He was a necrophiliac. Kept the bodies, putting make up on them, styling their hair. So handsome, smart and charismatic, which makes it all the scarier.
@raven2795
3 жыл бұрын
Ann Rule wrote a book about Ted Bundy called “The stranger beside me”. They worked together on a call in help line. She lived in the same neighborhood as me and my family.
@SherriLyle80s
3 жыл бұрын
Wild! I bet she had stories!...
@twisted1294
3 жыл бұрын
It actually was a suicide hotline!
@catherinelw9365
3 жыл бұрын
I remember reading that book and I was so scared I couldn't sleep. And he was already dead by the time I read it! What a horrible, evil monster!
@tdrxy
3 жыл бұрын
Of course she wrote a book
@george217
2 жыл бұрын
They made it into a movie starring Mark Harmon (Gibbs from NCIS).
@debbiewashabaugh9891
3 жыл бұрын
For years I knew the family of one of his first victims. They suffered. They were so devastated by the way she was killed and by what happened to her body. My brother went to school with her. Even when Bundy was electrocuted they had no peace. It didn’t bring them any resolution. He was a monster and every girl and woman I knew was afraid. The phrase “Don’t talk to strangers” was reinforced to all of us.
@katharrell3737
3 жыл бұрын
While working at the suicide hotline he worked with a Seattle policewoman, who later became an author, Ann Rule. She said she had no idea, she later wrote a book about him.
@tvc184
3 жыл бұрын
I have that book autographed by Ann Rule. She was teaching a police class on serial killers and naturally Bundy was a big part of her class.
@katharrell3737
3 жыл бұрын
@@tvc184 Very cool. She's a fave of mine. She has done a ton of stuff in the world of criminology.
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
He must’ve been so good at pretending to be normal
@katharrell3737
3 жыл бұрын
@@kabirconsiders He was very good at it. Most of them are for a while. Bundy even joked with people that he was a "Ted" & his car matched the descriptions, nobody gave it a thought in his circles, he presented himself so well. John Wayne Gacy dressed as a clown & went to hospitals to visit children. His victims were children.
@ginzingtonschnizer2330
3 жыл бұрын
one of the crazy stories about bundy is that after one of his early kills some people had almost caught him, he laid down next to the deadbody on the side of the trail in the woods. It was a couple out for a mid night stroll date in the woods and they actually stepped on bundy but didn't bother to check out what had tripped them up. Decades later that couple had married and were watching an interview with bundy where he talked about them and saying he wondered what life would of been like if that guy had just looked down at what he stepped on because he would of seen everything.
@ginzingtonschnizer2330
10 ай бұрын
@ThomasPercy45 it was a pod cast I listened to years ago... can't remember what it was called.
@petraleopold2713
9 ай бұрын
@@ginzingtonschnizer2330they didn't step on bundy, they stepped on body of murdered girl, bundy hid in the bushes and was watching them
@MorganaR9135
3 жыл бұрын
My aunt actually met Ted bundy. They apparently “really hit it off,” as she put it, but my grandma interrupted them while they were talking. She says she likes to think it was a mother’s instinct, but really she was just in a hurry that day and he seemed a bit too old for my aunt 😅. Imagine my aunt’s surprise when she heard the news later on… She always talks about dodging a huge serial killer sized bullet by never running into him again.
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
My goodness, talk about a close call!
@tonydaza8504
2 жыл бұрын
Well since he killed 12 year old girl I don’t doubt she doge a huge bullet
@Cubs-Fan.10
3 жыл бұрын
John Wayne Gacey scared the shit out of me hearing about him growing up. While all serial killers are true evil, Richard Kaklinski is the most soulless human I've ever seen in interviews.
@Timmycoo
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I remember he stated that he once just killed a random person to "test out a new weapon". Kalinski that is.
@smokeyverton7981
3 жыл бұрын
His father was truly evil. Richard never had a chance. I've watched his interview The Iceman Tapes. I'm not excusing what he did but my god.
@Cubs-Fan.10
3 жыл бұрын
@@smokeyverton7981 You're right. Most of those guys had a fucked up childhood, he was no different. Especially with a family history of mental illness.
@smokeyverton7981
3 жыл бұрын
@@Cubs-Fan.10 Didn't Richard have a younger brother in prison for throwing a girl off a building after assaulting her?
@TheMtVernonKid
3 жыл бұрын
I watched a doc about him from the pov of his sister
@catherinelw9365
3 жыл бұрын
I can't remember if it's in Ann Rule's book, but Bundy's grandmother told a story about her taking a nap, and she woke up and Ted was standing at the foot of her bed, smiling. He took all the kitchen knives and laid them on her bed, surrounding her, with the point of each knife facing her. He was only 3 or 4 years old. Man, that gives me shivers just writing this.
