pump.
He'd lost so much blood.
There was no blood to pump.
And at any rate, all the arteries around the heart were so torn up.
They couldn't move any blood anyway.
So it's probably likely he was dead in just that short car trip to the hospital.
Yeah, the official autopsy found two bullets, went into his back and went through his left lung.
Another went through his left shoulder, also through his left lung.
and then lodged in his neck, and the other one hit his left arm bone.
And in a very sort of strange turn of events, this news got out very quickly because there
was a producer for WABC TV there in the emergency room named Alan J. Weiss, who was being
treated after a motorcycle crash.
And all of a sudden, you know, it's not like just a regular person being wheeled into an ER.
It was, people were sort of losing their minds and it was really chaotic.
He knew that something was going on and he just gathered from sort of hearing things that it was, in fact, John Lennon.
And as he says, and this sounds, I'm not sure why I don't want to believe it, but he says that the music playing in the room while they were trying to revive him was all my loving.
Yeah, a Beatles song.
Yeah.
For those of us who aren't really into the beach.
enough to know that that's a Beatles song.
Sure, because he would not mention All My Lovin by the Everly Brothers.
He never know.
He's like, that's just weird.
He also said that he heard Yoko Ono scream, and he talked to one of the doctors attending to him,
and they agreed that John Lennon probably was dead.
And he was convinced enough that he called the station W.A.B.C.
And told them the news.
And so the news broke on ABC, which just so.
happened to be airing Monday night football. And it was Howard CoSell that broke the news to the world,
essentially, of John Lennon's death. Yeah, it was a Patriots Dolphins game tied up in the fourth
quarter. And Frank Gifford, you know, while they were in commercial, they discussed, like,
what should we do here? This is too big to kind of sit on. Apparently, Cocell did not really want to do it,
but Frank Gifford was like, we kind of have to. And so as the quote goes, Gifford said,
you know, three seconds remaining.
John Smith is on the line.
And I don't care what's on the line, Howard.
You've got to say what we know in the booth.
And Howard Cosell talked about, you know, this is just a football game.
He said Lennon was shot twice.
So the, you know, the news wasn't even accurate that quickly off the, you know, off the wire.
Or I guess it wouldn't even a wire at that point.
But he said that he was dead on arrival and that it's hard to go back to the game at that point.
Yeah.
So I also read Stevie Wonder
Stopped his concert in Oakland
When he heard the news
And broke it to his fans too
It was a huge, huge deal
I mean like you said you were even aware of it
And you weren't even like a Beatles fan
Or very aware of the Beatles
If you were a Beatles fan at the time
Yeah right yeah
If you were a Beatles fan at the time
It was the most devastating news you've heard
Since the Beatles were breaking up
Maybe even more devastating than that
I would say so probably because that ruined any chance of it ever being reunited.
Yeah, fair point.
I saw that somebody was like, what would have happened if John Lennon hadn't been killed?
Somebody was like they probably would have played together here or there, you know, once in a while.
So yeah, yeah, I'm sure it was much worse.
But he and Paul had repaired their relationship by that point.
And the whole, you know, the Beatles breakup was it was acrimony.
in that they were all sort of
not tired of each other,
but just tired of being in that band together.
But it wasn't, you know,
they never hated each other.
It was like any long-term creative partnership.
They had a strain,
but they had worked it out,
and they were hanging out together in New York
some when Paul was in town.
And, you know,
it wasn't like, you know,
they weren't talking anymore
or anything like that.
Things were headed toward reconciliation,
if not professionally,
certainly personally.
Yeah, they did work it out.
please I think with that Chuck we should probably take a break huh let's do it
hi Kyle could you draw up a quick document with the basic business plan just one page
as a Google Doc and send me the link thanks hey just finished drawing up that quick one
page business plan for you here's the link but there was no link there was no business plan
it's not his fault I hadn't programmed Kyle to be able to do that yet my name is Evan
Ratlift, I decided to create Kyle, my AI co-founder, after hearing a lot of stuff like this
from OpenAI CEO Sam Aldman.
