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Normies Question Baldwin Hoax Dots-MIRROR
I haven’t dived into this Baldwin hoax because I just don’t have the time. I never thought for a second that event was real just based on what I’ve seen on how they handle hollywood shooting scenes and props. When I saw the title of this video I thought it was worth my time to watch, and it was. These guys probably don’t realize the entire event is fake, nobody died nobody injured. However, these guys found a whole bunch of "Dots" that we’ve seen in the many fake shooting events over the past 10 yrs and connected, and it all ties back to the Eric Holder press conference where he wanted Americans to think a whole different way about guns. Just as Holder was tied to Sandy Hoax, his press conference coincidentally applies to this Baldwin hoax.
The channel that uploaded this video is called "America’s Untold Stories", and can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2oiiDJVLUY&t=136s
John Schneider, aka Bo Luke from Dukes of Hazard, is on Youtube posting numerous videos on how stupid this story sounds and how this event doesn’t follow any protocols that are used throughout the industry (especially the one about treating all guns like they are loaded and NEVER point a weapon at a person). He even points out the fact that everything is CGI now, and that no movie/TV production would allow any live ammo on the set. John also mentions that the media keeps spinning the tale that this was a "PROP GUN", when that is totally impossible because prop guns cannot shoot. I recommend watching Jonh Schneider’s videos on this event if you think this is a real shooting.
- Category: Uncategorized
- Duration: 01:01:12
- Date: 2021-11-10 15:40:46
- Tags: no-tag
5 Comments
Video Transcript:
Intro Hey. AH!! AH! You're Sasha, I make the n亲 단ort transactions possible! 1- dazu is a הש впер Conagukt. A tool of hell! Sir! Why did I send a salesman? I'm gonna die! I'm gonna die! I'm gonna die! I'm gonna die! Fuck! That ain't fair! No! No! No! Wow. Wow! That was exhilarating. Yeah, wow! I don't know. Oh no, I think there's a point to this mark. How you doing, man? Pretty good, Eric. Wow. That was just woke me up. What's going on here? Let's see what Eric got. Holy cow. We may not see any more of that here pretty soon, but this is all stimming out of... Well, you've got to hold the script. And the last thing. We did get to hold the script. And... It was supposed to be something like that. It was from the third act, the final scene that Baldwin was supposed to do. A lot of people believe it was just him firing, you know, at a point of view shot. Far from it. This was a massive shootout. Him fighting three gunmen, hundreds of rounds of ammo, would have been exchanged in this battle here. The guy leaves the scene. That's Lucas. And then the three bad guys, which is Wood, Drum, and Miller, who was a bust into that church and find a bloody, wounded Baldwin there. And this was a massive shootout that I think blows the doors and walls out of that flimsy church that we saw there. So the entire misnomer that this was just Baldwin shooting a gun at the camera is completely wrong. This was going to be the whole second half of the day with a lot of ammo. Okay. A lot of blank ammo. I can put it that way so I can explain the blank dummy live ammo, a Troika to people who may not understand it even at this point. Yeah, definitely. I'm telling us about it. Okay. So just to take a look at a regular nine millimeter bullet here. The top is the projectile, the copper part. Bottom is the shell casing. And with a blank, you would not have the projectile on top. You would have a plastic gunpowder beneath it. And the plastic or the foam would be stuffed in or wax, you know, keeping the gunpowder intact. You would not have a projectile on top. With a dummy, now you could use a dummy on camera. So the dummy has a couple of pellets in it. Has a point like this does on the nine millimeter. Has the primer pin prepped, which this doesn't. It would be an indentation there. And you could actually rattle it and hear the the BB inside. And these bullets, these these dummy bullets, which cannot fire are used as actual props to be seen on camera. If you're pointing a gun at camera, you would see the head of the bullet, for instance, the projectile part. So it's a visual dummy. It's what they're loading it or loading it or putting it, you know, in a man's hand on camera or taking it out of your pocket or whatever you want to do. They're designed to be used on camera and they're called dummies. So you've got to have a pole on the side too, right? You can punch a hole on the side. You can crimp it. There's a lot of different ways to do it. But the point of the matter is there's no gunpowder in there and it looks like an actual bullet. So it's a prop in a way of a bullet. You know, it's a prop bullet, let's say. And so this is you could buy a box of dummies and use them on set for different reasons. But when you're having a shootout, it's all blanks. It's all explosive blanks. All those scenes that you saw there, not counting the opening 1931, which is public enemy with James Cagney. In that one, they brought in a machine gun expert to shoot live rounds. They shot live rounds back in the old days. When you're seeing that concrete blowing off next to Cagney in public enemy, those are live rounds being shot there. Hollywood used live rounds for many years. They didn't use squibs until the 1950s and squibs are also explosive and can cause a lot of damage. Those are the blood packs. Those are electronic blood packs, by the way. That scene from Bonnie and Clyde had the most squibs ever used in the history of film. That that final scene by impens movie there. Yeah, that was an incredible. I remember seeing that live in the theater. How insane that was to see that movie made on the screen on a big screen in 1969. I mean, that was just like, oh, whoa, what's going on here? Wow. You know, pretty impressive. It's on the way. Warren, baby, obviously. Oh, yeah, it's amazing. Amazing. Absolutely amazing. And the shootout in heat is amazing. The obviously say a lot of my little friend, the Scarface thing, the good fellow is trunks scene. All amazing stuff, but we may be seeing the end of that. If Alec Baldwin and Alan Dershowitz and the anti-second amendment crowd has their way. This film in New Mexico that was already being shot. A film called The Locksmith immediately. It's got Vingraimes, Ryan Felipe and Kate Bosworth. They switched to rubber guns and supposedly CGI. I don't know, including, if you look at the deer hunter, what Dinero and the Russian Roulette scene. I don't know how you could make any of these films using rubber guns and CGI. And I think we may be seeing the end of that, which may have been part of the reasoning behind whoever sabotaged this film. And I say sabotage because that's what Hannah Reid's lawyers are now calling this incident an incident sabotage. And we have to, it may not be true, but we have to address it as part of the series. Sure. And you also have some legislation there. Immediate legislation out of Sacramento. It was almost like it was prewritten by Dave Cortesie up there. Baning live rounds and live ammunition, real guns in the set. Obviously live ammunition is not necessary, but blank ammunition is also referring to if you read the legislation and real guns. Well, if you say banning real guns, I