Rotten Mango - #325: 33 People Left For 2 Year Deep Sea Fishing Mission - Only 11 Came Back Alive
Episode Date: January 5, 2024Deep Sea Liner 2682 was coming back to port early. Nobody knew why - just that something very bad had happened at sea. The original plan was a group of 33 people would embark on a 2 year long deep sea... fishing mission. But now they were coming back after just 8 months. What happened? When the giant vessel docked - concerned family, corporate employees of the fishing company, and even 11 police cars were lined up waiting for them. Police went on board escorting each one of the passengers off in handcuffs. Forensic teams in full hazmat suits rushed onto the boat and sprayed it down with Luminol. The whole boat was glowing. Blood. There was blood everywhere. 33 people on a ship in the deep sea for 8 months. 22 murdered and only 11 came back. And nobody wanted to talk about what really happened out at sea.  Full Source Notes: rottenmangopodcast.com To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Bramble.
Better being better, boom.
The deep sea liner, 2682, was heading straight for the port in Shandong, China.
The giant vessel measures to be about 131 feet long.
It was built with the intention ofwithstanding all sorts of water and storms out at sea for
extended periods of time.
So this is the type of ship that goes into the deep waters for years. Does not come back
except only to fuel up. It's a little bit strange that the ship is coming home so early.
The original plan for this vessel was a two-year-long expedition, departing from China,
going all the way to Peru, going around South America for a while, but for finally,
slowly, making its way through Japan and back to China in the Pacific Ocean.
The trip was supposed to last two years.
Now for some reason,
the Deep Sea liner 2682
makes it all the way to Peru,
and then abruptly they decided to turn around and come back home
just eight months out at sea.
Nobody knew the real reason on why they decided to come back
so early. Just that something very bad must have happened on that boat. It was made pretty clear to
anyone on the docks waiting that this was not a situation of everyone just being homesick.
There was a major rainstorm the day that the ship was coming back and everyone that was gathered
by the docks, they had these flimsy little umbrellas that were basically flipping upside down and they're getting drenched in rain, just waiting for this ship.
There's this really strong sense of uneasiness, anxiety.
There were confused family members of passengers that were just standing around like, I don't know what's going on, why are they coming home? There were men in suits who worked for the company that owned the ship.
They're there confused.
Almost a dozen police cars were also waiting for the ship's arrival.
There are so many questions.
Why would there need to be so many police officers showing up for a random boat coming home
early?
And it's frustrating because when you see a boat that big docking, you see the boat.
You feel like it should be here any moment now.
You feel like you can scream and talk to the people on the boat.
But it actually takes about one and a half to two hours to dock a boat that size.
So for two hours, the family members are just standing there cold, wet, drenched, and confused.
The second that the ship docks, family members are strictly prohibited from talking to their
loved ones that they have not seen in eight months.
The passengers of this boat, they're brought out one by one, handcuffed, their heads are shoved into separate police cars and they're whisked away.
People waiting at the port, they're trying to ask questions like what the hell is going on, but the police just ignore them, they get into their squad cars and they drive off. Clearly, this is not a situation of there being a technical issue with the boat, or somebody
falling ill. It didn't look like some sort of innocent fuel shortage problem either.
Just as quickly as the police escorts the passengers away, men in full hazmat suits and goggles,
the whole nine yards, they show up for Rens forensic teams board the ship and spray the entire vessel with luminol
Which I'm sure you guys have seen in crime shows and movies. It's a chemical compound that you spray onto a surface
It detects blood even if someone tries to clean up said blood
It can detect blood that has been diluted 10,000 times
Once it comes in contact with blood it starts to glow this pale blue fluorescent color.
The whole ship started to glow.
Like some sort of like badly edited Halloween haunted
ship movie.
There was so much, quote, cleaned up blood on the boat.
It looked like someone had filled up water balloons
with blood and just threw them at the walls of this ship,
threw them on the beds, the deck, the cabins.
Every square inch of that ship
looked like there had been blood.
Stairwells, communication rooms, kitchen,
some of the beds were completely drenched in blood
to the point where the mattress it was spongy.
But you really didn't need a forensic team
to even tell you that something very bad happened
on the boat.
It's just a numbers game.
When the ship embarked on its journey, December 27, 2010, there were 33 passengers on the ship.
Eight months later, the ship would arrive home early with only 11 people on the boat.
22 people did not make it back.
They did not get sick at sea.
They did not get into some sort of freak accident.
22 people were murdered on the ship.
And out of the 11 people who made it back,
only one would share the story of what really happened on the boat.
Or at least, that's what he claims.
We would like to thank today's sponsors who have made it possible for Rotten Mingo
to support Words Without Borders, which is a nonprofit that translates international
literature in an effort to bring countries and cultures together by closing the gap of
language.
This episode's partnerships have also made it possible to support Rotten Mingo's growing
team of dedicated researchers, translators, so that they can focus on shedding light on
stories from all over the world.
We'd also like to thank you guys for your continued support as we work on our mission
to be worthy advocates for these causes.
As always, full shout-outs are available at rottonminglepodcast.com
But we did have the help of our amazing Chinese researchers and translators
with the gathering of data on this case.
But as always, with any and all cases, especially the international ones,
please let us know if there's anything lost in translation, miscommunicated, or if there are any other additional details you'd
like us to know, please let us know in the comments.
And also, before we dive into this, a huge source for this episode was an interview with
one of the eleven that came back on the boat, and it was done by a journalist by the name
of Do Chen.
It's translated from Mandarin to English by words without borders, by Nikki Hartman and Emily Jones.
And through that, the case was able to gain international attention.
So please check out the original sources in the show notes.
And with that being said, let's get into it.
There are some superstitions that C-Men just live by.
They're the more obvious ones. Don't turn anything upside down while you're at C.
Like a cup. Don't put the cup in the cabinet upside down. That means your ship is going to
capsize and go upside down. Don't whistle on a boat because you're whistling up a storm.
Or even the superstition of don't bring bananas on board. So this is like an older legend,
but allegedly back in the day, like in the 1700s, a lot of ships were lost at sea.
When they were found later, everybody was dead and there were just rotten bananas everywhere.
A lot of banana cargo ships went lost at sea.
The theory being that these boats were trying to move too quickly to their destination to
sell the bananas before they ripened and got rotten, so it's pretty fast considering
bananas get overripe just like that, so they rushed.
They hit a storm.
They weren't being safe.
So all of these things became things to be on the lookout for before your next cruise
or before your next ship takes off.
Whistling, bananas, things that are placed upside down.
But what do you do about the things that just kind of feel weird?
But you can't necessarily decide whether or not they should stop the entire trip.
Before the deep sea liner, Lu Rong Yu, the first couple of weeks of the day, they were all going to
get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married.
And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married. And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married. And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married. And then, the next couple of weeks, they were going to get married. And it's a little bit of a bad omen, but she wasn't on the boat, right?
So it should be fine.
That was the first...
Maybe this isn't a good sign.
The second one was, the ship was still at the dock preparing for the two-year-long journey.
They're bringing in all of the necessities. The crew are getting settled in their cabins,
they're doing routine checks. Most of them are actually gonna be sleeping on the the boat for the next few days just to get it prepped for departure.
And in the middle of the night, there are these feral screams coming out of one of the crew cabins.
Murder! Murder! Murder! Someone's just screaming bloody murder literally.
It was Shephyon, the man hired and paid to be on the ship to do all the cooking for the next two years. He's screaming
murder! Everyone starts briefly freaking out until they realize nobody was murdered.
Maybe the man's dreaming, maybe he had a nightmare, they tell him, hey, go back to bed, nobody's
getting killed. Everyone goes back to their rooms, they start doing their own things, sleeping,
playing poker, laying in bed, staring at their phones.
And at 1 a.m., he starts screaming, murder, murder, all over again.
This time, the captain of the ship had enough.
He drags the chef up to the deck and starts screaming at him, sit down and behave.
The captain storms off, and Chefion just falls to the floor of the deck, and he just looks
defeated.
He looks embarrassed.
He sits there for a solid few minutes in silence, and then out of nowhere, ever so calmly,
he gets up, walks to the edge of the ship, and jumps into the water.
The ship is still very much in the harbor.
Nobody was sure why Shephion decided to jump into the water rather than just walking off
the ship.
But this is a very dangerous situation nonetheless. It's actually not smart to be in the water at the
docks you could be electrocuted. But other than that, the water is cold at night, the wind is strong,
there's a lot of propellers in the water. I mean no one could see him. Everyone came out onto the
deck trying to lure Shephion back onto the boat, or at least back onto the docks for his own safety. But for 30 minutes, he's just swimming around the boat screaming,
murder, murder!
Eventually, he's pulled out of the water by another boat and sent home.
I mean, the whole thing was just so strange.
So did he go?
Yeah, he went home.
He didn't stay on the ship.
No. Some of the crew were questioning,
guys, is this a bad omen of sorts?
Because Shephion was actually pretty,
well, no, no, monk Seaman to be mentally solid.
Like, that's the type of man that you can trust
to bring out to sea for two years, and he would be fine.
Some other younger Seaman, they can't handle it.
They can maybe do six months,
and then they're at their breaking point.
Mentally, they're exhausted, They're about to snap chef.
He only could do three years.
He's good at being out in deep water for long periods of time.
So what happened?
The captain's trying to calm the crew down.
But his mom passed away a few days ago.
So, you know, his family has been going through a lot.
