Two 12-Year-Olds Tried to Murder Their Best Friend for Slenderman

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Summary

➡ The text discusses the 2016 film “Beware of The Slenderman” which explores the urban legend of Slender Man, a character created on the internet. The film focuses on a real-life incident where two young girls attempted to sacrifice their friend to Slender Man, believing it would prove their loyalty and protect them. The text also discusses the influence of internet culture and mental health conditions on the girls’ actions. The story highlights the dangers of internet myths and the potential for them to influence impressionable minds.
➡ Two young girls, Morgan and Anissa, believed in the urban legend of Slender Man and thought they could live in his mansion if they made a sacrifice. They attacked their friend Peyton, who they thought they had killed, but she miraculously survived. The incident highlights the influence of social media and the internet on children, and the importance of parental awareness and control over what their children are exposed to online. The girls’ actions have now become part of the Slender Man legend, showing how urban legends can evolve over time.
➡ The text discusses a movie where a character named Morgan is revealed to have inherited schizophrenia from her father, which was kept a secret from her. The text criticizes the movie for sensationalizing the internet and urban legends like Slender Man, suggesting they influenced Morgan’s actions, rather than focusing on her undiagnosed mental illness. The text also mentions how the movie has influenced real-life events and inspired other internet characters. Lastly, the text appreciates the documentary-style of the movie, showing real-time reactions of the parents and the interrogation of the young characters.
➡ The text discusses a documentary about two girls who bonded over a shared interest in an internet phenomenon, Slender Man, which led to tragic consequences. The author emphasizes the importance of parental supervision and mental health awareness, as the internet can be a harmful place for unsupervised children with mental health issues. The text also mentions an upcoming documentary about urban legends and promotes a comic about a conspiracy theory involving Stanley Kubrick and the moon landings. The author concludes with lyrics from a song, possibly related to the discussed topics.

Transcript

Was it a crime to take your friend in the woods and hit her in the head? Probably the stabbing part. Under the docks. Yeah, under the docks. Buried deeper. We breaking the locks. They collect the dots. Under the docks. Under the docks. Yeah. Under the docks. Welcome back to the under the Dock spooktacular special with Paranoid American and Sean Chris. I should have put the flashlight. I forgot. Yeah. Next one. The film is Beware of The Slenderman, a 2016 film directed by Irene Taylor Brodsky and narrated and directed by her as well. This film explores the urban legend of Slender man, which.

So people in our age bracket may or may not know about this. It’s not like a old, old school urban legend. This is a more modern one that kind of was a prankish thing, like, you know, just someone doodling and making some fun stuff up on the Internet, and then it turned into a reality of. For some kids. And this film explores an actual murder that took place in Wisconsin with two little girls sacrificed or attempted to sacrifice their friend to Slender Man. Yeah, they weren’t even good at it. And this one is kind of interesting because it’s a urban legend that we can trace the origins of pretty easily.

Like the. You don’t even have to put anything together. You can just go on Google, who invented Slender Man. You can see the exact date and the name of the person that came up with it and how they came up with it. It started as a Photoshop competition on the Something Awful forums. This one’s Wild Man. This is. And I. And I definitely heard about Slender man. And I don’t know if I knew about all the killings and, like, this particular killing. So this was kind of a new topic to me. Although Slender Man, I remember being on my radar.

I was probably in my mid-20s, maybe, like, going in the early 30s, when Slender man became a thing that people were actually talking about. And this happened. This was one of those first, like, those damn kids moments of my life, right? I realized there was such a generational gap. I was like, what idiots are believing in this? But they make some good. They make some good correlations in the documentary that makes me double think that a little bit I was the same way. Like, I. I think I mentioned on the last batch of shows that I was like, when we introduced this one, my daughter had told me about Slender man, and he was scared.