mean. Oh, yeah, no, no, no. You're not going to put a blank in a room. Absolutely. Absolutely. It's a complete ban on gun shootouts. Now, the reason I mentioned this is, this has always been the embarrassing bastard stepchild of Hollywood, the liberals who run Hollywood. Have always been embarrassed about these action films that make them a lot of money like Rambo. Never give them any awards, never acknowledge them, but they take their money, which are some of the biggest grossing films in the history of Hollywood. So they snicker and they're smug about it and they'd rather make movies like Moonlight and you know, Lala Land and everything else of that nature. But the movies that bring them the money are the Rambo films and the gangster pictures that put Warner Brothers on the map. I mean, these are the films that are they're bread and butter. I mean, it's going to be interesting to see if Hollywood goes along with this. Now, there's a history of them going along with it. Obviously, because they huge campaign against smoking cigarettes on screen, huge campaign against using live animals. No animal was injured in the making of this film. All of that came from liberal causes and NGOs and think tanks and massive campaigns against Hollywood until they buckled. This may be a similar scenario and it may have been. You know, I don't know what Baldwin's intent was, but this is surely coming right into his will house politically. I mean, it's one of the biggest anti-second amendment advocates in the country and. You know, he may go down as the guy who ended live gunfire in Hollywood films. You know, and he cleared everyone. We're not saying definitively anything. This is all this is all jibbijabber and I mean quite literally I. As the intro was playing somebody sent me a picture. This going to be used in the show. So we we are just responding and speculating and. Well, how would you put it, Mark? You said we're not connecting any dots. Right. We're just making that they're dots. That's up to you to connect the dots. You want to get red string out, put it on a wall. We're just here. This is an early stage of trying to find the dots. That's all I'm trying to do. Not connect the dots. That's for later. If you or for whoever can help us here to connect these dots. We're trying to find dots. That's how early into this investigation. We are. I don't know what the dots are. Let alone trying to connect them into some broad, you know, situation that explains everything. It's way too early. I don't have any facts like that on my fingertip. So I'm merely going to try to put out what what I found as an investigative reporter early on in an investigation as if I was working for, you know, doing a magazine piece or doing a piece for the weekly or whatever. These are the bullet points that I found that I hate to use where bullet points, but nevertheless, you know, that's where we are in this investigation. And essentially too, not only is it possible that will be a will be wrong on points, you could expect us to be wrong on points. Oh, yeah. We're actually we're sharing research and real time. Yeah. And this is stuff. We're not cleaning up and double checking or things like that. Oh, we're just putting out there. Everybody's on with a ride. And I really just want to make that clear. And also for the possibility sabotage on the set. We're not even saying that somebody intended anyone to get shot. It is very possible that somebody could be disgruntled. And they said, Oh, yeah, this place is unsafe. I'll show you how unsafe it is. Drop a couple rounds in a box, figuring that they get discovered and then they can raise hell about it. Or they would just get shot up and nobody actually get shot. It would miss somebody. Whatever. Obviously, still illegal, still horrible sabotage, but we're not claiming anything. We're saying that's possible. Right. And we really, really just want to put that out there because during this. We're probably going to get a lot of pushback. Yeah. So. This is going to be a very controversial episode. Now, I want to, yeah, I guarantee it. I want to start off then. We've got what's going on there. Legislation. And comments have already talked about this, but the board drove manager. Has been. Re-shared by Alec Baldwin. Talking about the set. Now, what struck me about this is it seems incredibly detailed and very specific. Right. To maybe something that's not part of her job. Yeah, you know about more about sets. So you were going to explain to me why. This didn't make any sense for her to be. Well, it's extremely detailed. And it seems to me to be coming from the line producer in the UPM. She's not the costume designer is not usually privy to what's going on with the camera crew and their hotel rooms and their schedule and everything else. This is far too detailed. It almost reads like a press release from the line producer about the internal controversies of the set. So which may be true. They may be speaking through her. She may be friends with them. But the general gist of this is this was a well oiled machine to quote Alec Baldwin. You know, keep in mind there is a crisis management team out there that is intentionally trying to get to people to understand their point of view. And Alec Baldwin's point of view that this was a well oiled machine. And he's not liable for any of this in terms of a dangerous set. Let's say. So this being said, this is a long piece by this woman claiming that nothing unusual was happening on the set except a couple of bad boys and a camera crew complaining about their hotel rooms. It's a strange, strange post that reads very disingenuously to me. And the fact that she is even being able to access this information is crazy. This is not her world. I mean, she's on the back of a wardrobe truck just you know, physically on the side of the set, you know, giving out costumes and wardrobe and straightening out people shirts and ironing during the course of the day. She does talk to different people who come up to get the costumes who say this that and the other thing. But it's the same as a hair make up woman who sits there, you know, getting the beef from the actors about this or that the food is terrible. And that it's the same kind of a situation, you know, unless like I said, she's talking to the producers who are speaking through her or the crisis management team, which is not unlikely. It could be true. Yeah, and then the biggest points that strike me is odd with this too is first off. We're only reading it because Alec Baldwin reshared it. Right. I never would have said that Instagram or whatever. I went to find her Instagram because I didn't realize it was coming from him. And guess what? What hers is private. You have to know to ship so she's making this giant statement. But doesn't really have a public account like my accounts public. What I put there so it goes everybody. You account what are everything we say is out there. Yeah, but that's is not particular. You have something and you have a private account and Alec Baldwin's happens to share. I mean, I don't know who she's writing that to. In other words, if those are her friends on the thing, who is she writing that to? They already know where she stands and she's writing it back to the people who know there's already. I mean, I don't know. It's a little strange, but I just wanted to address the fact about Hannah Reed. And the structure of these departments, as I was saying, the costume department