Chambers of the Occult - EP# 13 Courtroom Controversy and Eerie Dolls: The O.J. Simpson Trial and La Isla de las Muñecas
Episode Date: July 11, 2024In this gripping episode of Chambers of the Occult, we delve into two chillingly different tales that have captivated public imagination. First, we revisit the infamous O.J. Simpson trial, a courtroom... drama that unfolded in Los Angeles, California, and left the world questioning justice and truth. We'll explore the key events, controversial moments, and the eerie atmosphere that surrounded this high-profile case.Then, we're heading to Xochimilco, Mexico City, to explore the mysterious La Isla de las Muñecas (The Island of the Dolls), a place shrouded in eerie legends and ghostly encounters. Discover the haunting story of this remote island, where thousands of dolls hang from trees and buildings, creating a spine-chilling landscape that draws curious visitors and paranormal enthusiasts alike.And for this week's bonus story, Kai tells us about an unusual great flood in Massachusetts. This bizarre and tragic event highlights how reality can sometimes be stranger than fiction.Tune in for a deep dive into these cases that continue to intrigue and terrify. Don’t miss out—join us for a journey into the unknown! Send us a Text Message.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Chambers of the occult may contain content that might not be suitable for all listeners.
Listener discretion is advised. Welcome! Welcome! Why was there such a long pause?
I have no idea.
I was just thinking,
I'm not sure if I should be
in the video or not.
I'm not sure if I should be in the video or not.
I'm not sure if I should be in the video or not.
I'm not sure if I should be in the video or not.
I'm not sure if I should be in the video or not.
I'm not sure if I should be in the video or not.
I'm not sure if I should be in the video or not. I'm not sure if I should be in the video or not. Welcome! Welcome! Why was there such a long pause?
I have no idea.
Hi, my name's Alexis.
Because, because we said, remember last time we were like, okay, wait, Alexis is gonna
start.
She's gonna.
Yeah.
Hi, my name's Alexis.
Hi, I'm Jay. Hi, I name is Alexis. I am Jay.
Hi, I'm Kai.
And this is Chambers of the Occult.
Welcome back, a very rocky start.
This is what's up right now for other podcasters.
Yes.
Yeah.
We give you raw content and we let you know that we're not ready.
We let you know Alexis and we let you know that we're not ready.
We let you know Alexis is not ready for introductions.
Yeah, more than anything. Yeah.
Oh, I hate you guys.
Anyways, what you guys went up to. literally, like, I'm so serious, literally just trying not to die
from the heat. Like, that's what I've been up to.
Wait a way.
Yeah.
It's been so bad.
Yeah, wait a way.
Yeah.
Yeah, wait a way.
And I opened my window because my room was hot. and I'm like, it's gonna cool off a little.
It got hotter and I'm like, no, that was a mistake. It's so sad.
I mean, I got my water. So I'll stay hydrated at least through the episode.
And you created a new D&D character.
Oh, God. What? at least through the episode. And you created a new D&D character. Oh god.
What?
She's lovely.
I love her.
Oh, there's many.
There's many.
There's many.
I texted Alexis that I made a new D&D character because I was not like in the, like, I was
not like actively trying to make like a character or anything. I was just listening to music and this song came on and I was listening like in the like I was not like actively trying to make like a character or anything
I was just listening to music and this song came on and I was listening to the lyrics and I'm like
Oh, I was like, what if like a character was singing this song type of thing?
Yeah, and
Her name is a Lara Thorne and
Long story short she became like a dominatrix by default.
Oh, oh shit. Okay.
Like it wasn't her voice. It kind of just like landed on her lap type of thing.
Yeah. I love it. I love her.
That's so sick. Are you are you planning on like using her like in a later campaign or is it just like a fun thing?
I was telling Katie, I make characters faster than I can play them.
So it would be nice to play her some campaign.
Before playing her, I do want to play one of the pirate characters I made.
I love her.
You have a pirate character?
Yes, I love her.
Oh my god.
And the thing is that for some reason I really got invested into this character.
So the backstory is no longer a backstory. It's a whole...
It's like a whole book.
It's a whole chapter.
Yeah.
Yeah. So I need to stop.
Well, I mean, I'm interested to hear about them. And who knows the way that... I mean,
I don't know about the like wild magic table you guys have,
but like something catastrophic could happen to Callum.
Yeah.
I guess from my understanding.
The thing is that I gave Aidy a list of crazy things that could happen.
And we've lost Kai. Hey!
Oh, we lost Kai.
All three of us have been disconnected now
All three of us yeah the first time it was you oh
You know, I really like that it's you guys lately because you know, I've I don't know
I feel like I've turned a new table. I feel like
Unlead that's what the saying is.
Yeah, I feel like I've turned a new leaf.
And the student has now become the teacher.
Yes.
And that's great.
Welcome back.
And we got him back.
We were, I think.
Okay.
I accidentally closed the tab.
Man, we were celebrating.
We were like, and now Kai has also disconnected, just like the two of us in the past half.
Actually, you know what?
We've all disconnected from the pod now.
That's...
Yeah.
It's a historical...
That's crazy.
What a coincidence.
Oh my goodness.
What?
Anyway, you're telling Katie...
No, because I sent her like some custom
Well Magic Surges.
She took a lot of them
and a lot of the other ones and she added a lot
more in there as well. So I also, not gonna lie, if Katie you're listening, I'm sorry, I did not
finish going through the whole list of Wild Magic surges. So I don't know everything she's added in
there, which you know, great, because I'll be taken off guard as well.
Yeah, I love that.
But yeah, I love scaring you last session.
Oh, I was like, yeah, yeah.
Was it last?
I was a little prankster.
Yeah, it was.
Was she hit behind the mannequins?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm so proud.
Anyways.
Hell yeah.
No one that 20 year old is first felt to do that.
I did and I rolled good.
We rolled so bad. We rolled so bad yeah we lived we did
surprise yeah yeah
look well I already get in anyways whether yeah Jay start off Alexis
Yeah, I'll take you want me to start you off cool my story is alexis story so go ahead and share it, please
So I have a question for you guys
Okay, I might have an answer you guys. Do you guys like orange juice?
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, I Do you guys like orange juice? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
I have it, you know, I have it once in a blue moon,
but what do you call orange juice?
Like what's a nickname for it you have?
Oh, like nickname for it?
Okay, well, okay.
That's such a stupid way to introduce this story.
What's a nickname you got for it, brother? Say it for me.
OJ.
OJ, motherfreaking Simpsons.
Okay.
Oh my god.
That is so dumb.
Oh my god.
But it worked.
I would say something, but Kai has all the emotions I'm feeling right now.
So I'm going to let him do it for me.
Okay, get on with your story.
Thank you.
Let me have the floor now. So today we're going to be discussing the murder trial of OJ Simpson.
First things first, I want to start off with this is a super controversial topic.
That's my warning for everyone. And I am going to be giving a trigger warning throughout this.
Um, so this started June 12th, 1994 when the bodies of Nicole Brown Simpson and
Ronald Goldman were murdered outside of Nicole's home in Brentwood, Los Angeles.
I do want to say there are a lot of details about this.
A lot. A lot.
Okay.
So I'm not going to be sharing them all.
I'm going to be sharing the details I feel are significant to
the story and the case. This is kind of like, like how you did with Jaminet, how it has so much that
you could probably put it into another episode in the future. That's what I envisioned for this.
Okay. So I'm going to be sharing what I can. It's the tip of the iceberg type of thing.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, I've never like actually researched anything about the OJ Simpson like trial and
everything that happened.
But like I know that there's a lot of shit that goes along with it.
So there's a lot.
Yeah, I originally, my brother, one time put on a OJ Simpson kind of documentary.
I think it was like the People versus OJ Simpson on Hulu or something like that.
And oh my God, that was like one of my first introductions to OJ.
And there's a lot that they didn't even put in there, but there's
a lot that's already in there in the documentary in itself.
It's like too much details.
It's crazy.
There is a lot.
Yeah.
But the discovery of their bodies would later become one of the most publicized murder trials in history.
Nicole Brown was found with multiple stab wounds along with her friend Ron.
And a lot of people believed that only one man could have done this.
And that man was Orenthal James Simpson, actually Nicole Brown's husband himself.
And OJ had a huge name already at that point.
He won the Heisman Trophy in 1968.
He was in the NFL for 11 seasons running back and Buffalo Brails, Buffalo Bills.
But he was also known to be really charismatic in the media.
A lot of people figured he couldn't have done this,
but a lot of evidence began to surface and it made a lot of people question.
