1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Manky's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of 2 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:13,840 Speaker 1: I Heart Radio and Grim and Mild. Our world is 3 00:00:13,960 --> 00:00:17,960 Speaker 1: full of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, 4 00:00:18,280 --> 00:00:21,640 Speaker 1: all of these amazing tales are right there on display, 5 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:27,600 Speaker 1: just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet 6 00:00:27,840 --> 00:00:38,319 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. I'd like to think that everybody has an 7 00:00:38,320 --> 00:00:41,639 Speaker 1: innate talent, something they can do that just comes naturally 8 00:00:41,680 --> 00:00:44,800 Speaker 1: to them. It might be drawing, or playing a musical instrument, 9 00:00:44,960 --> 00:00:47,880 Speaker 1: or picking up a new language, or how about walking 10 00:00:47,880 --> 00:00:52,120 Speaker 1: out of prison not once, but four times? Now. That 11 00:00:52,240 --> 00:00:55,160 Speaker 1: last talent belonged to Stephen J. Russell. Born in North 12 00:00:55,200 --> 00:00:59,000 Speaker 1: Carolina in n and raised by a religious couple who 13 00:00:59,000 --> 00:01:01,160 Speaker 1: had adopted him as a a by at the age 14 00:01:01,160 --> 00:01:03,639 Speaker 1: of nine, he learned the truth, and he didn't take 15 00:01:03,680 --> 00:01:06,720 Speaker 1: it well. His birth parents had had several other children 16 00:01:06,720 --> 00:01:09,760 Speaker 1: and never attempted to make contact with their firstborn, which 17 00:01:09,840 --> 00:01:12,679 Speaker 1: sent him into a spiral. By the time he was twelve, 18 00:01:12,720 --> 00:01:15,840 Speaker 1: he was setting fires and getting into fights. As he 19 00:01:15,880 --> 00:01:19,199 Speaker 1: got older, he discovered some things about himself though. For one, 20 00:01:19,480 --> 00:01:23,240 Speaker 1: he was very smart, very very smart. He knew how 21 00:01:23,280 --> 00:01:26,400 Speaker 1: to read people and gain their confidence quite quickly. He 22 00:01:26,640 --> 00:01:30,000 Speaker 1: also had a knack for mimicking people's voices, skills that 23 00:01:30,000 --> 00:01:33,480 Speaker 1: would come in handy later in life. However, before he 24 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:35,600 Speaker 1: turned to a life of crime, he worked on the 25 00:01:35,640 --> 00:01:38,520 Speaker 1: opposite side of the law as a police officer. He 26 00:01:38,560 --> 00:01:42,160 Speaker 1: even married the Chief Secretary in nineteen seventies six, but 27 00:01:42,319 --> 00:01:45,199 Speaker 1: he was also gay, and admission that ended his nine 28 00:01:45,280 --> 00:01:49,800 Speaker 1: year marriage in Russell lost his job as a result 29 00:01:49,840 --> 00:01:52,360 Speaker 1: of that admission, and his attempt to get a new 30 00:01:52,400 --> 00:01:55,640 Speaker 1: one proved difficult because he was fired from one job 31 00:01:55,720 --> 00:02:00,520 Speaker 1: after another. His desperation eventually turned to poverty, and then 32 00:02:00,720 --> 00:02:04,120 Speaker 1: Russell came up with a plan. He started selling fake 33 00:02:04,280 --> 00:02:08,919 Speaker 1: Rolex watches, eventually graduating to even bigger cons. He pulled 34 00:02:08,919 --> 00:02:11,640 Speaker 1: off a slip and false scheme that earned him forty 35 00:02:11,720 --> 00:02:15,560 Speaker 1: five dollars in payott. Unfortunately, once he got a taste 36 00:02:15,560 --> 00:02:19,160 Speaker 1: for crime, he just couldn't help himself. Russell was arrested 37 00:02:19,200 --> 00:02:22,639 Speaker 1: after