@cvanz
3 жыл бұрын
His co-worker at the suicide hotline was the late, great true crime writer Ann Rule-who was a police officer during that time. He also babysat her kids. She wrote The Stranger Beside Me.
@catherinelw9365
3 жыл бұрын
I used to live in Washington state and knew an elderly couple who told me that they lived in the same town Bundy grew up in. He used to deliver newspapers in their neighborhood. They said a young girl (around 8 years old) went missing in their town and no one ever found her body or any clue, so it has been a cold case. After the whole Bundy case came out in the news, they wondered if he had anything to do with the missing girl. He was 12 years old at that time.
@Lafever1883
3 жыл бұрын
The second escape from the Colorado prison is even crazier then the one from the courthouse. He had to starve himself for weeks to fit into a hole at the top of his cell I think there was a small vent or a light . He pried it open crawled through that came out in to the guards locker room. Stole a uniform( from the prison he was being kept at no less) and walked right out the door stole a car and got all the way to Florida. You could not make this stuff up.
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
That’s one hell of a story!
@beautifulbliss5883
3 жыл бұрын
Living in California, I get nervous with another Richard Ramirez aka Night Stalker might be around. 😬😫😱
@mortensen1961
3 жыл бұрын
The fact that two of his victims were a mere six blocks from where I lived in Whittier, CA, at the time, still freaks me out. . .
@rosameryrojas-delcerro1059
2 жыл бұрын
He died of cancer a few years back. I also grew up listening to news about the NightStalker on the television. I was too young to be a target, but you never think a out it that way. LeonardLake/Charles Ng too.
@LarryHatch
3 жыл бұрын
The dude was smart, educated, handsome, well-spoken, and suave; everything most of us men want when talking to women. Women called him cute and charismatic. What else does a guy need? He got lots of dates and nearly got married twice. But he had this internal, psychopathic, sadist drive to make women hurt, beg, and die even without insulting him. Then he built up this hatred of authorities (common with serial killers) and that made him taunt them as another layer to his illness. His hero was his grandfather who hated blacks, Jews, Italian, women, and Catholics, also beating and abusing dogs and cats. Animal abuse is often a key early link in lives of serial killers. Combine all this with his alcoholism (removing inhibitions) and you get real trouble.
@antoniotrew5894
3 жыл бұрын
There is a serial killer named Samuel Little who confessed to 93 murders..He not only confessed but he could remember alot of the details about the victims..Like the hair styles, facial features, what they where wearing etc etc..He said he didn't like the killing part but loved how it felt to strangle his victims..You should look him up.
@elkins4406
3 жыл бұрын
One of the creepiest things about Bundy was the fact that nearly all of his victims (the sorority girls excluded) were unusually physically vulnerable at the time he abducted them. Either they were suffering from colds, or still convalescing from more serious illnesses, or they had left wherever they were last seen alive complaining of a migraine, or they had just a day or so earlier suffered some minor injury (a sprained ankle, a thrown shoulder muscle). These were nearly all young, healthy, strong women who were just under the weather that particular day. Over and over again, that was the pattern. It makes you wonder how many young women he might have passed on the street, but then rejected for consideration as victims. It's as if he had a predator's sense for weakness.
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
Very creepy, almost vulture like
@starrgamer13
3 жыл бұрын
There's another movie about Ted Bundy called, "The Deliberate Stranger" from 1986. That one still sensors a lot of his violent killings, but shows just how unsettling he was. My mom actually made sure I watched it so as to show me that predators could be anyone, and to make sure I'm always aware of my surroundings.
@babyfry4775
3 жыл бұрын
I watched that movie too. Mark Harmon was so good as Bundy. Scared the crap out of me. He started out peeping. I had a peeping Tom once. Scared me to death. I always close my blinds at night….always.
@hedonista7593
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah. Your confusion and revulsion is what I feel, too. And, yes. Bundy knew what he was doing was wrong. Which is why he covered up his crimes as best he could. But, he has no conscience. He doesn't see other people as human. Creepy stuff, man. I had just moved to Utah when his first prison break happened. We were all very freaked out, as I recall.
@dallas1272
3 жыл бұрын
I am actually a forensic psychology student and I did a paper on Ted Bundy he is quite fascinating and actually on the scale of psychopath he is one of the few that matches all the signs on the psychopath scale
@oldscool65
3 жыл бұрын
Mind Hunter is awesome, I hope it gets a new season.