There's this betting pool for the first year that there's a one-person billion-dollar company,
which would have been like unimaginable without AI and now will happen.
I got to thinking, could I be that one person?
I'd made AI agents before for my award-winning podcast, Shell Game.
This season on Shell Game, I'm trying to build a real company with a real product run by fake people.
Oh, hey, Evan.
Good to have you join us.
some really interesting data on adoption rates for AI agents and small to medium businesses.
Listen to Shell Game on the IHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
The moments that shape us often begin with a simple question.
What do I want my life to look like now?
I'm Dr. Joy Harden Bradford.
And on therapy for Black Girls, we create space for honest conversations about identity,
relationships, mental health, and the choices that help us grow.
As cybersecurity expert, Camille Stewart Gloucester reminds us,
We are in a divisive time where our comments are weaponized against us.
And so what we find is a lot of black women are standing up and speaking out because they feel the brunt of the pain.
Each week, we explore the tools and insights that help you move with purpose.
Whether you're navigating something new or returning to yourself.
If you're ready for thoughtful guidance and grounded support, this is the place for you.
Listen to Therapy for Black Girls on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Lines and Times with Spencer Graves on the IHart Radio app is a podcast designed for hunters and fishermen to enjoy success.
I like the idea of like, hey, put me on a big deer.
You know, hey, there's a big deer out here.
He's doing this.
Be looking for this deer.
But I also love doing it on my own.
I love going out there and saying running my cameras.
I love patterning in the deer.
I like showing up at the right time, checking the win, knowing what stand I need to be in,
and then whenever it all comes together and it happens, that's the most satisfying thing ever.
So when you do it on your own, it's like, I then can hang my hat.
But if I had somebody say, hey, pull up on these dots and catch them right here,
and you're going to win, and then when I go win, it's like, yeah, that's cool.
I won the tournament.
The ultimate goal is done.
But it's like, dude, when you find them and you make them bite, that's the puzzle.
I love it.
Listen to Lines and Tines with Spencer Graves on the IHard Radio app.
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast.
Okay, so we're back.
And the world is now just learning that John Lennon has been killed.
Yoko Ono, I'm not sure exactly when she did it,
but she released a statement saying, like,
there's not going to be a funeral,
which is probably a wise move because I can't imagine
what John Lennon's funeral would have looked like.
It would have just been chaos.
But instead, she said, I think it would be more appropriate
to have like a 10-minute silent vigil.
And around the world, people observed this 10-minute silent vigil.
And apparently in Central Park, there was upwards of 50,000 people standing there silently for 10 minutes.
And I heard a report that the only thing you could hear in Central Park in Manhattan at the time
were the helicopters whirling overhead who were covering this for the news.
Like, no one talked.
There weren't car horns.
There was nothing for that 10-minute vigil, which must have just really kind of driven
at home like the significance of that moment, you know?
Yeah.
I mean, it was before that, though, the Dakota, like there are pictures of, I mean, it looked
like a, you know, a festival, a concert festival of people just outside the Dakota.
I mean, it's not a stretch to say it was like on the manner of like the queen dying or
something like that.
I mean, people all over the world, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands gathering together
to mourn his death.
And even very sadly, a couple of people in the following days took their life by suicide,
mentioning Lenin's death and depression, kind of pushing them over the edge in their suicide notes.
Paul McCartney, when he heard the news and was, I guess, asked by a reporter to comment on it,
he said something like, drag, isn't it?
Okay, cheers.
and was very widely criticized for it.
And he, in his defense, said, like,
I couldn't bring to words like what I was feeling at the moment.
I was in shock.
Apparently, you went off and wrote a song
about the whole thing called Here Today.
Have you heard that song?
Oh, yeah.
It's on the Tug of War record.
The good one?
It's okay.
I mean, it's not my favorite from that record.
But that interview, that always has bothered me.
If you see the interview, it's just like,
He's jammed in the middle of throngs of people on a sidewalk and someone, you know, sticks a camera and microphone in his face.
And when you watch it, it's clear he's not being flip.
He's, he's a guy who probably doesn't want a camera and microphone shoved in his face at that very moment.