I’m like, who the hell is Slender? First of all, he’s not gonna do anything. Sounds like a skinny guy that’s not gonna do anything. I’ll break him in Half and then kind of exploring it. It was just kind of comical, like you said. You describe it the best. It was the. My first Old man moment of like, Ah, you little whipper snappers. Back in my day, we had a real urban legends. Were you curious, is there anything about Slender man that. That creeps you out or scares you in any way? No, like, I just. I. It kind of sounds comical to me.

Like, I mean, exploring like what these girls were doing. Like, yeah, that’s a little bit more the scary side of like the believability of children and people. But like, as far as like the idea of Slender Man, I’m like, what? Like, I don’t know. I guess I was lost on it. I may have been too old. I mean, you. I think we can just wrap the episode up now. That’s the ultimate conclusion is the scariest part of this entire documentary has got nothing to do with Slender man and everything to do with what 12 year old girls are capable of doing.

If all they have is an iPad to give them like a. An insight into the rest of the world. And Slender man, it could have been one of a million different things. Slender man just happened to be the thing that they latched onto and they created this weird feedback loop where their delusions became their reality and now they’re acting out in the real world based on these weird Internet rules about Slender Man. He became an like a real thing to both of them. To both of them and even like their friend, where they actually felt like they.

We’re in some secret society. And the. The funny thing is, is this film and a couple ones that we would discuss in this batch of our Halloween spooktacular. They’re more conspiracy than I thought they would be. Like, you know what I mean? I guess maybe I don’t know if it’s my our minds, but I’m like, whoa, that’s crazy. Like if you connect this like, it’s like everything is a conspiracy. Plotting the course. So as we spoke, there was two girls, in this case, Asina and Morgan, who became obsessed with Slender man to the point of this.

They believed by killing their friend Peyton, they would prove their loyalty to Slender man and that they would protect them and their family and the wrath of it. So on May 31, 2014, the girls lured Peyton to the woods, the wooded area, and presented a playing a game. Once they were there, they brutally stabbed her multiple times with a knife, inflicting serious wounds. Peyton managed to escape and was found by a passing cycler who called for help. So they basically took her to the wooden area to sacrifice her to Slender man for powers and protection from Slender man and to be in his inner circle.

Sound familiar? I was just talking to off air. It sounds kind of familiar to the weekend concert I just went to. No different. How you get your power? Well, you don’t want to have power. Yeah. And a lot of the claims they focus in this film. One of them is the influence of the Internet culture, which I think is the real meat and potatoes of this documentary. Because if we’re exploring now this new era, right, it’s not like Candyman or, or Bloody Mary as when we were growing up. Like, hey, if you go into a mirror, turn off the lights.

I don’t know if you’re familiar with that. If it’s. Maybe it’s regional, but those urban legends kind of like fed off of word of mouth. And now word of mouth. It comes even faster with the Internet age mental health conditions. They explore the mental health societies of kids. 12 year olds shouldn’t be so fascinated with this character. And I think like, as you talked earlier about like Slender man, which was created by Eric Dunson, hopefully I’m saying his name right, in an Internet form. It was not meant to be some like horror show film of like, hey, I’m creating this character.

It’s just winning like a contest. And I. It turned into. And how the Internet does it, right? Just like Reddit. If you put something on a Reddit form, it just spreads like wildfire. Yeah, I remember the something awful forms in the early to the early to mid 2000s and there was a huge community there that just did Photoshop. There was some good ones about like babysitters clubs, books that didn’t get released. And people would come up with like wild versions of babysitters clubs books or they would do screenshots from movies. They were kind of some of the original memes where memes started to come from.

And anyone that had Photoshop skills could make these little things and get. Before people really were calling them memes. Aside from like Richard Dawkins sort of, you know, aficionados who does make an appearance in this movie. But, but I think that the Internet culture part. I also wanted to just follow up on the story itself on how these girls lured their friend is. It’s actually kind of creepy. So the g. The. The basic beats in this are that the girls all had a sleepover at the. The Stabbers house. It was Morgan and Anissa and Peyton. Morgan and Anissa are the two girls that plan all this.

