32 Burst results for "Ted Bundy"

77WABC Radio
"ted bundy" Discussed on 77WABC Radio
"Since the Britney griner trade to me it's been nothing short of fascinating to watch it play out You know not many people come with a nickname the merchant of death Think about what you have to do in life to earn the name merchant of death Gotta do some pretty special stuff To get that kind of moniker Especially throughout the national security community Yet that was exactly the earned nickname of Russian terrorist operative Victor boot Which is what he is He's a Russian terrorist operative Which you know I would get a kick out of news reports identifying him as an arms dealer I mean calling Victor booted an arms dealer is about as instructive as saying Osama bin Laden was at about Muslim I mean this guy is arguably the most notorious terrorist this side of bin Laden in the century The kind of arms this guy dealt with they were missile systems They were rocket launchers among others And the targets of those arms happened to be American forces around the world Now this is ironic in so many ways The omnibus bill that just passed Congress that Biden will sign it's being talented for all of the defense spending All of the defense spending Well maybe the reason we need to increase defense spending Along with you know the reach around club or whatever it was for the LGBT youth community Maybe it's because Biden continues to make the world a more dangerous place by the day

Native America Calling
"ted bundy" Discussed on Native America Calling
"I know you worked on the Ted Bundy investigation and some other high profile cases as well. And were those any different than some of the lower profile cases that you worked? Well, you know, when you're dealing with serial murders and multiple cases, you're just a piece of the puzzle. You know, I'm a piece of the puzzle because the pathologist gives us information that photographers give us information and witnesses give us information and so one of the things that I really helped law enforcement was my interview techniques on victims and witnesses opposed to suspects. And there's a different way to interview people and to extract information from witnesses that actually see more than they think they did. And so there's an involvement in the arts and the techniques and I know that there's things that hopefully there will continue to grow in the area of forensic art and pathology and investigators are learning more about DNA and I've done cases, I did green river, the I 5 killer, I did.

WABE 90.1 FM
"ted bundy" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM
"Ready to play? Indeed. All right, well then let's hear first from Tom bodett. There are so many children to paraphrase Ted Bundy. So why not put them to work as pedestrian crash test dummies? Tesla's full self-driving beta software has like company founder Elon Musk then controversial and occasionally malfunctions. Anti Tesla warrior Dano dowd posted video of a self guided Tesla plowing into child size mannequins like they weren't even there. Doubt is now demanding the national highway safety administration banned full self-driving until Elon Musk quote proves it won't mow down children. For the record, Tesla does not yet offer a mowing attachment for any of its vehicles. Enter protest LeBron carmine couponing, who wanted to emphatically set the record straight. So he recreated the crash test, but instead of a dummy, he used his own son. Dad aimed the smart car downrange at his heir apparent and damned if it didn't stop in time. Now, some people look at it and say, oh, this dad is crazy. What is he doing? Said couponing, to which we respond, not some people, all people. Every freak he wanted us. A Tesla fan uses his own son to test the autopilot feature. Your next story of a little assistance from the level ones comes from Roxanne Roberts. New York actor Jeff Gilmore got the idea for his side gig while drinking a Grande latte Starbucks, where a succession of attractive young women came over to admire his infant son. One of his buddies who was with him also an actor watched a few minutes and then joked, hey, can I rent him? And a business was born. Quote, I had a really cute kid and women love men who love babies, rights Gilmore. I thought it was a win win. My son could help my friends and I could make money on the side. He had ground rules, no nights, no bars, and absolutely no adorable animal costumes. Zach may have been a baby, but he still had his dignity. Gilmore estimates he made 300 to $500 a week for 18 months until Zach now 6 years old was old enough to talk. Gilmore writes he has no regrets, all is fair in love and war. The guy rents out his son, the bachelors who want to attract the motherly types your last story of children chipping in comes from alzo Slade. Ben and Jen lightfoot of mesa Arizona suffer from a condition called walks Austrian, which first they made up and secondly, diagnosed themselves with. They say they experience deep fatigue just from putting one foot in front of the other to get somewhere. The problem, they had one TV in the house, but kept losing the remote. With no official treatment for a walk exhaustion, they decided to have a child who when old enough to walk and understand commands would be able to locate and retrieve the TV remote upon request. The first experiment slash child aptly named walker was very successful. And can almost always find and bring the remote, especially because most of the time, it's sitting right there next to them in the chair. But as time went on, they got more TVs. And with each one, they needed a new child. They're up to three of each at this point. And forecasting holiday deals on TVs, Jen is currently hoping her fertility lines up with Labor Day. Pun intended. All right. Somebody somewhere is using their

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Otherwise, you know, that whole show of what he did. He liked playing lawyers. He liked playing lawyers. Yeah, it's interesting to me. We talked about that time frame of the 70s and how many of those types of killers there were. Do you have any theories as to why that doesn't really happen as much? In this day and age, this is because technology shuts that down because if you talk about Bundy, I mean, this guy was crossing state lines. Police forces in one state weren't aware of him in another state. Is the technology the reason why we don't have these serial killers running a running rapid for so many years is that one of the factors. It's got to be one of the factors, but I also ask you this question, has it gotten less or have the serial killers gotten smarter and getting around these things? And there's so many that are still out there that we haven't even found or caught yet. Because think of how many people go missing a year. The numbers are unbelievable. Right. Is that a possibility? Yeah? We all have this magical force in our pockets this phone, you know, these wonderful powerful items that can do basically anything. Yeah. You'll simply speaking, Chris, as you said, it's just, it's become too difficult to get away with what they did back in the day. Police investigations has improved so much. They have so much at their fingertips able to identify things that they simply weren't able to do, not even 20 years ago. We've made just this giant lead in the last couple of decades. So it's too hard for them to get away with it. I had on a psychologist who specialized in serial killers. And he had a really interesting point. He said, serial killers still exist. They just kill all at the same time in the mass shootings that we see. Sure. He said, if you look back into the 70s, the mass shootings weren't as prevalent as they are 100%. So now, you know, if Bundy killed 36 people, then you go to the freaking, you know, Las Vegas a few years ago at the country music festival, the guy killed 40 people all in one fell swoop shall we say. So those people still exist. They just have morphed into taking advantage of different ways. So there's always going to be people with that psychotic issue. I always going to be somebody that's ready to flip over the edge and do that. It's a sick and demented way of looking at it's the age of instant gratification. I mean, every way, no one can wait for anything anymore. You know, everything is now and as weird as that may sound as sick as it may sound the same, but have to go for these psychotic serial killers. It's like, I want to do this. I want to kill 40 people. No, I don't want to take the time and effort to do it. So I'm going to just call some guns to the Las Vegas hotel and do it. Yeah. Well, guys, it's been a very interesting discussion with you guys, and I'm glad you reached out. Once again, like I said at the beginning, next time you guys come up with another topic, we'll do it again. That'd be so awesome. And we won't have a different name again. This is it. We will keep track of you now. Now I know for sure. It's the paranormal zone. I got it. Yeah, absolutely. We can't thank you enough, Chris. You've been such a health and you're so cool and we can't thank you enough. Cheers, guys. We appreciate it. Take care. Have a good one..

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Just quickly, as a quick little segue, I was going to ask you this earlier when a guy like Bundy goes on so many sprees and he's escaping from prison and he's getting very careless. How did he eventually end up getting caught? Tell that story. He got caught because he got lazy. The first time he got, he just got lazy. He was, again, to the point of arrogance that you could almost look like leaking out of his ears, he was so arrogant. He was frankly the first time he got arrested. He was driving around in Utah, man. He was smoking marijuana and he didn't pay attention to where he was and he ran through stop signs. And there was a cop who noticed him, a cop was the local sheriff who was kind of he had like a, he knew everyone in the town. He knew everyone's vehicle. And he saw Ted's little VW drive by and he's like, I don't recognize that car. Why is it about driving a two 30 in the morning back here? And why did you just run that stops? I know I better go run them down. And that's exactly what happened. And they found his murder kit in his car. What was his murder kit? That was, he had his ski mask that was made lasting as a nylon mask made out of pantyhose. His ice pick, his shackles that he would carry along with him extra pairs of clothes, blunt instruments that he would that apparently was his preferred way of killing it was actually beating them with a blunt object. Right. And then also in his Volkswagen had taken the passenger side seat out. So he had room to put the body or put the person in. And transport them that way. Wow. And that car is in that museum somewhere I can't think of right now, but it doesn't Zach bacon's have that one. I'm sure you probably does. He's got everything else out of your head. And if he doesn't have it, I'm sure he's going to get it. And then you mentioned Zach wagons, which is obviously a talk is Jericho alumni, one of the top ghost hunters in the world. He has some claims about the Bundy ghosts as well. Does he not? He does. They did, they did an episode on the ritual House we were talking about earlier. They captured some crazy and freaky EVPs that not only come from what they well, you watch the episode you can decide for yourself. Unintelligible male sounding Crohn's and a Hiss, just a crazy bizarre Hiss, but also very clearly a female voice. Reaching out to them, telling them where she may be asking, if you're here, where are you and said, in the basement. They went in the basement and the course, there's satanic paraphernalia everywhere. The satanic paraphernalia markings all over the house. Throughout the entire house. Wow. This is Bundy's which house are we talking about? The house outside of bounty for where he kidnapped and murdered a chance. Yeah, that ritual house the bacon's bacon's crew goes to ventures crew. They caught a lot of interesting creepy stuff. And they were all affected by this house. The house was condemned back in 1997 because of a gas explosion. To me, why is it still standing? I just want to know why it's still there. Yeah. They're saying that they heard a female voice, which would imply it's one of his victims. Yeah, I would think so. Zach himself said that he obviously we all hope that the spirit of one of his victims is not trapped there. That adds too much sadness to an already very sad situation. Wow. Who could it be? Has there ever been anything like this for a serial killer before this much reports and evidence of hauntings and spiritual activity? Not to this extent. Exactly. There's been issues, reports of Richard Ramirez, the night stalker, his another guy, absolutely linked to satanic rituals and all of that. Demonic possession. Right, totally. Briefly, what sets Bundy apart from Richard Ramirez to me is that Richard watching old interviews with him seemed to me that he was reciting a rehearsal. Every time you'd ask him a question, he'd go back, okay, I have to have this demonic imagery. I have to portray this that I'm possessed. So I'm going to tell you this. And then he goes, and he's just kind of boring and mundane, the same answer over and over. Obviously it doesn't lessen his atrocious acts. But to me, he seemed more of a fake. As opposed to ten. So sad, comparison, but that's how I feel about it. Mike is Ted Bundy. The worst of the worst of the serial killers that we know about? Well, he's definitely up there. He's definitely the most popular. He's been so romanticized. And there are people that they still talk to about him as being this very handsome charismatic guy, which I guess he was, but they think more of that and being such a cult figure that he's become with these people that they think highly of him and they seem to forget that as a 14 year old, he murdered in 8 year old and did horrible things to her. And the things that he did do definitely the most popular and in my mind definitely one of the top as far as the worst. I mean, not taking away from what these others have done like Dahmer and Ramirez and everything, but there's something that just clicks a little bit more with him. Ted sticks out so much because he came across as such a charmer and he seemed so normal on the outside. You think a serial killer you think of like this hunched over monster, lurking in the dark corners of an alley, you know? And this is going to jump out and grab you. This guy was he could have been a successful person in life if he would chose him to go the right path. You know, he had a life. He was a successful student. You know, he had so much potential going the right way, but he did it, and that sets him apart in so many ways for me. And while defending himself, it's like he had this abduction or if you want to say it that way or whatever, but he did have time is where he would kind of flip out and he'd show that crazy side during that..