@taylorjohnson5953
3 жыл бұрын
I’m from Tallahassee where he killed some sorority girls at FSU. My friends mom was in the same sorority and lived in the house but just wasn’t home that night. I also got to ride in the elevator he rode in at the court house when I was on the jury
@buddystewart2020
3 жыл бұрын
I remember my parents telling me a local radio DJ asked everybody to turn off any unnecessary electrical appliances to make sure they fried him right. Not sure which radio station that was, probably one over by Raiford or Starke area.
@mypungkin
3 жыл бұрын
There's many of us that have troubled upbringings. Thank goodness that majority do not become killer
@davenoppe8574
3 жыл бұрын
Deliberate Stranger is great TV movie starring Mark Harmon as Bundy.
@leannmiller7153
3 жыл бұрын
Sadly, Ted Buddy, kidnapped and killed my sisters friend Susan Rancourt. They were freshman at Central Washington State College ( now CWU) in Ellensburg, WA. They were usually together in the evening, but Susan had a meeting and was walking across campus alone💔
@davidhohn9106
3 жыл бұрын
Bundy did not have a bad childhood according to his schoolmates and neighbors, and many believe that his first victim was an 8 yr old girl that disappeared on his paper route. Bundy was 14 when she disappeared. Yes, he worked the suicide hotline, and became friends with Anne Rice, who also worked the phones at the Suicide Prevention hotline, before becoming a world famous fiction author. She also wrote a book about Bundy, called if I remember correctly, 'The Stranger Beside Me'. Bundy also had a thing for necrophilia. He would bury his victims bodies, then go back weeks later to have sex with them. Does it get more disgusting than that??? My husband and I both grew in the area Bundy did, although we are a dozen or more years younger. I remember that my mom would hide the paper to keep me from reading it. Rather pointless, since everyone was talking about it, and it was on the news nearly every night.
@timreno72
2 жыл бұрын
From what I've seen of Bundy the scariest thing to me was his appearance of wholesomeness and normality. Beaver Cleaver meets Manson.
@LarryHatch
3 жыл бұрын
A noted American university did a long, detailed functional MRI study of convicted serial killers and their live brains. Guess what? Nearly all over them had abnormally small amygdala in their brains, our center of empathy, sympathy, and caring feelings. The tough question is this. Suppose you find a kid or teenager with a small amygdala, thus prone to psychopathic behavior. Do you tell the parents? The insurance company? The kid himself or herself? What do you do? A small amygdala makes it hard for a person to control aggression and have any degree of empathy. Is it their fault then?
@LadyBeyondTheWall
3 жыл бұрын
Man, I've read your questions at least 10 times, and sat here thinking about it for at least 5 minutes and I just can't come up with any answer that seems or feels even remotely "right", if that makes sense. I'll be thinking about that for a while I'm sure. Although, having been in a very abusive relationship with a sociopath and still suffering PTSD, I almost wish I coulda been like "Hey, lets get an MRI first" or something, lol, not to make light of the situation, but.. some people, like Bundy here, just seem so normal until they have you where they want you. I knew my ex for two years before dating and he seemed to have empathy but he truly did not. But also, you don't want to discriminate unnecessarily. Hard questions.
@catherinelw9365
3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if they tried finding normal people (ie, people who have never killed or had been in trouble with the law) with a small amygdala?
@LarryHatch
3 жыл бұрын
I understand they used "normal", non-criminal people and inmates with lesser crimes as standard controls. The really cool thing was that they also scanned white collar criminals (ie. convicted wall street "greed is good", type A sorts). They had smaller amgdala than the average person, thus half way to serial killer with less empathy than normal. Fascinating stuff.
@LarryHatch
3 жыл бұрын
Since all MRI records are digital since 5-8 years ago...does anyone think the CIA or FBI can't hack into everyone's scans? Just warning.
@katharrell3737
3 жыл бұрын
As scary as it sounds, he may not be the most evil. He's definitely one of the many evil ones the US has had. He had zero remorse.
@smokeyverton7981
3 жыл бұрын
I think he was a Sociopath? He had zero empathy. His victims were objects, not even human. Super creepy....