A lot of people were captivated by this.
OJ and Nicole Brown met in 1977.
He was 30 years old.
She was 18.
Hell no.
Hell no, babe.
18, brother.
18.
And she was working as a waitress in a Beverly Hills private club.
It was called the Daisy.
Or she's just trying to make her money.
And this 30-mil man comes in.
I mean, like when you got, when your name is Orenthal and you got like a receding hairline,
then I mean, I guess you don't have too many options, right?
So yeah, wait a minute.
But I mean, she had a lot.
That's why he would introduce himself as OJ. Yeah, holy shit. Like, it doesn't
make it better. I've never known his actual name. I don't know if he has heard
it. But when you said his name, like Orenthal James, I like snickered. I was
like, Oh, no, I've heard it as well.
That's his name, brother, or thought James it's so funny though. Um, anyways, so yeah, he was 30 she was 18 working at the daisy.
They started.
This was in 1977.
Okay.
Um, when they were dating though, Simpson was actually married.
Bruh.
He was married.
Why?
He was filed for divorce two years later, 1979.
Why do people think they can get away with this?
Oh my goodness gracious.
I think she knew, I'm not entirely sure.
It doesn't really detail that, but yeah.
He was married, he filed for divorce from his wife
his first one, two years later in
1979. And then OJ and Nicole married February 2nd, 1985. They had two children, a daughter
named Sydney and a son named Justin. And they actually signed a prenup. And in the prenup, it stated that Brown was prohibited,
prohibited, prohibited, prohibited, prohibited from working during marriage.
So he was like, you're not going to work while we're married,
which a lot of women would probably go crazy for that
we're like not working yeah not working like crazy in a good way or a bad way I
don't know maybe both I would love to be a stay-at-home mom yeah see exactly
yeah no cuz like there's both takes there's a people that
want to get out there and work and there's a people that like I don't know if you've seen on
TikTok but they're like who was the first woman that ran to work because we hate you it's like I
wanted to stay home I wanted to do my little thing and I gotta go out there and make my money.
Yeah wait a minute. There's both points of you out there yeah yeah yeah wait a minute guys we need
to record in person with video because the reaction i just had to alexis saying trad wife
like there was no there was nothing vocal about it but like i leaned back in my chair i like
rubbed my face i'm just silently laughing to myself.
Yes.
Anyway, sorry.
No, you're fine.
Just keep going.
She wasn't allowed to work.
Yeah, she wasn't allowed to work.
According to a psychologist, the psychologist names is Lenore E. Walker. She said that their marriage displayed a quote, textbook example of domestic abuse, end quote.
Oh, yeah.
So trigger warning.
For domestic abuse.
Yeah.
Um, Nicole Brown, you wrote a lot of her statements.
There's a lot of documents, there's documentaries, letters, newspaper
articles, everything, And she states that Simpson would beat her in public during sex,
in front of friends and family members. She said he broke her arm during a fight. And
when she went to the emergency room, she lied to the staff and said he fell off her bike so that he wouldn't get arrested.
There were about 62 incidents of abuse that Brown experienced.
And out of all of them, the police were only notified eight times and Simpson was only arrested once.
Damn.
Yeah. And that's, that's what we know. Yeah. Yeah.
And she filed for divorce for irreconcilable differences on February 25th, 1992. And of course, after the divorce, things got worse. Brown
Yeah, Brown said that Simpson began like stalking her and harassing her. Yeah, which is like a tactic that abusers use to get their victims to like come back.
So, um, Brown, she had a new boyfriend and she said that Simpson spied on them having sex.
Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah
I don't like it. Also they had a kid, right?
They had two kids. Yes, you know who had custody over the kids or was it like shared custody?
It was shared I believe okay
And doesn't actually say, that's a good question. Yeah.
I'm nosy.
I want to know.
I like it.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
So, Shannon and her boyfriend, he spied on them and after this little incident she was
terrified.
She was scared for her life because there was a point in time where he had threatened
to kill her if he ever found her with another man.
Oh yeah.
As a result, he drafted a will.
Um, and on June 8th, 1994, a woman named Nicole, which we assume is Nicole Brown,
made a phone call to a woman's shelter called the sojourn house, assuming that, you
know, she was wanting a safe spot to hide from Simpson, especially because she was like
refusing to reconcile the their marriage.
And this whole prosecution was led by Marsha Clark and Christopher Darden.
And during this time, they had they both had like presented a compelling case.
But OJ, he had a whole team.
He literally called them the dream team.
And it was all just like hope high profile defense attorneys.
He had the money for it. Yeah, he had the money for
Yeah, yeah
Dream team is great
Yeah, no, seriously
So dream you imagine how cocky you have to be to be like this or this person like name them all is like
Yeah, like this is the dream. No, literally
No, seriously and then like I don't know I don't know I
Mean homeboy was rich
Like rich rich
Um
Speaking of dream team
dream team had Robert Shapiro I can't think of that
name without thinking of like victorious
what right victorious what what about it what Robert Shap jay tell me what what would you like me to say oh my goodness okay no no i'm asking
you because i have some no i was saying robert shippiro that i can't think of that name without
thinking about victorius the curly headed nerdy guy. He's a defense attorney.
Yeah. Girl, I-
Anyways, Johnny Cochran-
And I don't remember anyone's names.
Yeah, valid. Robert Shapiro, Johnny Cochran and F Lee Bailey.
This was OJ's defense team. Their strategy was to question the integrity of the LAPD and claim that Simpson was framed.
Oh, my God. Yeah, yeah, what do we.
By who?
I don't think they actually claim anybody who framed them.
But this, this entire trial was pretty much everywhere.
They made the headlines for every newspaper for like months. But I am going to tell you a little bit about the crime scene itself.
So at around 10 55 p.m. there was a dog walker.
She was just walking around the neighborhood and she found Brown's dog.
And when she found Brown's dog, she found his legs recovered in blood. And
immediately she thought like, Oh, the dog is hurt. Yeah. So she, you know, grab the
dogs and she lent it to a couple because she was supposed to be taking care of the dog
that she was walking, whatever. So she lent it to a couple that she knew. They were also her neighbors
to take care of it. And then that couple took it out for a walk. And as a couple was walking
the dog, they're walking towards Brown's apartment or condo. And they found her body. Immediately, of course. Yeah, they call the police.
So, yeah.
So the body was like easily visible then?
Yeah, it was.
It was like at the front door.
Just like outside?
The front door was open.
The front door was open, but she was at the bottom,
right where the front door is.
So you could see here right away practically.
The bottom, what do you mean?
The bottom of the stairs that lead to the front door, sorry.
So she was outside.
She was inside.
She was inside the house.
Wait, this part is coming again?
So, okay.
You walk to the front door, you open the door, and there's a set of stairs
right in front of you. She's at the bottom of those stairs. Okay. And she's easily like visible
from outside. So you open the door and you look inside and there's stairs going up into the house and she's at the bottom of those stairs
It doesn't matter but okay
Well, you know house houses have like two floors sometimes you know what I'm saying? Yeah
Yeah, she's at the bottom of the stairs. Okay, because you said the stairs going up to the front doors
So to me that paints the picture.
Oh, sorry.
Yeah.
I see where that confusion came from.
My fault.
Yeah.
Okay.
She's at the bottom of the stairs in front of the front door.
Behind the front doors.
Inside the house.
Inside the house.
Or like behind the front doors. Inside the house. Yeah. Behind the front doors, inside the house inside or like behind the front doors inside the house
Trying to describe one of those houses that has like little stairs that you take up and then you open the front door
No, I think like it's just a house like like you open up the doors and
Staircase just going up to the second floor. But yeah, I'm like
You know I'm saying I I'm like, I'm doing a great job. He's looking at it backward. You know what I'm saying? I don't know. Do you have a picture of the house?
Yes, I do. And I will be sending it to you guys. Well, do you want it right now?
I mean, yeah, that would help just because I'm trying to visualize it.
So I have like three different buildings in my head. Oh
Yeah, yeah, she lives in a condo so it's it's small it was not small but it is kind of small
Small big medium large
What kind of photo do you guys want cuz I have a lot of fun
What do you mean the photo you think we would need best to visualize it? Yeah, okay. The house one.
Oh, yeah. Oh, like are you seeing it for the first time too now? Yeah.
I saw a different photo of it.
I saw a different photo of it. Oh, Wikipedia is not good sometimes.
Okay.
Anyways.
And that's why I'm sending it.
Never mind.
They do lead up to the front doors.
I was right.
I just wasn't envisioning it.