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"One of them that's pretty intriguing. You don't take it as you will. We're open minded to all of this as being very. That's why we're here, exactly. That's why we're here. There was a student paper that was written at the puget sound university. It was back in 2011. These are the students who are writing this paper, and they claim to have encountered the spirit of Ted Bundy on campus. I mean, Ted at one point did attend campus. He attended several campuses throughout his life. And he is theorized, believed that he kidnapped several of his victims coming off of that campus. But they claimed that they have seen Ted's ghost on campus. And this was the part that's hard to swallow. They claim that he is nice and charming. Wrapping your head around that one, it's like, okay, that seems kind of, I don't really buy into that. But when you think about it, it fits his personality. Sure. On earth, when he was a physical being, I mean, that's he used his charming nature to seduce and bring women to their deaths. And so why would he not be doing the same in the afterlife? It's hard, it's hard to grasp as a potential reality, but I am totally open to that being legit. But they also, I just pop in my brain. They had those investigators at puget sound university. Not necessarily trying to contact Ted, but apparently they claim that they did contact him through a ouija board session. Yeah. And Mike knows where I'm going with this one. Yeah, it's crazy. The answer, one of their answers that they got spelled out. Again, according to them, I can not touch them. I can not kill them. This is my hell. That's what they claim they got as an answer from Ted, the spirit of ten, however you want to describe it. And again, that would make sense because why would that not be Ted's help? He can see he can interact, but he can't physically harm anybody. To me, that makes sense that would be his help. Oh, so he's saying in the other world because he can't kill anybody that's hell for him. Right. He can be there and see them and everything, but can't touch him. Now, they also came across with a message that he had supposedly said that he talked of joining Jeffrey Dahmer. Really? Oh, that's right. Yep. And he said, in his words, supposedly it's at that's where the big time killing is. Now think about that. He's hanging out with Dahmer and ghost land and apparently so. Ghost land, yeah. It's so hard to wrap your head around. But when thinking about his personality, it makes sense that he would still be he'd be tortured. Well, it does make it does make sense too because once again, you're talking about these very haunted individuals in real life that are committing these terrible, terrible acts and going back to the Bridgewater triangle. Another reason why they were talking about so many occurrences because there was a big war there not to get into history where 5000 first nation Native Americans were murdered by the pilgrims. And that evil forces and the bad vibes and the death and the murder is enough to continue cultivating those bad vibes. So if Bundy, not if all these terrible things that he did, it makes perfect sense that if he does come back that he would be the type of spirit to be there because he was such an evil person to begin with. Right. That energy is going to be there. There are several different theories as to the different types of energies when it comes to ghosts. I'm sure you've heard this, Chris, you know, the two prominent ones are residual energy versus an intelligent energy intelligent ghost. Explain a lot of these residual entities of residual energies that's basically something that has been imprinted in this realm of existence. Like our realm of existence by the power of emotion, essentially, the trauma. It has said that people have actually encountered the ghost of Ted Bundy at this burial sites of his victims. What any number of hiking trails out in the mountains that knew the back road seemed to do the back roads. He scouted them. He took time out of his day to drive back rows to find the perfect. I hate saying this this way. Dumping spot for his victims. And these very same dumping grounds. That sounds rude. No, but it's true. It's true. It's true. Exactly. It is. He referred to him as a dump, that's for sure. People have claimed a while out hiking to encounter what they later described as a ghostly figure of Ted. Why was he not be there? He's returning to his favorite place. What do you think about that, Mike? Well, and that also could be an intelligent where he's there hanging out there, but that could also be a residual to where it's just the energy and the emotion that people are seeing this as like a tape and a loop playing over and over again. That could very well be a residual. How do you mean a loop over and over again? Well, it's like it's like a residual sighting of a residual energy, it's like they'll see the same thing. Like you play like a few seconds of a film, then you rewind it and play it over again like that kind of a loop. Gotcha. Like for one example, if you've ever heard of The White House is so haunted and there's a reports of people seeing Abe Lincoln sitting on his bed putting his boots on and that's all they see. That would be like a residual energy of him sitting there, it's not Lincoln sitting there. It's not linking sitting there thinking it's just that that loop of energy playing over and over again. It's not an intelligent apparition of Lincoln. It's just that. Right. It has no idea that you were there or anything. It's just like, you know, watching that clip over and over again. They describe intelligent hauntings simply put are basically able to interact with us the living thing. Right. Residuals won't we can't. Gotcha. Intelligent can interact residual is just almost like a photograph or something along those lines. Exactly. Exactly, yeah. Yep. Yep, good. Good way of putting it..

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Just his I'm the most what did he say? The most cold hearted son of a bitch you'll ever meet. Yeah. Yes, you got it. If he's going to be haunting after the grave that kind of makes sense, doesn't it? It does, and like you said, it absolutely fits, it fits his personality on earth. We talk about this several times. It's like, you know, there's demonic as far as I do believe in the demonic. But there's demonic and then there's also purely malevolent, like Mike said earlier. Maybe they were just pissed off. Maybe they were assholes in real life, so they're going to be assholes in the afterlife. It carries over. Yeah. It carries over. And so the same definitely goes here with Ted just sitting there smirking and everybody saying, it got me beat you here. So guards actually saw him smirking at him. Wow. While sitting in the electric chair. In his own electric chair where he was, he was killed. So let's talk a little bit more about just kind of looking at some of the notes that you sent me. There's a lot of interesting things in here, but there's some appearances of the Chris Hagen. Yeah. Chris Hagan, yes. Alias that he was using the spiritual activity with that as well? Well, that one is so bizarre. Okay, when he was under the alias of Chris Hagan when he was on the run in Florida, the night of the Kyle mega murders after returning to his room. Other folks who lived resided in the building upon their return, they saw the encountered Ted, Chris, sorry, sitting out on the porch, he wasn't as usual charming himself, but he was very odd, very distant, and they were all talking about, did you hear what happened last night? You know, this awful murderous rampage occurred. And Ted immediately said, it was obviously done by a professional. You know, he's just sitting there, he's trying to maintain like this little, I don't know what happened, but at the same time trying to build up the accounts of me and this was done by a professional, you know, he obviously knew what he was doing. Again, arrogance. Total arrogance. Total arrogance. And that very same porch, people have claimed to have seen the apparition of this Chris Hagan hanging out on the porch. If it is anybody instead. And it just makes you wonder, it's like, what is he doing there? Is it some sort of, is he comfortable there? That was his last moment of freedom, essentially, was on that very porch. Why not return that? That's another thing that might and I love going back and forth about is, how can a spirit appear in one place and another across the entire continent, so to speak? How is that possible? There is no space and time when you're in that realm. It's interesting to me because when you talk about spiritual activity, a lot of times you'll see orbs or you'll see you'll hear the voices on the voice recorders and that sort of thing, but to actually see a ghost, which is a whole person, that's fairly rare. It seems to me, I haven't heard a lot of that. It's like something you would see in the Disney haunted mansion or some of you. This is a real life sized Ted Bundy apparition. Yeah. Well, it takes so much energy to have that full bodied apparition. Like, oh, interesting, yeah. Orbs and things are like, they're drawing energy from whatever they can, like your batteries out of your equipment and things like that. But maybe or in my opinion, it's possible that there is so much energy and still to this day from what happened and what went on, it's just like a charge that never ends and has enough energy to sustain the full body. Yeah, exactly. Or even communicate, you know? We mentioned kind of the demonic side of the satanic side. There's more house stories here, especially the one in Utah that you were mentioning that may or may not have had some sort of satanic rituals involved on it. Right, the ritual house. Yeah, this is, again, talk about the chicken or the egg. It was Chris. Like you mentioned earlier. You could throw that analogy for this case as well. Long story short, I want to get to as much as I can here. This particular what became known as the ritual house. Outside of bountiful Utah involved the murder of Debbie Kant who was kidnapped by Ted back in 1974, November, November 8th, 1974, when Ted was in the midst of his rampage. 1974 was his most brutal brutal year, gotcha. And this was like only like about a block away from the parking lot where she was taken. Yep, this house was about 500 feet away from the school parking lot. People who encountered Ted that night at the. There was a school play going on that night. And Ted had made his way into the school and everyone who had encountered him and including the play director, who was a female, and she noted that this man was breathing heavily black eyes again. And when he would talk to her, he tried to get her to go out to the car to help her with his help him with whatever problem he had. He could not look at her in the face, you'd only stare down like he was just lusting after her, you know, he was just, he couldn't wait to do what he wanted to do, unfortunately. He failed in his first attempt because she refused to go with him. He left, he came back in, unfortunately, Debbie Kent ended up disappearing and being murdered by this man. She brought him his theorize that Ted brought her to this ritual house, which was known for satanic rituals and sacrifices. Now, again, the chicken or the egg, it's theorized. That this house itself pulled the entity that was Ted towards it. Because it's been called for lack of a better phrase, a portal to help. And this house is emitting such a power that someone like Ted was just drawn to it. Again, theorize that he brought dedicant there held onto her for days potentially. And perhaps maybe this entity was speaking to him again as this urge grew and he ultimately sacrificed her to his entity. So it's sad, and it's bizarre. Have you heard of a house having that sort of power before that can draw other evil human beings to it by its pull? I absolutely think so, yeah. Yeah, absolutely. Either bringing evil from outside of the house, bringing that in, that energy, especially if you have that entity or whatever. But also, if it is a portal, you know, you've got anything coming in and going out from that portal. So it could draw in evil from inside or out. I believe that. I really do. That's another crazy bizarre topic. Because it makes you think, well, what is about this house that makes it a portal? It's not the house itself. It's just like the earth that's the land that this house is built upon. You know, for any number of reasons it could be that. Yeah, I've experienced that myself where it's just kind of the area of the ground, The Rock, you know, the vibe and the aura of things that happened in that same area, even hundreds of years ago, get all combined to that absolutely. This is a place called the Bridgewater triangle where I did a pilot and there was all it's like the most haunted area of the United States, all within this 250 mile square mile radius, all of these sightings and hauntings and appearances encrypted and everything else. And that really is underneath the ground a certain type of slate rock slate SLA TE that only exists in that part of the country in that area of the Bridgewater triangle. They think that could be sucking in some of this spiritual activity and that's sort of a thing. So maybe that's the same idea with this satanic house, the demonic house that you're discussing. Yeah. Absolutely. Chris, have you ever, if you don't mind me briefly asking, have you ever had a personal paranormal experience? A few, but nothing major. A couple orbs that we saw in the Bridgewater triangle, a couple I had a time displacement years ago. In the early 90s that would have discussed the show before, but a few things here and there. But nothing I've never seen Ted Bundy's ghost. So I don't want to see Ted Bondi's ghost. Is there other examples of these hauntings and other things that have appeared and popped up.