@tristan4175
2 жыл бұрын
@@smokeyverton7981 psychopath*
@sonyawasmer2344
3 жыл бұрын
America’s serial killer list is endless 😔 FBI says there is generally 25-50 serial killers loose in the United States at any given time. Sounds very scary; their victims tend to be prostitutes and homeless people as they’re less likely to be missed right away. Sad really. 😔💔😔
@johanna0131
3 жыл бұрын
We studied Bundy in my criminal psychology class. My professor was a criminal psychologist who studied sociopaths at Atascadero State Prison. Ted Bundy is classic narcissistic sociopath. Often charming, they love all the attention from the media, and reliving their crimes through telling their stories. They also generally believe they are smarter than law enforcement, and won’t get caught. They are incapable of empathy and often Mimic human emotion, but don’t actually feel it. Some form of abuse and inconsistent discipline are common in their childhoods. What really freaks me out are all the women who wrote to and supported Bundy while he was on trial and incarcerated, many of them matching the age and physical type of his ideal victims. WTF?! They literally flirted with him in the courtroom. Explain that dysfunction, because I can’t.
@jamesblanton3744
3 жыл бұрын
It's unfortunate that there are always monsters in the world you never know where or when they will be found
@annalykins1579
3 жыл бұрын
I remember Bundt. I remember Chi Omega at Fla St. I live in Ga, scared the hell out of me. He was vicious and brutal, the world is a better place without him 🥵
@TheDivineOne187
3 жыл бұрын
BTK and the Golden State Killer…and the Night Stalker….and the Green River Killler….scared the stuffing out of me. (The US has no shortage of serial killers as we have 70 currently working right now)
@joantrotter3005
3 жыл бұрын
I think I have three connections to this. A teenage girl delivering newspapers in the neighborhood I grew up in is believed to be one of his early victims. Not sure if they ever proved it. Our families remained close even after they moved to another city. A friend's mom worked with Ann Rule and Ted Bundy at the Crisis Line. She remembers them having him over for dinner. He offered to do dishes. Another friend's mom worked for Ann Rule.
@dmwalker24
3 жыл бұрын
I've seen the interviews he did. Bipolar (maybe), Multi-personality (nope), Psychopathy (don't buy it). He was lucid, intelligent, well-spoken, connected to reality. When he makes wild claims about why he committed his crimes, it's clearly an attempt to manipulate. He was a sociopath with features of at least a couple personality disorders. The ugly truth is that corporate CEO's tend to score very high on tests of sociopathy. The difference between ruthless corporate assholes, and serial killers is often trauma during childhood exactly as you said.
@nightshademasquerade4703
2 жыл бұрын
I think you meant to say schizophrenia instead of psychopathy, the former if which is the disorder composed of delusions and hallucinations. Sociopathy is a non-clinical term used by the general public to describe someone with antisocial personality disorder aka psychopaths.
@ShadowSoul92
2 жыл бұрын
What the hell are you talking about ... Being psychopathic/sociophatic doesn't mean you're not lucid or smart. Anyone who told you the bullshit that psychopaths / sociopaths are not intelligent or lucid people is a stupid person, if they are a psychiatrist they should, even more so, be disbarred. Not knowing what human emotions are, other than mimic them, or not having empathy doesn't make you a stupid or a not lucid person. This is about something someone told you that is fundamentally wrong and is the biggest bullshit I've ever heard, and u convincing yourself so. Also, there have been some instances where the serial killers came from wealthy families, whose family members never abused them. Being a serial killer has nothing to do with social status, but is more connected with mental illnesses, whether they are sociopathic or psychopathic tendencies. The first symptoms of these pathologies are seen since childhood, a child pees in bed longer than other children, tortures animals and sets fire to the animals he has tortured or to things. It is called the McDonalds triad and is the one that should help identify possible future serial killers, and intervene so that they do not become one. Many of these signs have been ignored by various families, treated as "it's just a baby", or even when a baby peed under his skin he was punished for doing so, rather than trying to figure out if there was an underlying problem... So yes, in part many had a difficult childhood, but, in my opinion it is a generalization, because the fear of having people with a normal childhood, becoming a serial killer is scarier than anything else in the world ...
@ShadowSoul92
2 жыл бұрын
@@nightshademasquerade4703 Er no, the antisocial disorder has taken the place, in psychiatry books, of the term "psychopathy" and "sociopathy", because the idiots of psychiatrists cannot "heal" or "help" the psychopaths or sociopaths have decided to change its name in such a way. that the public is less afraid of it, and that being a disorder it can be treated, when for psychopathy and sociopathy there is no treatment ... It was just a group of psychiatrists masturbating each other that changed the name, even if clinically nothing is changed.