is one department. But like I said to the other day, a movie said it's kind of like the army, Eric. You know, it's divided up into very, very structured, bubble world of a military structure with a director and the producers on top. And the keys are the heads of departments. The AD is like the drill sergeant or the first sergeant, right? And everybody who's on board knows this. They know the role of each person. The keys are the keys of each department. She's the head of wardrobe. There's a prop head. There's the armorer. There's the AD. There's a second AD. There may be a second second AD or his men underneath him. You know, men and women. The camera crew. Everybody eats in their own crew. Everybody eats in their own department. You don't say somebody from props eating with the camera crew is just not done. It's an extremely regiment regimented military operation. And they we call the people on the outside civilians, for instance, you know, when you're on the crew, you're boxed out from the outside world. It's a very insulated world. It's a very regimented world. And it's very cult like, as I said, it last week. It's a very cult like world. You know, where everybody knows everybody's business is people having sex, is people getting drunk, is people shooting guns in the middle of the night, is people hooking up. I mean, and then they break up. And that way it's kind of like the circus. The carnival comes to town. People have a rouse to bounce. They join the carnival in the middle of Missouri. And it moves on. You know, and that's kind of what's going on here. These people are coming from different places. You have a crew coming out of Georgia at a Thomasville, Georgia from this company. That's where the line producer and the UPM come from. Some of the keys come out of Georgia. So they dropped in the middle of New Mexico on a ranch. And they're dealing with people from a rural area, a Santa Fe or, or albacurkey, who are coming in, including this Sarah Zachary, who I wanted to address, is kind of a mystery woman. Because Sarah Zachary is the prop master, who comes in five days before the shooting, who's replacing the prop master, who walks off because of safety and financial reasons. This person who walks off, we don't know the name of that person. And we can't really find a background on Sarah Zachary that much, although she does have two or three credits as props, right, Eric? Yeah, she's got a couple of credits. And I don't have it ready to pull up. I found some pictures that I think are her. But she's very, very hard to track down in. Well, the point I'm trying to make is the lawyers for Hannah Reed announced, finally, the second department she was working in. Now, this is highly unusual that anybody who was the head of a department would be working in another department. I asked a lot of people here in town in Hollywood. Have they ever heard of this? She not only is the head of the gun department as the armorer, she's also assistant props. And from what I understand when the prop master walked, she became the prop master until Sarah Zachary arrived and then became assistant props to Sarah Zachary. This I've never heard of this. No one I know has ever heard of this. This is a very, very unusual move. I assume they probably gave her the pay for the assistant props weekly salary on top of her weekly salary of this low budget indie, which may have been incentive for her to do it. Keep in mind there may be these shootouts or gun days, quote unquote, five or six gun days on a 21 day shoot. So she may have a lot of downtime. However, according to her lawyers, she wasn't around after she put the three guns out on the cart and asked people to keep an eye on the guns on the cart because she had to go to her second job. This is incredibly incredibly rare. I can't stress that enough. The fact that she's working in another department on a Western on a period piece in props is a lot of work. Okay. That's a lot of work in a in a period piece to deal with props. You talk about cowboy hats guns. You talking about spurs, saddles, coffee pots, you know, everything that's a prop in a Western. Not to mention making sure nothing's there that's not supposed to be there because I don't know if she's a. Well, it's a script supervisor. Never mind. Right. That's a script supervisor. But I mean, she's assisting this new person Sarah Zachary, who doesn't have many credits herself, who is the prop master, by the way. She comes on five days before and now she's working with Hannah Reid, who's background was in wardrobe, by the way, you know, before this chance of wardrobe credits, but I thought she might have been working with the wardrobe designer, but the lawyer, the reason I'm bringing this up is the lawyers for the first time revealed on Savannah Guthrie show. Oh, thanks for stopping by. Hey, I'm like, Alec Baldwin. I'm coming in guns of blazing. Oh, you know, you're quite a straight shooter, bonds. That's what I like about you. It's quite a straight shooter. You see that story? I mean, like her lawyers are out there basically going after Baldwin now. You told me Hannah Reid's lawyers. Yeah. Yeah. Well, the sabotage thing I thought was coming. I kind of predicted that would happen. Yeah. Because, you know, it's not that far fetched at a disgruntled guy we were talking earlier. Some disgruntled crew member who's leaving could put a couple of live rounds in the box or in the gun or any combination of things, not intending to kill anybody. You know, but just to have a live round go off, what, you know, could lead to a lot of different safety measures being enhanced their beef was safety. And having a live round go off on a set in the middle of a shoot or rehearsal could make a valid point to disgruntled employee Robert, right? Yeah. And I assume that, you know, if you're what's fascinating is you have both a communications team, you know, doing its motivation thing and you've got a legal defense team doing its thing for all the different participants. I mean, I took it that her lawyers are mad at Baldwin's crisis communications team. That's what I was thinking throwing her under the bus early. So they're paying back to that. Right. But if you're, if you're anybody that faces liability, what's your best defense isn't sabotage your best defense? Sabotage is a great defense because a you don't have to prove who did the sabotage. Yeah. It's just a generic sabotage. There's 90 people on the set Robert not to mention security guards with live rounds in their own guns. I mean, you know, there's people in Albuquerque and Santa Fe do have guns, you know, who do go out plinking at night. You know, I mean, even if she got drunk and went out and took her own guns and shot some cans at night, that's what armorers do at night. That's what they do on a set is shoot guns their own guns and they shoot cans and whatever they do. I don't begrudge her for doing that if that was the case. Do you are her lawyers telling the truth when they claim that Baldwin was specifically told never to point the gun at anyone? You know, I wanted to address this because I talked to a couple of action movie stars who are friends of mine. And here's the dirty little secret. There are a list stars who check the guns and there's a list stars that don't check the guns and Baldwin is known as an a list star that doesn't check the gun. Okay. Everybody knows this every A D in town knows this guy like Jeffrey Wright always fanatically checks