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"That just doesn't seem right normal, very, very odd. Right. And it's connected to the idea that Ted's childhood home is in fact haunted. Mike, can I kind of talk about the possibility? Well, absolutely gets up, but I want to go back to the boil that you mentioned at the beginning because this is something that you see, I don't know if you guys have done shows about demonic possession, exorcisms, anything like that. There are physical that occur, exactly. Like you mentioned, a Boyle rising. I mean, I'm thinking of amityville to the possession right now in my head. You can see the guy even almost looks a little bit like Ted Bundy, to be honest with you. So this is something that is very much connected with possession is the boils and scars and cuts and that sort of thing, correct? Correct. You know, you have to think it's like, it makes sense if you have this malevolent force and it's so strong inside of you and it's just, it's literally bursting within you. It's going to affect you physically. As you mentioned, I don't know if you're familiar with the exorcism of Emily rose, the movie about it. But you see her body is physically literally contorted backwards and upside down and she's like a pretzel. And their actual pictures of that. And it's frightening. Yeah, I've seen them. Ted's Boyle isn't really, you know, it's not that crazy to think about it being demonic in origin and source. And actually wasn't there a police officer that had when he was arrested and Ted Bundy was in the backseat. He witnesses as well. He did. The final Ted's final arrest in Florida after the Kyle mega murders, I'm blanking on the arresting officer's name forgive me for that. Yeah, I can't remember either. But when he had him in custody and he was bringing him to the cell, Ted said, you know, like I wish you have killed. I wish you would have just killed me back there. And when you drop me off when you bring me to the cell, if I run, will you shoot me? I mean, he just wanted to end. He wanted to be done. But the arresting officers said the same occurrence is looking in his rearview, rearview mirror, black eyes, pure black eyes, and Ted and that foul, terrible odor. This is important to point out because again, you can make hygiene jokes and all that stuff. But Ted was even he was when he was on the run. He was still conscientious enough to find public showers to clean. He actually took a shower that very day he was arrested, so I'm not sure that his odor was because he had been backless for 6 weeks. You mentioned this odor, is that something else that's prevalent with possession victims? Is it some kind of absolutely sulfurous odor or what kind of an odor are we talking about? You nailed it and that's exactly what it is. When I think about demons, I don't think about the pleasant perfumes. You know, I think of atrociously bad. So again, sulfur smell is so much associated with that. Right. Yeah. Load the depths of hell by Lucifer. Gearheads know that some projects need so many parts, it feels like you need a whole storage unit, just to store them. That's what eBay motors 122 million parts are for. Think of it as your virtual parts garage. They've always got the right fitment at the right prices. Use the eBay motors app or visit eBay motors dot com. Let's ride. You mentioned that his childhood home was possibly haunted. Tell us a little bit about that. The stories that come up with that are much later on when I think it was 2011 or something that where he was or the house was being renovated by a contracted crew. And they had witnessed many different things. The contractor, he would bring his daughter to see where they were working at times and she, the first time the one time she went there, she freaked out, she was crying and she said she felt uncomfortable, like there is something there. And she left and there were times where they would come in and all the doors in the morning and the doors and the cupboards would be open. There would be times where one time where there was a message written on the floor in the dust that just said leave and no footprints around it or anything. There are no nothing else but just that word leave. And then I believe in Ted Bundy's what used to be his room on the window was the word help me. Wow. As a message that they found when they came in. You know, and then that makes you think like who's writing help me. Right. Exactly. And also, Chris, there's in that in the supposedly haunted childhood home of Ted's, there was built in cabinets in the wall that were a bit that actually somehow were pulled out of the wall, shoved out of the room and fell face first down in the hallway. I mean, it moved. And this was witnessed by the contractors. So there's something going on there, and this is after obviously after Ted's been executed. So are we thinking that it's the spirit of Ted returning home? That's one of the thoughts. Yeah. You know, and the thing is, it's like, when you think about what was written, leave was written in the dust on the ground. But yet, help me was written on the window. So that suggests that there's multiple things going on. It could be. Perhaps multiple spirits. They contradict each other so much those messages. Yeah, and so it makes you wonder what's going on. It's like, did this was this house didn't always have some sort of force in it that affected a young Ted or as Ted literally returning to that house or both. I mean, it's fascinating to think about it. That's terrifying too. Chicken and the egg sort of an idea, right? Which one came first? 100%. There have been other occurrences of Ted's ghost appearing, sightings of Ted's ghost, that's sort of a thing. Quite a bit. Well, that's funny, you ask that. Yeah, I would say the one that sticks out to me the most is the reports. Made by several security guards who were working at the Florida state prison, rafer prison, when Ted was executed there. That's where Ted spent his final final years the state prison. And this is right one of the sightings begin of dead. Yeah. I believe this was the first reported as far back as 2001. But one of the security guards who wanted to remain anonymous, I don't blame him. He says that immediately upon Ted's execution. And again, crazy bizarre as it sounds, immediately upon Ted's execution, his spirit was seen. In his cell in his cell block, roaming the hall, also, this fits Ted's persona so much. It's also sitting in his own electric chair. With a smile on his face. With an all knowing granular was described as. Right. And outside of his cell block, the security guards also reported that the apparition that they had seen appeared to be like a blue mist form, but they clearly recognized it as Ted, according to them. And it spoke to them. And.

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Much sold everywhere. Go try them for yourselves, guys. You can thank me later. Let me ask you this, and then we can get more into the paranormal side and the ghostly side. Every serial killer has a reason why they do what they do. Upbringing past parents did Bundy have any of that because when you're talking about the boils, which is very much something that we see with demonic possessions, did he have anything in his upbringing that could have led him here? Yeah. To say that he had a traumatic childhood, it would be putting it lately. And the thing is it's not that he necessarily suffered a severe amount of physical abuse, but he definitely was a mentally unstable young man. Going as far back as potentially as young as three years old. Quickly, a story of visiting aunt visiting Ted's mother's house and Tacoma Washington when he was three years old, woke up in the middle of the night, three year old Ted was standing right next to her and the bedside after having surrounded her with knives that he had found. What? In the house, surrounding her with knives. Knives that he had found. Like just on the ground or something on the floor? On her bid. On her bed surrounding her on the bed. Wow. That's not something I had three year old is apt to do as far as I know. And also crazy enough is that the family, they did nothing about it. They just took it as just an occurrence. Oh, it's just little Ted played with his teddy bear last night, and then it's so cute that he put out knives on the floor. What a little rascal. Yeah, right. And it's like, oh, shame, shame, Ted, you know? But he did have some, you know, like his childhood. He was raised, what he thought was his mother raising him was actually his sister. Oh, wow, really? I didn't know that. Why is that? Well, the way that went went. Okay, I'll say this as briefly. As I can. Did I say that wrong? Yes, you flipped it around. What he thought was his sister was actually his mother and his grandfather. That's even weirder. Yeah. And it also adds creedence and suggests a little bit. And I don't want to say anything that isn't true, but again, a lot of people believe that perhaps Ted was fathered by his grandfather. Right. Because growing up believing that his mother was a sister, he also grew up believing that his grandparents were his parents. He was born, Theodore Robert Cowell, his grandfather's name was Sam Cowell. And it took Ted was not, I'd say it was his early to late teens, probably closer to 18 years old, high school age when he finally found out who he really was. And it did have an effect on him. He considered himself a bastard and he would say that. And it did have a profound effect on him. The mental trauma that he went through and God knows we're not making excuses for him. Well, no, but like you said, there's always a past these types of things. And then before you continue on, I'm still trying to unpack his mother was he thought his sister was actually his mother, and there's a chance that his grandfather, his mother's father, was the dad of Ted with his daughter. Right. So there's some serious incestual issues going on here. Right. Right. And again, none of this is all hypothetical essentially. A lot of people are not even hypothetical. Is there a theories because, I mean, she was she did give birth to Ted in the house of unwed mothers because back then she didn't know who the dad was. It was scandalous. Sure. She would have been labeled so to speak. You know, and that's unfortunate. And again, it really, really through Ted for loop. He did not know who he was. And that opens you up. That makes you so susceptible to more emotional trauma. We believe, just with that first blond kid. Right. He's obviously, you know, a haunted individual in reality, but let's talk more about this malignant force and kind of, it's something that he spoke about and he acknowledged, correct? Absolutely. Yep, he talked about this quite often. He referred to it as the entity. The entity. The malignant malevolent force that he had no control over. He said it spoke to him. He said that he would listen to it. He described it as almost like an addiction how an addict, any item, someone maybe predicted. It just eventually overtakes you. When you give in. And Ted described this murderous purge. He wanted to fight it. He claimed that he wanted to fight it. He wanted to be normal. He strived to be a normal person, that according to debt. I mean, this is a law student for God's sakes. I mean, he had the degree in psychology. He could have been a success, but he went the absolute atrocious way. If as far as him being controlled by this entity, Mike and I definitely believe in this as a possibility. And we go as far as to thinking maybe even demonic. I mean, that might be too far for some people, but I don't know. What do you think? I am always on the edge about demonic things, but my belief in it or not or if it's just evil pissed off ghost or something, you know, but do you believe in the entity that he had some sort of force inside of him? You know, well, I thought about that and Patrick and I have talked about that and is it an entity that's within him that's making him do these things or is it some way of him making excuses or taking blame off of himself and putting on something else that something in his psyche that makes him accept what he's doing? It's not him. It's this other thing. You know, is it just a psychological issue? Theories. Defense mechanism. Once again, though, when you're talking about these types of people and they're hearing voices, is that some kind of just lunacy inside of them or it could very much be some kind of a presence. Yeah. Because what you were saying is that this forced this entity would be almost like, like you said, he's an addict. It's telling him to do something. He's telling him to do something. He's trying to fight it. He's trying to fight it and then he can't fight it anymore and has to go murder somebody to satiate this voice slash spirit slash demon inside of him. Sure. That's very well said. That's exactly what could be the case. And it appears like hoaxes. I mean, in his mind, even if it wasn't even paranormal at all, could do the same thing and have the same effect. And again, it could be, I mean, he could just be making excuses, but there's just a tantalizing amount of, I don't want to say evidence. That's really strong, but stop it. That strengthens the case that he was truly haunted, since a young age. Again, how many three year olds surround their aunts with knives?.