And is just trying to get out of there.
Paul McCartney was obviously crushed.
As were all the Beatles, Ringo Star was in the Bahamas, immediately came to New York and acted as, you know, sort of temporary dad to Sean.
because Yoko was like, I need help with my son.
You don't think about like the nuts and bolts of going through something like that,
one of which is I have a five-year-old that needs to be looked after and Ringo stepped in there, which is amazing.
It seems like a pretty Ringo star thing to do, too.
Yeah, I agree.
George Harrison, he was off on his kind of like Eastern philosophy trip
and had been devoting his life to preparing for a peaceful death.
So when he got the news, he apparently thought he got the call in the middle of the night and his wife, Olivia, took the call.
And he thought he just guessed at first that Ringo Starr was dead for some reason.
I never saw what his reasoning was.
He just said that he thought that in an interview.
But then when he found out what had happened, he apparently was really angry that John had been, like, robbed of a chance of having like a peaceful, like calm death that he died in such a violent manner.
and it took him a while to get over that
and just kind of accept that that happened.
But on that note, too, about the fact that John Lennon died in a violent manner,
he supposedly had kind of postulated that something like that might happen to him someday.
And he chalked it up to his violent past that he was a violent person
and that he expected he might die violently when he went.
Which I thought was very bizarre.
Yeah, very much.
Julian was 17.
He was in North Wales, and he said he woke up with a gut feeling that something terrible had happened.
And he, as the story goes, went downstairs and opened the curtains of his mother and stepfather's house, and it was just mobbed with press.
So that's how he finds out.
That's terrible.
Lennon was cremated at Ferncliff Cemetery outside New York City in Hartsdale.
but there was somebody who took another photograph, an unfortunate one of his body in the morgue,
and the New York Post published it, which is terrible.
Yeah, on the front page, I think.
And if it wasn't the New York Post that put it on the front page, the Inquirer definitely did.
So, yeah, there's some really significant photographs just that circle this event.
So Mark David Chapman shows up in court two days later.
He's taken to jail of obviously by the police, placed under suicide watch.
And also, I think he was wearing a bulletproof vest in court because there was just such a chance that somebody would kill him for killing John Lennon.
Still today, I think if he left prison, somebody might kill him for killing John Lennon 43 years later, you know.
And I suspect he might be aware of that.
But he underwent a battery of psychiatric tests with, I believe,
a dozen psychiatrists over 200 hours between over about the six months between the first time
he was arraigned and when he ended up pleading guilty in court. And every single one of these
psychiatrists, prosecution and defense said this guy has some sort of mental illness. The degree of
it was disagreed upon by the prosecution and the defense. The defense psychiatrists were like
he has schizophrenia, he has psychosis. He wasn't, he's not, he's not.
aware of like what he did. The prosecution said he's very aware of what he did. He has mental illness.
It's probably some sort of personality disorder, but definitely not anything that's made him so detached
from reality. He's not culpable for this crime. Yeah, for sure. Finally on June 22nd,
he changed his plea himself, his attorney. It was actually his second attorney because the first one
withdrew very quickly because there were death threats like you're, you know, defendants.
Mark David Chapman.
But Jonathan Marks was the second U.S. attorney appointed, and he was like, don't change your plea to guilty because, you know, we could probably get you, you know, at least insane at the time of the shooting, like temporary insanity, which, did they still even use that as a plea?
I don't know, man.
I know we've done an episode on it, but I don't remember where it landed these days.
Yeah, I'm not sure.
But he changed his plea to guilty of second-degree murder.
On August 24th, the judge sentenced him to 20 years to life at Green Haven Correctional Facility and said, you should get psychiatric treatment.
And Mark David Chapman read from The Catcher in the Rye, the part where I was going to read it, but it's a little long, but the part where Holden Caulfield is basically talking about saving the kids that are in danger of wandering off the cliff.
And, you know, that's when he calls himself the catcher in their eye.
And that's, you know, he was still so attached to that book at that point that was sort of his final statement.
And I think he even had a copy of the book that he had inscribed and said, this is my statement.