Peyton is essentially their victim. They’re all friends. They’ve been friends. I think Morgan and Anissa met each other and knew each other for about a year. They’re in sixth grade, I believe. And the thing that they bonded over was Slender Man. If it hadn’t been for Slender man, these two girls might not have come together. And Peyton, I think, was just kind of creeped out by the whole thing. She. There was even a part in this documentary where they’re mentioning that Pton wanted to distance herself from this little friend. Click. Because she was getting the ick from the whole Slender man obsession stuff.

So they have a sleepover at Morgan’s house, I believe. And then the next morning they’re like, oh, we’re going to go to the park. And the mom’s just like, sees three girls. They just had a sleepover. They’re all fine. Yeah, go to the park, have fun. When they go to the park, they all go into the bathroom and then the two girls decide they’re going to knock out Peyton and then kill her. That they’re not just going to like just straight up do a murder. So they. They try and hit her head against the wall. And they can’t knock her out because they’re not strong enough to actually knock her into unconsciousness.

So they. One of them hits Peyton’s head against the wall a few times and Payton just runs out. And I think Anissa runs out with Payton and they kind of hide in the woods and. And acting like, oh, mor, Morgan went crazy or something. And then Morgan finds them and then finally Anissa goes and tells, gives her the knife and says, morgan, do it. Like go kill Peyton. Payton’s like, what? What the hell’s going on? And then Anissa turns around because she can’t bear to see the actual murder take place. She kind of commands Morgan to do it again.

We’re talking about a 12 year old and a 13 year old girl in sixth grade. Then she stabs her like nine times. And as far as they are concerned, Peyton’s dead. They just killed Peyton. They made their sacrifice to Slender man and the reason they did this is so they can live in his mansion or something. I’m sure we’re getting into it, but that it’s not like Peyton escaped while they were trying to kill her. They just straight up thought that they killed her. And then eventually someone found Peyton and then she miraculously survived. Miraculously. And then close to death, it was found by a cyclist just like passing by and she like kind of like was able to stumble around and kind of get to the main road.

And that’s how she was found. The interesting part of this film too is like, I thought that it opens your mind more to like the. More than just the urban legend. Like that’s like the, you know, get you in there, the tagline of the Slenderman. But really like this influence of not just social media, but parents awareness of social media and how they can control it. Like they’re just giving kids iPads and. And maybe that’s not the greatest thing to do, right? To a bunch of 12 year olds or 10 year olds that are just randomly.

Hey, I’m. You’re bugging me. We had the tv, right? But you were limited with the tv. Like you only had what was programmed and now you’re just giving them free range of like, yeah, look what up, whatever you want, man. And then these urban legends really get legs. So that’s one of my parts of this movie that I think they really analyze very well. And then like they just. The myth making process in general, like the folklore of urban legends, which in, in a future episode we will kind of delve a little bit more into it.

But how urban legends are really like conspiracies. Like it really reminded me like how an urban legend kind of starts one way because it’s a real thing that happened. But over time it stretched into this fantasy of like, oh, this is that you didn’t know if you don’t touch the this three times or whatever. Right. They add their little lure to it, almost telephone game ish, where you’re just like, oh, it’s my turn. And they keep extending it. This one’s actually a really interesting example that too because at the very end of this documentary they show how Morgan and Anissa, them like the actual girls themselves, are now being incorporated into future versions of this Slender man urban legend, where now people retelling the story of Slender man online and doing these 3D reenactments or doing fan art and uploading it wherever the kids are uploading fan art to now, if it’s not deviantart and stuff, that now they’ll draw Slender man and then they’ll draw Morgan and Anissa in the background as if they really did enter into Slender Man’s mansion and that they.