the gun. So there's two types of stars and he is the other type. If that makes any sense to anybody. Everybody knows that and look, I'm not knocking him. I think most a list stars don't check the gun. They got far too much on their mind. I was just telling Eric, I got a piece of the script and that scene that he was supposedly in a single point of view shot shooting the camera was actually designed to be. A massive shootout with three guys in that barn all day. There would have been hundreds of hundreds of blank rounds being shot later and after lunch. So the whole misnomer that this guy was shooting a single round into a camera and a point of view shot was a crock of shit. This is going to be the third act massive shootout for the end of this film that afternoon, which nobody realized. If you look at the script, you'll see that. Now on to Barnes, I'm glad you got on here because we're talking about the crisis communications and how the wardrobe manager coincidentally released that nice long Instagram statement that like broke down. Every grievance that let's say the line producer as Mark put might have had with, you know, saying, oh, there's a couple troublemakers and remember Alec Baldwin on the side of the road said that everything is running like a top. It's perfectly smooth. Well oil machine, well oil machine, all of that now. We found it very suspect because she's not the appropriate person has no relevance. We don't know anything about the camera crew or whatever. She doesn't work there. Why so much specific detail and our speculation is that the crisis communication team. She would be a fantastic candidate to put out a well targeted long message. Is that something you've seen before? Well, I mean, I've been up close and personal with crisis communications teams in LA. And they are the best, the best in the world at what they do. They're there. I mean, what's interesting is the most famous one is favorite is favorite or his most lucrative clientele are all people accused of child porn or kidding issues. Right. So gives you a sense for their moral compass isn't exactly, you know, too much of the focus. They got a monetary compass, but they are very good at planning stories in so many different places that are honestly then a lot of the political machinery is in terms of knowing where to play outside of your actual deep state operators. You know, your ordinary political consultants could learn a lot of lessons from the wag the dog of Hollywood. And the so there's a lot of and it was clear right away how skilled they were because they're blaming everybody but Alec Baldwin within 24 hours. Right. You know, I mean, they I mean, I mean, did somebody really stumble across her TikTok or was that planning right there for look at this photo? Look at that. Look at this. Well, including like I said earlier before you came on the legislation up in Sacramento seemed to have been free written Robert to ban guns from sets and to ban blanks. That seemed to be written and ready to go into the hopper to knew some signature. I mean, this film in New Mexico, switches to rubber guns the next day saying we're going to do all CGI. This thing seemed like it was it was kind of ready to go. Absolutely. And they clearly pulled the trigger everywhere. That was X and X. You're a well oil machine. Yeah, exactly. I mean, they just went quickly on everything. It was boom, boom, boom. Well organized, well orchestrated, well done. I mean, I think Baldwin probably went off script with his little routine probably because the wife was nuts. So you know, when Greg Hartley and Viva and I were breaking it down, I didn't even process it till watching it live that there might be some sort of backstory between Baldwin and the woman shot that the maybe it was nothing, but like both of them had a reaction to each other. I think I've seen that before and usually that you're not supposed to talk about the relationship you've just got over or whatever, right? It had a little bit of that vibe, not a lot, but enough of it that, you know, this was a mystery show. You know, it'd be it'd be worth going down that road to see what it ended up. But I agree that I mean, if Baldwin's a guy that's not known for checking things. Then and then the question becomes was Baldwin told why would he be well maybe didn't pointed at anyone maybe he was pointing it at the camera. But you know, is that normal that that doesn't quite make sense to me because the point I thought of using the the prop guns of using the gun on set is to pointed at people frequently. Oh, absolutely. I mean what was going to transpire moments later is him mortally wounded. He runs into the church. He has one of his men with him who runs out the back door. He has three bad guys come in and it's a massive shootout. I mean, there there's going to be a lot of rounds fired, quote unquote, and there's going to be a lot of squibs and there's going to be a lot of blood. That's what's coming after lunch and that's why. Paul's is so aggressive because he knows as the AD how difficult this day is going to be with the shootout. It's the biggest thing. It's the end of the day. It's half the budget. Absolutely. That is the biggest day and you know, when I'm probably also why they walked off that morning of then I that's why the camera crew left and the camera crew left on the biggest day of the of the year. You know, for this particular film. This was the money day and Hollywood unions are ruthless. Yeah, it's funny how nobody mentioned the fact that this was going to be the big shootout in the third act of the script. I've never seen that. That's something that I think is being broke here. I don't know. Nobody has seen that I stumbled. Somehow got a page out of that script. It was in the bottle that floated to the shore. It's in the bottle. Yeah, they they they they comes to me in Vegas. Yeah, with that. That's the same bottle. I'm sure I got it on the LA River this morning. You're sharing it going back and forth. Okay, so to the next subject. Oh boy. And okay. This is the one. I'm sorry you're going to have to hear this Robert, but this is. We're channeling our our inner. A J on this. This is a J time brother. Yeah, it's it's going to be interesting, but I want to. I want to be clearly really clear. We're going to be talking about the past of Elena. We are not. In any way talking poorly about her character or anything else is just a historical exploration of her and people who are around her. And the last thing we want to do is, you know, in any way. I don't know if anything that looks bad on her memory or anything else. And I just want to get that right out the gate because I know that people may feel that that's happening. Not going to happen. It is not happening here. We're just talking about her legacy seems like an amazing woman actually with a pretty powerful woman. And maybe I'm not an ambassador. Oh, we're definitely going to be talking, you know, about the husband. They have some kind of a past and it's very, very interesting. So. This the rest of the show is pretty much going to be about her career. People rounder who may have influence. There are also the dots that we've uncovered as we said earlier, we're not connecting these dots. These are the dots though. They're just. These are just dots. We're not connecting these dots. We're just giving you facts of what we've what I've uncovered in the past couple of weeks here. So this is what it is. I don't