applying for a fake passport, and while out on bail, 38 00:02:23,120 --> 00:02:27,120 Speaker 1: he met someone special. His name was Jimmy Kempbell, and 39 00:02:27,160 --> 00:02:29,640 Speaker 1: the two fell quickly in love. There was just a 40 00:02:29,680 --> 00:02:33,200 Speaker 1: little issue in Russell's six month prison sentence. The con 41 00:02:33,280 --> 00:02:35,400 Speaker 1: man couldn't wait that long to see Kempell again, so 42 00:02:35,480 --> 00:02:38,000 Speaker 1: as soon as he got inside, he just started looking 43 00:02:38,040 --> 00:02:40,760 Speaker 1: for a way to get back out. He paid attention 44 00:02:40,800 --> 00:02:44,040 Speaker 1: to the guards schedules, watching when they'd take their smoke breaks, 45 00:02:44,080 --> 00:02:46,280 Speaker 1: so that he could wander off and look around. He 46 00:02:46,360 --> 00:02:49,240 Speaker 1: stumbled on a room where female inmates were being stripped 47 00:02:49,240 --> 00:02:52,720 Speaker 1: of their regular clothes before receiving their prison uniforms. He 48 00:02:52,960 --> 00:02:55,840 Speaker 1: swiped a pair of red sweatpants, a tie dyed shirt, 49 00:02:56,240 --> 00:03:00,519 Speaker 1: and one of the guards walkie talkies. Wearing this ridiculous 50 00:03:00,600 --> 00:03:03,400 Speaker 1: get up, Russell took an elevator to the first floor 51 00:03:03,440 --> 00:03:07,080 Speaker 1: and walked out the front door, and nobody stopped him. 52 00:03:07,120 --> 00:03:11,480 Speaker 1: And this was in nineteen He was arrested the following 53 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:13,880 Speaker 1: week at the airport before he and Kempbell could hop 54 00:03:13,880 --> 00:03:17,200 Speaker 1: a flight to Mexico again. Russell was released on bail, 55 00:03:17,320 --> 00:03:19,560 Speaker 1: and this time the two men managed to high tail 56 00:03:19,560 --> 00:03:23,040 Speaker 1: itself of the border. Sadly, Kempell was dying from AIDS 57 00:03:23,160 --> 00:03:25,160 Speaker 1: and in need of better healthcare than what he was 58 00:03:25,240 --> 00:03:28,160 Speaker 1: able to get in Mexico. Russell was picked up again 59 00:03:28,200 --> 00:03:31,480 Speaker 1: after coming back to the US and pulling another insurance 60 00:03:31,520 --> 00:03:34,840 Speaker 1: scam to pay off his boyfriend's medical bills, but Kempell 61 00:03:34,920 --> 00:03:38,320 Speaker 1: passed away a few weeks later. But love would bloom 62 00:03:38,320 --> 00:03:41,720 Speaker 1: again for Stephen J. Russell in the form of Philip Morris, 63 00:03:41,760 --> 00:03:44,680 Speaker 1: an inmate with the charming Southern accent who Russell had 64 00:03:44,720 --> 00:03:47,480 Speaker 1: spotted in the prisons law library. The two men were 65 00:03:47,560 --> 00:03:50,840 Speaker 1: parole the n and Russell took a job as CFO 66 00:03:50,960 --> 00:03:55,600 Speaker 1: of a large company called North American Medical Management or NAM. 67 00:03:55,640 --> 00:04:00,240 Speaker 1: The only problem he was completely unqualified. He'd pa did 68 00:04:00,280 --> 00:04:03,600 Speaker 1: his resume without landish claims, and his references were all 69 00:04:03,720 --> 00:04:07,480 Speaker 1: phone numbers belonging to him. He managed to embezzle almost 70 00:04:07,480 --> 00:04:10,560 Speaker 1: eight hundred thousand dollars from the company before getting caught 71 00:04:10,880 --> 00:04:14,000 Speaker 1: a kind of robin hood scheme he'd undertaken as payback 72 00:04:14,080 --> 00:04:17,920 Speaker 1: for how medical companies had treated his late boyfriend. Russell, 73 00:04:18,160 --> 00:04:21,679 Speaker 1: as usual, was taken into custody. This time, his bail 74 00:04:21,760 --> 00:04:25,000 Speaker 1: was set at nine hundred thousand dollars punishment for having 75 00:04:25,000 --> 00:04:27,920 Speaker 1: made a fool of the justice system multiple times before, 76 00:04:28,320 --> 00:04:30,560 Speaker 1: and an amount too high for him to pay himself. 