Yeah, apparently the book, the copy that he was reading after he shot John Lennon had that written in it.
And if you read that James R. Gaines interview with him and people from 1987, this period of time that six months,
are when he really seems the most mentally ill, when it really shines through,
because he's vacillating between a complete and total immersion in the catcher in the rye
and rejecting the catcher in the rye and going to the Bible, and then vice versa.
And there's a point where he has this awareness that the whole reason he shot John Lennon
is to let everyone know that he's this generation's catcher in the rye,
and every generation has a catcher in the rye, and he's the one now.
And it's really unsettling and disturbing.
And it would be really difficult to say the things that are coming out of this guy's mouth that is documented and be just making it up to make yourself seem mentally ill.
It's just, it's too off the, off the, off unhinged, essentially.
Well, and there was a history of this in his life, you know, it wasn't like all of a sudden after the murder, he just started saying these things, you know.
Yeah.
And also, I mean, even if if you exclude all that, don't you have to be mentally?
mentally ill to kill somebody to become famous, doesn't that require a certain level of at least
like a fundamental personality disorder that would qualify as a genuine mental illness?
I think so.
I do too.
Yeah, I'm no psychiatrist.
But if you believe that you can acquire someone's fame by murdering them, then yeah.
Essentially, yeah.
There were a couple of the other motives.
I mean, you know, the motive is what it is, which is a disturbed person wanting to kill a famous person
to gain fame. But he also was a very devout Christian after this. And at one point, you know,
the Beatles talked about being more popular than Jesus. He offended his Christianity with stuff
like that in the song, Imagine. But, you know, I don't think those were like the big reasons.
He has expressed more and more remorse and shame over the years as time went by because in 20, I'm
sorry, in 2000, he became eligible for parole.
And every two years, he goes up before the board.
And he expresses shame now.
He said, in 2020, what I did was despicable.
I assassinated him because he was very, very, very famous.
And that's the only reason.
And I was very, very much seeking self-glory, very selfish.
For her part, Yoko Ono always writes a letter saying,
please don't let him out. I don't feel like it's a punitive plea from hearing interviews. She
genuinely thinks that herself or Sean or Julian would be in danger if he was let out, and who can blame her?
Yeah. I mean, yeah. I don't know what else to say after that.
And one more thing I want to mention is, of course, Strawberry Fields, the place in October of 1985,
on what would have been
Lenin's 45th birthday Central Park
dedicated an area
near the Dakota
where he used to go and walks with Sean
as strawberry fields and it's a wonderful
place to visit. It's got this
beautiful mosaic on a walking
path and if you
go there, you can't
go there without seeing still just
scores of Beatles fans
paying their respects.
Nice.
Yeah, and Yoko
90 years old,
still going strong
and lived in that same apartment
until just a few years ago.
Yeah, I know.
And there's a lot of people
who love to hate on Yoko
if you want to get into
John Lennon conspiracy theory.
She's frequently the person
who's blamed as like hiring
indirectly.
Mark David Chapman is the hit man
to kill John Lennon.
Right, exactly.
Just stop.
At the same time,
that kind of, that's the kind of thing
that gives people
who despise her fodder
for being like, see, she just, she'd walk past the place where her husband died every day.
And it didn't, you know, she didn't move or something like that.
So she's a very misunderstood person, I think, in a lot of ways.
She finally did move during the COVID pandemic up to upstate New York, I think, with Sean.
Yeah.
People need to stop all the Yoko stuff, for God's sake.
Yeah.
I mean, it's still going strong if you read the Internet.
But it does feel like it's gone.
There's been a sea change.
I think it used to be way more.
acceptable to just hate on her.
And just in general, I think it's gotten a little more conspiracy-oriented rather than just mainstream these days.
Yeah.
Yoko Ono did not break up the Beatles.
Full stop.
Stop saying that.
If you watch the great Peter Jackson documentary that was out recently, it was definitely an odd thing for all of a sudden to have her in the recording studio with them.
it's different, but Paul was like, it was an adjustment.
And Paul was like, hey, listen, I, it's a little weird, but like he needs her.
He loves her.