He really wanted the job for the money and he said he was ready to come back to work.
Clearly, he wasn't.
No big deal, guys.
Shit happens.
We'll find another chef.
The crew just kind of chalk it up to grief and loss.
They work on finding a replacement.
Chef Zia.
Chef Zia is hired to replace Chef Yan.
And maybe you believe in superstitions.
Maybe you don't.
But Chef Zia would be the first to be murdered on the ship.
Seven and a half months into the trip,
one of the younger passengers, Charlie,
would have a full snap from reality.
He had been begging the other shipmates for this moment.
He'd been asking all the passengers when is it my turn,
literally asking to see if he could be a part of this.
And it just felt good to finally be accepted
after seven and a half months.
He leaned down and he touched this oozy, sticky surface.
So he dipped two fingers into the liquid.
He brought it up to his face, and he hesitantly
swiped it on his cheeks.
It was a red streak.
And he started smiling because it felt good.
So he bent down and he just
starts erratically wiping his hands into the liquid and then frantically smearing it all
over his face. And he screamed, I've been bloodied! His face was bright red. He was smearing
the blood of his first human kill on the ship. And to him, it felt so good. Mr. Do, the young journalist, he heard about the various suspicious ship that turned
all the passengers crazy to the point where they started hunting each other on the ship.
I mean, it's more like the premise of a horror movie. It's like hunger games on a boat
than a real-life story. So Mr. Do, he can't forget about this case once he hears about it.
He thought about it non-stop. It's taking up all of his brain space.
It just didn't make sense.
With it collective insanity, mass psychosis, like there have been cases of shared psychotic
disorders, where two or more people in very close relationships, they share a specific
delusion together.
The inducer, the primary person with a psychotic disorder, influences another person to
feel those delusional beliefs.
It's rare to see shared psychosis and even two individuals and even rare to see it in large groups.
Let alone 33 passengers on a ship.
It is a tad bit different from cults if that's where your mind is headed,
where the cult leader may be more or less believes in the delusions that they're sharing with others,
but they're just more hell bent on power and praise
and money more than anything.
This, this seems like a group of people
that would have to be in a collective state of psychosis
to start hunting each other out in the deep ocean.
I think the most recognizable case of shared psychosis
are the Ericsson twins.
Do you remember this case?
Ursula and Sabina Ericsson,? Do you remember this case? Ursula and Sabina
Ericsson, Swedish twins. They were otherwise ordinary sisters who in May of
2008, they made headlines for their really disturbing behavior. I mean, they were
just seen on the side of the highway looking determined, calm almost. And then
they suddenly started sprinting straight into oncoming traffic. It was chaos. One of them, Sabina, was briefly arrested,
later let out without a full psychiatric evaluation.
She ended up murdering a man that was just trying to help her.
I mean, it was a whole thing.
That is probably the most famous example of shared psychosis.
Some people just kind of chucked it up to that
because this was only like three years later.
So people are thinking, maybe this is shared psychosis with 33 people, 33 passengers,
or maybe it's a mass murder mystery that we'll never really be able to solve.
But journalists did not think so.
He traveled all the way to this small tiny little windy town in the northeast part of China,
and he was going to interview one of the remaining passengers he was gonna interview one of the remaining passengers
of the boat, one of the 11.
Mr. Duh gave him the alias of Zalmoo Chang,
but we're gonna call him Zach.
Zach had been released from prison maybe just like a year ago.
He was in his late 20s, but he looked much, much older,
and he had this very shifty, uneasy era about him,
like he didn't wanna talk to you about anything.
He asked the journalist, what do you want to know?
I want to know about the people.
I mean, this can't just be a situation of shared psychosis or evil people that
happened to end up on the same ship together, right?
No, it had to be something different.
Charlie was normal before we got on the ship.
The one that smeared blood all over his face?
He's actually the one that introduced me to the opportunity in the first place.
Mr. Dew looked at Zach and said,
Tell me about how the killing started five years ago.
This is the story that Zach shares.
Now just keep in mind, this is just about everything we know about what happened on the ship,
but it's very hard to say if this is without a doubt the solid truth.
There are conversations online about whether or not Zach is a survivor like he claims he
is, or if he's a killer that got luckier than the others
No other survivors have been interviewed and none of them have come forward at least that we know of so this is what we have
Zach said before Charlie and the rest of the passengers started hunting each other. They were just there to hunt squid
Loon Rangu 26, was a squid ship.
And I guess I never gave it much thought on how squid was caught.
If you made me answer it a few weeks ago, I probably would have made a guess of, I don't
know, boats go out into the sea, send down some nets and catch squid, right?
Squid fishing feels more like squid games.
There's human trafficking, force labor, runaway boats, and people thrown into the ocean,
beaten, abused, injured, thrown overboard to their death to catch squid for a profit. It's actually basically a cartel.
It's the squid cartel. It's terrifying. The squid fleets, boats, are sent out into the
deep waters of the Pacific Ocean to catch squid. They will usually stay out there for
a year or two. Every single day, every
single person on that boat wakes up and their soul existence is catching squid, cutting
squid, freezing squid, taking a brief nap, and then catching squid, cutting squid, freezing
squid. Most of the squid population, the colonies, they thrive in South America water.
Now most of the squid catching companies are Chinese.
They're not South American companies.
So the journey alone from China to the coast of South America,
where most of the squid fishing is done,
even that journey is rough.
It takes two months, two months to get there.
And it is not a smooth sailing experience,
like this water is not known to be nice kind and forgiving. Then once you get into the open waters, you are just in the middle of the ocean for one to two years.
There are storms that you have to weather. You can't see land in the horizon. You are that far
into the ocean. You don't see an island even with binoculars. There's no light pollution. It's pitch black outside at night. And that's
when the fishing starts. At night, the fisherman wake up head to the deck that's covered in
squid ink. No matter how much you try to clean it, it will never fully be gone.
So it's just black?
It actually turns mucusy once you clean it. Like the mucusy substance is left over. Then
you get up to the deck and you turn on these giant bulbs.
It looks eerily bright.
It's like an eerily bright lit auto body shop.
There's oil oozing around, squid ink, it's mucusy.
The lights are so bright, even if you look at it or open your eyes
for more than one second, your eyes start to water.
The light bulbs are the size of bowling balls.
The light is the thing that attracts the squid. But you can't see much into the water or even around you because the light
is shining down on you and the ship. So you probably feel vulnerable in the middle of the ocean
and the ship is glowing this strange blue, green color straight out of a Pirates of the Caribbean
movie. A New Yorker piece stated, to the squid, the human squid catching ships, they must
feel like aliens. Glowing in vessels approaching, and then you just want to go see
what the light is about. You just want to see why it's glowing and why it's
floating. And so you'll go and you see a rope come down with some yummy food, so
you bite onto it, and suddenly you're being lifted up onto this new vessel
that you've never seen in your entire squid existence life, only to be gutted and killed
for more aliens to eat.
And the ship is the only thing lit up in the water, like a bright bullseye, a target.
You can see the light from almost a hundred miles away.
That's how bright the lights are.
And it doesn't just burn your eyes, it's hot. The heat is roasting down your back while you work during the night. The ocean is known
to be cold during the night times. It's hot on that ship at night.
Squid fishing is not like regular fishing where you throw in a line and you patiently
wait for a tug. Each worker gets to operate three squid fishing machines. It's a terrifying
mechanical looking process. It's a terrifying mechanical looking process.
It's the type of process like a factory machine where you feel like if you're sleeve of your
shirt gets caught, you're going to be out in arm.
That's what it looks like.
Each worker has three giant wheels that keep turning and turning and it's just bringing
in more of this metal line.
And every so often on this metal line line there's just squid on the hooks to
artificial bait.
It's not even real bait for squid.
They come up, the hooks have sunk into the squid.
It's all done by machine.
The worker is there to unhook the squid and sometimes if there's a really big squid
caught, they have to tug on the line manually, really hard.
Sometimes it takes multiple men to bring it out of the water.
Some squid can get up to be 220 pounds.
It's a physically demanding job that challenges a worker's
strength, stamina, not just physically,
but also mentally and emotionally.
Your skin never feels dry on those boats.
Whether it's from the seawater during storms
or the boat never just fully dries
or the squid ink that's just covering every surface of this freaking boat, you've missed the feeling of dry skin.
Your hands feel like sponges, which is probably not the best when you have to work with sharp
objects to cut and gut the squid.
But the wetness, that's probably the least of a squid fishers complaints.
You just want to get into a flow state where your hands are working but your mind is on
land, your mind is on land
Your mind is not on this boat because if you're not you're gonna start getting frustrated with the sound of the squid
Did you know when squid get caught they hiss
It's like a you know when you have a kettle that's on the stove and it starts hissing. Yeah squid hiss
They turn translucent and they start hissing at you.
Squid fishers, they try to block out that sound as best as possible because
imagine how many squid are just hissing, but it's not easy and there's
nothing that you can do to block out the stench. Deep sea squid have high
levels of ammonia. The air on the ship smells like the world's most
collectively worse smelling urinal stall ever.
By the end of the night of squid fishing, the entire deck floor is overflowing with squid.
Shindip, you can't even walk around the deck anymore, it's all squid, and they're all hissing at you, and they're all oozing squid ink.
By the end of the shift, your skin smells like pee and squid, and your clothes, they can't even be washed.