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Was trying to give himself every extra hour he could and he'd say, okay, you know what, wait, please delay my execution just a little bit more because I have one more secret I want to tell you, essentially. I mean, he's trying to manipulate people to the very end. Right. 36 murders that he admitted to. His own defense lawyer browns his last name. I'm John blank on his first name right now. One of his own defense lawyers in his book that he wrote about bunny. He says that Bundy confided to him that he committed over 100 murders. That's what his lawyer said. Now, is he telling the truth as he put in the numbers to sell books? I don't know, but I don't know exactly why he would make up those numbers. The man's done in that harm as it is that why add more lies on top of that. And he's very capable of it as well. Oh yeah, yeah. The other thing that's interesting about that, what he revealed to his lawyer about 100 murders is that this lawyer also claimed that Bundy's first murder was a male victim, which isn't common knowledge is basically Bundy just murdered beautiful young women across the United States. Right. His lawyer says that bunny told him he killed a man for his first victim. His only one male that, again, that's according to his defense lawyer. And he would lure women into his car by saying that he had a broken arm and needed help, loading up whatever it was and all that sort of type of thing. So he was preying on these college age women. And he also was, you know, as far as serial killers go, who's fairly good-looking guy. Right. So he kind of had his scheme all calculated and worked out. Didn't he, Mike, he did, and he had everything going for him, say the looks from the charm, and charisma, and it would lure them right in. He also as well broke out of prison twice, I believe he did, yeah. Twice, he broke out of prison like this guy was just and committed more murders during that time, yeah. Just completely on the run. So overall, how long was his reign of terror, so to speak? Well, that's up for question. It really is. As far as his admitted murders, it rained from 1969 to 1978. So nearly a decade of documented mers. But this is kind of tied into the paranormal aspect of this as well. We'll get to that eventually. There are a lot of people out there, Chris, who believe that Ted Bundy committed his first murder at the age of 14. Wow. Does victim was an 8 year old girl. And a neighbor girl, great. Neighbor girl lived right down the street from Ted Ted delivered newspapers on this route. He had a great uncle who lived right next to this victim who went missing. It's still not solved as to what happened to her. Her body has never been found. Oh my gosh. She was only HEB. I guess in her 60s now. He did write a letter to the girl's mother at one time denying that he had anything to do with her disappearance or anything. But he did, and again, delaying his execution, he did infer that there were particular murders that he would never reveal. He would never talk about because they were according to ten. They were too close to home, and they were too young. And even Ted did not want to recount them. He's not necessarily admitting that, but he didn't want to talk about them. And we think that Anne Marie burr, this poor child who got murdered or he assumed she was murdered, that she was dead first potential victim at. The young age of 14 Ted possibly committed this act. But mostly his victims were kind of of that coed age from 18 to 24 sort of thing. Is that correct? Right. That's correct. Absolutely. And the two that he had murdered in that one night are the ones that actually got him conviction that got him the death penalty that that was a sorority house. Yeah, the coyote murders. Yeah, those are the ones that he was brought to trial again. I mean, he was brought to trial several times. He actually broke into the sorority house and murdered two women at the same night. He did. He was the night that he murdered the attacked 5 women in total. And two of them, unfortunately passed away. Another victim was two houses down on the block. After he made a frantic escape from Cy omega house, he wasn't done yet. You have to kind of think about it this way. He was on the run at this point. Because he had escaped from the Colorado prison. And he had actually made his way down the Florida. And he was living under the name Chris Hagan for 6 weeks. He tried to get a job. He's going to get a job, but he resorted to stealing whatever he could to make, you know, just to get by. We have to think about he was in prison for so long. He obviously couldn't commit murders while in prison, then he escapes. He's gone to lose for 6 weeks and it finally just comes to a head and a horrible violent night at Cuomo where 5 women are brutally attacked by him. And allegedly, on the paranormal side of that night, the two that he had actually killed reported whether it's true or not that the spirits of these the ghosts of these two women actually tried to help and warn the other girls that he was going after. To tell them not to leave their rooms in what way, how are they doing this? One that some who survived, she claimed that there was essentially you can interpret it anyways. But she claims that she was essentially held back told not to leave, not to move any further. You are safe, where you are right now. Do not try to escape because this madman is running through the halls still. As it sounds bizarre, but there are claims that these just recently deceased murdered women actually had the residual the intelligence remaining to attempt to save their sorority sisters. Again, take that how you will. It's bizarre, but it's been reported. The world is a stressful place, and that can wreak havoc on a guy's testosterone level. I mean, low testosterone is not just an old guy concerned these days, even then in their 30s or having low testosterone issues. That's where Irwin naturals come in. It's an all liquid soft gel line enhanced with bio purine. Erwin naturals is a bunch of different testosterone products like testosterone.

Talk Is Jericho
"ted bundy" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"All right, so always looking for cool subject matters in the paranormal field true crime field we have both of those with today's discussion and bringing back pat and Mike from the paranormal zone, which is funny because I just realized today that you guys have been on the show before under a different moniker. That's right. Just today, yeah, that was quite the moniker back then. We decided to change the name that served its purpose for sure. What was it called before? The ultimate route podcast. That's the ultimate podcast. We decided what we wanted to have a name that was a little more direct and to the point when it comes to the content that we like talking about. We're figuring out someone's scrolling for paranormal content. They're more likely to click on paranoia zone as opposed to the ultra realm. It looks like a travel show or something alternate route. Yeah, I remember we hooked up in the dressing room. I think it was in Fargo. Is that where it was? That's right at the event center. There you go. What do you speak about cryptids or something along those lines? What did we talk about? We talked about, oh man, wheel's a menagerie of weirdness. The giant rock giants, it feels pretty crazy. It was fun. A lot of fun. It was a cornucopia of weirdness and considering that weirdness today with a little bit more of a focused topic, which is very interesting to me because I have a lot of different partners that I use to do shows with. And I just say send me interesting ideas. And if you think of something cool, then we'll do it. And you guys came up with a pretty good one talking about obviously the other side of Ted bunny, which people might not know about the haunting side, the ghostly side, where did you kind of come up with the idea for this topic, guys? Well, quite honestly, it popped into my mind when reading a book about Ted Bundy. And the author himself started to, he had a very prominent section in his book, where he was talking about his conversations that he would have with Ted, when Ted was incarcerated and awaiting his ultimate fate. And this author, Stephen, miss showed, and the book was Ted Bundy, the only living witness in a chapter of that. He talked about when, like I said, when he was talking with Bundy, Bundy would often refer to this entity that would overtake him, resided within him, essentially, for his entire life, particularly, would overtake him to the point of where he would have to commit these atrocious murders. And what was interesting about, I mean, that's fascinating in itself. But when Stephen was talking with Ted, he would note several times. Several occasions when Ted would go into a trance like state, he closed his eyes, and he's recounting these terrible acts. A welt would start to form on Bundy's right cheek right underneath his eye. Along white that appeared to be a large white blister that was very, very prominent. The strange as this sounds, and this isn't just a joke on hygiene, you would begin to admit an odor. His eyes would turn black. And this is all noted by world renowned Bundy investigator and author, mister Steven miss Sheldon. This is something that he had seen over and over again, and that's basically long answer to your question. That's what got me interested in the idea of what is truly causing that, is there something to this entity paranormally speaking when it comes to Ted Bundy? And let's just talk about Ted Bundy for, because we've never really discussed them on the show. When you go through kind of the most notorious serial killers of all time, Bundy's always at the top of the list. You hear David Berkowitz and you hear Richard Ramirez and these types of guys, but Bundy's kind of it's funny because they all came from the same time frame. I don't know what it was about the 70s, but there was some sick dudes back then. Kind of give a quick overview for people that might not know, just how diabolical Bundy was and some of the crimes that he committed. In my opinion, there is people that have killed there are people that kill. There are killers. There are serial killers and then there's Ted Bundy. He is the top notorious beyond it's one of a kind. And frightening, you know, doing research for all of this that I've done after this Patrick, I'm done with Ted Bundy for a while. Well, tell us some of that mic to why do you put him in a category of his own? You mentioned you've done some research, so tell us a little bit about what you found out about him. It's just the, you know, when you take what he's done, the accounts of the murders and the level of violence. And then when you add in, if there's an entity within him, if there's a demon that's involved with this, it just takes it to a completely other level. If it's true, that his eyes change, he's shape shifting, you know, there's so much more to it. And that's one thing that, you know, we have information on the dive into. Yeah, one thing that we have to clarify here is that Bundy himself admitted to 36 murders. That's what he admitted. Right. He was always in denial for his entire life until he was trying to save his own remaining time on earth. You know, he was trying to give himself every extra hour he could and he'd say, okay, you know what, wait, please delay my execution just a little bit more because I have one more secret I want to tell you, essentially..

Netflix is A Daily Joke
"ted bundy" Discussed on Netflix is A Daily Joke
"I saw a great documentary on Ted Bundy. Did anybody say that was a four hour four part Ted Bundy documentary? And they said originally, he wanted to be an attorney or a politician. And when I heard that, the whole thing kind of made sense. Like, oh, all right, he actually took the more admirable route. And I've seen about 30 documentaries on Ted Bundy and I gotta be honest, I'm a little sick and tired of the hero worship. We have of serial killers in this country. And I say, 'cause I've been guilty of it too. But you can tell it's more than just curiosity and voyeurism. It's admiration. You can tell by the language used in the documentaries. They don't talk about Ted Bundy the way they should talk about Ted Bundy. If they were speaking about him, honestly, every sentence would start with, and then this piece of shit. But they don't do that. They give the obligatory. He was wicked. He was evil. But then they find almost admirable qualities and they harp on them. First of all, his intellect, they can't stop talking about his intellect, which was overrated. He was not that bright, but like Ted Bundy was so intelligent. He escaped from jail twice. Do you know how he escaped from jail the first time? The window was open and he jumped out. That's how a cat or a bird would escape from prison. You're not a mastermind if you're in jail and you see an open window and you're like, freedom, is that way. They called him a genius. So I think they like the idea of the wicked genius. They'd actually call they said ten bunny was a genius. He acted as his own attorney. They executed him. He sucked as a lawyer. You're not a genius. If you get the word, he couldn't have done worse. He got the. If he had hired an orangutan to represent him. And it's your shit in its own hand and mushed it in the face of the jury. It would have gotten the same sentence Ted got making an effort. And collectively, can we agree? Stop harping on his appearance. He was an average looking guy, but they can't stop talking about, oh my God, he was charming. Ted Bundy was so handsome. No, he wasn't. He was handsome in that pool of people. In the group of men who have murdered and raped 40 or more women. Ted's a catch. Ted's a 9. But how about some kind understanding words for the rest of us? How about a little leeway for other average men? I realize I'm only a 5, but I never hit a girl with a hammer before I fucked her. Catch Jim Norton in the degenerates only on Netflix..