They are outside. That's what you said. Like you were right. You gaslight yourself. I did. I really did. We just question
you too much for you to like. I know you guys literally interrogate me. You guys gaslight
me. Anyways, I'm just kidding. But yeah, she's at the bottom of the stairs. I was outdoors. Okay. She was outside. Okay. I know what I pictured
Okay, and a lot of blood sorry go on yeah, sorry that's why I asked what kind of photo
Okay what kind of photo because the other photos. I don't know what kind of photo. Well, okay.
But yeah, they found her body right there. And so, of course, immediately they call the police.
And. When the police came on scene,
they saw, of course, the front door was wide open, but.
There was no sign of like any kind of breaking in or anything like that.
There was nothing out of the ordinary, I guess.
And they did notice that her body was face down.
She was also barefoot and she was at the bottom of the stairs
that led up to the front door and the walkway was like covered in blood.
Okay. And then they also noticed that she could have been, she was eat they could tell that she was intended to be the person like she was an intended target
She had multiple stab wounds, but she also had a lot of defense stab wounds in her hands
Which of course shows signs of struggle. Yeah, she's fine, but there was
One that was in her neck and it was so deep into her neck that it severed an artery
on her back and like the center of it kind of upper a little bit like kind of
high. How old was she at this point? How old was she when she died? Got killed?
Yeah.
How old was she?
I have that, although I'm looking at it.
I don't have it right here, that's why.
She was...
45.
Okay.
No, I'm wrong.
25.
Ronald was 45. She was 25.
Yeah, that sounds about right. Yeah.
Because she was 18 when they got married?
Yeah. So.
Because they got married what?
They got married 70. No, they got married 92 in 92.
92, got it.
Yeah.
But they found a bruise on her back and then on the back of her shirt that she was wearing they found a footprint.
Oh yeah so they think that the murderer had stepped on her back pulled her head
and go back to him to him and slit her throat after the murder had killed Goldman.
Yeah.
Goldman was found.
That's what.
I'm just...
That seems like excessive.
Yeah.
No, it does.
Like she was like on the ground and he like walks up like behind her.
Essentially grabs her hair, pulls her head back and then like. And then.
Cuts from behind.
Essentially.
Yeah.
God.
That's some rage right there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So they think that the murder did that after they killed her friend Goldman.
He was found pretty close by kind of on a tree by a fence.
He had same kind of stab wounds.
They were on his body and his neck and the
same defense stab wounds on his hands. But there were also signs on his neck that he
had been put in a choke hold. So, and right beside his body, there was a blue knit cap and an extra large light leather,
erasist stone, esatoner, leather glove.
It was to a left hand.
There was an envelope with something that
Goldman was just bringing back to Brown.
They think that he was bringing, he was bringing something back to Brown. So they think that he he was bringing he was kind of like bringing something back to her.
He just went to her house to drop something off. And so they think he was just caught in the wrong
time. And that they murdered him because he was a witness as well. But the glove was a huge thing.
Okay.
It was only the left hand, so that meant there was the right hand somewhere.
They were going all over to find that right hand, brother.
Yeah, of course.
Did they find it. But they also found a trail of a bloody shoe print. And to the left of the
footprints that were going kind of just away from the scene were drops of blood
from the killer. And I guess his his left hand was bleeding.
So they were able to go ahead.
So well, Jay, were you going to ask if they found the other glove?
Well, I was going to ask more about the how they were able to determine that the blood was from the killer.
OK, yeah, that's that was also a to be my question. Did they DNA test and figure that out? They did a DNA test. Okay. They did a DNA test on Simpson and it matched it
all. It matched the blood drops next to the bloody footprints. It matched.
On Simpson as in OJ or? Yes. OJ. Yeah. Okay, I'm just going to call him OJ from this. Yeah, OJC.
Because they're both Simpsons. So. Yeah, that's true.
Yeah. Well, I call her Brown. I call her Brown. That's why.
You did. Okay. But.
Interesting. Okay. I mean, because like, I mean, if they confirmed confirmed his DNA then like why was this such a controversial trial?
But I'm sure you'll get into that so
Because it has to be beyond the reason of a doubt that they're guilty
And I'm just thinking like his dream team would just have to like
And I'm just thinking like his dream team would just have to like give I don't know if like was there a you'll probably get into this about if there was a jury or not, but
I'll ask when we get there.
Oh, yeah, I'll ask when I get there.
Okay.
Um, but um, another reason why they found out it was like from his left hand specifically as well is because Simpson OJ had a cut on his left hand.
And so that's how they got the DNA and that's how they matched it together. the law enforcement, they were trying to call some, or OJ after, you know, Brown, the scene.
They went to his estate so that they could, you know, notify him. Yeah. And it was Tom Lang, Philip Vanater, Ron Phillips, and Mark Fuhrman.
And they were also trying to let him know that he had to go pick up his kids from the
police station.
They were going to escort him there because they were found inside the house sleeping.
Which is awful.
And they went, they buzzed on the intercom and after 30 minutes there was absolutely
no response.
And they saw that his car was parked.
So at least his car was home, which meant possibly he was home.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
But they noticed it was parked really weird.
It was a at a weird angle.
Kind of like there was if he like yeah, like hurry.
Yeah, exactly.
And then they noticed that there was blood on the car door.
For some reason, I this is this is where the controversy comes in.
Kind of if you.
Their first thought when they see the blood on the car door is not that he did something bad, like just
murder somebody. It's that he's in danger. He's hurt something. And so... Malad, because like his
wife was just killed. So what happened to him type of thing? Yeah. So they scale the wall. And they unlock the gate from the
other side. Furman was the one that unlocked the gate for them.
And they went into his home. And when they went in, Furman found
a right hand leather glove.
Okay.
There it is.
Bro is like messy.
Yeah, bro.
One of the detectives, Phillips, he later testified that when he called OJ to tell him about the death, he seemed quote, very upset
and quote, but he was only concerned about the children, not in a way of their safety,
but if they saw the murder, if they saw her body and things like that, which honestly,
I think I don't know, I think that's kind of valid.
If I'm a dad, I'm going to wonder if my kids saw that.
No, yeah, of course.
I'm also going to wonder if they're okay.
You know what I'm saying?
If the concern is more that they see anything rather than are they okay?
Yeah.
It's valid to have both concerns, but if they lean more
towards the that they see anything, I guess it really depends though. I don't know. Yeah, yeah,
yeah, exactly. No, but this trial, this trial went on for eight months.
This trial, this trial went on for eight months. It went on for longer than eight months, I believe, actually.
And honestly, that's not long compared to a lot of other murder trials. Some of them go on for years.
And so I think that's like another thing is like, oh, damn.
Like, they just know.
But on October 3rd, 1995.
The jury had made their decision.
And Simpson was acquitted of his murders.
Yeah. acquitted of his murders. The fuck? Yep. He was tried and acquitted.
What was there?
Is there like, I guess, notes or like commentary from any of the jurors about how they came
to that decision?
Yeah, like, was there a jury involved or was it? Yes, there was a jury involved.
It even says I even have the statistics and their races. The reason why that the jury
had came to this conclusion is because this case is so
controversial because a lot of people just assumed that this was all because
they were just racist towards OJ. Oh so they were like he didn't actually do
this they just wanted to pin somebody for a crime and he was a black man. So yeah, I see. And the jury was 40% white, 20% black,
17% Hispanic, 15% Asian. Okay, so it was like a, it was a like a minorityfilled jury. So they ruled in favor of O.J. Okay, I see. That makes a lot of sense,
actually.
Yeah. Yeah. So yeah, O.J. Simpson, he was tried and acquitted for the murders of his wife and his wife's
friend and done nothing really after that.
So I have lots of questions.
Yes.
You better have those answers. Is there any recount from OJ, from any of the officers or things like that, the investigators
who looked more into how like the actual murders were committed, the scene and like the staging
of it all? Like, the actual process of what happened, is there knowledge of or a theory of what
happened?
Like, there's a lot of theories.
Yeah, no, yeah, there's a lot of theories.
A lot of them are mainly just because of the fact that he was just abusive. Like it was all just involving domestic abuse.
It really doesn't get into details to like other motives or anything like that.
It honestly doesn't even give a lot of details to how he's like for sure, for sure accused if that makes it like or like yeah I don't know
if that makes sense but yeah he's there's nothing concrete about him or
really anything else and that's what like does not sit well with me like what
the fuck yeah he is the he was the only suspect and he was DNA matched to blood
and objects used in the crime to the scene but no it wasn't him what year place? The trial? Yeah, 95. Okay, because my mind said would have been we got to hold off until we
have enough evidence that we can prove that he was guilty. If I was, you know, trying to prove him
guilty. But I don't know. I don't know if I need to know more
details to know whether it felt rushed like a rush trial or not. No, because it
took months but like rush like rush getting him.