Most of these ships don't want to waste resources
on the workers for their clothes,
so the fishermen, what they do after a dirty shift,
is they tie up all their squid-ink-covered clothes,
tossed it into the water,
and it drags behind the boat for miles in the saltwater.
That's how they do laundry.
But catching squid is only half the job.
The same fishermen have to now weigh, measure, wash, and sort the squid into metal trays for
freezing and bagging.
First, you have to separate the squid into two groups, the squid that are under 9 pounds
and the ones that weigh over 9 pounds.
The ones below 9 pounds have to be cleaned and placed onto trays ready to be frozen.
While the big squid they have to be cut and separated into fins, trunks, heads.
Then at the end of the workday, each worker has to bring around 50 trays of squid down
into this massive freezer on the ship.
Each tray is said to weigh about 33 pounds, so you have to go up and down this cramped
stairwell 50 times with these trays.
Every couple of weeks, a secondary boat will pull up to the main squid ship and take the
frozen squid so that
your freezer is empty for more squid.
And if the squid cartel, or, I mean, the squid company, doesn't think that you've caught
enough squid in the allotted amount of time, you will be hearing about it and you'll
likely pay for it.
And then once the workers are done with that, they have to sweep the deck, clean the cabin,
scrub toilets, mop showers, they do this 16 hours a day,
6 days a week for 2 years straight.
But that's when there's a moderate amount of squid.
If the vessel predicts or feels that there's a massive squid colony moving through the
area, fishermen are forced to work 3 days straight, only getting in about 1 hour naps
a day.
A day.
If you decide halfway through, guys never mind.
I don't want to do this anymore.
Forget the money.
You don't even have to pay me for the past six weeks.
Just take me home.
There's no way I can do this for another year and a half of my life.
They're not going to take you home.
There are a lot of alarming reports that people have been shackled, beaten, and starved,
forced into submission to keep fishing for squid.
Even if you're not trying to quit or go home, if you make a mistake or you're too slow
at catching squid, you'll likely get beat.
Some fishermen get injured on the job, weaker men start going crazy, just from not seeing
the land for two years.
Some fishermen die from low vitamin levels.
Apparently they get swollen like melons before they pass, their eye whites turn yellow,
their exhausted, overworked,
barely seeing the sun. They're not eating well. Why? Because by month four, most vegetables and
fruit have run out on the ship. Not that the workers were wind and dying to begin with.
And if you're not injured and dying, you're watching everyone around you injured and dying in these
brutal conditions. And the only stress reliever that you can somewhat afford on this boat,
because you're basically cut off from the rest of the world.
You can't contact your family or the outside world.
Whatever you brought on that ship with you is all you have.
You brought three books, you better reread those three books.
A lot of crew members will just chain smoke as a stress reliever.
But there's no gas stations out at sea.
If you run out of cigarettes that you brought in the past two years, you have no more cigarettes.
Unless you purchase them from the ship, from the company.
They have a little convenience store.
The company will sell the worker's cigarettes at maybe 20 times the price that they would
be on land.
A lot of workers, if they're not careful, they can smoke away all the money that they
earn in two years.
The idea that that's even possible is kind of insane.
Or maybe you just need to relax.
If you miss one day of work, you will get beaten and they get two days of pay taken off.
I'm Glen and Doyle, author of Untamed and Host of the Podcast, We Can Do Hard Things.
On We Can Do Hard Things, my wife Abby, my sister Amanda, and I talk honestly about the
hard parts of life.
Join us and guests like Michelle Obama, Tracy Ellis Ross, and Bernet Brown as we have
refreshingly honest conversations.
New episodes are out every Tuesday and Thursday, so listen to and follow we can do hard things in Odyssey podcast, available now for free
on the Odyssey app and everywhere you get your podcasts.
And just something to note, I went down the rabbit hole. The squid fishing industry is
terrifying and China does dominate in that industry
There are a lot of questionable Chinese companies that have been called up for very illegal
Very ethically immoral things that they have done to catch squid and the abuse that they put their workers through
I mean some of the companies are just pure pure evil
But the New Yorker they put out a piece of the squid fishing industry.
And at the very end of their piece,
they added food for thought.
Because it's very easy to just point the finger
at one very, very deplorable part of the food chain.
But over 70% of China's seafood catch
is exported out of China and into places
like the United States and the EU.
So this is the kind of ship that they're on.
They're not on a nine month cruise.
They're on a hell journey for two years.
Do you remember Charlie, the one who smeared blood all over his face?
He was the one that got Zach the job in the first place?
Zach had never been on a boat like this before.
Neither had Charlie.
I mean, you would imagine that Sheenfa Foods, the company that owns the ship, they would
be recruiting real fishermen that know what they're doing to go out there for two years, but no.
They were honestly just taking about anyone.
Charlie was on the boat because he burned down a building.
By accident though, he worked for a bus company before this, and one night Charlie got super,
super drunk, started playing majong at a co-workers place.
He's drinking.
One thing leads to another, he burns the building down.
But we don't know exactly how he burned the building down. It seems to be an accident,
but not really because he was drunk and being careless, the whole building caught on fire,
and because he started the fire, he was in a ton of debt for the building repairs. And
he thought, you know what? This is the best way to make money quickly, because even if
I make money right now, here's the problem. I keep spending all my money. You keep going and spending it on rent
and going out to these restaurants
and wanting to hang out with my friends.
If I'm on this ship, how am I gonna spend the money
I'm working on?
And I get free room, three meals a day?
It's very little expenses.
Zach describes Charlie as being the type of guy
that was pretty excited about this whole experience.
He wasn't moping around dragging his feet, like complaining about, oh, I can't believe
I have to do this because I'm dead.
I don't even mean to set the place on fire.
He was actually a happy, go lucky kind of guy.
Zach and Charlie knew each other from working at a restaurant together.
A few summers back, they both worked at a barbecue restaurant.
And I feel like this was a bad omen in and of itself.
It was a very rainy summer.
They worked at a barbecue restaurant.
Outside, they made next to nothing working together.
It seemed like these two friends, they just did not have the best luck when they were put
together.
So Charlie calls Zach, tells him, this is the job of a lifetime.
The fishing company is going to pay us 45,000 yuan a year.
The average salary in China in 2010 was closer to 35,000 yuan.
This is with a college degree, like an office job.
So this is a big deal.
They don't care about your education background.
They don't care about your work experience.
I mean, this is unheard of.
Side note, 45,000 yuan is about six and a half thousand US dollars, so $6,500, which I
know might not sound like a lot of money because of the conversion rates.
But if you're in America, this would be like the equivalent scenario.
Someone is offering you $95,000 a year compared to the national salary average of $74,000 a year.
And that's 74,000 is with people with college degrees. They're getting corporate jobs.
So $94,000 for someone who didn't even graduate high school,
that's crazy.
I mean, I think that helps put into perspective, right?
How desperate they were for this type of money.
And not only do you get that $45,000 you on,
you get a bonus when the job is complete
and you land back on land.
Zack's like in the idea of it.
He's like, I have a girlfriend that I really love
and I know that I'm not earning enough to satisfy her
and marry her.
Like her family's never gonna let it happen.
So this would be my sacrifice.
Go on this ship for two years.
When I get back, she's gonna be my wife.
And hopefully he wouldn't spend too much money
on the ship because, I mean, living expenses
would be very low, and he wouldn't even have time
to go out and drink and hang out with friends.
Company gives you three meals a day.
This is perfect.
Side note, every crew member, this is kind of important later.
You get a weight limit of luggage and supplies that you can bring.
So you do get three meals a day, you get a bunk bed, but shampoo, conditioner, all of these
things you need to bring for either two years, or you can buy them at the store on the ship,
but the store is very expensive.
It's kind of giving like real life, squiggy.
Yes, like you have to weigh all of your stuff and then, you know, it's just really bizarre.
Some people would use it to bring beer.
Some people would use that weight to bring cigarettes, water bottles, soft drinks, instant
noodles.
Again, you can technically buy all of these on the ship, but it's going to be very, very
expensive.
On the boat, a carton of cigarettes costs about $26 US dollars.
Back at home?
Yeah.
Cheap cigarettes in China can go for as low as a few dollars for a full carton.
The markup is unhinged.
Some of the workers had plans to make even more money though, because they took out a loan.
There was a guy named Lu who did this.
He took out a loan, bought a ton of cigarettes,
enough to stack them up from the bottom bunk to the ceiling,
and the plan was to sell them later to the other workers
for half the markup of the ship.
So instead of $25 a carton,
he was gonna sell them for $15 a carton.
He would still be making like $12 a carton profit.
They would never get to do that though,
because 22 people would be murdered.
December 27, 2010, the first day on open water, everyone is gagging.
Hurling breakfast lunch in dinner over the side of the boat.
I mean, just looking at the cup noodles that they stockpiled in their rooms, they want
to gag, they want to throw up.
Because the fishing company just wanted to recruit anyone that they could get, most of
the men on the boat had never been on a boat.
The seasickness was something that they could not handle. They would rush to the toilets, they would rush up to the deck to just throw up. They would come back looking frail, gray,
green, and their hands would just be on their temples trying to massage the nausea away.
This is very interesting, but the minute that you can't see land anymore, a lot of people
report feeling uneasy and it makes them feel even more seasick.
It's just interesting, they say that they feel a little bit lost, like there's a lump of
anxiety in their stomach when they can't see land.
So they're dealing with that, they're regurgitating every solid food that they've consumed in
the past 48 hours.
And side note about this, this is very shady, but a lot of the guys that were on the boat. There were 33 people on the boat, all men, very fascinating to note.
