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Luigi Mangione has become a cultural phenomenon, striking a chord with Americans fed up with the healthcare system. After murdering a UnitedHealthcare CEO, his interaction with a McDonald's employee—who called police hoping for a reward but dialed the wrong number—has sparked controversy. Mangione fans are now leaving one-star reviews at the Altoona McDonald's and sending threatening messages to the cashier, raising serious questions about vigilante justice and cult-like fandom.
Meanwhile, Tesla's humanoid robots made their White House debut, complete with Richard Nixon-style gestures. This unsettling development comes as Bill Gates predicts most humans will be "unnecessary" within a decade thanks to AI advancements. The hosts explore the contradiction of fearing these technologies while simultaneously inviting surveillance into our homes through countless smart devices. As one host points out, "They can't get in unless we let them in"—but we're already doing exactly that.
The conversation shifts to the Gilgo Beach serial killer case, where Rex Heuermann murdered women for nearly 20 years while corrupt officials derailed investigations. A Netflix documentary reveals how Suffolk County's police commissioner and district attorney—both now convicted felons—were more concerned with covering up a stolen "dildo and porn stash" scandal than solving murders. This institutional failure allowed a predator to operate in plain sight, with neighbors later admitting they always found him creepy.
The podcast wraps with two contrasting tales: a father with facial tattoos who rescued his daughter after 25 days in captivity when authorities wouldn't help, only to face further trauma at the hospital; and a Chinese couple's flirtatious game that ended in the emergency room when the husband's jaw locked with his wife's hand in his mouth.
Ready for more unfiltered takes on our increasingly bizarre world? Subscribe to OK Bud and join hosts Ben Kissel, Jerii Aquino, and Kyle Ploof as they navigate the strange reality we're all living in.
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Luigi Mangione has become a cultural phenomenon, striking a chord with Americans fed up with the healthcare system. After murdering a UnitedHealthcare CEO, his interaction with a McDonald's employee—who called police hoping for a reward but dialed the wrong number—has sparked controversy. Mangione fans are now leaving one-star reviews at the Altoona McDonald's and sending threatening messages to the cashier, raising serious questions about vigilante justice and cult-like fandom.
Meanwhile, Tesla's humanoid robots made their White House debut, complete with Richard Nixon-style gestures. This unsettling development comes as Bill Gates predicts most humans will be "unnecessary" within a decade thanks to AI advancements. The hosts explore the contradiction of fearing these technologies while simultaneously inviting surveillance into our homes through countless smart devices. As one host points out, "They can't get in unless we let them in"—but we're already doing exactly that.
The conversation shifts to the Gilgo Beach serial killer case, where Rex Heuermann murdered women for nearly 20 years while corrupt officials derailed investigations. A Netflix documentary reveals how Suffolk County's police commissioner and district attorney—both now convicted felons—were more concerned with covering up a stolen "dildo and porn stash" scandal than solving murders. This institutional failure allowed a predator to operate in plain sight, with neighbors later admitting they always found him creepy.
The podcast wraps with two contrasting tales: a father with facial tattoos who rescued his daughter after 25 days in captivity when authorities wouldn't help, only to face further trauma at the hospital; and a Chinese couple's flirtatious game that ended in the emergency room when the husband's jaw locked with his wife's hand in his mouth.
Ready for more unfiltered takes on our increasingly bizarre world? Subscribe to OK Bud and join hosts Ben Kissel, Jerii Aquino, and Kyle Ploof as they navigate the strange reality we're all living in.
Support the show
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