77 00:04:31,160 --> 00:04:34,400 Speaker 1: Not to worry, though, because he had a plan. Of course, 78 00:04:34,480 --> 00:04:37,080 Speaker 1: he had a plan. He called up the courthouse from 79 00:04:37,160 --> 00:04:40,560 Speaker 1: jail and impersonated the judge's voice, telling the clerk to 80 00:04:40,680 --> 00:04:44,240 Speaker 1: drop the bail to forty five THO dollars instead, and 81 00:04:44,320 --> 00:04:47,880 Speaker 1: they did. Russell paid and went home. The following day, 82 00:04:49,040 --> 00:04:51,880 Speaker 1: the authorities quickly realized what had happened and picked Russell 83 00:04:52,000 --> 00:04:55,120 Speaker 1: up at Morris's home. Soon after the judge had stopped 84 00:04:55,120 --> 00:04:58,040 Speaker 1: playing around, he sentenced the man who had strolled out 85 00:04:58,040 --> 00:05:01,120 Speaker 1: of jail twice with a forty five year prison sentence. 86 00:05:02,040 --> 00:05:05,680 Speaker 1: Russell wouldn't be caged that easy, though. While incarcerated, he 87 00:05:05,760 --> 00:05:08,320 Speaker 1: bought a bunch of green magic markers from the prison 88 00:05:08,400 --> 00:05:11,400 Speaker 1: commissary and emptied them into the sink and his cell, 89 00:05:11,480 --> 00:05:14,240 Speaker 1: which he had filled with water. He soaked his prison 90 00:05:14,320 --> 00:05:16,640 Speaker 1: whites until they were dyed a pale shade of green 91 00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:19,920 Speaker 1: to match the scrubs of the visiting doctors, and once 92 00:05:19,960 --> 00:05:23,360 Speaker 1: again waltz right out of the prison through the front door. 93 00:05:24,240 --> 00:05:27,440 Speaker 1: He and Morris fled to Mississippi after that, but were 94 00:05:27,440 --> 00:05:30,679 Speaker 1: soon found again, and Russell was sent right back to prison. 95 00:05:31,440 --> 00:05:34,880 Speaker 1: Sometime after that. The press interviewed him about his numerous breakouts, 96 00:05:34,880 --> 00:05:37,360 Speaker 1: but noticed that he wasn't his usual, happy, go lucky 97 00:05:37,360 --> 00:05:41,359 Speaker 1: self anymore. He was sad despondent. Russell told them that 98 00:05:41,400 --> 00:05:44,640 Speaker 1: he had been diagnosed with HIV and he was dying. 99 00:05:45,360 --> 00:05:47,240 Speaker 1: He lost a lot of weight over the next year 100 00:05:47,440 --> 00:05:49,960 Speaker 1: and was eventually moved to a secure nursing home to 101 00:05:50,000 --> 00:05:53,240 Speaker 1: live out his final days. During his stay, prison authorities 102 00:05:53,279 --> 00:05:56,240 Speaker 1: received a call from Russell's doctor. Apparently, there was an 103 00:05:56,240 --> 00:05:59,680 Speaker 1: experimental trial for a new HIV drug, and Russell had 104 00:05:59,680 --> 00:06:02,960 Speaker 1: been ozen to participate, but he had to act fast. 105 00:06:03,960 --> 00:06:06,840 Speaker 1: It wasn't fast enough. The doctor's phone the prison again 106 00:06:06,880 --> 00:06:09,240 Speaker 1: a few weeks later to tell them that Russell had died. 107 00:06:09,760 --> 00:06:12,120 Speaker 1: It wasn't until a man walked into a Dallas bank 108 00:06:12,160 --> 00:06:14,760 Speaker 1: and applied for a seventy five tho dollar alone that 109 00:06:14,839 --> 00:06:17,799 Speaker 1: they realized that the King of cons was still alive 110 00:06:17,839 --> 00:06:21,000 Speaker 1: and well and up to his old tricks. And how 111 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:23,960 Speaker 1: did he do it? He faked his medical records using 112 00:06:24,000 --> 00:06:28,200 Speaker 1: a prison typewriter, then reduced his food intake, swallowing laxatives 113 00:06:28,200 --> 00:06:30,560 Speaker 1: to move things along. By the end of ten months, 114 00:06:30,600 --> 00:06:33,200 Speaker 1: he was half his old size. After all, he had 115 00:06:33,240 --> 00:06:35,960 Speaker 1: watched a boyfriend succumb to the effects of AIDS and 116 00:06:36,080 --> 00:06:39,880 Speaker 1: knew how to mimic the symptoms. Today, Stephen j. Russell 117 00:06:40,000 --> 00:06:43,479 Speaker 1: sits in solitary confinements, the weight of a one forty 118 00:06:43,520 --> 00:06:47,120 Speaker 1: four year prison sentence heavy on his shoulders. His spine 119 00:06:47,240 --> 00:06:49,760 Speaker 1: is compacted from a lack of movements, and he fights 120 00:06:49,839 --> 00:06:52,120 Speaker 1: every day to maintain his sanity in a six by 121 00:06:52,200 --> 00:06:56,200 Speaker 1: nine cell designed to break him mentally and physically, but 122 00:06:56,279 --> 00:06:59,040 Speaker 1: he hangs on, buoyed by the support of his friends 123 00:06:59,040 --> 00:07:01,640 Speaker 1: and family who visit it on the weekends. He also 124 00:07:01,680 --> 00:07:05,000 Speaker 1: writes and gives interviews to the press on occasion. However, 125 00:07:05,160 --> 00:07:08,080 Speaker 1: his habits of breaking out of prison, well, that seems 126 00:07:08,080 --> 00:07:12,080 Speaker 1: to have run its course, although someone should probably check 127 00:07:12,480 --> 00:07:28,400 Speaker 1: and make sure. Most people hope to accomplish one great 128 00:07:28,440 --> 00:07:31,000 Speaker 1: thing in their lifetime. It could be writing a novel, 129 00:07:31,120 --> 00:07:34,360 Speaker 1: or learning the piano, or maybe just winning the lottery. 130 00:07:34,680 --> 00:07:37,000 Speaker 1: A few of us will ever achieve such feats, and 131 00:07:37,080 --> 00:07:40,320 Speaker 1: even fewer will go on to do more. One man, however, 132 00:07:40,440 --> 00:07:42,920 Speaker 1: didn't learn to play an instrument, nor did he win 133 00:07:42,960 --> 00:07:46,520 Speaker 1: the lottery, but he is remembered for his many great accomplishments. 134 00:07:46,720 --> 00:07:49,640 Speaker 1: For example, he was the German robin Hood of his day. 135 00:07:50,000 --> 00:07:52,480 Speaker 1: He was a poet, a warrior, and he was among 136 00:07:52,600 --> 00:07:57,920 Speaker 1: the first cyborgs. Goods von Berlichingen was born to German 137 00:07:57,960 --> 00:08:01,360 Speaker 1: nobility in four eight. Raised in what is now modern 138 00:08:01,440 --> 00:08:04,040 Speaker 1: day Bavaria. He joined the military at the age of 139 00:08:04,080 --> 00:08:07,800 Speaker 1: seventeen to fight for the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian the First. 140 00:08:08,200 --> 00:08:10,880 Speaker 1: He struck down enemies across Europe on behalf of the 141 00:08:10,920 --> 00:08:13,920 Speaker 1: emperor for the next several years, but grew weary of 142 00:08:13,960 --> 00:08:17,440 Speaker 1: fighting in service to a king. By he was on 143 00:08:17,480 --> 00:08:21,200 Speaker 1: his own working as a mercenary. It was during a 144 00:08:21,280 --> 00:08:23,960 Speaker 1: siege in the small Bavarian town of land Shoot when 145 00:08:24,120 --> 00:08:26,600 Speaker 1: Goat's right arm was blown off by an enemy cannon. 