Most of them don't even have a marine license, which means that they're not legally allowed
to fish at sea and they're considered illegal laborers. The company said, it's fine, it's
fine. We do this all the time. Everything will be fine. We just have to smuggle you onto
the main ship. So on the main ship, only the crew
with certificates and licenses were allowed to be on board. Customs and immigration would
let them through do a check of the boat. And then 10 minutes later, a little speed boat
would pull up with all of the other workers, all 18 of them that did not have their licenses.
How did you get on? They just like throw it down on a rope.
Oh.
Everyone knew that this was illegal.
It just happens.
Yeah, it just happens.
The company told the men, well, if we don't do it this way and you have to get your license,
then that's money out of our pocket, which means less money for you because, you know,
we got to make our profits too.
So that doesn't make sense.
Do you want more money in your pocket or do you want a marine license?
The workers were like, I want more money in my pocket. The sea sickness would last for about 16 days.
From there, it was smooth sailing. The first two months of this trip, it was like a cruise more than anything.
Everyone's getting over the sea sickness. You wake up, walk up to the deck. You don't have work to do. The squid aren't there.
You're just moving. You're trying to get to South America, you see open water for as far as you can see and it's this incredible
feeling of almost like you're conquering something. You just feel free. Then you chit chat
with some of the other crew, play chess, read books, what the best was gambling. As long
as they had a deck of cards, oh poker every day, all day. The ship was like a mini casino and everyone would slowly let their guards down
and they're getting to know each other.
There's like a just a real oddball mixture of guys there.
You had Seaman who had done three years out at Seen No Problem before.
Some of them had gone deep sea fishing in Africa.
Tons of experience.
Side note, one of the guys that had gone deep sea fishing in Africa.
His wife really did not want him to go on this trip because on the way back home last time,
they encountered pirates. It was terrifying. He could have died. So since then, she was like,
I just want you to be in a radius near the land because usually when you can see land,
it's hard for there to be pirates of any nation, you know? So please don't go. And he's like, babe, I have to go.
It's, I'm just ready for it. And my friend said he needed help. They need people. If I back
out now and they can't find more semen, how can I ever look at him again?
So there are a lot of experienced sailors all the way down to Michael. Michael's a recent
college graduate who could not find an office job. He did not graduate with anything
that had anything to do with the sea, nothing like that.
So he just applied for this,
which is a wild escalation of events.
He was choking up, telling the rest of the man
about how his mom was begging him not to go.
She was yelling at him,
you've never even been on a boat!
You zero experience, you've never even hung bait
on a fishing line but
Michael thought you know this is great way to make money mom and I'm trying to
learn a new set of skills would you rather me lay around at home and do nothing or
work for the next two years another guy was training to be a pilot and he
thought that this was a great way to see the world some guy straight up said
they didn't have anything better to do and once they got all this cash they're
gonna buy a new car.
They were going to get some designer stuff when they get back.
One of them said, my sister was wreck.
I mean, tears streaming down her face and I sat her down and I was like, hey, just imagine
I went to prison for two years, okay?
Just forget about it.
But a lot of them, they were there to pay off debt.
One guy had a pig farm that got completely obliterated by a pig disease. He owed a lot of money. Charlie, he burned down a building, but none of
that really mattered on the boat because there's no way for creditors to track
you down on the open water. By early February 2011, the ship had been sailing in
the Pacific for over a month and it was almost Chinese New Year. There is this
air of excitement and peace within the ship. Everyone's cooking
up the feast. They've got eight meat dishes to share. They're sitting on the ship floor
with metal bowls and disposable chopsticks. They're helping each other scoop rice. It's
all this like cute moments. They're laughing, joking about how when this is all over,
we're going to go to each one of our hometowns and eat the hometown food. I want to try
those noodles that you keep talking about from back home. They were allowed to use the ship's satellite phone to call
their families back because it's Chinese New Year. And it would be the last time that
many of them would ever get to talk to their loved ones.
Two months before arriving back at the harbor, loud music was blasting on the ship. Everyone
knew what that meant. It was time to hunt.
They were hunting each other.
By the time that the music cut off, people would be dead.
If you were unlucky, you would be brutally stabbed
and thrown overboard with nothing but the loud music
ringing in your ears.
And if you were really unlucky, you would still be alive
when you hit the water.
And then you knew that the end would be you
waiting for the fins to show up, because once the sharks smell blood, they come out to feed.
There are a few distinct phases that the passengers would go through before they completely snap
and start playing hunger games on this boat.
The first phase is nothing is wrong until something is wrong.
Zach was in the dorm one day when he saw Lou, another crewmate, and he left his notebook
laying on the bed.
They were almost to Peru, so he reaches over, he's flipping around, and it's all sort
of like random numbers written down.
When Lou comes back into the room, Zack asks, hey Lou, what are you writing down on your
journal?
Oh yeah, those are the ship's coordinates, and where we are.
Oh, why doesn't the ship track that? No reason. I just thought it'd be kind of fun.
That kind of waited for Lou to explain further about this whole coordinate situation because it's just a little bit weird,
but Lou was just an interesting man. He always looked like he was deep and thought on this boat about something somewhere,
but he would never tell anyone what it was, which is fascinating because by like month 2 everyone is telling everybody their deepest
darkest thoughts and secrets because you don't have anyone else to talk to.
All people knew about Lou was that his parents were poor farmers and he had to make money
to marry his girlfriend.
He was also kind of scrawny.
I mean you would never really look at this man and think this guy is strong, this guy is
muscular.
But he was.
When it came time to unload all the squid and carry the giant metal trays down into the
freezer, those things like I said, they weigh 33 pounds and because of the size of the
tray, it's just really very difficult to balance and carry it down.
Lou would offer to do it for Zach because Zach was short and pretty weak, which is crazy
considering this is not an easy task and Lou's not going to get paid for Zach's portion
of the work.
Why would he do that?
It's bizarre.
Zach said he was thankful but at the same time, Lou was still fascinating.
Lou liked to look out for people on the ship, but at the same time, he also liked to look
down on everyone around him.
So it's nice, but it's also kind of mean.
He just seemed full of himself, but in a quiet,
I don't even want to talk to you
because I don't think you're worth it.
I don't think I should waste my breath on you.
That's the type of guy he was.
But what could you say?
He's the squid king on the boat.
There was one month where he caught seven tons of squid,
which is about 14,000 pounds.
That's about the weight of an elephant in squid, or imagine two and a half SUVs parked in front of you, but instead
of SUVs, it's just giant piles of squid.
In a single month. He wasn't even an experienced fisherman, but he knew how to catch squid,
and he made it a point to help everyone around him. Like there was this sense of teamwork
with him around. It was really tough, it was really bad, but everybody was there for the same reason,
and it just felt nice to be working towards something.
Until two of the workers got sick. It was, uh, it was pretty bad. They couldn't even get up from
their beds. There was no doctor on board, limited medications. I mean, nobody knew what was wrong
with them. And even then, they were in some really unsanitary conditions. So it's even harder for their immune systems to work
over time to help them recover. One of the guys that fell sick was Lou's best friend,
Little Minion. He was the youngest on the entire ship, 19 year old Jin.
He was so sick, he was laying in bed asking Lou, can you call the company? Just request
me be taken off this ship.
They don't have to pay me for the past like four months of work.
I don't care.
I just need to go home and say a doctor.
It's that bad.
I don't even need any of the money.
Jin's parents were from Beijing and they had a bit of money.
They had a house, they had a car, which is a pretty big deal in Beijing.
The only reason Jin ever came was because he liked Lou and he wanted to be a sailor.
That's it, he was in it for the ride.
The company rejected his request to go home to see a doctor.
By mean, if you want to go home, then the ship had to go all the way back.
Well, they can request that a smaller boat come and get you and you can pay for that.
Pay for your fare back.
But not only that, the captain of the boat, captain Lee, instead
of helping the workers, he called the company like a little snitch and made sure to stop
their payments for a month while they were covered, the two sick people. The two sick men
were really upset about this. I mean, I think everybody on the ship was because they'd
all been working so hard. There was a sense of teamwork established and now it's confirmed.
If you get sick from working your hardest, nothing you didn't matter because the company will stop paying you.
They won't even appreciate that you exhausted yourself and that's why you got sick.
Even the captain isn't on your side rooting for you.
And this just planted a tiny little seed in everybody's minds.
The captain in this company, they're not on our team.
And then one comment did it in.
Everybody was sitting around eating when one of the workers looked offensive.
Everyone's like, what's wrong?
Nothing I just said.
You know, it's probably nothing.
What is it?
We were supposed to depart on December 28th.
But do you guys remember how we left today early on December 27th?
Which means technically our contract doesn't make sense because our contract is December 28th
to December 28th 2012.
But what if there's some sort of like legal loophole?
Because technically we started working December 27th.
What if that means our contract isn't really valid and it doesn't mean anything because
we didn't start work on that day?
Does that mean they can get away with not paying us?
I mean, I'm sure that's dumb, right?
It's a big company.
There's no way.
That doesn't make sense, right?
Yeah.
The workers glance around and the seed starts sprouting roots.
A few of them are whispering in the dorms that night
and they decide the next day that they would just ask the captain
to clarify a few things in their contract. No big deal, you know. They sit the captain
down and ask about the specifics and if they're still going to get paid the 45,000 yuan,
well you were going to get paid 45,000 yuan if you didn't catch any squid. What? Yeah,
if you caught no squid, you would be guaranteed 45,000 yuan a year. But if you catch squid, you don't get the guaranteed pay.