@nightshademasquerade4703
2 жыл бұрын
@@ShadowSoul92 it's naive to think it can't be treated. True, it can't be cured, so to say, but treatment and managing or being aware of symptoms is possible
@ShadowSoul92
2 жыл бұрын
@@nightshademasquerade4703 Being aware of the symptoms ... er yes of course, as if no psychopath convinced the psychiatrist that he had to give him a psychiatric examination that he was sane, or when they were close to a possible parole, they manipulated people into convincing them that they had repented ... only to go back to killing as soon as they got out of jail. Naive is your view, that just for a person to be aware of the symptoms they stop before killing someone. A psychopath has no morality, empathy or any human emotion ... He is simply an unexploded bomb.
@MelaniePoparad
3 жыл бұрын
Serial killer docs are fascinating... don’t watch them alone at night but they are incredibly interesting.
@smokeyverton7981
3 жыл бұрын
Ed Kemper, The Co Ed Killer is an interesting case. He once said in an interview " Yeah I killed her but I didn't hit her"
@smokeyverton7981
3 жыл бұрын
@M K yikes. Yeah his mom was something. He threw her vocal cords in the garbage disposal. When asked why he said " She was always running me down all the time". Guess he had enough
@wadew3623
2 жыл бұрын
This video doesn't mention that, on the same night of the sorority murders, he had attacked and severely injured yet another victim. Also, when he worked at the suicide prevention hotline, he worked with true crime author Ann Rule, who would go on to write one of the definitive books on Bundy, "The Stranger Beside Me."
@liddybird3608
3 жыл бұрын
I went to school at UW in Seattle Wa , and rented a room from a couple that had not only known him, but were good friends with his girlfriend. He often babysat for them.
@Belnick6666
2 жыл бұрын
his last victim, Kimberly, was 12 and he R before he ended her
@MeighanT
3 жыл бұрын
He tried to pick up my older sister & her girlfriend not far from our house (remote area, but near where known victims were taken), but they got away. Super creepy!
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
No way! Talk about a close call 😳. I’m glad your sister got away
@ltkell2028
3 жыл бұрын
You definitely need to watch Homicide Hunter on Hulu. It's a true crime series based on 1 homicide detective who has solved almost 400 murders during his 22 year career as a homicide detective which is crazy since few others have that kind of record! He also assisted in solving the murder of Kelsey Grammer's (from the t.v series Frasier) younger sister's murder. His name is Lt. Joe Kenda.
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
Sounds interesting, I’ll check it out!
@ltkell2028
3 жыл бұрын
@@kabirconsiders How are you doing young man? How is everything over there? I hope all is well & I'll send you a couple links. You take care
@ssshadowwolf6762
3 жыл бұрын
My mother was a deputy at the jail in Colorado Springs when he was booked in and it was the only time I ever saw her Un-nerved. I went to school with the prosecuting attys son . It was weird to read a book and know some of the people mentioned . Ted Bundy was the single most reason college boys no longer got to hitch hike so freely all over Colorado . Back then it was common as the state is a college state in general . I remember seeing a college boy wearing a Tee shirt that said “ I am not Ted Bundy “.. That evil man ruined everything.
@smfmnoneya9134
3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact...Ted Bundy worked with Ann Rule at that suicide hotline. Ann Rule is famous for her true crime books.
@Darth_Lunas
3 жыл бұрын
Sometimes we grow em crazy over here. 😆
@smokeyverton7981
3 жыл бұрын
Usually Iowa, Indiana, or Seattle. Go fig......
@jaredcole5818
3 жыл бұрын
the thing I really love about your channel is how much it brings into perspective how different our lives are right. like over here everyone knows who Ted Bundy was and probably most of us think the whole world does to. but when it comes to say British serial killers I can only think of Jack the ripper. which makes me think an American version of your channel with an American reacting to British things would also be really cool
@lkayh
2 жыл бұрын
I don’t know how accurate this is-there are a couple bits I know are wrong (for example, he wasn’t just “thought to have killed” the 12 year old in Florida. He was convicted of killing her. The video also (thankfully) spares you some of the creepier things about his crimes. If you’re into reading, one of the most chilling books I’ve ever read was The Stranger Beside me, by Anne Rule, who worked alongside Bundy on the suicide prevention hotline, while also reporting on crimes in the area, including the disappearances of some of his victims. Also, assuming you’ve seen Silence of the Lambs, both Ed Gein and Ted Bundy were used to model the character of Buffalo Bill. (Gein also inspired the Hitchcock classic Psycho.)
@TheDivineOne187
3 жыл бұрын
Mind hunters is freaking awesome!!