No, I know what you mean. But even months. Even even then like months to me is still
kind of rushed. Like I said, like these murder trials are going for years, dude.
And like, you know, they just got this and the case, you know, like, they found two bodies.
If it was close, if it was just a cold case, or like, if it's still like, if it's still like if it's still remain open after a while?
I think it just closed right after they acquitted him. See and that doesn't make sense though because if you're going to say he's not guilty okay figure out who was the killer then because that means
he's still out there or she's still out there don't just stop investigating because he's not you can stop
investigating him because you quit at him go find another person go find
another suspect um so yeah honestly I'm I still had some more questions.
So it was seen as just like a murder of passion, essentially then.
Like domestic violence went a little too far. far, he probably got angry at the dude being so close with his wife and killed them both,
something like that. I guess at least that's my understanding of how logically that would
have happened. Was there other evidence that was used in the case other than the DNA testing, the glove
that was found, and the blood scattered throughout, like on the car, in the house, things like
that?
Was the entire investigation just based off of the DNA evidence?
There was hair found in the blue knit cap.
Got it.
So there really wasn't too much evidence.
They just were really banking on the fact that they had something they thought was concrete
in a way.
Yeah, they had all they really had is the blood trail, the shoe print, the hair.
That was it.
The glove.
I don't know.
I feel like that's pretty concrete, like pretty cut and dry.
I don't know.
It does seem like that, but we just have to figure out what the dream team, how they dismissed
it or what they brought to the table.
And I have a whole different thread of stuff
I could get into about the lawyers, but same. That's when like, when Alexis mentioned them,
I was just like, quiet for like a minute and a half. I'm like, I am not going to get into
this. It's so extremely detailed that I know for a fact I could do another episode of this
and it would be longer than this one and I would give you a lot more details and you
probably still would have more questions after it.
Could you give us more details right now?
I think we still got time.
Yeah, because he just died this year.
That's why you guys can ask questions.
Yeah, he did. He did.
So, OJ, he was pretty still pretty favorable in the public's view at that point, right? Like, good football player. Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, and that's part of the reason why it was so
controversial, right? Because people were just like, oh, no, he's a good guy. We like him.
controversial, right? Because people were just like, oh, no, he's a good guy. We like him. It was. It was that the fact that he was a black man and like a lot of a lot of
people just thought that they were just accusing him of actually Furman, the detective who.
found the glove. He said the N word.
I believe to OJ.
And he.
I think was removed.
From the police department as a whole.
Fired, I guess, if you should say,
for racism and planting evidence.
I see. Okay. That's a big thing to kind of leave out.
I think that's a big thing to kind of leave out. Um, yeah, go ahead.
Just like if, if the lead investigator of your case is very obviously like racist, or
at the very least discriminatory against OJ simply because he is black, then I completely understand how that
skews the investigation, but especially with the jurors who were like primarily
minority people. And so I feel like that's very important to this
investigation. Yeah, anyway, what were you gonna say, Jay?
No, I was gonna say that I know you said
that there's a lot of information.
You said it right from the start.
And I know there's more and I want more,
but you're gonna have to give us a deep dive
in this case at some point in the future.
That's what I was trying to say.
Yeah, like I just wanted to do a deep dive on this
because there is a lot
and there's a lot with Furman that I wanted to save as well for I'm gonna be so real I think
you could have done it this episode like I think you still can if you want to I don't know
I don't know. I told you it's a lot.
It Kai, it really is a lot.
It's a lot.
Okay.
Like it actually is a lot.
All right.
Well, but do you guys have any more questions?
I guess not as of right now.
I guess I'll save some of them.
Yeah, well I'll have more when you do the deep dive.
Okay.
Then at that point you'll have a lot more answers.
Yeah. But thank you for listening to the murder trial of OJ Simpson.
You're welcome. Thanks for telling us. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Okay.
And then who's next? You're next, Jay.
I am next.
Cool.
You're mama.
All right, Jay. So you're up.
I am up. So this is episode 13. And I wanted to do something spooky. But I didn't know what would be considered spooky. I mean, I know what's in the feed, but I'm like,
how much spooky do you want to put in there?
So I just decided to do something that a lot of people find horrifying.
Oh, thanks.
Mounds.
No, actually.
Okay.
That would have made sense too, though. No, so for this case,
we're gonna hop on a plane and we're gonna fly down south to Mexico. Okay. Oh my goodness.
Lots of scary shit down there, so you know. Are you talking about? Huh? Continue. Okay, so
Huh? Continue. Okay, so we're heading to Mexico and we're going to go to the the borough of Xochimilco in Mexico City. Oh my god. No, that's not what we're covering.
I don't. I've always wanted to go there, bro. I've always wanted to go. So this is the story of La Isla de las Muñecas, also known as the Island of the Dolls.
Yeah.
Oh wait, okay, no, I have heard of this before, but like years and years and years ago. Okay.
Yeah. So that's what I'm covering this episode.
Cool.
Thank gosh.
Because a lot of people find dolls creepy.
Yes, I do.
I want people...
And I don't want to go there, so...
I too.
Whoa.
I too.
I too.
I too.
So, we're going to head, like I said, to Sochi Milko.
And let me tell you a little bit about Sochi Milko. So we're going to head, like I said, to Xochimilco.
And let me tell you a little bit about Xochimilco.
So let's just go into the island and don't let you know about its surroundings.
So Xochimilco is mostly known because of its canals.
And they're navigated by colorful bottom boats called trajineras.
And these boats are just popular among tourists and locals, and they're used for leisure rides,
celebrations, parties. It's very affordable and people go on them all the time.
Okay.
So I'm actually sending you a picture right now on the group chat of what those boats look like.
And there's hundreds of them.
So there's hundreds of these boats. They'll have different
Names and like designs.
Um, oh my goodness. Yeah.
So like I said, I love them. Those are called trajineras and it's the name of the boats.
Like I said, those are called trajineras and it's the name of the boats. And the canals are surrounded by chinampas, which are small artificial islands that were
created by the Aztecs for agricultural purposes.
Okay.
That's sick.
So, yeah.
That's really cool, actually.
Yeah.
So the canals and the chinampas from Xochimilco were highly productive during the
Aztec period, a little bit of a history lesson, so just, you know, like, why it's an important
type of thing.
So they're like floating gardens, and they're capable of producing large amounts of food
that were essential for feeding the large population of Teochiclan, the asset capital, and the estimate
suggests that the chinampas, like the floating islands, could produce food for thousands of people.
Are you enjoying the history lesson?
Yeah.
Yeah. And they were said to produce up to seven harvests per year due to the fertile soil
and the efficient irrigation system.
So they grew a variety of crops including corn, beans, squash, tomatoes, chilis, and
other vegetables and flowers.
Alexis, are you okay?
She is dying over here.
Continue. Do you need a minute?
No, I'm good.
Okay.
And like I said, it's just a quick history lesson,
but some sources estimate that the Chinampas,
those floating islands, provided enough food I said, it's just a quick history lesson, but some sources estimate that the Chinampas,
those floating islands, provided enough food to feed around 200,000 people, which was crucial
for supporting the dense urban population of Teochitlan.
And it's estimated that there was about 200,000 to 300,000 inhabitants at its peak.
So that's where they got their primary source of food.
And they're still used nowadays. Like if you're to like visit and you're to like take a trajinera
down the canal, they use them to grow flowers, vegetables, and other crops.
And because it's such a unique location, due to its unique agricultural method and historical significance, in 1987, Xochimilco became a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Okay, that's cool.
Yeah, so it just kind of offers that glimpse into the pre-Hispanic and colonial past of the region.
Yeah.
But now back to the story that we're here for.
I just wanted to give you a little bit of the surroundings, like build the atmosphere, build the scene.
Yeah, world building.
Yeah, exactly. So this story actually starts in 1950s, in the 1950s, when Don Julian Santana Barrera,
that's his full name.
Yeah.
Well, I'll either call him Don Julian or Julian to make it easier rather than a full name.
Okay.
No, call him Don.
Don.
I don't know him like that.
So supposedly in the 1950s, supposedly, taken with a grain of salt, he left his wife and child.
I'll talk about why I said supposedly in just a minute, but not much is known of who they were or why
he left them. And the reason I said supposedly is because according to an interview from
one of the interviews they did with his nephew, his nephew's name, Anastacio, he says that Don Julian, his uncle was never married.