146 00:08:27,080 --> 00:08:30,200 Speaker 1: Such an injury would have sidelined other soldiers, forcing them 147 00:08:30,240 --> 00:08:32,640 Speaker 1: away from battle and back home to nurse their wounds, 148 00:08:33,120 --> 00:08:36,559 Speaker 1: but not goods. He saw the expertise of local blacksmiths, 149 00:08:36,600 --> 00:08:40,480 Speaker 1: who provided him with a replacement arm. They fashioned for 150 00:08:40,559 --> 00:08:44,800 Speaker 1: him a rudimentary prosthetic made of metal and leather. Unfortunately, 151 00:08:44,840 --> 00:08:46,680 Speaker 1: he wasn't able to do much with it, so he 152 00:08:46,760 --> 00:08:50,440 Speaker 1: had a better, more advanced arm constructed instead. His new 153 00:08:50,480 --> 00:08:53,520 Speaker 1: prosthetic limb had fingers that could bend at the joints. 154 00:08:53,880 --> 00:08:56,320 Speaker 1: Berlick and Gen would use his left hand to operate 155 00:08:56,360 --> 00:08:59,480 Speaker 1: the unique spring loaded rod system inside that was so 156 00:08:59,559 --> 00:09:02,440 Speaker 1: precise he could curl the metal fingers around something as 157 00:09:02,480 --> 00:09:05,640 Speaker 1: sturdy as his sword or as delicate as a quill pen. 158 00:09:06,320 --> 00:09:08,760 Speaker 1: Once again able to wield the sword, he went back 159 00:09:08,760 --> 00:09:11,960 Speaker 1: to work as a mercenary. He carried out vicious acts 160 00:09:12,000 --> 00:09:14,240 Speaker 1: on behalf of those who hired him, as well as 161 00:09:14,280 --> 00:09:17,080 Speaker 1: people and even whole towns who had wronged him. In 162 00:09:17,160 --> 00:09:19,400 Speaker 1: fifteen twelve, he let his beef with the city of 163 00:09:19,520 --> 00:09:22,240 Speaker 1: Nuremberg get the better of him when he attacked several 164 00:09:22,280 --> 00:09:25,679 Speaker 1: merchants returning home there after selling their wares in Leipzig. 165 00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:29,719 Speaker 1: His former employer, Emperor Maximilian the First, got wind of 166 00:09:29,760 --> 00:09:32,840 Speaker 1: the raid and issued an imperial ban, which meant that 167 00:09:32,880 --> 00:09:35,280 Speaker 1: he lost all his rights and was free to be 168 00:09:35,360 --> 00:09:39,560 Speaker 1: killed by anyone else without consequence. He spent two years 169 00:09:39,600 --> 00:09:42,400 Speaker 1: as an outlaw after that, before paying the steep fine 170 00:09:42,440 --> 00:09:45,920 Speaker 1: of fourteen thousand golden for his freedom. He used his 171 00:09:45,960 --> 00:09:49,000 Speaker 1: newfound freedom to continue his one man war against the 172 00:09:49,000 --> 00:09:52,440 Speaker 1: people and places who had offended him. He traveled to hess, 173 00:09:52,480 --> 00:09:55,840 Speaker 1: home of the Hessian people nineteen thousand of whom fought 174 00:09:55,880 --> 00:09:59,000 Speaker 1: for the British during the Revolutionary War, and carried out 175 00:09:59,120 --> 00:10:02,600 Speaker 1: his next attack are. This time he kidnapped Philip, the 176 00:10:02,640 --> 00:10:06,400 Speaker 1: fourth Count of Valdak, the head of states under Emperor Maximilian. 177 00:10:06,720 --> 00:10:09,160 Speaker 1: His new crime earned him another price on his head 178 00:10:09,360 --> 00:10:13,040 Speaker 1: and another banishment. He had no interest in sitting by 179 00:10:13,160 --> 00:10:15,600 Speaker 1: while fight carried on without him, though he came to 180 00:10:15,640 --> 00:10:18,600 Speaker 1: the aid of Uric, the first Duke of Wurtemburg in 181 00:10:18,679 --> 00:10:22,080 Speaker 1: fifteen nineteen, when the duke's town of Mackmule was under 182 00:10:22,120 --> 00:10:26,800 Speaker 1: attacked by a peacekeeping outfit known as the Swabian League. Berlikingen, however, 183 00:10:27,000 --> 00:10:30,520 Speaker 1: lacked these supplies needed to defend mack Mool properly, and 184 00:10:30,600 --> 00:10:33,600 Speaker 1: was soon captured by the opposing army. It was too 185 00:10:33,600 --> 00:10:36,240 Speaker 