They made this sacrifice to him, so now they get to be his right hand and left hand like henchmen. So that’s. It’s wild to see this because we’re witnessing in real time like from before it started to Right now how this urban legend is starting to get into a feedback loop. And I don’t know if that means it strengthens over time or if it’s just like an interesting little quirk, but it’s not something that you get to see and know what you’re seeing at the exact same time. Hidden treasures. I would say my hidden treasure on this is actually the exploring of, as I was speaking of, like the real society’s function of this technology.

Right. Because it’s still new technology. Like having a phone in all of our pockets with the Internet, access to anything we want, tablets, whatever, is only, what, 20ish years old. You know what I mean? It’s not super old. And I think that a lot of people been trying to manage life with it. And this is an extreme example, right? Like a very, very extreme example of what could go wrong. Like, not every kid that’s going to have an iPad is going to find out about some urban legend and be like, hey, we’re going to go have to sacrifice my friend in the woods.

But it tells you the road that kids could go down. So I really liked how they were highlighting the importance of what social media is and parents, because a lot of times, and I mean, I’m going to my little soapbox for a second. A lot of people are. It’s like, we need government. Government to help us. And it’s like. Or parents could pay attention. Right? Like you can see what the hell your kids watching. Yeah. What does the government do in this particular example that would have fixed the issue. And even as you’re talking to the parents, they.

One of the. Actually one of the sets of parents makes it seem like this never would have been on the radar. That this was the dad of Anissa, I believe, and that whenever Anissa had friends over, all the doors in the house were open. And he makes this comment about, unless you’re expecting me to go and just sit in my daughter’s room and watch every single second that she’s doing something, then you get like mixed messages from the different parents over the course of the documentary. And Morgan’s mom was a little bit more telling. And this one kind of stood out to me because I do the occult Disney podcast.

So whenever someone starts using Disney references and very serious topics. But Morgan’s mom mentions that, oh, well, when we showed her Bambi for the first time, we were concerned that she was gonna feel a certain type of way. She was going to be flooded with emotion. And they were sort of ready and prepared, like, okay, honey, here’s what death is and like the whole thing. But that when they played Bambi and Bambi’s mom dies, Morgan, instead of being sad, is like, yeah, Bambi, get out of there. Save yourself. Screw. Screw that old lady mom. She doesn’t know what’s going on.

And imagine the mom listening to your daughter like, yeah, kill the mom. Save yourself. So this shocked her, but also this was unintentional in the documentary. But the first thing I thought was like, damn. And Disney is really doing well if the baseline for is my child a psychopath or not relates to how they react in a Disney movie. And, and I don’t even think I’m saying that critically. Like that is a real thing. You can imagine that for every parent out there when they show their kid Bambi or one of the other Disney movies that’s got like a very scary scene, Pinocchio or something, that there’s a parent that knows their kids watching this for the first time.

They’re like, all right, let’s see how they react. Like, like Disney has become a de facto unofficial sort of, you know, psychopath test for your children. And then they cut to Anissa’s dad and he’s wearing a Superman shirt and it’s just like, man. The two parents, their frame of reference was all about, what does Disney tell me? What are comic books tell me. And then they’re surprised that their kids are believing in these made up stories that were like convincingly photoshopped. Again, like being overly critical from like the armchair. But yeah, the, the two girls were being raised by pop culture as a proxy through their parents and the Internet.

And the, and both of their parents were definitely generationally separated enough from the Internet that they probably had no idea what the hell something awful forums were or what like Photoshop battles were and stuff. So of course it wasn’t going to be on their radar. But yeah, I thought, I thought it would. That was interesting that this Disney thing became a sort of milestone. Like, this is. And I wonder for anyone watching this that has kids like, do you do. Have you ever done this? You played your kid a Disney movie just to see how they react.

Because you’ve got a certain expectation. And if your kid cheers when Bambi’s mom dies, what do you do? Do you put him on a list? Do you like, contact the authorities? Like, what’s, what’s the tell here? Because the way the mom described it was like, okay, yeah, no, we knew something was off with Morgan. And then you don’t find out until the Very end of the movie that. Oh, by the way, Morgan’s dad has been a lifelong schizophrenic. He’s seeing spirits and holograms right now that are telling him to kill people. But he. He knows how to work through this.