Midnight Double Feature - A Film Podcast
"ted bundy" Discussed on Midnight Double Feature - A Film Podcast
"Just connection to them as artists and i felt like they kind of producers who are willing to take risks and yeah they were really like we support your vision of the film like all the way through. I felt that and And i felt like i want i want those are the kinds of people. I want to work with people who are true artists. You know as well as obviously it's a business and we need to make money but also you know people who are willing to it willing to push the envelope a little bit which they are so to me it just kind of made sense to come on and then you know. When i started doing research i was like again. You know laura ted bundy movies. But i felt like what i wanted to ask. The question of was in a sense. Why are there so many ted bundy movies and i felt like i was able to make ted bundy while also asking that question of. Should we be making a ted bundy movie. So that's what i did with all the women in film at who are representations the victims or just women in general in very broad sense. Who are looking at bill looking at ted and then eventually turn to look at us as if to ask why. Why are you still here. You know why. Are you still asking that question because to me i think we can both have an interest in true crime and people like ted bundy and recognize. That might not be the best thing that we do have that and to look at well. Why do we you know. I think it's not those things are not mutually exclusive. They can exist at the same time we can. We can be doing something for entertainment or shock value at same time. We can question it and question. Should we be doing it and so for me. I felt very much. Like i'm split here. I'm torn like this movie. I wanna make. I wanna i wanna do this and at the same time i wanna question. Why isn't that. I want to do it. And so i felt like. I tried to put those two together into the film. I'm so glad you said that. Because what i really enjoyed about. Momentum god is that it didn't put on the on a pedestal. Oh mythology is in like you. So many of documentaries films ter- In waldo maybe does point out that he was absolutely idolized by people You know he's receiving fan mail things like that it. It really really reminded us that he was in facts naval presence and we never really forget that there was study plus victims that we that we know of i mean probably there were upwards of one hundred exactly And their families right. I mean you multiply that by rail full And you've got a small country so Yeah two part question It must have been important. Fear to stray away from mythology causing him You know and and focusing more on bill you know we leave the prison and it and stick with bill rather than Focusing on ted and going back to the cell right..

Lights Camera Barstool
"ted bundy" Discussed on Lights Camera Barstool
"I think the whole movie was very dependent on your chemistry in these conversations. Like you're saying with you. Luke kirby who played ted bundy nominal so good gnarly. You have a look man. He had the whole mannerisms down and everything to crazy. But how did you guys build that sort of The killer handler relationship. Because obviously that's the whole movie. So how'd you guys build it up. He ha- well we had. It's so interesting making a movie in in in this era It was co compliant film. So like we normally rehearsals would be in person. We'd do table read the directors and director and the actors would all get together. We couldn't do that so it was all over. Zooms like this. You know In fact every weekend prior to each week of work because it was all dialogue as you see in the film. It's it's there's so much log at the. The movie is predominantly these four conversations. Really everything kind of around a lot. And so every weekend Lucan i would get on zoom like this and just run on lines for the week just to help each other out with so much out of us but we we were lucky. That is three weeks shoots. It was very much like an immersive experience We did have a couple of weeks of just a working with with amber on zoom like this but working going through the script working through each scene. What's the subtext you know what's being said what isn't being said. What's being said on. You know underneath the words and just sort of like diving into the sort of micro elements of each of the scenes and the script itself. That was extremely helpful. Just to kind of get our bearings in terms of where each of our characters was coming from and then we were able to shoot as certainly the conversations. If i'm if memory serves. I think we serve. We shop them in sequence and that was also really helpful. Because there's a growth. That happens obviously over the course of those conversations You know the first conversation is very much that first conversation of of ted being extremely sort of Unwilling to give anything over. He kinda holds all the cards and is not really giving bill anything and bill trying to find his way in and that was a you know being able to shoot. That sort of it wasn't the first thing we shot. Lucan i but it was. It was very near the first thing that really helped find that relationship throughout the course in the sense that it was It was kind of happening in real time and again like like. I said we had done a fair amount of work just ironing out. You know every little shift within the context each of those scenes where they occur why they're occurring so we've kind of done all of this thinking and planning beforehand. We're able to sort of have that foundation. The work from we were onset. And then there's also just the simple in a working relationship with another actor and loop was just a joy in such a tour. We given the the materials as dark as it is and it is these being about pretty dark things. The the atmosphere on set was actually relatively joyful. And i think some of that was did to the fact that it was the first time any of us baround other people for a number of months. Six months of being in lockdown so being involved in creative process again was just nice. It felt great to be with other people. And to be working creatively together And so there's a fair amount of laughter. Despite the fact that again the material was as dark as it was We had a lot of fun doing it And lucan..

Crime Glasses
A highlight from Introducing Crime Glasses: A True Crime Book Club Podcast
"Reader. Crime glasses is your true crime book club podcast. Every month we'll be selecting a new true crime book to read using it as a guide to talk about the cases that shocked us. The underlying issues and the moments that had us closing the book desperate for a breather. And if reading is just not your thing, that's okay, I still welcome you to listen to the weekly episodes because I will give you all of the case details so you won't miss out. Also, I can't promise that you won't find yourself in a cozy nook devouring every page after. We will read everything from true crime classics like the Ted Bundy focus the stranger beside me by Ann rule to more recent favorites like we keep the dead close by Becky Cooper, which details the author search for the killer of Jane Brighton, a Harvard student who was murdered in her off campus

Morbid: A True Crime Podcast
"ted bundy" Discussed on Morbid: A True Crime Podcast
"An interesting note that a lot of but a lot of people may not Before gary ridgway was caught ted bundy was imprison and he told authorities. He was like hey come here real quick and he was like. You should stakeout out some fresh grave sites that you find from the green river killer. Because he's gonna come back and try to have sex because he's i speak from experience like he literally was like. I think he's like me. I did that so maybe you should go do that. So they did. They didn't catch them that way but they ended up like using it in his psychological profile. That they Like we're not like pat on backwards out. But it's like he was so gross and fucked up. In such a weird nuoc way in an anomaly. Recognize gang so he is like i'm really fucked up and i can tell you that that person is the same kind of fucked up that i am so. Let me tell you what i would've done right. Exactly which is straight as. There's no honor among serial killers. Like oh you got to look out for each other. It's like if anything. There's competition in outweigh. I think so. Yes so i think he was probably like he's gin and on my number. Yeah because at that point he was the most prolific. Yeah it makes. It brings more attention to ted bundy. Imagine there's a certain element in the year. Where oh it's engine needing says no i'm better. Oh yeah like ted. Bundy loved ted bundy betsy. No one loves bundy..

The Michael Berry Show
"ted bundy" Discussed on The Michael Berry Show
"The very things. He's being accused of or the sorts of things he has in the law. You know ted bundy worked on a suicide hotline and they said he would talk to women at length about their problems. You hear these stories about police officers who go to the dark side police officers who get involved with drugs but before that are working on the drug task force. This is andrew cuomo's cover by being the guy who is out to defend women who are sexual abuse victims. He is himself sexually abusing women by being the man who is saying that.

Murder In Alliance
"ted bundy" Discussed on Murder In Alliance
"That we've heard firsthand from an expert about the type of person she believes could have killed yvonne lane someone angry. Who knew von personally and had a reason to attack her with a vengeance and we've heard how botched the crime scene was how the scene didn't match what joe said. I think it's important to take a close look at who exactly detectives were on the case and turn the tables instead of putting the victims under the microscope. I wanna put the cops under it and look at their records and try to figure out why this case was such a mess. I've already talked about a couple of alliance. Police officers like quinton artists. A patrolman who you on allegedly said had started harassing her after a traffic stop. Artists is now a registered sex offender. Then they're officer rick. Who's last name. I'm keeping private for now. Who detectives told the psychic was rumored to be dating. You're on and possibly the father of her youngest child. But now i wanna focus on the four detectives assigned to the case as you may know already. If you've been digging through case files on patriotic. They were detectives. Lloyd bud samson william muko mark walsh and john leech and i want to start with john leech on april first nineteen ninety nine detective. Leach was not on duty yet. He was called in to help. Here's detective samson in his two thousand eight deposition. you've heard clips from before to assist us. Exactly his day off when he got called in. That was true that he was called off vacation to help us this case. And we've called in whether or not was vacation a lot. I don't recall that but yeah he was called in. Did you make the decision. That would be an order now. I do not but somebody did. And so each mccall on the day off part time off and helped samson says. There was no quote lead detective on the case. But according to samson he and bill mucciolo did most of the investigative work leach was mostly on the case to assist like mark welsh. In fact. i won't go into mark welsh much because he wasn't a big part of the case at all.

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark
Delving Into the Mind of the BTK Serial Killer With Dr. Katherine Ramsland
"Katherine ram slant. I'm a professor of forensic psychology and the author of confessions of a serial killer. What i call guided. Dennis rader the t k. Serial killer. Dr ramsland had unprecedented access to one of the most notorious serial killers in american history. She's a real life minehunter. She spent years working with dennis rader to figure out his psyche. Why he became a killer. It wasn't just dennis rader talking about himself in any which way he wanted. It was me guiding him toward the end of benefit in criminal justice psychology and law enforcement so that whatever we were doing would end up providing insights and also The proceeds benefit the victims families before we get started. Let me tell you. The story of dennis rader raider killed ten people in kansas over thirty years before he was finally caught. Bt k. stands for bind torture. Kill one of the things that was so frightening about raider is that he seemed relatively normal. This is from her book through jailhouse visits telephone calls and written correspondence. Catherine rams lynn worked with raider himself to analyze the layers of his psyche using his drawings. Letters interviews and raiders unique coats. She presents in meticulous detail. The childhood roots and development of one man's motivation to stalk torture and kill. Dennis rader grew up an all american boy in kansas into the heart of america with religious values and and intact family etc and yet he developed the idea that he wanted to be famous. He got attachments to Serial killers he read about as a teenager. Intrude detective magazines and girls made him feel uncomfortable and off balance so he began to put those things together. As a way to keep women under control was to be and to become famous was to become serial killer so his fantasies began to form around that notion and then he just identified with one day he was going to be is famous. Jack the ripper or ted bundy or any of the other ones and He said about to do that.