You get the base pay plus commission.
What?
Well, how much is the base pay?
1000 yuan a month.
So you're only making 12,000 yuan a year when you're promised 45,000 yuan.
And you're just going to hope that you catch enough squid individually to make
the rest in commission.
So to put that in perspective, think about how devastating this is.
These men came out into the ship in the middle of nowhere without their loved ones to work 16 hours a day
in some of the most brutal conditions imaginable, and their base pay a month would be guaranteed to be 140 USD a month.
So this is like a scam contract?
Yeah. Wow.
The men were distraught, but the captain reassured them,
well, you have the commission structure,
so technically you can make 45,000 you on a year.
He explained the commission structure,
and it only made things worse.
Everyone found out that even if they worked as hard as Lou,
and caught 30 tons of squid in three months,
which is the size of a shipping container per person,
or the weight of a fire truck, or a yacht in squid.
If they caught that much squid every 3 months for the next 2 years, they would make 3,400
yuan a month, or about 488 USD a month.
If they did not even lift a finger, if they never caught a squid, they would have made 523
USD a month.
A lot of things are wrong with this.
I mean, finding this out was not great for morale.
Your boss is like, I'm going to pay you a thousand dollars a month for doing nothing,
for just existing.
But if you work your ass off to the point of killing your body, mental state, I'm going
to pay you less than that.
But additionally, most people weren't even catching as much as Lou.
They were going to be making a lot less than what they thought.
They were going into this for.
When Lou got word of this pay structure, he sat there and started doing all the mental calculations.
There was no way out. He screwed himself.
Because he had gotten a loan for all those cigarettes.
Technically, he should be the best off because he's the one catching most of the squid,
but that loan, he took it from the fishing company
to buy cigarettes.
He did the math, even if he worked as hard as he did
for the past three months for the next two years,
he would barely make enough to cover the loan
he took out for the cigarettes.
Worse than that, worst case scenario,
if the squid fishing gets slower,
he might have to perform hard labor for two years and still owe the fishing company money.
So for a while everyone just sat there soaking it in. A lot of the guys never hired
attorneys to look over their contracts. First, they didn't have the funds to, but
second, they just assumed there was no way that such a big company would screw
them over like that. Since that day nobody's mind was on fishing anymore. They were all
pulling each other off to the side, whispering about something, planning something.
There's a saying in China, it's very straightforward. If it's cheap, it's not going to be good quality.
If it's good quality, it's not going to be cheap. So when the crew found out that they're
making peanuts like next to nothing, they're gonna
stop trying.
Other squid fishing boats nearby would complete their catch at around 8 to 9 a.m., but 2682
would finish at around 2 p.m.
Nobody was really trying anymore.
Some of the workers would straight up disappear from the deck, they'd be found sleeping in their
cabins, even Lou, his mind is not unfishing.
A few of the workers try to talk to the captain and say, please, just let us go home then.
Not a single one of us want to be here anymore.
We're 17,000 miles away from home.
I'm not wasting all this fuel spending months taking you back home because you don't
know how to read a damn contract before signing it, besides, you don't have a license.
No boat, including myself, is going to be willing to smuggle you 18 back in through the borders.
So remember, 18 of them did not have licenses.
You have to work whether you like it or not.
Let this be a lesson to read contracts better next time.
And that is when they entered the next phase of madness.
If they're not with you, they're against you.
And from the get-go, there were four groups of friends.
There were also a lot of relatives on board
which makes this whole thing even more insane
that 22 people get murdered.
But out of the four groups of friends,
there were the Dalians.
Dalian is a part of China on the Eastern coast.
It's actually very close to North Korea.
Now the Dalian group was led by Captain Lee,
the captain of the boat.
There were about 10 people in his inner circle
and most of them were professional sailors and they were part of the management captain of the boat. There were about 10 people in his inner circle, and most of them were professional sailors,
and they were part of the management team on the ship.
So none of them really did any of the actual squid fishing.
They are there to make sure the ship stayed afloat for two years.
The chef was included in this group.
I mean, they were the closest to the company.
In terms of hierarchy, they're at the top
with Captain Lee sitting on a throne.
Then you had the Mongolians led by Baudi.
Now they were really able to keep to themselves a lot because most of them spoke Mongolian
and none of the rest could understand them. There were only like four or five of them.
Then you had the northeast group which was run by Lou. They only had about five people in the group.
One of them was Mongolian, the other one was Dalian, but they felt more allegiance to Lou
rather than their hometowns or like the province that they were from.
And the other 12, they were the neutral group.
And immediately after Captain Lee refuses to take the ship back home, the leader of the
Northeast group Liu and the leader of the Mongolian group, Baudi, they start talking.
They would rant to each other whispering, you know, we work so hard, but this company is
a scam.
They don't even pay us minimum wage, and they think that we clearly won't get the money stated in the contract.
That's why they're acting like this. That's why they're not even listening to us. We want to go back.
Slowly these rants, they turned into a solution.
If the captain doesn't want to take us home, then we force him. We hijack this ship. Lew and Baldy were in. So were their groups, but both of them were trying to
convince the others from the neutral group, lose sat them down and said, on the
way here, I wrote down the coordinates for fun. I didn't think it was going to be
useful. But even without the captain, I can retrace our steps and get us back
home. And when we get back, I know a pretty good lawyer. We can all sue the
company together.
A lot of the neutral people were kind of hesitant.
Lou told them, think about it.
And as he walked out of the room, he turned around and said,
you know, one more thing.
It's not a crime to kill someone in international waters.
Everyone except the management team, the Dolly and Group,
knew about the plan to take over the ship.
But not everyone was on board with Lu and Baudi.
They were scared. If they weren't successful, the captain would beat them up all to a pulp,
and that was probably just the start of it. And the plan seemed unhinged.
Lu and Baudi's group were going around hiding all the knives and sharp objects on the boat.
They were gonna hold the captain hostage and hope that he just guided them back towards China.
Now, this plan was kind of in the works for a few weeks.
The whole thing betted on the fact that they had to refuel. So the boat was going to make it back
to a port in Peru, refuel, and that would be the time that they finally take over because they
need all that fuel to get all the way to China. They can't run out of fuel and they can't show up
and report it with the Captain Health hostage. That's not going gonna work. So June 16th is the day that they're waiting for.
They departed December 27th, June 16th.
So the whole time, they still have to work,
they have to make sure that Captain Lee has no idea
about their plan to overtake the ship.
And I would say every other week,
it was a new thing going on.
One week it'd be like, the plan is on,
we gotta do this.
Then the next week, nobody would be talking about it anymore, so a lot of people thought,
maybe everybody's kind of cooled off, the plan is off.
But Captain Lee would make sure it happened.
If you talked back to Captain Lee, if you were a little too slow,
you would walk back to your cabin with a black eye,
or worse, he would degrade you, scream at you, threaten to throw you overboard to the sharks
unless you get down on your knees on the squid inked drenched sticky floors and apologize to him.
And every time he did this, the others would just glance at each other, and they would feel
a lot more sure about their plan. But it wouldn't be Captain Lee that dies, it'd be Chef Zia,
the replacement chef that would be the first to be murdered. June 16th, 2011, the ship refilled at a port in Peru and it was time.
That night, Jin, this is Lu's right-hand man, the 19-year-old,
Lu, Baozi, the Mongolian leader, and a few others, they barge into the captain's cabin.
What the hell are you guys doing? They're standing there.
Take us home. No, I'm not doing this again. Go back to your stations now.
The captain turned around expecting them to leave, but he turned back and they were still
there.
We reached into his pocket, takes out a knife and stabs it straight into the captain's
thigh.
Blood starts gushing out the others, knock the captain over, they just start pommeling
him.
All their frustrations, taking it out directly on his face.
They lift him up, sit him down on the chair,
wrap a long thick rope around him, he's got nowhere to go, he's tied to this chair now.
If you don't take us home, we will throw you overboard to the sharks.
Okay, okay, I'll take you home. None of this is necessary. I'll take you home.
The orders were given. All workers were to reel in the fishing equipment and prepare to set sail.
When that announcement went off, immediately,
the Dalian group felt like something was wrong.
They rushed towards the captain's quarters,
but they're stopped outside by two of lose minions.
They're screaming at each other at this point.
They can even hear you lose screaming from inside
the captain's room.
I'll kill all of you.
A few of the captain's men are putting their hands in the air showing their palms like,
whoa, okay, it's not that serious.
If every single person wants to go home, we'll take you home.
Really, like you don't have to be like this, just tell us right now and that'll be the
end of it.
We can turn around.
It looks like everything's going smoothly, but in come Chef Zia, he managed to find a
kitchen knife that they didn't hide, any screaming. Who do you sons of bitches?
Thank you are trying to hijack a ship. This was not gonna end well.
The whole trip chef Zia and one of lose guys had been going at it like they literally tried to stab each other last week before this
They hated each other and now both of them had knives in their hands standing in front of the captain's room
They're standing there yelling yelling at each other.
And then Chefsia decides he's had enough.
He walks past the other guys, shoulder-biting one of them, on his way into the captain's
room.
And from behind, he hears a sharp noise.
He looks down and there's blood coming out of his mouth.
He had been stabbed in the back, literally.
One of the other guys takes an iron bar and strikes him
in the back of the knees, so he falls down
into the kneeling position, coughing up blood.