And, man, maybe we should have mentioned this to our daughter at some point. Like, hey, by the way, schizophrenia runs in your family. That, to me, that was such a wild, like, very important bit that didn’t come up very often. Yeah. Until the end where they’re like, oh, yeah. They’re like, she. We don’t really know. I don’t know if it’s the Internet. I don’t know if it’s, bam. She didn’t cry when Bambi. And then you’re like, oh, the dad was a schizo for his whole life. Probably genetics, right? Yeah. She’s got undiagnosed schizophrenia that they just have been afraid to tell her.

Maybe that’s it. No, no, no. It’s got to be one of those for. It’s got to be. It’s got to be the Internet. It’s got to be the iPad. And for me, some of the overboard moments would be like, the sensationalizing the Slender man, like, as if, like this urban legend, like, somebody crafted this, like, devious plan to, like, get children, like, to follow it. And I thought that was a little overboard because we know how the Internet works and things are just thrown out there. And then someone continues off of it. Original piece becomes now part of the Internet.

Internet domain. And once it’s in that free domain Cate category, people are gonna do all kinds of things to it. So that was kind of my overboard moments where they were trying to, like, sensationalize it. Yeah. For me, the overboard moment is kind of similar, the sensationalizing bits. And there was a very distinct part where I just had to take a stop and I just wrote a note like, what the hell is going on? Where it was before you find out that Morgan is a schizophrenic, essentially undiagnosed schizophrenic. Would you find out in the last five minutes of the documentary? And then it ends, and you’re like, wait a minute.

But earlier on, when they’re speculating, it’s like, what would drive these two 12 year olds to stab their best friend that otherwise had no indications. They would never. Problems. They never had fights with each other. It was just straight up, we need to kill her, otherwise Slender Man’s gonna kill us. And then they show a clip of Doomsday preppers TV show, and they show a clip of, like, animals being her. And then they show someone, like, torturing, like, a mouse in a. In a tub or something. Like, it’s. And they never outright say, and this was.

This is what Anissa was watching on her iPad. They just kind of leave this question open about, well, what could these kids be getting into that would cause this. Here’s a whole bunch of clips that we’re not going to actually say have anything to do with what we were just talking about, but they use that. That kind of, like creative editing to add a narrative that I guess the editors or the documentary creators that in their mind, it was like, oh, it’s these horrible Internet video clips and it’s this horrible iPad and online system, when in reality, again, it was undiagnosed schizophrenia from a direct, you know, blood rel at the daughter of a man who, as they’re asking about this, he’s like, oh, yeah, no, I’m seeing holograms right in front of me right now.

And I hear things. I hear demons telling me to kill. But I. I know that they’re not real, but, man, they feel really real. Like, it’s. It’s just this really wild. And to me, that’s the biggest overboard moment. Like, why not start with that? If this were my documentary, I would have opened on the dad talking about demons telling him to kill and. And then bit like, and here’s what happens when you don’t disclose this to your family. That may have been the reason they didn’t, because it may have been a shorter film, but it would be more impactful.

Like, hey, pretty much she’s a schizophrenic and that’s why she killed him. An annoying bit that it’s so predictable where they’ve got all these psychologists or child psychologists that are like, well, maybe we’re all Slender man, you know, like, always throwing that completely unproductive. Oh, maybe Slender man represents the. A dark shadow self and it just needs to find some kind of connection and that. Like, come on, bro, you’re just weaving at this point. You got to kill your Slenderman off, right? If you see a Slender man on the road, you must kill him. Ripple in waves.

This actually does have some impact socially. Like, right. Like, there’s other characters that have come from now, not. Not necessarily this film. I won’t say, like, it’s all this film, but I think it. This has, like, kind of opened the case for all these other Internet sensations to new urban legends per se. But Slender man itself inspired quite a bit of things. Like, it inspired, like, this other character that I don’t know if you heard. I. So as my daughter grew up, then my niece when she was younger, who. They’re like, I think eight, nine years apart, whatever it may be.