Feminist Utopia
We're Frustrated. What about YOU?
"Today in our feminist. Utopia governor cuomo resigned and stops kissing young women at weddings or stops being garbage. Human being. I mean he created a toxic work environment not just for the women s but for the men that worked for him to. But we'll get to that. Yes chalet recording on national women's day last year we were on a boat celebrating international women's day with an all female crew for the first time it was amazing and i wish we were back on that boat. We were in a bubble of just being pampered and surrounded by powerful women and it was amazing until covid happened in. it wasn't so amazing and instead of being surrounded in a bubble. We were worried that we were surrounded by five. Rhys but i i was worried. They were gonna cut seattle off because trumpet actually made sounds like well we just isolate seattle. It will spread. We all know how that turned out and happy international women's day. I guess we can start out with some good vibes because today on international women's day joe biden has signed Two executive orders geared toward promoting gender issues. The first executive order establishes a gender policy council within the white house and it's Reformulating that office from the obama administration that was disbanded by trump. But this one is going recognizes. That discrimination happens to both genders. So i think that's a positive thing and we hope that that will lead to more equality not just in the united states but around the world and then the second executive orders directed at the department of education and it Reverses the controversial rule on campus sexual assault and harassment that was issued last year by betsy devos. Donald trump's education secretary. So these are two Positive advancements and we will applaud those with some good vibes and biden also signed an executive order About election rights. And so we'll get into that a little bit more than we talk at the end of the show about. Hr one We can't count on executive orders to save us. But at least women who are on college campuses or more protected now because of that executive order and i am really glad that biden chose to do it today. Yeah we're gonna go from good vibes to pet peeves. I decided Section called pet peeves because this has been highlighted in the news. And it's really annoying me. People miss naming the george floyd trial. It's not george floyd trial. It's derek chauvin trial for the killing of george floyd and we should know derek chavez name as a murderer that he is and when you miss name it and call it. George floyd it places the blame on the victim and causes more pain to the victim's family and misses the point. I think we need to hold. Derek chauvin accountable and make his name famous for being murderer. I think it's the perfect example of a micro aggression that even progressives make without thinking about it and when ted bundy headed trial. We didn't name his victims. We didn't say it was the kimberley trial. It was ted bundy trial. But in this case. I think this is one of those little deep seated things that we don't think about until someone like you pointed out like i hadn't thought about it until i read it in today's research but i hadn't even. I didn't even in all fairness i didn't know the trial was starting so i didn't even know that but we'll do hell no hell of a time finding jurors so the 'cause the videos out there like the Selection process started and then it was halted. There's some concern about whether it's going to be a second degree or a third degree murder charge. So yeah they. They were going to add the third degree murder charge to make sure he doesn't get off on a manslaughter charge. Just go to jail for three years.

LGBTQ&A
Susan SurfTone: Female Competition in The FBI, and Criminal Psychology
"I I think we need to start with the FBI. Special Agent in the eighties. Yeah. That's a pretty male dominated field initially for that. Yes. It was convene many women back then or there. That many where I think I, think women had been in for eight years before I joined. So what was lacking was women in the supervisory roles who they hadn't made it up that high hip. So those of us that were there were you know bottom of the Ron Did the women's stick together women did women do Basically. No. Women aren't like men and women don't help each other usually. Oh. That's sad to hear it is but it's the truth than I. Always tell the truth they'll please do. So every woman for themselves, I wouldn't say it's an all the time general rule but most women that do want to get ahead a lot of them feel that they're better off putting their, they're investing their time with the men that have power. And they don't help other women and I have a theory. See My father played baseball father was a pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers Minor League and I grew up in a very sports oriented household were learned to play on teams and be kind of a team player and understand that a team has to work together and I learned that my ban to. And women don't learn that because my women Meyer didn't plant sports teams, I hope some of the younger girls learning that now that they're having an, you know able to play more on sports teams that you kind of have to help each other to win. And sometime, there has to be. A star. And, sometime, that's the quarterback sometime that's the pitcher in the guy that can hit the grand slam home run like puts. Hernandez. Whatever his name is did for the dodgers women no learn that lesson and they don't help each other. They don't know how to work together with other women is that probably than reinforced back then there's a lot less women in the workforce overall. So just didn't. Learn that because women to learn it with. Yeah, I. Think. So that's what I'm saying we weren't on teams. We didn't learn that how teams work together and look at look at what happened to Hillary Women Support Hillary I it's hard to describe. Unless you've lived in it and you've seen it and it's hard to describe to man I. Think because they just don't don't see. They don't get it is that there is kind of jealousy among women. That is a very female thing. It's self-defeating. We'd be a lot further ahead if we learn to work together and support each other. Even with everything you're saying though do you still felt like accomplishment getting into the FBI originally though, right? Yeah I was it was an accomplishment. Sure. What was that I like when you're going there for training I guess scary. I didn't want to be looked upon as weak by the males in my class or the instructors who were all male I wanted to pull my own way and I wanted to do a good job. I felt good because when I took the entrance exam if I had been white male I, would've qualified to get in. So in my own mind I didn't feel any exception had been carved out for me because women were allowed to have lower scores because they wanted to get more women in when I think about the training. I think about learning to shoot guns personal defense will tell us someone's lying information from them without them knowing is. It all those things. It's all those things plus it's a lot of academic work. We did a lot of academic work. We did I had fascinating classes in criminal psychology absolutely fascinating. They were some hard slide shows to look at I'll tell you that Jin example, Flynn murders, bodies mutilations, and it was funny because it was in explaining the psychology of Ted Bundy in we were taught by experts in the field people that had pretty much written the book towards the end of the class I had showed us. Of course, it was female bodies were mutilated female victims and they said at the end of the class, we're going to show you two days of. Young boys and men that were victims and mutilated. And they said we can guarantee you. That There's GonNa be some mail in the class that's GonNa Faint. Said you're GonNa the men are going to get sick. They won't be able to handle this. Guy's all at all of course out eight hundred lightning ha ha well, one of them hit the floor guy sitting right next to me thud. The guys were practically running out of the room to get to the men's room so they could vomit. Seeing the male body so mutilated and it's bad. The things they show, they show you the real thing it and just you're saying that they were they were made sick by seeing a male body relative a woman's body right and the women were fine seeing the women's body and with the instructors told us and neither the guy that like I said wrote the book on Criminal Psychology said that women are so conditioned in our culture to see ourselves mutilated that it doesn't bother us. But men are not. And when men see it they just they can't handle it. Kind of blowing my mind to be honest blows your mind when you see. When you actually are sitting there and you sitting next to the guy that just fainted I've never heard it put that way that we are conditioned to see women's bodies like that and it's nonchalant toss? Yeah. Yet is a mind blower isn't it? It's like the opposite like we're conditioned to see women's bodies sexualizing half naked, and then we see a naked male body it's like, Oh wow, that's that's a naked person it's. How we're conditioned.

Orlando's Morning News
Man gets 5+ years in prison for harassing Parkland victims
"Nine a California man convicted of cyber stalking the families of victims of the Florida mass shooting is going to federal prison Brandon Florey was sentenced Monday to more than five years behind bars for documents show the twenty two year old used aliases that included the accused parkland shooter and serial killer Ted Bundy he was also convicted of threatening to kidnap some of the

Radio From Hell
19 Horror Movies Based on True Stories
"Nineteen horror movies that are based on true stories that are smaller so disturbing that they made movies at all good how some of these movies I've never heard of and and I don't know if they're not some of them are not horror movies in the sense of being supernatural they are of like murder stories number one on the list no I don't I don't think these were it ranked in our in the order of you know probably not ten Rillington place have you ever heard of this movie I have not nineteen seventy one based on the real life murderer John Christie who killed several women including his wife and hit their bodies in the garden in England and the the net the address of the house was a ten Rillington place and the movie was actually filmed a few doors away from the real wall ten Rillington place number two this one we've heard of the exorcism of Emily rose yes now remember this movie coming out in two thousand five I don't touch based on actual events he said that's what they said and I and I guess it was pretty scary that is based very loosely on the story of Annelies Michelle number three compliance this is a movie from twenty twelve because I feel like not very many people know about this movie it's based on true events in the reality of story was even worse because a lot of the victims in real life were between the ages of fourteen and sixteen it shows how common how much common sense people lack but also how much people will do for the Florida it is a difficult movie to watch it's called compliance it doesn't say what the story is it doesn't that's not helpful number four I saw this movie and I said at the time no one should ever see this movie Henry portrait of a serial killer yeah I watched it once it came out in nineteen eighty six I'm curious to see it again yeah given all this time at the time I saw it it was so brutally real that it was just a just terrifying and it's a stars what's his name Merle from walking dead now you know and from the us crazy and from the here why can I recall is named muse guardian flight Mike that's it so it's Michael Rooker as a young man they just call a broker playing this a serial killer and he's terrified no he's be scary just himself he is in real life he bought but this is the it was a terrifying movie as I recall something called hounds of love in twenty sixteen an Australian horror movie it is based on actual events they should explain what the events okay I can I can I'll tell you but it's so I didn't want to read this one because I remember her own you know okay at the two twenty sixteen Australian horror movie that follows a teen girl named Vicky issues held captive by a couple and must drive a wedge between the two to escape it's based on the more house murders committed by David and Catherine Bernie who adopted raped and killed for women in nineteen eighty six I saw this movie now I think about it it was a Sunday answer slam dance moves and we're and we're if I was given a screen or other than I thought and it was horrifically psycho course we all know Matt's based loosely on a real story Annabelle we haunted doll it is this is the first time I found out about that Anna but was a real doll and was actually a raggedy Ann doll with giant regularly and all is a huge it's now in a in a haunted museum walk in a glass box where it's safe and can't hurt anybody so so too often at all that was really haunted that's what this number number eight nineteen ninety one the haunted a made for TV movie based on things that happen to the small rural family well they were just asking for Beyonce moral smile this movie I've heard of it's not something I ever want to see it's call borderland and directed in two thousand seven and it's up it's bright it's a movie based on a real guy off I'll go full because found so who was a self proclaimed witch doctor who work with the Mexican drug cartels in the eighties while he killed American coed to cross the border as a hobby yeah I'll pass on that was a hobby the girl next door from nineteen from two thousand seven again a torture movie lot of these are like that but but based on a real you know that one no I I'm not saying it on real life experience of Sylvia likens parents left turn her little sister to be taken care of by a woman who would eventually torture and murder back country in twenty fourteen story of a couple went camping in the woods and well you know you know what happens well it was a bear yeah all but it was kind of a supernatural bear extremely wicked shockingly evil and vile rough Ted Bundy Ted Bundy twenty nineteen wolf creek yeah five I don't know that movie inspired by real events the strangers of that adds a creepy movie in two thousand eight it's about a big cabin in the woods a close to a town where it's called the caddy cabin murders in and the town that dreaded sundown another it's so guy wears a bag on his head like the elephant man a slasher movie the Amityville horror which I never thought was scary them the Mothman prophecies allegedly based on which I remember as a real legend and use those two words together which I remember seeing and it was really creepy and then finally this one I I was I was shocked to find that the hills have eyes a real actually based on a real story based on the Sony beam clan who lived in the cave in Scotland in the sixteenth century for over twenty five years they would robin cannibalize local villagers at night they were said to have murdered and eaten over a