The guy that Chef Zia had problems with, walks around
to face him, and he's towering over him
because Chef Zia is kneeling now, stares into his eyes,
lifts his arm, and plunges the knife into his chest now.
Blue runs over, grabs the knife from his little minion, his friend, and instead of stopping
him or telling him this isn't the way we're handling things, he starts stabbing the chef's
butt and thighs.
Everyone on the deck could hear the screens coming from the captain's quarters, and then
they heard a splash, followed by silence.
They would find out later that Chef Zia was still alive after all the stabings.
Lou ordered his men to pick him up and throw him overboard for the sharks.
Zach was down in the deck area when this happened, and he remembered 19-year-old Jin coming down
from the captain's room, and he said, hey, you got any cigarettes?
He sounded so normal.
Zach was so scared. He
quietly passed him one and Jen's hand was shaking when he took it from Zach. He couldn't
even light it. He just said, Chef Zia's dead. Everything changed that night on that ship.
Zach was called up to lose group by the man who stabbed Chef Zia, the guy that hated
Chef Zia. Zach's taken it as long as he can because who knows?
Is he getting stabbed next?
I mean, he didn't have problems with anyone on this boat,
but like these people are unhinged.
He goes there slowly, Lance, the guy who killed Chef Zia,
puts his arm around him.
Zach, why don't you go and get some sleep?
We like breakfast early.
You're going to be our next chef.
OK, sir. So his name be our next chef. Okay, sir.
So his name is Lance.
Yeah.
First killer.
First killer.
Lance led him to the stairway and pushed him forward.
There was blood everywhere from Chef Sia's death.
Zach wasn't wearing shoes.
He was barefoot.
He looked back and Lance was like, come on.
Go on.
He stepped into the blood.
And when he got to his cabin, he calmly wiped his feet, took
off his rain gear and he laid down in his bed and he said he could not fall asleep the
entire night.
He was so scared for his life, he just laid there thinking, what the hell is going to happen
next here?
Actually nobody on that ship really slept that night.
They were so scared.
Baudi, the leader of the Mongolian group, he tried to ease the tension and he said, if we're down a crew, we're down a crew.
It's fine.
When we get back, we'll say that he fell into the sea or was dragged down by a fish.
These things happen at sea all the time.
It's not a big deal.
That did not help anyone.
Nobody got sleep.
The next day, the ship was sailing back towards China.
Captain Lee was kept under close watch and the rest of the management, Dali and group were
scared to do anything against the orders. They were just doing as
they were told. Everyone felt like they had to watch their backs. Like they could not
turn their back on anyone. They always had to be alert, always listening, and they still
had 50 days to go on this ship to get back to China. It was clear that the new captains
were Liu and Baudzi. They took turns on duty, they watched the captain, they make sure
that the boat was headed towards back home. They patrolled the deck with knives and sticks.
Zack focused on cooking. The cargo still had fresh vegetables so he tried his best to
cook the yummiest food because who knows, maybe you get off for not even cooking good food.
Who even knows anymore?
And eventually, slowly, everyone starts getting relaxed again, playing cards, smoking
around each other, drinking.
Well everybody, but Lou.
Something was happening with Lou, up there in his mind.
Lou did not like hearing the whispers.
If he felt like you were whispering with someone, he would sneak up on you so quietly, you
wouldn't even know that he's standing inches away from your head, and then he would loudly
ask, what are you talking about?
Oh, jeez, nothing.
Sometimes he would scream from afar.
You guys over there.
What are you gathering and speaking so softly about?
Are you afraid someone might hear you?
He felt like he was going crazy.
He knew that people were whispering about him.
They were trying to kill him.
He could feel it.
Lou went around double checking, triple checking,
that all the knives were confiscated.
The life wraps were tied up with steel bars,
and the life jackets were also locked up
so that nobody could escape. Nobody could hurt him. that all the knives were confiscated, the life wraps were tied up with steel bars and the life jackets were also locked up
so that nobody could escape, nobody could hurt him.
Louis is suspicious of everyone, even his closest friends.
Zach wasn't Louis' close friend,
but he noticed that something very dark
was happening inside of Louis.
He was convinced the management team were gonna kill him
and take credit for saving the ship and crew
from the hijackers.
He thought, they're gonna go to the company
and say, look what I did, look how I stopped
the hijackers, pay me extra money.
The others try to calm Lou down, they wouldn't do that, that would just be so dumb.
You know I think at this point, all of us we just want to go home safely and put this behind
us.
But one night, one of Lou's men pulled him to the side in the cabin and he whispered,
they're trying to fight back, they've asked me to join up against you,
go up against you and all of your friends.
Who is?
The management team.
Lou was upset but not surprised.
What else did they say?
Bo, the guy who is telling him everything he knew
that the managers were talking about,
he said July 20th, near the coast of Hawaii,
they're gonna do something.
So instead, that day, Lou ordered the slaughter of six men from the management group.
And Bo.
If Bo was out here spilling all the secrets of the management team,
he could not be trusted with Lou's secrets.
The day of the hunt,
Lou used the loudspeakers to play music.
He didn't want the neutral people to freak out at the sounds of murder.
But all it did was put everyone more on edge because it's not like a soundproof vacuum.
They can hear screams, they can see blood, they can hear splashes of people screaming as
they're being thrown overboard.
It just feels like they're in some sort of horror movie.
The second person to be killed on that boat was stabbed through the back as well.
The knife went through his entire body.
He was still alive and trying to run away from the killers, but they blocked his path and just went into this frenzy stabbing
him. When he finally gave up fighting, they dragged him like a rag doll to the edge of
the boat and threw him in the water. The guy they just killed, his brother was on the
boat too, so they needed to get him next. They ran into the brother's cabin. It was a coordinated
attack. One person grabbed the brother's arms, pinned them upwards on the bed, the others just started
stabbing everywhere.
The bed, the bedsheets, the mattress completely soaked in blood, it was dripping onto the
floor underneath.
He was dead when he was thrown overboard, like his brother.
Next, the killer started hunting the rest of the management team.
They lured out Peter from his bedroom, they were waiting behind the door. The minute he stepped out, they stabbed him. Peter started freaking out, decided
to make a run for it. He ran to the deck and he had a split second choice to make. Either
die by stabbing like the others or drown. He looked down and he jumped to his death
with the squid.
Lou was content, but he wasn't done. He went into the cabin,
strapped another one out,
stabbed him, threw him into the sea,
and there was just one more person
he wanted to kill that day.
Weng, they barge into Weng's cabin,
just starts stabbing him everywhere. Weng was asleep, so he woke up kill that day. Weng. They barge into Weng's cabin, just starts stabbing him everywhere.
Weng was asleep so he woke up screaming in pain.
He's trying to grab anything nearby to hit the killers with.
He ends up falling from his bed.
They stab, disembowl him, and they taunt him.
What's the matter?
Your guts are spilling out.
Oh no, what to do now?
When they were done, the killers were drenched in blood.
Zach was in that same room as Wang,
laying frozen in his bunk bed,
lose straightened up, turned.
He's covered in blood and he saw Zach laying there.
He looked at him and said,
I asked you to join us at the start, but you didn't.
Where Zach is roommate there?
With Wang.
So he just witnessed the whole murder?
And he did not move.
He's just laying there in fear.
Oh, he just looks at him and says, I asked you to join us at the start, but you wouldn't. Are you scared now?
Zach was terrified. It seemed like Lou was excited after the killing. He had this huge smile on his face
that Zach would never forget, but it would not be the last time that he saw it.
Lou was no longer a man, he was like an animal.
Lou smiled and said, don't worry Zach, I'm not gonna touch you.
You're like my brother.
And with that, he walked out leaving a trail of blood behind him.
Zach did not believe a single word he said.
He had known him for a few months and there were already 10 dead people who could believe
anything Lou said.
Zach said, you can't imagine how powerful Lou became when he was killing people.
He was a completely different man.
When Lou's men were too scared to actually stab someone to death,
Lou would walk over to quote, show him how it's done.
He would ruthlessly plunge knives into victims,
and it was the full descent of Lou's madness.
He wasn't even done killing.
He was no longer the lieu that anybody recognized.
And I don't want to say that to give this man an excuse, but he truly becomes more and
more unhinged. And I don't think that he's insane. Like, I don't think he could use that
as a defense, but he, he's still an animal in prison. Let's just leave it at that.
That night, the hunt continued. Bo, the informant that warned Lu about all of this, he was stabbed and thrown into the
water.
This just became a pattern.
Men were either stabbed and thrown into the water, dead or alive.
Others were given a choice, and I don't think they're being nice about it.
They just want to torture you.
They would give you the choice.
Don't be stabbed and see if you can swim.
Swim to land.
Maybe you'll make it. Jump. Sometimes Louis would get all
pirates of the Caribbean or I don't know what movie or what reality he's living in.
But he would make the man stand on the edge of the boat and he would kick them in the
chest, like literally kick them off the boat into the cold dark sea. This is the Pacific
ocean. So now he's killing more people? Yeah, just for fun now.
Anyone he thinks is going to kill him,
he's like, I'm not as well just kill him.
I don't even know.
Maybe they're my friend, but if I feel like they
looked at me a little weird, I'm not as well just kill them.
This is the Pacific Ocean.
On average, it's about 13,000 feet deep.
I mean, there's really no answer on what this would feel like,
but when that is in said, there are problems when you're thrown
into the ocean, deep into the ocean.