Then she was like, hey, there’s this Siren Head guy you got to watch out for. I’m like, what? This is new to me. I wonder too. Is this a situation where if someone doesn’t tell you about Slender man, then he’ll never hurt you, but the second they tell you about him, now you have to know about it, otherwise it could be a danger. Just stop telling people about Slender man, and we’ll just save everyone a lot of trouble. Right. Don’t tell me about Siren Head, because now he’s real to me. Yeah. And basically it’s the same thing, like, where it’s this Internet video of a giant with, like, a head for, like, an old siren, and he just, like, chase.

And I’m like, well, what’s he gonna do? What? Siren me to death. But also, then, the Slender man also was an inspiration to a character in Minecraft, the. The Enderman or whatever that was inspired by Slender Man. He’s just like a dark, shadowy figure that kind of. Just one thing that I do think, Slenderman, just to the. Not tip of the cap to all the cryptid guys out there, the cryptologists. Right. It kind of reminds me of Rakeman. Right. Like, when I do hear of Slender Man, I kind of get the. Like, was the inspiration for Slender man from Rakeman, but that’s a whole nother topic for another day.

Yeah. Honestly, I think that’s interesting because the Slender man is now in canon. Like, he’s an official cryptid slash urban legend thing. Because a murder has. I mean, there’s plenty of urban legends that just kind of stayed urban legends that never resulted in real life murders, just kind of rumors of murders. This one’s got a real one, and I think this one does have the. The documentary itself does have an impact. It’s got some ripples and waves. Because one of the things that kind of blew my mind a little bit watching it. This is not a documentary where everything had already happened.

The girls had been sent to, you know, prison. Spoiler alert. And now they were going back and, like, okay, what happened? They’re actually showing, you know, like, two weeks after stabbing, and they’re with the mom in the car driving around to the courthouse and stuff. So you’re more or less seeing in real time these Parents like, what the, what the hell happened? And you’re seeing the actual interrogation footage of these 12 year olds being asked by police, you know, why did you murder your friend? And then some of the weird 12 year old manipulative talk where it’s like, oh, well, I don’t know, Anissa told me to do this or whatever.

And then Anissa’s like, oh, I didn’t even touch the knife. I couldn’t even look at it. Morgan did all the stabbing. Like they’re kind of already put in a little bit of thought into what their alibis are and how they want to look under all this. So I’ve. I found a lot of that sort of interesting to see and those reactions and this coverage by this documentary is essentially what other articles now reference. Like, like if you go and read another modern day article and it’s talking about how the parents react and all this, they’re talking about the footage that came from this documentary.

So that’s kind of an interesting part. When you see a documentary that becomes part of the news story itself as it’s unwinding. I always find that a little bit more interesting than ones where it all happened like two years ago. When they’re going back and doing reconnaissance. It’s that time, my friend. What do you got on this, a sink or a swim? I’ll call this one a swim, man, because this one gets. It gets kind of the thumbs up swim. Because it’s a real case and I didn’t know about it, so maybe I’m biased towards learning about things I didn’t know about.

But also it’s. It’s way more about just some stupid Internet thing. I think they actually do a good job of being like, this is just some stupid Internet stuff. Here’s the real problem. What the hell are these kids doing in isolation that feel neglected? And one of the girls would cry at school. They would interview a teacher. He’s like, oh yeah, she would just come here during recess and cry because she didn’t have any friends. So the second that these two girls meet each other and it’s through this Slender man thing, I mean, I don’t know how that could have been on anyone’s radar, but it was a problem.

Like, I guarantee you the, the second that these two weird girls connected over this really weird thing, there was never like a good outcome that was going to come from any of this. There was always going to be some sort of a tragedy. And the fact that we get to see it unfold in real time or at least the aftermath is something you don’t see every day in a documentary. I give it a swim as well. I had saw this prior to before and watched it again. I liked it because I think it’s a classic new version of, like, the Real True Crime.