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
Such a great show! Hopefully there’s a third season
@dalemoore8582
3 жыл бұрын
He was considered handsome and charming. That's how he met most of his victims
@R777-RLM
3 жыл бұрын
Ted Bundy, came to OUR front door in Taylorsville, Utah, in 1975. I was 4 yrs old and already interested in cars; so, I remember him following my Mom and I in his beige VW Beetle, at least twice, and when we would turn up our road, he'd pull over at the end of the street to watch us. One day, my mom felt uneasy, so she kept looking out the front window. She saw a man walking up the road, he didn't stop at any other houses, but came straight to ours and knocked. My Mom answered, and as she was home alone, she kept the storm door locked. He said he was a Police Officer and needed to use our phone; so, my Mom said she saw him walking up the road, then asked him: "Why didn't you stop at any of those other houses?" He rose his voice, demanding she let him in, while quickly flashing something (like it was a badge), but Mom refused. She said she could see his face change to pure anger, then he hit the door hard, immediately turned around and began quickly walking back the way he came - my Mom watched him, until he was out of sight.
@george217
2 жыл бұрын
The Iceman, Richard Kuklinski , made Teddy seem like a model citizen. He was a hitman who also killed people just for the heck of it...
@dlove032002
2 жыл бұрын
Living in Florida, not far from where Buddy was executed, they told us in school to make sure we turned off our power at home so they would have extra juice in the electric chair when they executed him…
@8mycake244
3 жыл бұрын
My sixth grade science teacher was a student at Florida State when he was killing there. She lived in a nearby sorority house. Yikes.
@Psynergic
3 жыл бұрын
You briefly started to touch on Nature vs Nurture. Honestly, the answer is usually both. The diathesis stress model suggests that we all have the capability but some are just born "closer to the finish line" - so to speak. Psychological stress, the "troubled past", is what will push one over that finish line.
@sliverofthemoon3165
2 жыл бұрын
I think it's definitely a combination of natural psychopaths who are born without a conscience and neglect, abuse etc that tends to bring out the sadistic sides in these types of people. But it's scary that some killers seem to have had violent fantasies even as young children. It needs more study.
@elainablake3030
3 жыл бұрын
I just watched a series where a episode covered serial killers. Found out he came up with a profile for the Green River Killer. He wasn't caught for a while, but the profile was pretty right on.
@sgtpickles1319
3 жыл бұрын
Not related to this video but this weekend is the first of the NFL season, would love to see some reactions to game highlights, Seahawks v. Colts was a good game 👍
@reneehomen2226
2 жыл бұрын
I wish they wouldn't make movies and such about these evil killers. Their names should never be all over the place. I watched both seasons of Mind hunter. Psychopaths have NO conscious , no remorse. They copy and mimic normal people's emotions. Don't give them any attention. Throw them in a dark hole and forget about them. I don't understand how stupid law enforcement was , knowing how evil this guy was and never chaining him up.
@gregvanmatre5068
Жыл бұрын
They made a Mini Series with Mark Hammil as Ted Bundy.
@deenormus1975
3 жыл бұрын
Ok, as a person who read the Ann Rule book on Bundy, followed the Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI & have been terrified of Bundy for decades…that cartoon history “lesson” was truly awful. They got a few things wrong, the tone was FAR too chipper, left out a bunch more - like his last victim was an innocent 12 year old girl. He was a sadist & necrophile. And he was ashamed of the last one. Told John Douglas (also an incredible book that talks about the FBI’s first profilers) he didn’t have sex with them after they were dead. They were alive & had a good time. (No, they were dead. Every single woman was dead or dying. Bc he was insecure & didn’t want to have them to laugh at him. Terrified of being humiliated or emasculated. Guards said he had a small ween.😃 And I don’t feel bad about humiliating that sick f, so…)
@dakotawilliford75
3 жыл бұрын
You should look up H.H. Holmes.
@DrVonChilla
3 жыл бұрын
I've been a serious student of Bundy's crimes for more than 30 years, yet as incredibly interesting as Ted's story is, he doesn't even come CLOSE to being the most-savage American serial killer. If you want info on ultimate savagery, check out Randy Kraft - Bob Berdella - Lawrence Bittaker. THESE torture-killers make Bundy seem like an angel of mercy....but be forewarned: the reality of their depraved, inhuman crimes are NOT for the faint of heart.
@CDceilingcat
3 жыл бұрын
In terms of murders he was only accused of two but the most gruesome and gross murderer in my opinion has to be Ed Gein. He was the inspiration for a lot of different films and fictional serial killers like Leatherface, Buffalo Bill and Norman Bates. Truly a disgusting and insane human being.
@briankirchhoefer
3 жыл бұрын
Bundy was partial to girls with brown hair parted down the middle. Many ladies changed their hairstyles because of him.