Squawk Pod
Microsoft's Win, Facebook's New News, SALTy About Taxes
"There may very well be lawsuits about this there may be depositions about this there may be all sorts of litigation so we're going to see what happens they can do it you can say whatever you want on your facebook posting and they can't police that but if they're accepting money for it they should probably be held to stand for that it's it's advertised it's an advertisement are knocked does that change anything meaning if I if I was running for for mayor of New York and I started just posting things that were blatantly look I think I think that's a tougher situation to try and assess that's where you can make the claim that you are simply posting board in the things get up but for anything you're accepting ads for why aren't you held the same standard as other broadcasters would would would naturally be for that you're accepting advertising so there is some interaction accepting money whether you laugh at about over the big bad wolf lung capacity legend and Bacon and easiest at six there's some that you really can't repeat on here I just saw one for for Ted Bundy but they're they how many are there are literally thousands of these people went on surprised on twitter tie I missed it I'm on a different version twitter than you are and the New York Times reports that Boeing help to craft the law late last year that undercuts the government's role in approving the design of new airplanes report says that the company and its allies shaped the language of the legislation to their liking overcoming criticism from regulators including the FAA mummers is going to be testifying this week so so he's going to be having to to answer a lot of these it is well the whole idea of self regulation which is a huge part of what's happened in the airline industry is fascinating and by the way not just happening I discovered because look into this weekend that's happening the United States a lot of this is because Airbus and what's happening in Europe is following the same similar similar approach understand the argument that there may not be qualified people in the government to sign off on some of these things but it it argues for changes structure I if Boeing or Airbus is going to pay for it they should ultimately answer to the laters not and you also had members of the writing letters saying this is not the way to do it right right well I think the biggest question this is even if the government has issues what safety this gives the manufacturers upper hand and this particular legislation and the weekend at the box office joker reclaim the one spot eighteen point nine million North American ticket sales it had been pushed out of the top spot last week by Disney's malefic mistress of evil jokers now the most successful R. rated movie ever with the global take eight hundred forty nine million dollars you from Manhattan into the stairs in Brooklyn that everyone is going and take them Celsius where he does some kind of weird scary I've not seen George people that are yeah exactly yes I can imagine how many people taking taking shots so so far so good with this scary sick movie right I mean he's very talented that that guys are wiped out but he's right but he's very very very tone eh wacked up about the talent part but the stairs are in the Wadden Brooklyn let's go next unsquashed Odd Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson has new hope for low income homebuyers we're back after this what kind of Tech Company does the world needs today one that applies smart technologies at scale with purpose and expertise not just for some but for all with a I blockchain and quantum technology IBM IS PARTNERING WITH CLIENTS TO DEVELOP SMART scalable technologies that help businesses worked better together. let's expect more from technology let's put smart to work visit. IBM DOT COM slash smart to learn more

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark
Say No to Strangers
"I Georgia I was writing my longboard around my hometown by myself I parked my car to Skate Park which is also the beginning of a bike path walk path at borders a river I went down the path breath yeah this person was having a day really getting out there being in the Nature Dila Fair right skate park what are you the richest person in America okay as I was making my way back to the trail a man ran up behind me forcing need to ride into the grass and stop he asked me if there were any running trails around so I told them there was a trail up near the river he then asked me if the trail gets more secluded obviously I was very uncomfortable with his question and realized I did not WanNa talk to this guy anymore he proceeded to walk next to me and ask me questions he asked where I was wing and I said I was going to meet my boyfriend at the Skate Park not far from where we were parentheses I was not meeting my boyfriend he lives two hours away at the time smart Bryant he save off a major Ted Bundy vibe because he was good looking and charismatic you could tell very uncomfortable not making eye contact with them and keeping my longboard in between us as a buffer he would periodically touch my arm when I was clearly not intrigued station I managed to tax my boyfriend telling him to call me he replied with a I'm eating dinner I'll call you all know now is your ex boyfriend parentheses we now have a code for one it's an emerging that's better that's better than when my oh yeah well you fix it fix it the man then asked if you could try out my longboard I said no and then I had to go right away he said if you let me try your longboard I will leave you alone no it's not fucking deal this should have stopped three ago beyond getting we're going to go through the whole thing and then talk about it after Since I really wanted to be left alone when I let him try it out this man fakes fell off the longboard saying he hurt his knee I quickly picked up the board was about to right away when he grabs my arm and attempts to pull me down on the ground with him at this point he's gripping me so hard trying to pull me on the ground luckily my many years of squats came in randy eventually slipped out of his grip any and wrote off the quickest I ever have before I consistently checked behind to make sure he wasn't following me but he just got up and walked in the direction he came from this was by far the scariest thing ever to happen to me especially since the river was right next to this secluded trail stay sexy endure squad so you're strong long enough to escape a man's grip or stay sweaty so you can slip out of his grip thank you so much for listening

Ellen on the Go
Hannah B. plays 'who'd you rather' on Ellen
"This is a staff that is addicted to the bachelor. I mean, I just have never seen anything like it. It's just it's it's like a phenomenon so much. So that we have our own bachelor recap show on Ellen tube. Featuring a number of our staff members, I'm working very hard to make the bachelor recap show its own podcast. That's that's on my jets. Great. Are you on your watch list? We have good access to that show. Yeah. And and so, you know, we're all up on Colton is. And the fact that Colton divergent and they jumped over the wall jumped over the wall which led to him. And then we didn't elaborate clip of what happened after he jumped over the wall. And then we sure there was a woman named Cassie. I I know about thirty percent of what I'm saying. And long story short the next bachelorette is going to be Hannah be which apparently shocking news a lot of people. Right. Yeah. And also, you learn when we informed when we had Hannah be on the show, our studio audience did not know a that we had. Hannah be right. Be that Hannah. He was the new bachelorette and the audience reaction. I mean, they love her. They love unbelievable. My goodness. They vary site area excited at the notion. I was amazed at how comfortable she was like in the chair, you know, she really twenty four year old can't four years old. And she's ready. She says she's ready for marriage. I got married at twenty eight was I ready probably not. As you're listening. We also we played the game. Who'd you rather? So that we try to we put two men on the screen, and she has to pick the one that she would keep who she'd rather dot dot dot and an it's just it's it's awesome. She had a very specific type. Yes. Yes. And to her credit she stayed true to that type. Amen, mary. So you're going to date thirty minute once. So we thought we'd get an idea of what you're looking for. We're gonna play a game it's called who'd you rather? And we're going to show you two images of men and you'll say who'd you rather? And then we'll finally find the person you would rather do it with than anybody else. Okay. All right. Let's see the first two. Oh, that's a tough one. Oh, okay. Michael B Jordan's really attractive in creed. When he's all sweaty and stuff right that front. That's rough and. Yeah. Zaka high school musical like mine. Yeah. Yeah. He also plays Ted Bundy, which is creepy. He's he's really good in that too. By the way, and Michael Jordan is also good looking not sweaty. All right. Zach front or Bradley Cooper. No question. Bradley, brad. Okay. Bradley and it stars born Bradley Cooper because I don't know. There's I have a problem. I think I like people that look like they haven't bathed but smell like they have. Yeah. That's what I liked. It seems to be a thing because you like to Michael Jordan sweaty. And you want him to look like he hasn't bathed. All right. So you get out the alcohol and right? Okay. Good. So Luke, Bryan shoot. Okay. Well, I'll country music, and he can shake it for me any day. All right. All right, Bradley. Oh, we're still with Bradley. Okay. Bradley or Ryan Gosling. Oh my gosh. Now, the audience has delimitation. That's him in the notebook when he hasn't slept and have it hasn't bay. Oh, you know, you remember that scene? Okay. But still, Bradley, okay. Let's see who else. Chris pine is is but he's looks like he's just freshly bathed. Yeah. He does. I mean, the five o'clock shadows cool. But yeah, he does look kind of clean, and it's not playing. Okay. So let's get rid of the clean. Idris. Oh, yeah. You know, he's kind of wise for me. But he's very good looking and has a nice body. Yes wrong. Yeah. He he's probably clean too. Yeah. Oh, he's very clean. Yeah. Spicy clean. Okay. Jackson Cooper, to wise and to clean, okay. Oh, no. Oh, everybody. Oh, hi to who. Are we going to do it? We're all in so much. He can move. And he can't do you? Would you rather? Yeah. Yeah. That. Yeah. He can move. Still the derby one.

This Morning with Gordon Deal
New Ted Bundy victim identified 30 years after killer executed
"Thirty years after infamous serial killer, Ted Bundy sat in Florida's electric chair. Another one of his victims finally identified sergeant Shane Alexander of the bountiful Utah. Police department says DNA testing on a human kneecap they received three and a half years ago proved to belong to Debra Kent. The seventeen year old was last seen in nineteen seventy four when she left a school play to pick up her brother at a skating rink and never return thirty-six hours before he was executed in nineteen Eighty-nine Ted Bundy confessed to killing Kent and other young women and told police where he left kens

Jason and Alexis
Netflix picks up Zac Efron’s Ted Bundy drama Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile
"Net. Flicks is kicking off two thousand nineteen with the one two punch for to crime obsessive just weeks ago, the streaming service debuted its docu series conversations with a killer, the ten Ted Bundy tapes, which I believe we've all watched right? I have not watched it yet. Okay. Watch. Young. It's me out a little bit in the way that that happened. Himself in the third person. What else lex sorry? What were you gonna say? Lex. I wanna watch. Colin does not want to watch it. So I'm going to have to. Watch it by myself. Yeah. Well, you'll be hooked right away. I starts one hundred and fifty hour. Well, it isn't a full, but he recorded one hundred and fifty hours of tape with Ted Bundy back in the day wrote a book, and this is just shrieked down. It's fascinating love it. Okay. They also have purchased that movie extremely wicked shockingly evil and vile. That is with Zach Ephron. That's his Ted Bundy movie that just premiered at Sundance the race to get the projects out. Yes. Nine million they paid for it. Wow. Now, I want to also mention that. It's the same director Joe Berlinger directed conversations with a killer. The Ted Bundy tapes on net flicks there and also this other one was Ephron. Oh, so I mean, this guy's an expert in it. So the baby so interested in seeing this. They're also releasing it in theaters that it'll be a contender for awards.