And, you know, those kind of documentaries, they do it justice. And I like the, like. I think it depends on what lens you’re looking through it. And for me, I just was really honed in on all the, like, because it’s something that, you know. You know, I beat the drum on constantly of where I’m like, yeah, there’s a lot of, like, parents that have either underlying mental health issues. This one a major one. But, like, they have these issues, and then they’re just like, yeah, kid, just get out of here and go be by yourself. And like, these kids are in their own worlds, and I see it all the time, and even it’s getting worse and worse.

So I think this was like, one of the first really insight of, like, hey, there’s this problem, like, not only with mental health issues, but the mental health issues are increasing because kids are left unsupervised to kind of just roam the Internet free. And the Internet kind of can be a disgusting place at times, and you can find anything you want. So I liked it. I liked how they put it all together. Definitely a swim for me on the horizon. You know, we got next gonna continue with this spooktacular under the docks extravaganza, if you will.

We’re gonna go back to some more urban legends, and it’s called the Killer legends. And this 2014 film is going to really break down a little bit more of this urban legend conspiracy, if you will, that we’re kind of jumping down for this holiday or Halloween holiday season. Yeah, I think the next one’s gonna be a perfect extension of this one because we start out and it’s focused on one specific urban legend. And the next documentary we’re gonna watch is supposed to be about a bunch of variety of urban legends and how those form. So, yeah, this is.

This will be an interesting one because I haven’t seen it, and I’m hoping to learn about new monsters that I didn’t even know were hiding under my bed that might come out and kill me. Don’t forget to, like, scrap, subscribe and share any under the docks paranoidamerican.com kill them birds.com we’re signing out Peace dots under the do under the door. Ready for a cosmic conspiracy about Stanley Kubrick moon landings and the CIA. Go visit nasacomic.com NASA comic.com CIA Stanley Kubrick put us on this while we’re singing this song out nesting nasacomic.com go visit nasacomic.com go visit NASA comic.com yeah go visit NASA comic.com NASA comic.com CIA’s biggest CR Stanley Cool put us on.

That’s why we’re singing this song about NASA comic.com go visit NASA.com go visit NASA comic.com yeah go visit NASA comic.com never a straight answer is a 40 page comic about Stanley Kubrick directing the Apollo space missions? Yeah go visit NASA comic.com this is the perfect read for comic Kubrick or conspiracy fans of all ages. For more details visit nasacomic.com I scribble my life away driven the right to page Will it enlight your brain give you the flight my plane paper the highs ablaze somewhat of an amazing feel when it’s real to real you will engage it your favorite of course the lord of an arrangement I gave you the proper results to hit the pavement if they get emotional hey maybe your language a game how they playing it well without Lakers evade them whatever the cost they are to shapeshift snap get decapitated met is the apex execution of flame you out Nuclear bomb distributed at war rather gruesome for eyes to see Max them out that I light my trees blow it off in the face you’re despising me for what though calculated they’d rather cut throat paranoid American must be all the blood smoke for real Lord give me your day your way vacate they wait around to hate whatever they say matters not in the least bit we get heavy rotate when the beat hits a thing cuz you’re welcome for real you’re welcome they ain’t never had a deal you’re welcome man they lacking appeal you’re welcome yet they doing it still you’re welcome.
[tr:tra].


  • Paranoid American

    Paranoid American is the ingenious mind behind the Gematria Calculator on TruthMafia.com. He is revered as one of the most trusted capos, possessing extensive knowledge in ancient religions, particularly the Phoenicians, as well as a profound understanding of occult magic. His prowess as a graphic designer is unparalleled, showcasing breathtaking creations through the power of AI. A warrior of truth, he has founded paranoidAmerican.com and OccultDecode.com, establishing himself as a true force to be reckoned with.

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