So, yeah, some people out there said that he left his wife and child.
According to his nephew, he was never married.
Okay.
Yeah.
So we're going to go right now with the row that he was never married, just
because that's what the nephew said.
And I find that more reliable than unknown sources.
Yeah, it does seem a little more reliable.
Yeah, so like I said, this is in the 1950s.
And he decided to move into a small island in the Canals of Xochimilco to live in peace and tranquility.
And he was just known for being a divided religious man,
and he was dedicated to just tending the land and growing plants.
Kind of like a hermit type of thing, like he just kept to himself.
I love that. Yeah.
He would go out into, like, the city to, like, purchase things, but like.
He's had his residents in this
island and that's where he must have his time. Now this is where we have three different versions of how
the story started and I'm gonna share all three of them with you because I really
can't get like a straight answer from anyone. Yeah. So one of the versions says that one day Don Julian saw a young girl drowning,
that she was tangled in some water lilies and that he couldn't help her.
Another version of the story says that Don Julian simply found the girl already drowned
and that her body was found in the banks of
the Chinampas.
And the last version says that according to some of his relatives and some people, Don
Julian simply imagined, wow, imagined in the girl's heart. Imagine seeing a girl drowning. Yeah. So there's versions that he said he found a girl drowning, that he saw a girl drowning,
and that maybe he made it all up.
He imagined.
Yeah.
So either way, this is the origin of the Island of the Dolls.
Yeah.
And yeah.
So the story continues that Don Julian suffered nightmares of the girl drowning
and that he was like tortured by her screams. And shortly after those like nightmares, he saw
a doll floating near the canals. And he just thought that it belonged to the girl.
So he picked it up and he hung it on a tree.
Yeah, okay. Valid. Nothing wrong with that. Yeah. And that's how it all started.
So from that moment, Don Julian began to collect dolls and parts of dolls from the canals or the garbage and he would hang them in trees on the island. It was said that he traded produce that he grew, like local produce, for some dolls.
And according to some versions, like he would go out into the city, just do his grocery shopping
or whatever he had to. and sometimes on the way back
he would find just like dolls around like in trash or just laying around he would take them with him
oh my god yeah so according to some versions of the story this is once again where there's like two
different versions um he did this to protect himself from the spirit of the girl who he believed had possessed him.
And other stories say that it was a way of him showing respect for the spirit of the girl that
drowned. So he was just like, yeah, I'm possessed by this girl. I need to collect every single doll that I find ever. Yeah. Though it was one or the
other. Like I said, there's multiple versions out there. So he started to continue adding dolls.
And this is something that might sound kind of familiar, but you know,
the island continued to grow with the dolls for the next 50 years.
The island continued to grow with the dolls for the next 50 years.
So for 50 years, he was just cutting the dolls.
Yeah. Wow.
So he started creating either willingly or like unknowingly,
like a creepy and disturbing collection.
Some people say that he didn't clean up the dolls or attempt to fix them. He just put them up with like missing eyes or
limbs covered in dirt and like whatever ranch he found them in. Some
people said that like he would actually just try to like clean them up and then
he would put them up. But even when like dolls arrived in good shape, like you found them in good shape, it was 50 years, the wind, the weather,
rain, anything would eventually crack them or like give them like a distorted version
of what the original doll was. Yeah. Yeah. So he ended up turning this entire island into like a bizarre, some people say horrifying, doll-infested wonderland.
I love it.
That's kind of cool. I support it.
Cut it out.
Yeah.
No, that's fine. Maybe it became like a hobby.
It kind of seems like it.
Yeah, because it doesn't seem like he was going too much out of his way to collect dolls.
Maybe he was, I don't know.
Maybe, like digging in trash cans and stuff.
Yeah, but it's like 50 years of dolls.
So at this point it's not just like a random thing he's doing, it's just like a way to spend his time, I guess.
It really well could be. Yeah.
Now, he wasn't like, like I said, he wasn't cut off from society living in the island.
And he got visits from his nephew, Anastacio, who was in the interview. And his nephew, Anastacio, was quite involved and supportive of Don Julian.
So he continued adding dolls and dolls for 50 years until in 2021.
Whoa, 2001.
Big time jump. Yeah, 2001, where his nephew, Ernestastio,
would find his uncle Julian dead next, dead.
And some people say that he was dead next to the shore,
where like he found the body of the dead girl.
So some people think that it was like the girl claiming him.
I heard a story out there that he was like fishing with
his nephew and like his nephew went to get more bait or something he like
stepped away from a minute and as he was stepping away Don Julian was saying that
there was something in the water that was gonna get him and then when like, an assassin came back, the uncle was dead.
That's actually like really ominous.
Yeah, I mean, if it's true that there was a girl and that he was dead in the same spot that the girl was found, that's where it's kind of like, OK, I don't know
how much of a coincidence that is.
Yeah, exactly. Like it was kind of like predicted, no? Yeah. They did an autopsy on him and it kind of just showed that it
was a heart attack. And one of the interviews with Anastacio, he tells a
story of, you know, he just retells the story of how his uncle Don Julian hung
the dolls in trees to scare away the spirits of the girl.
But as time went by, he would think that there would be other things out to get him, so he
would add more dolls kind of to protect him from like everything he saw at night.
Now after Don Julian passed away, his nephew took over.
And the nephew says that in his years taking over the island, that he will hear his uncle
Julien walking around and dragging himself with a cane.
As Julien got older in his years, he would require a cane to move around. And that's what his nephew Anastasia says that he hears, like, the uncle with the cane.
And he said that he's heard him over 15 times.
Damn!
Yeah.
And that he's also seen some shadows around.
Yeah. And that he's also seen some shadows around.
I wonder if that would feel like scary at all, or if it's just like them seeing their, like, uncle... Well, yeah, I mean...
Not even converting in a way, but like, oh like oh like he's here still type of thing
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking as well cuz it's you know, it's your uncle you spend time with him
You visited him and you've not have an encounter. You just kind of heard him around
Exactly. Yeah, the shadows would definitely be more like concerning. I
mean
But that's
about it. But an associate and a sassio and some people that have
visited the island do mention that some of the dolls will move
from one location to another.
Okay. And he said that for the first three months when he took
over, that he would just would not be able to spend the night
on the island. But now he actually spends some nights here and there on the island.
Interesting. So like he... Okay, so he would still spend it even though he wasn't like
fully comfortable at first being there, I guess, but he's...
Yeah. Like he would probably go to like to take care of the crops or whatever he was growing.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Or clean it up, you know?
But he wouldn't spend the night.
And now, after like three months, he got a little bit more comfortable and he would start
spending the nights there.
Yeah.
So, there's also...
I mean, both of you have heard of them.
Heard of the Island of the Dolls. And some
popular shows have gone to like do their own investigations. Several TV shows have featured
like La Isla de las Muñecas. And of course, they are going to highlight the eerie atmosphere,
like the legends, the dolls. So I'm going to name some shows that have gone there in
case you want to check them out.
From Travel Channel, Ghost Adventures has gone.
From Sci-Fi, Destination Truth, of course, Buzzfeed Unsolved has gone.
Yeah, okay, Buzzfeed Unsolved.
Yeah, I remember.
Yeah.
That was like years ago.
Yeah.
It's an older episode nowadays, yeah.
There's also an Amazon Prime series called Lore.
And it...
I tried watching this one because I'm like,
oh, I have Amazon Prime, let me check it out.
I was disappointed.
If you want to check it out, it's season one, episode six.
But it's like the first
ten minutes are about the first five minutes are about the island and like
the rest of the episode it's about a different doll somewhere else in the
world oh it's not an episode dedicated to the island of the dolls but they
mention it there okay from the Discovery Channel there's a
series called Expedition X and there's a History Channel series called the
Unbelievable, the Unbelievable, Unbelievable with Dan Ackroyd. Okay. Now I tried
finding some stories from people that post them on like reddit or a blog or something like that
I was able to find a story from independent.co.uk
So this is a story from a man called Dino
and Dino has been working as a traginero.
Tino, what did you think I said?
Dino.
Dino?
Yeah.
No, his name is Tino.
Yeah.
He's worked as a traginero, you know, with those
big boats carrying people from one place to another one.
For five decades, so 50 years.
And he said that steering the boats through the canals, he said to have seen many otherworldly
things.
Interesting.