@elkins4406
3 жыл бұрын
The Son of Sam killer also went after girls of that description. My parents were always trying to convince my older sister to change her hairstyle, because it seemed sometimes as if all the 1970s serial killers targeted young women who looked just like her.
@johnmurphy1442
3 жыл бұрын
You need to watch many of the documentaries about him, this video barely touches the surface
@gitchygitchy3106
3 жыл бұрын
If you haven’t seen the documentary on Netflix you should 💯 check it out. It’s CRAZY
@mardykeel2474
3 жыл бұрын
Jeffery dahmer has to be next the serial killer files video is amazing
@juanitahuisentruit1989
2 жыл бұрын
" you can give him all the labels in the world he is just evil " Very true words . You should watch the interviews he does he is very very evil
@warpedwhimsical
3 жыл бұрын
Please do more true crime content!!!
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
More on the way!
@barbaramullin5182
Жыл бұрын
I went to high school with one of the Chi Omega victims. Very nice girl. Bundy was killed on my birthday. I was at the prison. No one there was protesting the execution.
@zak27986
2 жыл бұрын
Great reaction mate. As a normal heterosexual proud man with no criminal record myself from Lakemba, New South Wales, Australia I do not claim Ted Bundy because he is a violent predator. He is one of the reasons why we men are being hated these days because Bundy makes men look like monsters. In my honest opinion any man in this world that commits violent crimes is a weak man because they allow evil to control them which is absolutely disgusting & pathetic period. May all Bundy’s female victims rest in peace and my heart goes out to all the female survivors & their families so depressing & so sickening how some humans in this world can think & behave like this absolutely demonic. To all my fellow human brothers and sisters around the world, always remember be genuine & take care of one another.
@allanrose2964
3 жыл бұрын
A co-worker of mine in Oregon years ago was GF with a fellow later called the I-5 killer, Randall Woodfield. After they broke-up, he came to her apt. one night banging on the front door after midnight. She did not answer as she was concerned and he eventually went away. She always felt, later on, that he was there to kill her that night. Look him up.
@babyfry4775
3 жыл бұрын
I saw a movie on that guy. He was so scary.
@kayyyyooo6946
3 жыл бұрын
My grandma went to the University of Utah around the time Ted Bundy was in law school there. he used to hang around my sorority house, there was a picture of him with the old chi omegas so they burned it, they were lucky what happened in florida didn’t happen there😭
@suddenlyfrogs1906
2 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure why the video said he'd supposedly murdered poor Kimberly Leach, I mean he admitted it near the end "I, I can't talk about that right now" Literally the night before he died. I can't really speak for the victim when he was 14 but the coincidences of time, geography etc are compelling as the girl lived on his news paper route and they knew each other socially according to friends of theirs and his half Brother. Another creepy possibility, but unsubstantiated is that his car was photographed the afternoon of the Lake Samamish double murders. Trouble is tan VW Beetles weren't exactly uncommon so could just have been somebody else's but if not? Creepy af. I think Thomas Harris was inspired to write his Hannibal Lector novels over much this as both Lector and the Toothfairy guy in Silence of the Lambs share so many similarities. Psychology student, faking injury or disability to lure women into a false sense of security and he offered help in investigating the Green River Killer. I think Mindhunter will cover that (Unless it's true and it's been cancelled? :( ) in later seasons.
@lynxregions6724
3 жыл бұрын
Also another thing they didn’t say Bundy never used a gun to kill because he knew the cops would find out more easier so he used blunt objects instead
@michaeltipton5500
3 жыл бұрын
My Brother in law grew up near him and dated his Sister. He does remember Ted.
@davidr3146
3 жыл бұрын
Who ever does these videos needs to do one on BTK killer.
@EdmundKempersDartboard
3 жыл бұрын
Should ccheck out the edmund kemper interviews. If bundy is one of the most evil, kemper is one of the most fascinating. And dare i say... likeable. I maintain that bundy was not nearly as smart as he is made out to be. His success was due to his ability to charm people. Kemper however was (still is) genuinely brilliant with an iq north of 140.
@sliverofthemoon3165
2 жыл бұрын
You're not wrong, Bundy himself said when he escaped the second time he truly intended to live a good, legal life and stop killing but it seems the compulsion to kill was too strong for him and he dove in brutally and almost mindlessly being more wreckless than he ever had. It seems like some sick people really are wired differently to the rest of us..
@justgames21xd32
3 жыл бұрын
When is the Moore Oklahoma tornado reaction part 2 coming out?
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
Probably Wednesday
@justgames21xd32
3 жыл бұрын
@@kabirconsiders ah ok thank you 👍. Loved the vid as always 😁.