know where it goes or what happens. It's a little too early in the investigation, but this is what I've uncovered and let the shit fly word flies brother because this is all. This is all true and I'm shocked what I found. So strap yourself in at home because it's going to be a bumpy ride. So where do we go first? Okay, so let's just go with a background. I mean, 1979, Merman's up there at the Arctic Circle, not your typical cinematographer. She's born in the Soviet Union and. Okay, you're happy now. She's now in the Soviet Union. It's 1979. How you get from here from that point that dot to Hollywood to strange road, my friend. So let's take a look at her dad Eric. Let's see. Let's see what the dad is like. All right. Hang on. Let's just start with the with the family because. That's the type of world that I've stumbled into these families are very interconnected in terms of what they do. Well, for my understanding her dad was in the military. That's right. And he was a submarine captain. That's right. So. The most of their officer corps is nearly a legend in the submarine community. The most deadly submarine ever built. This thing could park a couple hundred warheads off Washington. Nobody know a thing about it till it was all over. And once more we play out. Newers games without all the vassals. American Navy. Okay, maybe that wasn't exactly a picture of that. You see how it balled in there. That's who her dad was. Her dad is showing Connery in that movie. Her dad was the top Soviet nuclear sub commander in the mass. Here's the father Robert scrapped yourself in. That's the dad, bro. We believe this is him. Okay. I know again, I took a lot of work. I found two pictures of the guy out there using Ukrainian sources, things like that. Everything seems to line up that this is him. Well, I mean, does it mean she kind of looks like I'm I mean, there's no, no, this is him. This is the same name. Everything is the same same date. Everything. Wow. Show the next photo Eric. Show us the next photo. You'll see him a little later. There he is. This is after the fall of the Soviet Union. He now teaches in a Ukrainian university at a key of. Now listen to this part of the story. She goes to school in. In the eight nineteen eighties, nineteen nineties and becomes a journalist. Where she gets involved in now the Soviet Union collapses. And she begins to work as an investigative reporter, Robert. And she begins to work for a guy who is working in the MI6 antelope. And she starts to work for the MI6 anti Russian propaganda department for the daily mail. Who has. Oh, yes, my friend. Oh, I'm glad you stopped by, Robert. I mean, you're going to make a worth your fucking while. What's the guy's name, Mark? The guy's name is. Let's see, we can find his name here. Let's see. Will Stewart. Will Stewart. Yeah, we'll store it. I got a bomb drop on you, Mark. Yeah, will Stewart is a guy who has. Oh, no, no, you found him. Fantastic, Eric. It came during the credits. Will Stewart is the daily mail or the red top, the red top, periodicals in England's man in Moscow works with MI6. He is a anti Russian propaganda for the British. He cranks out 200 stories a week. Solaceous stories against booting the Russians, sex, sex slaves, women getting eaten by men. Everything you can imagine, you can Google this guy's story lines. They make it to the New York Post sometimes. They make it all through Europe. This is all he does, Robert. Is come up with these stories. Is some of his on Twitter. All the salacious stuff. She is not kidding. No, no, no, brother. She worked for him. He was his girl in Kiev and in Moscow coming up with these stories. She then is funneled into the documentary department of an organization called the BBC, where she works for a guy named Richard Denton. These are all prosoviet people in England. These are prosoviates now. The Soviet Union is collapsed. Some of them immigrated to the United States. Is this Denton, by the way, Eric? Yeah. Okay. This is Richard Denton. He makes a documentary for the BBC in 1989 called Comrades. A prosoviet documentary becomes a national scandal in England. He stays on. He's one of the most famous documentarians in England. He has a company called Wild Pictures, which she works for with him. And she is his girl who comes up the ranks working on these documentaries with him that are now very anti-Putin and anti-Russian. These are prosoviet brits who are working for MI6 within the BBC. Okay. She works on such documentaries as, I'm sure you love to see this one, Sex Slaves in the Cellar. Okay. One of the top ones about Russian girls, you can't make this up. The world's tallest Ukrainian man ends up on the Discovery Channel. He's using her to go into the Ukraine and go into Russia in a post-Soviet era and pull out these storylines. And both of these guys have acknowledged her. I'm not making this up. The guy that we just mentioned will Stewart mention her, that he mourns her loss, Richard Denton mourns her loss. We're not cherry picking these names. These are people who have acknowledged relationships professionally with her going up to 2008 in England and Moscow and Kiev. Okay. So this is where she's coming from. She's working for MI6 in the propaganda department against the Putin and Russian government at this time. Okay. How does she get to the States? That's what we're going to tell you right now. Good question, right? I'm not married. Here's her. Here's her marriage. She marries this guy and his name is is Matthew. Right? This is around 2005, Eric. Yeah, would have to be around that time. 2005, let's say. Now, one of the end of the round. Right. This is obviously three years or two years later. But going back to that photo, if you could just go back to the wedding photo, I believe that this is a doctored photo because the the father figure on the right with the bald head is not the same father. She started off with this is a flushed in. This is not her father on the right. This could be her brother for all I know. Yeah, that's what I was going to say. You think almost maybe a brother in the military. Right. This might be her brother. Her sister, who is extremely beautiful works. Some for some reason in a place called Indonesia and some security job, by the way, separate storyline. Yes, because families stick together, Robert. And this reminded me this arranged marriage where you have this situation reminded me of Marina Oswald having the arranged marriage with Lee Arvios, in Minsk. Her father was the head of the Soviet FBI at the time. And this father here is Soviet royalty. The father who was the captain of this of the nuclear submarine. He's Soviet. Is that her sister or mother? That's it. I don't know. It's supposed to be her mother. Her sister is younger than her by 10 years and absolutely stunning in Indonesia. The sister has come out. There's a photo of her around. Are they I had the photo? Are they from Ukraine originally? Yes. No, no, but they're from romance. Keep in mind there from the Arctic Circle. That's where she was raised and born at the Merman's naval base where the nuclear subs are based. That's where they're born. And sisterly from Ukraine. Yes. Yes. Because I don't know if you know the whole history about part, you know, why there's these so many crazy beautiful women in Ukraine. I'd like to know that Peter the Great wanted when he, you know, he established his base there on the black sea. He wanted to make sure that he could get