And that goes back to how superstitious people are, because once once again this was pretty much used by the
Aztecs at some point. It goes back years. Yeah. And the story that he says says that
one day he took three girls to the island and he explained that two of the girls wanted to go
but the other one who claimed to be psychic was reluctant.
Go ahead. I would say that's kind of funny. I don't know. I think it will be funny to be like,
kicks are always kind of funny with their reactions. Yeah, I'm sure. I mean, I feel like
especially when it's overhyped or like when it's like a popular destination or known place.
Exactly.
But she was encouraged by her friends and she eventually gave in and they headed into
the island.
Dino, the traquinero, he took the girls and about five minutes later, the girls came running back.
Oh shit.
Yeah.
And the one girl that did not want to come to the island was crying and between her sobs,
she screamed that the doll was laughing.
That's funny.
I'm sorry.
No, like I'm laughing at it, but I would be scared shitless if a doll laughed at me.
No, yes, same.
But at the same time, that's so funny to think about.
Like, a doll laughing at you.
No, I'm sure, like, in this story, you want to laugh at it, but being in their shoes,
it would be, like, terrifying.
Mm-hmm.
No, yeah.
No, seriously.
Yeah, so Tito said that he was going to go check it out to make them feel better and
that they were wrong.
But when he got into like when he started walking into the island, he was said that he could hear
the sounds of the laughter too. Oh, so it's why he shares the story. It's not like a story of like,
oh, this is what the girls told me. It's like, oh, this is what happened to the girls. And then
I also heard one of the dolls laugh.
Okay.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
And he said that the doll that was laughing
was dressed as a rabbit.
Yeah.
And he was like, I promise you,
I couldn't believe what I was seeing.
What?
Yeah.
Wait, what?
That's crazy.
I will actually send you right now some of the pictures
of the island.
Okay, the first picture I sent you is a picture of Don Julian with one of the dolls.
And here's a few more pictures of the dolls.
They're all over the place.
Oh. Oh.
Looks like my dad.
That's racist.
I can't believe it.
Damn bro!
It's honestly, it's really interesting to like learn that I can't believe it. Damn bro.
It's honestly it's really interesting to like learn that there is actual like history and
a story behind this place and it's not just like a doll island.
Like yeah, they're like it started at some point.
No one really knew why and then you can also see a picture
there of the of Don Julian I think the most recent picture I sent you there's a
picture on the wall and that's the picture of Don Julian as well okay as
you see like there's all sorts of dolls. YouTubers go there all the time. Some people will take
like their own dolls as a token of like, hey, like, offering type of thing, or like protection
of like, hey, we're just here to check it out. So you find all types of dolls like Barbies,
Bratz, porcelain things, things that require batteries, everything. Oh my god. Little robots.
I'm gonna be real, like, I don't know how I would feel about bringing my own doll there.
Well, like...
Yeah.
I don't know, that's kind of like, like infringing upon it in a way.
Yeah, no, yeah.
But I also could see how it's, I guess, like, protection or something like that.
Yeah, some people bring it like an offering of like hey if
There's anything here. Don't follow me home. Here's a doll for you
Yeah
Yeah, you can see how there is a variety of them
definitely, so if
one more thing that I found out during this during this whole research is that if you or we want
to go to the Island of the Dolls, it's possible.
There's tours that happen there.
I would like to.
But when you get at Traginera, that boat, and they start taking you there, it's about an
hour boat ride.
Oh, shit.
And the reason I bring this up is because other people have tried to imitate the Island
of the Dolls, and it would be like a 20 minute boat ride. So if like when you get on the boat and like you're you're on your way you can see it like right off the bat.
That's not the one don't have them take you to that one because that's not the real island of the dolls.
Oh, so there's going to be like like fake.
Like islands of the dolls like on the way to the real one. Yeah, like imitations have a thing.
Yeah, so if you get there too soon, or if you can see it right off the bat, way to the real one. Yeah like imitations have a thing. Yeah so if you get there too soon or if you can scare right off the bat that's
not the one it's about an hour boat ride. Interesting that's honestly really weird
that they do that but I guess like perhaps. Yeah tourism there is like I mean
of course you have to pay to like take the boat. Like here's some things that I had a little thing from Atlas Obscura of like know before you go to like Xochimilco.
Yeah.
So the borough is about 17 miles south of the city of Mexico City.
And the best way to get there is to leave from the Embarcadero and it's four hours round trip. Okay, so
it's two hours, not one hour away. It's a two hour boat ride. It's a four hour
round trip and it costs roughly around 75 US dollars. Okay. Yeah. And just to keep
an eye out for the wildlife during your boat trip, nothing will attack
you.
Just like common-seen creatures like pelicans, kingfishers, egrets, and like other types
of water snakes.
Egrets?
Yeah.
Fun.
And other than that, yeah, um, quick disclaimer to anyone that wants to go to such a musical
from our listeners or when we go, do not expect clear waters.
This was never a place that had clear waters.
It's something that was, I'm not sure if it was human made by the Aztecs or if something
that they just took advantage of.
But the waters are murky.
If you've seen those TikToks of like the Seance River in France, in Paris, it's dirty water.
It's kind of what you're going to find here.
Yeah.
So, yeah, not good for swimming. Don't go dip your
tail. Your toe. Don't drink the water. Don't drink the water.
Yeah. Yeah. And if you want to take Traginera, have fun with
it. You can hire Mariachi to take with you. If you forget
your snacks, there will be smaller boats that will sell snacks on the canal as
well.
So whatever you need, they have for you.
That's so sick, actually.
Yeah.
It also shows like how touristy it's become.
Yeah.
And that is the Island of the Doll dolls for you. Awesome. Thank you. I have always wanted to go.
When I went to Mexico in February and I came back, Omero asked me, did you go to the island of the
dolls? And I was like, no, I actually wasn't even in that state.
And then he was like, oh, okay. But yeah, people have heard of it. Yeah.
Yeah, the only knowledge I have is like the distinct memory, or not the distinct memory,
but it's literally like one single frame that I picture in my head. And I'm pretty sure it's
just the thumbnail of the Buzzfeed Unsolved video of them just like looking at all the dolls in the dark on the island.
Yeah.
That's the only thing that I know of.
I remember them recording the boat ride.
Yeah. And also you're able to go at night. You just have to find the right trajinero
because not all of them will go to the island at night.
And once again it comes to the superstitious like aspect around it. Some people don't want to go,
some people will be like, yeah that's fine I'll take you.
Okay. Yeah. We gotta go. I am so done. My dad's from Mexico City. Is he? Yesam. You should ask him if he's ever gone.
I did.
Or let's ask him if he thinks of it.
A while back.
Oh, he said he wanted to go.
Okay.
You know, road trip with your dad?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He gets time to bond.
I would need to go to my headquarter to get his teeth fixed anyways.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I thought that was happening here.
No, I said it was happening in Mexico.
You either did not tell me or I forgot.
One of those, and either way, he's going to Mexico.
Fair. Yeah. those and either way he's going to make there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So he might do it here.
I don't know.
It depends.
Anyways, thank you for telling us that wonderful.
You're welcome.
His stream lesson.
Give you a vivid image of so Chimico and the Island of the
dolls.
Yeah, we have to go to Island of the Dolls. Yeah. Sick.
We have to go.
To the pile.
I am so down.
We gotta go to a bunch of places.
Do we have a list?
We do.
We gotta start making a list.
I mean, I'm sure we might have a list.
Wait, can I make the list?
We still have to go fencing.
We still have to do that.
We do.
Vanguard. Okay. But do. Fungi.
Okay.
But hey, slow progress has been made.
USS Hornet is out of the way.
Alcatraz is out of the way.
We could not do Bigfoot Discovery Museum, but maybe next time.
Or the Mystery Spot, but maybe next time.
We'll be going back. Yeah. We got time for the mystery spot but maybe next time we'll be going back yeah yeah we
we got time for those we need to make an episode about our experience at the Alcatraz or actually
nevermind yeah i don't know i don't know if any of us have experiences at Alcatraz nevermind
um i had an experience but it wasn't paranormal.
No, that's what I mean.
Not like our paranormal experience, but our experience overall.
Okay. Yeah, because when you say experience, I think-
Oh, I'm just talking about it.
Oh, sorry. Yeah.
Fair. Okay.
Bad and I would say bad and then no.
Let us know if you want to hear our
experience just walking around. We'll do it.
Like any other like haunted places or places we've been or anything like that.
Or just give us places to go put on our list.
Send us places.
We will go eventually.
I'm making the list right now.
When we've got the phones to do so.
Actually after this we'll talk but I was going to say on the Google Drive I have like a Google
map for like a haunted road trip and it's literally just haunted locations.