@sharoncrews9442
3 жыл бұрын
The Ted Bundy tapes documentary on Netflix is really good. Creepy, but good!
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
I’ll check it out!
@SuperZippyzippy
2 жыл бұрын
My uncle went to school with one of Bundys victims. Sad
@anonnnymousthegreat
3 жыл бұрын
I feel like the character, Joe, from the netflix series named “You”, was somewhat inspired by ted bundy.
@ocydroma
2 жыл бұрын
The 12 year old victim which was also his last victim, Kimberly Leach, was my cousin’s best friend and she was the last one to see her alive. My cousin lived in fear that he would escape from prison and come find her. She only was able to feel safe after Bundt was executed.
@LittleMac07
3 жыл бұрын
Lalisa is the rage in the USA.....
@mordrid7904
3 жыл бұрын
I feel that given the time any serial killer could hold this title had they more freedom perhaps or a greater amount of opportunities. Same with mass murderers and certain dictators, empires, and monarchs... more populous often resulting in larger body counts but they didn't choose how many people they could freely kill, given the opportunity murdering whomever qualified they found before them.
@OhioOwns
3 жыл бұрын
dude admitted himself that there were countless women he attacked that ran off and never reported him
@babyfry4775
3 жыл бұрын
I loved Mindhunter. It was so good and the killers really looked like the real killers. So disappointed it ended. This was sort of a light gloss over of Bundy. You should read the book The Stranger Beside Me by Anne Rule. She had been a cop but became a writer. She actually knew Bundy and had no idea he was evil. He was that good at hiding his real personality. I think a typical Sociopath. They can imitate how to be normal but aren’t. The best movie to watch is not the Zac Efron movie but the movie (made for tv) called The Deliberate Stranger with Mark Harmon. He was so good as Bundy. Bundy didn’t kill people he knew but rather strangers. The police in the 70’s didn’t have DNA only fingerprints. Bundy would move from state to state too as to throw off police. Good reaction Kabir. By the way, he started out as a peeping Tom, then rape then murder. I had a peeping Tom once. Scared the crap out of me. Always close windows and blinds at night. Always.
@ogkushnick1121
3 жыл бұрын
You should do Richard Ramirez
@hannabertrand4460
5 ай бұрын
He's the most infamous but Idk about the most evil. BTK is the one who gives me nightmares. He killed men, women and children often during the day. And scariest of all, they would have never found him if he hadn't communicated with the police & media.
@carladams5891
3 жыл бұрын
You should check out the Netflix documentaries on Bundy!! This is what I would call a true American Horror Story!!
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
I’ll check one out! I’ve heard the movie with Zack Efron is pretty good
@carladams5891
3 жыл бұрын
@@kabirconsiders Haven't seen that. I did like The Bundy Tapes, a recorded interview with Bundy.
@jerryduffin1358
3 жыл бұрын
React to “the search for DB cooper” by LEMMENO
@kabirconsiders
3 жыл бұрын
I’ll put it on the list!
@jeffrichards1537
3 жыл бұрын
Nothing beats interviews with Charles manson he was insane lol. He wasn't very big but very unpredictable.
@baswtb2003
3 жыл бұрын
I'm always wondering if these channels forget about Samuel Little the most prolific serial killer known..maybe I'm just not finding those stories.
@innocentsweetiepie
3 жыл бұрын
Try learning about the duo Leonard Lake and Charles Eng
@innocentsweetiepie
3 жыл бұрын
@M K yes they were.....
@rosameryrojas-delcerro1059
2 жыл бұрын
His name is Charles Ng. Yeah, eeeeevill.
@davisbridges676
3 жыл бұрын
Ted Bundy was caught in my hometown of Pensacola Florida. I was not alive yet but my mom remembers it being on the news
@stonewall01
3 жыл бұрын
Bundy was certainly evil but "America's Most Evil Serial Killer"? No he wasn't. Just look up David Parker Ray, aka "The Toy-Box Killer."
@smokeyverton7981
3 жыл бұрын
That recording he made for the girls when they first woke up is the stuff of nightmares
@stonewall01
3 жыл бұрын
@M K There are some sick people in this world but in a criminal justice course I took in college, we debated the death penalty. It got around to my turn to say whether I approve of it or not and say why. I just simply said "Yes I do approve of it and the reason is because people like David Parker Ray exist and they deserve nothing more." Reading about him actually made me a little sick to my stomach.
@Trenton-om9qs
3 жыл бұрын
You have to react to something on Jeffery Dahmer
@Sleepywalker0
3 жыл бұрын
Didnt see anyone mention Ed Gein, who i feel was more atrocious than Bundy
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