First danger, drowning.
But let's say you have a life jacket, which these men didn't, or let's say you managed
to keep your head above water.
Great, the next danger is cold.
Cold water extracts heat from you very, very quickly.
In Arctic water, you have less than 15 minutes till things in your body start breaking down.
In 60 degree water, maybe a few hours few hours, warmer tropical water, maybe days. But then you have the danger of wildlife.
Sharks. Time estimate on that? Unknown. But let's say you can overcome all those things.
The next issue is M-A-S-D. Moisture Associated Skin Damage.
The net is in rights. You know how your skin gets all wrinkly in the pool after a few
hours, your skin can start to blister?
After a day in water,
your skin can start to peel off,
and that would, without a doubt,
attract the aforementioned wildlife.
Time to death?
Probably a few days, max.
And the beating tropical sun
is gonna make it pretty hard to avoid drinking
the salty water all around you.
Even if you have the discipline of a Navy SEAL, you could still end up drinking some accidentally. Drinking this water is only
going to dehydrate you faster. Also, the salty ocean will absorb some of your fluids through
contact osmosis. Although dehydration is said to be fatal in about 3 days, it probably
be 2 days.
After the first hunt on the ship, the loud music cut off
and a total of 11 people were gone from the ship.
There were 33 people.
Now there's only 22 people on this ship.
But it was supposed to be 23.
Lula sure.
He thought about which people he wanted to kill.
It was pre-meditated.
So where did the extra person go?
Where did they go?
Were they hiding somewhere?
Lula starts losing it, trying to count the life jackets, making sure none of the rafts
are missing.
The college student, Michael, who came because he couldn't find a job, he was missing.
Because everybody snaps in different ways.
Michael Edge is graduated college, and he knew even if he made it all the way back to
land, he would never be able to look at himself or people ever the same, not after all the
blood that he saw on this boat.
So he jumped off the ship to his death.
When Lou found out he had this incredibly condescending laugh and he said, why did he jump?
I wasn't going to kill him, that poor kid.
I was going to use him as my spy.
Michael had snapped.
And Zach, he was in full survival mode.
His brain blocked out how bad it was.
He was blocking out everything that he was seeing.
The only time he kind of had some sort of idea was when he was prepping meals.
He went from prepping 32 meals to now just 22.
Once when he was serving meals, he got so anxious, he went up to the deck and he started
pacing.
He felt like he was going to have a panic attack.
And one of those guys came up to him and said
Stop stressing out. Nobody has it in it for you. We're all buddies. We're not gonna touch you
Look if you get a proper job one day, I'll look out for you, you know
But all of it just sounded so fake. Zach snapped at him crying
Just warn me first if you guys decide to kill me, okay? And I'll just throw myself overboard, save you the trouble.
Zack started looking for small spaces to hide on the boat. I mean, there was nowhere. He
even briefly thought about getting into the fresh water tank, but it was so easy to spot
him inside, and there's no way for him to close the lid from the inside. He tried to rip
up any sort of foam insulation in the ship to see if he could crawl into the insulation.
He tried stealing a life jacket or a raft. I mean anything, something. All he came down to was, if he's out in that
water and he's still alive, he can maybe eat fish eyes. They have drinkable water content
in them. That's all I know. He was taught eat fish eyes if you're thirsty. But even
that's pointless. In the middle of the Pacific Ocean, they can't even see land nearby.
The closest land to them was Japan. And Japan was a thousand miles away at this point.
If you took a boat, you would travel a thousand nautical miles in five to ten days, depending on the boat.
Five to ten days on a boat.
There was no way. That's if the sharks didn't even get Zack first.
What was the point of staying alive in the water when he was going to die anyway? Zack's new mission became just to stay alive for as long as possible because
if he were killed and thrown overboard, at least he could be a little bit closer to home.
Maybe his parents could put him to rest. As they got nearer to Japan, Loo told everybody on that
boat 22 people that he had a friend in Japan that could get them fake passports but they would
need to send money to get it done.
He wanted all of them to use the satellite phone to call their families, ask them to transfer
a thousand dollars into lose girlfriend's accounts, and she would get them fake passports.
There was just something about the way that Lou was urging everyone to do it.
The message was very clear.
The underlying message was, I don't care if you get these fake passports or not,
because I don't think you're going to get off this boat.
The Mongolian group are now getting sick of Lu.
They were sick of embossing them around, acting like they were dumb.
They knew what he was planning to do.
They knew where that money was going.
The plan to overthrow Lu was in the works by the Mongolians.
The first step they decided was to create chaos within lose group. Baudi,
the Mongolian leader, would pull aside 19-year-old Jin, lose 19-year-old best friend slash sidekick,
and he would tell Jin that Lu plans to kill everyone else on the boat minus a few of his old buddies,
and he was planning on escaping to Japan without the rest of them. And Jin's not a good candidate
to keep alive. First of all, he's too young, he's too immature, Lou might feel like it's a risk, and he's
still too frail from being sick.
Baudi's plan was to plant seeds in Jen's mind, make him want to move over to the Mongolian
side, and it seemed like it was working.
Jen agreed with them.
He has been ruthless.
I feel like he's strange, he keeps pressureing me to call my family to give them money.
I don't know, it's just so heartless.
Side note, Baldy approached Jen because Jen was actually from Mongolia, so his parents
now lived in Beijing, but he was from Mongolia, so there's a bit of an alliance there.
He chose him out of everybody else.
Immediately after their conversation, Jen went to Lou and said, I have something to tell
you.
What is it?
It's really serious.
Baldy wants me killed. How did you know? Yes! and said, I have something to tell you. What is it? It's really serious.
Baldi wants me killed.
How did you know?
Yes!
Four days after the last hunt,
the one that killed a good chunk of the boat off,
Lou was planning the final slaughter.
So Jen, the little kid in media, you sold...
The Mongolians out to Lou, yeah.
Wow.
Lou pulled up a chair in front of the captain who was still being held hostage by the way.
He sat in front of him elbows on his knees and he said,
I've got seven or eight men's blood on my hand.
And if the rest of you want to live, you'll have to get blood on your hands too, including
you captain.
Your best friend, officer Wang is dead.
Baudi killed him.
Ruthlessly.
I mean, I'm evil, but he was really brutal with it. Stabbed him over and over and over again.
I mean, I thought the guy was possessed.
I didn't know where he had the energy.
Not when it came to squid fishing, that's for sure.
The captain was locked in the control room during the hunt,
and there was loud music playing, so he had no idea who killed who.
He just knew that some of his best friends on that boat were dead.
He knew there was blood everywhere, and a third of the crew were gone after that night.
And now, lose telling him it was Baudi
who killed your best friend.
Captain Lee starts getting worked up
at the realization that Baudi killed his best friend
and Lou tells him there's a way to get revenge.
Kill Baudi, kill him and we'll let you live too.
Lou's favorite thing on this boat
was having his friends kill people.
He called it getting their hands dirty. If they don't have dirty hands, to. Lose a favorite thing on this boat was having his friends kill people.
He called it getting their hands dirty.
If they don't have dirty hands, they would have no incentive to not turn them in when they
get to land.
He needed everybody to be bonded by blood and murder.
He told Captain Lee if he got his hands dirty he would let him live.
Captain Lee agreed.
But there was another boy on that boat that really wanted to help.
Charlie.
Charlie is Zack's friend who introduced him to the squid fishing squid game's torture.
Charlie really wanted to be accepted by Lou.
He practically showed up at Lou's cabin door on a daily basis, begging him,
being like, if you ever need anything I'm here for you,
like, don't you ever worry.
If you ever need anything at all, if you need someone to kill someone,
I'm here for you.
I can help you.
Some argued that Charlie did everything he could to survive. anything at all. If you need someone to kill someone, I'm here for you. I can help you."
Some argued that Charlie did everything he could to survive. Others argued the guy is just blood thirsty. I guess it's up for you to decide. But Lou decided to use Captain Lee and Charlie,
who had been somewhat neutral since all of this, and he would use the two of them to lure BOW,
BOWDEE onto the deck. That night, BOW Bowdy came onto the deck alone.
Charlie snuck up behind him, stabbed him in the back.
Captain Lee came up in front of him, pretended to catch him from his fall, and then stabbed him through the chest.
Together the captain and Charlie took out their knives and plunged again and again in the front and back in unison on the boat.
Bowdy broke free, stumbled to the edge of the boat,
and threw himself over the edge.
Charlie smiled because it was his first kill ever,
and he smeared all the blood over his face and screamed.
I've been bloodied now.
Lou lured out the rest of the Mongolian inner circle
to come back onto the deck.
Three of them were forced to jump into the ocean.
Two of them were stabbed to death,
and then flung over the side of the ship into the water.
And at this point, there were only 16 people left on the boat.
Lou was exhausted from his night of killing.
He ordered everybody to stop.
Mainly himself, and he gathered everybody's knives.
He went back to his room with two of his minions guarding the door, but that night, after
getting zero sleep, after hearing all the screams and just trying to ignore it and act like
nothing was happening, trying to act invisible so that he wasn't randomly targeted next.
Zach was laying in bed when he feels a tap on his shoulder.
It was when he lose, guys.
Lou wants to talk to you.
Zach froze. His head starts spinning. He's thinking, okay, I'm next.
He gets up as slowly as possible, savoring the last moments of his life. He's dragging his feet, following the henchmen to the captain's cabin that Lou had taken over,
the door opens, and Lou is sitting on the bed.