Oh my goodness.
It's not very big.
It's just California for now. So you can continue
out in there. Okay, I can't help it. I'll also make a list just from my social. Anyways, okay.
Yeah, so Kai, you get to close this off. Yeah, take it away. Right.
Last but not least.
Thank you for your singing.
All right. So have you guys ever had molasses?
Yes.
I honestly don't even know if I've ever had molasses before.
I had to look up what it was and And it's it's it's basically just
like condensed sugar syrup. Yeah. So I was like, Oh, okay, that kind of disappointing.
I thought it'd be something cooler. Yeah. But I mean, if you think about it, it's kind of cool if you just eat it like that.
It's just food full of molasses.
No, no, because I'm saying people around me would see you eating something black.
Mlazes.
Oh, OK.
And be like, what are you eating?
That's the only thing I'm thinking about.
Mlazes.
I'm thinking of how people would react around people.
Wait, isn't brown sugar just like sugar with molasses? Brown sugar,
I believe so. So they just put sugar into more sugar to make brown sugar? Molasses is like
molasses is like sugar cane oh brown sugar does contain molasses
but it's brown it's molasses with refined white sugar so it's the combination of both
so they just put more sugar into sugar to make that
god damn it you're right oh my god what am i learning about the world
yeah um anyway yeah you're right. Oh my God, what am I learning about the world? Yeah.
Anyway. Yeah, you're right.
No, like that wasn't even me being to be like
proving you wrong or whatever.
It was just like, what the fuck?
No, no, no.
I never thought of it like that way.
And you're right.
It's sugar mixed with sugar.
Refined. All right. So, um. Molasses.
Yeah, I like we went on a tangent and it's not related at all, but like it's kind of
related.
Okay.
I was about to say that I was like, just watch us talk about molasses for 10 minutes and
your story has nothing to do with molasses.
Yeah I just had a question for you guys. A lot of shit happens in Boston. A lot of shit
has happened in Boston over the years. Yeah. And I won't get into it. Like the Winchester. What? What? What? Boston, Alexis. Yeah, the medium.
Oh, the medium from Boston. Okay. Yeah. Oh, I was so confused as well. Yeah, I thought you said
win. And I was like Winchester in Boston. I was like, what do you mean? Anyway, Boston, a lot of stuff happens.
Yeah. A lot of really bad stuff. Yeah. And surprisingly...
I assume you're not telling us a good thing that happened?
I mean, at first glance, you kind of laugh at it. But then you read more into this and it's just like, oh, that's
not good.
That's actually really bad.
Like really bad?
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
So what I'm talking about is the Great Molasses Flood.
I'm sorry.
The Boston Molasses Disaster.
Yeah. that...
This is where you guys laugh.
Well, I'm processing what you said.
I know you said flood and molasses.
Molasses.
The great molasses flood of 1919.
In my head, you're just not credible. That's so funny. The great molasses flood of 1919.
It's like how does molasses flood?
But anyway.
Wednesday, January 15th, 1919.
Of course in Boston, Massachusetts.
The locals around there, they were going about their day. They were, you
know, working, going to their jobs, living in the residential community of North End.
It's the oldest, like, community in Boston, essentially. So people were living their lives,
and they were next to the big railroad, the big elevated
railroad area, what the trains would come through to bring in the cargo and all of these
things to get business going through Boston.
And right next to it was a huge tank of molasses.
You said huge.
How big?
You said huge. How big? Yes.
50 feet tall, 90 feet in diameter.
It was a giant tank.
Just filled with molasses.
50 feet tall is crazy.
Do you call that a tank or do you call that a building?
It was a tank but I don't know, it was Jenkins.
How heavy?
Very.
Oh my god.
What the hell?
They didn't really think much of it. So this tank was sitting, it was at the
purity distilling company facility at 529 Commercial Street there in the
North End neighborhood of Boston. When at around 1230 p.m. in the afternoon,
somewhere around lunchtime, the people in the area were
suddenly surprised by a 25 foot wave of 2.3 million balance, brother? What?
Yeah. 25 feet, brother? That's a tsunami, brother.
No, literally. Jay, what do you have to say? I am just nodding my head like no, because...
I should match my head, Ben. I'm sorry, no.
I'm trying to imagine people's...
I wouldn't either.
And like their heart stopping for a second.
No, literally, yeah.
25 feet tall, 2.3 million gallons,
weighing about 13,000 tons. And this wave traveled at about 35 miles an hour
down the streets through the buildings. And the entire area was just flooded with molasses.
flooded with molasses. Yeah.
Oh my god. What's the consistency of it? Is it like thick?
Very. So molasses is about 40 to 50 percent thicker and more dense than water is.
So it's a syrup. It's a thick syrup.
Yeah. And it was coming at them like.
It's a syrup. It's a thick syrup.
Yeah. And it was coming at them like crazy.
Yajay?
No, I am just trying to picture these houses, these buildings.
People.
Children's dogs. What do you do?
No, seriously. And that's exactly what it happens. Like, at first you laugh at it.
It's like, what the fuck? Big wave of molasses that goes.
But then you think of the people.
You think of the children, the dogs, the horses
that were in this dock area
surrounded by the company of the commercial areas there.
I didn't even think of the horses.
Now I'm scared for the horses.
Yeah.
Twenty-one people died.
150 people were injured.
So many animals passed away as well.
They were trapped under all the rubble, suffocating under the,
you know, foot-tall flood of molasses on the ground.
And so it's a lot, like I said, like a lot more horrible than
you really think at first glance. So the reason why it was even there in the first place is
because back at that time, like they were preparing for essentially like World War I, they're trying to help create the munitions,
the explosives, things like that for use in the war. And molasses was actually a primary
thing used to help ferment and produce alcohol or ethanol, like industrial alcohol. And so
that was being used given to the military to create all their
explosives and things like that. So there was a huge use for molasses during that time.
So there was a big tank of molasses. Yeah, that was just stored towards like the harbor
side towards the Boston Harbor right around there. It was
just a street tank owned by the purity distilling company. And so they
distilled alcohol for commercial use for the military as well as just like
personal consumption as well. So there was this huge tank that was there. So it
was just sitting there. January 15th, it was still pretty cold. It was
really the middle of winter there. Really cold, but on January 15th, it got up to
about 40 degrees Fahrenheit, which was actually pretty warm compared to just a
few days prior. So the temperature increased very rapidly
as well as the day before January 14th, a ship had come in with also millions of pounds
of molasses being shipped. And so they completely filled up that tank that was just
sitting there. It was fully packed with all that molasses. And so that warmed molasses
from the temperature of the day as well as it just being shoved into there. The thermal
expansion, the very quick fermentation and all the gas that was produced from it is what was is widely
considered to be what caused the tank to burst open at around 1230.
So it actually says that there are like, of course, lots of witnesses nearby. There are
a lot of people in that commercial and residential area.
They said they felt the ground shake and they heard like a huge roar. Like I mentioned, that tank was sitting pretty close to some of the elevated like railroads essentially around there.
So a lot of people thought it was just one of those elevated trains that was coming through
to bring in a delivery. Oh no. And when they saw it, it was too late.
Yep. So they looked up, they heard a huge bang, a crash, and they saw a 25-foot wave of black.
Just coming towards them.
Whoa, dude.
They also said that there was the sound of like a machine gun going off.
And it's because the metal rivets that were just being shot out of that.
Oh, like a scene from a movie.
Yeah.
Like a cartoon.
Like Terminator.
It caused so much damage.
It burst the steel panels of the tank apart.
It pushed over one of the street cars on the tracks of that railroad.
Buildings were swept off of their foundations,
crushed, and just completely collapsed into the floor. Some of the blocks around the area
were flooded to two or three feet tall. No! Imagine waiting in three feet of molasses.
molasses? That's insane. There's actually a report from like the Boston Post of a quote from somebody back then. It says, molasses waist-deep covered the street
and swirled and bubbled about here and there struggled a form, whether it was animal or human being was
impossible to tell. Just thrashing out in the sticky mess, horses died, the more
they struggled the deeper they... human beings, men and women suffered likewise.
Yeah, cuz you can't float on this. Nope. Because you are literally
stuck. Like you're pulled down, it is sticky as hell. And then also the the collapsed structures
of the buildings were weighing down as well as being pushed down by the weight of the molasses itself. And so
that mixed with the actual, this initial explosion itself, it was so strong that
people were like actually pushed back by like the rush of the air and the debris
that was going to be hurled. So it was pretty warm. Um, that molasses was pretty warm though when it did explode because of the rising temperature.