1: bad that he'd made so many enemies during Mercenary days, 186 00:10:36,360 --> 00:10:38,720 Speaker 1: since he was given over to the town of Heilbron, 187 00:10:38,960 --> 00:10:41,320 Speaker 1: which he had rated quite a few times in the past. 188 00:10:42,040 --> 00:10:45,400 Speaker 1: But Berlickingen had also made some friends too, and two 189 00:10:45,440 --> 00:10:48,960 Speaker 1: of them fellow knights themselves, came to his defense. With 190 00:10:49,000 --> 00:10:51,480 Speaker 1: their help, he was only forced to pay two thousand 191 00:10:51,480 --> 00:10:54,560 Speaker 1: golden and he was free to go. Oh and he 192 00:10:54,600 --> 00:10:57,000 Speaker 1: had to promise not to go after the Swabian League 193 00:10:57,000 --> 00:11:00,240 Speaker 1: for revenge, which he didn't, but he did Yd a 194 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:03,560 Speaker 1: new cause to fight for after that, in fifteen twenty five, 195 00:11:03,679 --> 00:11:06,840 Speaker 1: he and his metal arm fought alongside hundreds of thousands 196 00:11:06,840 --> 00:11:09,160 Speaker 1: of poor German farmers in what came to be known 197 00:11:09,200 --> 00:11:12,400 Speaker 1: as the German Peasants War. They had risen up against 198 00:11:12,440 --> 00:11:15,920 Speaker 1: the aristocracy for better land rights and more freedom, and 199 00:11:16,040 --> 00:11:19,520 Speaker 1: Berlkingen himself, being a man of means and born to 200 00:11:19,640 --> 00:11:23,360 Speaker 1: a wealthy family, had no problem joining their cause. His 201 00:11:23,480 --> 00:11:26,640 Speaker 1: participation is what earned him the nickname the robin Hood 202 00:11:26,640 --> 00:11:29,600 Speaker 1: of Germany. But he eventually deserted them once he saw 203 00:11:29,640 --> 00:11:32,720 Speaker 1: that they were less invested in the challenge and merely 204 00:11:32,800 --> 00:11:37,120 Speaker 1: after blood goats. Van Berlikingen died in fifteen sixty at 205 00:11:37,120 --> 00:11:40,480 Speaker 1: around eighty years old, leaving behind an impressive legacy as 206 00:11:40,559 --> 00:11:43,480 Speaker 1: a one armed, iron fisted knight who fought for the 207 00:11:43,520 --> 00:11:46,320 Speaker 1: poor and was hated by almost every town he met. 208 00:11:46,840 --> 00:11:49,360 Speaker 1: All of this was discussed in his memoirs, which were 209 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:53,719 Speaker 1: adapted into a popular play in seventeen seventy three. Today, 210 00:11:53,720 --> 00:11:56,840 Speaker 1: both of his prosthetic arms, Mark one and Mark two, 211 00:11:57,080 --> 00:11:59,959 Speaker 1: are on display in his birthplace of youngs thousand, German 212 00:12:00,040 --> 00:12:03,000 Speaker 1: me The town even boasted depiction of his metal hand 213 00:12:03,040 --> 00:12:06,640 Speaker 1: on their shield, making it a true coat of arms. 214 00:12:09,240 --> 00:12:11,960 Speaker 1: I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet 215 00:12:11,960 --> 00:12:15,839 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn 216 00:12:15,920 --> 00:12:20,479 Speaker 1: more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. 217 00:12:20,520 --> 00:12:24,040 Speaker 1: The show was created by me Aaron Manky in partnership 218 00:12:24,120 --> 00:12:27,400 Speaker 1: with how Stuff Works. I make another award winning show 219 00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:31,560 Speaker 1: called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, and television show, 220 00:12:31,840 --> 00:12:33,720 Speaker 1: and you can learn all about it over at the 221 00:12:33,880 --> 00:12:39,640 Speaker 1: World of Lore dot com. And until next time, stay curious. Yeah,