He looks up, don't be scared.
It's nothing.
We'll be in Japan in a couple of days
and you've got nothing to worry about.
You're not blood on your hands.
Anyone with that blood on their hands
can just go back to China and everything will be fine.
Then he looked at Zach and said,
go to the kitchen and cook some noodles.
We're starting to get hungry.
Zach gulped, opened the door and walked out with his life.
He was one of the lucky ones.
Out of the 33, like I said, only 15 were left now,
but we know that only 11 come back.
So we still have four more to go.
There were just a few days out from Japan
when everyone starts scrambling at 4 a.m.
The ship had suddenly lost power.
The engines were down, the lights are down,
the entire ship is tilting to one side.
Everyone's belongings are just crashing
into the sides of the walls.
Everyone's running out of their bunk beds,
running towards the deck,
and the captain's quarters to figure out
what the hell is happening.
Lou orders a thorough check of the ship,
and he discovers two things.
There were only 14 people left on the boat.
So one person is missing,
and the ship's main valve was open.
The ship's valve lets water into the main area of the ship.
They were able to stop it, block it,
stop the water that's coming in, but it's too late.
The ship feels like it's slowly sinking.
It was discovered that in the middle of the night,
while everybody slept, one of the engineers
left a lie from the management team,
opened the ship's valves, deliberately trying to kill everyone
on board, and then jumped into the water himself.
Lou ordered everyone to use the water pump
to help pump out the water, but when that wasn't working fast
enough, he ordered them to tie together all the floatable
things, like planks of wood, anything.
Float them together.
We need to get all the life rafts out.anks of wood, anything, float them together, we need to
get all the life rafts out. They really only had like one working life raft that was inflatable
and they need to stock it with food. So if this ship goes down, at least they have food and they
can try and survive out in the open waters. And when the ship kept tilting dramatically to one
side, they did the last thing you want to do after committing mass murder on a boat.
They sent out a distress signal
so that they could be found.
The boat was going down, either they all die out at sea
or they try to find a way out of this.
Lose survival instinct was very strong.
So there were three people that were now loading up
this life raft and they had plopped it into the water.
It's working.
So now it's up to them to climb down the ladder and put the food in.
So they do.
And, um, Zach sees them floating away and at first he's confused and he thought something bad was happening.
So he threw them a rope, but one of the men on the raft grabs the rope. He throws at them throws it back into the water and he screams.
They have knives. They're planning on killing more men.
We're not coming back.
By the time Lou saw what was happening, the raft was so far gone out, it was the size
of your fist.
Lou did not scream or curse like everyone expected him to, he just stared into the water.
He slowly sat down on the deck, everyone got quiet.
The boat is sinking, the raft is gone, the distress signals were sent out, but who knows
if people are ever coming, and even if they did, they were going to die for their
crimes. After a long pause, Lou got up and said,
It's fine. If they rescue us, we blame them for everything. The people on the raft,
they killed everyone left us for dead, that's what we say.
Nobody was listening to him though. They were staring behind him at the blue water. He
whipped around, and the raft was drifting back to the boat.
The current was sending the raft back straight into the ship.
And no amount of peddling was helping the escapees get away from the ship.
And any humanity left in some of these people broke that moment.
They became full-on animals.
There's a very famous quote by Frederick Nietzsche.
If you gaze long into the abyss, the abyss also gazes into you.
And maybe these men had been gazing too long into the abyss of the ocean.
Because now they were animals.
It had only been eight months.
When that raft floated back, all of them grabbed knives, squid knives, anything they could,
and their spit was spewing out of their mouths.
They were screaming, their eyes were crazed, they grabbed all the weapons, veins were popping out of their necks, and they started chucking weapons at the raft.
They were hunting for humans again. Many of the ones on the rafts, the three of them were stabbed, knives were getting thrown and embedded into their arms,
sides, thighs, the raft.
Blood was seeping out of the raft and making the water around them red. One of the men,
Song, he jumped into the water and started swimming towards the ladder of the ship, begging Lou to spare his life.
Lou ordered him to be pulled in. He had a head wound. He was bleeding.
The others, they escaped, but they were screaming in the water for their lives
because the sharks are coming soon.
They could smell the blood.
Lou squats down next to song on the deck
and he grabs a paper towel and puts it to his head.
He turns around and he said,
Zach, Xavier, you guys are the only ones
that don't have blood on your hands.
Throw him into the water.
So he literally only brought him up so that these two could get blood on your hands. Throw him into the water. So he literally only brought him up so that
these two could get blood on their hands. Sack was like, what? Like I said, you guys are
the only ones. Xavier was so scared he grabbed the nearby squid knife and he braced himself
and started speed walking towards song but Lou stopped him and said too much of a mess.
Just tie him up and throw him into the water. So that's what they did.
And the whole time song was begging.
Lou, please, were brothers remember, why are you ditching me?
You don't hate me that much, right?
I promise I'm not going to say anything when I get back.
Lou just watched quietly as song was lifted and thrown to the water.
And then everything went silent.
And almost like some sort of pirate legend, a typhoon hit, washing off a lot
of the blood on the deck and buying the crew some time before the distracts signal could
be intercepted and people would come to rescue them.
For some reason the boat did not sink.
It didn't sink, but the engines were no longer capable of turning back on so they can't
move, so they're just stuck in the water, going with the way of the current. Lou ordered everybody clean up the blood
and while the storm raged on and the rain was pouring in,
Lou went over the plan over and over again.
Everyone took turns memorizing it.
Baudi and his men killed the management team off
and then the four that died on the raft,
they're the ones that killed Baudi and the Mongolians
and then they escaped, leaving us for dead,
trying to sink the ship.
Last time, Zach saw Lu was in prison.
Zach was walking past Lu's cell, Lu was laying in bed.
The same way he laid on the bed on the boat.
It's like nothing had changed.
He was still on the boat in his mind, it looked like.
Lu smiled at Zach through the bars.
He lifted one of his hands, pointed two fingers at Zach, cocked it like a gun,
pew, shooting it at Zach any smile.
That was the last time Zach saw Loose before Loose died.
All 11 quote survivors of the boat were found guilty.
The sentences were handed out November November 14th, 2012,
which, side note, lose mom even said
none of this would have happened
if the victims were strong swimmers.
I guess implying everyone could have swam away
from a homicidal maniac.
It was just a wild statement to make in court.
Six of the men were sentenced to death.
The other five were given lesser sentences
and varying degrees because I guess the courts decided
they didn't play as active of a role in the killings.
Zach was released after four years on good behavior, and on his way out he saw 19-year-old
gin, and Zach asked the guards to wait.
He got up to the steel bars and asked,
Hey, do you need anything?
I'm getting out.
I can mail you something.
23-year-old gin smiled and said, don't worry about it.
My parents are sending me stuff.
But look after yourself, and just forget all this happened. And with that, he smiled and he waved at Zach.
Jen had been sentenced to death. Loo Jen, along with four others, were executed in 2016.
Loo decided in prison that he was going to escape. He tried to convince his cellmate to help him.
He was caught. And instead of, I don't know, putting him into like solitary confinement,
they just tied him to his bed every day by all four limbs. Yeah, he was like that for four years until he was executed.
Shinfa Food Company, the company that sent the ships out, they compensated the victims around $60,000 each.
Some victims relative stated they were pressured by the food company to not talk to the media about anything. And in the end, nothing happened to this food company. And a lot of these fishing
companies in China, if you were even just Google like squid fishing industry, it is scary.
There have been bodies that have been washed ashore notes in water bottles filled with rice
that have been washed ashore random people from Southeast Asia that have been recruited to work on these ships
They would be just dumped on the ports like literally about to die and they were all on these squid fishing boats
Like the stories coming out of there are really terrifying and nobody's talking about it
Nobody we're just eating calamari.
Because I guess it's not something,
it wasn't even on my radar.
It was never something that comes up on TikTok
or is on the news of like,
you guys will never guess what happened.
It just kind of gets buried with everything else going on.
But it is, it's something I would look into
if you guys are into stuff like that,
or just curious and intrigued,
want to do something. Zach is now back in his hometown taking
care of his mom. His girlfriend, the whole reason he went on this fishing trip
for, she ended up moving away. And Zach knows that he could technically go
looking for her and explain to her what happened and try to win her over the
love of his life, but he can't. He says he feels embarrassed even at the idea
of seeing her again.
Because he's just a village boy and she's in Shanghai now.
And that is the story of the crazy eight months at sea.
I mean, I just kept thinking about this story because right now there's a cruise
that's going on for nine months.
And I know obviously the situation is different, but this is I think the world's
longest cruise is nine months.
It's happening right now.
I think recently I got flooded.
There was a little bit of drama on board,
and I just can't imagine being out at sea.
I know they stop by the ports
and they don't go as deep into the sea as the squid fishers,
nor are they in, you know, it's a luxury cruise.
It's like $70,000 per person for nine months.
Yeah.
What?
All food included and everything, but still it's unhinged.
So I get it's a luxury experience compared to this, but I think just the idea of being stuck on a ship with that many people,
strangers, it just feels scary.
But that's it for today's video.
Let me know in the comments what are your thoughts on this case.
Do you think that any 33 people left on a boat would succumb to this under the exact circumstances that they were in?
How would you have handled it?
And do you think Zach is a survivor or he's also a villain?
Let me know in the comments and stay safe. I will see you guys on Sunday. Bye.
Bye.