But after it came out and it was exposed to the cold air, it started to cool down once
again.
So it became even thicker, even more viscous, continuing to trap the people that were inside.
Holy crap, that's insane.
And I'm literally picturing, like when you see, like in horror movies,
like a figure walking like from like a blob of something, some black goo.
That is what I'm picturing.
Yeah, like pictures just covered in black goo.
Yeah. Like, pictures just covered in black goo.
There's a man named Edwards Park.
He wrote in a Smithsonian article in 1983. He wrote of a child experience during the collapse, the explosion.
A child named Anthony Di Stasio. It says that he was walking. Okay, I'm echoing. I don't know who's echoing.
It's you. If you click you can actually fix your settings to
have it echo cancellation. I don't know if it's gonna let
you or not.
You just echoed to
you're done echoing.
Am I?
Yeah.
Okay.
All right. Yeah, it looks like we're good.
So, okay, so a child he said he was walking home with his sisters when he was picked up by the wave and carried,
tumbling on its crest almost as though he were surfing.
No, I don't like this. I don't like this.
He heard his mother call his name and couldn't answer. His throat was so clogged with the
smothering goo. He passed out and opened his eyes to find three of his four sisters staring
at him. So luckily that kid did survive. Oh, yeah.
Yeah, no, for sure.
Everyone.
No, like, that's crazy. I remember, like, when I was
little, like one time I was at the beach in Hawaii, and
there's this one beach is we call it big beach, because the
waves are actually pretty huge there.
And so one time I was going in and I'm super confident in water, at least I was as a kid.
So maybe a little too overconfident. But I went in and a wave just completely took me and it slammed me into the ground and I actually lost my breath and I inhaled a lot of water. And so I like was fighting to like
crawl myself out from the beach and like cough up this water that I swallowed. And I was
like traumatized for the rest of the day, like going into the water. Um, so I can kind
of imagine maybe how that kid felt. Yeah, it won't be so easy to cough out because it's a lot thicker.
Seriously, it's stuck in your lungs.
That's crazy.
So immediately after the aftermath of what had happened, there were a bunch of people
that rushed to the scene, you know, the Boston police, the Red Cross members, but some of
the first people to get there were actually a bunch of cadets.
So Navy cadets from
the USS Nantucket. It was a training ship of the nautical school, the Massachusetts nautical school.
It was docked nearby because it was sort of like the harbor area. So 116 cadets ran to what was
happened. And so they ran, they tried to, to you know wade through the knee-deep
Molasses that was there to pull out survivors
Everybody joined in so I'm realizing as this is happening as this cadets are running in as this kids are kids are getting swept away
Pete this people don't know that it's molasses
Yeah
they did though, actually. And
that helps me into that they know it was molasses. So it does
lead me into, I guess, the most horrible part in a way about this story. It wasn't just a freak accident that
this tank blew up.
Are you telling me it's happened before?
No. So initially, like the owners from the distilling company, the owners of the tank,
they were like, oh, this was somebody who tried to purposely blow up our tank to cause disaster.
But really, that was just to cover up their incompetence. that the actual tank itself was built not too far away. So it was actually a pretty
new tank that was made to hold all of this molasses. It was built, I think, in just the
previous year. But there were very obviously leaks and cracks in the tank
It was it was rushed to be built because they really there was so much
Need
Need for all the molasses production from the military from
People as well. So there were literal leaks
Inside of this tank and so children from around the
area, they would go up to the tank with cups, with buckets, and they would just collect
molasses for themselves to take home with them.
Oh, that's cute. But now look at the...
So they knew that there was molasses in here. they knew it was leaking, and they brought it up to the officials. They brought it up to the owners, the distillery company. What they did was
they denied it whatsoever, and then they painted the tank a dark brown to help disguise the
leaking molasses that was coming out of it.
That is so bad.
And so it was pretty, you know, quickly decided back during that time, around like, you know,
the next few years were so 1925, by 1925, 10 years later, it was in court, it was decided
that it was the negligence of the owners of the tank that
were to blame for its collapse and for all the death and damage that it caused.
And that's just even more backed up by modern research that has been done.
So there's been analysis by modern scientists and structural engineers from, you know, 2014, so not long ago.
They re-examined this?
They re-examined it and they determined that the tank itself was not equipped to hold that much molasses at all. Yeah, I think you're echoing Alexis, like I can hear from it. Yeah. So the the
tank was not designed to hold that much. It was built super quick. And so in its construction,
the steel wasn't fully set. It wasn't thick enough. Research shows that it was way too thin to
support the weight of a full tank of molasses. Because typically, they only kept it half or
three quarters of the way full essentially. They only had
it full to the brim like a couple of times. So it was not designed to actually hold the
full weight of all of that molasses, the 2.5 million gallons that were supposed to be in
it. It was not strong enough to hold it. So they rushed the design of it. The riveting that was
put in was flawed. They didn't secure them well enough. The rivet holes were stressing too hard
with the weight of all that molasses. So cracks started to form. And it even got to the point where
It even got to the point where it said that there was an analysis that happened in 2015,
and they actually said, does it count from like that time? It's a quote, they say,
when the laborer brought actual shards of steel from the tank's walls into the treasurer's office as evidence of the potential danger, he replied, I don't know what you want me to do, the tank still
stands. So they knew that this tank was literally falling apart, it was cracking
open, but they did nothing about it, and that's the reason why it exploded.
Thank you. I have no words. Am I still not going?
I'm not sure. No, so by echoing I meant I can hear myself through your mic
as well as hearing Jay through your mic. But I think we're good now. So yeah, it was just the negligence
of the workers that caused this. And so this situation is actually one of the biggest reasons why we have so many modern
regulations along construction and engineering.
There's so many processes of actually needing to fully verify and sign and seal plans with
all the building inspectors and architects that need to do all of these examinations
on structures.
It's very much due to this disaster that happened in Boston.
People died.
Mm hmm.
Ah, molasses.
I'll never look at it the same.
No, like, now there's this irrational fear
that if I see something like a black liquid,
it's molasses coming from somewhere.
Yeah.
What if it was molasses that was leaking
from your Airbnb in your hand?
I wouldn't have lost it.
No, no, no, no. If it's coming down and it's black and it's sticky, I don't want anything to do with it. I'm out. At that point, you can pay for
my therapy as well. Got it, got it. Oh No
Cool well, that's the the Boston molasses disaster, so thanks for listening
I'm not sure
We all have a rational here. This is my new irrational fear.
I love that. Getting asphyxiated by a 25-foot wave of molasses. Yeah. Honestly, valid fear.
I mean, it's not a fear without ground. It did happen once. Yeah, it happens. That's... Yeah.
What are we? Thank you, Ty.
Well, thank you everybody for listening.
Thank you.
Oh, you have outdone yourself.
Well, I wouldn't say that. I just talked about molasses for like half an hour, so...
Fair.
Yeah.
Enjoyable and horrific at the same time. Yeah. I don't want to try some just straight molasses now.
Like what does it actually taste like by itself? I had no idea. I mean I assume it's just going to
be extremely sweet since it's...
Well we have to try it.
Have you ever had raw honeycomb?
No, but I've always wanted to.
I had it one time when I was in high school, I think, and it was really sweet.
Like really sweet.
But it was good.
I like honey a lot. I don't know what you guys put on your pancakes but as a Mexican we put
honey on our pancakes. Yes I love honey on pancakes. Have you guys had, I grew up, I grew up eating this shit. A peanut butter, banana and honey sandwich.
Oh, yes. That's so good. It's so good. Oh, my God, I want one right now. Listeners, try
it if you're not allergic to any of the components of this. Yeah, no, it's it's good. Cool. Yeah, no, it's it's good.
Cool. Yeah. And I that's one of my like childhood foods that like I completely forgot about.
I love it.
It's literally still your favorite.
It's still, yeah, you will eat it no matter where you are.
No matter.
No matter the weather.
I could tell you hey Alexis here's some arroz con leche.
It might taste, it might smell a little bit like almond because I put some you know arsenic
on it but that's fine.
And you would still eat it.
Alright I'll take it. That came out of nowhere. it but that's fine and you would still
yeah
well i'm just iisoned or not. Thanks.
Yeah, sorry Alexis. If it smells like almond, it's not arsenic, it's cyanide.
Okay, thank you for letting me know that way. I know how I'm going.
Anyway, thank you for listening, folks.
Thank you, everybody.
Have a great night.
Bye bye.
Stretch, drink water.
Bye. Thanks for watching!