She's great for him.
And she's not, it's not like she's much of a disruption or anything.
Like, even when you watch the footage, she's, she's just there.
And other family members are popping in here and there all the time.
She was there the whole time.
And he really needed her at that point.
Like, she was his life.
And Paul McCartney understood that.
And he knew that, like, that was going to be part of the working arrangement moving forward.
And they were getting okay with that, you know.
Nice.
Well, put, Chuck.
I just wanted to say that.
I'm glad you finally settled it once and for all.
Yeah, I'm sure not everyone will be like, well, Chuck said Yoko's great.
Yeah.
You got anything else?
No.
I don't love her singing, but that's a different story.
We've talked about that.
I think we have, but I'm sure I've mentioned it before.
Have you ever seen a cover of fireworks?
Uh-huh.
I love that, man.
It's so great.
I just think she's a true original artist.
So even if I don't love the singing,
like she's always done interesting things.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, if you want to know more about the death of John Lennon,
there is no shortage of articles and documents and stuff that you can read on the internet.
And since I said that, of course, it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call us just a recent email from a young listener.
Hey, I'm sorry, not even hey.
Yo, Josh and Chuck.
My name is Ben S.
And I'm a 13-year-old from Eagle Mountain, Utah.
Love your podcast.
I've been listening to it for years, and it makes me feel very smart around my friends.
My dad introduced us to it by having us listen to it on all of our road trips,
because we really like to go camping.
I come from a family of six kids,
and four of us have a rare skin condition called epidermalysis.
Epidermalysis?
Belosa Simplex.
Be super cool if you guys.
did a podcast about our skin condition and also this we have a contest in our family
to see who can get on listener mail first and I'm really hoping it can be me so if you
do read this on the podcast can you shout out my family mom dad Ricky Lily me Olivia Sam
and Grace thanks again for the show hopefully I can listen to it all through high school and
college and Ben sometimes we like to make dreams come true so that's why I picked
this one so take that to mom dad Ricky Lilly
Olivia, Sam, and Grace.
Yeah, Ben won, everybody.
Contest is over.
First one to email as far as I know,
but that's how it goes.
Right.
Well, that's awesome.
Thanks a lot, Ben.
We appreciate him.
We're glad we could help you out a little bit.
Thank you very much for listening.
And we hope you do continue to listen
throughout the rest of your life.
And if you want to be like Ben and send an email
and let us know you're super cool,
we love that kind of thing.
You can wrap it up, spank it on the bottom,
and send it off to Stuffpodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff you should know,
is a production of IHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, My Heart Radio,
visit the IHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hi, Kyle.
Could you draw up a quick document with the basic business plan?
Just one page as a Google Doc.
And send me the link.
Thanks.
Hey, just finished drawing up that quick one-page business plan for you.
Here's the link.
But there was no link.
There was no business plan.
I hadn't programmed Kyle to be able to do that yet.
I'm Evan Ratliff here with a story of entrepreneurship in the AI age.
Listen as I attempt to build a real startup run by fake people.
Check out the second season of my podcast, Shell Game, on the IHeart Radio app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You know, we always say New Year, New Me, but real change starts on the inside.
It starts with giving your mind and your spirit the same attention you give your goals.
Hey, everybody, it's Michelle Williams, host of checking in on the Black Effect Podcast Network.
And on my podcast, we talk mental health, healing, growth, and everything.
everything you need to step into your next season, whole and empowered.
New Year, Real You.
Listen to checking in with Michelle Williams from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the IHeart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
I didn't really have an interest of being on air.
I kind of was up there to just try and infiltrate the building.
From the underground clubs that shaped global music to the pastors and creatives who built
the cultural empire.
The Atlanta Ears podcast uncovers the storage behind.
one of the most influential cities in the world.
The thing I love about Atlanta is that it's a city of hustlers, man.
Each episode explores a different chapter of Atlanta's rise,
featuring conversations with Ludacris, Will Packer,
Pastor Jamal Bryant, DJ Drama, and more.
The full series is available to listen to now.
Listen to Atlanta is on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast, guaranteed human.