Colleen and Bradley
Zac Efron's Platinum Blonde Hair Brings the Dye Job Mainstream
"That. Yeah. Zach Ephron showed up at the Sundance film festival with a new look. He has platinum blonde hair. Now, if this better be for roll, well it was before. And now it's back, but this time, it's more platinum e yes, Zach Ephron is at Sundance for the premiere of his Ted Bundy movie, extremely wicked shockingly evil, and vile Ephron has left his facial hair. Brunette allowing for a nice contrast on his melon. And when asked if his new book is for a role Zach Ephron said just for life, bro. I noticed for life. I wish she wouldn't have maybe said it like that. That's. Luckily, you don't need to be that like eloquent to be hot or like when you're hot right for you know, what I'm saying. Are you? Are you hoping the same is true? Dumbed down.

Monocle 24: The Monocle Daily
The Scene at Sundance Film Festival 2019
"One of Utah's most famous events the Sundance film festival kicked off yesterday. James Nelson rights runs broadcast based in Salt Lake City joins me now to tell us more of this year's edition of this event, one of the largest and most famous independent film festivals in the world. Welcome to the program. So James, could you I still about the selection of films in offer this year will thank you Marcus great to be with you across the ocean. There I'll tell you what fourteen thousand two hundred and fifty nine films were submitted. That's an all time record. And it shows you how much Sundance is growing over the many years decades related it's been in existence, but the number of films that finally make it to the screen for the people to come and see and for the Hollywood folks to take a. A close look at is only one hundred sixteen. So the odds are not good that you'll make it into Sundance. But Marcus if you do oh my goodness. Sundance is a heck of a trampoline or springboard to get out there in the world and make some noise exactly what I'm wondering. I'm wondering what the films that are making noise this year. What's going to be the biggest to discussion topics? What feels like going to be creating most of us. Well, you know, one that has ties to Utah believe it or not is a story about a serial killer Ted Bundy from decades ago that film, you know, has got a lot of people talking. And by the way, a little side note on the movie, it's called extremely wicked shockingly evil and vile. That's the story about Ted Bundy a side note is one of the Metallica performers is got a cameo appearance. He plays a Utah highway patrolman, but that story has got a lot of early hype and buzz because it was such a horrific event. And yet that story still haunts Utah, Colorado and Florida Florida being where Ted Bundy was finally executed in the electric chair electric chair some years ago, Marcus this you'll feel them recommendations, by the way. I'll tell you. What sonia? The white swan would be a recommendation that I would make this. This is a true life story directed by an so it sqi it chronicles Sonja Henie one of the world's greatest athletes. She won three gold medals ten world championships. And she was by the way, the inventor of figure skating as we know the beautiful sport today. She goes to Hollywood, this is sort of the film that script becomes very rich. She becomes even more famous. But then like a skater slipping on ice, she falls in that movie has a cold is the ending. However, it might be Sonia's. The white swan it might be her best performance. So that's a mystery another one I wanna tell you about. Very the last tree is a film about a British boy of Nigerian heritage raised in Lincolnshire. I don't know if I pronounced that correctly markets, particularly thank you. He's got a lovely life. In a pretty darn good neighborhood with foster parents things are going along quite well. But then the real mom shows up, and she grabs it takes her home to a flat much different neighborhood much different field for this youngster in with all of those big differences. The boys lost he struggles and distances himself from both mothers, just so he can go out into the world and try and find

Gary and Shannon
Even Just Hearing About Conversations With a Killer: The Ted Bundy Tapes Is Terrifying
"Was a very good looking smooth talking clean cut double life living serial killer that operated in the seventies up in the Seattle area. Notorious and his story has a lot of twists and turns that I think end him up in Florida's that we ended up I believe so. Yeah, I it wasn't just murder by the way rape kidnapping burglary. Dismemberment decapitation necrophilia checked all those boxes is that all. He was one of those guys who you would never ever ever assume was into this kind of stuff because he was so clean cut. So affable. And because this month marks the thirtieth anniversary of his execution. True crime filmmakers are releasing two different. Ted Bundy projects there's the conversations with a killer. The Ted Bundy tapes, that's on Netflix. They say not to watch that alone. Which makes me want to race home and watch it alone. It is a post to be chilling. The other one is extremely wicked shockingly evil and vials starring Zach Ephron as Ted Bundy, which I think is a great class a casting call. He killed thirty women. He confessed any way to the murders of thirty. He might have killed more. The Zach Ephron picture is framed by a book that was written by his longtime girlfriend. There is a woman Elizabeth club. She went out with Ted Bundy during his reign of terror like ten years or the seventies. And she talks about how they first met. I met at a local bar and the university district of Seattle September nineteen sixty nine. And she was twenty four at the time. She was recently divorced, and she had left her hometown of Salt Lake City looking for a fresh start ordinary night. She heads choose Sandpiper tavern with some friends, she instantly notices this tall, sandy haired. Man, clear blue is that she said lit up when he smiled. He was seated by himself. Ted Bundy was he was twenty three at the time. And she says she was surprised at how approachable and easily amused. This handsome man was they danced they flirted. She said I knew when I first looked at him before we even had danced that he was a cut above the rest of the crowd. She was captivated by him. She took him home that night from the bar. Wow. He and she whatever and the next morning he wakes up and notices that she's got a hangover. So he decides to make her breakfast. She says she almost immediately started dreaming of a future with him. Their their romance blossoms through normal. Dating habits picnics homemade dinners movies meeting, friends, and all that. And probably most importantly. Group dates with her three year old daughter. She said that she was amazed. How quickly he assimilated to domestic life as a as a father figure and a protector to both that he would talk and eat and take care of little Tina when she wasn't around her. She was at work or whatever that he was a family man who watch up Saturday more. He would wake up early Saturday mornings to watch cartoons with our well while mom slept in and by the way, apparently in this film. This new Netflix documentary you see because he's in a lot of family pictures and whatnot. You kind of see what you're talking about that he had integrated himself into family life. Oh my goodness. And in and she she introduces him like you said to her family. She says that her her introduction to his family wasn't as warm that it was tinged by a lifelong resentment Ted felt for his mother because she kept the identity of his birth. Father a secret it was he was fourteen years old when Ted discovered that he was. Illegitimate. I guess that's what his cousin called him that the man who raised him along with us for other siblings was not as real father, and that really pissed them off. It's probably the root of all of it. Well, it was a route maybe or something, but he was a sadistic psychopath. You know with the. Who was about to go on a murder spree that is can rival any in history. She says that they were together for three years that turned into five years, and then it kind of started to unravel their relationship. Did she said it kind of became a mental roller coaster that there was a series of emotional jabs in counter-punches that he would go on dates with other women, which would send her into a total spiral before he would smooth things over and say all the right things, and she would counter strike by going out with men hoping that it would make him jealous and prove that he cared, and it just the cycle continued over and over and over. I guess the the whole charm thing that he had in the charisma thing is is not so uncharacteristic. If with a lot of these shows, you paths. That's what psychiatrists said when they were looking at this Ted Bundy case, anyway, go ahead. I then what happened Ted bundy's car? I didn't know this is now a tourist attraction at the national museum of crime and punishment in DC. She says the girlfriend says she first became suspicious of Ted Bundy because there were eye witness accounts with missing women that said the suspect was driving a metallic Volkswagen beetle. Yeah. That's what was going on women were starting to go missing. This is all going on while he's still dating her. He's killing women. And as you say more than just killing them. I gotta believe that to a degree since she's looking the other way with his cheating on her that there was a bit of a head in the sand syndrome going on in terms of Ted Bundy, and and not wanting to believe that he was. That he was the perpetrator even know things were lining up.

Courageously Go
Jan Nelson -- From Mad Men to #MeToo: Self-Defense and Personal Safety Then and Now
"Welcome to create Asli go where we will venture to places. We've been afraid to go women of the world. We are going to start a movement, a movement towards courage. Hello, everybody. I am. Debbie peach. Oh, your host of Craigslist go. And for many years, I was challenged with social anxiety and being shy and not keeping myself on the sidelines a lot. And so since my fiftieth birthday, I have decided that it all starts with courage and the more we choose courage and follow our hearts by choosing courage, the life of our dreams and a better world for all are truly possible. No matter our age or circumstances. We never need to feel stuck or alone. I'm really excited that all of your out there. I have a very accomplished guests that I'm excited about. Introducing you all to her name is Janet Nelson combining over forty years training. And teaching in the martial arts with her experience in the master social work program at Florida State University. Janet Nelson has developed a unique approach to personal safety awareness that stresses mind, body training, and psychosocial issues. A fourth degree black belt in kung new martial arts sense. They Nelson is an experienced instructor of women men youth, the aged, and the physically challenged. Janet began her martial arts training and Gainesville, Florida in nineteen seventy four training directly under founder Deng no, for over ten years originally from oak park, Illinois. Janet is a nineteen seventy seven graduate of the university of Florida. After beginning her social work career in nineteen seventy eight. She attained her MSW from Florida State University in nineteen Ninety-four credential in the academy of certified social workers by the national association of social workers and as a licensed clinical social worker in the. State of Florida. Her direct practice specialty is mental health services with adolescents, young adults and women as a social worker and psychotherapist. She spent twenty years with at risk, teen girls and young women, seven years at Tallahassee, community college mental health services and five years in private practice tweeting adolescents and adults of all ages. Additionally, Janet is a certified tension and trauma releasing exercises instructor a globally, taught self care body therapy that promotes our bodies ability to open up healing, open up the healing process and Ebeling us to release tension stress and held trauma since nineteen eighty. She has conducted self defense for women seminars and short courses in general, personal safety awareness training too many throughout the state of Florida as well. As national combining her to interest in the early nineties. She created every day, self defense trainings for human service professionals. More recently, she designed online personal safety courses available for c. to license social workers in Kansas and nationally NSA w national everyday. Self defense for social workers is approved by the national association of social workers for continuing education credit in forty six states in two thousand fourteen. She was deemed an expert witness for the federal government agency of occupational safety and health administration in clinical social work, personal safety awareness, workplace violence prevention programs and worker safety skills training. Currently, Janet devotes time to designing and managing online courses and to teach personal safety and wellness instruction. To social health and human service workers across the nation. Janet, Nelson, welcome to courageously. Go. Thank you so much for having me Debbie. It's nice of you to have me. It's great to have you and I don't even know where to begin with you because you you are, you are so accomplished and I've had a recent conversation with you. I know you have a lot going on. So why don't you start off? Why don't we start off with what are you currently most excited about these days? What's going on. Well, you know, when he read when you read my resume,