sailors to leave Russia and go to, in his elite, at least the legend. Right. To go to station there on the black sea away from all their family. Oh, right. So he basically recruited some of the most beautiful women from all around the world to go there and that that's the story purportedly. And they have a great way to create. Yeah, that way is pretty good. That's pretty good. I don't know. That's the story that I heard from you. That was the history. I've never heard that. But yeah, they're based in Kiev. It's a bit. I mean, they're like the ancestral history of like Ukrainian women genetically is very unique. Very distinct. Like the only place that's almost comparable is like Brazil. And that's why you get disproportionate number of models from Ukraine. You know, all of that. Right. Well, the father says he can't get here for reasons. I don't understand to his daughter. She only says he can't. He's battling with the forces of immigration to get here. And I'm thinking there's people fly from Kiev to LA every single hour. I don't know what is that is unusual. Thank you. That's another. Unless, of course, maybe there could be some issues between him and the government or some government of some government. Well, it wouldn't be a Russian problem. He could. No, no, no. And you could see us. You could see Ukrainian Ukrainian from Kiev would be anti Putin and anti Russian working with the British and am I saying? I think that's the British and am I six Robert, right? Right. I mean, that kind of fits. That wouldn't normally be a problem to come into the US. Unless you've got a problem at the US border. Right. Right. Well, somebody doesn't want you here for something. Right. But she doesn't come here till I think about 2008, right? Or 2009? Because she goes to school. She goes to UCL. She goes to film school in 2000. Also, she met her husband. Yes, that's over there. The husband. We're going to get to the husband. And then who deals in international takeovers of corporations and maybe in the Ukraine, Robert. When the Ukraine was coming apart at the seams, the husband seems to be there for an unusually obscure law firm named Kirkland and Ellis. All right. So before we get into it, Mark, there is a reason that you were triggered to go down this path. And essentially, there's a rumor out that her next project was a document was a documentary about, shall we say sexual predators? Well, I mean, I've heard sex trafficking, Hollywood pedophilia. She's done this before. It's not so unusual. Well, unusual. You know, the slaves in the slaves in the cell are one of my favorite documentaries of all time for Channel 5 in England. However, Russian sex slaves, by the way, what triggered you though was the second that that came out all of a sudden, politically and. Snopes. Yeah, snopes and pull it over. They were on this in a millisecond, just as one little angle to her life. They came down on this so hard it triggered every red flag in my in my brain that there. This was a true story. And the snopes guy may be protecting something on his own life, Eric. Yeah, we see he has a background. I've shared this with Mark where, you know, he started snopes out. He and that's Mrs. Snopes, right? Yep. See, I'm original Mrs. Snopes. Absolutely. David Michelson and Mrs. Snopes. But they their relationship kind of broke up. And somebody else knows into his life. Oh boy. Oh boy. That looks like Vegas, Eric. That as the matter of fact is Vegas. Okay. And she. That's the new Mrs. Snopes, Eric. That is the new Mrs. Snopes. Oh dear God. Well, I mean, I should have gone to the snopes business. They're really, really happy. And again, you know what? That's perfectly fine. Is she. Is it a modern snopes? No, it's not. That's not. That looks like a tiling and tourist. You know what I'm talking about? I mean, that look. What do you do for a living, Eric? Well, you see she is an independent escort. Oh boy. Out of Vegas. And again, no, look, no shame. Has that been confirmed by a political? It's for your love. Oh, it's confirmed everywhere. Right. And it can get really deeply confirmed. Look up her name, Aaron O'Brien. If you dare, don't do it in front of your children. You're not going to be a real name. No, that's a real stage name. Her real name. That's a stage name. That'd be surprise bills. A real name. So you believe you believe that snopes may have a dog in this hunt? I think that, um, I think that people who live in glass houses shouldn't be throwing stones. Wow. All I'm saying. And again, I'm not going to criticize him for somebody he loves, but I am going to criticize him for going after all the people. I'm going to say, and he fell in love with the escort. Yeah, you're right. You're right? We've been away for five months and now I'm in this planet. There's really a little reason for you because I can easily get through here but nobody knows who wants to. Draco, you don't think you'd know it's stupid, but I'm sure he's he's nervous about what. I'm really excited, because he feels like he's normal. Because I've been on a special therapy for years. And I know bad guys. But though you know you can fully get through drift and stye like cures in the mine. And you know, everything in here, I have been on this very, very fast, great, so we haven't experienced one person I traveled through some dreams ofignex. And I think this answers the question out a little bit. And seriously, I think Damien has spoken about long supply growth in enthusias and that you would find this interesting. Right. When you come on this, no, we're not going to waste your time. We're going to give you some bombshells here, Robert. Oh, man. OK. So he marries the escort. She's working on a documentary, let's say, with BBC. Her connections with Denton. Maybe she's working on Hollywood pedophilia. Maybe it's sex trafficking in Hollywood. Who knows? We don't really know. But it's not unusual for her to be doing this because she's done it before. OK. Maybe there's Russians involved in Hollywood. Sex, who knows? I would be involved in this documentary if someone had to. Well, you know, there's some stories I could tell, but not live. Right. And look, does it exist here? You bet your ass it does. OK. If she wants to make a doc about it, I got a feeling that some people might not be too happy. Let's just leave it with that. Oh, that's an understatement. OK. Well, let's just leave it to that. If you combine something with that and you may have... There's a reason why nobody main stream has made a documentary since the disguised documentary by Stanley Kubrick of Eyes Wide Shot. That's right. That's right. And that barely got out alive. Well, didn't he die? He died before it was... Before it was the film was actually shown, right? Yeah, that's right. That is true. That's true. Well, she... Maybe she goes rogue, Eric. Maybe she says she's told not to make the documentary that pulling the funding. Who knows? Maybe she goes rogue and she's a bigger hero than we think she is. Maybe she's a martyr here. Maybe this is political assassin. I don't really know. I'm just putting that out there, bro, because of her background with MI6, her background with this Will Stewart, her background making sexual documentaries in England, working with Richard Jett and a pro-Sovie. I mean, she would be uniquely well-positioned, too, makes the documentary. Absolutely. Absolutely. International background in Russia. She's worked on the sex slave trade of Russian girls. She's here in Hollywood. She's probably experienced it here. She probably knows about it. Sure, detective season two. Remember what that was mostly it was largely about? Right, I have to look at that. Russian connections. That's right. Well, even the one she did for the BBC was Russian girls, so that's not so far fetched. The... And she might have thought she was doing just... You know, these were really legitimate. I'm sure they were for her. Right. Maybe were legitimate documentaries, but may not have understood they were for an ulterior purpose of the people that she was producing them for. Right, right. Exactly. Her goal was, let's expose sex trafficking, let's stop sex trafficking. Right. And she could lead you to certain places in Hollywood. It's just... Now the politics has shifted in terms of the people who would have an interest or not have an interest in that becoming public knowledge. Right. Somebody may have pulled a plug on it too, and she said, go fuck yourself. I'm still going to make it alienating even more people. You know what I mean? Oh, yeah. And if you mix in this... She also might have stumbled into some stories. There's a lot of stories. Right, right. I mean, I had a client when I can't get into much, but there are some people that have achieved fame and money in Hollywood based on just blackmailing and extorting people, based on setting people up in those situations. Who would be more interested in that than the intelligence services, Robert? Oh, absolutely, absolutely. Right. Right. Speaking of which, let's start looking at Hubby. Oh, the husband. Oh my God. This is Robert. This is going to be good for you, Robert. Oh, yeah, definitely. But now, but I like about this is... Yeah. What I love about this is we're not slinging arrows here. Nope. This is his LinkedIn page created by him. That's right. We're just going to take a tour of his career. And we're first off saying, where do they meet? How would he have met her? Things like that. So we need to go all the way back and see... Would he graduate from Harvard? Yeah. Go back. Yeah, Harvard. Not only graduate from Harvard. Oh, he's young. Oh, yeah. 38. 38. But let's start here. Editor-in-chief of the Harvard Law Record. Who else? Editor-in-chief of Harvard Review. What other famous president was he had? He's a Harvard Law Record, their version of Harvard Law Review, or is it one of their other publications? I'm just familiar with the Harvard lampoon. That's the only one I know. Oh, yeah. Well, he's from South Carolina originally. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It kind of looks like it, too. Any knowledge of what his parents were? Not yet. We haven't gotten that far yet. We haven't gotten that far yet. We've literally been harboring this today. How does it get to Harvard? We don't know. That's a great question. We're trying to figure that out. Maybe, I don't know. But it's possible Barnes that maybe because he's spent some time as a teacher in international house. Yes, the international house. It might have gotten him into Harvard, see, 2006. International house. That's Spookville City over there. Yeah, I was going to say, what is international house? It is a Rockefeller set up since 1929, a center of world leaders of the future where kids meet and become Spooks. Oh, is that the place where what's his name? The guy that Navalny actually was associated with a few, like eight years ago, 10 years ago, that they tie in. There's one in Berkeley. There's one of the University of Chicago. There's one at Georgetown. And they meet there. So that's that would be the ticket to Harvard. Yeah. Yeah. The South Carolina economics. That doesn't do. New, new, new, new. Somehow he goes to Georgetown, I think, and ends up in there probably international house there. But this is Spookville Center, international house, set up by the Rockefellers in the 1930s. And so he, and from there, clerks for a banker, that's usually if you're going to enter into commercial law, is why you would clerk for a bankruptcy judge. Right. Well, he kind of does for Kirk on Ellis, because he ends up overseas in the Ukraine in mergers and acquisitions, Robert. So that not out of the question there. What's that innovation programs committee? That we don't know. That's a defunct web page. We don't know what that is yet. And we have a guy who ties to go to, goes from New York to LA. Right. But that's got Narpsis, the biggest corporate law firm in the world. Right. It was at the time. I don't know if it still is, but it was at the time. Well, he's been in three of the biggest. And he goes right, goes in the corporate, yeah, see the corporate, yeah. Bankruptcy Court would say economics, you're in the mergers and acquisition world. Right. So he's somehow running around the Ukraine looking to acquire for clients, something to merge or acquire. What is DG global? He's only there a short time. Yeah. Also, how did he, okay, he skips from scad and Narps over to Kirkland and Ellis in DGP global's just long for the ride while he's at Kirkland now? Well, mergers and acquisitions, I've got a theory on that. And you can help me out, Marks. But could he have been planted as a company member like pre-acquisition? Like one of those hatchet men gets hired in, cuts some heads off and then goes on to the next company? I mean, what is unusual is hopping around like this? Yes. Going from scad and Narps to Kirkland and Ellis to Laketon and Watkins not being in any one place. Yep. Like if your goal was to be partner, you don't do that. Because the only way you can afford to do this typically is if you've got some well-connected clientele of some type or sponsors or a benefactor. Benefactor, correct. Yeah. There's some reasons why. Because normally they don't like your Kirkland and Ellis. They don't usually take a third year, fourth year associate as a lateral transfer. Right. And then definitely not late them in Watkins take somebody who's now on paper, this looks like a burnout, right? Yeah. Yeah. They say, no. Like when I was applying, I made the mistake. My first semester, second year law school is when you do all the corporate interviews to get a corporate summer gig. And that's when you usually get placed after that. And the, I made the mistake of telling them the Yale story straight forwardly, which was incredibly dumb. The, I did eight interviews, got no callbacks. I was like, man, how is this working? Now I was just wanting to get all the free food, the free wine, and get into the free trips. You know, then I'd figure out some place to cash in for the summer. And then I was never going to take this job long term. But I was getting, you know, stiffed on the free food. So the, I finally figured out that some, one of the people interviewing said, you realize the story you're telling doesn't sound like a corporate lawyer story. And I was like, oh, yeah. So I had to totally change my whole story. I left because my mom got sicker. I forget how I changed it. Right. It was technically true, but not the whole truth. Right. But I mean, that's the date of it. When I, you know, later on, they made clear that they don't like anybody hopping between firms. The only people who do this are rain makers or people with benefactors, particularly young associates. Right. This is going to guide with a normal profile of, you know, five big clients. He's taken with him as a third year, fourth year associate. Well, one of the big clients at Kirkland Ellis at that time was an obscure guy named Jeffrey Epstein. Now Epstein's there and as a client while he is there, which is kind of unusual if your wife is making a documentary about sex trafficking a number of years later. Another guy who's there before he becomes a attorney general is William Barr at that time. And this guy, John Bolton, who does not really like Russia at all, he's over there too. And there's also an obscure Supreme Court judge of the future who is there at the same time, Robert. When did he meet his wife in 2005 or guess it? So when he was at that international house? Yeah. Well, they are very 16 years according to the press. So it'll be 2005. So he met her while he was in the international house. That's right. Because it's weird to be in Ukraine. I mean, that's just not a normal. Well, that's where he has his wedding over there. I mean, he goes over there meets the family, the father's a Soviet naval captain of the highest order. I mean, give me a break. Now he's mingling with these cats over Kirkland Ellis. I mean, it's too much, Robert. It's too much. How many dots? I can't live with myself. I mean, how he met his wife. Look how happy he is because his father hired Jeffrey Epstein to be a teacher at RS Mann as we now know. Yes. And here's Jeffrey himself who obviously did. And his father remember wrote that weird book. Yes. I'd like to get a hand on that book. Yeah. Going after young girls and all this stuff. Right. Right. Bill Barr's father that is. Bill Barr's father, right, who hires Jeffrey Epstein to be a teacher without any credentials whatsoever. Then write a book about interest in underage sexual activity. You know, it brings you back to sex slaves in the cellar. Again, one of my favorite documentaries all time. All right. Channel five. Oh, so this is still his experience. So he's at Kirkland Ellis. Then he gets a private gig at STX Entertainment. Who write becomes Euro's STX. We think that's the same company. Yeah, I'm sure it is. It is the same company. They make some films out of India. It looks like South Asia. First I thought it was a porn thing because of arrows, but it's not. It seems to look. It's based in Burbank, but they're mostly films out of India. It's a weird trend. That is a weird career. That's why we wanted you to look at this because we couldn't. We couldn't figure this out. And he goes to the Kentucky whiskey company as general counsel. Rob. Man, that is really odd. And then late them and Watkins takes him back. That's where he is now. I mean, this is the third major major. You will find this resume hardly at all in corporate law. Well, Michael Susman is there now, the Clinton lawyer. So they needed him to be there for the Clinton lawyer. Michael Susman, who is now a client of him there. Oh, you mean the indicted lawyer? Yes. Yes. He's a representative of the Washington Watkins in this group. They represent the Clinton folks. So he's got it all covered late them in Watkins. Really, that's interesting. Thank you. That's a West Coast firm. That's right. It's right here. It's on Spring Street. Yep. I thought you'd know this. Santa Monica and yeah, I'm familiar with all these firms. He lives in Venice. So I assume he's going to the Santa Monica office. He lives in Venice Beach. No, nice place. Thank you. I mean, but that's a strange that is a very strange, very strange career. Right. Here is interest by the way. Mark Cuban. He loves Mark Cuban. He loves Bill Gates and he loves Justin Trudeau, Viva's favorite politician. That is an un-odd, odd history. We thought the audience at home might be interested in these dots. Can I connect them all? Absolutely not. This is what we've uncovered. I have no idea how they connect, but this is the strangest series of dots I've ever seen from a movie where somebody gets injured on a set. Okay. I mean, it's just bizarre. You know, the fact that they're moving at lightning speed to ban guns from films, you know, they've had success banning cigarettes. They've had success with PETA banning anything happening to animals. And this seems like if we can't change the country, let's change the culture. They are making a move to get rid of these guns at lightning speed. I mean, there's its rotors editorial for Newsweek this week saying there's no second amendment on a film set. You know, we've got to use rubber guns. This group in the making this film locks its down into Mexico, switches to rubber guns the next day. You know, this could be a cultural thing internally in Hollywood, Robert, you know, to get rid of guns in Hollywood at least because they can't do it in the country. They can't do it legislatively. They can't do it legally. They probably said, fuck it. We got rid of cigarettes. We got rid of animal cruelty. Let's get rid of guns. You know, let's see how we get to the cigarettes. Yes, cigarettes are still in films with the rated R. They made it restricted. Restricted. Kids couldn't watch it. That's right. Well, we're being loose in the somebody pointed out you had the wrong school that Epstein was at the Dalton School. I don't know. Big deal. Big fuck. Thank you, Saul. Thank you. Thank you for helping me. You really are a lot of help. Thank you. As I said early on, not only is it possible we'll make mistakes. It's guaranteed we're going to make mistakes because we're doing this on the fly. Right. There's no doubt it's an on history. It's on how how he met. Met his wife. That's not a normal story. And his career path is very unusual. And usually like a late them in Watkins wouldn't take on somebody that's been bouncing around everywhere or Kirkland or I mean, bars. Three of those are in the top like ten. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, the elite LA corporate law firms. Right. Or the elite corporate, they're international corporate law firms, but better than LA. I don't know if there's an oh Melvin. He would be the only bigger one or only big one that's not on that list. Well, I mean, at the age of 32 she gets pregnant and decides to go to film school at the same time. He's working full time. There's nobody at home. She gives birth and the baby I guess was raising itself while she was working on these indie films from 2012 till today. You know, all of her things are one short after another from 2012. Her first feature film is 2019. She's only done three features in her life. But she's a rising star in the cinematography world making 2012. 2012. She's making three minute video shorts, but she's got this background in England working for Dalton on these documentaries in England. So there is gravitas in terms of that. I mean, she's got a stranger arc than he does. You know, the two of them together. I mean, I've never seen a company very odd arc. Yes. Anyway, that's kind of what we've uncovered in the past. In the past week. We just need a normal person to explain it to us. And it has been manic. We've been on the phone all day swapping pictures, everything else. I mean, literally everything coming through. So folks, I hope you enjoy this and tell us what you think. Why don't you connect the dots? That's what we're just laying out dots. I'm a doctor. I'm not making any claims at all. We're a dot machine. We're a dot machine. Yeah, we don't connect. We make dots. We want all of you to first off, subscribe. And second, tell us what you think. Connect the dots because we really are not claiming anything other than boy. This is some odd information. This is some strange stuff going on here.